Authors: Joss Hedley
They had sorted and settled on other supplies: a map, of course, and a compass. A sleeping bag, hat,
first-aid kit and a belt of coins. They decided, too, on a second set of clothes. The first set could be stolen, they thought, or destroyed. They might be needed for trade once their coins ran out, or for tearing into bandages. Or the children might be taken by surprise and forced to start their journey without proper clothing on their backs.
Colm shrugs into a long-sleeved cotton shirt and pulls a hat down over his eyes. He feels at once the relief from the sun. Ahead of him, Lydia is trudging up the hill in her undies and singlet; already he can see her shoulders turning pink.
âLyd!' he calls. âPut your shirt on!'
She doesn't stop but continues upwards, her head down, her eyes fastened to the rocky path at her feet. Colm pushes himself after her.
âIt's too hot,' he says. âYou'll burn.'
âI just want to get to the top,' she replies. âWe'll see the path from there. We'll see Father coming.'
The way grows steeper, the sun hotter. They come to a small cairn made of the same orange rock that surrounds them. As they pass it, Colm kicks at it and sends the rocky structure tumbling. Some of the pieces shatter as they hit the stony ground.
âWhy did you do that?' asks Lydia.
Colm stops and stares at his sister. âWe can't leave a trace,' he says. âYou know that. And you're burning. Put your shirt on.'
Lydia ignores him and begins to gather the scattered
rock. âFather won't find the way without it,' she says, and stacks the pieces on top of each other.
âOf course he will,' says Colm. âHe's spent years in these hills. He only built the cairn for us.'
Colm takes his water bottle from his pack and hands it to Lydia. She hesitates at first, then drinks, slowly, carefully.
âPlease, Lyd,' Colm says. âWe have to leave it. And you have to dress properly. You won't make it very far in this heat if you don't.'
Lydia screws the cap back on the bottle and begins to dress. Colm finds her hat in her pack and hands it to her. Her chin quivers.
âCome on,' he says, and touches her cheek. âThere's a long way to go.'
They climb through the heat of the day and into the afternoon, stopping from time to time for a lick of water, a dried fig. The way becomes steeper and steeper. Often Colm has to drop his pack and go back for Lydia's. Sometimes he takes her hand and helps her up the harder sections. They both tire quickly under the merciless sun.
The rocks glow red as the afternoon dips to evening. The sleeping creatures of the day begin to shift about, to stir. The heat sinks slowly with the light.
Brother and sister stand at the top of the range. The last of the evening sun makes clear the path they have climbed. They are alone on the mountain. There is no one about.
âWe will wait until morning,' says Colm. âWe'll be safe in the cave for the night.'
They turn from the sight of the distant valley below and make their way across the flat plate that is the top of the mountain. The bare rocks are softened by occasional clumps of spongy vegetation, the leaves of which the children snap off and suck.
The mountain range snakes north and south in a long unbroken line. A series of valleys press into the escarpment, forming little mountain after little mountain, here where they are already so high. The way down, Colm and Lydia know, is not to walk along the top of the range to its end â that would mean constant ascending and descending â but to find one of the moraines that run from the side down to the great dry plains below.
The light drops, the way becomes less clear. They find a cairn indicating that a path be taken along a narrow ledge, one side of which falls away steeply. Lydia kicks the marker as they pass and sends the rocks skating over the edge to the emptiness beyond. The seconds pass slowly before they hear them hit the bottom.
The lingering light is not enough for them to see by, for them to be safe by. Colm switches on his torch and takes the lead. Lydia walks closely behind. The ledge widens and they find themselves twisting their way through a maze of large boulders, each taller than a man, taller even than their father. The cooling darkness
moves in like velvet about their hot, aching bodies.
âIt's here, Lyd,' breathes Colm. He is tired but happy to see at last the natural stone archway that marks the start of the moraine. He takes his sister's hand and they step through together. A few minutes later they are at the foot of the little cave in which they will spend the night and, exhausted, they haul themselves up a final incline and throw their packs onto the dark stone floor. The sudden alleviation of burden makes them feel as though they will float away.
They prepare a mess of dried potato and eat wearily from a single bowl. The night air creeps into their tired bones and they lie in spoons with their packs as pillows and settle in to sleep. The stars wink and wonder.
And Colm, far from home, slides into his small glass box, curls himself up tightly and lets the world spin him away, spin him deep into the blackness of a quiet, whispering night.
They sleep, they wake, they sleep again. The dawn comes slowly. Colm shifts and turns on his bed of stone. His hip aches from the unrelenting hardness of the rock.
He wants to be walking. He wants to be moving further away. The dark early hours are the best for travelling, he thinks. Then it is cool and quiet. But he knows they cannot leave, not yet. They must wait for the sun to tell them when to go. They must wait and hope that their father will join them between this time and that. Otherwise, they set out from this place as they set out from the last: alone.
Colm wishes he knew where their father was, wishes he knew of his safety. He is smart, though, thinks Colm. Once he'd been seen as the saviour of the planet! Had been admired and adored! Colm comforts himself with this thought: that the brilliance which
once earned his father adulation would now keep him free from all harm.
The sky at last lightens to grey and they peel themselves from the ground, loosen their limbs. Lydia traces her way back to the start of the moraine in the hope of spotting their father. Colm wipes clean the dinner bowl from the previous night and gathers their belongings. Ribbons of mauve and orange light unfurl across the sky.
Lydia returns. She climbs back up into the cave and squats on the floor. She traces a stick along the veins of rock and rakes the powdery dust into neat little piles. Occasionally she glances at the sky.
Colm feels anxiety scraping his stomach. The sky is blue now, the air still cool, but he knows it will not be long before the heat starts again. He squats beside his sister.
âLyd,' he says softly. âWe've waited too long.'
Lydia spells out her initials in the dust.
âWe have to go without him.'
A tear rolls slowly down her nose and hangs there like a little glassy stalactite. She wipes at it with her hand.
âJust a bit longer,' she says.
Colm looks again at the sky, at the sun climbing slowly into its blue heights, and exhales.
âAll right.'
He stands and shifts his weight from one leg to the other, his hand flat against his stomach. The anxiety is
grinding away at his insides and he feels like he wants to be sick again. He knows he is too soft with Lydia.
âCome on,' he says roughly, and shoulders his pack. âNow. We have to go now.'
Lydia gets up slowly as though reluctant to leave the marks she has scratched into the dirt. But she runs her foot over them and so leaves no trace. Their steps beat a farewell to the cave that has been their shelter and the day proclaims itself at once upon their skin.
âA scorcher,' says Colm.
Every day's a scorcher. He knows that. It's just something you say when there's nothing else. He can hear Lydia snuffling into her sleeve behind him and wishes he had something else to talk about. But he hasn't. Just the weather.
When their father was young they smalltalked the weather too. Only back then there were a few more options. âLooks like rain,' someone might say. Or, âGunna be another wet one.' But that was before, when the seasons were still in line with the months of the year, when the rhythms of the earth and of the sky were predictable.
Colm and Lydia were born in drought. They have never seen rain. Colm tries out the word on his tongue. âRain,' he says, softly so Lydia can't hear him. âRain.'
His eyeballs prickle. He pulls his hat further down his forehead and walks with his gaze to the ground. He does not want to think of this, of rain and of his father. He does not want to think about the fact that now they
are alone. Even though their father had warned them of such a thing a long, long time ago.
âColm!'
He stops when he hears Lydia's voice and looks up. The path they are on has split into two. He is standing on one, Lydia on the other.
âThis is the way,' says his sister. âThat just goes along the base of the range. This will take us to the plains, to Nurrengar and Midgin.'
He looks in the direction she is indicating and sees the vast expanse of dry red dust. The path he is on looks more inviting: there are still scattered patches of vegetation of the type they sampled on the top of the range, as well as the occasional gum.
âFather said we should walk through the towns,' insists Lydia. âHe said we'd be more likely to find water. Besides, he could still catch us up.'
Colm nods and crosses over to the other path. Funny how the plans they made in the valley now seem patchy, inadequate. His instinct is to follow the range, but it is true: if they head towards Nurrengar they could stay there for a day or two until their father joins them.
âYou're right,' he says. âI had my head down. Wasn't watching.'
He lets Lydia go first and watches her suddenly buoyant steps. He is glad she feels better, even if he himself feels worse. He shouldn't do this, walk along and think of things so that they take the wrong path, so that they lose the way. Lydia prevented that from
happening this time, but he isn't to rely on her. He needs to keep alert. He needs to think only of the moment.
He isn't happy, though, about this path. It feels too exposed. There is nowhere to hide. He knows that anyone further up the moraine would see them without difficulty. He turns and looks back the way they have come, scans the rock, the path, for any sign of movement. That there is none does not lessen his anxiety: it is easy enough for raiders to hide on the cluttered slopes.
They walk. The sun grows hotter. Silvery shimmering mares' tails appear, rising from the ground before them. Their soles blister.
It is late afternoon by the time they reach the outskirts of Nurrengar. They are exhausted and almost don't notice the small red iron hut for the haze that covers their eyeballs. But a gust of wind blows and one section of the rickety tin roof scrapes against another. The children look over to their right and see the little hut with its garden of grit and rusting metal posts. A woman, scrawny and gnarled, stands in the doorway with a rifle pressed into the side of her chest, her head cocked, her eye steely down the barrel. Colm takes Lydia by the hand and pulls her so her step is quickened. They turn their heads from the woman and her gun and fix them hard to the brown dirt underfoot, to the scraps of spinifex and to the black ants marching steadily south.
They pass a second hut some way down the road, then a third and a fourth. A dog is chained to the fence of the fifth and rears menacingly as they approach. It barks and pulls at its chain. White flecks of saliva fly from its mouth.
The town opens up before them, a random collection of ruins and sheds. Rubbish lines the streets in steaming heaps; the smell of rotting garbage wrenches the gut.
Welcome to Nurrengar
reads a faded blue sign, many times painted over.
Proud entrant of Tidy Towns 2027
.
Colm once knew this town well, though it's been some time since his last visit. It was to Nurrengar that they would travel with their father to purchase supplies â flour, sugar, salt â before the raids began and self-sufficiency became more pressing. And before, of course, they lost their road. Now, though, he barely recognises the place for the deterioration that has set in. Entire streets seem to have disappeared. Landmarks he remembers are no longer standing. Only a few of the shops on the main street appear to be open for business. Colm and Lydia brush through grubby fly strips into Joe's Emporium. The air hangs low and stagnant within.
âHello, Joe,' says Colm.
A large red-faced man in his fifties looks up from a tattered tide guide.
âHello,' he says. He screws up his eyes and peers through the dusty gloom.
âI'm Colm, Rafe Bell's son. This is my sister Lydia.'
âHello, Joe,' says Lydia.
âWell, well,' says Joe, and lets out a long, slow whistle through the gap in his teeth. âRafe Bell's kids, eh? It must be five years.'
âAbout that.'
âHow's your old man?'
âHe's gander.'
Joe whistles again, nods slowly.
âWe were wondering,' says Colm, âwhere everything is. The streets and the buildings and stuff.'
âRaids,' says Joe. âCoupla years back now. Should do us for a while. Nothin' much left to take.' He looks glumly about the shop, his jaw thrust forward, the fleshy ledge of his lower lip extended. Rows of dusty wooden shelves stand empty of any recognisable wares. A cabinet set with grubby glass makes a coffin for long-dead flies. A ceiling fan hangs idle in the simpering heat.
âYa didn't wanna buy nothin', didja?'
âNo,' says Colm. âYou still got that room you sometimes let people stay in? We've got money. We can pay.'
Joe grimaces and levers himself out of his stool. âYou runnin' away?'
âNo.'
âBeen raids up your place?'
âYeah.'
âOld man gander?'
âDon't know.'
Joe shakes his head and turns to the cool box
behind him. He hands the children a warm can of Fanta each.
âGet that into ya,' he says. âMust be thirsty after walkin' all that way.'
âThanks, Joe.'
âSorry they're not cold. No power for the frigidair.'
Colm and Lydia crack open the cans and slurp desperately on the sweet, sticky liquid.
âCome on,' says Joe. âI'll show you the room.'
He leads the way out through the shop to a small bare yard. A woman of about his own age pegs a couple of dusty grey articles on a clothes line.
âAnnie,' he says. âYou remember Rafe Bell. These his kids.'
The woman stops and turns. Her face is dry and peeling. Her lips disappear into a thirsty black maw.
âYa give 'em those Fantas?'
âSure, Annie. They're Rafe Bell's kids. They come a long way.'
âI was savin' those for an occasion.'
âIt
is
an occasion, Anne.'
The woman hurrumphs and turns her back. âDon't give 'em any more,' she says. âDon't give 'em no food or nothin'.'
Joe looks apologetically at Colm and Lydia. âShe's got a broken heart,' he says as they cross the brown yard. âAll our kids and our grandkids. Left years ago. Gone north. Nothin' for 'em here.'
âHow far north?' asks Colm.
âSaid they'd go to Jillyback. Then we got a card from 'em about two years ago sayin' they was further north of that in Elan Plains. Never heard of it but they reckoned it was gander there.'
He shows them into a small lean-to at the back of the shop. The two narrow beds are spread with threadbare coverlets. A sticky strip of paper black with flies hangs by the window. Colm and Lydia drop their packs with relief and offer to their tired bodies the bliss of rest. They eat a small fistful of sunflower seeds, drain the last of the Fantas and fade quickly away with the last of the day.
⢠⢠â¢
The room is still dark when Colm is disturbed from sleep by an insistent shaking. It is Lydia.
âColm,' she whispers.
âWhat?'
âI want to go.'
Colm raises himself from the twist of rag that is his pillow and sees his sister fully dressed with her pack strapped firmly to her back.
âWhat is it, Lyd?' He is surprised by her sudden eagerness to leave, especially as it means they might miss their father. He touches her arm. It is icy.
âYou're cold,' he says, and moves to the far edge of his bed. âGet in.'
Lydia is resolute. âWe've got to go, Colm,' she
insists, and begins to gather her brother's things and fold them into his pack.
âIt's the middle of night! Why can't we leave in the morning?'
His sister says nothing, only hands him his shirt. Colm gets up and puts it on.
âAll right,' he says, and wonders again at his softness towards her. He takes his pack from her, knots it firmly and slings it onto his back.
They make their way out quietly to the yard. Colm leaves a small pile of coins on the back doorstep and they pass through the side gate into the lane beyond.
They walk for an hour, maybe more, with Lydia in the lead. The moon's pale light lies like a veil over the landscape. Fractured shadowy trees and boulders pattern their path. The plain stretches out before them, an endless sea of dark dust.
The land dips. Their feet slide in the soft sand and they find themselves in a dry shallow gorge. Even at night they can tell that this was once the bed for a creek, a little brown brook, a winding rivulet. It amazes Colm that something which no longer exists could have so many names. He has seen creeks â and lakes and rivers and tarns â only in books. Their father owned numerous such books, entire volumes devoted to a single river or lake long since dried up, or to great tracts of rainforest once teeming with wildlife, and lush vegetation now razed to the ground. Colm was always amazed when he looked at those pictures, amazed that
his own country, now almost completely arid and bare, could have so recently sustained such life, such beauty. There were volumes, too, of cities: great cities humming with industry and invention, with culture and technology; cities that held within them small towns devoted to reading and learning, whose monolithic structures were filled with tomes on every extraordinary subject, from every distant part of the world; cities where plays were performed in huge shell-shaped constructions, where brilliant musicians played sonatas and concertos on instruments centuries old; and cities where the lights were always on, where there was never any darkness, where people rarely needed sleep. But all was changed now, Colm's father had told him. The cities were empty and desolate, abandoned by their inhabitants in the quest for food. These great metropolitan centres were the domain now of the earth, which had sent up the brown vines that now shackled every building. It was hard to believe, Rafe Bell had said, that such dereliction and bleakness could once have been the home to wonder and invention.
A single, distant gunshot cracks through the air, followed by another and another. Colm and Lydia turn and scrabble back across the creek bed, press their bodies against the vertical earth of the bank and peer over the plain towards Nurrengar. It is clear at once that the shots have come from there. As they watch, structure after structure is set alight, the dry wooden huts overwhelmed at once by flames. In no time, the
entire town is a low orange blaze, brilliant and seething against the blackness of sky.