Authors: Steven Herrick
Truth and beauty
I walked into the
Railway Hotel
and put $20 on the bar.
I said to the waitress,
âKeep the beer coming
until there's nothing left.'
She took the money
and replaced it with
a big cold glass
with the froth
trickling over the lip
and I thought
how beautiful is a drink
that hasn't been touched,
the deep radiant colour
burning gold,
the bubbles dancing
ballet-perfect to the rim,
the sweet-bitter smell
of malt and barley.
I lifted the glass
and downed it
in one ignorant gulp
and I called for another
as all thoughts of
truth and beauty
washed from my mind.
Old Bill's fall
In 1993
my ten-year-old daughter Jessie
fell out of a tree
and landed bad
in a coma
in the District Hospital
and for twelve days
my wife and I
sat beside her.
I held her hand
and told stories
about our holidays together
and what she'd say to us
at dinnertime or
early in the morning
when she'd climb into bed
with my wife and I.
I talked to her
so she'd remember
and wake up
and we'd go back home
as if nothing had happened.
The doctor came
with the form for us to sign
and I couldn't,
not for another four days.
I sat by Jessie
and waited.
My wife signed
and handed me the paper
and I held Jessie's hand
and signed with the other.
They switched off the machine
and Jessie lay there
for hours
still not moving,
then she died.
I went home and
took to the tree with an axe.
I was there for hours
mad with rage and pain
and God knows
that tree fell â¦
But look at me.
Kids fall out of trees
all the time.
They sprain their ankle,
or get the wind knocked out of them,
but my Jessie,
my sweet lovely Jessie,
fell
and I fell with her
and I've been falling
ever since.
And this pub,
this beer, these clothes,
this is where I landed.
The house
My wife died one year
to the day after Jessie.
She died of signing the form.
She died of making me sign
more than she died
of driving drunk
and a roadside gum tree.
After the funeral
I moved to the carriage.
I closed the door
to our house,
left everything as it was
and walked away.
The house remains
and I sometimes think
I should sell it,
or rent it,
but the thought of a family
within those walls,
people I don't know
within those walls â¦
I go there sometimes
to sit in the backyard
and remember.
I mow the grass,
then I walk back
to the Hilton
and get so drunk
I sleep for days.
I sleep, and
I don't dream.
Comfort
Back at Wentworth High
I never talked to girls,
I hardly talked to anyone.
Sure, I answered questions from teachers
and occasionally I'd talk
to some guys I'd known for years.
But I didn't have any friends,
I didn't want any.
I had books and Westfield Creek
and I had days spent
in my bedroom reading
and avoiding my father
attached to his lounge,
his television
and his smelly unkept house.
So living in this carriage
is special, it's mine
and I keep it clean
and I read to give myself
an education that Wentworth High
never could
and I think of Caitlin
and how we fell asleep
on the picnic
so comfortable
and I don't know
what she sees in me.
I hope it's
someone to talk to
someone to look in the eye
knowing they'll look back.
Old Bill and the ghosts
Old Bill and me are friends.
Sometimes he comes into
my carriage and we share a beer.
He asks me questions
about my day
about the books I read,
he never asks me about family.
He gives me advice
on how to live cheap,
and how to jump trains
late at night,
and how to find out
which trains are going where,
and which trains have friendly guards.
He encourages me to travel,
to leave here
and ride the freights.
He makes it seem so special,
so romantic,
and I ask him
why he doesn't do it,
you know,
if it's so special,
and he tells me
about his Jessie
and his wife
and the house he visits
when too much drink
has made him forget
and how he's afraid to forget
because without his ghosts
he's afraid he'll have nothing to live for.
And at that moment I know
I am listening to
the saddest man in the world.
Lucky
No more taxi rides home
after McDonald's.
Billy walks with me.
Billy and the half-moon
and perfect stars.
We walk the long way
down Murdoch Avenue
and across the City Ovals.
The dogs bark
and each house glows
with a television light.
I tell Billy about school
and Petra, Kate,
and the drudge of exams.
Billy has become the diary entry
of my days. He holds the secrets
of every long session of Maths
and the crushing boredom
of Science on Thursday afternoon,
and as I tell him all this
I don't feel rich or poor,
or a schoolgirl, or a McDonald's worker,
or anything but lucky,
simply lucky.
Dinner
Dinner in our house
is always the same.
Mum's perfect cooking
and Dad's favourite wine.
He and Mum drink,
talk about work,
ask me questions about school
which I answer quickly
so as to change the subject.
Once a week
Dad brings up the topic of university
and a career for me.
His favourites are Law
and Medicine,
Mum's are Teaching and Business.
I tell them mine are Motherhood
or joining the Catholic Church
and becoming a Nun.
This usually shuts them up.
We eat in silence
and I think of Billy
in the carriage
waiting
for my shift to start at McDonald's.
I forget all about
careers and education
and the dreary school world.