Read Huia Short Stories 10 Online
Authors: Tihema Baker
A Good Friday
Kelly Joseph
The last rays of the sun wink in the cracked window of a small cabin. The cabin's corrugated iron roof is pitted with rust, and kawakawa and pikopiko grow to the very edge of its lop-sided porch. Nearby, a stream teems with fat eels and watercress. Three small shadowy figures suddenly burst from the cabin's door, sending birds scattering from their roosts to fly upward into the darkening sky. The three shadows begin to run down a gravel road that unfurls towards the horizon. This is Rangitoto district â dominion of the Hohepa boys.
âÄpi! WÄ«! Wait for meee!' says PÄpu, a small boy with a dirt-smudged face. He scampers after his two older brothers as they race down the middle of the road. The sound of their quick breathing fills the air. Their dust-coated bare feet are tough and resilient to the gravel underfoot. Running down the steep hill to Te Kuiti, they skid on the stones, but they don't slow.
All three boys have unkempt mops of hair. It has been a long time since their last haircuts; since before their mum left. The eldest boys are both wiry, but Äpi, the oldest, is taller and more solid than WÄ«. He runs slightly ahead, and WÄ« strains to keep up. Mist begins to rise from the cooling paddocks and envelop the surrounding bush-covered hills. The boys' clothes â long-sleeved denim shirts with worn elbows, and shorts with rips that reveal the brown skin of their bums â barely keep out the chill. They rush onwards.
âWaaait for me, bros!' cries PÄpu.
Äpi slows down and then finally stops. He waits beside the road silently. WÄ« runs on. PÄpu is on the verge of crying.
âCome on PÄpu, you're too slow, man. We're gonna miss the 8 o'clock showing,' says Äpi.
PÄpu rubs his feet and snivels. âMy feet are cold and sore,' he says.
WÄ« runs back to his brothers. He sighs loudly when he sees PÄpu's face.
âE, come on, baby! Be tough ⦠like the Lone Ranger,' says WÄ«. He waves a pretend cowboy hat and rides an imaginary steed around PÄpu. PÄpu's lips quiver.
âE, don't be a pissy-pants crybaby,' says WÄ«.
Äpi shakes his head at WÄ« and says, âRemember the cowboy code bro, Number four.'
WÄ« scratches his bum as he thinks, then shrugs. âCan't remember that one.'
âCowboys must be gentle with children,' says Äpi.
Äpi lifts PÄpu onto his back and opens up a gate into a nearby paddock. He lowers PÄpu's feet into a steaming cow patty. PÄpu smiles and wiggles his toes. He closes his eyes, dreaming.
âI wish we had a horse like those cowboys,' says PÄpu. He opens his eyes suddenly and rubs his tummy. âMy guts hurt.'
âThat fulla's always hungry. Must have bloody worms,' says WÄ«.
Äpi frowns at WÄ«. âWe'll get something later, eh. Let's get going,' he says. The three boys run onwards down the road.
Halfway down the hill they pass Mr Bennett, a leathery PÄkehÄ farmer, fixing a fence in the failing light. He smiles at the boys as they run by. Äpi stops and leans on a post.
âCome by tomorrow, Äpi. I need help with the drenching,' says Mr Bennett. The farmer is good to Äpi, giving him jobs. Äpi often helps drench the sheep or do other work around the shearing shed. Now and then the farmer's wife has Äpi do a spot of gardening or cleaning or odd jobs around their house.
âWill do, Mr Bennett.' Äpi waves, runs to catch up with the other two boys. WÄ« is shaking his head as Äpi approaches.
âWhat?' says Äpi.
âNothing. Just reckon you shouldn't be that cocky's bloody slave. And what about school?' says WÄ«.
Äpi stops in his tracks and glares at WÄ«. He looks like he might punch his sibling, but instead he puts PÄpu on his back and begins to run again, this time faster. He leaves WÄ« in his dust.
âE, wait up, bros!' calls WÄ«.
As night falls the boys run into Te Kuiti â a flourishing town on the main trunk line. But tonight it is eerily quiet, except for the sound of their feet on the footpath and their breathing. They rush through the streets, not noticing that shops are closed and there are no cars parked on the street. Äpi sets PÄpu down.
âHurry, you fullas. It's probably started already.'
They quickly approach a grand building. It is decorated in posters and flanked by a ticket booth edged with gold paint. A large sign above reads âState Theatre'. It is unlit. The boys finally notice something is amiss.
âHey, where's all the people?' says WÄ«.
Äpi looks around, confused. He walks up to the double doors and tries to open them, but they are locked. He peers inside. It is dark.
âWhat's this say, bro?' says WÄ«, pointing to a sign on one of the doors. Äpi clears his throat.
âIt says “No showing today due to Good Friday”.' Äpi shakes his head, disappointed. PÄpu's lips quiver.
WÄ« spits a gob on the footpath. âE, No pictures! Good Bloody Friday!'
All three boys press their noses up against the glass door of the theatre and look in longingly.
âE, bloody no pictures alright man,' says WÄ«.
Posters hang in the side windows of the theatre. One shows Roy Rogers and Trigger. WÄ« ogles one featuring the Lone Ranger and Tonto. Äpi goes up to another poster and looks at it with awe. It shows his favourite, the singing cowboy Gene Autry, riding his white-maned horse, Champion. Äpi smiles up at his hero.
He is pulled from his reverie by a tugging at his pants. It is PÄpu, rubbing his tummy sadly.
He says, âMy guts hurt, bro, and this is boring as.'
Behind them WÄ« is riding his pretend steed again up and down the empty footpath, with an oily handkerchief wrapped around his neck.
âHi ho, Silver. Wahoo, man!'
Äpi leans down to PÄpu and whispers in his ear.
âLet's be cowboys on the lookout for Indians. Maybe they left some kai behind, eh?'
PÄpu nods. Äpi finds his own dirty handkerchief in his pocket and ties it around PÄpu's neck.
âWÄ« is the Lone Ranger, you're Roy and I'm Gene,' says Äpi.
Äpi begins to swagger up and down the street a few times, trying to act tough. Hands on the hips, at the ready to pull out his pretend gun. PÄpu giggles. WÄ« sees him and joins in. He puts his hands on his hips too. Äpi dives behind a rubbish bin and begins to shoot at invisible Indians in the night. He looks inside the rubbish bin and sees a half-eaten hotdog. He leans over to PÄpu.
âLook â the Indians were so scared they ran off and left their kai behind!' says Äpi. PÄpu's face lights up and he digs into the rubbish. âLook! Injuns are coming,' says WÄ«.
Across the road, a group leaves a church service. A woman wearing a silver fox fur around her shoulders crosses the road, pulling along an anaemic looking boy about WÄ«'s age. She notices PÄpu with his hand in the rubbish, and recoils when he draws out the hotdog and begins to eat it with gusto. She wags a gloved finger at him. âThat's filthy!' she says.
PÄpu continues to eat, finishes the hotdog and smiles up at her, meat caught in his teeth. The woman looks around. She spots Äpi standing sheepishly on the footpath.
âWhere are your parents? Get home, the lot of you!' she says.
WÄ« appears from behind her, riding his steed. He whips out the pretend pistol and points it at her. âE, piss off, you bloody old bitch,' he says. He bends over and gives her a brown eye.
The woman's son stifles a laugh. The woman pulls him away from the heathens, up the street. WÄ« giggles and swaggers some more; shoots his pistol at her back.
âPishaw! Pishaw!' says WÄ«.
Äpi smacks the back of his head, and WÄ« jerks with surprise.
âE, what'd you do that for?' says WÄ«, rubbing his head, his pride injured. His lips begin to quiver.
âThe code, man. Number nine. A cowboy must respect women,' says Äpi.
âE, you're all talk. What about Number one, bro?' WÄ« rubs his head again. âNever hit a smaller man?' He wipes his watery eyes. He puts his pistol back into its hip holster and storms off into the night. Äpi watches him, remorse flitting across his face.
âHey, wait up! Bro! WÄ«!' calls Äpi. WÄ« disappears around a corner. Äpi grabs PÄpu's hand and they race after their brother.
They find WÄ« sulking on a wooden seat on the platform of the train station. PÄpu sits down beside him and sidles up close. Äpi stands nearby, awkward, with his hands in his pockets. WÄ« is looking off into the distance, where the tracks meet the horizon.
PÄpu looks that way too, trying to see what WÄ« sees. He puts his hand around his brother's shoulder. WÄ« begins to talk to no one in particular.
âI reckon I might hop on the next train that comes by.'
âYeah, me too,' says PÄpu.
âHow you gonna pay for a ticket?' asks Äpi.
âJust sneak in, like we do at the pictures,' says WÄ«.
PÄpu nods wisely. âYeah, just like the pictures, eh,' he says.
âNo you won't. We can't. What about Dad; who'll look after him?' says Äpi.
âShut up,' says WÄ«.
âDon't tell me â' says Äpi.
âShh!' says WÄ«. The boys are quiet. âYou fullas hear that?'
The boys listen. In the distance, a whistle. WÄ«'s serious face cracks into a smile. âIt's a bloody train!'
A cloud of steam appears on the horizon. A train chugs slowly into view. The boys laugh and jump as it pulls into the station. Hissing steam fills the air. They peer into a nearby carriage.
âFarrrr! Check it out!' says WÄ«.
It is cosy and bright inside, and there is a family eating at a table. They have a steaming thermos, thick sandwiches and biscuits with butter. PÄpu licks his lips.
Äpi notices a tall man hop off the train and briskly walk past them. He is greeted by his family at the end of the platform â the woman with the fox fur stole and her son.
The train sounds its whistle and begins to pull away. PÄpu's face is still glued to the window. His eyes drink in the sight of the family inside with their delicious spread. He begins to run beside the train.
âHey, wait! Wait ⦠for me,' he says.
His calls are drowned out by the train's loud whistle. As he nears the end of the platform PÄpu trips, landing near the woman and her family. They look down at PÄpu, who is holding his knee and bawling. The son begins to go to PÄpu's aid, but his mother holds him back. The woman yells something in the tall man's ear, above the din of the train, and the man shakes his head. They turn and walk off, pulling their son along. The woman's son watches PÄpu sadly as he walks away.
WÄ« runs over to help his little brother. The whistle sounds once more as the train begins to roar into the night. The boys are surrounded by a cloud of steam and soot.
For a moment Äpi imagines he can see a white horse that looks like Champion, snorting and pawing at the ground in the steam. Äpi's face is suddenly harder and older. WÄ« has PÄpu on his feet, but the smaller boy is still crying and his knee is bleeding.
âGive us a hand, bro,' says WÄ«.
Äpi walks over and uses his old handkerchief to wipe the blood away. âThose bloody rotten bastards!' he says.
WÄ« nods. âYeah, mongrels. Didn't even stop â¦' He looks at Äpi, surprised. âHey, you swore! E, what about Number eight of the cowboy â¦'
âStuff the code,' says Äpi.
A look passes between Äpi and WÄ«. PÄpu sniffles. âI'm hungry, bros,' he says.
Äpi ties the handkerchief to PÄpu's knee. He stands, his manner suddenly businesslike.
âCome on, you fullas. I know where we can get some good kai.'
He runs off into the night. WÄ« pauses, then he lifts PÄpu onto his back. He follows after his brother.
Äpi leads the way back up the road they ran down, and stops at a big white villa set on top of a hill. It has panoramic views of Te Kuiti â the street lights below twinkle in the crisp night air. The boys pass the mailbox with the names of Mr and Mrs Bennett printed on it.
They stop at the shearing shed first. It smells musky from all the sweat and lanolin that have soaked into the wooden floors over the years. There are a few items hanging on pegs â a pair of woollen trousers, a singlet and a pair of long johns.
The boys stuff them into a hessian sack they find in the corner. Then they head for the house.
The villa has a large verandah, and warm light shines through the stained glass on the front door. The boys creep around to the back of the house. They sneak past the square of light leaking from a window where the curtains are not drawn. Mr Bennett is with his wife, a pink fleshy woman, eating a mutton roast in their dining room. PÄpu looks in longingly at the roast before being prodded by WÄ« to move. Äpi leads the way to a shed on the side of the house. He carefully opens the creaky door and slips inside. The other two boys follow.
Inside the farmer's store shed there is just enough light from the window to see what they are doing. Äpi moves towards a stack of boxes made of light wood lined up against the back wall. He opens a box carefully. Inside are beautiful, plump peaches. He opens another and inside are pears, each individually wrapped in white tissue. Äpi grabs the box of peaches and lays the hessian sack with the clothes on top. He indicates to WÄ« with his head to pick up the pears. WÄ« hefts it up. PÄpu fills his two shorts pockets with a peach and a pear. He goes to grab one more, but knocks over a crate. Fruit falls noisily to the ground. There is the scraping of a chair and the sound of footsteps approaching.
Mr Bennett appears suddenly at the shed doorway. Äpi lowers his crate and begins to throw fruit at the farmer. WÄ« joins in.
âWhat the hell?' says Mr Bennett. He retreats back inside the house. âRun, bros!' yells Äpi.
WÄ« scampers around the side of the house, followed by PÄpu and then Äpi. Mr Bennett comes to the front door. He has a rifle. He sees the kids running off, and swears after them. He shoots his rifle into the sky. Äpi stops and turns around. Mr Bennett peers into the darkness. As he recognises the boy, his face flits from anger to disappointment.