Authors: Steven Herrick
Celebrating
I hugged Old Bill
like I've never hugged
a man before
sure that he'd saved my life.
I hugged him in Main Street
with the office workers walking by,
and the shopkeepers staring,
and the two old ladies at the bus stop
watching the big grey-haired man
wrap his arms around the teenager
and I thanked him once
and thanked him a hundred times.
I shouldered my bag
and we walked up the hill
to the better part of town
with the neat gardens
and orderly trees
and brightly coloured fences
to Wellington Road
with the freshly mown grass
and the swallows
celebrating a birth
in the nest
above the veranda.
Swallows
Old Bill and I
sat on the veranda
watching the swallows
swoop and play
with a gentle breeze blowing
through the fir trees
along the back fence.
Old Bill told me
he planted those trees
their first year here
and he built the shed himself
and this veranda used to have
a gas BBQ for summer evenings,
sipping wine and cooking steak,
and they had a dog,
Jerry,
a little cockerspaniel
who loved sausages,
who'd leap in the air
when Old Bill threw him a snag.
Old Bill told me they'd
lived here for fifteen years
and he closed the door
and locked it on March 2nd, 1994.
He told me he came back
occasionally,
âTo sit on the veranda
and cry, like an old drunk'.
I held the key in my hands.
I knew better than to ask him inside.
I knew he hadn't been inside
since that March day,
and I wasn't going to force the issue,
not for my sake.
I pocketed the key,
said thanks, again,
and we both walked back to town.
I wasn't going inside
without Caitlin with me.
I could wait.
Tremor
My hands still shake
from the drink
or lack of it
so when I can
I walk with them
deep in my pockets
so people won't see
my tremors.
Billy and I sit on the veranda
and I tell him
about the BBQ
and Jerry
and his acrobatic tricks.
I keep my hands
in my pockets.
Billy holds the key,
returns it to his pocket,
says thanks, again,
and offers his strong young hand.
We shake,
and my hand in his
stops trembling
for a moment.
Locks and keys
It's been too long
since I've seen Caitlin
and I say sorry
as soon as I walk
into McDonald's
and she smiles
even though she's mopping!
I order a lemonade
and sit upstairs.
I've got so much to tell her
and I don't know how.
A house seems so â¦
so â¦
so adult,
even though
it's only for a short time
until the welfare
are off my track
and I can decide
what I really want to do
here in Bendarat.
Caitlin and the key
Billy told me last night
to meet him here
on the corner of Wellington and Jamison
after school.
I feel very silly
here on the corner
in my school uniform
with an umbrella
as the rain tumbles down.
And of course Billy walks towards me,
wet and grinning like a madman.
We kiss, and he takes my hand
and leads me down Wellington Road,
a long way from his train carriage.
I ask question after question
but I can tell
it's a surprise
and he doesn't want to tell me,
he wants to show me.
So I hold my impatience
and he leads me
into the driveway
of a beautiful white timber house
with an old shed
and a huge backyard
of trees â wattles and firs â
and one of those homemade bird feeders
on a pole near the fence,
and there's a king parrot
sitting, eating some seed.
Billy and I stand on the veranda.
He hands me a key
and we stand, his hand on mine,
the key between us,
and he tells me
about the cops and welfare
and Old Bill's story
and Old Bill's plan
and how they both
sat on the veranda yesterday
talking
rather than taking the key
this key I hold
and turning it in the lock.
And Billy looks at me,
he wants me to do it with him,
because of this house
and its past
and what it means to Old Bill.
And it's all too much.
I start to cry
because I think of Old Bill
and what I thought
when I first saw him
swearing and waiting for breakfast
from Billy
and I think of both of them
at dinner at my house
with their hair neat
and the three of us
sitting on the floor to eat.
I feel the tears
and I turn towards the door,
I insert the key
and turn it slowly
and push the door.
I reach behind for Billy's hand
and we walk inside.
Old Bill
Tonight, in my carriage,
I remember telling Billy ages ago
to travel,
to jump some freights
and see the country.
I thought it crazy,
a young bloke living like a bum
here in Bendarat,
in an old train carriage.
But Billy stayed
and we worked at the cannery
and he kept waking me
with breakfast
and often
we'd spend nights
sitting in the dark, talking,
and those nights
were the nights I stopped drinking.
I had something better to do.
And tonight
I think of Billy
and Caitlin
in the house together
and I'm still not drinking.
I'm thinking of an old hobo,
months ago,
offering advice to a young kid
when he should have been listening
to his own words
ringing
hollow in his head.