Authors: Steven Herrick
Cooking, and eating
I hate cooking.
I hate touching raw meat
and cutting it into thin slices
and peeling vegetables is boring,
so I do it all quickly.
I throw the chicken,
potatoes, beans, carrots into a pot,
I add stock,
and curry from a jar,
and I let it simmer
for hours.
I go downstairs to Dad's cellar
and choose wine,
a few bottles of red,
one white,
expensive wine
for my valued guests.
I go upstairs
and run a hot bath,
put some music on,
just quietly,
and I lie back in the full tub
and I forget cooking.
I think of eating.
I love eating.
The moon
I almost laughed
when they arrived.
The two neatest hobos
I'd ever seen,
with their hair combed,
slicked back,
and their faces rubbed shiny clean.
Old Bill called me âMiss'
and offered me a box of chocolates
he'd brought
and he looked around the house
as though he was visiting the moon.
Billy saw the wine,
already open,
and he poured three glasses
passed them around,
and as we raised our glasses
Billy said,
âTo the richest house in Bendarat'
and we laughed.
My cooking even smelt good
and Old Bill kept
wandering from room to room
discovering
another side to the moon.
Stories
We couldn't sit at the table.
It looked too neat,
too polished, too clean.
We sat on the floor
near the fireplace
and we ate the curry
with a fork
and we dipped our bread
in the sauce
and we drank just enough
to forget where we were.
Billy and I talked
and planned picnics
and nights off from McDonald's.
I told them about school
and its stupid rules
and about Petra and Kate
and the gossip about
the two Physical Education teachers
that swept the schoolyard.
And Billy told us about Irene
and their library deal
and reading books beside
Westfield Creek while jigging school.
Old Bill sat quiet,
a faint smile
as he slowly drank
Dad's expensive wine
and listened
to our exaggerated
stories.
Simple gift
I shook the young lady's hand,
and Billy's.
I thanked them for the meal
and took my leave.
I walked back
through the rich streets of town,
the neat gardens,
the high timber fences,
the solid gates with
the double garage behind them.
I hadn't drunk too much,
the wine was too good to ruin
with drunkenness,
and I'd listened
to Billy and Caitlin talk
and I'd noticed
how they looked at each other â
their quick, gentle smiles over the food â
and the way they sat close,
and I realised as I walked home
that for a few hours
I hadn't thought of anything
but how pleasant it was
to sit with these people
and to talk with them.
I walked home to my old carriage
and thought of how to repay them
for their simple gift,
and I enjoyed the thinking.
Making love
It was like falling headlong
into the clear waters
of the Bendarat River
and opening my eyes
to the beautiful
phosphorescent bubbles of light
and trying to catch those bubbles
in the new world of quiet and calm
that carried me along, breathless,
and too late, or too early,
I surfaced
and broke the gentle tide,
and I gasped and rolled
and wished Caitlin and I
could return to the hush
of that special world
and we could float
safe for a lifetime
lost
and hoping never
to be found.
My other life
We fell asleep.
I fell asleep with Billy
beside me,
his arm on my stomach,
his breath so close,
and when we woke
we woke together
and he kissed me
and we made love again
in the single bed
I've had since I was eight
with its crisp white sheets
and oversized doona
and lots of pillows,
and I looked around my bedroom
at the posters on the walls
and my dresser full of make-up
and moisturiser and clutter
and my school uniform
hanging neatly behind the door
ready for my other life,
the life I'd forgotten about
for a few hours last night
and this morning.
Monday
It was early Monday.
I was sleeping,
and I heard the knock.
I knew it wasn't Caitlin,
her knock is quieter.
I woke with a start
and was ready to run
when the door opened
and it was Old Bill
with a coffee
and a breakfast bowl
for me.
He came in,
sat opposite,
handed me the cup,
and he said,
âMilk and two sugars,
the way you like it.
You young blokes sure
know how to sleep,
it's nine o'clock you know.'
We looked at each other
and I started laughing.
I couldn't help it.
I laughed long and loud,
and Old Bill,
who at first looked offended,
joined in,
two hobos laughing,
laughing the morning away.
Tell the world
On Monday at school
I sat with Petra and Kate
and I wanted to tell
them about everything.
I so much wanted to tell
but I couldn't
because
I thought of Kate
and her story
of sex in the bushes
and I didn't want
to have to talk about
the details
as if to prove to her
that it was good
and fine
and I felt lucky
and I didn't want to admit
that I couldn't wait to see Billy
and do it again
and again
and that somehow
while mopping the floor
at McDonald's
I'd met someone
who I could lie naked beside
and not feel foolish
or embarrassed,
that I'd met someone
I could trust
and feel safe with.
I wanted to tell them that,
but not yet,
not just yet.
I wanted to go to Billy
tonight
and tomorrow
and next week
and I wanted to prove it
to myself
before I tell the world.