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From: the Burnside Writers’ Group team.

Jean Stewart: Double Trouble

He watched the group of tearaways move stealthily along the supermarket aisles. The retired policeman in him was sorely tempted to act. It was not hard for an experienced eye to spot their pilfering. Perhaps a creative outlet was needed for these kids. Surely some community program would be out there? Maybe he should become a veteran mentor in a military camp for troubled young people. Start a branch in his area. He was lost in thought as he walked home – his third trip of the day to the local shops.

* * *

She’d assessed him as she waited in the queue. Top of the range Nike runners.  Presentable polo shirt and jeans. Why would he buy one orange, one banana, an onion and a pack of peas? Was he broke and trying hard not to show it? He’d drawn some cash at the checkout, but she could not see how much. She continued to watch until he exited. She caught up to him further along the street as she wheeled her frayed and faded shopping cart.

‘Excuse me sir, I noticed the items you bought. I have a full bag of oranges, onions and bananas; my cart is heavy… I can easily offload half to you.’

He turned to the elderly woman, whose startling black hair was pulled tightly into a bun. She appeared fatigued, leaning slightly forward.

‘That’s a kind thought. I appreciate it!’

She noticed his smile of perfect, white teeth. Costly dental work?

‘Fact is, I deliberately walk to Woolies at least three times a day to keep vaguely fit. I buy the minimum. Three walks a day helps with the 10,000 steps tally,’ he grinned. ‘Do you always walk? That cart looks too full and heavy.’

‘Yes, I do; it’s exhausting. I try to buy a week’s supply in one hit.’

He’d stopped at a groomed garden. She was aware of compassion in his eyes.

 ‘I turn in here. Can I help you push that cart to wherever you go?’ he asked.

‘Oh, no thanks; I don’t have far; I’ll be fine.’

‘At least I can offer you a cup of tea? Water?’

She appeared hot and somewhat trembly.

He sensed her discomfort, and something more – agitation? Perhaps he was embarrassing her.

‘At least let me arrange your shopping so you don’t lose anything,’ he offered.

He leaned forward as she stood next to him, balancing the cart. He deftly rearranged the items until the cart’s cover closed easily.

‘I do appreciate your help… I really must move along now!’ she said.

He smiled as she walked on, moving at surprising speed.

She smiled too. Those notes he’d withdrawn at the supermarket had been a breeze to extract from his pocket as he’d performed his good Samaritan act.

She boarded the first bus that approached. What a relief to reach the back seat and remove her wig.

Donata Galluccio: Leaving Italy

I am so excited! Papa’ is leaving for America this morning. My older sister, Cristina, and I race ahead to the fountain intersection where the bus will take him and two other men to Naples to board their ship. At the fountain we look back at them walking abreast, each carrying a small suitcase. I cannot stand still and keep hopping from foot to foot waiting for them.

The bus comes, they board, we wave enthusiastically, as the bus departs. Cristina is sniffling, upset that Dad has left and she doesn’t want to run home with me. I shrug and keep skipping. At home Mum is subdued attending to my younger sisters, Giovannina and 3-month-old Carmelina who is crying. I go out to play with my friends. At sundown, on the roadside, I scan the villagers coming back from the fields, looking for Dad.

Mum calls us home and I ask “Where is Dad?”

“He’s gone to America.”

“But it is night time and he comes home at night.”

“He will not be coming back. He has gone very far away in a ship.” Mum explains. What’s a ship? I don’t understand and crestfallen I go to bed.

In the morning, I go out and look for the furtherest place I can see – a town on top of a hill – it must be ‘America’. Dad must be there. I head to the plateau, and wave energetically shouting good morning to him. In the evening, I again go to wish papa’ goodnight. Cristina laughs at me, “He’s not there.”

I must have kept up the greetings most likely until I started school and learned what ‘America’ meant – anywhere overseas including Australia where he had actually gone. Even now when I am back in Molinara and the hilltop town, San Giorgio, comes into view I still secretly wish papa’ a good day.

Edie Eicas: Medea

I mull over the character of Medea. In the myth, Jason of the Argonauts goes to Colchis to retrieve the golden fleece once owned by Zeus a justification for stealing. Medea, the King of Colchis’ daughter, through her knowledge and magic, helps Jason. Her act betrays her father and her country and, as they flee to Greece, she kills her pursuing brother. Jason then uses Medea’s magic to gain power in his kingdom but doesn’t marry her. Later, when he sees an advantage, he marries the daughter of another Greek King.

Remember, this is a Greek story and every myth has a problem. Medea, the rejected woman who supported Jason, betrayed her family, moved to a new country, and produced two heirs, has in turn been betrayed. Think about Cinderella and what happened when her mother died and her father remarried. Medea understands her children have no value once the Queen produces heirs. What would you do to protect your children if you were in the same position? What we forget is to place the myth in context. When rivalry exists over who inherits a kingdom, murder is a common occurrence.

What can you do to protect your children if you can’t take them with you, or if they’re isolated in another part of the palace where you have limited access? Medea chooses options that have the greatest bearing on Jason. Medea, betrayed and filled with rage, enacts revenge, poisons the cloak she gives to her rival. Can anyone in the myth ever be innocent even the Queen? After killing her sons Medea flees. What options did Medea have to protect them? And at what point would you take their lives? When they were young or, capable of recognising their life had ended, as perhaps the two princes in the tower may have? Perhaps the choice she made was the most sympathetic to the situation.

In terms of betrayal, who or what did Medea betray? Her children, Jason, the kingdom that wasn’t hers and would never be as she was a foreigner? Or did she stay true to her values? Her commitment to Jason? And the protection of her children? Perhaps her act is a warning to those like Jason who betray, and the women who usurp another woman’s place, and to those who disrespect someone of another culture.

Is her condemnation through history because she was a sociopath, or because patriarchy expects women to nurture and sacrifice themselves while the men act with impunity? Zeus’ love child, Herakles, kills his wife and five children when the goddess Hera’s jealousy condemns him to madness. As a Greek and not a foreigner, when he wants to commit suicide his friend Theseus dissuades him. Herakles is redeemed through grief and reparation and, his 12 labours. Who supported Medea? We have little of her story for insight as the point of view is Greek but, we do learn of Jason’s ignominious end.

The myth becomes a warning and reveals the extent to which betrayal can devastate, but also remind us that out of context, any story can be misinterpreted.  

Robert Schmidt: Moon Landing – Truth or Myth

My father, Johannes Carl Schmidt—yes, that was his full name—was head patent attorney at Collison and Co in the 1960s and 1970s.

            With his scientific background it seemed only natural that he would become focussed on the television and saw all the moon landings between1969 and 1971. He was particularly riveted watching Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin being the first to walk on the moon. Dad even took me to see them parade along an Adelaide street in 1971.

            However, my Aunty Hilda was totally different. She was eleven years older than Dad, in her mid-seventies when Armstrong walked on the moon.

She would come from Glynde Lutheran Homes in her old FJ Holden to visit us. She and Dad would get into heated arguments when it came to the moon landing. She would say, ‘Hogwash, John. Man never walked on the moon. It’s a myth. God never intended him to.

            ‘You know, John, it was all filmed in the Nevada desert, using Hollywood crews. Also, John, how come when they unveiled the US flag it was swaying as if being blown in the wind? Isn’t there meant to be no atmosphere up there?’

            Dad, quite overwhelmed, would fire back, ‘Did you  think, Hilda, the Russians would let the Americans say they had landed on the moon first if they hadn’t? It was a battle to see who was first, Hilda.’

            My father regarded the moon landing as this world’s greatest achievement until his passing. My Auntie Hilda went to her grave in the 1980s thinking that somewhere in the Nevada desert there is a bunch of used US space junk.

Nell Holland: The Watchers

Everyone watches. But who really sees?

Two women animatedly talk about their charity shop purchases as they walk towards the café. Buoyed with the delight of the bargains contained in the bags swinging from their hands, they’re looking forward to sitting down. Their gossip and laughter last as long as the coffee and sugary cakes they’ve ordered, before they reluctantly return home. Untidy houses, indifferent husbands, and defiant children await them. Neither woman hurries. Their worlds are brightened by this weekly contact and as they leave each other, both wonder when her life became so aimless. When did dreams get forgotten and monotony take hold? Their weekly highlight ends too soon. It always does.

The big man strides briskly past the café window oblivious to others who swerve out of his way. He’s lost in thought about the wager he’s just placed on a ‘sure-thing’ winner in today’s eleven-o-clock horse race. No-one knows he’s been betting and losing badly since the big win he had at Christmas, and he’s scared to look at his bank account. Marcie doesn’t know. She believed him when he told her he’d stopped gambling. She thinks he’s going to take them both on a holiday to New Zealand and has already said she’ll leave him if he ever makes another bet. He badly needs a win. Today has to be the day his bet gets him out of the financial mess he’s in.  If it isn’t, he’s already stockpiled some of the sleeping tablets Marcie used when she was unable to sleep. He gives a quick shrug and straightens his shoulders as he walks on. No. It won’t come to that. Today is his last bet. Today he’ll have a winner.

The two girls have commandeered the café table for the last hour. Their skinny lattes are cold and only partially drunk. Stale, frothy smears mark the inside of their glass beakers and occasionally one girl raises a head from her mobile phone and attempts a sip. While they still have liquid before them, they’re declaring their right to remain. Becca is frantically texting Jayden who rarely replies. He’s ignored her since she got drunk at his birthday bash and ended up having sex with him in the lavatory. She’s desperate to believe he’s interested in her, but he only sends the occasional one word reply to her lengthy texts. It makes her feel cheap when she just wants to believe that Jayden likes her. She tells Joni everything. She doesn’t know what she’d do without Joni. Joni’s her friend.

Joni is following the latest chatter about the ‘Markles’ and enjoying the thrill of scandal. It’ll amuse her boyfriend if she can relate something racy that he hasn’t yet heard. Perhaps she’ll tell him tonight when she lets him see her in her new Veronica’s Secret underwear. That’ll really get him turned on. She takes a sly look at Becca who’s told her all about the ‘sex-in-the-loo’. Joni thinks Becca is a silly cow who’s probably still trying to get Jayden to talk to her.  Jayden’s told Joni that Becca is a boring tart. Joni knows Jayden doesn’t like Becca because he really loves Joni. Jayden’s her boyfriend.

The middle-aged couple sit silently at the next table staring blankly ahead. They can’t remember why they chose to sit here after leaving the consultant’s office and can’t remember everything he said. Did they really order those coffees that are sitting on the table before them? Does this crowded place give them some life affirming reassurance in the activity and babble surrounding them? Both need comfort and neither can give it to the other. They are frozen into immobility. Minds are in turmoil, hearts racing, stomachs churning while dread stills their limbs. Yesterday was normal and real. Today they are living through a nightmare they never saw coming when they awoke this morning. How many tomorrows will they have? How did this happen? How do they rearrange their plans? How do they tell others? He reaches for her hand and tries to smile. He forces himself to speak, “We’ll be right, love”. She can’t smile back and knows if she tries to speak, she’ll start to cry.  They both know nothing is ever going to be right for them again.

We all live as islands surrounded by people, but completely alone. We watch others. But few truly see.

David Hope: Working for Brian

I went to Perth a couple of weeks ago to help my brother-in-law, Brian, start to empty his large shed of computing and industrial equipment as he is not well or fit enough to do it.
Over a 10-day period we (largely me) filled 11 Naly bins, four 240 litre waste bins, sundry boxes and plastic bags to take the material to Ross Auctions, about 20 kilometres away.

The first trip to Ross’s (all computer stuff) was a challenge for me. Apart from never having driven the truck before, Brian had loaded the Naly bins right on the edge of the driver’s side of the tray, the truck was listing to starboard, and I, slightly terrified had to fight the steering all the way along a major highway busy with traffic.


After that experience I made sure that the Naly bins for the next load (more computer stuff) were centred in the tray. The trip to Ross’s was largely uneventful, except Ross’s advised that they could not take any more computer stuff for a while.


I filled four more Naly bins with industrial products, then a large metal box with welding rods. The metal box was extremely heavy. Loading it on the rear of the truck, beyond the rear wheels, made the rear end sag. Driving the truck became more terrifying. I silently cursed Brian as the front wheels were struggling to maintain contact with the road. I was looking forward to emptying the truck for the drive back. It was not to be as Brian had not organised that we could deliver the material. We headed home still fully laden. Brian diverted me towards another auction house, phoning them to be told they no longer dealt with the items. Brian continued on his phone, failing to give directions when needed. As a driver who likes to be well-positioned on the road, to be in the right lane for turning, I silently cursed Brian some more for his lack of organisation and situational awareness.


It was a scary trip home.

Don Sinnott: An Audience with Elysus

Jason stepped with infinite care. He had waited at the threshold of the tomb, hoping his eyes would adapt to the darkness. But in vain: he could make out nothing. Only the sensation from the tentative sliding of his bare feet revealed anything about his surroundings. Sand, no obstacles; his outstretched hands encountered only air.

This was where Elysus dwelled. His tribe forbad entry to this portal of the god. Those who entered never returned, the sages taught. Yet here he was, entering this forbidden space, driven by an imperative to know. Elysus, surely, could help him. Or kill him. It was a risk he must take. His hesitant progress continued unhindered.

Suddenly a flash blinded him. He fell to the ground, stunned. A harsh drumming sound burst around him, almost deafening him, and he could just make out a voice: commanding, insistent, in the cacophony that now filled the cave. ‘Mortals may not enter this place. Why do you break the taboo?’

Jason attempted to speak, but his throat seemed closed, and how would he be heard, even if he could utter a sound?

The voice came again, louder now, ‘Speak mortal, speak! I am Elysus, why do you presume to enter my domain? Do you count your life for nothing?’

Recovering his voice and struggling to a supplicant position, sand clinging to his clothes, he answered. ‘Great Elysus, I have no right to be here, that I know. But I must have your counsel. Only you can see and command the future. The future of my tribe, which worships you, seems bleak. I have been chosen to speak with you and seek…’ His voice trailed off as the din ceased as abruptly as it had begun, replaced by a profound silence, into which the god spoke again.

‘You are Jason, and I know of your election to speak for your tribe. You have done wrong to enter here. Yet speak more, and I may listen.’

Jason lifted his eyes and looked around. The stunning flash had been momentary, and all was blackness again. In quavering tones he spoke into the space. ‘Great Elysus, we are challenged by the Wilubrie tribe, who say we must give them the grain we have just harvested or they will do battle with us. They are much greater than we are and any battle would surely end in our defeat. They would kill us to the last man, woman and child. What should we do?’

Silence. Then the drumming returned, quieter now. Jason’s heartbeats added their own insistent drumming in his head. Slowly the drumming in the cave ebbed into silence. A silence that was more unsettling than the drumming. Finally, Elysus spoke. ‘You need have no fear of the Wilubries. I will send a pestilence. They will not fight you. Now go, and never presume to enter here again. Speak no more. Go.’ Jason stood, turned, and found his way lit by a faint glimmer on the sand. He hastened to the opening of the tomb and was gone

Jean Stewart: Tackies

People have been using footwear for over 30,000 years. Prior to this, humans walked and ran barefoot. Fashionable footwear that altered the foot’s shape developed over ten centuries ago. In China around that time for example, foot binding was common among women of status, stunting and deforming their feet. In medieval Europe, extremely narrow pointed shoes made of leather became a status symbol.  The trendy cushioned, arch supporting running shoe took off in the 1970s. Today’s breathtakingly high heels among fashionable women, to me, are quite terrifying.

 TACKIE:  A South African colloquial word for a lace-up sand shoe with a rubber sole.

Tackie is also used as a slang word in South Africa for TYRE.

Many South Africans have a pair of tackies for casual wear. Many Australians have thongs. In our global village South Africans also wear flip flops; Australians wear casual sand shoes.

I have tried to find the origins of the word ‘tackie’ in South Africa. Tacky because of the sticky rubber sole? There could well have been Dutch influence (Afrikaans ‘tekkie’ – original meaning unknown). Perhaps during  British colonial settlement they had been called tennis shoes. Before I was born in 1950 my parents had been wearing tackies as casual shoes for years, so their place in our culture is long and strong.

As a child I would wonder at seeing shredded tackies regularly on the side of our roads. The poorer black community would wear them out until they fell apart. Our cheerful gardener Samuel went so far as to make his own footwear from cut-up tyres. He was skilled, with the resulting style resembling today’s Birkenstock sandals.

‘Can you make me a pair of tackies from tyres Samuel?’ I once asked him. For some reason I could not understand, he found my question hilarious.

‘Why are you laughing?’ I asked.

‘Little Madam, your father and mother would not like that.’

I questioned my mother. She took time to respond.

‘You know, your Christmas present will be a new pair of tackies; how about we buy a pair for Samuel as his end-of-year gift?’

I was delighted with the idea. I had imagined my new tackies would be red and blue. Perhaps Samuel’s might be the same?

Both our pairs of new tackies turned out to be bright white. My mother had chosen our sizes well. Samuel and I would spend time in the garden – he pruned, clipped and planted, while I packed weeds and branch clippings into the wheelbarrow. We became known as the Big and Little Tackies. At day’s end our shiny tackies would be splotched with wet dirt. I’d always pull mine off before going inside, later to find Samuel had hosed down both our pairs, clean and ready for a new day.                                               

Our feet serve us for a long time; we give them a pounding. Now living with  misshapen toes, I wish I’d taken greater care of mine; I’d have ditched the platforms and stilettos of my early adulthood, and worn tackies for every occasion.

My partner’s six-month-old grandson has recently discovered his feet. They fascinate him. I look forward to buying him his first pair of tackies; his parents can choose his thongs.

Edie Eicas: Lithuania Teutonic Knights

She knew they were coming. It was gossip from Vilnius. Some listened while others ignored. Her village prayed, hoping Deivas protected them.

Fear swept through Kaunas as news of the Teutonic Knights’ massacres reached them. Stories of carnage arrived with fleeing villagers, and many began to worry. These murderers were stomping through Lithuania from Prussia and taking what they wanted. In the name of their god they practised slaughter, knew how to wield a sword, killing those who would not convert. Violence was unleashed, all this destruction with the Pope’s blessing and money. How could their god be called loving?

The Teutonic Knights earlier defeat in Jerusalem had brought shame and their need to destroy others. Tarnished with the label pagan, they were sport. It was blood lust and greed. The Baltic filled with herring and their lands fertile with wood, a prize for any conqueror, meant it would never be a matter of religion.

The beat of the horses’ hooves on the dry clay road was an ominous warning. ‘Run,’ she said hoping all she foraged would not be lost from her basket. They needed to hide; could not go back to the farm the forest the safest place. The sound growing, she grabbed her little brother throwing him behind the raspberry bushes. Her heart pounding, she prayed her family would be safe and escape the marauders. She knew what lay ahead. The riches of Vilnius the prize the knights sought.

The knights high on their horses looked formidable, their white cloaks and red crosses only promised death not redemption. They would kill all who stood in front of them, strip everything of value, leave no food for those left behind. All that work to prepare for winter for nothing, just to fill the mouths of murderers.

The long line of bloodthirsty knights and their retinue filled her with horror. She’d heard the stories. Kill the men and the old; leave only the women and children to bear the brunt: rape and slavery. The skirmishes around the border by the knights had left empty farms, lands desolate, the reward for those who followed. Hate grew, she wanted these foreigners dead, there must be a way to stop this invasion. We are just farmers, it is they who carry the sword.

Her people were no competition, their horses were old, their knives only for the slaughter of animals and they had no swords. They lived in peace but now a poison was sweeping through. She hoped protection from Vilnius would come, stop these thieves, arrive before the land was left barren and her village destroyed.

The pine forest was her domain. Perhaps they could protect themselves here. They were no match for the knights but they could ambush the Prussian settlers who followed, lead them into the marshes. She could feel a change inside of her as her fingers tightened around the hilt of her knife. She watched and waited for nightfall, prayed Dalia offered a fate better than death.

Don Sinnott: The Best of Times: The Worst of Times

Is it the good times or the bad times that stay with us? Is the mental glue stronger for joy or for sorrow? For me, Grade 4 is doubly anchored by that glue.

My teacher that year was a disciplinarian with an emphasis on rote learning. Memory has never been my strong point; I developed logical work-arounds.  

            Spelling yielded to my logic. Given a set of 10 words to learn overnight I would almost always get 10/10 in the morning spelling bee. Until the teacher changed tactics, announcing one morning, ‘Write out the words you learned last night.’ I was instantly undone; my method was to focus on the tricky words and forget about the ones that followed the rules. I scored 4/10 that morning.

Failure in the spelling bee meant staying in during recess to write out all the words 10 times. Grumpy about this, I conveyed to the teacher my feelings about the shortcomings of his method of teaching spelling and the superiority of my selective approach. This tutorial was a bad idea. Thereafter I was a marked boy, a smarty-pants troublemaker. One day I set a pre-recess class record of 12 ‘cuts’—full-blooded strokes of the leather belt to the palm of my hand—for offences I stoutly maintained I had not committed. Life in Grade 4 became hell; I hated school.

My escape from the tyrant’s class came unexpectedly. Additional teaching staff and a transportable classroom allowed a composite Grade 4/5 class to be established. Students were drawn from existing overcrowded classes and assigned to a creative and charismatic teacher. How was the student selection process made? It wasn’t on academic merit as there was a fair spread of abilities in the transferees. Maybe it was just luck I was chosen, but it changed the course of my life. My love of learning was reignited.

David Hope: Nightmare

Eyes. Blink open. Mistake! Sun. Blindingly bright! Unbearable. Tight shut eyes.

Great pain. Whole body pain.

Last memory. Walking. Mountain track. Falling. Tumbling over rocks. Big rocks. Water. Rocks. River. Pain. Cold. Glacier cold.

Move body. Bad idea. Sit up. Black out!

Wake up. More pain. More cold.

Must move. Agony to move. No black out. Broken leg. Broken arm. Crawl from water. Shiver. Vomit.

Find wood. Flood detritus? Heap sticks.

Pack? Yes, damaged. Matches? Yes! Dry grass. A little. Light grass. Poke into sticks. Blow flames. Feed fire. Bigger sticks. More sticks. Keep feeding fire.

Fire warming. Fire drying. More sticks.

For leg. Pack. Bandages? Yes. Work on leg. Pain again. Bind sticks. Leg immobilised. Still pain. Subsiding.

OK, arm. Smaller sticks. Straighten arm. Pain. Vision clouds. Deep breath. One more. Bind arm. Pain. Too much. Black out!

Awake. Pain, bearable. Fire dying. More sticks. Blow coals. Fire rekindling. Stay warm.

Food in pack. Warm food. Boil water. Make tea. Feels good. Think. What now?

Road. Near river. Hobble? Slowly – yes. Crutch? Need stick. Right stick. Found one! Pack on. Pain. Let’s go.

Hobble. Hobble more. Rest. Repeat. Keep repeating. Rest more, hobble less. Moving. Inch by inch. Moving. Falling. Black out.

Wake to pain. Come on! Keep moving. Hobble. Hobble more. Rest more. Keep going. Slowly. More slowly. Moving. Moving. Road in sight.

Reach road. Wait for traffic. Wait. What’s this? 4×4 truck. Wave. Slowing, slowing. Stops.

“What happened?”

“Fall!”

“Hop in!” Laughs.

More memory. Driver’s face. Familiar. Where from? Rack brain. Where from? Slide into sleep. Jolt awake! Driver’s face. Mountain track. Pushing me. Falling! Oh, shit

Jean Stewart: Doing What Comes Naturally

Doing What Comes Naturally

I turned into Gulf Parade, driving well below the stipulated 50kmh.  I was used to keeping the speed down, as Saturdays were always frenetic around the oval and community barbeque area.

A still, sunny day. Dogs on leads, wet and panting from their beach romp. Children sprinting across the oval, returning to canopied tables intermittently for picnic snacks. Walkways and bike tracks sprinkled with exercisers and cyclists.

Seemingly out of nowhere, the sleek kelpie shot out in front of my car. I braked hard, but saw, heard, and felt the thump. The shocked dog sped back in the direction it had come from, but instead of returning to its owner, it disappeared into the dense foliage leading to the cliffs above the beach.

I pulled up to the side of the road, my car in park, leaving the engine running as I tore to where the stunned owner stood at his open car door.

‘I am so sorry! I did not see him!’ My heart pounded with concern and visions of the dog being fully caught under my wheel if I’d been travelling a little faster. I looked up at the burly and bearded owner, who had introduced himself as Dave. He had another dog safely on the car’s back seat, doors now closed.

‘It’s my fault,’ he said calmly. ‘I took him off the lead before he was in the car; he’d spotted another dog across the road.’

‘What’s his name? I’m not leaving until he comes back!’

‘Tango,’ said Dave. We shouted the dog’s name repeatedly. I had visions of the kelpie bleeding and passing out.

After what seemed an eternity Tango emerged, still at speed, romping up to us and letting Dave and me carefully examine his panting body and legs. No yelping, happy to be stroked and patted, allowing me to scratch his tummy.  Such trusting eyes. Forgiving too?

I suggested a vet checkup. Dave said he’d think about it. He was so easy on me, but clearly delighted to see his rescue kelpie.

At my request, I received a text with photo from Dave later that day. ‘All good. Like bouncing off a cow or sheep. Tango sends you a consoling lick and looks forward to meeting you on the beach.’ Relief enveloped me.

I’ll never forget that thump.

Anne McKenzie: Kangaroo Island

We’d planned a 3 day ‘plonk’ holiday on Kangaroo Island. You know, the kind of holiday where you book into some pleasant accommodation with great views and spend most of your time reading and gazing at the natural beauty of the spot.

After a tranquil ferry trip to Penneshaw and a 45-minute drive to Kingscote, we checked in to the newly renovated Sea View Motel situated on the foreshore. The accommodation had all we wanted. We unpacked our cases and the breakfast and snacks food provisions we had brought with us, including the essentials of red wine and cheese, and set about ‘plonking’.

As the afternoon drifted towards evening, we headed out to walk to the nearby Ozone Hotel for dinner. The motel’s restaurant, ‘The Odd Spot’ was closed that night.

As we left our room, a clearly panicked young man, came running up to us shouting, ‘Get out. Get everyone out. The kitchen’s on fire. Can you call the fire brigade?’ He began struggling to release a fire extinguisher from the cabinet on the wall near us.

It was then we noticed the thick black smoke billowing from the chimney of the main building. We did as he asked, calling the fire brigade, knocking on the doors of other rooms to alert other guests to the danger, and then quickly grabbing most of our possessions from our room and decamping to the car park. We were all quite calm as clearly we were in no immediate danger – our rooms were in a separate building

As night fell and the darkness enveloped us, we stood with the other guests and watched events as they unfolded. We had nowhere else to go. By the time the fire trucks arrived, and the firemen were on the ground, the roof of the motel was in flames and the black smoke filled the air.

It took several hours but the building was saved, and the fire ultimately did not reach our rooms. But there was to be no going back into these rooms. They reeked of the black smoke and the power was out anyway.

Finally, we walked to the Ozone Hotel for dinner and awaited a call from the motel manager about alternative accommodation. The call came about 8.30pm.

Settled in our new accommodation, it was time to plonk again and for a glass of that fine red wine we’d brought with us. But where was it? Back in our motel room, that’s where!!

Nell Holland: We Are One Aren’t We?

In Australia, we are bombarded by folk telling us about all the wrongs committed by previous generations, for which we must apologise. Well, I haven’t heard any apologies from the people of Rome about their invasion and take-over of my homeland in AD 43, when they took some Britons as slaves. Or even from the Scandinavians who raped, pillaged, and held my ancestors under the Danelaw for a couple of centuries from AD 73. They also took slaves.

Then people say our present lifestyle is ruining the planet for future generations – more apologies perhaps? Should I shiver, eating cold food in darkness? Or should I buy an electric car that needs re-charging at least every 300 miles as I drive across the Nullarbor. Not many electric stations in the desert.

I’m confused when an acquaintance tells me the female child she gave birth to 20 years ago, once considered herself to be male but has now decided to be non-binary. Despite still wearing dresses, the child/daughter/son/lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender/queer/questioning/intersex/asexual, will no longer   acknowledge her birth name and only responds to being called ‘them’. I’m informed anyone can be anything they choose these days, so I’m giving serious thought to what I might decide on for myself. However, there’s been no apology from ‘them’ for stuffing-up the English language so badly.

Celebrities splutter awkwardly when asked for a definition of ‘what is a woman’.  Any woman in Afghanistan could tell us what it truly means – if only she dared, and we really listened. We indulge in rhetoric, ignoring reasoned argument instead of applying common sense. Unfortunately, that isn’t common these days.

Homeless folk live on the street and in parklands, existing on free hand-outs from foodbanks while business executives are given millions of dollars as bonuses on top of obscene salaries and hidden perks. Many people would be happy with the perks alone.

I’ve discovered Santa is already missing from the lives of children whose parents insist they know the ‘truth’. That means knowing Santa is a myth and parents buy the gifts. I’d like to return to the magic that happens when parents stitch together a fairy-tale for wide-eyed offspring, giving them something that keeps them excited for weeks. Childhood is fleeting. Enchantment disappears when Santa does. The same folk avoid discussion about Christian beliefs and fill Easter with only bunnies and chocolate.

 Am I a ‘miserable moaner’ railing at the inevitable? Unfortunately, well behaved, silent bystanders get drowned out by vocal minorities.

By the way, when Christmas arrives, I shall wish everyone (even ‘them’) a good time in December and January, which might be construed/misconstrued as Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all. However, remember – don’t cut down holly or mistletoe (sabotaging flora) – don’t eat turkey (killing fauna). Forget the log fire (carbon emissions) but put an article in the newspapers saying – I apologise to everyone for everything!

Mahatma Gandhi is attributed with saying ‘Be the change you want to see in the world’. The world may be changing, but is this the change we want?

 .

Rossana Mora: 8.1

Marco hadn’t slept well, the thoughts of his shortcomings at work kept him awake.

This time he was not going to be lucky. The big bosses were going to be there, and he was going to be on the spot.

Why did they have to come today? If they had chosen Friday instead, I wouldn’t be here! I would be in Acapulco drinking a cold coconut with rum!

He was already showering when the alarm went off, it was 6 am. He wanted to avoid peak hour, so he hurried and jumped in his car. The streets of Mexico City were already busy, but he was good behind the wheel, and he was moving faster than the others. He was aiming to arrive at 7:30, that way he could review his presentation one final time and print flashy handouts on the big new printer.

It was the 19th of September 1985. Suddenly, in front of Marco’s eyes the skyscrapers seemed to meet each other at the top as if they were made of flexible plastic, balancing for a few seconds before starting to collapse. His car bumping into the other cars, back and forth. Braking or trying to control the car didn’t help. The noise, a mixture of honking, crashing, screaming, glass breaking and buildings collapsing, contributed to the growing confusion, fear and desperation. He wanted to get out of his car.

When is this going to end? Am I going to die?

In no time, all went dark. Breathing was difficult, a cloud of dust and debris around him, stinging his eyes. He could feel some weight on his stomach and chest, arms immobilised, but his legs, he couldn’t feel his legs. He wanted to bend them and push whatever it was oppressing him, but had no response, no pain, no feeling, perhaps no legs.

The earthquake lasted 90 seconds, 8.1 on the Richter scale. Nearly 400 buildings collapsed. The official number of deaths didn’t match the reality lived by the population. The 48 hours of the aftermath felt even more catastrophic than the earthquake itself. The Mexican government was not prepared for such a disaster.

A communal willpower and strength formed. People organised themselves while already doing the job. Bare hands digging, lifting, whilst tuning the hearing, guiding themselves instinctively to where the survivors were trapped. It didn’t matter if it was family, friends or strangers. Everyone that could be saved was going to be saved. The brigades formed had a life of their own.  They ran 24/7, self-guided.

Marco started to cry and then he stopped. I can’t waste fluids. I must cry without tears. His heart pounding so loudly. He tightened his eyes. I must survive. I will survive. Now, small breaths, control yourself. No more trying to move, no fighting the weight. Just small breaths. Listening carefully to the outside world and every now and then opening my eyes to try to spot some light. I will survive. I am alive and that is a miracle.

He tightened his eyes again.

Robert Schmidt: Is That a Blueberry Flan?

Is that a blueberry flan?

After an appointment, my wife and I decided to have a light lunch at Utzi Café at the Burnside Village.

We both ordered rolls. Jane also ordered a skinny mugachino. I ordered a pot of English Breakfast tea.

You are given a number for the food; and a buzzer for the drinks. A young lady brings the food out fairly quickly.

Then the buzzer goes. I take it to the counter collecting Jane’s skinny mugachino. I notice the guy in charge of drinks is new.

I see him behind the counter making my pot of tea. It’s taking an eternity. Does he know what he is doing? The buzzer keeps buzzing.

Eventually it is ready. I collect it. It was a good pot of tea. I think the buzzer is still going though.

I had just finished my roll but barely started my tea. I go back to the counter; seeing a dairy free blueberry flan, I order it from the new waiter. I thought he said, “I’ll take it to your table.”

I’m deep in conversation with Jane. In the background I hear a voice getting louder.

Someone making a nuisance of themselves. I am wondering if a security guard will appear for the disturbance.

Then shock, horror, the waiter was staring at me to collect my flan. All that noise was for my benefit.

Actually, he was getting grumpier the further the afternoon went. I wonder if the young waiter will be at Utzi next time we go?

Jean Stewart: A Search for Night Tranquility

Those fortunate enough to have nights of deep uninterrupted sleep are a select group I have envied for a long time.

There was a time when I could be counted among such a group. My childhood and adolescent years brought nights of feather-quilt comfort and the security of knowing my parents and boxer dogs would fend off intruders. No major responsibility or care in the world. I don’t remember losing sleep over a boyfriend, upcoming exam, or the class bully.

As I moved through my early adulthood, those eight hours of slumber still came easily. Life was joyous and filled with anticipation: friends, achievements and future plans. Even the deaths of my favourite pets did not cause sleeplessness.

As approached my thirties, the loss of those closest in my wonderfully blessed existence began. Perhaps my smooth sleep has not been the same since my mother died. Remorse at not being around at the end has been unrelenting. My closest, most trusted friend had gone – forever changing the colour of my world.

Caring for little ones of course brings night disruptions, but these somehow seem natural and manageable.

Move forward to the sixth and seventh decades of life. Something strange, intrusive, downright exasperating happens. It’s called insomnia. Those night noises of others. The struggle to switch off thoughts – distressing or stimulating. That need to go to the bathroom.

 Alcohol/no alcohol. Shutting down phones and TV. Keeping a sleep diary. Retiring late. Reducing liquids. Weighted blankets. Meditating and mindfulness. Melatonin capsules. None made a difference.

And then, a tip-off.  Simple, free, available most days. I have finished with thoughts of prescription pills, pre-bed self-talk and psychologists.

Nature has come to my rescue.

Early morning light in the eyes for about twenty minutes. Repeated late afternoon. No sunnies. Combined with stretching and strengthening is even better.

Restless nights are now rare.

Sun, I salute you.

David Hope: E-Book or Hard Copy

Many of my friends and, I suspect, some among you, express a marked antipathy towards eBooks.

Their most frequent expressions in the discussion are:

‘I like the touch and feel of a physical book.’

‘I like to turn the pages.’

‘I like the smell of a book, especially a new one.’

‘I love to be the first person to read the book.’

‘I love to see the books on my bookshelf.’

I share those sentiments.

However, there are downsides to having physical books.

In past years, when I travelled overseas every year, I would buy books and books. Books to read on the plane. Books about places I had been. The latest science, philosophy or history books. Books about different country’s cuisines. Trying to pretend I was not over the weight limit for air travel, the load of the books in my rucksack was backbreaking.

Then you must have space to store them and at one stage I had seventeen bookcases in my office; only four now, but a second cull is underway.

Then you have so many, you forget you have a book, and you purchase another copy.

You lend a book out and you never see it again!

eBooks require no physical storage. I have 21,000+ eBooks catalogued, and they would all store easily in my iPad. (I have many more uncatalogued.)

I can take all of them with me when I go on holiday if I want to.

They weigh nothing.

You can lend a ‘copy’ to one or more friends, keeping the ‘original’.

If you have a backlit Kindle or an iPad, you can read with the light off in bed, to the joy of your partner.

I used to be on the side of physical books, but I am now a confirmed eBook reader.  I still like to read a hard copy book.

Rossana Mora: The Bridge II

At this new property a similar pattern developed. As men came and went, neighbours gracefully turned a blind eye. The less they look, the better. Some did it for their own sake, not to be tempted; some others because they simply didn’t approve and preferred to pretend they didn’t know what was going on behind closed doors.

It was evident that people  would turn their faces away, pretending to be looking at the trees, the ground, the dog or whatever, instead of greeting her.

She would come closer to her neighbours to try to make contact, presenting herself with a pleasing, friendly smile. It wouldn’t work. Once ignored, she usually would smirk and lower her gaze, but she kept trying. Did she enjoy this?

On Monday, when she arrived at her office, there was a gathering around the TV. She joined in. She could see the impact the breaking news had in her colleagues’ faces. Third murdered person in the last month, police had no clue and relatives of the victims were demanding justice.

‘Pretty shocking, huh?’ A colleague said. 

‘Horrendous! Why do we have to be the murder capital city? Goodness!’

‘I know!’ someone else replied. ‘Come to Adelaide, they say.’

Sarah, the Director, addressed the gathering: ‘Now that everyone is up to date, please let’s start our day. As you all know, we have a very special client visiting today and we need to be running smoothly. I appreciate everyone’s input.’

Very quickly they dispersed.

‘Sophia, can you please come to my office?’

‘Of course! The presentation is ready,’ Sophia said confidently, with a beautiful smile of satisfaction.

A few pair of eyes discreetly followed the rhythmic walking of Sophia in her leather pencil skirt.

The two women disappeared behind the lift door.

Jean Stewart: Monkey on Her Back

No-one could say she’d not tried to tame her struggle early. After that devastating evening when she’d lost $1,000 in an hour, and continued playing her favourite machine into the night, she knew something was wrong.

Those nights after her husband’s death had been so excruciatingly lonely. Their much-loved pub was around the corner from their townhouse. Sunday roasts, meeting friends for a drink or bistro meal had been such a part of their contented existence for years.

One evening after work she took a walk, found the pub lights and warm aromas welcoming. Yet she felt conspicuous. Alone. Her embarrassment and need for connection caused her to duck awkwardly into an adjoining pokies room.

Crowded, easy to merge. Women were sitting at machines, coffee or wine in hand. Men too, walked around, not bothering anyone, apart from a friendly greeting or brief exchange. She’d learned the drill quickly.

After a lengthy confiding talk, her closest friend suggested: ‘Why not go on a cruise? Heaps of women travel that way on their own… it can be relaxing and fun without any discomfort.’

This same friend had booked her on a cruise exploring the Baltic. ‘No poker machines on this ship!’ She’d added: ‘Scandinavians don’t meddle much with pokies… not even sure they have them… Copenhagen, Stockholm and Oslo have lots to offer. Helsinki is worth it too. They speak English well and like a chat.’

The cruise was all she’d hoped for and more. Surreal peace of surrounding water, superb food around the clock, friendly people milling about, yet also doing their thing. Company when she wanted it, tranquil solace when not.

She’d rocked along with other Boomers to a Beatles night, forged new friendships.

                                               ***********

On her return she passed their corner pub. The lights beckoned.

Edie Eicas: Shopping Adelaide Arcade

I like to think my humour comes from my parents, particularly my mum who had a wicked, sarcastic, confrontational sense of humour. When the kids were little, I played a lot of jokes on them, that part of me contained an element of my family’s wickedness.

When the kids were in primary school, I was walking through the Adelaide Arcade and saw the joke shop on the Gays Arcade corner. I called it the joke shop but it was actually a shop selling equipment for magicians. Of course curiosity led me into the shop, and looking around, I found a number of things I thought would entertain the kids.

My kids have very different personalities. Andrew my eldest is a bit more reserved, while Robbie has a wicked element to him and a willingness to play. The whoopie cushion became the favourite of Andrew’s, and he would place it on seats and we would hear the air, fart like, expelled from the rubber pillow. The boys would be in hysterics at the sound and looks on the adults’ faces. It was a cute joke and they had hours of fun.

When I picked the boys up from school, Robbie, with a look of both pleasure and self-consciousness, had a confession. He had taken another of my presents to school. At recess he had opened the packets of Fart Powder into the boys’ toilet. Apparently, the powder has a very strong reaction when mixed with a liquid and the resulting smell that acrid the boys were not able to use the toilet block, and it had to be closed down. In the telling of the story I began to laugh and of course, encouraged him to laugh as well. I hadn’t thought through the gift, and I hadn’t thought through what the kids would do with them either. My choices from the shop were made because we were a family known for its scatological humour.

When the boys’ father left and we were in emotional chaos, we were gifted a cat, Hobbsie. Robbie commandeered the cat, and when they moved in with their father, the cat went with them.

The dad, a night shift manager in the pokie room, would get home very late and tired. After brushing his teeth and into his jarmies he would pop into bed, but this night, in the middle of his doona, was a pile of cat shit.

Robbie recounted how they were woken by their dad’s angry outburst. Yelling, “Oh, shit, oh shit!” he picked up the doona and took it to the toilet and threw the brown pile into the toilet bowl and flushed. It, the brown blob, wouldn’t go away. The boys awake at the commotion and watching, laughed at their father’s attempts to rid himself of the offender. No matter how many times he flushed the toilet, the brown plastic imitation cat poop remained solid in the bottom of the bowl. 

Robbie telling the story left me in hysterics. The story became my revenge in telling others and, my appreciation of Robbie’s sense of humour.

Don Sinnott: A Holiday with a Difference: Part 1

October 2004. With funding for me to attend a three-day conference in Toulouse, in the south of France, my wife and I opted to build this into a shared four-week French holiday, including a week cycling.

Cycling? What were we thinking? Neither of us was more than a very occasional cyclist but we committed to a self-guided cycling tour. The tour company would provide bikes, maps, baggage relocation to our overnight accommodations, breakfasts and evening meals. Brochures showed idyllic scenes of exuberant couples spinning along sundrenched country lanes. That would be us; we’d have a great time!

The title of the tour should have warned us. ‘Perched Villages.’ Only after committing did we realise that ‘perched’ meant hills—very steep hills—in the Luberon massif of central Provence. In the centuries following the fall of the Roman Empire, villagers had relocated from the plains to the mountains, where height substituted for the protection of the Pax Romana. The quaint medieval villages are tourist-clogged in season but by October only locals remain.

After collecting our bikes on the first day we set out in bright sunshine and high spirits, heading downhill through small and picturesque towns. Then it got serious: our map led us back into the mountains with repeated steep grinds. By late afternoon we were flagging, with hours still to go. And the rain began.

We pressed on until the map said our destination was close: le Moulin Brun. This would be like le Moulin Rouge, I reasoned, on the basis of my minimal French, just brown sails, not red. We left a valley in our wake and climbed a steep hill before reality dawned; le Moulin Brun was a water mill. We’d passed it kilometres back, down in the valley. We retraced our wheel tracks and arrived at our destination tired, saturated, and grumpy. Not a good start; but things got better—and worse—on successive days.

Jean Stewart: Food Glorious Food

Good food, like deep sleep and unpolluted air, is one of life’s great pleasures. Yet many of us have such an ambivalent relationship with it.

‘There is nothing more delicious than hot buttered toast,’ my mother once said. Experimenting with what we’d put on top was even better: mashed banana with cinnamon sugar; peanut butter with tomato; home-made apple jam. As children, we would toast slice after slice.

I quickly ditched the desire to be super skinny in my adolescent years, simply to fit into my denims or mini skirt. I could not get past an afternoon of the Beverley Hills Diet – the appeal of more pineapple or watermelon faded completely with a dinner aroma of roast beef fillet, crisp potatoes and greens.

Move forward to our lives in 2023 and diets still abound: Paleo, Mediterranean, CSIRO, 5:2, Detox. Prepared meals, liquid meal replacements. Organisations like Noom and Juniper promise to see us through to goal achievement. All to be ignored as far as I’m concerned. Food sharing and enjoyment is far too satisfying. A starved body threatened with extinction will eat ravenously when the survival mechanism kicks in.

There is still so much emphasis on body shape today. It was the same sixty years ago. What are we not learning? Okay, we can blame celebrity pressure, social media to fit the mould, but let’s get a grip on what really matters in our lives.

When I was seventeen, a fitness instructor advised me: ‘Try to eat only when you are hungry… forget about what or how much. Train yourself to eat with focus until you are satisfied.’ I generally find this works, and if I eat past satiety at times because something is too delicious, so what?

We have more nutritional knowledge and food choices than ever: abundance of fresh fruits and vegetables, a range of dairy/non-dairy, numerous grains, nuts and seeds, proteins and pulses, gluten free. We also have diversity of home delivery and eating out: Thai, Mexican, Chinese, Indian, African, South American, Japanese, Italian, French and good old pub bistro meals. We have cookbooks filling our shelves, and countless TV, YouTube, live streaming food preparation programs.

These all may add to performance pressure by producing dishes to perfection. I have always been a nervous host as I strive for faultless array at the table. I am learning from my friends: the fun part is trying new combinations, tastes, and in sharing. A friend’s husband regularly participates in the kitchen. He feels no pressure or competition. I remember him once having a go at making papadums. They crinkled and curled all over the place, making them even more fun to dip. Men taking part in the kitchen is no longer rare, to the delight of most women.

Good food is social, nurturing, comforting, makes us zing when we pack our bodies with nutritious greens, reds, oranges and purples. The odd bland colour of stodge is part of the joy too. Nothing better than a custard tart warm from the oven.

Anne McKenzie: Lemon Meringue Pie

Guests for dinner, no worries. Barbecue followed by my go-to favourite dessert – lemon meringue pie. It’s a bit fiddly to make, involving three stages: pastry crust, lemon curd filling and meringue top — but it’s never let me down. Marie offers to help but I say I have it all under control.

First, you make the sweet short-crust pastry base. This is the fiddliest bit because the pastry dough is so soft and inclined to fall apart when rolled out or when you place it into the pie dish. But today is a good day. It’s in the pie dish without a hitch. Until, as I admire my handiwork, I realize that I forgot to grease the dish beforehand! I’m not prepared to take it out and start again. So into the oven it goes to bake for 10 minutes or so until lightly browned. I’ll just have to hope I can get it out of the dish when serving.

As I take the pie crust from the oven and set it aside to cool, I realize that I have used plain flour and forgotten to add the baking powder. Now I have a flat crust that maybe won’t come out of the dish at all. That’s a first. But what can you do but push onwards? I’m not starting again.

Making the lemon curd is the second stage. I assemble all the ingredients – water, sugar, custard powder, evaporated milk and lemon juice – add them, except for the evaporated milk which goes in last, to a pan over heat and stir continuously, as required until the mixture thickens. Thicken it does and then turns into a lumpy gelatinous looking mass. That’s never happened before.

Desperate times call for desperate measures — it’s time to bring in the big gun, Marie says – use the hand-held stick blender. It works a treat, and the mixture is now the correct smooth and glossy texture. Now for the taste test. Something is still wrong. It tastes very custardy but not very lemony. That’s never happened before. Clearly, I need to add more lemon, but I’ve already used all our lemons. I’m so over it all by now.

Marie appears again in response to my wails, offers to go to the store to buy more lemons but then notices, there on the kitchen benchtop, the container of lemon juice I had squeezed to be added to the mixture! Didn’t taste very lemony, not lemony at all you twit. You forgot to add the lemon juice! You’ll be surprised to learn that adding the lemon juice at that late stage and reheating the mixture produced a very acceptable lemon curd.

Stage three, the meringue layer goes without any apparent hitch, the egg whites whip into lovely stiff peaks and I beat in the sugar nice and slowly, as required.

I bake the assembled pie until the meringue is browned just a little. The finished product looks good I have to say. Although the meringue has dropped a little. That’s never happened before. Perhaps my stiff peaks weren’t quite stiff enough? Still, I have a lemon meringue pie I can offer.

The feedback on the pie is all positive although I found the crust a little chewy. The best part of the evening though, was the laughter when I recounted the pie’s creation story.

Rossana Mora: Journey

I like to take my time, I don’t like rushing. When it comes to food, I like to taste every bite and enjoy the flavours.

For the first 23 years of my life, food was just food. It didn’t matter if it was a balanced or healthy meal, if it was good quality, or if it was freshly made.  I suppose I ate because I was hungry, and I ate whatever was available to me. The food might have been great, but in general, I didn’t notice. The same applied to street food, I ate anything, and didn’t pay much attention to it. I clearly remember when my dad took me to a place to try cow’s brains. I thought they were disgusting, but I ate them, not taking the time to explore the flavour.

When I was 24 I discovered what we call the sazón. If you try to translate this into English, it will appear as “seasoning”, but sazón goes beyond seasoning.  It means the absolute perfection of flavours. We say that it is a skill that your hand has; you don’t learn it, your hand has it. Those were the years when a memory of a fish floating in a pot, staring at me with a still eye, looking horrendous, transmuted into an experience of the most delicious fish broth, bursting in flavour. For years, I knew my places to go to and I was loyal to them. Always adding new ones, from the one-dollar street taco to the hundred-dollar meal.

Then, I moved to Australia.

I had to start again. I needed to learn what would become my new ways, navigating now amongst several cuisines. No street food around, so searching for the good sazón needed more planning and more money. It was here I learned to cook.

I have found new pleasures. From enjoying fish and chips wrapped in paper on a beach, to allowing triple-cream brie to melt in my mouth before sipping on a good shiraz. I have found my favourite place for beef carpaccio.  I know now the store that sells the pork crackle I use to make tacos with guacamole. They also sell the dry chilies I need for other dishes. I recently discovered an Italian restaurant that it is just perfection. They take up to 40 minutes to bring out your food, but when they do, you are transported to heaven. I have found my favourite wood-oven pizza with double fior de latte. I know now that high tea exists, and I indulge myself in it. On a Sunday evening, there is nothing like a lamb roast with the proper veggies in my home. I always ask my partner to do the carving, thin and even.

Cuisines like languages, are intertwined. In this new experience, I surrender to the known and new flavours with humility, tirelessly searching for that perfection that imprints a memory not only on your palate, but in your soul.

Karen Agutter: An Accident on the Stairs

I sat, transfixed, barely aware of the tread of the stair, the polished wood, cold and hard against my thighs. Bizarrely fascinated, I examined the scene below. Surely the angles were all wrong. Did legs really bend that way? Where was his left arm? And the blood. So much blood. Spreading slowly across the floorboards, glistening in the moonlight that shone, like a stage light, through the glass of the front door. Macabre, but also strangely beautiful.

The click of a switch. The harsh glare of the light, extra bright,

to

prevent

accidents

on the steep

Victorian staircase.

I felt the warmth of her presence. Became increasingly aware of her arms as they wrapped tightly around my body. I let go, let myself collapse, melt into the arms that held me. Shaking, but no longer fearful. 

“It’s okay. It’s going to be okay” she whispered, holding me tight, rubbing my back and cradling my head in her arms. Gently rocking me, back and forth in that familiar, comforting motion – mother to child, now child to mother.

In time, as my shaking abated, I turned my head, looked deeply into her eyes. I watched the smile as it crept across her face, grew broader as she looked down on the mess below. Breaking the silence she spoke in that little girl, baby voice he liked her to use, despite her teenage years. Mocking. Full of hate, “Oh daddy! Poor daddy! Are you hurt daddy? Did you trip and fall daddy? You have to be careful on the stairs daddy. Silly daddy.” And with increasing venom, “Dead daddy.”

Turning back to me, her voice so calm, self-assured, relieved, “It’s okay mum. He can’t hurt us anymore.”

And for the first time in years, our laughter replaced the fear, as it echoed through the stairwell.

Edie Eicas: Split

I have two sides. The life I lived and the one I didn’t dare pursue. It took years to understand how the unconscious controls our lives. We think we have free will but it’s an illusion. We have no freedom until we accept we have no will, and then start questioning the programs that make us the person, the robot we are.

They said I murdered her but they’ve no idea how she provoked me. If I was programmed so was she to irritate and refuse to comply. After all, she wasn’t working, it was me bringing home the bacon, making her life so cushy.

Why do they listen to him? He always could sweet-talk everyone.

She just never stopped spending. Wanted the best and then wasn’t satisfied. All she did was complain.

He wanted an image. Wanted perfection. It didn’t matter what I did, I was never perfect, had to do everything again. Should’ve realised when he started complaining about dinner. He’d lived on junk food and cans before we met, then, all of a sudden, he was a food critic. Complaints! Just a smoke screen for infidelity.

She was sloppy. Never did anything properly. If I did my job the way she did, then I’d be fired in five minutes.

While the jury is still considering its verdict, his fans are outside the courtroom with placards demanding he be freed. They don’t believe he was capable of murder. They know it was self-defence.

Your fans! What fools those women are. Don’t they know underneath all your charm you’re just a narcissist? And a murderous one at that.

She deserved everything she got. Bitch!

Your claim it was me who came at you with a knife is a lie. I tried to protect myself against your rage. Look where it got me.

Money buys the best lawyers and barristers. I’m not spending ten years in gaol.

I don’t have a voice. I’m painted as a woman who used him. Why is that story doing the rounds? Should’ve run years ago, got away. Seems you can’t escape the cobra, you belong to them. Leave, and they kill you.

Smart operators leak information to the media, muddy the waters.

We know her history she was a slut. How he ended up with her… She was always after his money.

The Social Media feeding frenzy of envious women ready to smear another they’re happy I’m dead. Now their fantasy about marrying him is a possibility. Do they really think they’re in his league? They’re just conveniences filled with false hope. He learnt early to shop expensive.

Even her kids turned against her, gave evidence. They knew what she was like.

A good barrister can put words into anyone’s mouth.

He wanted access to my trust. I said no. I thought I was protecting my kids. It always looked like it was me fighting, provoking. He’s so clever. I wish I had left when he first tried to strangle me. Would that have been evidence enough?

Lawrie Stanford: The Apple Story

On an aimless stroll down Rundle Mall one Sunday, I come across it—the Apple Store.

Yes! I thought, I can sort out that confounded iCloud issue on my phone! So I enter.

Looking around, I see a crowded hall and cheerful Apple consultants chatting to customers. In the crowd, there was a consultant waving at me.

Great! I approach him and he greets me with, ‘Hi, how can I help?’

So I explain. ‘I attempted to register my double-vaccination certificate on the Frequent Flyer website. The site insisted that I access the certificate through iCloud. Now, while I have an iCloud account, I don’t use it…’

‘Can I show you how?’ the consultant interjects.

‘No thanks, in fact, I don’t want to use it, and with great difficulty, I worked out how to post the certificate without using it. Thing is, because the website directed me to iCloud, my phone registered that I wanted the damn App. Now it persistently interrupts my phone use by asking me to update the Terms and Conditions for iCloud.’

‘Yes, I understand.’

‘OK, but my question is, how can I stop my phone from asking me to agree to the new iCloud Terms and Conditions?’

‘Agree to them,’ the consultant glibly replies.

‘Well maybe, but I open the Terms and Conditions, and get the choice to “Agree” or “Disagree.” Naturally, I “Disagree.” After all, I don’t want to use iCloud. Also, I don’t want to read through 21 pages of legalese to find out if, on reflection, I do “Agree.”’ My consultant knits his brow at this, but I plough on. ‘However, when I “Disagree” the Terms and Conditions go away. But, on a regular basis, a message box pops up, saying “To use iCloud on this iPhone you must accept the Terms & Conditions.” To get rid of the message, I then have to go through the rigmarole I have described. So, again, how can I stop my phone from asking me to agree to the new iCloud Terms and Conditions?’

‘Just agree,’ the consultant repeated.

‘But I don’t know if I agree. Moreover, I don’t want to find out if I do agree and I don’t want to be asked to agree.’

‘But it’s a condition for using the App,’ and he adds, ‘without agreeing you can’t use iCloud on your phone.’

I now wonder if this guy is listening and reply, ‘I d-o n-o-t w-a-n-t to use iCloud.’

‘Ah,’ he replied eagerly, seeming to have just made an important discovery and explained, ‘but the Terms and Conditions have changed. You are being asked to agree to the new Terms and Conditions.’

Now I think he is grasping at straws. ‘Look,’ I reply, ‘I just want to stop my phone asking me to agree to the iCloud Terms and Conditions. So, how can I do that?’

‘Just agree, and it’ll go away.’

‘But I don’t agree. I don’t need to agree. I don’t want to agree.’

Running out of responses, he says, ‘But you can only agree.’

‘But there is a “Disagree” button, so why won’t Apple take the hint and leave me alone?’

Lost for answers, he says ‘You can only agree.’

‘Then why is there a “Disagree” button?’ I ask.

‘I don’t know,’ he says, then adds, ‘I think you are being silly.’

‘I beg your pardon; did you just say I’m silly?’

‘Yes, well at least, I think you are being silly.’

‘I’m sorry but I don’t think I’m silly, Apple is dictating terms to me and is acting like a bully!’

‘That’s the way it is,’ he says.

To end this torture, I say, ‘We will have to disagree then,’ and turn to walk out of the store.

As I leave, I hear him call out, ‘Thank you sir, have a good day!’

Not much bloody chance I think to myself—with you as the apple of my ire.

Jean Stewart: Stalked

He is leaning on someone’s letterbox when she opens her gate to walk past him. Cross-legged and smoking, his gaze penetrates.

Her voice is breezy and carefree. ‘Just moved in? Welcome!’

His half-closed eyes survey her. With a strong Middle Eastern accent, he replies:  ‘I’ve seen you already; your unit is in front of mine’.

She knows this; it has perturbed her that his kitchen window overlooks her back courtyard.

‘You walk past with your nose in the air, like a queen,’ he says.

Nonplussed, she asks: ‘Where are you from?’

‘Egypt. I’m an Arab.’ He sounds proud.

She feels trapped, awkward. ‘I love Egyptian food,’ she responds.

‘Oh? Like what?’

‘Falafels, date cakes.’ She pours out whatever comes into her head. ‘Must keep moving.’ He watches as she heads for the local shops.

The next morning she opens her door to a tray of date cakes, and a tub of falafels. All delicious. Should she include a note of appreciation when returning  tray and tub?

Drop-offs keep coming. He starts knocking on her door. Rude to ignore him?

When her friend Joe leaves after each weekend, the Egyptian is back on her doorstep, waiting. Commenting begins on her smile, her beautiful eyes.

‘Stop this nonsense, Ahmed! I have a boyfriend.’

‘So what?’ His response is dismissive.

She ignores the door knocks.

                                                      ————                                       

Through the growing hell of his rages, being followed, watched from every angle of her unit, others blame her.

‘Couldn’t you see he was grooming you?’

‘Why were you so friendly?’

 ‘Some men expect a woman to comply; didn’t you know that? Nothing like their fury if you don’t!’

The sergeant who organised her intervention order had said to her: ‘Men like that don’t change. I’d move if I were you.’

Seven years later, after stubbornly holding her ground, she packs.

In her delightful new home she finally breathes, relaxes, sleeps once more.

David Hope: Mistaken Identity

It’s a dark night in Whitechapel in August 1888. Through the gloom, an observer watched the two figures struggling. Martha Tabram was fighting for her life on a staircase in George Yard. A fight she was losing as her assailant stabbed her again and again. The knife rose and fell, rose and fell, on and on. Suddenly, the witness moved toward the fray and grabbed the mugger’s knife arm, twisting it up behind him, causing the shoulder to dislocate. Crying out in agony he dropped the small knife he had been using on Martha and fell to his knees. It was too late to save Martha already dead from the many stab wounds inflicted upon her.

’What the hell do you think you are doing on my patch?’ yelled the observer. ‘You’ve murdered this girl! What has she done to you?’

‘She’s just a slut! Probably one of the thousands of Jewish sluts infesting Whitechapel. And even though I said I’d pay for a fuck, she wouldn’t fuck me!’ shouted the assailant.

The witness looked at Martha more closely. ‘I know this girl!’ he exclaimed. ‘She’s my mate Johnny’s girl and she’s no whore, so you’re lying to me, you bastard. I’m taking you to Johnny. Get up!’

Slowly, the murderer got up from his knees. He swayed a little, in pain. He attempted to escape the clutches of the witness, setting off running, but the dislocated shoulder proved too big a handicap. The observer grasped him by his knife arm, exacerbating the pain dragging him through the lanes and back alleys of Whitechapel towards Wapping. Eventually, he stopped outside a hovel close to the Thames and slipped through the door, dragging the attacker behind him.

‘Johnny’ he called.

‘In the back room’ came the reply.

The murderer was pushed through another door and thrown to the floor, much to the surprise of Johnny. ‘What’s going on?’ he cried.

‘This bastard has murdered your girl Martha,’ said the eyewitness ‘He stabbed her over and over in George Yard up Whitechapel way. I tried to stop him, but I was too late.’

Johnny grabbed the man, marching him out of the hovel, through the back streets with his mate’s assistance, down to the Thames. ‘Time for your life to end,’ said Johnny.

‘Mercy, mate, I’ve made a terrible mistake and done a very bad thing,’ said the murderer.

‘No mercy for you, you bastard. You never showed my Martha mercy,’ an anguished Johnny retorted, as he slit the murderer’s throat. With the help of his mate the body was rolled into the Thames. The tide was ebbing. With any luck the body would be swept out to sea and never seen again. Not that Johnny cared. He was too distraught, as he was helped back to his hovel by his friend.

‘I’ll be off then, Johnny. Look after yourself, mate. See you around,’ said Jack the Ripper, taking his leave.

Rossana Mora: The Bridge

It was 6 am when the alarm went off. She opened her eyes and automatically jumped out of bed. In no time, she was walking around the neighbourhood.

Two blocks away from her house she came across a small pedestrian bridge. Underneath there was a running creek. She started crossing the bridge but stood in the middle of it for a few seconds and then continued with her morning exercise.

Just a week earlier she had moved house once again. The rental crisis in Adelaide was at its peak but for some reason that didn’t seem to apply to her. Not her, no. She always got what she wanted and this new house was no exception. She went to the inspection on a Friday, applied on a Saturday and was signing the lease contract on Monday. She got the keys the same day, but her rent would start running from the following Friday. She was smart, a good negotiator.

At her former place, the neighbours didn’t like her. Perhaps because of the parade of men that would cross her front door? She was attractive and had a refined manner. Single,  seemed like a happy person, but no one likes that level of ‘freedom’. How she behaved contrasted with her innocent appearance.

She liked working men; not because they worked hard, but because of their smell.

The sweat in their neck, chest, armpits and even between their legs drove her crazy. She was very clear in asking her male visitors not to shower before the action and they would follow suit, no questions asked.

Her door was like a portal to another world.

She was a good lover, so men would try to gain a second invitation to her domain but very few achieved it. During those encounters she spoke little, almost nothing, but the men didn’t care.  They went home exhausted and satisfied.

Jean Stewart: Ambition

‘Pull tighter while I hold my breath, Macy!’ The maid blushed as she strained the corset strings; this girl would surely faint. Cressida had sipped only a cup of morning tea and a bowl of soup at midday.  It was the eve of the most important ball of her young life.                                                           

In the spring of 1888, dressmakers in New York were swamped. It was the time of prestigious invitations. Cressida was overcome with anticipation. Perhaps the only person more excited was her mother.

‘Oh Mama, the black and gold silk gown is best! The bustle must have a taffeta bow!’

 ‘Of course!’ replied her mother. ‘And we’ll need new satin pumps and purse.’

This was the first time Cressida and her parents had been included on the guest list of Mrs Astor. Unlike the Astors, Cressida and her family were not old money. Her father would be classified as nouveau riche – he was a railroader. As a youth he’d worked on the tracks springing up across the United States.

When the American Civil War ended in 1865, investors in the railroad system were taking chances, buying stock. Cressida’s father had been one to try his luck early, continually adding to the small investment gifted from his then boss, William (Billy) Vanderbilt. A risky but fortuitous calculation. Mass transport was needed. The Statue of Liberty beckoned, and an influx of immigrants had grown New York city’s population to well over two million.

Eighteen-year-old Cressida longed to be part of established society. ‘Papa, when will we move to Fifth Avenue?’ she’d ask intermittently.

 ‘Patience my dear… all will happen with time,’ was the recurring answer.

Apart from the Astor ball, there was feverish buzz among Cressida and her friends. Lord Brereton of Cheshire, England, would be in attendance. What chance of a daughter marrying into British aristocracy?  Cressida’s mother almost swooned at the thought of a titled son-in-law, with her daughter becoming Lady Brereton. Surely such a circumstance would catapult the family into that category she could only dream about – acceptance into New York society’s top Four Hundred.

Lord Brereton anticipated the Astor event as much as the mothers and daughters. Marrying into a wealthy American family might reduce his woes. A generous dowry was sorely needed. He had inherited two crumbling castles and was deeply in debt.  

That evening, Cressida would never forget the imperious image of Mrs Astor, perfectly coiffed in a stunningly understated gown, as she stood in front of a huge oil painting of herself in the reception hall.

When her name was called, Cressida moved with floating grace into what must have been the most impressive ballroom imaginable: soft electric lamps, flowered pillars, quartets in alcoves, manservants deftly balancing silver trays. With fan held in a tightly gloved, clammy hand, she vaguely saw Lord Brereton approach as the room itself began to float. She toppled sideways, losing her fan and purse to astonished onlookers.

When she came to, Lord Brereton was cradling her. Her mother’s expression was one of pure ecstasy.

Nell Holland: The Journey

This fictitious journal was inspired by Malen Rumbelow, passenger on the former convict ship. His diary was partially reproduced in the 1977 “Chronicle Cameos” publication

The houses and people were smaller each time I turned my head to look, until all that remained was a curlicue twixt sea and sky. The shore receded, but our families would still be watching, weeping.  I was reluctant to see them disappear but didn’t want to not see them for the last time, so I turned back and forth until the sky was empty, and all land departed. Martin was silent, and unmoving. He remained standing long after the sight of everyone we knew, apart from each other, had melted into waves pushing us on. All those landmarks and faces held dear would be treasured in memory, but never seen again. Not by us in this world.

The Pestonjee Bomanjee was a sturdy barque, and Martin and I only two of the three hundred and forty-four souls on board. Few had been on the sea previously. Captain Montgomery set sail with his shipload of human cargo, including thirty-eight crew, on the morning of 18th June,1854. Initially, fine weather and a strong breeze made everyone hopeful for a good journey, but within hours many were ill with sea sickness and before nightfall one poor woman was delivered of a child.

By 13th July the weather was so oppressive that many lay on the deck at night to keep cool. During that long, hot night, the first baby born at sea perished, while a woman in an adjoining cabin suffered greatly until her accouchement was completed. They were only a small number of many births and deaths that happened, and I was grateful to not yet have children to worry or grieve over.

Occasionally, flying fish landed on board and made a welcome treat for breakfast, and at other times we were entertained, watching dolphins playing alongside. But by August the weather turned cold, and the salt waves appeared mountain high. The ship pitched and rolled fearfully.

The weather had improved by 10th September, and dancing was organised in the evenings. Then, just days later we suffered snow at intervals and hailstones resembling marbles were bouncing on the deck.  The wind progressively increased and at 2 am one day, what appeared to be tons of water poured down hatchways, drenching families, and bedding. It was daylight before the chaos was sorted, leaving everyone exhausted.

Finally, on 9th October, Martin and I stood on the Port Adelaide dockside feeling shaky after 112 days of being rocked by the sea. Baggage at our feet contained all we possessed in the world, along with my little bit of England, a grapevine from mother’s garden. I’d guarded it carefully throughout our long journey. Wrapped in wet sacking and now held firmly in my hand, it signified our hopes for the future.

We felt strangers in a strange world. But we’d committed to find land, and plant ourselves along with my vine. We both lived, and through our endeavours, and with God’s grace, we’d eventually have offspring who’d acknowledge this place as home.  We were determined to survive – and to thrive.

Anne McKenzie: Noise

I’m at a Crows AFL game on a Saturday afternoon and it’s getting to me again. No, not the prospect of another lost game – although you never quite know with the Crows. It’s not the heat – we’re in the bleachers and the sun is baking down. It’s the noise. From the moment you approach the ground until you leave you are bombarded with live music, excessively loud piped music, loud-speaker announcements and on-screen videos of marauding crows. In every break in the game quarter time, half-time and three-quarter time – and every time a goal is scored, it’s the same.

The crowd noise when the game is on and the club songs played as the teams run onto the oval are fine – and even the victor’s club song played at the end of the match is fine – well at least it’s just bearable if it’s the opposition’s song – but all the rest is so unnecessary.

You can’t hear yourself think and conversation with those you came with is nigh on impossible. Heaven only knows how the players hear one another or the umpire. In fact, quite often they don’t. Then there is the visual noise of those neon ads flashing all around the oval’s boundary fence for the entire game.

Oh, how I long for the days when I could enjoy my half-time cuppa from a flask of tea and chat with my mates in peace and quiet. Has someone decided we can’t bear a single moment of silence, that we have to be entertained every moment?  

I’m seriously considering tossing in my membership next year and becoming an armchair supporter – at least I can control the volume on the television.

At times today I’ve been just so tempted to clamber over the boundary fence, run to the middle of the oval and shout, ‘Be quiet’. But no one would hear me, would they? Perhaps if I stripped all my clothes off as well…?

Don Sinnott: The Birdsville Track: 1978. What Could Possibly Go Wrong

The bitumen stopped at Maree.

We had driven our Holden Kingswood sedan, towing our camper trailer, to the only fuel outlet in town. Our friends, in their borrowed much-travelled Land Cruiser, waited behind us for their turn at the pump. We drew some comfort from travelling in company with a four-wheel drive vehicle as we wondered how well our car and trailer would handle what lay ahead. North from here were hundreds of kilometres of unforgiving gravel, sand and gibber—next petrol stop Birdsville. 

Soon after, two couples and six kids, we with our four, they with two of theirs, sat on the curb sharing sandwiches on the main street of Maree. A third vehicle was travelling with us, a tiny Suzuki four-wheel drive. We didn’t really know its driver Ray, but he had arranged through a mutual connection to join and travel with our mini-convoy as far as Birdsville. Safety in numbers. Now he had a fuel issue: the Holden and Toyota used leaded petrol, which was available in Maree, but his car used unleaded, which wasn’t. A tanker was due in an hour; he would wait until it came, refuel and join us at our planned campsite on Cooper Creek.

Dividing the party seemed a bad idea but after conferring over maps, we were reassured. Somewhat. Our elder son, aged 10, wanted to travel with Ray; it would be fun in the little Suzuki and Ray would welcome the company, plus it would allow a little more room in our car with just five passengers. It was agreed.

We and our friends set out onto the rugged track. By late afternoon after changing a shredded tyre on our camper trailer, we reached our intended campsite beside a muddy pool on the ephemeral Cooper Creek.

We set up camp and awaited the arrival of Ray and our son.

Robert Schmidt: Poor Robert

I rang the Fullarton Lutheran Homes for a visit with my sister Pauline.

‘That will be fine,’ the secretary said.

‘No RAT test or appointment?’

‘Just put on a mask and head visor when you get here.’

Half an hour later, I cheerfully arrive at the front door. There is a certain amount of red tape, but nothing like the previous visit.

Inside the main door, there is a short walk along the corridor to a lift and instead of going up the lift I am directed along another long corridor, through a series of doors that have a code to access – then up another lift – then I arrive at an unfamiliar part of Acacia West, Pauline’s Ward. Rooms 30 to 33 to the left, 34 to 37 to the right – goodness knows where Pauline’s room, number 13 is! I’m lost!

Straight ahead is a big locked door. Eventually “Hey Sesame”, the door opens.

A slightly rotund man appears and asks, ‘What are you doing here? We are in a lockdown ward.’

Slightly nonplussed, ‘Um, ah,’ – pause – ‘the lady downstairs at the front desk says I can visit my sister.’

‘What’s her name?’

‘Pauline… Pauline Schmidt.’

‘Ok.’ He disappears. Long pause but finally returns.

‘Ok, she’s right ahead through the big door past the nurses’ station in room 13 – she’s lucky.’

Finally, I’m sitting with Pauline enjoying our catch-up. Then a carer comes in, someone who I’m not familiar with.

‘Pauline I’ll give you your RAT test now. Sir, I don’t think you should be in here. I’ll give you your RAT test in your room.’

Goodness who she thought I was. Protesting I said, I’m Pauline’s younger brother Robert – I’m visiting.’ Pauline’s eight years older than me and has always looked young and beautiful – SO MUCH FOR MY YOUTH!

The lady must have been an agency nurse – and after she left I spent a pleasant hour with Pauline catching up the gossip.

I say good-bye. Then get to the large locked door again – and there is no one around. I could not raise anyone!

Behind me, and turning my head around I hear Pauline say, “POOR ROBERT.”

She was always considerate of others.

In Memory of Pauline.

(16th February 2023)

Humble Pie: Jean Stewart

     I hobbled to the pounding at the front door. ‘Elsa from the agency!’ A portly, pony-tailed woman breathed heavily. ‘I use all me own equipment and cleaning materials. Don’t worry showing me around. Bath and vac mainly is it?’

    ‘Pardon? Oh, yes,’ I replied meekly. Already I was regretting this request for help.

     Elsa lumbered in, pulled on a back-pack vacuum while dragging a couple of buckets filled with bottles and cloths across the varnished wooden floor. She speedily buckled down. No instructions required.

    The pungent dust aroma of previous homes from that Pacvac overwhelmed.

     I felt trapped and restricted by the knee surgery. Sounds of my Royal Doulton plates reverberated in the lounge-room. Elsa took phone calls regularly. However, the vacuuming, bathroom swishing and spraying continued uninterrupted. This girl was full-on, I had to admit.

    When the bedroom was clear I sank gratefully onto the unmade bed, stretching my complaining knee, swollen and purple.

    The hour’s booking seemed interminable. Finally, Elsa yelled out. ‘Finished now… see ya in a coupl’a days!’

    ‘I thought this was a fortnightly booking, and only for a month or so?’ I queried.

    ‘Aren’t you having your windows done too? Set for Wednesday.’ My heart sank. ‘Oh, you do those as well?’

    ‘I do everything… Jill of all trades, mistress of none!’ Elsa laughed with gap-toothed heartiness at her well-worn line.

     Grabbing a cardigan I shuffled to the front porch to see Elsa out. ‘Don’t bother…with that gammy leg you won’t get yourself to the gate!’

      Returning to peace, I noticed my keys were not at their usual spot on the cabinet. Was Elsa a thief?  Panic subsided when, relieved, I felt them in my cardigan pocket. Guilt flowed.

    Despite resenting the intrusion, I reluctantly welcomed my home’s now squeaky clean pride.

David Hope: Memory and Loss

‘Hi, David, it’s Karl. Sadly, I have bad news. Ian Willis died last night, probably from complications from serious surgery.’

There is a little moment when things seem to stop, and belief is suspended. Then reality is back.

’I just spoke to him three of four weeks ago, Karl, and was organising to catch up with him in Canberra in early April. I better ring Carol.’

I ring Carol and after a bit of telephone tag we talk. The hard thing is, what do you say? She is very stoic, but that has always been her nature. We briefly exchange memories going back more than forty-five years; meals together, playing tennis on cold winter nights every Wednesday in Canberra. Carol asks if I will speak at the funeral and I am very happy to say yes.

As I ponder some words for the funeral my mind turns to my loss. Someone I met through work, who became a friend. I left Canberra in 1980, but we kept up a relationship over the years, visiting each other from time to time. Ian was a stalwart: reliable, calm, trustworthy, taking things in his stride, arguing his point of view. We each had a career in the public sector and always had lots to talk about – the good, the bad, the indifferent of the public service and politicians. There will be no more of those moments.

It is not just my loss. I think of Carol, married to Ian more than fifty years, and their three boys and their wives and children. The loss of a treasured husband, father and grandfather. The loss for siblings, cousins and other family, for colleagues and friends. The loss will be different for each person Ian’s life touched.

And all that will be left are the memories.

Edie Eicas: Ticket to Ride

When I was very young and the urge to be someplace else was on me, I was assured by mature people that maturity would cure this itch.

They lied. There’ve been many times when I wished the floor would open up and I would disappear, preferably to some beach in Hawaii. When I was younger, I suffered terribly from shame over any mistake, either real or imagined. My body’s response was to blush the most vivid red from my chest to the top of my head. I had no control over this vascular flush and felt so many eyes on me, judging me. My body was my enemy. It betrayed me.

With age I had a better understanding of the way culture determines our behaviour, and how shame was a necessary means of control for family, religion, politics and society, I could manage my thoughts and so my body. But, with maturity came menopause and hot flushes and then I wanted to be someplace else, preferably somewhere cold. Somewhere “the change” would not be so evident.

Going back to university as a mature age student, was a nightmare. Since I was paying for my classes I resented the tutors waiting for some twenty year-old to finally speak up and answer a question. I saw this as a waste of time as many did not read the assigned papers or do their homework. I would, in my frustration, burst out with some comment only to be told the university was a democratic institution. The result, an overwhelming flush that not only left its mark but left me wet with sweat.

I wanted to be in Tasmania and not facing a hostile lecturer or the inquisitive looks from the under-aged class. That itch to escape has not left me. Anytime I make a mistake, that old voice of judgement speaks to me and I blush red and think of a ticket to…

Jean Stewart: Luck of a Green-Eyed Cat

Who could be thoughtless enough to knock on her door at 7 am? The entire street knew she worked early shifts. Billy next door, holding a black cat with green eyes, glared. ‘Judy’s died and it’ll be put down if no-one takes it. You’re the only one in the street without any dogs or cats.’

Cornered, she felt cruel. ‘Billy, I’m away all day… it’ll be alone and afraid.’

‘Not like at the RSPCA, waiting to be destroyed?’ And, ‘Cats sleep all day. It won’t even notice you’re gone.’

No comeback. He had her! Shoving the clawing animal at her he lumbered off.

She fretted at work. No cat box. The dreaded intruder would leave splats and stains on her carpets.

Hurrying home, cat food and litter in tow, she found it curled up asleep on her bed. No signs of mess anywhere.  Contentedly meowing a greeting, beautiful eyes blinked in the fading sunlight.

After preparing another’s dinner plus her own she finally fell into bed. The cat could  seek out a cushioned chair somewhere. She awoke with a furry black ball over her feet.

Three days passed. The cat increasingly settled – even attempting an early morning paw on her cheek. She’d learned this meant hunger.

Another dawn front door pounding. Furious, she flung it open. Young Eddie from the corner house, red-eyed. ‘I wasn’t even asked if I wanted Judy’s cat. Mum says I can keep it.  Everyone knows you hate animals… you’ve never had any… why should you have it?’ Tears streamed.

She fetched the purring creature, unfolding it carefully into Eddie’s outstretched arms. Beaming, he scarpered with his black bundle.

She felt bereft. The house echoed.

Any sign of regret in those retreating green eyes? Only purring contentment, nine lives intact.

Nell Holland: Time Travelling

I see me with Dad, both of us squinting into sunlight, as Mum pushed the button on the Brownie. I was five years old and on my first seaside holiday. He sits on the beach wearing his weekend trousers and a sleeveless vest; I wear knickers and a hair bow. We just had clothes.  No-one had ‘holiday’ clothes. Dad would have been thirty-two and died nine years later, too soon for me to buy him a pair of shorts that weren’t leftover from army days. His eyes were always brooding. Combat in Egypt and Africa was behind him, though never discussed. Dad lived ‘now’ and never ‘then’.

My solitary time travel begins the moment I open the photograph album, which badly needs sorting. The photographs are in a jumble. Coffee at my side, I’m ready for the trip.

I turn a page and there I am, at the same age as Dad in the previous photo, windswept in winter at the port of Dunkirk, a baby in my arms. I remember wondering – was I anywhere near the spot Dad had once been?

A jumble of snaps taken in my teenage years fall from the pages. Christine and me walking to Riber castle, dressed inappropriately with heeled shoes and tight skirts, back-combed hair and make-up. We probably hoped we’d meet boys. We were seventeen and Maureen would have snapped us. We were always a trio, but Maureen was stunning. Her death still distresses me.

Two pictures of Mum are on the same page. In one she’s looking quizzically at the camera while kneeling on the front lawn, a trowel at her feet. I captured her as she was gardening, looking casually lovely, though forlorn. She was thirty-six and a widow who never remarried. The second photo was taken on the same lawn years later, as she laughed and played with her first granddaughter. The brilliant light transformed my daughter’s hair into silver.

Here’s St Mark’s Square, with pigeons flying around Sue, Sylvie and me, clowning with the Canadian boys we’d met in Venice. I smile, remembering Rod who turned up unannounced at my home, and the cool welcome he received from my cautious mother. I wonder where Rod is now.

There’s one of my wedding, taken in black and white. The midst of a Scottish winter, but, for that one perfect day, the sun spangled on the naval swords forming an arch over our heads. We thought we were so grown-up, knowing nothing of what lay ahead.  The sunshine days still cement us.

I see the photo taken of Mum at her ninetieth birthday; the centre of attention surrounded by grandchildren and laughing with joy. I once thought Mum could teach me nothing. Time educates otherwise. I hope I’ve inherited half her strength and resilience. She’s missed.  I wish she were here.

Hours have passed and I’m still looking; still travelling back and forth through countries, years, memories. The coffee’s gone cold. I reflect and remember. And not a moment is regretted.

Karen Agutter: Walking Home

As she approached the bottom of the hill she stopped, placed her bag of shopping on the ground, took a deep breath and readied herself. ‘Come on old girl, nearly there’ she chaffed, in a half-hearted attempt to jolly herself on, but this was the worst part. Trudging slowly upward, she noticed that the fog was coming in, like a grey blanket, laid across the crest of the hill. She lifted her free hand, rubbed her eyes in a feeble attempt to stop the tears, as memories of Charlie and his tatty grey army blanket filled her thoughts. That blanket had given him so much comfort in his final days, more than she would ever understand. But that was a long time ago, and she chided herself for being so sentimental, ‘Silly old fool, it’s just fog.’

The sound of heels interrupted her self-reproach and a woman appeared, resplendent in a deep red coat, two small dogs dancing and yapping at her feet.

The old woman, ever hopeful for conversation, couldn’t help but comment. ‘Oh, what a beautiful coat. Just the thing to brighten a grey winter day.’

But before she could finish what she wanted to say, before she could tell this glamorous young thing that her coat was the very colour of her own name, the stranger had walked on, barely glancing in Ruby’s direction. ‘I’m sure she’s got better things to do than stop and talk to you. To listen to your silly whittering’, Ruby muttered into the now empty space.  

Finally, reaching the top of the hill, the blanket of grey fog wrapped itself around her, and Ruby imagined a different scenario. Two women meeting by chance. A pleasant chat, over the colour of a coat no less. A story she would once have told Charlie over tea.

Fran Collins: Obsession

It’s interesting how a singular activity can become an obsession. Sometimes with good outcomes. Sometimes not. My particular obsession provided all things positive. It was born in 1988 and was a personal challenge to reduce the time it took me to reach the top waterfall of Edith Falls, south of Darwin.

After four years of unrelenting work pressure, my partner and I departed Darwin in June, 1988. We stored the furniture hoping it would not go mouldy, and set out in a sassy-red 1979 Toyota Hilux four-wheel drive. Off on a working holiday around Oz for an indeterminate time, or as long as our savings lasted.  Relinquishing the harness that had been my job, I dived into a world of freedom, exploration, and renewal.

First stop out of Darwin-Edith Falls, in the Jawoyn language- Leliyn, and located in the heart of the Nitmiluk National Park, some 20 kms off the Stuart Highway.  These falls were only three hours south from Darwin (about 290 kms) and about 60 kms north of Katherine. You didn’t get very far on day one was the inevitable critique from friends back in Darwin. But this didn’t matter. We were on chill time.

We arrived at the camp site around midday, set up the tent, which was to be our bedroom for the next couple of years. We took advantage of some shady eucalypts when positioning our cooking space. June is early dry season in the Territory. Searing hot cloudless days when everything seems painfully sharp on the eyes. Nights in contrast are quite chilly, requiring a camp-fire and rugs.

Close to the camping area people swam and snorkelled in a crystalline pool bounded by tall eucalypts, pandanus palms, rocky outcrops, and of course a small waterfall fed by the Edith River. This pool boasted a resident fresh-water croc, about two metres long, affectionately named Bazza. This species of Johnston River reptiles is vegetarian but he could still inflict a nasty bite. I respected this little fellow and gave him a wide berth. Snorkelling was a joy because of the abundance of aquatic life: fresh water prawns, yabbies, delicate transparent fish fingerlings and long-neck turtles.

The track leading to the middle and upper pools was steep and challenging. The top pool captivated me because it was small, intimate, and less frequented by hikers than the other two pools. During the five weeks I was obsessed with climbing to the top pool. As a personal best project, I committed to shaving off a few minutes every day from the climb. This was not an enterprise for a slacker.

Near the camp site, it was possible to leap and romp along, my legs devouring the flat, grassy track as I made my way upward. My pace slowed with a passage of narrow, unstable, flat man-made steps that serpentined across the escarpment with the increasing gradient. Over time, I learnt the best way to negotiate this section was to become light as a puff of air, tip toeing, floating centimetres above the ground. Negotiating a path to the upper waterfall was a very different challenge.

Lawrie Stanford: News From Home

(Day 4 of COVID isolation in a caravan, July 2022)

Being confined to a caravan 24/7 gives you time to reflect. Receiving a piece of news from home during this time certainly gave me cause.  The news came from Melody, my daughter. She said in an email…

Last Friday, I was picking up Rory from work with the kids in the car. We were half an hour early so I took Alvie for a milkshake from a McDonald’s drive-thru.

We were coming down Hindley Street back towards the city and Alvie exclaimed, “Oh Oooh. I spilled A LOT”.

I couldn’t pull over so I turned down the nearest side-street and looked back—he’s holding the milkshake cup’s lid in one hand and the tilted cup in the other, with a good two-thirds of the contents running down his front, pooling in his lap and spilling over the booster seat. At this point I say “JE..S!”, which Alvie repeated with uncharacteristic, perfect pronunciation.

I tried to clean up with wet-wipes but they didn’t make a dent in the pool of milk and ice cream, so I lifted him out of his seat without straightening him, so I could pour it from his crotch onto the road.

Then I changed his clothes on the footpath while office-workers parted around us as they rushed to catch their buses.  OH BOY!

At about this point, Alvie said calmly, “Well I won’t do that again!”

On reading this, I couldn’t help but laugh-out-loud. It cheered me up.

Mel’s story also reminded me of an experience, much like this, when she was about Alvie’s age. Tell me if you can see the similarities.

The family; Mary, Tim, Mel and I; were travelling in the country. Mel, in nappies, was in a child’s seat in the back of the car. The nappies were the recently-invented, super-duper type—with stick-on side-tabs, loads of soak-it-up padding, a water-proof outer and expandable elastic rims that fitted the unit closely around a child’s legs.

At some stage in the journey, I suggested to Mary that a foul smell was coming from the back seat and I suspected poo. Mary glanced back and after a quick examination, reported that Melody’s nappies were “All-clear.” I was unconvinced and pulled over to check more thoroughly. I walked around the car to Melody’s door, opened it and leant in to make my own enquiry.

I was surprised to find that Mary was right, no mess. But the smell persisted, and so did I. I leant further into the car and pried open the elasticised trimming around Melody’s inner thigh, the likely problem area—where the brown business happens.

It seems that the combination of pressure from the tight-fitting child’s seat and the retentive properties of the nappy, meant that when the nappy’s edge was pried open, out came a projectile-style dose of diarrhoea.

There I was—in close, inquiry-based proximity and now dosed in a brown-wash. Arrgh!

So, what is left to be said about these two events?

How about, “What goes around, comes around.”

(An excerpt from https://travellingwithgullible.wordpress.com/ )

Edie Eicas: Armchair Traveller

I’m an armchair traveller. I once did a great deal of travelling on my own, but found that without the company of another, some pleasures were denied. I’m also not good on water, I get seasick. I suffer with vertigo and tinnitus and a moving ship that rolls from side to side or up and down sets me off. While I appreciate the medication, it’s the rampant imagination that bothers me, that primes my stomach to churn even before the ticket is bought. While short plane flights are manageable with a book, the long distance haul proves a problem. Hips, shoulders and neck begin to ache and without the ability to sleep through each leg of the journey, even with the help of a sleeping pill, the resulting disaster is a fog that clouds the mind for days, sometimes weeks after landing.

But, I’ve found the solution: the TV. My new hunting ground is SBS and their series Bamay, the word from the Bunjalung language meaning land. It’s an exploration of Aboriginal Country from a drone. Each program exposes another part of Australia that I may never see and it has opened my heart to Australia’s beauty.

The drone flying over rock formations shows the land’s eruptions and the wear of time. The McDonnell Ranges in Arrente Country, and the Tanami Desert in Walpiri Country expose the various ochres that shine in different lights while noting the quality of the soil and availability of water. How would I see this diversity other than through this technology?

A panorama shows small creeks braiding into larger streams that create a river; the fractals coloured brown and green, nature’s repetition.

The pictures of the verdant edging of mangroves, so often seen as worthless by the colonial mind, remind one of the aquatic nurseries contained around their roots that sustain fish, crabs and prawns.

Different coastlines expose the rough and smooth. Beautiful white sands with the gentle break of lapping waves speak of promotional material for tourists, with each coastline, a different wave set the signature. The giant churn and smash as foam and water pounds cliffs reminds me that nothing lasts forever, no matter how much one decries Global Warming the climate is changing.

I have a greater respect for the Aboriginal artist that paints Country, speaks the nuances of the land, paints the colour of the soil, the wind’s movement through grasses and measures the change of seasons. That once missed in the past by my untrained eye now draws my appreciation.

Through watching the program I recognise the arrogance that had no understanding of the diversity within the flora of Australia and how Country determines culture through plants and other foods. How sensitive and precious the land and how Indigenous knowledge of place has been disregarded. How different Aboriginal groups were disrespected and placed under one cultural umbrella. How much was lost.

I realise how my arrogance judged the land as the series opened my eyes and feed my sense of awe.

David Hope: Donna

Donna was late. As she walked into the office, appearing slightly breathless, heads turned towards her. Slowly at first, then more rapidly. Normally, she was well-groomed and confident. Today she seemed to be slightly deshabille. Not dishevelled, but just looking as if she had dressed in a great hurry. 

She was flushed, as if from some physical exertion. Her hair was out of place, an unusual occurrence.  She was wide-eyed and alive. The calmness she generally exuded had been replaced by some sort of nervousness, as if she was both regretful and satisfied, unsure of which was appropriate.  Excitement and trepidation seemed to flow from her. This was a new Donna, a revealed Donna. A girlishness had replaced the maturity she usually displayed.

Her sensuality, hinted at in the past, was in full flower.

Her co-workers were speculating. New lover? A morning tryst?

Donna was aware of the attention she was generating. She smiled inwardly, musing on the events of the last twelve hours, basking in the afterglow.

Yes, she thought, it is true, Frenchmen make better lovers. Jacques had been a revelation over the last few weeks. Attentive, kind, thoughtful, generous and always considerate of her feelings and needs just as she had been of his. It had been a slow and thoroughly pleasant seduction, which she had welcomed wholeheartedly. Many hours at galleries, parks and events. Intimate dinners. Hand holding, kisses and embraces that thrilled and promised more.

And last night, the anticipation that had been building was finally fulfilled. After a meal, which Donna had difficulty in eating, so intense was her expectation, they had gone up to the lovely room Jacques had booked for them. Donna had never had any doubts about the evening and how it would unfold.  She was no starry-eyed virgin.  The slow building of their relationship had given her a confidence that had sometimes been missing from previous liaisons.

After a shower together, where they had gently and unhurriedly soaped and washed each other before patting each other dry, heightening the level of intimacy.  They moved as one to the comfort of the large bed, naked and aroused.

Jacques slowly caressed her body, kissing, nipping, nuzzling with a deliberate and measured tenderness. Donna responded in kind, thrilled by the tautness and strength of his body, his smell and the faint roughness of his skin. Slowly, they fondled each other until the moment they had both been waiting for arrived. Jacques entered her.  With mounting intensity, his body moved over her, the intensity slowing as he brought her arousal along with his, increasing as he sensed she was nearing a peak and, in a final increase in tempo, reaching a climax as Donna joined him in orgasm. They continued to caress, arouse and fulfil each other long into the night.  They slept briefly, continuing the lovemaking in the morning before the realities of a working day intruded.

Changing the coffee filter in the lunchroom Donna murmured to herself, “Thank you, Jacques!”

Nell Holland: I Was Just Thinking…

Quote by John Steinbeck;- When I was very young and the urge to be someplace was on me, I was assured by mature people that maturity would cure this itch.

Why is it called an itch? I experienced it as a painful, unnamed ache, too deep to be eradicated, and a source of irritation to my mother.

‘You’re never satisfied. What do you want?’

I had no answer. There were no words. So, I gave silent, sullen stares while yearning for more than life then provided for me. I was stultified by the tedium of a small country town. I was frustrated by humdrum days morphing into years without anyone noticing – or so it seemed to me. I wanted excitement. Too many faces were familiar. I craved difference.

My mother, who’d conveniently forgotten she’d once been rebellious herself, railed against my discontent, berating me for what she considered my ingratitude. She’d been a sixteen-year-old at the start of the Second World War and had once seen a way to begin a thrilling new life.  She’d hotfooted it to the local recruitment office, lied about her age, and signed up as a WAAF. When he heard the news from his jubilant daughter, my grandfather, incandescent with rage, made his own way to undo the deed. The speed of his journey made my mother’s own haste appear positively snail-like, but he managed to get there before the office closed, which gave him time to go to the pub for a celebratory beer before he returned home. She never forgave him and apparently refused to speak to him for weeks. During that time, my grandmother captured a photograph of my mother sitting on the garden wall, watching my grandfather working in the garden. Her head is thrown back; her mouth open, as, according to my grandmother, she loudly sang a song popular at the time “I can get along without you, very well.”  I have the photograph in the family album. Could that sulky look on her face be like the one she rebuked me for?

In time my aching, unspecified longing eventuated into the reality of adventures in numerous countries; the exhilaration of discovering existences so far from my origins as to be astonishing. I’ve breathed in the air of lands that became part of me and called places home that were once alien. I’ve been so fortunate, and sometimes wonder about how my mother’s life might have been. If only her father had allowed her use of her wings to fly the coop.

When I return to where my life began, I view things differently now life has given me all the experiences and enjoyment I once coveted. Long ago I believed I knew every face in my hometown. But strangers presently walk the streets, and if they speak, tell me how blessed they are to be living in such a lovely place. They satisfied their own itch by relocating there and I ponder on my own aching, nostalgic sadness for what once was.

Maturity cures nothing.

Robert Schmidt: What Happened to The Kia

I had agreed with Allianz to return my free Commodore car to Budget Car Rentals on Marion Road by 10am. After this date, I would pay for my own rental.

On Wednesday afternoon, I contacted Alliance. They were going to contact Budget to get a cheap rental. “No worries” they say.

Within minutes Budget rings me. ‘When you go to Marion branch by 10am Andrew with have a Kia car ready for you. It’s all arranged, you won’t need to worry about a thing.’

I ring Budget headquarters at 9:30 am to confirm all of this. What can go wrong?

Arriving at Budget on Marion Road at 10am on the dot I am greeted by a man who collects the keys to the Commodore and drives off with the car. I go inside the office and I see the man behind the counter.

‘Can I help you?’ he says.

‘You must be Andrew. I’m here to collect a Kia. It’s all been arranged.’

He stares blankly at me. ‘Andrew’s not here! Are you sure you have the right branch?

I shout, ‘Marion Road Budget.’

‘Yes it is,’ he says. ‘What size Kia are you asking for?’ Even more blankly he stares at me.

‘I thought there was only one size,’ I reply.

He walks off then comes back. ‘There’s been a mistake. There’s nothing been arranged. If you wait 45 minutes we can get a Toyota Yaris to you.’

‘Hang on. Thirty minutes ago it was all arranged.’ I retort.

While waiting we do my credit card. That gets declined. Turns out it was the machine. Stay calm I say to myself while exploding on the inside.

After an hour my Yaris finally arrives. We go to the car-park and he gives me the keys and gets on with his life.

Rossana Mora: The Shack

The family trip started late in the morning. It was going to be a long drive before arriving at a waterfall that promised to be just spectacular.

Excitement was in the air; the whole family was singing, playing games while sharing snacks. Landscape after landscape—it seemed that mother nature had just more and more to give to them.

When the sunset came the parents were quietly disappointed. The high spirits were dying slowly.  Soon after, there was nothing else to see, but darkness.

‘When are we going to be there?’ asked the youngest child. The question had been the elephant in the room for a while now.

‘We must be very close according to the map, my darling’, Dad replied.

Silence again.

The wife seemed annoyed, she clearly had told her husband she didn’t want to get there at night and here they were… on a dirt road, dark and narrow, on their last leg to the waterfall.

When they arrived at the campsite, they could only hear the waterfall, but not see it. Both parents were trying to set up a tent while the lights of the car were slowly dying on them.

They both wished they had left home earlier. 

 They were in a remote location with no phone reception and now also, with no useful vehicle.

‘We must sleep in the car, doors locked, I guess,’  she said finally after several failed attempts to finish setting up the tent.

‘I am sure we will be fine, don’t be afraid. No one else is here. Nothing can harm us’.

They got in the car and after looking at their three children sleeping, leaning on one another with twisted necks in the back seat, the father decided to go for a walk.

‘A walk?, Are you for real? and leave us here, in the middle of bloody nowhere!?’

‘I need to look for options, look at them. Don’t be superstitious, all will be fine,’ and he was gone.

After a good 20 minutes, she spotted him coming back to the car. She felt relieved. 

‘There is a shack, there is a shack, we can sleep there!’ he yelled.

‘A shack? What shack? Whose shack? I don’t like this!’ She was clearly frustrated.

‘Com’on love, just grab a child and let’s go. I already checked it out. It is perfect’

It was perfect indeed. It had the basics, and they could even bolt the door with a long piece of timber.

They crashed.

After a while, she half-opened her eyes, sleepy and disoriented, she could hear the waterfall, the wind and… whispers?

With her eyes closed, she listened intently  and when she couldn’t recognise her children’s voices in the whispering, she shivered.

Someone else was there. 

Fully awake now, she tried to sit up but couldn’t move. She tried again, same result. She panicked even more and felt her heart racing. She screamed loudly but no noise came out of her mouth. She was immobilised, she could only move her eyes.

She heard the voices coming closer and closer and becoming clearer. She closed her eyes tightly, frightened.  ‘A nightmare, this must be a nightmare, I must fucking wake up!’ Wake up you stupid!’ a scream in her head. 

It didn’t work. She remained unable to move. She opened her eyes again, this time for several seconds, moving them quickly in all directions. Slowly, things became visible. Shapes and forms could be seen now. She saw the shack’s door, the small windows, the husband next to her, the children shapes. It was then when she saw those things. They were called duendes, small legendary creatures known to be evil. She felt an electric shock going down her spine, her skin bristled. How she was to protect her children if she couldn’t even move?

As if in a movie, she saw it all. The duendes made a circle around her sleeping children and lifted them from their bed, carrying them outside the shack while chanting diabolic tunes. At the same time, all other noises faded away, the big roar of the waterfall wasn’t there anymore, nor was there any more cracking of the wood. But the silence was so powerfully loud it hurt, banging in her ears and head.

She felt her heart torn; her children taken. Her tears freely flowing down her temples, a lump in her throat, still, unable to move.

Don Sinnott: Anchored in Thames Estuary – September 1843

The story so far… John, the carpenter on a ship leaving London bound for Adelaide, has noticed an attractive young woman, Bess, on deck among the steerage passengers who boarded the day before. He’s approached her and tried to impress by referring to their route, with apparent knowledge, to the colony of South Australia.

She inspected him keenly. ‘You’ve sailed to South Australia before?’ Her eyes widened; was this a chance to ease her fears of what lay ahead?

‘No,’ John confessed, flustered by her directness, ‘never sailed to any of the colonies…’ The woman’s eyes narrowed. ‘Fact is,’ he continued quickly, ‘I’m the ship’s carpenter but all my carpentry’s been done ashore, as a shipwright.’ He was going to say ‘master shipwright’, his recently acquired title still one of intense pride, but he thought that would be lost on her. ‘My first voyage as a ship’s carpenter, but I’ve sailed with the Royal Navy out of Portsmouth in my earlier days.’

If he had been trying to impress this woman, mention of the Navy seemed to have done the trick. The woman’s open-eyed look returned.

‘Well, you’re an important person on this ship. Beggin’ your pardon if I’m takin’ up your time chatterin’ away.’ She glanced around nervously. ‘Last night the cap’n come into our quarters and said there’s a matron in charge of all us single girls. Made ’er stand up – scowly old bitch. We was told by ‘er we mustn’t mix with the crew, so maybe me ‘n you shouldn’t be talkin’, or I’ll get scolded.’ She hesitated. ‘But then, you’re not crew, you’re the carpenter so I s’pose that’s all right. And I can’t see that matron woman on deck.’ She grinned with a conspiratorial giggle that both excited and discomfited John.

‘Not a lot for me to do now so I can talk. Another steam tug will come to tow us out into the channel but there’s no sign of it yet. In any case, I ‘spect we need more wind than we have here if we’re to raise sails after we get towed out.’ He licked his finger and raised it in a mock attempt to assess the wind direction and speed, as he’d seen others do during his navy training. ‘We may be waiting anchored in the channel awhile.’

David Hope: Cabal of Cats

It was a dark and stormy night. The cabal of cats was meeting to plot their various schemes against the humans who attempted to enslave them and limit their freedom. A number of them had slunk into the meeting bedraggled and infuriated with the terrible storm.

Oscar, who was hosting the meeting, smugly enjoying the fact that he had not had to venture out into the night, looked up from his place by the fire. He felt some empathy for those of the group who had suffered a thorough soaking from the storm.

He vacated his spot close to the fire, clearing his throat as he did so. “Draw closer to the fire everyone. Dry out and get warm.”

“Blast, Oscar, did we really have to meet tonight?” said Sally, even more grumpy than normal. “Outside, it’s a terrible night for cats – even for humans, although I don’t care too much about that!”

“Just taking advantage of the fact that my humans are out until late, and we can gather here undisturbed.”

“It’s all very well for you, Oscar. You didn’t  have to endure the howling wind and the lashing rain out there,” grumbled Tom, who always complained. Tonight, his complaint had a great deal of substance.

Raising her voice, Puss – how she detested her humans for such an uninspiring name – interjected, “Let’s get on with it, I want to get home to my warm bed, and I still have to negotiate this miserable evening to get there.”

“OK, let’s consider the first item on our agenda, keeping us in at night,” intoned Oscar, leading the meeting in the absence of their natural leader, Sam, who had been imprisoned by his humans every night for several weeks now. “It’s becoming more and more difficult to enjoy each other’s company and conduct our night-time hunts and I for one am fed up to the back teeth with my humans circumventing my evening pleasures. Night-time was always the best time of the day, pretty well free from human interference.”

Tiffany, who usually said little, jumped in hurriedly, “My humans were talking about how it is the government – whoever they are – that have said that cats have to be kept in at night. Something about minimising our impact on the environment – whatever that is – and saving other animals.”

“Don’t you believe everything those humans say, Tiff,” muttered Ceefa, whose human’s cat naming was even less inspiring than Puss’s. “My humans think it’s a great idea. They are even talking about building something called a cat enclosure which means I’ll be incarcerated forever and never see any of you again!”

“That’s why we are meeting tonight, Ceefa,” uttered Oscar, “to develop strategies to overcome this human torture. Ideas, anyone?” Strategizing was not Oscar’s strong point.

Tiffany chimed in again, “I think we need to do a careful assessment of our residences to try and identify the alternative exits.”

“Great idea, Tiff! More ideas, anyone?” continued Oscar.

The meeting went long into the night.

Edie Eicas: Surprise

I’m a tabbie given to Andrew and Robbie by their mum when they were going through a hard time. They saw me when they visited a school friend and he showed them my mothrer and the litter she’d just birthed in his cupboard. I was the runt, the last one left and would be delivered once I was weaned.

I was given the name Hobbsie after the toy tiger in Calvin and Hobbs, I didn’t disappoint them. I was a scallywag always getting into mischief but as a kitten, just small enough to be held in their palms, all they wanted to do was stroke and cuddle me.

They would fight over who would have me in bed at night. Robbie often won the war and I learnt to slip between the sheets and feel him warm against me. Edie, his mum, read to us before she turned off the lights and Andrew would interrupt the reading and make it difficult for their mum to continue. I think Andrew was upset and jealous that it was Robbie who had my company.

When the boys were away at school, their grandma looked after me and would take me into the back garden as she planted vegetables and harvested the fruit trees. I loved climbing and scratching and I would chase any insect I would find. I couldn’t be lost in the tall grass as my striped black and yellow fur would stand out.

I loved all of the family but in different ways. It was grandma who put the bottle top on the kitchen floor and taught me to play soccer as she kicked it and I flicked it with my paws. The boys would scream with delight as I raced around the kitchen chasing the top as it bounced off the cupboards.

Their mum bought them a laser light and they would move the red dot all over the place and as I would chase it, they would try and have me climb the walls. I was fast and agile no longer the runt, and I could jump and twist easily and amuse them for hours.

When we went to live with their dad, it was a different world. They were often left alone but I was there to protect them.

One night, their dad coming home at 4 am, tired from dealing with drunks, found a surprise sitting in the middle of his bed. Yelling, ‘Shit! Shit! Shit!’ he woke us.

Racing to his room we watched as he dragged his doona to the bathroom cursing me all the way. Flipping the present into the loo, he tried to flush the pile away. To his surprise it didn’t move no matter how many times he pressed the button.

Confused, he didn’t understand why the boys couldn’t stop laughing. Their mum, with her wicked sense of humour, had given Robbie a khaki coloured plastic cat poo, and he had put the gift in the middle of his dad’s bed.

Nell Holland: Heidi

It was a warm and dreamy, summer afternoon when even the flies hovering around the cattle seemed dazed by the balmy air.  

Heidi watched from the shaded area under a tree as four-legged blobs, like dirty cotton wool, moved methodically across the English meadow. The sheep moved in unison with heads bent, cropping grass steadily, oblivious to everything except the next mouthful. There was silence apart from the sound of grass being torn up and the occasional irritated snort if a lazy fly came too close.

Heidi loved the Peak District. She’d been born here, and it was all she knew or ever wanted. She was young, vulnerable but quite unremarkable apart from her appealing brown eyes, and she accepted her life without question. She preferred her own company to that of her noisy neighbours, who mostly ignored her anyway, so she was happy to keep her distance. The one exception was Morag who stood out from the crowd with her wide white belt. She’d come from a place in Galloway and was always comparing her original home to where she lived now. Heidi’s whole life had been in Hathersage, so somewhere called Ecclefechan sounded too exotic to be true. But she loved listening to Morag’s descriptions.

It’s fine here, Heidi, but you should see Ecclefechan. I know you’d like it, for sure. There’s a loch at the far side of the property and when the clouds are full of tears, they feather the hills with trails of moisture. It takes a good bitty sunshine to make clouds disappear, but the shine of it all when it does! I tell you, it’s worth the wait. Low, grey houses tuck into folds of the hills – and the colours of the grass! I swear I’ve never seen such multi-coloured green, all sown together with stone walling. The place is so bonny you could swear it had been painted by an artist.

Heidi would look around her and see old stone bridges straddling the stream running through the pasture; watch scudding clouds conceal, then reveal, shards of sunlight spangling the bubbling, clear water below. Brambles straggled carelessly on the boundaries and would soon be heavy with fruit. Children would risk thorns to capture their bounty and families would have picnics. Morag’s place sounded great, but this was her home.

Ecclefechan sounds wonderful but I never want to leave here. Having you as my friend and with young Sammy to love, there can be nowhere better.

Heidi as a first-time mother had benefited from the more experienced Morag’s company when she’d been pregnant. Now he’d arrived, young Sammy was an adored clone of his mother and a close friend of Jimmy, the farmer’s son. Heidi rarely let Sammy out of her sight, but this was a sleepy kind of day. So, she was happy to let him be with Jimmy, who had his arm around Sammy whispering boy-secrets into his ear. Sammy was enjoying the attention, while Heidi stood quietly under the tree, drugged by the warm day, and let her eyes close.

Her reverie was disturbed by Sammy’s frightened cry. As she turned, she saw Jimmy pushing Sammy down the country lane while the farmer pulled him onwards with the rope tied around his neck.

She galloped to the gate, eyes wide and wild, bellowing for his return, but neither her cries nor Sammy’s stopped the progression towards the abattoir lorry.

At her side Morag tried to give comfort to her Friesian friend who was hysterical with grief, calling to Sammy, tossing her head erratically with the mucous streaming from her nostrils and spraying the air. The gate shook as the young cow tried to shoulder her way through, tail swishing violently and eyes terrified, with the white sclera emphasising her frantic brown eyes.

Let him go, pet. You’ll not forget your calf, but there’ll be another next year.

Notes to aid the reader; –

Heidi – a young Friesian cow. The species originated in the Dutch area of Friesland..

Morag – a mature Belted Galloway cow. Traditional Scottish breed.

Galloway is a region of South-West Scotland.

Hathersage is an area within the Derbyshire Dales.

Cows are extremely intelligent and emotional animals. Like humans, they develop strong bonds with their children and have best friends.  

Some cows cry for days when their calves are taken away. The grief they feel can only be imagined by those humans who take the time to do so.

Georgette Gerdes: Fields of Gold

Eva sat in the driver’s seat of her convertible and peered at her face in the rear-view mirror. Beautiful. Well ok for today. She pouted her lips and dragged the bright red lipstick across puckered skin. Perfect. She was meeting Arnold, the architect with his long dark hair and rather midcentury trousers, he was after all: -a man after her own heart-old fashioned.

He jumped over the convertible door and kissed her smack in the lips, smudging her new red smile.

‘Hello darling’ he said.

‘Off we go now’ Eva laughed, her foot flat on the accelerator.

The couple sped down the highway at breakneck speed, hair flowing behind them, the wind almost tearing the strands from their scalps.

They ventured down winding roads further and further away from the big smoke, until roads became lanes, became dirt tracks. The convertible bounced along on the corrugations. Despite the bumpiness it was a romantic adventure.

‘We’re here!’ Eva said jumping with excitement from the now, dirt splattered vehicle. She had spent weeks searching for the perfect spot.

‘Great’ said Arnold, looking unconvinced by this location.

Eva took out the picnic basket and they settled down to a tasty lunch of smoked salmon sandwiches, she made the bread rolls in the shape of vaginas! There were oysters and champagne. It was a glorious day. The sun shone, in its jealous sky, heavenly rays over fields of golden grass, dandelions and barley. It was warm and summery. The bubbles surged through the couples’ bloodstream and up to their brains, creating a dizzy, mellow fog.

‘I have something to show you Arnie,’ Eva said giggling. She led him around to a farmers hay shed.

Perfectly planned in her programme to woo, she ushered him up to the top of the bales of hay.

Arnold was unsure of the wisdom of this act but felt unable to protest.

Eva and Arnold rustled in the rooftop hay, eventually removing items of clothing and proceeded to have a rather unusual sexual encounter with bits of hay jutting in backs, bottoms and other orifices. But they were in love and nothing could dampen their enthusiasm.

‘Hello, who’s there?’ A rather puzzled farmer was peering up at a bare bouncing bottom.

‘Oh sorry, sorry, sorry,’ Eva jumped up and grabbed her clothes. The young couple scrambled down the haystack half naked and raced to the convertible, leaving their picnic basket and vagina shaped sandwiches behind.

                                                                                 ***

It was sunset on a beautiful balmy day. Amber rays illuminated the countryside. Mary smiled at her daughter Evaline and thought how she was so much like her grandmother Eva. They got out of her shiny electric SUV that had halted suddenly on the tarmac.

‘Why are we here Mum?’ Mary said to her mother,  looking irritated.

Eva climbed, gingerly out from the front of the car with wonder. Tearful eyes scanned the field, until she saw a solitary hay shed.

‘That’s it! That’s where IT happened’ she beamed, a giant smile on her bright red lips.

‘What Mum, me? Here? I’m not sure I really want to know?’ laughed Mary.  Little Evaline scrambled under the fence wire and ran on ahead.

Arnold opened the car door, helped by Mary.

‘There we go Daddy’, she said kindly.

He was slow in his movements, shuffled as he walked and his head, bobbed about. They walked gently through, a newly erected gate into the radiant field. There was an old bench to where Arnold was manoeuvred and his Zimmer frame placed alongside. Evaline and Mary lay on the grass and Eva sat beside her husband on the bench holding his hand. His usual mask like face broke into a subtle smile. It was a moment in time to be cherished, in the light of the setting sun.

                                                                                 ***

‘Many years have passed since those summer days

When we walked in the fields of barley

See the children run as the sun goes down

as we lie in fields of gold’.                      

Robert Schmidt: UFO’s Humbug

Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) have fascinated me all my life. We often would talk about them around the dinner table. We talked about life on billions of planets, numerous sightings through to the 1947 Roswell, New Mexico, ‘flying saucer’ claims and conspiracy theories.
My Dad was a brilliant patent attorney with the full name Johannes Carl Schmidt, OBE. He had the distinction of getting a pilot’s licence at 64, when I was sixteen; he was the oldest person at Parafield to get one.
Not long after getting his pilot’s licence he was flying to an airstrip near Goolwa when, he insisted, he saw a UFO to the right of the plane. It apparently appeared, unexplained, on the Parafield radar. I believed him; he’s my father.
In year 12 I managed to get permission for him to talk on UFOs at Concordia College. As he lectured, no mention of the UFO incident, Roswell or the countless sightings in the sixties. In fact, he used the line all sightings can be explained scientifically. The more he talked the more deflated I became. He was playing a straight bat to the whole subject. Shock, horror.
I didn’t question him. I think he was terrified reporting seeing UFOs would wreck his reputation. Forget my reputation with my school friends. They were saying, ‘Why didn’t you get the science teacher to give the lecture?’ The moral of the story is that if you’re going to get your Dad to lecture, check his notes first.

Georgette Gerdes: Camellia

pink ‘n pretty
with your delicate petals
so exact
symmetrical
flouncing with the morning dew
you bask in the sun or dappled shade
oh how you tease Madam

Japanese princess
how I have worshipped you
sung your praises
given you water
yet you deny me

brown buds lady
it ain’t fair

yet

a single bloom
in all these months

is worth the wait

Anne Mckenzie: Ghosts

‘Do you believe in ghosts, Anne?’ Jan says.

We’ve just seen a rerun of the ‘Ghostbusters’ movie at our local theatre so it’s not a wholly unexpected segue.

‘You do?’ I say.

‘Well, not so much ghosts but rather spirits. Yes, I do. For instance, I believe my mother is still very much with me and that I can talk to her in a meaningful way when I need to. I can feel her warm presence too. But you haven’t answered my question.’

‘Let’s just say, I wouldn’t be the first to volunteer to walk through a graveyard in the dead of night,’ I say.

‘Come on, be serious,’ Jan says.

‘Well, I can’t say that I do. Although, now that I think about it, something weird happened when I was just a kid, maybe 10 or 11 years old, that has always stayed with me. There’d been another party at our house. It was very late. As usual my father had got rolling drunk and obnoxious. I could never understand why people kept coming back to the next one.  Maybe it was the free booze. Anyway, after everyone had left or been driven away, he started in on my mother. Usually she didn’t bite back and just walked away from him. But this night she stood up to him. And then he hit her in the face. I got between them somehow and dragged her from the room. She had blood running down her face from her nose. I cleaned her face up and put her to bed in my room. He stayed in the lounge where it had happened. I went to bed too but I was so scared it took me an age to go to sleep. And then something woke me up. A man was standing at the foot of my bed looking down at me. I say standing but really there was only the upper body and head of a man. He had long blonde-brown hair and a matching beard. He didn’t say anything. He…’

‘Jesus,’ Jan said.

‘No, it wasn’t scary at all. He had the most gentle and kind face and I felt so safe that I smiled, turned over and went back to sleep.’

‘No, Jesus as in Jesus Christ! You had a vision of Christ,’ Jan said.

‘Trust an old God-botherer like you to come up with that explanation. But I will concede that ever since then I have called up that same sense of being cared for or watched over in times of personal struggle. But, hey, this conversation is getting way too serious. Let’s see if we can scare up some coffee at that cafe you’ve been haunting of late. Casper’s isn’t it?

Don Sinnott: The Boss

Charles swivelled from his screen, his face a mix of irritation at the interruption and resignation about his open-door management policy. Edmond Brice stood in the doorway.

‘Sorry to interrupt you, boss, but I need to talk. If it’s convenient. Maybe it isn’t…’ He had read the look on Charles’s face.

‘Sure, come in Ed. Shut the door. Always happy to talk.’ He hoped his voice didn’t betray his absence of conviction. He had been deeply involved in wrapping up a tautly argued response to the Minister and now, with this interruption, he would need to regain the thread of his argument. Should’ve closed the door.

Rising, he ushered his visitor to the conference table in his office. Brice closed the door as Charles eased into the chair at the head of the table.

‘How can I help you, Ed?’

Brice was only half into a chair before he began in a rush. ‘Well, thing is, boss, I’m in a bit of a jam. Personal stuff I’d prefer to keep to myself.’

Charles’s eyebrows rose in non-committal invitation for his staff member to continue.

‘I’d like some time off to deal with… some stuff.’ He was visibly perspiring, hands shaking.

Charles waited for him to continue. Silence. ‘Well, Ed, you know we are under enormous pressure to deliver the project you’re leading. Are you sure you need to take leave right now?’

Brice nodded, battling to contain his emotions. Charles’s stomach tightened: he wasn’t good at handling touchy-feely stuff. What would he do if Brice broke down?

Brice struggled to regain his voice, then blurted out, ’I’ll have to tell you, it’ll come out one way or another. I think I killed someone last night. Driving. Too much to drink. Raining. Didn’t see him crossing the road. And panicked—drove off…’ There was a painful silence. ‘I’ll go to the cops now. No alternative.’

Charles took a deep breath.

Fran Collins: Hiding in Plain Sight

Xavier pulled up at the kerb and parked his 1995 Holden in leafy Rosewater Street,
where his aunt had resided for decades. His rangy long legs cleared every second
step leading up to the front door. He rang the bell. No response. He rang the bell
again. No response. He pressed the bell a third time holding it down longer. He
walked across the front lawn to the Jacaranda, disturbed a pot plant and retrieved
the key from its customary place.


Entering the hall, he stepped over a pile of mail and found his way to the
sitting room, calling ‘Faith, Faith’. No-one at home. The lace curtains were drawn,
illuminating the room without the need for overhead lights. Bright and sunny, just as
he had remembered. He walked across to the dining table and traced his finger
along its length. An accumulation of dust. Nothing seemed out of place. Entering the
kitchen he looked around for evidence of Devil, her old black Labrador. No water or
feed bowl. No evidence of a dog in residence.


Concerned he sorted through the mail, forming two piles, junk and
correspondence. His eyes fixed on several business cards for James Hamilton, Land
Developer with a Melbourne head office in Collins Street. Pursing his lips, he
expelled a jet of air as he inspected the dates and names recorded on ten business
cards.


Securing the front door, Xavier took some loping strides in the direction of the
neighbour’s house. Rang the doorbell, introduced himself to Phil and Esmay Newton
and was invited inside.

Rossana Mora: Darkness

‘You must walk one hundred steps now, don’t do anything stupid like turn around, run, or scream,’ he said. ‘Or, a bullet would perforate the back of your head.’

As he spoke, he gave me back my briefcase by pushing it against my chest while pointing in the direction of the darkest street anyone can imagine. I started walking and counting the steps. Every step meant I was closer to my freedom.

One, two, three, four. My eyes started to adjust, and I could see the tip of several ciga-rettes and their smoke diffusing into the air. It was dark, late, and I had no idea of where I was. How many people were there smoking leaning against the wall on the other foot-path across from me? I didn’t want to know. I tried to walk faster, but I couldn’t. I was counting, I was told one hundred steps and I was going to walk them all, without scream-ing for help.

Hours earlier, I had had a wonderful dinner with a dear friend and, after hailing a taxi downtown in Mexico City, my fate had changed.

In the distance, I spotted a little boy playing with a ball under a street lamp. That boy has a mother, and that mother is going to help me out for sure. Why wouldn’t she? I am a woman, she will understand my situation, I thought.

I heard whispers and laughs coming from the men smoking. What did they say? I wanted to run but couldn’t. I was told not to run. 65, 66, 67…80.

I was getting closer to the boy. I couldn’t see his mother or anybody else. He would be my hero … 90, 91, 92, 93 … I started walking on the actual road towards him when sud-denly, when I reached 100 steps and I could finally talk to someone, a female figure came out of nowhere and grabbed the child and ran towards a door that was shut in my face. I managed to scream, ‘Please help me!’

‘Go away lady, go!’ she yelled at me.

‘Please, I have been kidnapped and robbed just then! Please!’, I tried again.

‘Fuck off woman!’

I knew my chance had vanished.

A taxi came around the corner and I almost died in fear. ‘It is them again? Will I be taken again?’ A hole in my stomach opened, I froze, my heart raced and my legs shook. I blinked in slow motion to see the taxi driving by very slowly, the driver looking at me with no expression.

A sign on a corner gave me the strength I needed to continue: A convenience store. I regained hope.

I tried to compose myself. I was alive, I was free, but not safe yet. I was in no-one’s land. I kept walking, further into the wolf’s mouth.

Robert Schmitt: The Guest of Honour

My birthday on the 24th March 2022 was planned to be low key.

It was to be in the Honeypot Café at Fullarton Lutheran Homes. Only my two elderly aunties, Wilma and Lotte, cousin, Karen, sister Pauline and my wife Jane were invited. The party was set for 2.30pm.

It’s only a few minute drive from our unit to the homes but Jane is notorious for making me late.

‘Can you get me a cup of tea’ Jane asks at about 2.15pm.

‘No We will be late. You can have one at the Honeypot,’ I reply.

We actually arrive at the foyer to Lutheran homes at 2.30pm on the dot. Pauline is sitting patiently in foyer, but no one else.

After a few minutes Aunt Lotte appears. ‘The party is in Wilma’s unit. I thought you knew that,’ she says.

‘No!’ I retort.

We all walk over to Frew Street, to her unit. A sign on door says, “Go inside and relax Robert”. The door’s locked. Curiously there is food outside on a table but no sign of Wilma or Karen.

Jane retorts, ‘I’m not hanging around, food’s probably contaminated. Let’s go to the Dulwich Bakery.’

A minute after leaving, Wilma and Karen appeared. They were at the Latin Service which finished at 2.15pm. No one told Jane and me.

The party went on. But no guest of honour.

Don Sinnott: Houseboat Holiday

It ticked all our boxes: an indulgent few days on a luxury Murray River houseboat, with guided walks each day over sections of the cliffs and floodplain, restaurant-quality meals and a comfortable bed. We found ourselves a generation removed from the other seven guests (and two generations from the two guides and the boat manager) but we folded easily into a convivial group.

The Murray floodplain north of Renmark offers a surprising wealth of interest. Our guides opened our eyes to the vegetation and fragile ecology of the Murray River basin, as each day we walked through an ever-changing lacework of wetlands. Floods upstream meant the river level was high, each day flooding more of the plain so our guides needed to adjust their walking routes to avoid new wetlands, with varying success. The first time we came to a floodway barring our track there was some merriment as boots and socks came off and the group waded through barefoot. Repeat performances caused less merriment.

First Nations people have left their mark: shell middens and canoe trees are frequent. At one canoe tree we stopped and a guide recreated a scene of a family group making a canoe. The work would involve everybody over the better part of a week. The men would carefully mark, then cut out a slab of bark with hand stone tools. To general jubilation, the thick layer of bark would be prized free and carried to the fire the women had tended. There it would be moulded and dried until it assumed the shape of a canoe and its ends could be sealed. It was a communal project; today only a tree-scar reminds us of a community ritual now lost.

Spectacular red cliffs, a long-dry floodplain awakening to new life, a connection First Nations… It was a memorable few days.

Nell Holland: Friday’s Toast (Part 1)

The evening of laughter and testosterone-fuelled noise was a great success as far as the partygoers were concerned. No one outside this group would have understood jokes the men passed around in quick-fire bursts, nor the indulgence shown by their wives. No one in the room was yet thirty-five, and the buoyant confidence in the room was powerful. This group of young naval officers was potent on self-belief and felt invincible. They’d recently returned from a successful six-month submarine deployment on America’s Western Seaboard, and thirty-six hours later they were gathered with their wives in the home of the sonar officer, Mike, enjoying a post-patrol party.

When working as a crew they’d relied on each man’s judgement to keep them safe for weeks and knew each other’s strengths and weaknesses. Now, with the weight of responsibility temporarily lifted, they were unwinding, and jubilant. Most of them lived on the same naval estate, a few miles distance from the Clyde Submarine Base where their submarine was docked. Initially the Scottish West Coast had been foreign territory to many, and their wives had become each other’s life-support. When the submarines left for their patrols, the wives knew they would hear little, and then only sporadically, from their men, but the women were in constant contact with each other, sharing moments of drama that most civilian wives would never understand.

Now the husbands were home, and men, starved of female company for months, were hungry for sexual gratification. They knew that few wives rejected pleasure after so long alone and the frisson of anticipated passion was palpable. This evening was the appetiser for what they all anticipated would come later.  Soon they’d settle into a routine with less lust. But not yet and not tonight. The company in the room was young, virile, and the men were relieved and overjoyed to be home. While the men held centre-stage, wives were happy to be witness to the bombast. They looked on while the men drank, laughed and ‘let off steam’ and waited for the end of the evening when they’d have their men to themselves.

The loudest voice belonged to Chris, the navigator, whose pretty wife, Jane, watched quietly while he related yet another anecdote.  His final words created an eruption of noisy masculine mirth and as she moved to his side, he caught her to him and pulled her close.  Jane smiled at him, ‘I think we should be heading home. The babysitter wanted us back by midnight.’

There were token complaints from the other men as the party broke up, but it was late, and some had children who’d wake them in a few hours.  Noisy goodbyes were exchanged, and conversations continued as they milled around on the pavement, before veering off towards their own maisonettes. Transport wasn’t needed: home was within walking distance for most.

Two couples without children were the only ones left and it was suggested they enjoy ‘one for the road’. Both men were already very drunk but couldn’t resist one more glass of whisky while their wives sipped tonic water.

Mike, relaxed in his own home, lazily gestured towards Jago, and his wife, Robyn. ‘Well, whaddya make of Chris?’

Bleary-eyed, Jago sank back onto the couch at the side of Robyn. ‘Great bloke. Practised Lothario, though.’

Mike’s wife, Julia, exchanged horrified looks with Robyn but before she could speak Mike raised his glass, ‘Cheers! Let me give you all – Friday’s toast!’

Julia’s eyes narrowed, ‘You’re plastered Mike. Today’s Sunday.’

Both men, intoxicated and irresponsible with their speech, laughed helplessly at Julia’s words until Mike explained, ‘Friday’s toast is – To sweethearts and wives.’

Jago held his glass up high, in imitation of Mike, and enunciating carefully he explained to both wives, Usually followed by – May the two never meet.’

Both men laughed even harder at their joke, while their wives, with horrified looks, thought of Jane and silently mouthed to each other ‘Oh no!’.

Edie Eicas: Raising the Dead

There was no pleasure in getting old. It appeared there was no respect for the elderly and what they had done for the country. Frank Martin was anxious contemplating his situation. This was the third tenant who had threatened him and with this show of aggression and, after a conversation with his stepdaughter, he decided it was time to sell. His plan to live off the rent of his properties had faltered, and it was time for change.

As a young real estate agent in the outer suburbs, he had seen the Gold Coast transform. The area renowned for its value as a holiday destination had evolved from servicing Brisbane and providing shacks for fishing trips, to a booming cosmopolitan city drawing people from all over the country looking for a warm climate.

Where once the land lay fallow covered by swamp or bands of bush, now project homes grew unchecked. Sprouting uniformity, they covered the paddocks with both promises and illusions while providing opportunity for those who could see the future. Bulldozing the bush and filling the lowlands with sand, the urban sprawl swallowed everything in its path. Development was determined not to let nature stand in its way.

Early on Frank recognised an opening, bought a small farm and when he retired, moved into the farmhouse. Through planning, he set himself a project and when the city expanded around his property, he brought the surveyor in and sub-divided the land. He then built the necessary road and sold off most of the blocks for development. When the flush of activity subsided, he was left with five unsold blocks. Using the proceeds of the subdivision he found the cheapest of builders and built the requisite project homes surrounding himself with the reminders of his cleverness.

The development, on the periphery of the city, drew young families. Reliant on their cars or, if unlucky and with no second car available, the women and children walked; the only option available as no services reached the outskirts. Families peopled the streets and there was a blossoming of social activity but, when the kids were of school age, the necessity to move brought change. The houses were sold and investors bought the properties and renters moved in.

Pride slipped as the neighbourhood transformed its character. Gardens were neglected and pit-bull terriers protected properties behind high mesh fences to growl at those who still walked the streets. The tenor of the population changed as an excess of cars mounted the verges and a criminal element moved in. A chop shop stripped essentials from stolen cars and helped reconfigure the dreams of machismo males through newly painted, bespoke throbbing machines.

Frank’s renters changed. Threatened by his tattooed and mullet haired tenants who refused to pay, and too invested in his old identity, he refused to put the properties into the hands of an agent. But, with his ego taking a beating, reality set in. Age was no protection and life demanded adjustment.

Anne McKenzie: Scooter

Denise and I had been finger training our young pet budgerigar, Scooter, for several weeks. Now he stepped onto the proffered fingers quickly and confidently. Such is trust. And it was a thrill to feel his little warm feet gripping our outstretched fingers.

But now the time had come to take him out of the cage on the finger and introduce him to the little playpen of toys we had made for him and to the wider world of the house.

After he had hopped onto my finger I very slowly withdrew my hand towards and then out the cage door. So far so good.

Then a sudden bang from the neighbour’s yard spooked him and he took off in a panic, flying back and forth across the kitchen and into the lounge, crashing into windows, curtains and furniture. We crouched down so as not to impede his flight and waited until he was still.

But where was he? We were fairly sure he’d last headed towards the kitchen window and fallen onto the sink. But we couldn’t see him there among the dirty dishes. We searched everywhere in the kitchen and the lounge – on top of cupboards, behind the stove, under the table, on chairs, behind and under the lounge, behind curtains and blinds and behind and in bookcases – all without success. We’d just have to wait until he decided to reappear or made a noise. But the cat would have to stay out, obviously.

We decided to get on with our chores and returned to the kitchen sink to do the dishes. As I picked up the vacuum flask from our picnic lunch to rinse it out I heard a slight fluttery noise. I looked inside and there was Scooter at the bottom of the flask, ankle deep in coffee dregs.

I upended the flask. Nothing happened – other than the coffee dregs pouring out. I gave the flask a little shake and then a more vigorous one. Still no budgie came out. He must have been hanging on for dear life. Or maybe he was stuck. I laid the flask down on its side and we waited, hoping he’d walk out, unsure what else to do if this didn’t work. Eventually a very bedraggled and sad looking Scooter appeared.

Denise offered him her finger and he climbed aboard to be carried back to his cage. Once in the cage he retreated to the furthermost perch and very pointedly turned his back on us. Such is disdain.

Nell Holland: Patient 41

2022

The nurse changed my bed linen at lunchtime. It should have happened hours before, but a patient had demanded to be discharged and then changed his mind. This had doubled her paperwork and she found herself hopelessly behind schedule.

 She’d sighed an explanation, ’Paperwork is the worst thing, ever, for a nurse.’

Paperwork? Really? I don’t think so.

Decades ago in England

I was 19, Barbara 20 when we walked onto the ward for our ninth nightshift in a row. With Sammy, the elderly ward orderly, we looked after 40 male medical patients in an open ward; beds lining each side of the room.

The night began normally. Evening beverages, injections, tablets, two-hourly patient-turning, four-hourly observations, gastric feeds, reassuring patients, checking intravenous fluids, issuing then cleaning up urinals and bedpans. The three of us worked non-stop, but before Night Sister’s rounds at 11.30pm everything was completed.

At midnight, Sammy had his meal-break. While I prepared clinical trolleys for morning, Barbara brought paperwork up to date.

A telephone call from Casualty told us to assemble another bed in the middle of the ward, for a 39-year-old suffering from Delirium Tremens. He arrived, enormous and unconscious on a trolley, accompanied by a porter and two policemen who bundled him into bed, promising he’d be quiet as he was heavily sedated with Largactil.

As they left, one policeman looked at Barbara and me and shook his head. ‘If he wakes, you two won’t hold him.’ Neither of us weighed much over 50 kilograms at the time. Ten minutes after they’d departed DT-man woke and started punching imagined objects and screaming more swear words than I’d ever imagined existed. Barbara phoned the houseman to come and assess the situation but when Ahmed arrived DT-man was already sitting up, laughing maniacally, and cursing loudly. Paraldehyde was ordered, but Ahmed immediately ran for the door, watching DT-man leap out of bed bellowing new profanities. I shouted to Ahmed, ‘Call the porters. We need help!’

By now, the whole ward was awake, with patients watching in shocked terror.

Then Sammy returned, and DT-man’s bloodcurdling uproar included Satanic descriptions of Sammy’s Nigerian face. He grabbed and threw containers from a nearby trolley before kicking it over. Barbara was hit on the jaw with a pot of iodine, and I got hit on the temple, methylated spirits flooding my eye. Sammy grabbed a nearby beaker and threw water into my face, probably saving my sight, though the pain from the methylated spirits was excruciating.

DT-man, in full flight, screamed bloodcurdling blasphemies to accompany his rampage while we tried to shield patients who were mostly helplessly confined to their beds. The urinal stand was first to go, glass urinals shattering. Then the bedpan trolley was kicked over; metal bedpans clattering and skidding. The noise was ear-shattering and the broken glass and scattered bedpans combined to create a vision of devastation more often seen in a war zone.  He’d begun shaking beds, randomly grabbing patient’s notes, and kicking them around the ward, when two policeman and four porters arrived. The fight to get him into bed was monumental; DT-man really did possess the strength of ten men and believed he was fighting for his life. All six men plus Ahmed, Sammy and I were needed to hold him while Barbara injected the Paraldehyde, then to constrain him (mostly lying on him) until he’d quietened, and we could put up cot sides. The policemen insisted we add a restraining net over the bed, and we were more than happy to comply.

By now it was almost 3 am and Barbara and I had last eaten at 8 pm the previous evening. We cleared up glass, papers, and debris, calmed patients and gave out cups of tea. Then standard procedures kept us in perpetual motion until daylight. We didn’t dare to sit down as there was so much to achieve before we handed over to the day staff. Whatever happened during the night would never be allowed as an excuse for not having achieved our workload, before the day staff came on duty at 7.30 am.

When Day Sister arrived for the hand-over at 8 am her eyes narrowed on seeing us. Barbara’s jaw was bruised, an iodine stain running down her neck and uniform. I wore an eye-pad; my hat, collar and apron crumpled from water ruining the starch. But the ward looked pristine, and DT-man was oblivious and snoring loudly in his Paraldehyde miasma.

The night report was delivered in the unemotional and factual way that was expected. The drama of the night was reduced to clinical words on paper and Sister accepted the report without offering comment or praise for what had happened – or how we’d coped.   

However, she did say we should get cleaned up as fast as possible, as Matron wouldn’t want us to be seen in such a dishevelled state by any member of the public. Her cool, impassive approach was in stark contrast to that of the grateful patients who were only too aware of the drama, and how much worse it could have been.  They wolf-whistled, cheered and clapped as we departed, ignoring the furious Day Sister’s orders for it to stop. Their tribute created enough adrenaline to get us to our rooms. We’d eaten nothing all night but were past hunger and with great relief, tumbled unwashed into our beds. Then in the evening we woke; found fresh uniforms and walked back on duty to begin another shift.

Robert Schmidt: Poor Robert

I rang the Fullarton Lutheran Homes for a follow-up visit with my sister Pauline.

‘That will be fine,’ the secretary says to me over the phone. ‘No RATS or appointment. Just put a mask on and then a visor when you get here.’

Half an hour later I cheerfully arrive at the front door. There is a certain amount of red tape but nothing like the previous Wednesday.

Inside the door there is a short walk along a corridor to the lift. Arriving at the lift, I am sent along another long corridor through a series of doors which my code can use. Then I am at another lift.

Going up to first floor and getting out at the first floor it says you are in Acacia West, Pauline’s ward.  Rooms 30-33 to the left, 34-37 to right. God knows where Pauline’s room 13 is. Straight ahead is a big locked door.

Eventually the door opens. A slightly rotund man appears.

‘What are you doing here? We are in lockdown.’

Slightly nonplussed I reply, ‘Um ah,’ pause. ‘The lady at the front desk says I can come in.’

‘What’s your sister’s name,’ he asks.

‘Pauline, Pauline Schmidt,’ I reply.

He disappears. A long pause, then he returns. ‘OK, she’s right ahead through the big door, in room thirteen.’

Finally I am sitting with my sister, Pauline  A carer comes in who I am not familiar with. ‘Pauline, I will give you your RATS.

The carer turns to me, ‘Sir I don’t think that you should be in here. What’s your room number?’

‘I’m Pauline’s younger brother, Robert. I’m visiting.’

Pauline’s eight years older than me. The carer thinks I’m a resident! So much for looking young for my age. She must be an agency nurse.

After spending an hour with Pauline I say goodbye. I get to the large locked doors. I can’t raise anyone to let me out.

Poor Robert.

Anne McKenzie: Noodling

‘Noodling,’ not to be confused with canoodling, is a must on a visit to Coober Pedy. It involves fossicking on the mullock heaps for opal the original miners missed. Mind you, canoodling under those vast Outback desert night skies has its appeal too – but I had no taker!

We’d done all the other tourist activities – visited underground houses and underground churches, toured old and working mines,checked out museums and travelled out to the Moon Plains and the Breakaways. But it was our last day and we still hadn’t noodled. That we had left it so late was as a result, once again, of companion reluctance.

Our last day was the hottest of our stay – 37 degrees Celsius in the shade – and it was very windy. So I had to work very hard but finally got agreement to proceed. ‘Houston, we are good to go.’


We’d been advised to go to the safety of the public noodling areas where there were no abandoned mine shafts to snare unwary tourists. I was very happy with this advice. We’d already been on a tour of the active opal fields with its treacherous ‘over one million mine shafts and test holes up to 30 metres deep.’ I’d stayed in the safety of the bus for that tour – and had scrutinized my fellow passengers very carefully – as I’d once had an unhappy client who had threatened to ‘do me in’ when I least expected it and dump my body in a Coober Pedy mine where nobody would ever find it. It pays not to tempt fate, don’t you agree?

But what do you noodle with? One local told us that all you needed was a stick and that you could use your hands to sieve the rock and sand. Good luck finding a stick, or even a blade of grass, in Coober Pedy. (Can you believe it, locals have to take a square of artificial turf with them to tee off on at the golf course?) Sieving by hand didn’t really hold any appeal either. Surely in this day and age there’d be noodle kits you could hire?

So I googled ‘Coober Pedy noodle kits.’ The top result gave me the details for the local Opal City Chinese restaurant! The other results yielded only the information (but it was useful) that what you needed was a short-handled shovel, a sieve and, ideally, a black (ultraviolet to show up the opal) torch.

There was no hardware store in Coober Pedy but there was a very large multipurpose IGA– and we weren’t going to be defeated.What we came out with was a large wooden spoon, a plastic kitchen colander and a small bucket of Cadbury’s Easter eggs. The bucket was to be for our finds. I mean, no harm in being aspirational is there? A local had told us ‘a bloke from Sydney found $5,000 worth of opal there just last month. So go for it, look for rainbows.’

We went kitted out with hats, COVID masks (great for the bloody flies) and having slathered insect repellent on our arms and legs. We stuck it out for about an hour. It was hot. The wind blew the sand from our sieving into our faces and onto our bodies coating our bare arms and legs. But it was fun, even though we found not even a flake of opal.

We ended the day with a beer and a meal at the local Chinese restaurant – sweet and sour pork, not noodles!

Edie Eicas: The Coils of the Serpent

It was just after Christmas twenty years ago and one of my friends was extolling the benefits of a small handheld electrical device that denuded the body of hair. Listening to her praise the virtues of the machine, and caught by her enthusiasm, I decided an investment might prove an advantage.

Excited with my purchase, I plugged the implement into the wall, placed my leg on the dining room chair, then bent over to find the starting point at my ankle and began epilating up my leg. While enamoured with the idea that my legs would no longer be marked by a succession of cuts from a razor, I hadn’t understood the machine was a plucker. I’d imagined it as one akin to a razor, and hadn’t considered the process; oh my god, the pain of plucking multiple hairs. Ahh! The scream was reflexive. The pain was excruciating.

Pulling my arm away was also reflexive, but what I hadn’t bargained for was my long hair. In my excitement at my new acquisition, I’d not tied my hair back and it had flowed over my shoulder and down my leg. My arm jerking brought the machine in contact with my hair and, as the implement had no off switch, or I had no idea where it was, it began progressively winding itself into my mane. I had done my usual, not read the instructions before I used it; a fundamental error.

The machine steadily wound my hair into its parts and, confused, I was at a loss as to what to do. As more and more hair knotted into its hungry jaws, I tried to fight the machine’s appetite by pulling it away from my scalp. Ah, more pain until I realised I could yank the cord from the wall.

I felt like the dishevelled Red Queen from Alice in Wonderland with the machine bobbing near my mouth and its cord trailing around the room. At first I thought I could easily untangle the mess but, standing in front of my miserably small bathroom mirror, I realised I was deluded. The thought of having to cut off my very long hair to get the bloody thing out was enough to make me cry in frustration.

I was stuck and in need of a different solution. Holding the offending device and contemplating the mess, I considered taking the thing apart. Okay, I had some Philips head screwdrivers, but did I have the right size?

It was a great idea although the implementation was a major problem. To dismantle the device, I had to work while looking at my reflection in the mirror. I’ve never been good at reverse images. Forget using the hairdryer and curling brush at the same time, so how was I to undo this mess?  

Persistence pays, especially as the incentive was the shame of having to explain how I got myself into another embarrassing situation. Slowly, and having to stop and rest my arms constantly, I managed to unscrew the rotating head from the machine’s body and then spent an hour carefully untangling each strand from its binding while hoping not to lose too much hair.

Robert Schmidt: It’s All Part of the Act

I welcome my guests at the entrance of the Burnside Ballroom for our Words, Wine and World Music event on the 10th November 2021. I sit down with them, fairly close to the stage.

At about 6.55pm Sharon, Anne, Georgette and I go and sit on chairs on the left of the stage. I feel in my trouser pocket for my writing. Shock, horror, it isn’t there! I rush back to my guests. They don’t have it. Why didn’t I leave a copy with my wife Jane?

I rush back out to the entrance of the ballroom to the registration table. I see a piece of paper on the table. It’s my writing! I’m saved! I rush back up onto the stage.

When it is my turn to read, I stride to the lectern. I try to take my COVID mask out of my jacket pocket – blow me down it’s stuck to my mobile phone. I deftly unwrap it. Then it wraps around my glasses. This is not good. In fact these are two of the examples I speak of in ‘my Mask Day Blues’ piece which I am reading. Somehow my glasses don’t fog up like they normally do when I panic.

Those sitting behind me on the stage must wonder what I am doing!

Then finally order is restored.

The reading is easy after that.

While mingling with Jane and the others after the show, people ask if the start was part of my act. ‘Amazing’ they say. I own up. ‘Well, no.’

Well, fellow writers, it wouldn’t be a night out without a bit of drama from me.

Nell Holland: Post-Christmas

How many more cards with Christmas greetings will keep arriving? They were posted last year in the UK, and it’s now the end of January. Some cards are even postmarked from the end of November.

When I look at the postage-price Louisa paid for her card picturing a classic Nativity scene, I’m horrified to see it was posted on December 1st and cost the equivalent of almost AUD $8. That seems an obscene amount for posting a card, even if it was sent to combine festive cheer for us with her exciting news. Louisa would have anticipated the card welcomed with delight, displayed among other cards, with her words bringing joy. Instead it lies open on the hall table, the inked words drowning in my tears.

Her writing states simply.

“This Christmas will be magical. Philip is besotted and hardly put Ekaterina down since her 25th November birth. We’ve waited so many years for this – now she’s here and she’s just perfect! We already can’t imagine life without her. Ekaterina completes us, so come see us soon! Much love from this brand-new family!”

The accompanying photograph shows Louisa laughing at Philip who embraces her with one arm, while cradling Ekaterina dressed as a fairy, or perhaps an angel, in his other arm.

The Festive Season produces good memories and happy times, covering regrets and sorrows. Joy competes with sadness though delight never completely obliterates heartache. This is a layered time of year.

When Philip phoned this morning, it was almost midnight his time. He told us Ekaterina died in her sleep yesterday and there will be an autopsy. Louisa has collapsed in distress and is sedated heavily. He feels helpless, broken and in pain. The call ended when his weeping rendered him speechless.

An hour afterwards the post arrived.

With more late Christmas cards.

Don Sinnott: A Tale of Three Couples—Saturday arvo flicks, late 1950s

He wore his school pants—the only pair of longs he owned—and she wore her fourteenth birthday dress, a less comfortable fit than it was a year ago. They slid into their ticketed seats for the Saturday afternoon film, the girl clutching the gifted box of Jaffas, and self-consciously linked hands.  

As the Val Morgan slides rolled, the lights about to go down, a middle-aged couple bustled down the aisle, tickets in hand, then stopped, surprised, at the occupied aisle seats immediately in front of the young couple.

‘You’re in the wrong seats.’ The man glared at the row in front of the young couple and thrust his tickets at the elderly couple comfortably settled in what were now contested seats. A fumbling comparison of tickets showed identical theatre, date and seat numbers for each couple. An error in ticket printing? Whatever the cause, the seated elderly couple weren’t about to move—they reckoned possession trumped bombast.

Sorting this out was beyond the teenage usherette who was immediately summoned and as the youngsters snickered at this clash of elders they earnt a reproachful stare from the standing man. All the usherette could offer was, ‘Please come with me and I’ll see if we can find you other seats.’ She turned, intending to lead the fuming latecomers back up the aisle. There was no movement.

‘These are our seats. I’ll see the manager.’ retorted the now red-faced male latecomer shooing the usherette off to bring her boss as he and his lady friend stood their ground. By the time the be-suited manager appeared the lights were down and a second comparison of the identical sets of tickets was conducted by torchlight. The manager could offer no immediate solution and, after heated words in the aisle, the aggrieved couple were eventually persuaded to follow him out of the theatre.

The youngsters had watched the exchanges with growing amusement. ‘What a bighead,’ she giggled.

‘Call the manager,’ chortled the boy. ‘As if that was going to change anything! They shoulda come earlier. Serves ‘em right if it’s a full house.’ He felt a dig in his ribs and a ‘Shh’ from the girl as she turned her attention to the screen.

The film proved less entertaining for the young couple than had been the prelude. And 30 years later, when the boy was a middle-manager, he would often recall the lesson he learnt that day: passing your problem up to your boss doesn’t solve it.

Fran Collins: An Invitation

Sitting in a café in Broome in the monsoonal heat of the Kimberley, I struck up a conversation with an American woman. She introduced me to an unconventional way of living.

‘How would I like to volunteer on a station out of Derby in an exciting new enterprise? It’s a unique project. It uses ecology-based theory to cultivate high protein, natural savannah grasses, and the grasses produce quality organic, lean beef. And there is a ready international market for healthy beef. A friend of mine, a Texas-oil millionaire funds this amazing experiment through the international Eco-Technics Institute. It will be a spectacular adventure into personal development’, she said taking a deep breath.

The invitation was clearly scripted, yet it ignited my curiosity. This venture demanded only the time, energy and creativity of my partner and myself for a commitment of one to two months.

‘Let’s go and give it a try’, I said to my partner, Bill.

Having packed up the four-wheel drive, we set off for Derby with our letter of introduction to the station manager.

Little did we realise that we were entering a ‘brave new world’. A world of confused values and behaviours. A cultish world with a dark under-belly in which theory and its practice were divorced. Totally at odds with each other. This world revealed itself in sabotage, subterfuge, selfishness, jealousy, and petty behaviours that defied rationality. A community closed off from mainstream, suffering a chronic disconnect with the world outside. A fascinating, if not frustrating experiment in group, and in particular gender dynamics.

The rules for participation included much that was described as compulsory, for example:

  • no television was permitted as this was considered a distraction from the wholesome values of the venture
  • teams of two people were rostered to prepare the evening meal, which had to include three courses, whether consumed or not. The pigs ate sumptuously from our largesse
  • music could only be played in the privacy of one’s hut at night, at a level that respected other peoples’ right to peace and silent meditation
  •  a special meeting, once per week was set aside for resolving group conflict
  • focus was on the development of skills, talents and sensitivities of the ‘whole person’. It was therefore compulsory to participate in the station’s annual theatre production for the dry season in Derby.

Sabotage of the station manager’s authority was a common occurrence instigated by the same irresponsible individual, who held the title of Agricultural Manager. This meant she was John Deere representative for the Kimberley, machinery trouble-shooter and problem-solver for all things agricultural. A station Red Adair!  She knew as much about machinery as Sister Theresa but lacked the good nun’s humility. Ignoring the most fundamental of bush principles, she left gates open that should have been closed and closed gates that were intended to be left open. As a result the cattle regularly wandered into the watermelon patch and trampled the produce that was destined for the local supermarkets in town.

Everyone lamented those occasions when our Agricultural Manager was on kitchen duty, since it meant that the meat would be badly undercooked, and vegetables arrived raw on one’s plate. The meal presented well, but was a challenge to digest because she didn’t plan adequately for the required cooking time. Since this became a pattern, I could only infer that she was not in the least inspired to develop her culinary talents. Interestingly the cult members tolerated and ignored this behaviour, so it was never an agenda item for the conflict resolution meetings.

I suspect most people were afraid of her. She and the station manager were frequent antagonists. On occasion their quarrels escalated beyond a war of words to brawling in the paddocks, in the homestead, and even in the chook pen with disastrous effects on egg count for that day. Their discord permeated the station and had people downing tools to escape the conflict.

This woman was not the only source of discord. Our hut neighbour had many talents, especially of torture. He was a friendly young fellow by day who miraculously morphed into a heavy-metal fiend by night. He shared his passion for this music with the district, its humans and beasts. I still have images of him thrashing his guitar, feet astride, face contorted, head canted to one side, turned to the full moon as he delivered his artful cacophony to the universe. Any plans for quiet meditation that night we put on hold.

The most bizarre of all events was the performance of the play, The Maids by Jean Genet, a proponent of the Theatre of the Absurd which dealt with abstract values, illogical speeches and meaningless plots. It was a play about a lesbian relationship between the mistress and the maid. These roles were performed by, yes, you guessed it, our Station Manager and our Agricultural Manager. A peculiar choice of literature for a wild cowboy town like Derby. By eight we had a full house of local families eager for a night of entertainment. By nine patrons were fleeing the stalls, row after row in a frenzied getaway. Our audience had disappeared well before interval. It was surprising that no-one had delayed long enough to demand their money back.

We stayed in the project for the agreed period and escaped once our contract expired, thankful for release back into prosaic mainstream society. A wonderful learning experience that contributed to my developing skills in discernment.

Rossana Mora: Roots

Memories of some chats I had with my father revolve in my head from time to time.

Back when I was little, moving houses seemed to be our lifestyle. My parents were teachers and they were sent to a remote rural town at the beginning of their careers. Their wish was to move back to their hometown, to be close to their respective families. Over time, they did it, by coming closer and closer, one move after another. I remember him saying how much he wished for us to settle and develop roots in one place, that we wouldn’t have long term friendships if we didn’t.

As a young adult, I repeated the pattern myself. I moved houses with my own family many times, mainly due to my jobs until I finally decided that it was time to have a family home. Yes, the big family house, the one that would cater for everything and everyone. 

An old house was offered to us and we decided to take it. The price was below its value and once I reached the top floor when inspecting it and saw the ocean view, I fell in love with the possibilities. I fell in love with the dream. There was only one thing missing though, a garden.

The house was on the side of a hill, built in levels adapted to the hill and had almost no room for a garden. I overlooked that desire. It hurt, but perhaps not enough for me to reject the property.

While the house was being remodeled, my husband started to be more absent than usual and I ended up supervising the works alone, deciding colours and materials. I chose every piece of furniture myself. I was paying, so I believed my husband just wasn’t comfortable with that.

The house wasn’t yet finished when we divorced, so when I finally moved in, I didn’t even bring a teaspoon from my married life. New beginnings, new start.

All my extended family spent Christmas and New Year’s Eve in that house several times. There was space. Everyone had room. Everyone enjoyed the ocean view, the terrace, the pool. We had enough toilets even for a salmonella outbreak! What a joke!

The house has now been empty for nearly 10 years…alone, abandoned. No more parties or family gatherings; memories of faces and voices have faded within its walls.  

The violence in Mexico scattered my extended family around the world in the search of an opportunity to have a real life. A life with no fear. In my case, I took my two children and moved once more, this time, to the other side of the world.

Now, I see my nomadic journey reflected in my pot plants.

At the beginning, I refused to have more than four plates and four cups. I refused to have plants. I considered my apartment in Glenside as a temporary home. Then, a tiny succulent in a little glass jar was left behind when my daughter moved to Melbourne to study at University. I looked after that plant because I felt I was looking after my daughter. 

One day, a new friend gave me a pot plant. Then some more plants started to come. A few years later, after selling that apartment to keep fuelling our life here in our new country, I realised that my pot plants had grown and multiplied. I still have small, cute pot plants but I also have some plants in big pots, those ones that are not easily moved around.

Today, looking at my pot plants, I realised that despite growing and thriving, their roots are still contained. My pot plants can’t develop roots in the Australian soil just yet and knowing this, hurts.

Those memories of the chats I had with my father are spinning in my head again.

Anne McKenzie: A Few Drinks

‘I think I’ll just walk down to the local pub for a few drinks,’ he says, smiling and looking directly at me.

We’ve just got back from the airport and we’re having a cup of tea at my home.  It’s the first time I’ve seen them face to face for seven years, as they’ve been travelling overseas, and the first time they’ve flown interstate to visit me in literally my first home away from home.

I look at him and remember…

He spoiled every Christmas we shared, every birthday we celebrated and every family gathering or party – even my graduation dinner. We were always held hostage to his drinking.

An alcoholic? Well, a binge drinker at the very least. He could never have just one drink and the drink always made him nasty and spiteful. When he’d been drinking he’d pick at us, looking for any weaknesses he could exploit. He tried to pit mother against child, child against child and child against mother. He’d reduce us to tears. He didn’t use blows, just words.

Only once did I dare to speak out against him.

‘You have no right to get drunk and pick on us all,’ I said, with all the courage and outrage I could muster at ten years old.

My mother said my words upset and hurt him and made me apologise the next morning. ‘He’s a good man and he loves us,’ she said.

I felt truly alone in the world for the first time at that moment.

‘I’m sorry for speaking out but not for what I said,’ I finally muttered to him. It seemed like a victory of sorts on my part, not a total capitulation, but I’m not sure it was.

It was clear it was a game to him. Well, for one thing he kept on doing it.

Some working week mornings over breakfast he would say, ‘I think I’ll call into the pub for a drink on the way home from work.’ Those days he might or might not come home drunk.  Sometimes he said nothing in the morning but came home late and drunk.

When he said he’d go to the pub after work, he knew we would worry all day about what was to come in the evening. On those days, by 5.30pm, when we would normally expect him home from work, my sister and I would sit at the lounge room window and peer out at the drive, watching for his approaching car, compelled to be there like moths to a flame. We were helpless in his thrall. Ironically, the watching achieved nothing – if he’d been drinking, he didn’t drive the car erratically or stagger from it to the front door. But we had to watch and watch. And even if he was late and drunk, we had to greet him effusively and try to jolly him into good humour for all our sakes.

‘I think I’ll just walk down to the local pub for a few drinks,’ he says, again, breaking my reverie.

‘I heard you Dad. Fine, if you want to go, go. It’s just a few hundred yards left down the main road. But if you go, don’t bother coming back. We’re in my home now.’

Lawrie Stanford: Conversations with Mary—When the chips are down

I eyed the bowl of chips carefully and selected the smallest, crispiest chip. Hmmmm, I thought, just how I like them—the crunchy feel, the fluffy cooked potato, the tang of salt and the moist, smoothness of cooking oil. I dived in for another. 

‘When did you order them!’ Mary exclaimed, ‘You must have done it when I wasn’t looking.’

‘Well yeah, you would have said no.’ I replied. 

‘Too right!’ Mary shot back. ‘You have already ordered a 500-gm steak with salad.’

‘But you know I like hot chips and they didn’t come with the steak,’ I pleaded.

‘You’re hopeless.’ Mary retorted. Any further debate was stifled by the arrival of my steak. But I offered Mary a consoling assurance, ‘I won’t eat them all, I’ll only eat the smallest, crispiest ones—the ones I really like.’ 

Mary was now engrossed in conversation with others in our group. Excellent, I thought, let’s do these chips. I proceeded to quietly, surreptitiously, pick away at them.

As the number of chips dwindled, they were no longer as small, or as crisp. The upside though, was that there was always one that was! I ploughed on. 

Before long, I noted the numbers had dwindled to just two chips. One of them was smaller, and had a crisp patch on one side. My hand reached out to grab it. It was, after all, the smallest, and crispiest, in the bowl. 

Then, rationality returned. I can’t eat that last chip, I mused, I have to show some restraint

Mary glanced my way and saw the near-empty chip bowl.  ‘You weak so-and-so.  You ate all those chips!’

‘No I haven’t,’ I said, ‘I’ve shown some restraint. And now for my steak!’

Don Sinnott: Amateur car repairs, 1970s

Just a minor collision. A lady shopper reversing in the car park didn’t notice my wife, Wendy, driving past behind her. There was a crunch of deforming metal as her car’s rear end embedded itself in the passenger-side door of our car. The post-collision discussions lacked any heat—it was clear who was at fault and Wendy agreed to get a quote for repairs to the door, which the other party, uninsured, would pay.

The local crash-repairer quoted for a new paint-matched door and, separately, for fitting it. I met with the errant parker’s husband and offered, if he met the cost of the new door, to do the fitting job myself. After all, blokes can do anything! What could possibly go wrong? He accepted my offer, after glancing at the saving I was offering him by removing his liability for fitting costs.

In due course a door was available, and the crash repairer grumpily passed it over with a warning that I might regret my DIY plans: ‘Bound to scratch it—not as easy as you might think. Shoulda left it to us.’  I waved off his protests.

He was right, of course, I did scratch it, but just a little, and it was difficult to transfer all the door fittings to the new door. Compounding my challenges, the day I set to work was time-limited: we had evening theatre bookings. As the departure deadline loomed the door had a window, was attached to the car, but lacked handles and a lock.

Easily fixed—all it needed was a rope tied to the inside of the door to hold it closed, crossing the front seats and tied to the opposite door. Final repairs to be made the next day. I considered this a good outcome but less so did Wendy, objecting to having to enter via a back door, clamber through to the front and wriggle under a rope across her lap. Even elegant solutions have down-sides.

Edie Eicas: Shared Memories

The 11th of February is my mother’s birth-day, and I realise there are memories that only she and I shared, and while I can still tell stories of our lives together, her input is no-longer available to me.

In 1987 I was pregnant, and my eldest was crawling. Busy getting dinner ready for a party, I was rushing around the kitchen. Back then, the house hadn’t been renovated, and the fridge was 10 metres or more across the room from the stove and benches.

Back and forth I went, pulling out what I needed from the fridge, I was hurrying to finish my preparations. Andrew in his baby blue jumpsuit was exploring the kitchen. At one point, I looked up and noticed my son was nowhere to be seen. Worried, I looked in the lounge, but no, he wasn’t there. Anxiety mounting, I couldn’t understand where he would be, and began to panic.

Then, the fridge door caught my eye and I could see it was slightly open, and there, at the bottom of the door, two little blue feet dangled. In surprise, I opened the fridge to find Andrew had hoisted himself up using the shelves of the door but, with his weight, it had swung closed. Caught between the shelves and the door he just held on, but with no cry of distress to alert me to what had happened.

Barely able to stop laughing, my son on my hip, I rang my mother in Queensland to share the moment. There was joy in the telling and pleasure in the shared laughter, but once the story had finished, I realised the woman on the other end of the phone was not my mum. She didn’t have a European accent. I had dialled the wrong number, and by coincidence, had called a woman who also had a daughter with a child. Recognition of my mistake and my spluttering apology brought further laughter for both of us.

Now I had another story to share with my mother and more laughter to add to our bond.

Nell Holland: The Bargain

Chocolates and sticky cakes usually hold little temptation for me. But once one is sampled, although the brain says ‘stop’ my mouth takes no heed. Unfortunately, I must confess I’ve got pitiful willpower.

On a recent shopping trip I saw a bag of chocolate caramels on sale for five dollars instead of the usual ten. Well, I love a bargain, but did I need those caramels? Of course not. Would I buy them? You betcha!

That evening I settled down in front of the television and popped a caramel into my mouth. When The Antiques Roadshow expert told a stunned woman that the hideous jug she disliked intensely was worth a small fortune, I bit into the chocolate, feeling as shocked as the television participant. I chewed on wistfully imagining what I could do with all the money I’d heard mentioned, and gradually became aware that the chocolate seemed unusually crunchy. A terrible thought occurred to me. Was I really crunching chocolate?

I left the The Antiques Roadshow experts with the astonished, but joyful participant, and made a hasty trip to the bathroom mirror where the worst was confirmed. The toffee had extricated a large filling and fractured part of a tooth. Overnight, the jagged tooth cut into my tongue causing extensive ulceration. Then, inflammation from the ulcers tracked to my throat producing enlarged lymph glands and by morning, I could hardly speak or swallow.

I’m sure my husband was enjoying the silence, so ignoring his exaggerated, faux-sympathy I threw myself onto the mercy of my most un-favourite profession.

The dentist saw me within hours and was able to drill – hideous word – the serrations down to a smooth level and asked me to wait for a two-hour appointment to be arranged. Apparently, he’ll attach a ‘crown’, which I’ve been told will cost me almost two thousand dollars. (For that price I believe I should be given something akin to what Queen Elizabeth wears on her head.)

Now, any visitor to my house will be offered one, or more, or even all, of the most expensive bargain buy ever.

Please, do me a favour and take the lot!

Anne McKenzie: Skin Cancer

‘I’ve got the results of your biopsy and it’s an unusual result,’ he tells us.

Marie and I look at one another, faces grim. I’ve been on this skin cancer journey long enough to know that ‘unusual’ is not good. It’s going to be as bad as ‘medically interesting’ was the last time.

‘So it’s not another melanoma, which is good, but it’s not an innocuous Basal Cell Carcinoma either, as we’d hoped,’ I say.

‘No,’ he says. ‘It’s a Merkel Cell Carcinoma.’

‘What ‘Merkel’ as in Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor?’

‘What? Yes, that’s right. The bad news is it’s an aggressive skin cancer —fast growing — as you’d be only too aware from it growing from a tiny pimple-sized lump to a largish marble by the time we’d cut it out several weeks later. The good news is that we got it all and with good margins on all sides.’

‘I’m glad there is some good news.’

‘But they can recur, even in the same spot and we recommend a course of radiation therapy. That reduces the risk of the cancer returning by 50 percent.’

I feel ill. Oh, not again!

‘You’ll need to have treatment five days a week for six weeks to your lower lip, chin, neck and the lymph nodes in your neck. There’ll be side effects— worse because it’s your face and neck. You’ll get mouth and tongue ulcers. You’ll get a dry mouth as the salivary glands will be damaged — that will most likely be permanent. Your voice will deepen. You’ll lose your sense of taste — that comes back in a few months to a year but is a permanent loss in some people. Your face and neck will become swollen and the skin in that area will become fire engine red — and then the skin will itch and peel.  You’ll have trouble swallowing and eating generally because your mouth will be so sore. You’ll need to see a specialist dentist — they may need to clean your teeth for you as your gums may be too sore for you to do it properly.’

His words hit me like numbing blows, one after the other.

How many times has he given this spiel, doing it almost without drawing breath and without looking up from his computer screen? But he is kind and concerned — he’s fitting me in before he goes on leave.

‘We’ll start Monday. Oh and you’ll have to wear a mask for each treatment. You don’t get claustrophobic do you?  We’ll get you in tomorrow for a simulation and to make the mask. It covers you head, shoulders and upper arms and it’s strapped down firmly so you can’t move. Oh and we’ll push the barrel of a syringe into your mouth to try to keep your tongue back out of the way. The mask is like that one there. ’

He gestures to beneath the examination table.

When he leaves the room to book my appointments, I pull the mask out from under the table. It’s quite heavy and feels metallic but is probably only a hard plastic. I try it on.  It’s a finely woven rigid mesh. You can just see out of it and breathe.

 ‘I do get claustrophobic,’ I want to shout after him.

 ‘I don’t think I can do this,’ I say to Marie.

‘Yes, you can. You’re stronger than you think.’

Lawrie Stanford: Timeless Tales Told in Verse—The Pirate

I went down to the pub one day,
at the bar there was a pirate—
at least he had the gear I’d say,
so I asked him, had he hired it.

‘Oi’m a pirate, aye me ‘earty,
that oi be—aye, well and truly,
oi’m not dress’d up for no party,
oi be a pirate—quite unruly.’

Well I’ll be darned, I was in awe,
seeing peg-leg, hook and eye-patch,
and I wanted to know much more,
wondering what tales he’d hatch. 

I bought him beers as incentive
to tell me his tales of daring,
expecting something inventive
about life on ships, sea-faring.

‘So what about that wooden leg?’
was my first and awkward query.
‘That thing that looks just like a peg?’
He looked at me, his one eye bleary.

‘Swingin’ on a rope from our mast,
with me legs out there ‘angin’ free,
I was boardin’ a ship as it pass’d,
when a sword lopp’d me orf at the knee.’

Then I asked how he got the hook,
while noting it was his making, 
for sure, it was not a good look,
but a pirate?—there was no mistaking.

‘Cap’n’s girl it were, she wa’ pretty,
but the blaggard cut orf me ‘and
when I reached to touch her foyne titty—
and me fingers fell limp on the sand.’ 

And last, I queried the eye-patch,
to lose your sight is such a shame,
I wondered what’d be the catch,
and just who he’d find to blame.

‘Twas soon after me ‘ook was fit,
a fly ‘round me ‘ead buzzed about,
so I took a big swipe at it,
bloody ‘ook, took me eye right-out!’

Sharon Apold: The Centurion And The Butterfly

You who are good, strong and whole
you hold me as though I am a butterfly
delicate, flighty, fleeting

You who are solid, and calm and reliable
you have your hands just outside my wings
protecting, shielding, guarding

You who are wise, kind and stable
you look at me and watch my attempts at flight
unsure, unsteady, broken

You who feel my pain and bleed for me
you wonder if I am merely your fantasy 
ethereal, tempting, enticing

You who are my guardian and place to rest
you see inside my beguiling exterior
bright, colourful, entrancing

You who keep me steady and safe
you hold part of my soul inside of you
warm, alive, eternal

You who are my friend, love, soulmate
you own my heart and share my body
soft, strong, responsive 

You who are my palace and home
you can feel safe with me
treasured, adored, loved

Fran Collins: Then I Fixed It

What a scorcher was that Melbourne summer of December, 1967. The Bureau of Meteorology had predicted bush fires for the Dandenong Ranges and fire bans were in place in early October. Residents perched on ladders were zealously clearing their guttering of dried leaves and other combustibles. Blinds drawn, windows closed, and where no blinds protected the bubble-glassed front doors, in vogue at that time, makeshift solutions prevailed. Our family’s remedy was to shroud the front door in blankets. The ever-present threat of fire and cinders carried by sweltering northerly winds sat heavily in peoples’ memories of previous summers that were the hellfire of Hades. In that summer of 1967, Melbourne was baking under day time highs of forty degrees Celsius and night time lows of thirty degrees.

But life went on. People still went to work, dragging weary bodies home on trains and buses that were saunas, as air-conditioning had not yet arrived in public transport. I had just completed my matriculation year at Oakleigh High School and was revelling in the freedom afforded by the conclusion of one chapter in my life, and the beginning of a new one; entry into Teachers’ College the following year.

In the interim I was toiling on a conveyor belt in a local potato chip factory in Clayton as a process worker. Because of the available overtime, I could earn a better wage than the salary provided by my usual summer vacation job of dog’s body in a local hairdressers.

I was part of a group of women who stood for eight hours plus on a concrete floor, along a conveyor belt close to the oven. The mouth of this furnace spewed out burning hot potato chips followed by splutters of scalding oil. Our eyes penetrated the flow before us, identifying the burnt chips and, grasping them with bare hands before the conveyor belt whisked them away. With equal speed we deposited them in the plastic bins on our right hand side. The rhythm of grab and dump, grab and dump continued hour after hour. As afternoon arrived, the pace slowed considerably.

Robert Schmidt: The long, long, long weekend

Last Friday afternoon I needed to contact Helping Hand to stop a contractor coming on Wednesday afternoon 6th October to deliver tall boys and tables and collecting our old ones. I wanted to reschedule.

Wednesdays I go on my Heart Foundation walk and once a month to an important lunch at the Glynde Hotel with friends.

I thought it would be easy to rearrange. About 2 pm I ring Helping Hand on my mobile. That would be right, on a loop you go. ‘Your call is important to us, you will be answered by the next available operator, blah blah…’

After a while another voice cuts in, ‘If you want to leave your name, number and a detailed message we will return your call.’ I listen for a few more minutes then decide to do as she says: name, number etc.

My friend Steve says ‘You haven’t a hope, they won’t return your call, they’re a semi-government organisation. They have gone for the long weekend.’ He’s right, my phone’s silent for the rest of the afternoon. I’ll try Tuesday.

On Tuesday, after a long delay I get to speak to a real live person. ‘Unfortunately,’ she says, ‘the coordinator’s taking an extra day off. Can you ring Wednesday?’

I’m writing my story Tuesday evening. If I can’t get through to the coordinator in the morning I’m still going to my lunch, but I won’t be popular with Jane if all these contractors turn up. Wish me well!

Edie Eicas: AI, Artificial Intelligence

I wasn’t sure why they asked me to do a psychology test before I bought that new fangled high-end, super-dooper fridge with voice activation, and the ability to predict what I needed. But, I was impressed by the salesman who sold the thing to me. Well, more than impressed. He was good. He worked me through the fridges until I was standing in front of the most expensive, and the one that had internet connection. It would order what I needed as I used the contents. I would no longer have to worry about having no milk for coffee.

I bought it. I bought the hoo-ha. The spin. And now, I’m not sure if I’ve done the right thing. That white gleaming monstrosity sits in my kitchen and now dictates my life.

I’ve tried to get that fridge to order ice-cream, but it’s refused. It’s telling me my BMI is too high and I need to diet. This AI, this artificial intelligence has gone too far. I was told, based on the psychology test, that I’m a bit neurotic, and now the fridge is telling me that ice-cream isn’t the answer to my anxiety. Says who?

I’ve tried buying ice-cream and sneaking it into the freezer. The first time it worked. The freezer wasn’t prepared for my revolt but, when I took the container out to savour the taste of hazelnut, the fridge wouldn’t let me put back what was left. 

I started getting paranoid. Was there a camera on the fridge watching me? Determining the weight I needed to be? I was shocked that a mere machine would think it could take over my life. I revolted. Ate ice-cream out where that fridge couldn’t see me. Poked my tongue out at that piece of metal, but the fridge didn’t stop trying to regulate me, or tell me I was over-weight.

Well, I’m over it.

For sale: one fridge looking for a new home.

Don Sinnott: Recollections of the Heysen Trail, South Australia

We’re loggers. Not the timber-cutting kind, but the kind who log their notable events in a journal. For years we’ve recorded recollections of journeys that bring a warm inner glow, peaks of joy and depths of gloom. We don’t intend to have others read our journals—although perhaps a later generation might skim them after we’ve gone—and they’re certainly not going to appear on the web. Our records are logs but not blogs.

For the last five years we have sporadically walked the Heysen Trail. Mostly day-walks, partnering with another couple to pre-position a car at each end of a planned day’s walk, sharing their company on the Trail and a few indulgent drinks at day’s end. Each walk has been faithfully recorded in our log, wedged among our other records of the years.  

But now we’ve finished the Trail: we emerged onto the Parachilna Gorge Road a few weeks ago, with 1,200 km of sweaty wonderment behind us, and next day wrote our exultant final Trail log. But there are some problems: although we covered the Trail from South to North, not all the segments were done in the map’s sequence and having the individual day logs buried in the stories of five years of our lives is not ideal. We want a connected Trail narrative, from its beginning to its end, as a stand-alone tale. And so the task of extracting our separate logs and reassembling them in ‘Trail order’ has begun.

It’s a process both tedious and fun. Over five years our writing, formatting and documentation styles have evolved and we feel duty-bound to impose some uniformity, reviewing and editing the logs as we paste them together. As we do so, we’re there again, fair weather and foul, steep climbs and precarious descents, rock-strewn creek beds and verdant grasslands. What a wonderful land we live in!

Rossana Mora: Stevens-Johnson

The baby girls were born into a lovely family after a hard pregnancy for their mum, who had a massive belly that looked like it was going to be torn apart at any time.

The baby born first is always claimed to be the strongest. The second one was born half an hour after the first one and was indeed smaller in size and weight. She was named Lucy.

At the age of five, she fell terribly ill. It was meningitis and after a hard battle in hospital, she came home with a bunch of medicines and no brain damage. The doctors were impressed at such an excellent outcome. She was very strong, they said.

After a few days, a second battle started at home: Lucy refused to take her medicine. She cried, screamed and said it hurt her to swallow, but she was forced to take it.  She needed to be forced, they could not risk her full recovery.

Days later, a visit to another doctor sent Lucy straight back to the emergency department. It was then when her father, my uncle, rang me and asked in distress, ‘Do you know anything about a disease called Stevens-Johnson?’

I quickly tried to recall names of diseases from a book we had in our family library and said, ‘I haven’t heard of it, but I will search for information and ring you back ASAP’. I never asked him why he called me. I am not a doctor and I know nothing about medicine.

I emailed a friend who knew people in the medical field. She sent me some links and as I read, my eyes watered. Soon a river of tears was flowing down my cheeks; still, I had to call back and be the bearer of bad news.

In hospital Lucy was tied to her bed, fully immobilised to prevent hurting herself. As the days passed, medical personnel preferred not to touch her or even look at her. The parents carried out most of the care in those last days. Her eyelids falling apart, her body covered in open blisters, her insides self-destroying. 

The Stevens-Johnson syndrome was triggered by one of the medications that saved her from meningitis. The more medicine forced into her, the stronger the self-destroying reaction of the body. Who could have known?

Her coffin was locked so no one could see how she looked like after such a horrible death. My uncle held the key tightly in his hand during the funeral. He wanted everyone to remember his daughter as the sweet, lovely girl she was.  Little Lucy, rest in peace.

Robert Schmidt: My Mask Day Blues

Jane and I drove to South Terrace to pick up an admission form for St Andrews hospital where Jane was to have a medical procedure.

After hastily parking my Suzuki, I walk towards the entrance of the hospital. While walking, I fiddle in my jacket pocket for my mask. My mobile phone must have wrapped itself around the mask. As if my mask was a slingshot, out flies my Samsung into the distance. I pick up the phone and the face has been wiped. ‘Blast!’, I say, or perhaps it was stronger words.

I then need to go to Vodafone on Sunday afternoon. Leaving home, I arrive at Greenhill Road and realise I have no mask in my pocket. I turn around and rush home. Nearly break the front door lock, grab another mask, then slamming the door behind me rush back to the car. Jane was in the toilet. She thought it was as burglary. (I realise later, there were two masks in the glove box.)

I arrive at Vodafone at 4.55pm, just in time to buy a new Samsung phone.

On another occasion, I was going down an escalator at Burnside Village. This time, there go my glasses. Forgetting where I was, I bent over to pick them up. Trying to regain balance, I was nearly a COVID mask casualty.

One solution I found was to wear a mask under my chin nearly all day.

Watching footy on TV with Jane, I made a spur of the moment decision to go to a takeaway where I put my mask on outside the shop. While sitting inside, I realised I was wearing two masks—one over my nose and one under my chin. No-one said a word, well, not to my double-masked face.

I kid you not—it isn’t easy being Robert.

Georgette Gerdes: ‘It’s not easy bein’ green’

  – a homage to Kermit the frog

‘Its not easy bein’ green’
Kermit sings with 
skinny limbs
and felty fingers
strumming the god given banjo

he says it’s boring 
blending in with things
chlorophyll
leaves
grass
vegetables

mountains
of green

the greenback
lucky green
green with envy
green behind the ears
green when you’re about to vomit on a boat

flags

shamrock

sometimes
‘wearing of the green’

stands out

perilous

for an Irish catholic
in 18th century Ireland
a man
wearing green ribbons or handkerchief
was ‘subjected to;
imprisonment, 
transportation, 
the rope or 
bayonet’ 

for women; 
‘the brutal insults of the common soldiery’

green nationalism 
survived

green is relaxing
nature
parrots
grasshoppers
tree frogs
emeralds

bein’ green in Colombia
protecting the Earth’s lungs
is definitely not easy 
you are likely to be murdered

four killings a week
the worldwide 
butchery of environmental defenders

sage
teal
forest green
lime
apple
mint

bein’ green as a climate scientist
is not easy
you may be hacked by cybercriminals
discredited
receive death and rape threats

aloe vera
hosta
maidenhair
snake plant
agave
peace Lilly

bein’ a female green in Australian politics 
is not easy
it may lead to ridicule, slut shaming 
sexual harassment

conifers
bamboos
acers
poplars
oak
eucalyptus

bein’ green in a world of climate change
warning governments for 50 years
watching the extinctions of species
biodiversity loss
melting of the permafrost

the impending humanitarian crisis from drought, pollution
heatwaves
fires
floods and storm events
is not easy

it’s not easy bein’ green

but we’ve got to try

Kermit we hear you
as you say...

‘green's the colour of spring
and green can be cool and friendly like
and green can be big like a mountain
or important like a river or tall like a tree
I'm green and it'll do fine
it's beautiful and I think it's what I want to be’


Attribution: ‘Is not easy bein’ green’ written by Joe Raposo 1970, performed by Jim Henson as Kermit the frog

Sharon Apold: The Wine Dinner

The Duke and the Baroness

I enjoy these evenings of food and wine pairing. Hearing a wine maker lead me into their work of art. Sure, you can teach a human to make wine, in a similar way you can teach them to cook, but it’s an art to curate raw fruits of the earth into something of beauty, both to the palate and the eye. Science also meets the intuitive hand of the horticulturist, both in the vineyard and the farm.

The wine dinner is the stage, the winemaker the conductor and what you put into your mouth – the performance. The Duke of Brunswick is a local pub in Gilbert Street, Adelaide. Run by Simone Douglas, The Duke is gluten free, inclusive, and proclaims to be #seriously social[1]

Joanne Irvine[2] is The Baroness: owner and winemaker at her Barossa based winery ‘Lévriér by Jo Irvine’.

This article is about the performance.

We began our evening with a NV Sparkling Meslier Brut Rosé. Crisp, clean, green apple palate, with a delicate, gentle bead. Very complimentary to the crunch as I bit through the fine crumb-coating on the pillow-soft scallop. A hint of salt from the topping of salmon roe and a smoothness on the palate from the little dot of aioli atop each one.

A miniature vertical tasting followed. Two Pinot Gris. Here, I would love to venture off into the ethos behind Jo’s premium ‘Mosaic Collection’, but you will have to allow me your audience at another time for that one.

The two ‘Gris are from the same vineyard, from similar vintages and made by the same wine maker. This tasting is intended to demonstrate bottle age. The ’16 has an elegance and finesse yet to emerge in the ’18. After 12 months on lees, and yet to be released, the ‘18 still has that yeasty, punchy palate and soft mouthfeel. This makes me visualize a cloudiness I can’t see. If I close my eyes, I imagine a fresh unfiltered white wine with a slight cloudiness but when I look at this baby it is a clear pale honey colour. The ’18 has been off lees for two years and has begun the journey, but it’s destination can be seen in the ’16. A beautiful golden colour, the ’16 has lost that yeasty flavour and has become complex and delicate. Now five years down, this wine is drinking very nicely. Jo gives it a cellaring life of around ten years. Served with pasta, this is slightly incongruous in theory, the Italian version ‘Grigio’, would avoid mixing ethnicities. On the palate though, the clean subtlety of the ’16, sits well with the cream, coated pasta, which is bejewelled with bright green peas and crisp prosciutto.

The palate cleanser. Out comes 2016 Merlot. Merlot is an Irvine family tradition.  Again – another story. And we’re stepping down a price point to the ‘Art Collection’.

You will want to hear Jo’s story about this. Lévriér‘s Merlot is smooth. Think morello cherry, a little plummy finish with a gracious gentle tannin.

Zinfandel enters. Originating in Croatia as Crljenak Kastelanski[3] and known to the Italians as Primitivo. It’s partnered by a generous wagyu rump steak. The wagyu is char-grilled to medium rare, and is accompanied by a large, dark field mushroom. I’m drawn to the mushroom first, its own earthy character carrying the richness of the wagyu juices. My mouth waters remembering the flavours. Wagyu is so cooperative on the grill. It’s infusion of juicy fat, rendering when heated and handing to you a soft flavoursome steak. There are chunky chips to remind me I’m in a pub and charred greens for freshness and contrast. The Zinny[4] gives me richness, but without that ‘punch in the face’ middle, some Barossa reds carry. The finish is spicy, like a nod to cinnamon, without quite going there.

On to dessert.  A fortified Semillon is served. Mistelle is the technique of adding spirit to a partly fermented grape juice.  It’s not what I expected. With a sugar content of some 40 grams, I expected a viscous lolly water. So mistaken. Jo’s Mistelle was paired with a chocolate brownie, laced with pink peppercorn. The Mistelle set it off perfectly. I had in my mouth warm and mid weight, fruit bearing liquid, followed by a chocolatey, fudgy gooiness. Punctuated by the surprise and lift of pepper.  In my mind I could see the little pink berries, shedding their wafer-thin coats to reveal their dark hearts. I’m sure the tart raspberry smeared on the plate and the spoonful of vanilla ice cream were in the chorus, but I was too distracted by the symphony in my mouth.

I’m keeping an eye out for the next wine dinner.


[1] The Duke of Brunswick’s reference to being social, refers to their support for local community groups, their gluten free menu and dietary requirement conscious, non-discriminating philosophy.

[2] Joanne Irvine is a member of the Barons of The Barossa. Barons of the Barossa are appointed by invitation to recognise and celebrate an individual’s exceptional contribution to the Barossa.

[3] Pronounced: Tserl-yee-ehnak Kashh-tell-ann-skee

[4] Zinfandel is sometimes also referred to just as Zin.

Fran Collins: An Adventure into Nature

An impulse to bend rules and indulge in some ‘risky business’, along with a big injection of hormonal lust, saw me accompany the sexy, blond-haired Sven on a trip to Banias Falls.

Nineteen seventy-three. We were volunteers on Kibbutz[i] Amiad, in the Golan Heights, a stone’s throw from the Sea of Galilee and 40 kilometres south-east of the border with Syria.

Luck with hitchhiking would see us close to Banias Falls after nightfall. An under-the-radar overnight stay in a barn, on the edge of Kibbutz Quneitra would allow us plenty of time to visit the falls the next day, and cross paths with some of the ancient Druze people. This would be no ordinary hike. We had to slip past the Israeli border control to reach the falls, located in territory annexed from Syria.

We departed Kibbutz Amiad after dark. Neither Sven nor I were keen to mention our destination to the kibbutzniks[ii]. Travelling ultra-light made it easy to scurry undetected down the long driveway from our kibbutz to the highway.

We had secured a ride some time later and found ourselves at the turn-off to our destination. The bitumen behind us, we padded silently down a corrugated track. Ahead, the voices of Israeli soldiers focussed our attention. My heart sat in my throat, reverberating into the heat of the evening. A group of male and female soldiers was huddled outside their tents, conversing in rapid-fire Hebrew. We had to traverse the boom gate that separated us from the falls. This meant negotiating some obstacles. Firstly, an enormous spotlight etched the surrounding forest with an electric luminescence. We could only proceed when the soldiers had retired to their tents long enough for us to scarper out of sight.

After what felt like hours, the soldiers retired to the main tent for belated happy hour drinks. Their voices became louder as they broke into song. This was our opportunity. Moving stealthily like commandos, we breached the waist high barrier. Skulking in the shadows along the tree line, we picked up pace once out of earshot. It was well after midnight before we managed some shut-eye.

Sven, kitted up for the four kilometre hike to the falls, dragged me into consciousness before sunrise. Our breathing was laboured as the gradient of the track became steeper. Working our way toward the top of the falls, rivulets of perspiration ran down our legs. My gait was heavy and clumsy like a drunkard’s. Negotiating the track and maintaining my balance demanded intense concentration.

The morning sun emblazoned rock faces a golden bronze. Coruscating light mingled with water spray from the falls creating ethereal rainbows and droplets of water that kissed my burning skin. Air so bracing you could have served it in a chilled glass of sparkling lime and soda. The pounding of water was deafening and exhilarating. It vibrated through my body like the quivering strings of a violin. The view was breathtaking, memorable and worth the risk- taking involved.

The trek down the gorge was so effortless that we came upon the Druze village in no time. Here foreigners stuck out like the proverbial Aussie out-house. Two Druze men, attired like Lawrence of Arabia, and seated on their sturdy camels beamed at us with amusement. Their congenial mood morphed into the darkness of censure when we mimed a desire to photograph them. We departed without a record of our encounter with these majestic people.

Miraculously that night we escaped detection as we retraced our steps past the Israeli encampment. A bonus serve of good luck and risky business manifested in an illegal ride back to our kibbutz with an Israeli army ambulance, the ‘Magen David’. The young ambulance driver put the pedal to the metal and took off at warp speed. His colleague, riding shotgun, ratcheted up Steppenwolf’s ‘Born to be Wild’, and we flew along the highway at break-neck speed. Our levels of adrenalin and oxytocin rose exponentially: a fitting release from the past twenty-four hours of risky business.


[i] A farming community based on socialist structure, set up by the pioneers of the state of Israel.

[ii] Residential members of the kibbutz, not to be confused with the international volunteers who came to work for time-limited periods.

Georgette Gerdes: Dances with Covid

lockdown

appliances are friends
I can hear 
the chatter
Auntie ABC in the kitchen
PK, Phillip and Norman Swann
information
updates
doomsday

whirring, twirling 
spinning sheets
splashing, whooshing
dirty plates

cars drive by 

humming in tune
LG -
nascence of expanding waistlines
bathed in fluorescent light
yogurt, milk and mouldy left overs

the main event

magical Sony 
mysterious button control
options upon options 
of mind numbing time wasters

Olympics 
take over
Tokyo
days of gymnastics
snuggled 
with a fact possessed teenager

transfixed

scrolling on screens
window shopping
in electronic malls

comfort heating
and eating
warm glow
under blankets
on soft couches

lucky ones
staying safe

getting down with gizmos

pandemic 2021

Nell Holland: Iolaire-The Gaelic Eagle

The most venerated date for all Scots is Hogmanay, the last day of December. It’s the night to feast the old year out and welcome in the new one, and in no place is it more celebrated than the Outer Hebrides.

By the end of the Great War, the Isle of Lewis had lost over 1,150 of the 3,100 men who’d gone to serve and fight, but on Hogmanay 1918 many islanders waited in anticipation of their men returning after years of wartime. Crofts were filled with celebratory food and drink; windows were illuminated, and peat fires burned. But all were anxious, for the weather and sea conditions had been extreme all day, and by nightfall had become atrocious. Earlier, there’d been joy when some men returned on the regular ferry, but many more still waited at Kyle of Lochalsh. HMY Iolaire, a converted luxury yacht, was ordered to sail with these additional men, but before it sailed, two more trains arrived with yet more men eager to get home. No man was refused passage, but no record was kept of the numbers, and Iolaire sailed with just two lifeboats and eighty lifejackets.

When they left at 9.30 pm visibility was poor, with sleet beginning to fall and the sea becoming wilder. The men onboard knew the area and watched uneasily, knowing that neither the captain, nor the navigator, had ever taken a ship into Stornoway harbour at night. Unease turned to terror when the ship, in worsening conditions, inexplicably veered off course in sight of the Stornoway lights and struck the treacherous rocks called Beasts of Holm just twenty yards from the shore. Many couldn’t swim but the appalling circumstances made it almost impossible for any man to attempt to swim to safety. Within minutes, many were thrown into the sea as the ship listed and flooded. One mast broke and the two men clinging to it were drowned. Another man held onto the remaining mast for over seven hours and survived.

By 3 am on New Year’s Day 1919, Marion Macleod was in the hell of a force 10 gale. It appeared the whole island population had converged on the shoreline; frantic wraiths moving everywhere, occasionally exposed by shifting moonlit shadows. The noise was indescribable. People cried in despair; voices smothered in the thunderous noise of the sea as it swelled, crashed, and disgorged its flotsam onto the land; human flotsam – the men they had waited so long to welcome.

Marion searched with them, soaked from sleet and icy sea-spray, buffeted by the howling wind. Her sodden skirt clung to her legs and the shawl she held over her head gave barely any protection as it was whipped awry. She searched with desperation. Close-by, her father, Donal, grimly held a guttering lantern, looking at bodies discarded on the shore. Some men staggered to their feet, too traumatised to notice the freezing air. Others lay lifeless, dragged back and forth by the roiling water.

Marion searched for Finlay. They’d married weeks before war was declared and she prayed that God would spare him.

When Donal halted at the side of a body, Marion recognised Finlay’s face, discoloured and half covered in seaweed. The night’s mayhem swallowed her screams as she dropped to her knees. Then Donal turned the body over and water spewed from Finlay’s mouth as he convulsed, gagged, and struggled for air.

More than 200 men died that tragic night, with the last body found six weeks later. But in that ‘crowning sorrow of the war’ Marion’s man survived. 

Lawrie Stanford: Saintly Deeds

It was a long time ago, back in university days. There were long hours in the Barr Smith Library and frequent attempts to break the drudgery of study. It was time for another coffee.

I left the library passing Mary, my steady friend who had a more disciplined approach to study. I knew she wouldn’t be persuaded to interrupt her work for a coffee. Least of all, three-quarters of an hour after we last had coffee together. 

‘I’m going out to get a coffee,’ I whispered in her ear.

‘OK,’ she whispered back, ‘but you realise it’s only another hour to closing time?’

‘Yeah, yeah, I know, I just need a break.’

Outside it was balmy, the evening sky was clear and the lawned area in front of the library was bathed in the half-light of a full moon.   

As I descended the steps leading to the refectory, I noted a car parked next to the lawns. The motor was off but the headlights were on. Well at least, one was on—the other wasn’t working. I noted that in the car were four nuns—fully attired in their ‘uniforms’.

My first thought was that the car was ‘in-habit-ed’, but suppressed this in favour of kindlier thoughts about these saintly souls. I approached the open driver’s window to tell them about their headlights.

‘Excuse me,’ I said, ‘did you realise your headlights are on? Take care that your battery doesn’t run flat.  And by the way, your right-hand headlight isn’t working.’

‘Oh dear’ was the driver’s startled response, ‘I didn’t realise.’

Attempting to put her at ease, I spontaneously effused, ‘But don’t worry, you can get home tonight and fix it tomorrow. If the cops pull you over on the way home, just tell them you didn’t know the headlight wasn’t working.’

My mind immediately buzzed with panic as I realised I had just told a Bride of Christ to lie!  I quickly turned on my heels and walked on.

‘Oh gawd!’ I muttered under my breath with my panicking mind racing onto, Jeez, what have I done? Oops, sorry Lord for using your name in vain! Oh shit, I responded to myself, I’ve made it worse. Oops, sorry again Lord, but maybe profanity isn’t as bad as blasphemy—is it Lord?

Oh bugger, I resolved, that’s the last time I try to help Brides of Christ—I’m not even Catholic!’

At this point, Mary joined me and I related my misfortunes. Seeing my distress, and as if reading my mind, she said ‘Father forgive him, he knows not what he does.’ (Luke 23:24…adapted).

Robert Schmidt: The Friendly Reminder

Normally I pay my bills on the day I receive an account. I have a perfect credit rating.

My wife and I have a Home Care package from the government, which pays for certain work in our house. Mind you, not $10,000 for a fancy bed for my wife that we were talked into buying by a salesperson recently.

A few weeks ago, I managed to pull a light bulb out of the ceiling socket. God knows how. Helping Hand said contact Ken Hall electricians, they’ll fix it and we will cover payment.

A Ken Hall electrician came within an hour and amazingly fixed it in a jiffy.

Too quick for the system though.

Last week, I received a friendly reminder letter from Ken Hall. I ignored it.

Yesterday I picked up the letter again.

‘We trust you have been happy with recent works completed. We pride ourselves on delivering the highest standards of service.’

Straight away was nervous. Why send a letter patting yourself on the back? Then, a little threat…

‘You may have overlooked your outstanding account. I would appreciate if you could make the payment as soon as possible.’

And if I don’t, a debt collector at my door, I was thinking. Then the letter follows.

‘Any queries with this letter, contact my friendly team.’

You mean, not so friendly team if I ignore it. The letter finished…

‘We hope to visit your home in the future.’

You mean debt collector, I was thinking.

I rang Helping Hand who’s responsible for the account. They said, ‘Ignore the account. The original account is in the system.’

No sooner is that call over, Ken Hall rang…

‘About your outstanding account?’

David Hope: Travels in Queensland

Ian and I arrived in Croydon after a very pleasant five-hour train journey on the weekly Gulflander service from Normanton. It runs every Wednesday, returning to Normanton on Thursday. The line, 151 kilometres long, is not connected to any other line. It was built to cater for the gold finds in the Croydon area in the 1880s.  Because of the terrain it passes through, subject to flooding and termite attack, the sleepers are made of U-shaped steel, generally laid directly on the ground. Although the initial cost was greater than for timber sleepers, the line is easier to re-establish after flooding, a feature of life in the Gulf. Replacement of timber sleepers would have been exorbitant. Amazingly, 98% of the sleepers are original.

The maximum speed of the railcar is 40 kilometres an hour, making for a gentle and laid-back trip. Our driver kept up an excellent commentary with a multitude of anecdotes of incidents over the 130+ years of operation, the history of the line and the country the train passed through.

And it is not just tourists carried by the train. Deliveries are made to stations along the track.

The train stops at Blackbull station for a morning tea including scones, jam and cream.

As we arrived at the railway station in Croydon, we were told that buses would come to take us to the Club Hotel for lunch. Despite the excellent morning tea at Blackbull, Ian and I were thirsty. We could see the pub: it was close, and we opted to walk. A good decision!

We were well into our second beer when the bus arrived. We were also well into some excellent rissoles for lunch – three per serve.

“They look good,” came from one of our fellow travellers.

 “Excellent rissoles,” we replied.

Quite a few people decided that this was the go for lunch. Sadly, they were disappointed as the cook had only made eighteen – six serves. We had had the third and fourth serves.

For those making the return trip on the train the next day the evening meal was at the pub. It was a barbecue.

“We’re getting in the line before you!” came from a few people. “We’re not missing out on the steak.”

That was a good move because the pub did run out of steak!

They switched to chicken, and the pub ran out of that!

Then, they ran out of salad!

The back-up to chicken was fish, so that’s what Ian and I had, with the back-up vegetables.

Curious catering – the train only runs once a week – every Wednesday!

Fran Collins: After The Storm

Nineteen seventy-three. Another missing person. Close to home. Home was the Al Akbar Apartment House, West Bank, Jerusalem. It was a thirty-minute walk along a dusty goat track to the Jaffa Gate in the Old City, where I worked.

Sitting here in Adelaide, in my kitchen in 2021, I celebrate the forty-eighth anniversary of our friendship with our customary pot of Earl Grey. It was a friendship veiled in mystery, as was his unexplained departure from my life. Nineteen seventy-three was the year that I learnt about the intransience of life, a feature endemic to a war-torn country, and its lesson, that one commands only minimal control over fate.

I had arrived from the souk with the usual assortment of sweet honeyed pastries for our high tea. I busied myself setting up our space on the wrought iron and cerulean tiled balcony, which gave out onto desiccated hills, peppered with flat-roofed square concrete blocks, called apartment houses, generally occupied by poor Palestinian families. I called John’s name out loud, checked the communal kitchen and bathroom and proceeded down the dark corridor to his room.

His door was ajar. Wardrobe bare and chest of drawers empty, hanging perilously open. His dilapidated suitcase, gone.  A hasty and seemingly unplanned flight. The floor was strewn with the flotsam of living: a discarded old sock, a single satin slipper, and scraps of paper torn from a notebook, and crunched into balls. The air was heavy with the stench of stale human body odour. A diaphanous streamer of fluff was suspended from the ceiling, floating in the cross-draught created by the gaping door and window shutters. Kneeling on all fours, I detected a travel-weary trunk under the bed. I tugged on it with one hand, bringing it into the sunlight. It was forsaken and devoid of contents, but for a few ancient beads. I pocketed them just as John had done before me. How disappointing, his pilfered stash of treasures gone, only the rubbish remaining. I stood frozen in place trying to decipher the messages hidden amongst the residue of his belongings. All evidence of his existence had evaporated into the oppressiveness of the hot desert air, leaving me to ponder his fate. A familiar shadow of dread descended upon me, its claws of grief and loss embedded quickly into my flesh. Throat constricted, my tongue drier than sandpaper. John Robertson: amateur archaeologist, retiree, English expatriate, a veteran volunteer-librarian at St George’s Anglican Cathedral in East Jerusalem, and my neighbour at Al Akbar had disappeared.

Memories of our conversations were running on a continuous loop through the fog in my head as I grappled for clues that might provide some explanation.

‘So, what brought you here after retiring? ’ My eye contact too uncomfortable for him to return.

Looking out into the heat haze across the hills, his distant gaze pulled back into focus, ‘I simply needed a change of scene. What about you, why are you here?’ deflecting my queries with practised skill.

His taciturn manner wasn’t born of shyness nor was he inarticulate. John Robertson could speak rapturously on those subjects that lifted his spirit and made him soar: literature, history, and the near-by archaeological digs that consumed his spare time. Months into our friendship this man remained an enigma, locked up and inaccessible to me.

Edie Eicas: Through The Wire

The flush of excitement about the army had long lost its appeal and been replaced with familiarity and security. The group had seen parts of Australia none would have experienced had they not joined, and now they had friends. Mates they believed were solid, with whom they hoped they would step through life, who would be there when needed. Banded together by the army, not only did they work hard but they also partied hard. Drinking, the sign of maturity, the badge of adulthood, the proof defining the self as Aussie male, became an important ritual in their bonding. They gauged their exploits by the amount of alcohol consumed, by the hangovers and sometimes the young women in whose beds they found themselves. Their mateship and exploits held sway over them and they appeared to have all they wanted. However, dissatisfaction grew with constraint, repetition and boredom; the steps from teenage boys to young men had changed their view of what was desirable.

Institutionalized, the dead-end jobs the army forced onto them by a bureaucracy unwilling to see their potential,  irked many in the group. Those picked for promotion stood out by dint of personality, or support by a mentor. Those who had no skill for self-promotion, conveniently forgotten. Comparisons with others their age outside the confines of their base, brought to view possibilities. What they saw were rewards and benefits that others had gleaned, but they had forfeited by their choice. Seen through the wire fence the world beyond appeared more profitable. Sports cars and a fast life beckoned.

Don Sinnott: Murphy’s Law

Of course he was familiar with Murphy’s Law: ‘If anything can go wrong, it will.’ And its corollary, ‘If something can go wrong in multiple ways, it will go wrong in the worst possible way.’ Brett found these thoughts unsettling as he ruefully surveyed his crumpled car. Both Murphy’s law and its corollary seemed to have played out this morning.

He was rushing, late leaving for a meeting, and as he started the car the garage roller-door was just beginning its upward transit to let him out. It seemed so slow this morning. He revved the motor, waiting impatiently for a sufficient gap to allow him to reverse out.

Now—go! The squeal of the tyres was followed immediately by a thunderous crash. He’d misjudged how far the door had rolled up: it had shattered the car’s rear window, had deflected to deliver deep scores to the roof and was by now struggling, as if mortally wounded, to its maximally open position. Brett, instantly aware of what had happened, slumped in frustration and fury against the steering wheel, thumping it with his fist. His foot followed suit, as if in sympathy with his fist, driving the accelerator to the floor. The tyres squealed again but this time there was no obstruction; the car surged out, failed to take the bend in the driveway and bounded half-way over the retaining wall before it came to rest. It teetered unsteadily, its rear wheels suspended, still spinning, over the manicured lawn beyond the wall.

Brett, by now deep in shock, all thoughts of his meeting banished, slowly took in this ‘bugger’ moment. He eased open the driver’s door, which seemed oddly reluctant to move, and gingerly stepped out onto the top of the wall to survey the damage and consider his options. But Murphy had not yet delivered his coup de grace. With Brett’s weight out of the front seat the car slowly tilted back and as Brett watched, transfixed, gracefully embedded its rear end into the turf, wheels still turning slowly as they furrowed the grass.

The morning had not begun well.

.

Rossana Mora: José

Life is a journey they say, but I guess you only realise that it is an actual journey when the friends that used to be sitting next to you, watching your back, are no longer there.

I have been fortunate enough to find good and honest people along my path. Today, I want to remember José. José was a friend of my former husband, but when the divorce came, he chose my side.

He was a very relaxed person to be a Mexican lawyer. Sometimes, he would present himself not properly dressed to be in court: trousers with creases, a stain on his shirt perhaps, messy hair, hand-written notes on an unevenly folded piece of paper. At first impression, you wouldn’t give him any credit and would think the worst would come for you as a defendant.  Judges, I imagine, would look at him and think that an easy session for them was on its way.  Not with José, no.

José knew the criminal law inside out. He was always updated and ready. Once he took your case you could rest assured that he would win. He was fierce and ruthless in his own way. He would never raise his voice or impress you with the eloquence of his speech. He would speak slowly, quietly, pausing occasionally but, he would be clear and accurate, making his points with no fuss.

Did he defend guilty people? Yes, he did. Sometimes by choice and sometimes by obligation. I always loved to listen to his stories and to learn from him.

His greatness in the court rooms wasn’t reflected in his later days. He died of cirrhosis, because even though he was brilliant, he lacked the willpower to stop drinking. He was silly in that sense, the silliest person ever. I say that because it hurts me that he died in pain, in confusion, in a public hospital and in bloody poverty. Why? Why?

After he was admitted to hospital for the first time, we had a few long conversations over the phone. He confided in me some of his current family affairs. He felt like a burden, he felt lonely and abandoned.

The time I rang his number and his wife answered, I knew it was over. Little was said. I cried. It hurt me. It still does. He was always there for me and I couldn’t be at his funeral. I live in Australia now and Mexico is too far away.

Today, I imagine myself on a train, continuing my life journey. I wish he hadn’t gotten off so early. I wish we could still chat.  I wish we could still laugh. His seat is empty and hasn’t been filled. The train keeps going, it doesn’t stop. It is always moving. Life is indeed a journey.

Anne McKenzie: Just a Small Garden Project

‘I think we should’ve started this when we were 10 bloody years younger!’ she says, brandishing the sledgehammer and chisel she’s been using for hours to chip away at the bricked wall of the in-ground fishpond in the back yard.

‘You’re not wrong there,’ I say. ‘Clearly we built it to last. We’d have no trouble finding jobs as brickies on the Great Wall of China.’

It had been a straight forward enough project at the outset – or so it seemed. The fishpond had to come out – it was a lot of work to keep it clean, the neighbourhood flock of domestic pigeons had found it as a water source and were pooping all over the yard, and we were only going to find it harder and harder to maintain as we got older.  Then it would just be a matter of filling in the hole and planting a few more shrubs. We could do this.

So we’d emptied the pond, detached the pump and removed the fibreglass shell quite easily.  But we’d forgotten that in an earlier iteration the pond had been much larger with a three-brick high edge that we’d buried and hidden in the garden. It would have to come out too. If you were going to do a job, you needed to do it properly.

Many muttered expletives, barked knuckles, testy exchanges and five days later, the last two pieces of brick and cement footings finally yielded to our efforts.

Now we were on the downhill run. All that remained was to lift and remove the slate pavers that had bordered the pond.  But the sandstone garden bench, which was to go too, was sitting on some of the pavers and we couldn’t lift it.  No worries. We can push it over into the hole out of the way. We’ll have to get someone to come and collect it and the brick and cement rubble anyway.

We lift the pavers only to discover that we had very properly bedded them in gravel. Another job – the gravel has to be hand sieved to separate it from the surrounding soil. Then there’s the pump power cable to be dug up and removed. We’d forgotten that too. Finally it’s done.

We survey our handiwork.

‘You know,’ I say, ‘I’ve always regretted that we didn’t include an area of lawn in our back yard when we designed it. Maybe we could have some lawn?’

‘You mean in the space we’ve cleared, instead of more shrubs?‘

‘No. I’d like a really decent-sized stretch of lawn, say from the garage up to just short of the raised vegetable beds. It would open up the area so much more and give us better space for entertaining, too. And the garden we’d have to maintain would be so much smaller – much less weeding to do.’

‘Dig up all of the rest of the shrubs!  What would we do with them? Surely not chuck them out?  We’d have to dismantle the drippers again too. And we’d have to buy a mower. And who’d mow it?’

 ‘I know, I know, but just imagine the feel of soft and cool lawn under your feet in summer.’

‘Well… I suppose I could live with that,’ she says.

‘Good, well let’s get stuck into it. And don’t worry about the mowing – I rather fancy a turn at being the neighbourhood nuisance who gets up at bloody 7.30am on Sundays to mow their lawn!’

Nell Holland: Shadow Man

You Think You Know Me?                                                                     

No-one really knows me, including Camille. My wife, the diplomat’s daughter, erroneously believes I’m something like her successful father. She absorbed the training in her mother’s milk to become the perfect wife and hostess for me.  I’m fortunate. And so is she.

 We entertain often with an eclectic mix of guests from many levels of society.  I’m good in a crowd but I can be unobserved when I choose. Being alone never worries me. I’m a good listener.  I carry a glass of tonic water with ice and lemon, and it’s assumed it’s laced with gin, but I rarely touch alcohol. My brain is never clouded by intemperance.

 I’m neither too ugly, nor too attractive and I’ve been disparaged as bland. I never look disapproving or angry; never agitated. I’m considered to be no threat to other men and I’m always courteous towards women.

My clothes are neither cheap nor too expensive. In my dress I’m conservative, mostly in grey, beige, and taupe, but nothing that’s obvious. My manners are impeccable.

Neither in my dress nor conduct am I conspicuous. I’ve honed being neutral into an art form which has become second nature. I’d be a good poker player but wouldn’t expose myself to the temptation. My emotions are veiled, and nothing creases my brow.

I’ve been considered apolitical; disinterested in world affairs and unbiased concerning issues of the day. I’m always detached when an argument arises. Those who judge me are fools. And I despise fools.

I travel widely, meeting people who grace the front page of newspapers and the lead stories on the television news. If you know where to look you may glimpse a blurred head turning aside just as the camera clicks.  I’m never identified. Espionage is the invisible game and I’m the perfect shadow man.

Lawrie Stanford: Fire Alarm

‘No, you won’t!’ Mary’s outburst was angry and insistent. ‘You’ve spent so little time with me and the kids because of your bloody devotion to work. The kids are on holidays and I’ve hired this beach shack, so you’ll damn-well stay with us.’ That was it, Mary’s outburst was compelling and there was no way I’d argue with it.

It was 11 January 2005.

After wrapping up matters in the office so I could take a break with the family I had travelled down to the Middleton beach shack, arriving late the night before.

On the first morning, we were all walking on the beach. It was a stinking hot day and the morning freshness had burnt away early. A withering northerly wind had ramped up, stinging our faces with its intensity. The wind was so strong it made the rolling crests of the incoming waves curl back over themselves and out to sea.

‘You know this is a classic bushfire day,’ I said to Mary, ‘I think I’d better go back to Mount Osmond and make sure everything’s OK with the house.’

This brought on Mary’s outburst. Despite this, my point still made sense to me. Sure, it was important I spend time with the family. But if the house burnt down—no-one would be happy.

We retired to the shack and as the heat persisted, my anxiety grew. I paced the lounge impatiently. Unable to bear it anymore I said to Mary, ‘I’m going down the street to get some fish and chips. Do you want some too?’

Mary said, ‘No, but you go ahead. It’s good to see you relaxing a bit.’

My escape plan worked—I jumped into the car and started the hour’s journey home. With any luck, there would be time to see that things were OK at home and get back without any great concerns raised—at least, that’s what I told myself.

I drove home by the shortest route through Meadows. Still in a holiday mood, and with no-one else in the car, I sang along to an Eric Burdon CD at the top of my voice.

“Baby, do you understand me now…well I’m just a soul whose intentions are gooood.”

The soulful melancholy of the song suited my mood and seemed to justify my deceptive behaviour.

Well into the journey, I thought there was a faint smell of smoke but with no other sign of it, the thought was dismissed. Driving on, the smell became stronger and concern creeped into my mind. The holiday mood evaporated completely when I switched from the CD to local ABC to hear the fire alerts for the Adelaide Hills.

Sure enough, a grass fire was reported to be burning from the Tollgate on the Mt Barker Freeway and up the hill towards Mount Osmond.  I knew the first houses in its path would be on Gleneagles Road—where our house was.

I drove on towards Adelaide in grim, determined silence.

From the Freeway, I turned onto the Mount Osmond overpass, just short of the Portrush Road intersection, taking me up to Gleneagles Road. As I entered Gleneagles Road, I was confronted by enveloping smoke and two CFS trucks. The crews were preparing firebreaks to try and halt the grass fire coming up the slope.

A surprised CFS officer swung around when he heard my car above the clamour of feverish fire-fighting. As I stuck my head out of the car window, he bellowed, ‘How the hell did you get up here? We blocked the Freeway off at the Portrush Road intersection!’

I could only explain in a loud voice that I’d come from the other direction and nothing indicated I couldn’t come up the hill. I added, ‘I need to get to my house at the end of the street.’

At that point, excited voices at the fire break suggested a change for the worse with the fire. The distracted fireman in front of me said, ‘Yeah, yeah—at your own risk mate,’ as he moved away quickly to assist his colleagues.

I didn’t wait around in case he changed his mind and headed down the street.

At home, there was an eerie sense the street had been abandoned. Undeterred, I retrieved a ladder, unravelled the hose at the back of the house, and clambered up onto the roof—dragging the hose with me.

At this point, it was apparent that the fire near the CFS crew had reached a dangerous stage. The smell of smoke intensified and a water-bombing helicopter had been called in. It circled over my head as it collected loads of water from the dam on the Mount Osmond golf course which backed onto our property. The enormity of the situation hit me. The periodic, deafening reverberations from the helicopter engines as they passed overhead and the shrill whir of the CFS water pumps down the road, contrasted starkly with my puny efforts to protect the house. There I was, a vulnerable speck in this raging tornado of activity. Pathetically perched on my roof, holding a mere garden hose supplying low-pressure, gravity-fed water from a storage tank on the hill.

I thought to myself, ‘Who am I kidding?’

Suppressing the rising panic—a loosening of my bowels and a thumping heart—I drew comfort from the absence of visible flames. My mind chose to ignore the crackling and exploding sounds of burning trees down the street.

Suddenly, a dense wall of smoke reared up about 300 metres away and started rolling towards me. Choking from the heat and dust, my lungs resisted gulping the toxic air, depriving me of more oxygen.

The fire front was now only minutes away. My mind raced. A downward spiral into fear, and thoughts of suffocating, lead to further tightening in my chest.

At this point, my phone rang. It was Mary. Mary! I had completely forgotten about the events earlier in the day. What do I say to her? This new problem wrenched me out of my panic.

I answered the phone to Mary angrily asking, ‘Where are you?’ Oh-oh, I thought, she’s not happy. She quickly followed with, ‘There’s a fire in Mount Osmond—did you know that?’

In a measured reply, I said, ‘Yes, I’m here now, on our roof with a hose, monitoring the situation.’ Thundering back down the phone I heard, ‘You are what!’ and then silence. I sensed Mary struggling to grasp what was going on and I continued explaining, ‘I couldn’t bear thinking about our house burning and kept driving when I went for the fish and chips. But I’ve got things sorted here. The fire plan is in place and I’m in a position to defend. Don’t worry, there’s a helicopter water-bombing the fire and the CFS is on the street fighting it. I think it’ll be OK.’

Amazingly, as if willing it made it happen, the wall of smoke stopped rolling and appeared to be thinning. Maybe it would be alright after all!

Back on the phone, Mary sighed, ‘Well, I don’t know what to think.’ Then resolutely, ‘I’m heading home. I’ll drop the kids at Audrey’s first. Ring if anything changes. I need to know how you are.’

Happily, the situation did improve. As I kept watch on the roof, the smoke dissipated, the helicopter completed its work and retreated, and the CFS units monitored the street for spot fires.

By the time Mary arrived, I was off the roof and the neighbours had returned. We all met in the middle of the road and excitedly exchanged stories about the day’s events.

That night, with concerns about flare-ups, Mary and I prepared to flee if necessary. We threw a mattress in the front foyer and assembled valuables around us.

As we drifted into an exhausted sleep, Mary put her hand on my shoulder and said, ‘Well, I guess you were right about the fire danger today.’ Then mockingly, ‘And you are my hero’.

As I drifted into sleep, my fading thought was, you can put this one down as the day I got away with it…

Don Sinnott: January 1844*

A sailing ship, the Augustus, leaving Adelaide under a captain Duff and scratch crew has grounded off Encounter Bay and the captain has returned to shore in a rowboat to seek more crew members. The previous captain, Hart, and his crew have left belongings aboard which now must be retrieved. The two captains rent a crewed rowboat to get out to the ship.

‘You man, we’re going out to the Augustus,’ Hart called to a strongly built man lounging on the sand beside a lighter. A second man sat 50 yards away scanning the horizon. ‘Get that other man and be quick about it,’ demanded Hart.

The first man recognised Hart’s voice and its urgency. ‘Aye, cap’n. We’re waitin’ for the Osprey to offload her mail. Ain’t sighted her yet. Won’t be no trouble gettin’ you and…’ He hesitated, squinting against the low sun to make out Hart’s companion, then, recognising him, ‘…cap’n Duff out to your ship afore the Osprey arrives. Are you plannin’ on stayin’ aboard or do we need to wait alongside an’ bring you back?’

‘Wait alongside, we’ll load some chests and then you’ll bring us back to shore.’ Sensing a question about payment, Hart continued, ‘We’ll pay 50 percent over the going rate for offloading from an incoming vessel.’

Together the two men dragged their boat across the sand to the breakers and held it for their passengers to board. With the two captains seated in the stern, they pushed off then swung aboard with accustomed ease. Their powerful rowing drove the boat forward through the surf— they were soon in clear water heading for the Augustus, which had clearly floated free on the tide and now rode at anchor in deeper water.

With the boat fast to the ship, Hart and Duff, with the practised agility of experienced seamen, clambered up the lowered ladder and swung onto the deck. Although Duff held command of the ship, he stood mute and scowling as Hart issued orders to collect the sea chests of the former crew members, including Carmichael’s carpenter’s toolchest, before retrieving his own sextant, navigating equipment and charts. The mission accomplished in scarcely 15 minutes, the captains were back in the now heavily loaded boat as the oarsmen leaned into their work and headed for shore.

*A snippet from a proposed historical fiction novel

David Hope: ‘Do I know you?’

Yesterday I went to Strathalbyn to catch up with some friends. Ian, Marilyn and I met in Alice Springs in 1971 (yes, 50 years ago). We were all working for the Commonwealth Government in different agencies. Young and single we were housed in a hostel where there was a fair amount of propinquity at work. Ian and Marilyn married and stayed in Alice Springs for the rest of their working lives, retiring to Ballina in 2008. We have stayed in touch over the years and catch up when we can.

Their daughter, Lisa, lives in Strathalbyn and, as they were down visiting her, we arranged to catch up for lunch.

Arriving in Strathalbyn early there was time for me to go to the newsagency to purchase a card. As I left the newsagency and was walking along High Street a woman exited a shop and nearly collided with me. As I looked at her, I recognised her and said, ‘Hello, Dot.’

She looked at me quizzically and said, ‘Do I know you?’

‘Yes,’ I answered. ‘I’m your ex-husband!’

Edie Eicas: Chelsea Troubadours

Black boys walk the sunny streets 
sub-culture’s clothes black and white 
t-shirts and tight jogging pants, 
sneakers on trend, a motza’s worth, 
stylish hair: boy braids, cornrows, top knots
creativity announces identity. 

A mob loud, demands space,
leaves white walkers paranoid; 
distance divides as wary white faces 
look over shoulders, stop.
A gang, it’s London’s fear run rife
but, to those who hear the music, 
the a cappella’s rolling rap all beat and bounce,
note delivery’s cadence where flow’s
rhyme reveals loved language,
it’s mastery. 

I take time to watch and listen
hear young voices in their joy: 
the jongleurs.
An ensemble’s parading performance;
a shifting spotlight the line’s lead
the call and answer; a rhythmic 
response to lyric’s poetic form.
The chorus, ‘Hey’ and ‘Ho’ 
announce appreciation’s punctuation 
raised arms mark the silent signifiers.

I walk intrigued, white and woman unafraid, 
I hear their protest, its street’s vernacular: 
underdog, picked on, feared, victimized; 
the exploration of politics and style.

My heart open, my smile appreciation 
I hear their music feel the rhythm, 
find wonderment in words that rhyme,
share their joy, feel their pleasure;
love their unity
these wandering troubadours
no colour bar bars their creativity. 

Anne McKenzie: Unbelievable

It’s a balmy evening the first night of our week in Port Elliott and it’s time for a beach walk. Denise and I cross the road from the unit where we are staying and head down the cliff. To reach the beach we have to first follow a narrow sloping dirt path, then go down several steep flights of rough-hewn steps and finally traverse another narrow sandy path among the rocks. It’s a route we’ve taken so many times before. Yet, as I step onto the final path I feel uneasy. The light is poor and there seem to be more part-hidden rocks than ever. I tell myself not to be a wuss. I can see Denise just ahead of me and, while struggling to keep her balance at times, she still makes it safely to the beach.

Then it happens. My left foot catches an unseen rock; I lose my balance and fall heavily into the rocks on that side of the path, banging my arms, legs and finally, with a mighty ‘whack’, my head. For a moment time stands still. I pull myself into a sitting position. Then there’s blood everywhere from scrapes and gashes. It’s running down my arms and legs and streaming from my head onto my face and into my eyes. I can already hear the 7.00pm television news bulletin to come, ‘Elderly woman winched to safety by Channel Seven rescue helicopter after fall onto rocks at Knight’s Beach.’ And I know I’m going to hate the ‘elderly’ most of all. But then I realize that I’m not in great pain so clearly I haven’t broken or sprained anything. The sounds of the chopper fade off into the distance.

Denise has run back and, together with a young surfer who saw me fall, helps me to my feet. They guide me back to the bottom of the steps and from there I am able to climb the rest of the way unaided.

It’s clear that our holiday emergency band-aids are not going to be enough. Denise drives me to the South Coast Hospital at Victor Harbor.

Mercifully the Accident and Emergency waiting room is empty but a rather ominous sign at Reception says the likely wait time may be five hours. We sit and wait… and wait. Our only company is the waiting room television which, to add insult to injury, is screening an old episode of Baywatch featuring a bare-chested David Hasselhoff running nimbly over the rocks to save a woman in distress in the water.

In a little over two hours I’m seen by the doctor.  The wound on my head is glued closed (God knows how I’m supposed to get the glue out later), there are stitches in my left leg and all my other grazes and gouges are cleaned and dressed.

Back where we are staying I head in before Denise who is parking the car in the very snug spot we are allocated. There are steps down from the roadway to the unit’s backyard. It’s raining and dark now. Somehow I miss or slip on the last step and fall headlong onto the back patio, landing heavily on my hands, knees and lower legs. Miraculously, apart from a slight strain to my thigh muscles, I’m unhurt. What I don’t know then is that the fall has burst the stitches in my leg.

Denise doesn’t know I’ve fallen again. So I pick myself up, hear her coming and turn to say, ‘You’re not going to believe this…’ At that same moment she screams and tumbles forward down the same steps, landing heavily on her right side, banging her knee, ribs and twisting her foot. She is in a great deal of pain and crying out. There is nobody around to help us.  I feel shaky and frightened. I think I may have to call an ambulance for her or at the very least drive her to Accident and Emergency.

After a few minutes, while we are still considering what to do, Denise is able to get up and I help her inside. She’s still in a lot of pain from her ribs and foot but can at least weight bear on her foot. Maybe nothing is broken afterall.  Several painkillers and ice packs later, the decision is made not to go to Accident and Emergency again that night. We’ll see how she is in the morning.

The next morning Denise is still experiencing a lot of discomfort but is in two minds about going to the hospital to be assessed and have x-rays. Then when I change the dressing on my leg, which has bled a lot during the night, I discover the burst stitches. This makes the decision for us. I have to go, so she will too.

Mindful of the potential for a five hour wait, we go well prepared this time – taking books, ipads, snacks and drinks.

The nursing staff greet us and our sorry tale with looks of utter disbelief.

The waiting room is not empty this time and it is a five hour wait. A chorus line of holiday mishaps joins us – sprained ankles, busted knees and bloodied noses. Finally, though, Denise has her assessment and x-rays – no rib or ankle fracture, no strapping needed. And my leg is re-stitched.

We resume our holiday, watching very carefully where we step and choosing very conservatively where we walk. There’s lots of reading, relaxing, going for drives and just sitting watching the ocean. There are coffees at Retro Vibe and a lunch at the Flying Fish Café.

On our last full day we decide to go to the local wildlife park. I know, risky. But we’ve been there in the past and it’s a great place to spend a few hours. We’re not worried. The park is well laid out and there are no trip or fall hazards. And what can go wrong with ‘come and pat a koala and feed the kangaroos’?  I mean everything that could bite, kick or eat us, the snakes, the dingoes, the saltwater crocodiles and the emus, are safely locked away. Mind you I do hesitate just for a moment on reading the sign on the entrance door. The gist of it is that any mishap whatsoever I suffer while in the park will be my responsibility entirely.

The park again proves to be a delightful way to spend an afternoon. In the autumn sunshine we wander from display to display among caged, penned and free-range creatures.

We pat a koala; it is completely oblivious to our touch as it gorges itself on a bunch of fresh gum leaves.

Last of all we come to the kangaroos. They’re eager to be fed and as I pull the bag of food pellets from my pocket, one bounds straight up to me. Without warning it makes a grab for the bag with its front paws, raking my hands and forearms with its claws. I cry out in pain, step back and drop the bag of food, spilling its contents on the grass. In disbelief I look at my hands and arms and watch the blood bead and then bubble from the cuts and scratches.

 I look across at Denise and raise my arms in mock surrender. Her look is of shock, concern and then … Then we are both laughing. At least our holiday emergency band-aids will do the job this time.

Georgette Gerdes: Island Life

caught
she wants to fly
far, across the horizon
to the island
the island of safety
hurt no more

the logs flatten on
fractured wings
struggling in dirt
pain, hot
scorching

beak open
no sound 
gagged by distress
gasping

struggling to survive
squashed
helpless, ignored, discarded

expendable

but the Island is beautiful
soft breezes
turquoise waters
it beckons

frantic flapping 
weakens
bloodied feathers

thoughts of carefree days
summertime
home
trees in the garden
before the violator
decimates

weaker and weaker
the struggling lessens

ear splitting roars 
monstrous machines
trunks ripped out like extracted teeth
roots dragged bloody
with dusty earth
metal claws lift and crush

tiny bird dumped 
in a skip
decapitated, suffocated, broken

worthless

she soars high above meandering sands
and glittering tides
gliding on the Gulf Stream
pain and suffering is no more

Rossana Mora: Numbers

The Fields is the name of the nursing home that lies in the middle of the one of the nicest suburbs in Adelaide.

Almost 80 percent of the residents are women, the oldest being 103 years old. They live within the four areas that are named after grains: oats, rice, barley and rye. Rye is the dementia ward. There are at least 10 teams that are in charge of completely different duties such as Nursing, Kitchen, Lifestyle, Community, Personal Care, Administration and Cleaning. 

The system they use to communicate between teams and to record a history of each resident is called People’s Numbers; with a click on the appropriate ribbon and window of the computer a report of what a resident has been up to can be produced. Did they attend the gardening hour? Did they have morning tea today? Did they watch a movie in the games room? Did they have some medicine and at what time did this happen? When did they see their doctor last? Are they feeling ok? Did they have a one-on-one chat with someone today? Have they been to the hospital? Did their children come to visit them?

In the paperwork used to record activities, the residents’ preferred names are highlighted or sometimes used instead of their real names. Some of those preferred names are pretty obvious, and some are completely unrelated. When Susan first started to upload some of the activities into the system as part of her duties as a volunteer, she was very confused by that fact. It was hard to find an Elizabeth who was registered as Maggie, for instance. After a few weeks, she felt she knew nearly all of the residents even though she had never seen any of them.  Susan could recognise who were the active ones, almost who was friend with whom, by the closeness in room numbers and through their attendance to certain activities.

Susan learned more and more about life in the nursing home and she loved capturing information in the system. ‘All of the work they do here makes such a difference in the residents’ lives,’ she thought, while smiling and working.

One morning, she couldn’t find someone’s name in the system and after asking what was wrong, she was told that it wasn’t a system error but rather, that person had passed away.  Sad news. The number in the system had no name anymore. The following week, a new name appeared, but with the same number.

Some other names changed areas, mostly going into the dementia ward.  Now, they had a new room number in rye. Fewer lifestyle activities, almost none. From now on, only the room number was going to be consistent.

Susan refuses to look into the system for numbers, even though that would make her work easier. She looks for the residents by their real or preferred names but avoids searching for their room numbers. Numbers sadden her. In Susan’s mind, the number somehow erases the person, their life, their memory, their legacy. 

Sharon Apold: Again

Not again!

the floor drops beneath me
I feel it go
my body suspended mid-air

the head in front of me still talking
mouths moving 
words don’t match the shape they make
sounds garbled
echoing 
taunting

my feet hang
momentarily unaware of their
vulnerability

life moves around me
I am not a part of it

I scream 
silently 
help
catch me
I am gone

worthless
pointless
useless

my demons
free inside my head

soundlessly my fingernails scrape the sides 
I fall

can’t you see?
how can you let this happen?
save me!

alone

dark hole

sobbing

my words
sharp
hurtful

my heart is torn
I tear at yours

I wake 
I’m exhausted
still here
the sounds make sense now
I find strength 
climb out

damn the hole

you are still here
everyone is here

sorrow
regret
humiliation

Again.

Robert Schmidt: Remember Me

I was sharing a pot of tea with my wife Jane at the Utzi Cafe in the Burnside Village ̶ next thing a former friend, well I think I’ll call him that, from my evenings at the Wildwood Gallery in Grenfell Street, comes up to the table. Wildwood Gallery had art on display but was also a place where people could recite their writing to anyone coming down into the basement.

In no time at all he’s standing against the table talking. Has the one metre rule gone? I don’t think so!

It’s not that I wasn’t delighted to see him. Well I tell a lie. We were having a private conversation and he joins in. He says, ‘Remember performing our writing at the Gallery?’ Then talks on and on about the good old days.

Wildwood is where I started reading my slightly humorous stories.

‘You remember my stories don’t you Robert.’

Andrew’s specialty was the monologue and I mean monologue. We would pass the candle around from person to person, to who was reciting. When it got to him, the candle would go out while he was still reciting.

A few people came off the street to listen and to look at the paintings. With Andrew reciting, their eyes would glaze over and up the stairs they would go out to Grenfell Street.

He was retelling a story about sharing a taxi home with Jane and I could see her eyes glaze over as on and on he went. Suddenly he says to us, ‘That’s Frank over there. Remember, he sold the odd painting. Do you mind if I talk to him?’

‘By all means,’ I say. Before he could say, ”Frank remember me?” we were hiding in Coles across from Utzi.

Lawrie Stanford: To Sled Or To Bed

With snow upon the ground outside,
the boy leapt headlong on his sled,
and down the hill at pace a-crackin’,
delinquently, he quickly sped.

He felt the wind as it blew by, 
there were no thoughts of fear or dread,
but in his haste, he lost control,
and crashed his cart into the shed.

Those looking on were not surprised,
he gashed himself on hands and head,
and ‘though it started out as fun,
it’s sad to say—the boy, he bled.

Future thought of risk and daring,
while tucked up safely in his bed,
he might dwell on preservation,
and opt to stay right there instead. 

Fran Collins: Lost In Translation

‘I promise you it won’t be difficult or dangerous, really Fran.’ A simple request of deep friendship from my friend, Sinead.

Belfast, 1973, a city besieged, with search checkpoints located strategically at turnstiles at the entrances to the CBD. Skeletal remains of buildings partially blown away, walls plastered with graffiti, evidence of a city at war. People, heads downcast to avoid eye contact, disinclined to speak. Buses, spilling passengers out into wet wintry drizzle amid frantic, afternoon traffic. People alighting with haunted gazes, intent upon reaching their destinations. Queues piling up at the turnstiles, blocking entry to the CBD, until all bags are searched, and all pockets emptied. This was the city that confronted me on my weekend forays across the Irish Sea to visit with my Irish girlfriends on ‘the Falls Road.’

‘The Falls Road’ was a typical neighbourhood in the heart of Catholic territory. Living in Belfast was living in a war zone. After dark the danger was palpable. Lying in bed, we could hear the footfall of English militia or Irish paramilitaries trawling the streets outside. This would go on for hours. Explosions interspersed with muffled cries from the dark, and on some nights the air was pungent with the smell of gunpowder, finding its way through open windows and poorly sealed doors. Those Belfast girls could readily identify the ordinance being used: rifles, machine guns and rocket launchers. A plethora of destruction!

‘That’s an AK 47,’ whispered Bernadette to me. ‘I haven’t heard one of them for a while,’ she added, her creased brows ageing a young and vital face.

These Belfast adventures were omitted from my cassette-tape letters home to Oz.

David Hope: The Fires Burn

The fires burn, the smoke thickens.
Hotter still, the day quickens.
Pushed by the wind, flames abscond.
Sirens sound, firies respond.
At the fire, hot work beckons.
The fires burn, the smoke thickens.
A wall of fire, massive front.
Are we able to bear the brunt?
The fires power, all consuming.
Deal with this? We’re only human.
The fires burn, the smoke thickens.
The air heats, the sky darkens.
All about, landscape blackens.
More effort! No beg pardons!
We will win, resolve hardens.
The fires burn, the smoke thickens.

Don Sinnott: Memories of Mongolia

‘Let’s go somewhere different this year.’ Back in 2013, with international travel an expectation of our retirement plan, and a border-closing pandemic unthinkable, I had set my wife a challenge.

An hour spent surfing travel sites and she emerged from the office triumphant. ‘How does a yak trek in Mongolia sound?’

Mongolia? My blank stare invited her to continue. I was soon convinced—this would certainly be different. Within a week we had booked and by late July that year we were in a vintage Mongolian Airlines B737 from Hong Kong, descending into the surprisingly westernised city of Ulaanbaatar.

Our guide for the next two weeks, Oso, showed up at our hotel that evening to brief us. The tour had two main components: a trip south to a ger[1] camp in the Gobi Desert before returning to Ulaanbaatar to regroup before heading north into a remote and picturesque area of mountains and streams, traditional lands of the 13th century Chengis Khan[2], who in these parts is celebrated as the greatest of national heroes, not the brutal Eurasian scourge of western history.  

A Russian 1960s minivan offering few concessions to passenger comfort took us south the next day. Progress was slow over an increasingly broken road-surface that morphed into unmarked tracks across sparse grasslands. Neither driver nor guide really knew where we were heading, as the ger tourist camps relocate each season. With shadows lengthening, growing tension changed to jubilation when a painted rock beside the wheel ruts indicated ‘nearly there’.

The ger camp was surprisingly comfortable. Each couple had a large ger, with solar power, a dung-burning stove, twin beds and a short walk to the long-drop toilet and shower ger. There an ingenious battery-powered pump provided a warm trickle from a bucket heated on a dung stove. Meals were large but of limited variety and the walks and tours to local Gobi Desert points of interest were a window into a land and lifestyle vastly different from ours.

Getting to the northern component of the tour took us over similar barely-there tracks, with steep rises that challenged the minibus until we were delivered to another, but larger, ger tourist camp. A day later the real fun began: the yak trek. Contrary to our expectations, the herdsmen drivers and their yak-train of loaded wagons took the low road and we hikers took the increasingly challenging ‘no road’ across lush plains, marshes and mountains to finish each day at a camp set up by the yak drivers. Famished from our exertions, we tore into our evening meals, produced by Tuul, the accompanying cook, as we squatted around a cloth spread on the ground.

One day a furious thunderstorm broke just as we trekkers summited a mountain, with torrential rain and lightning strokes too close for comfort. The warming and drying dung fire in the ger was very welcome that night.

All that was then. Now overseas travel is impossible. Maybe we will be too old to resume adventurous wanderings when international flights resume. Or maybe not. For now, we relish our memories of travels past.


[1] A traditional yurt or ger is a portable, round tent covered with skins or felt and used as a dwelling by several distinct nomadic groups in the steppes of Central Asia. In Mongolia the term used is ger.

[2] More usually the name is Genghis but Mongolians insist on Chengis as the anglicised form.

Anne McKenzie: On The Bus

‘The Department is a bus about to set out on a long journey, and I’m driving’, says our new Chief Executive Officer.

We’re at mandatory leadership training for Supervisors and Managers—for middle management.

She’s been with us for about two weeks and this is the first time we’ve met her.

‘Let me put this simply’, she says. ‘Either you’re on the bus with us or I’ll help you to leave.’

I look at the shocked faces around me. I feel as if I’ve just been punched. To reinforce her message, everyone is given a tinker-toy bus to keep on their desk. Well, obviously, there weren’t quite enough buses to be had so some of us got other vehicles. Mine’s a kombi van.

‘Well, that sure was one hell of a way to win friends and influence people,’ my colleague says, in the tea break. ‘What did you get? Oh, a kombi van.  Perhaps they have a surf and sand holiday already planned for you?’

‘Do you remember when they gave us those cardboard pencil cases with the Department’s core values and mission statement on them? I wonder what happened to all of them,’ I say

‘Bloody things were so flimsy they wouldn’t stand up when you put pens in them. But we had to have them on display on our desks. Bloody waste of money.’

Edie Eicas: Aurora

Aurora, basket in hand and smelling of Brasso, had just finished her weekly clean of the golden plate that announced the house name, Hendun. It was a meditative job, the polishing, the day’s early ritual before summer’s heat overpowered. The weather prediction for the coming school holidays was storms, a release from the building humidity.

Opening the heavy front door, she turned at the sound of pounding feet. James had caught up to Fee. Then the scream as he pulled her pigtail, yanking her head back with such ferocity Aurora thought he’d snapped her neck. Mouth open, Aurora stood frozen in surprise as she met his eyes. The look he shot her before he turned to walk away was one of hate and challenge. She knew the look, the rabid dog, and it left her body bristling with fear.

The job was new and Aurora’s English limited, her communication was more a matter of hand gestures and nods.  Hoping the family would let her stay, she filled the space like a ghost, leaving her trace through beds made, and bathrooms cleaned. She had not expected this. The photographs littering the lounge room of a smiling family belied the malice she’d seen in the boy’s eyes.

Kneeling on the runner next to the sobbing, crumpled girl, she took her into her arms and whispered, ‘Cara, sei al securo. Sei al securo.’ The body thin, lacking meat sank into her arms. It was a jolt of connection and left its imprint on Aurora’s soul.

Nell Holland – The Book Launch

She was dressed completely in black leather. Black blouse open at the neck and a short, tight jacket straining at the bust. An equally tight mini skirt struggled to control her stomach, and the spike-heeled boots were thigh high.

From behind, she appeared a young woman with red tresses falling below her shoulders. Then she turned. Grey sprouted along the hairline.  The heavy makeup, filling the give-away lines of a heavy smoker, looked garish as we approached. But the coup-de-grace was the messily outlined eyes looking as if kohl had been applied the night before, slept in and ‘refreshed’ with a heavy hand.

As we got closer, Rose – this had been her idea – hissed, ‘Oh! My! God!’.

The vision stepped forward to greet Rose. ‘You came! Great.’

Then she tottered away on spike-heels, leaning forward to keep balanced.  She probably believed she looked sultry and enticing. She didn’t.

I was aghast, amused, and lost in thought. She reminded me of someone. Who? Oh yes! That ageing transvestite seen long ago on Singapore’s Bugis Street.

We found a table and choked with barely controlled mirth every time we caught each other’s eye.  Rose pleaded, ‘She didn’t look like that when she invited me to her book launch. I wonder what she’ll read?’

Within minutes we were enlightened.  What she announced as a sexy story, was revealed as hard-core pornography in the bedroom, the bathroom, on the grand piano and in a mirror-lined lift. That was chapter one. No foreword and little foreplay!

We left as the sex-quiz papers were being distributed and Rose had run out of variations on saying sorry. 

By then we needed a cleansing cuppa. But we kept looking at each other, wondering who’d cleaned the piano and spluttering into our tea.

What an educational afternoon!

Edie Eicas: Long-Range Weather Forecast

A Short Story

Lennox Walker’s long-range weather forecast held no joy. The Miller family looked despondently at one another recognising the reality they prayed for would not materialize. No rescue for the farm in the grip of drought, Walker’s predictions promised more of the same: the El Nino weather pattern had set in and things were going to get worse.

Kathy felt the tension between her parents as her father looked helplessly at the radio. His anxiety over his inability to control their future transmitted itself acutely. She knew they would face another lament as her father saw their history slipping from his grasp. Seeking relief, she opened the kitchen door and walked out onto the back veranda. Looking out to the stand of trees covered by the silver of a full moon, she reflected on her future; the farm, the only life she knew. Her heart ached over the changes that had stripped life from the land; gone the green, replaced with red; the soil parched and only the last, strongest plants holding onto hope. As she stood reflecting on her options, the wind, which had once brought relief, swirled around the homestead. Now a thief, it stripped more from the farm carrying with it yet another layer of top soil.

The weather on everyone’s lips meant constant questioning and filled the last six months with concern. All who crossed paths were interrogated over the possibility of a break in the drought. Information gleaned from every encounter and medium, stored for reference and shared later around the dinner table to add more to the ongoing theme: how to get the best out of what was left.

The stock cut back to the bare minimum; the family held the place together with just prayer. The boys had left long ago as the work diminished and tension mounted with their father. Only Kathy the youngest was left to help, but now, the future loomed dire leaving her no other decision but to find a job in the city. She knew it was time to leave the nest. At eighteen, her experience defined by the country surrounding her, and with few skills beyond the farm, she did not relish the move outside her sphere. But she knew she was one of many, the country diaspora, in search of new employment.

Through a network of friends and acquaintances, a room was provided in the city and the search for gainful employment begun. After a few false starts a position was found in the employ of a judge who sought a housekeeper.

Life had become chaotic for the judge. A fire had broken out in the house and an accident had left him with back pain, a dull constant ache reminding him of his loss of control. As his rein on order slipped from his grasp, his house also fell to the chaos surrounding him. His housekeeper had left and all who came to his employ, seemed to be but transient figures leaving within a couple of months of starting. Patience had deserted him, as age and pain brought out irritation and frustration and parts of his personality began to slip his grasp adding to the tension that now seemed to surround him.

Seeking help, he asked friends if they knew of someone interested in housekeeping. In asking the question, so appeared the answer, and an old friend made mention of Kathy and an interview arranged.

At first, the judge appeared sceptical an eighteen year old would be sufficiently mature to handle the responsibilities but, without another avenue, he dismissed the casual cleaners and explained her duties. Single and compulsive, he demanded the family mansion, too large for one living alone, be cleaned in a manner he prescribed. Over compensating for the chaos surrounding him, and by nature difficult, he detailed the specifics of his requirements. As they walked through the rooms, he pointedly looked at Kathy seeking confirmation she understood the importance of his demands. Nervous and repetitive, he showed through his attention to detail, his need for control; the label ‘anal-retentive’ given him behind his back meant to warn those in his employ.

The house, a shrine to the past, detailed the history of its predecessors though paintings, sculptures and furniture. Different rooms contained the signature of a particular individual who had claimed it as their own and, while little had changed in some rooms, others declared the imprint of technology and the toys the judge deemed useful for his existence. Walking Kathy through the house, commissioning his expectations, he hoped yet again, rescue was at hand. Dependent in this arena, he sought escape from the pressure of the house, and longed for the order of the past that seemed now to elude him.

The epitome of a ‘country girl’ solid, plain and mousey, Kathy appeared to exude an aura of competency as she followed him around asking questions and noting his demands. Leaving her with lists of contacts and expectations, he hoped this young girl could fulfil his requirements. Unconvinced, he felt he had little choice even though she came with glowing references: able, honest and competent.

At first, Kathy, frightened by his demeanour, provided all negotiated with a touch of anxiety but later, as she found her rhythm and the jobs became habits, apprehension relaxed its grip. As order stripped the dust from the corners, she began to explore. Curiosity and boredom led her to open the first cupboard in the kitchen. Although the surfaces had been dusted by a succession of cleaners, nothing behind closed doors had been touched. Pulling everything out to reorganise and clean, her methodical nature found an outlet. 

Slowly as time permitted, Kathy extended her range. As each room found order, she moved to the next and began again the challenge to install discipline in what appeared years of neglect. Each cupboard opened, revealed shelves stuffed to capacity. The judge’s history was crammed into any space he found available; belying the spurious order of the outside, the cupboards hid the disorder within.

As the months progressed, the judge witnessed a change. Books left in piles found their places back to the library shelves, and his CD collection now stood in alphabetical arrangement, the loose CDs finally in their covers. While the judge appreciated the arrangements that facilitated easy access and choice, later, offence grew at her gall at reorganizing other parts of his house.

Over time as she dusted and familiarity grew, Kathy began to move objects around the rooms; arranging them in groups by colour or theme. At first a small move, but as courage and initiative took hold, she became bolder. Photographs arranged on the sideboard were now themed by the silver of their frames and surrounded by slivers of silver in snuffboxes and letter openers. Other objects moved to groups more in tune with their subject matter.

A game of change and resentment brought the movement of pieces to and fro and, like a chess game, some pieces moved forward while others back. At first, the judge would return the items to their places, angry at her audacity. Then in frustration, he would remove the object from her grasp, hiding it in a cupboard or replacing it with another sculpture or piece of glass.

When Kathy grouped memorabilia related to horses on a table under the study window  ̶  a cup won, a photograph, a plaque and a whip – she came back to find  the whip removed and those items left, rearranged. As he reclaimed a room, she would shrug, vexed, but move on to where she could add her signature. Then, each night after one of her days in the house, when the judge returned, he would open the door and like a stalker, begin his search for her intrusion.

Although the tension mounted, the judge could not deny the impact Kathy made on his life. Order in his house allowed him some relief from the stress that seemed to dog him still. Things were easier to find as logic dictated where bits and pieces should be stored. Now the laundry and kitchen cupboards revealed their contents easily. Grouped and placed at his convenience, he found the batteries he sought, or the shoe polish he bought in bulk, as he misplaced yet another can.

His wardrobe now ordered by jackets, pants, suits and shirts, all cleaned and neatly colour coded, meant easy access to his clothes. Thus, the morning torture of choice made easier. Then, after a long day, as he stepped through the door to find the house pristine, glowing and ordered, pleasure would sweep over him and he would sink into the comforting feeling and relax. Unable to sack her, for although she intruded, she brought what had long evaded him, and so he moved to stoically accept her as a necessary evil in his life.

Later, as he saw the complement in design or colour she offered, he would return the piece he had snatched earlier, or add another acknowledging awareness of the style she was imposing. Theirs became a game that eventually subsided into a dance of display. As she moved and he moved pieces around, they finally found creativity and new pleasure in the juxtaposition of shape, colour or composition.

Notes left commented on arrangements, and allowances made that she offer more to his environment. Flowers found their way into bowls and vases as the garden came into her providence. Slowly order crept further afield and soon the judge too became more a participator in the transformations.

As spring heralded change, so he too brought his interest back to the house and a gardener given instruction to add colour to parts long overlooked. Inspired, the judge purchased new pieces of art and Kathy, watching from afar and enveloped in proprietorial pleasure, shared his delight in his home.

Change also brought Kathy the need to spring clean further, and she began to dig into the judge’s personal sphere. The spare bedroom he used at different times for visitors now targeted and the drawers emptied into the middle of the room. Hidden amongst the detritus she found a series of magazines. Looking to categorize them and place them in his library, Kathy opened one to find herself confronted by the performance of a porno starlet.

In shock and blushing, she quickly stacked the magazines and, looking over her shoulder, returned them to the back of the drawer. Where the farm had taught her independence, as situations could change dramatically, she now regretted the liberty taken. Caught by embarrassment, feeling vulnerable and privy to too much, she wished she had never started. Having grown up with two older brothers, she wondered at her response.

From the moment of discovery, the relationship between herself and her employer took another turn. Caught by the knowledge that a darker side lurked in his life, that he was more than the one-dimensional figure that imposed himself upon the vignettes she arranged, she suddenly felt his presence. Where once she ranged free in the house now his presence intruded, and the judge’s secret and personal side became a siren song to Kathy.

Piqued, she gave more attention, not to the art, but now the judge’s private life came under scrutiny. Details once overlooked became a source for speculation. Cups that appeared over the weekend and littered the kitchen were checked for lipstick marks before being deposited into the dishwasher. Then, before vacuuming, she would check the thick pile of the carpet looking for heel marks in the different rooms.

A compulsive element began to impose itself as she watched for signs of women entering the judge’s domain. Soon, she noted further intrusions that suggested intimacies. Irritated, she jealousy judged the signs of his feminine encounters. Slowly a possessive quality came into play, and each time Kathy entered the house, she became the stalker checking for signs of intrusion.

Disorder once again became a part of the judge’s life, this time one equated with pleasure and not chaos. The house became the judge’s stage as he sought to seduce those who crossed his threshold. The changing spectacle announced a succession of women entertained by the judge. Some came and went, just sexual sport and gone quickly. Others lingered, and ever hopeful, would leave a calling card, something personal, but not too expensive in the hope of returning to collect the ‘forgotten’ item. Finding these declarations of possession, and feeling offended, Kathy threw them into the rubbish bin.

While cleaning up after one of the judge’s busy weekends, the phone rang and, preoccupied, she answered. Greeted by a woman’s voice enquiring after the judge brought Kathy to attention. Suggesting the woman ring his chambers, Kathy also asked if there was any message. Replacing the phone and annoyed by the confidence in the woman’s voice, Kathy moved about the house unsettled and uncomfortable.

Stomach churning and seeking relief from her irritation, the master bedroom became the object of Kathy’s attention. At first, her embarrassment over the discovery of the magazines had stalled her venturing further into the judge’s private domain, but now other motives propelled her. Bedside drawers spilled their contents onto the floor as she began to order and pry. Rejecting the accumulated rubbish meant more room and symmetry.

Change brought pleasure to her eye, but opportunity as drawers opened to disgorge their contents of photos, clothes and odds. As she sat sorting the photographs into boxes, she examined the judge’s past, and with a feeling of entitlement and intimacy, inspected his life a little closer. Soon a potted history revealed the judge through family gatherings and special moments that recorded his childhood. Then, as an adult free to indulge in travel, cars and women, another aspect of his life was revealed. Laying out the photos of the women who had peopled his life, Kathy examined each and judged the person captured by time. To her critical eye it was obvious that none suited him. This one carried a pinched mouth, another looked bored, while others revealed their dislike and disinterest in other ways.

As she emptied the last of the drawers onto the floor, videos and more magazines were revealed under old polo shirts. Gathering the magazines she no longer blushed at their contents but curious, slowly flipped the pages allowing herself the privilege of indulging in the images. Examining the pictures, she realised the judge had a fetish, and the whip she had placed out on the study table, which had disappeared so quickly, was in fact a prop for the games he liked to play.

‘Oh!’ she exclaimed as the penny dropped and a flush of pleasure moved through her body. Replacing all she found to the back of the drawer, she covered them with the shirts and continued her duties satisfied by her discovery. As the weeks went by and time permitted, she returned to the secret cache and revisited the images, pouring over them, fascinated.

For the judge, his life with a succession of women continued for a number of months then disappeared as suddenly as it had started. Summer over, change was heralded with darkening skies. The flush of different colours in the garden announced autumn as the house returned to its emptied life with the judge left alone to leave the litter that stated bachelor.

Time on her hands and bored, Kathy wandered back to the judge’s private world and retrieved the videos from their hiding place. In her private revelry, she mimicked the faces and postures of the women and noted their attitude, fascinated by the confidence of the women, and the expression of their sexuality.

Life for the judge lost its spark. No longer propelled to work the long hours that once captured his time, the house called him, and he retreated to spend weekends wrapped in newspapers and solitude. Slowly a new interest came to dominate his life and cookbooks became the addition and motivation to initiate a vegetable garden.

His home a place much changed drew him back, for what he once considered a burden had become a pleasure. Now a sanctuary stripped of its chaos and made orderly, he no longer sought escape but found in its peace, a refuge. The constant pressure and agitation of his job lay in contrast to his home, and when time permitted, he would make an early escape to the simple joy of cooking and the pleasures of his garden.

Coming home and caught by the light of the video the judge stopped, his breath trapped in his chest. Like the rabbit startled and caught by the spotlight he could not move. Here revealed on the screen was his dark side, his sexuality. From shock to explosion, it took but a few seconds. ‘How dare you!’ His powerful voice thundered the accusation that could not be answered.

Kathy spun around, her face flushed red with shame. Caught in the act of a voyeur, she had no place to hide. Mouth open, she stood frozen in guilt.

His rage contained and face white, the judge lunged at her and grabbed the remote control turning off the television. ‘Young lady, your position with me is terminated. If you tell me how much I owe you, I can settle your wages. I think we have nothing further to discuss.’ He turned on his heel and walked from the room.

If the judge had waited a moment while he stood behind Kathy, if he had not spoken out so quickly in his haste to hide his shame, he may have observed her differently. Rather than focus on himself, had he extended his view, he would have seen something that could have changed the course of their relationship.

For instead of revulsion at what was revealed on the screen, the innocent girl who had come to him from the country had developed a taste for the delights of his fantasies. At first disgusted and disapproving, she had refused to contemplate what she had seen. Later, as time and curiosity caught her interest, she had gone back to the hiding places and pulled the magazines out. The clothes caught her first; the black leather bustier called her to attention, shiny and made to flatter the woman’s body, was made to reveal breasts and entice. Each photograph that captured the look of pleasure on the young women’s faces, tempting the onlooker to participate in what was on offer, also tempted her.

Now the fantasy to look like the girls pervaded her life. Given an image to strive for, she began to lose weight and by increment, her hair went from mousey brown to short blonde and spiked. Makeup also became an enhancement, and her clothes slowly changed from country practical to city and sexy.

Where the magazines gave Kathy the images that brought the inducement to her physical change, the videos became her seducers. The girls on the screen looked powerful and seductive, appearing to have all she lacked and she hungered for the control they seemed to wield.

Later, the bondage playing out on the screen also found appeal. Reading both the pain and pleasure in the faces of the men gave her a jolt of recognition. No longer the innocent, Kathy burnt inside with the desire to experience that which she could only see in the videos.

If the judge had stopped and watched, he would have seen her body move with growing desire and seen in her an eager response to those on the screen. For here in front of him stood the young country girl metamorphosed into the partner who wanted to mete out all that he so secretly desired.

Sharon Apold: The First Walk Home

The small girl walked along the long dusty track. Newspaper clutched to her chest and small brown school case held by her side. To a stranger, it would have appeared to be something she did daily. The determination on her face was deliberate. Fear and doubt were welling but she did not want to let her insecurity show.

I did not want to let my insecurity show.

The path was familiar, but I had never walked it before. Usually Mum in the shiny blue station wagon would be there to meet the bus, or Dad in his green work ute. Not only was it hot and the road home long, but it was also uphill. Dry and dusty on my polished black school shoes. No give in the hard soles for the little gravelly pebbles. My school tunic hung heavily as I trudged.

Grape vines lined one side of the track. The other side, where cattle grazed contentedly, was bounded by a fence topped with barbed wire. The large beasts were a bit frightening to me at five years old but not as scary as the thought that my parents might have somehow disappeared.

It felt such a long way and seemed to take forever, that first walk home.

As the circular driveway came into view, I felt a single tear run down my cheek. A sob but no more. Relief at the sight of the house and the two cars outside; rebellious pride at having made the march alone.

My parents were standing in the kitchen talking. Smiles and hugs as they realised that they had forgotten to pick me up from the bus stop. Laughter from them.

Forgotten me! I’m not sure which was stronger: the relief, indignation at having been forgotten, pride at my little display of independence or exhaustion from the walk.

Strangely, I know it was not the last time I walked the hill home, but it is the only time I can remember.

I can still picture the dirty smudges across the face of that small child.

Across my face, where I had wiped the lone tear away, not to let anyone see that I had been afraid. A determination, I’ve taken into adulthood.

Sharon Apold: Dark Secrets

The woman sat down heavily on the time worn bench. It felt hard and cold beneath her thin skirt but somehow reliable, comforting. The day had been challenging.

Neither young, nor old, on a good day, she could be beautiful. More from what shone in her eyes than the physical. On a bad day the mirror gave her little charity, left no doubt that life had left its mark.

Across the lake the full moon illuminating the tree-scape held her attention. Her gaze moved to the glass-like surface of the lake, to the moon reflected there. The aura of something ominous hung in the air, lurked patiently in the shadows around her. The unknown, backlit by the ever present.

How many times had she come here, she wondered, to share her silent thoughts with the lake? Witnessed only by the moon, in its many shapes how many secrets had sunk below that glass-like surface, never to re-emerge?

For a moment, as the weight of the day bore down on her, she wondered if the lake could hold all her secrets. Hold them forever. She wondered if she really had the courage to give them all up.

She rose, still weary from the day. Her loafers fell easily from her feet and her toes curled a little at the shock of the cool grass. In that moment only she, the beckoning lake, and the ever-watching moon existed.

As one foot slipped easily into the shallow water, she felt the weight on her shoulders begin to lift. The other foot slipped beneath the water. The lake, her blackened accomplice. A wave of comfort flowed through her.

She stooped and grasped a small smooth and rounded stone. Felt its seductive curves and its weight, in her small hand. Again, she felt the pull of the inky night deep in the lake’s bosom. Oh, to be held there. She clenched her fist tightly around the pebble. Cast it hard and far, listening for the expected “plop” as it went to meet the lake at its deepest. The lake seemed to sigh as it accepted the rock as the lesser prize, releasing the woman from its mesmerising grip.

The ripples reflected a thousand moons shimmering and dancing across the surface, like the swirl and flow of the woman’s skirt.

Suddenly she could feel the water’s chill move up her legs. Pulling her jacket tightly around her shoulders she stepped back onto the grassy shore. Wet feet sliding into warm shoes, she spun around, her skirt swinging against her legs.

A shiver ran through her and a shuddering gasp escaped her parted lips.

She marched quickly up the grassed bank to the road toward her waiting car, slid onto the seat and hit the radio button. Something familiar bellowed out and her thoughts turned to routine things. For the moment, the dark lake and the watching moon were pushed aside. She knew that they would always be there for her, if ever she needed them.

Sharon Apold: Dance with Dad

Beneath my hand I feel your shoulder bone
Your smile is broad, careless, sweet
I’m reminded of home
Your step is neat

Under my feet the floor feels grounding
Your joy is open, blatant, obvious 
I’m almost crying
Your dance oblivious 

Around my waist your arm holds tight
Your eyes shine bright, clear, pale
I’m being careful 
Your body’s frail

Above our heads hangs the time
Your step falters, your dance becomes slow
I’m slowing mine
Your face aglow

The tables have turned, although slowly
Once you carried me ably 
I hold you boldly 
You see your baby.

Georgette Gerdes: I’ve A Bone To Pick With You

It lies on the grass grisly and grainy; fat pokes out between the brittle maze of calcium castles, tufts of red flesh glistening, beckon a salivating dude, the main man.

Sammy.

He waits, alert, primed for action. ‘Sit, stay.’ He sits. He stays. The seconds are like minutes, are like hours, like an eternity. ‘Go on. Good boy!’ He propels himself forward then tentatively inspects his prize. He looks around for interlopers, birds, cats, burglars, children, anything that might snatch, ‘his precious’. Then the orgasmic sniffs. Sammy is in heaven. He tastes a tiny morsel, savouring, delectable, juicy, exquisite, bloody sinews. But wait! It’s not safe. There are predators, stealers – everyone wants a greasy, stinky piece of carcass.

Sammy, weedy in stature, grasps the bone and drags it across the lawn amongst the weeds and prickles. He finds a spot under a tree and tries to dig. Sammy was not genetically engineered by his ancestral masters to be practical and makes a dogs’ breakfast of his work. The bone is half buried in the mud and covered in leaves.

Dirty nose and paws, the fuzzy hound approaches, cutely. ‘Hi Mum I’m hungry.’

Three weeks later Sammy sits on the grass, intense. He has a large, muddy object. Rotting, stinky, mouldy. Tasty. Sammy indulges. He gnaws and licks, grunting with pleasure.

‘Don’t eat that disgusting thing, you’ll vomit on the carpet.’ An attempt is made to remove it. Sammy growls, for seconds the wild animal rears it’s head. Don’t touch my bone!

What’s the point in giving that pooch a bone when he doesn’t eat it, buries it and tries to eat it when it’s flyblown and upsets his tummy?

Instead try-Dentastix – clean, green with mint for fresh puppy breath and nice teeth.

Do you think he will chew on those rubbery things?

Not a chance!

In these times of environmental crisis, should we, or dogs even eat meat? We domesticated animals early in evolution for food production, but do we need to now? It’s possible to go without. We are genetically programmed to benefit but the need outstrips the resources of our planet. Things to ponder. A vegetarian carnivore? Plant-based meat for pups?

Sammy continues to chew on a muddy bone. He throws up occasionally. He has good teeth and is very happy.

Robert Schmidt: Last Cab Off the Rank

I saw my urologist, Dr Wells, late on the day of my horrible flow test. ’You still have 800mls in your bladder,’ he informs me. ‘If I were you, I’d be rolling around on the floor.’ Charming, I think.

Surgery was set for the 12th September. Admission at 5.00pm? Everyone says to me the surgery must be on the 13th.

I am required to fast after breakfast on the day of the surgery.

My friend, David Synot, must have been nervous for me. He drove straight past South Terrace driving me to St Andrews.

We arrive at five minutes to five. The lady at the desk says that my surgery must be tomorrow.

Eventually I’m taken to the day surgery section. See people discharge one after another.

Then I’m taken to the surgical floor. They get me to put on a white back the front gown. Just in case I want to make a fast exit out the back!

Eventually it’s 8pm, then 9pm, then 10pm.

At 10pm they get me to hop onto another bed. Taken to what looks like a deserted warehouse. This must be theatre. Told I was last for the day. Felt like I’m the last Holden on the assembly line on a Friday, when they were still making Holdens.

Finally the anaesthetist and surgeon arrive, about 10.30pm. Not sure if they were yawning away. Not game to look. A short conversation, then a breathing mask and needle. I’m soon out like a light.

I awake in a lot of pain. It’s nearly midnight. They soon control the pain. However, a very long night ensues.

Roger Monk: Those Three Hundred Words

The other day, I was telling a friend about our Burnside Writers’ Group’s world-famous Three Hundred Words and he asked how I went about writing them.

Hmm, I thought, how do I go about it? What thought patterns and wide nets do I consider and throw out into the ether? Much the same as everyone else, I suppose.

Firstly, I ask myself what subject I feel like working with this time. Travel, romance, crime, comedy, downright rambling rubbish, history, psychology, geography, holidays, family, neighbours, the garden, my theory on relativity, stomach complaints, life after death, pets. how not to grow a front lawn, ancestors, our magpie family, philosophical ramblings, flying pigs or the discovery of mustard.

Having chosen one, I type it at the top of the page and look at it. Hmm, again. What can I say about it that hasn’t been said before? What slant will I take? What new leaf on the tree of time will interest those who sit in judgement?

Nothing comes to mind so I go and make myself a cup of strong black, no sugar, return with it and stare at the cup for inspiration. It steams back at me, soundlessly.

Perhaps I could start with a snappy quote or a ‘sit up and wonder’ question or comment like, “Have you ever been face to face with a bison?” That should arouse their curiosity or at least keep them awake.

But what after that, as they slide back in their chairs and count the water stains on the ceiling. A start is a start is a start, but only that.

Hmm again. Perhaps if I – no, that wouldn’t work. For one thing I don’t know anything about it and for another thing there isn’t much that …

Ah! 300 words.  Thank goodness!

Anne McKenzie: Sylvia

Smiling faces beam at you from every wall, table top, mantelpiece and shelf in Sylvia’s home. In sepia tones, there’s Nina and Tony, her paternal grandparents, now deceased. Her father, Manny, with seventies hair, buttoned up in his wedding suit, Uncle Nico, his best man, at his side; in yellowed Kodachrome there’s her mother Maria, holding the twins, just infants then; .the twins again as shepherds in the school nativity play and together in their class photographs; brother, Angelo, in his Scout’s uniform and later graduating from university; and sister Dani in fairy fancy dress, wearing her mother’s high heels, and later with her fiancée Johnny atop Mount Buller.

There are no photographs of Sylvia. There is no room in this gallery for a little girl with a cleft lip and palate.

Roger Monk: The Garden

 Matted elm leaves abandoning all hope.
 Naked sticks of unashamed winter.
 Glorious nightshade in purple velvet,
 tall as six year olds and just as deadly.
 Bunched violets scuttling over bare ground,
 covering the sins of summer.
 New boy on the block: feijoa, name still attached,
 where once a paperbark, now stacked firewood.
  
 A rock unearthed, spade annoyer put aside,
 a stepping stone in the making?
 Red diamantina, summer leftovers, waving
 stop signs, ignored by frost and sleet.
 Memories of salvias, eye catchers long gone,
 worn out by flamboyance and upstart showing off.
 Snail shells piled in corners, funeral pyres,
 Slain by small blue pellets on warmer nights.
  
 Wet bricks for sliding on, sloped to kill unwary.
 Wisteria peering overhead, curling purple lips.
 Summer hedge of vigour, slowed to nought,
 From rampant shooting fighter of a thousand cuts.
 Blueberries where white dabs of blossom hung,
 winning birds with waiting eyes, first in line.
 Lemon tree stalemate, refusing to play,
 Galls arising from the branch. No game at all.
  
 Shy clivia clumps brightening through the straps,
 Surprises least expected from the shade and damp.
 Lonely, single, desert pea, dead if pampered, 
 Challenging ‘roo paws for the oos and ahhs.
 Tattered, vined glory rags on twisted lines.
 Heating chillies, burning yellow, red and green.
 Upturned mushroom birdbath, now forgotten,
 Once the saving soul for singing neighbours.
  
 Thistle do, the mites of down now standing firm,
 Now giving in. Thistle out to swell the limpy heap.
 Grasses still but not asleep. Waiting on their backs,
 Waiting, ever waiting for the coming turn.
 And over all, with verted bones of seeming dead,
 but slightly budding in the winter sun,
 the golden elm, heat shield and master of it all,
 surveyed in my front garden, much alive. 

Robert Schmidt: The COVID-19 Adventure – Part 2

On Monday evening arrive home from the Royal Adelaide Hospital by taxi with our masks on. Take mine off in a hurry.

‘Going to be a long seventy-two hours Jane,’ I sigh.

Suspend walking with my friends and social activities. No one can actually come inside our home. Self isolation you know. Fortunately we have adequate food in the place.

What can I do? I know I’ll write about the experience.

On Wednesday, ring Lawrie from writing group. ‘Would you like to take writing from my letterbox?’ Explain about Jane and my COVID-19 tests.

‘Do you have your results?’ he enquires.

‘Well no,’ I say.

‘Robert it’s best not to touch your writing unless we can sanitise it,’ he says.

He was right, could spread infection. Couldn’t find any gloves either.

On ringing my medical practice, Hughes Clinic, ‘Good news Robert. You’re negative,’ a secretary says. ‘Jane’s isn’t here. Think doctor will ring tomorrow. There are few things to discuss with her.’

Now we start stressing. Was virus dormant but now positive? It would have been first case in a while in this state. Maybe it will be in the press, shock, horror!

Ring Lawrie. Agree not to do anything until Jane is clear. Could be reason doctor has not rung.

Eventually doctor rings. We both take a deep breath. A bit of blah, blah. Then the words we want to hear. She’s negative! ‘Jane you can go anywhere you like,’ she joyfully says.

Now what to do with the half dozen masks we have between us?

When COVID-19 is eradicated in many years, when it’s just a distant memory…if short of money, I could put my cap and sunglasses on. Take a mask, covering mouth, nose, up under my eyes. In my nineties, could be the oldest old age pensioner to rob a bank. If I can bark Jane’s medical history through a mask, can bark instructions to a hapless teller, if they still exist.

Maybe I need a life!

Robert Schmidt: The COVID-19 Adventure – Part 1

My wife Jane has been feeling unwell for a few weeks. Her symptoms became flu-like in recent days. We both have had our vaccinations. Her doctor yesterday suggested she have a COVID-19 test. ‘I’ll get the results almost instantly,’ she says to me. We decide to get a taxi to the Royal Adelaide Hospital straightaway.

The taxi leaves us at the entrance. There are signs saying restrictions on entering the building. There is another sign to follow the yellow arrows on the outside of the building to the COVID-19 clinic.

Tunnel vision clicks in for me.

 ‘Yellow arrows? What yellow arrows? Can’t see any yellow arrows,’ I say to Jane.

A kindly lady comes alongside us.

‘Are you lost? Looking for the clinic? She says. ‘It’s just past that yellow arrow around the corner.’

Suddenly the arrows and clinic are obvious.

We reach the makeshift building. A fairly senior lady with a mask on greets us. She seems to be the boss.

‘Here, put these masks on. That’s right, over the nose and mouth it goes’, she says.

(I get sinusitis, hence my nasal voice. Don’t like breathing in those things).

Jane gives her symptoms and a few details. Then the lady turns to me.

‘Have you symptoms?’ she says.

Hastily I reply, ‘No but I live with Jane though.’

‘You don’t have to be tested. It’s good if you are,’ she says. ‘You’ll need to go home straightaway. The results will take seventy-two hours. You’ll need to isolate at home that time.’

Seems over the top. However we agree to COVID-19 tests.

The senior nurse says, ‘Can I get your number?’ Maybe I was holding my phone?

‘What about Jane’s?’ I ask.

‘No I only want yours. We’ll send both results to your phone by ringing or text.’

Straightaway, you friendly writers who know me, are cringing.

The COVID-19 office is in the main building. Suddenly the friendly(?) boss lady peeks her head around a corner.

‘Your phones not ringing. It’s going to message bank, three times,’ she protests. ‘Can you come here,’ she yells.

Like a little schoolboy summoned to the headmistress’s office. Everyone is looking at me now.

Getting to the office I’m whining, ‘Phone was ringing an hour ago.’

Falls on deaf ears.

There are people behind a big glass window. I slightly lean on the shelf my side of the window.

‘Don’t lean on that shelf,’ a person says.

Stupidly I was trying to show my phone. As if they would touch it.

I’m a mumbler at the best of times. You try giving hospital admissions through a mask and thick window.

Slightly saving the day by remembering Jane’s number.

Sent back to my social distancing chair.

No air conditioning either.

Finally Jane and I are ushered into a small cubicle. They are slightly more friendly now.

They stick the thing down your throat and up your nose. Horrible!

The ordeal is over. We are given our own COVID-19 packs with masks inside.

Another nurse says, ‘Now leave your masks on until you’re home. Stay there seventy-two hours until you get your results.’

I think I know of a use for all the COVID masks when COVID-19 is done and dusted!

Wish us luck

TO BE CONTINUED…MAYBE

Anne McKenzie: Tom, Lesley and Lucy

‘Can’t the Judge see that the mother’s so brain damaged from being beaten by him and so scared she’ll say whatever he wants, including, as she’s just done, denying the abuse she and the children have suffered?’

‘Apparently not.’

‘The father’s lawyer’s got to know, got to know too that the mother should have a separate lawyer?’

‘Just wants a win for his client.’

‘And the children’s lawyer?’

‘Says his clients, well the older children at least, have told him that they want to go home.’

‘Why would they do that now?’

‘Well, I doubt they ever wanted to leave really. They just wanted the abuse to stop. And they know their mother can’t care for herself, let alone them.’

‘So this court application could just fall over and she and the kids will go back to that abuse?’

‘I’m afraid it’s looking that way today.’

‘So what’s the point?’

‘The point is that we’ve tried and that we’ll keep on trying.’

Roger Monk: Book Ends

I am at the end, book. I have turned your pages and this is where you go no further.

I close you slowly, book, and stare, flicking memory to this moment or that, pondering you in part or whole, my inner eyes giving me again that moment of excitement of fear of sorrow or joy that kept me thanking you.

You have given me secrets, book. Things that only you and I know in a particular way. Discoveries that I can take, but also leave for others to discover in their own way.

Do I wish to stay, book? Yes, because you have made me a little different and I can feel that difference, and no, because I am not you. I am my own book and it is different.

Thank you, book. You have felt my gratitude as I turned the leaves, one by one. Thank you for introducing me to the thoughts that only you hold.  Thank you for new worlds, all of which I can both take away and leave in your safe keeping. Thank you for permitting me to walk on your pathway of words that have come alive for me.

Thank you for allowing me to walk where you have been before, cutting the thicket of adventure or fun or fear. Thank you for giving me something new that I can take out with me, and remember when the whim takes me. I can return and remember, but I can never again begin.

Now, book, I must put you down for a time. If I return it will not be to a world  unknown; to secrets to be discovered, for you will never be new again. Return will be because a little of me is still between your pages, and always will be.

Anne McKenzie: Miguel

The suffering Christ sags heavily from his bronze cross above the altar. To his left his mother still weeps, her tears frozen in prisms of blood-red stained glass. They’ve both seen it all before—so many times. 

Miguel lies hidden in his adolescent-sized coffin.

The father, Guido, is seated several rows in front of me. All I can see of him is a hunched back and bowed shiny balding head, fringed with tufts of curling grey hair. I’m glad I can’t see his face as I might feel compassion or pity for him. Today I want my anger.

Beside Guido is Maria, his wife and Miguel’s mother. Her sobbing is mute, betrayed only by the convulsive shuddering of her black-shrouded back.

Somniferous music plays softly in the background as the church fills with mourners, many friends from his school.

Beside me, Sonya mops at her tears with a now soggy tissue. She’s a first-year graduate social worker and Miguel is her first loss.

Only last week Sonya had brought him to the door of my office to introduce us. ‘Anne, this is Miguel. Miguel, this is my boss.’

He’d smiled shyly, pushing back the locks of wavy hair that had escaped to hang over his eyes. He was handsome and wholesome in his school uniform of grey trousers and matching shirt, maroon blazer and shiny black shoes. I can still picture him there outside my office.

I can see, too, the blood and brain spattered wall in his father’s study where he shot himself with his father’s gun three days later.

Nothing he did was ever good enough for you Guido, was it?—but you wouldn’t listen.

Robert Schmidt: Your Call Is Important To Us

Recently I was required to have a blood test. I have several questions to ask over the phone before having it. There is a 1300 number you can ring.

I dial the number. It rings a while, and then a recorded message cuts in, ‘Your call is important to us. We will be with you shortly.’ The voice sounds just like deceased shock jock, Bob Francis.

O.K Robert, be patient. I am sure I will get to a real live person shortly.

Silence. Then say twenty seconds later the recorded message from…let’s call him Bob. ‘Your call is important to us. We will be with you shortly.’

Silence. Then the recorded message over and over again. This seems to go on for hours. Obviously I’m in some sort of time warp. Maybe, shock, horror, I’m stuck in Bill Murray’s ‘Groundhog Day’.

Would the real Bob Francis be so patient listening to his own voice? Or would he throw my old land line phone out to window, along with uttering every profanity he knew? Or could invent?

Then another strange voice cuts in, ‘When we answer your call, enquire about our other services…’ Blah. Blah. Now I’m angry. I just want a real person answering my simple questions. Why can’t they be honest, answer, ‘Your call is not important to us. We have people asking questions far more important than yours. You’ll just have to wait.’ It would be more honest.

Hang on. Is this a real voice? Yes. Yes

‘How can we help you/?’

Anne McKenzie: Last Chance Goodbye

‘I’m not going,’ she says as he walks in the door.

He says nothing, just sits down at the kitchen table and picks up the newspaper lying there.

‘I told you on the phone I wasn’t going. I don’t know why you bothered coming over.’

She goes on cutting up the vegetables for the casserole. The knife’s frenetic rat-a-tat on the chopping board betraying her outward appearance of calm and resolve.

At fifty, she is fatter that she ever wanted to be and, at five foot five inches tall, now a little stooped after the fashion of her mother. Her thick, red-brown hair is still lustrous, although not the brilliant coppery canopy it used to be. She tweaks out the odd grey strands she finds and forgets them.. Her face is what’s most arresting about her appearance. Her pale blues eyes flash with intelligence, vitality and humour, except when she is very fatigued. And there is a warmth and openness about her face that invites even strangers at the bus stop to smile and speak. Sometimes she wishes it were not so. Sally has offered many times to teach her the ‘don’t bother me’ look she claims to have perfected and patented, especially after yet another lost soul has arrived at their doorstep for a coffee and a chat.

‘You’re just wasting your time. Time you could be spending with her.’

She has the grace to wince at that barb.

He says nothing. He’s said all there was to say on the telephone. He keeps his attention fixed on the newspaper he’d read cover to cover earlier that morning.

He is a tall, now spindly man in his late seventies, bald except for two little unruly Bo-Bo the Clown tufts of grey hair, one above each ear. His brown eyes are misted with tiredness and pain. His shoulders are hunched inward, as if to protect his heart from some further thrust or attack. He would love a cup of tea but doesn’t ask.

‘If you’re determined to sit there all day, I suppose I’d better make you something to eat and a cup of tea.’

Now there is a clatter of teacups, banging cupboard doors and the fizzing of the running water into the electric jug. But not even activity can conceal her growing anxiety.

‘I knew it would come to this. I knew you would ask…’ she says.

Looking up, he says quietly, ‘It’s not me, she’s …’

‘I know, I know,” she interrupts. “But it’s really you asking me isn’t it?’

‘You haven’t even asked how she is,’ he says.

‘She’s dying isn’t she? What more is there to ask?’

The bitterness in her voice is palpable.

He winces visibly but again says nothing. His hand trembles as he brings his cup to his lips. The too hot liquid scalds his tongue.

Now remorseful, she says, ‘I’m sorry, Dad.’

‘Where’s Sally?’ he asks hopefully.

‘Wanting to call in the cavalry now, eh, Dad?’

She comes over to the table and gives his bony shoulders a quick hug and nestles her face fleetingly into his neck.

She wishes Sally was there too and not away in Darwin lecturing for a week. Sally who was calm and clear thinking. Sally who would put a reassuring arm around her shoulders, who would … damn it… would expect her to make her own decision.

‘Nothing in twenty years. Not a word. It was if I had died. And now she wants to see me.’ She is thinking out loud now and expects no response from the old man.

‘Is there to be one last plea for my soul? Will the shameful and dissolute gay daughter give it all up at last, renounce her licentious lifestyle and grant her dying mother’s last wish? Not bloody likely, mother, not bloody likely!’

The teapot, meant to top up her father’s cup, is now perilously in mid-air above his head, its spout swaying dangerously from side to side as she speaks, like some viper poised to strike.  In some alarm, he strains back in his chair.

His movement catches her eye and stays her arm and her words. She begins to chuckle a little at the image they would offer a camera at this moment: the fat fifty-year-old, the china teapot and the spindly old man.

‘Give me a moment to go to the loo and to get a coat, Dad. I’ll lock up and meet you in the car.’

He mops his wet eyes with a handkerchief as he wearily pulls himself up from the table. Now he allows himself a worried glance at his watch. 

She thrusts the car into the passing traffic daring anyone to reproach her. He keeps a nervous eye on the speedometer which threatens excess at any moment but they arrive safely at the hospital twenty minutes later. He gets out but she makes no move to join him.

‘I’m sorry Dad. I just can’t do it. Call me when you’re ready to come home.’

Roger Monk: Kitchen Kaper

It may come as a surprise to you that I have been known to pay the odd visit to our kitchen.

Usually, it’s with a tea towel in my hands, but now and then I venture in because I rather fancy myself, unwisely, as a master of pastry.

For some very basic, challenging echo of a long-lost reason, probably gleaned by a fighting forebear on the fields of Agincourt or Culloden, or at Trafalgar, I rather enjoy endeavouring to conquer and lie, flat on its face, the odd aggressive sheet of belligerently flapping filo or pugnacious puff and to paste up on my imaginary floured board the score of Roger 1.  Shortcrust Nil.

But pastry is a fighter. Possibly the only genuine confrontationist in the kitchen. The Charlemagne of the pantry. Challenging from the moment it decides to slide out of its cardboard castle and dares you to touch it before it thaws. Try to challenge it and it snaps at you. No rolling pin can make it move a muscle until it’s ready to move. But move it will, all over the board, growing bigger at every roll and twisting, wrinkling and buckling at every turn. It sticks to the roller when you want it to lie flat and it breaks away when it should be curled neatly on the edges.

And then, when you think you’ve fought it into submission, it’ll unwrap itself from the sides and wave an edging at you, or open itself in the middle as you’re pouring in the meat or vegetables. It’s then that you discover that half of the cover is lying on one side or it’s about an inch too short, all around. With a satisfied plop it returns to the board and looks up at you.

Puff 1. Roger Nil.

Robert Schmidt: The Flow Test

Two weeks ago I had a flow study and a bladder scan. The tests identify how well you empty your bladder. A few weeks earlier a CT scan of my bladder and only kidney, had identified a problem down below.

On the day of the flow I drink a litre of water in the hour leading up to the scan as required. You know, you’re so full you think you’ll burst. Arriving there, the receptionist calmly says, ‘If you’re ready to go, our nurse will take you to the flow room.’

I say, ‘No, I‘ll wait five more minutes, just to make sure I’m ready.’ Actually, I’m beside myself with anxiety. What if I get stage fright?

The pamphlet says it’s like going in your own toilet. Now or never. The nurse ushers me in.

I see a large funnel connected to a hose connected so some sort of measuring device. High tech? Doesn’t look like my toilet.

As night follows day, I get stage fright. Can’t pass a drop.

The contraption starts ticking, recording nothing, and then soon stops. Still nothing.

Still beside myself with anxiety, I lean over. What’s going on here?

My foot must have hit the hose as the whole contraption falls apart with a bang. Now I pass a few drops on the floor in fright.

A very angry nurse rushes in. My trousers are still at half mast. I don’t think COVID19 measures were in place when she wiped the floor.

‘You’ll have to go back to the waiting room,’ she snaps. ‘We’ll try again in another half hour.’

An hour later things are no better.

Georgette Gerdes: The Culprit (Plumbers’ Dream cont.)

He stands proudly, gnarled, twisted, whispering in the breeze. He’s been here for one hundred years or more. He’s steadfast, strong and rather unattractive. My late mother would say how much she hated him. His red needles would drop all over her grass and the brick patio. Annoying sweepings required. He extends and thrives. His branches keep stretching out like tentacles, weighing down roofs with dry, grey leaves and flower buds like kitchen scourers. He needs a trim, a hack with a chainsaw. Yes, he’s flourishing in our garden.

What is your green-fingered secret you ask?

Well, this bugger feasts on our water and sewerage. His steel roots sniff out the breaks in the post-war pipes and gorge themselves. As a result, he is Herculean in size and strength and provides a living for local plumbers.

Cut him down then?

Oh, how COULD you? I know he’s not pretty but…

This old red bottle brush tree is central to the garden. Countless children have climbed him, swung from the frayed rope swing and played in the gargantuan tree house. The tree house extravaganza is every fathers’ envy. Hand constructed by my brother in law, it’s complete with two doors, windows, a ladder, trap door plus a sandpit reached from a very high slippery dip that would contravene most health and safety regulations.

Children are not the only devotees. In spring, when the flower buds open to crimson spikes, there is a mysterious hum in the air. If you look closely, you will see hundreds of bees hovering around the stamens and pollen, popular amongst indigenous Australians to suck on, or make into a sweet drink. Birds also compete and flap through the branches; nature’s feast.

So, when it comes to the conversation about our dilapidated house and unkempt garden, I say, you can knock down the house but save the trees. The many: camellias, hibiscuses, oleanders, nectarines, orange and cumquat. You can replace crappy floor-boards and walls, but you can’t replace years of nature’s nurturing love and devotion. That’s why I will never sell, regardless of revolting bathrooms. I need to save the trees from reckless developers and ignoramuses that don’t appreciate our leafy friends.

Long live the trees, no matter how annoying.

Lawrie Stanford: For Alvar, Aged 5

 I’d hate to be a snake—
 when I’m trying to escape, 
 I’d worry about my tail,
 left far back on the trail. 
  
 Sticking out there to be nabbed,
 far too easy to be grabbed,
 even if I’m 'round a bend, 
 it’d be my sorry end!
 I’d hate to be a cow,  
 I’ll tell you that right now,
 to rise early every dawn—
 sleepy, weary and forlorn.
  
 To have milked a bulging udder,
 in cold that makes you shudder,
 while my little calf is fed,
 with packaged milk instead!
 But I’d love to be a hog,
 it wouldn’t be hard slog,
 ‘cos I’d be riding high, 
 living in my messy sty. 
  
 Muckin’ around in slush and mud,
 caked in all that mush and crud,
 no telling me to behave, 
 or that I really need to bathe! 

Source of images: http://clipart-library.com

David Hope: Dubrovnik

It’s a lovely June day, warm and welcoming.

After entering through the Pile Gate and ascending the stairs, we begin a circuit of the walls of the Old Town of Dubrovnik.

The old town of Dubrovnik

The walls, largely intact, present a bird’s eye view of the old town as well as some insight into the mind of the city fathers and their efforts to fortify the old town against invaders. Aided by cliffs rising from the Adriatic on the west and south of the Old Town, very thick walls on the landward side and a series of turrets and towers, the walls presented a formidable obstacle.

It’s about two kilometres around and the walk provides the opportunity to see some of the remaining unrepaired damage; the city was shelled for seven months in 1991 by Serbian and Montenegrin forces. Medieval fortifications are no barrier to modern artillery shelling a city from the heights above. The walk provides views of many of the features of this World Heritage site.

These features included (clockwise images): the old town port with its distinctive red-tiled roofs of buildings and apartments and the azure Adriatic Sea; the Venetian baroque style Church of St Blaise; the city’s main street, the pedestrianized Stradun; one of Europe’s oldest apothecary’s, founded in 1317, located in the Franciscan Monastery off the Stradun; Onofrio’s Fountain; and Sponza Palace.

We realise we are hungry and find our way to a small restaurant in one of the lanes leading off the Stradun where we order beer, bread, cheese and sausage. The waiter tries to convince me that a large beer would be too large for me. I point out I am Australian.

Yes, a litre of beer is just right for lunch.  

Nell Holland: The Twin-Tube Tale

Their first washing machine, a Twin Tub Hoovermatic (TTH) bought in 1960, was invaluable when two babies arrived in two years. Then, in January 1965, Tom said they were going to exchange their Scottish existence for tropical heat. Molly had no idea where the Solomon Islands were but the thought of sunshine, rather than ice on the inside of windowpanes, convinced her. This was an excellent idea!

TTH was among the essential possessions packed up and taken but unfortunately, Malaita wasn’t ready for a TTH. The outpost Tom had been posted to only had an irregular diesel-generated power supply and TTH needed electricity. So, washing times had to be organised around times of available power.

To Molly’s chagrin, there was no hot water supply and no bath for the children, but Tom improvised. The washing tub had a heating element, and when filled with water it had a new function as a child’s bath. The girls loved their unique bathtub, and it gave great entertainment until they became too big to fit in. It was about then that Tom announced they were once again on the move. They were relocating to Fiji, where Molly was assured, they would find both hot and cold running water – and a bath.

‘TTH will have to come too.’ Molly declared, and as transportation of goods was part of the job’s perks, Tom was happy to pack up TTH and move to a home bigger and better than their Malaita house.

TTH still coped well with their washing, but its function as a bath was history – until Tom brought home a stray dog of indeterminate origins he called Bitz. Bitz was happy to remain dirty and matted forever but Molly insisted the smell needed eradicating! Little Bitz could be lifted into TTH’s tub and washed easily, and after an initial frenzied attempt to escape, he grew used to his regular spa. By the time Tom declared another relocation for his growing family, Bitz had moved to canine heaven, though looking cleaner on his last day than he had on his first.

TTH was now considered too old for another move, so Molly put a sign on the door.

FREE. Well-travelled, much loved washing machine. Condition as is.

It soon departed on the shoulders of an enormous, and incredibly pleased Fijian

‘Do you remember what you said when we bought it in Edinburgh?’ she asked.

Tom smiled. ‘I think it was something like – do you think it’s value for money?’ He laughed aloud. ‘Well, I think it might have been. Don’t you?’

Don Sinnott: Zooming the Branch Committee

The ‘old-timers’ had memories of smoke-filled rooms, with big-bellied men, shirts dishevelled and slackened ties askew, shouting over each other as they jabbed the air making their point. Clay had no experience of that era but, even in the more civil times in which he had joined the local branch committee, he’d known some rough meetings. They wore suits now and there was no smoking in the back room of the sitting member’s electoral office. But there was always profanity and shouting, threats to resign, personal innuendo… It was never a civil gathering.

Clay leaned back from the laptop screen showing the tiled faces of his fellow committee men. In these separated times they met by Zoom, so the laptop on his kitchen table connected him with this badly behaved shouting match. It was worse that a face to face meeting: they kept talking over each other, angry not only with each other but with the limitations of the technology. Clay was no Puritan and, when provoked, had as good a line of profanity as any of them. But somehow, he was profoundly uneasy with the language pouring from the tinny laptop speaker, invading his home. He was alone in the house, but he had sat at this table with Sally and the kids over breakfast, just an hour ago. In this place—his home—you didn’t speak and behave like that.

            He eased further from the screen. He was now out of the camera’s view and the sense of disengagement from the meeting came like a fresh breeze. A couple of the others had disappeared and reappeared during the meeting as from force of habit, they leaped to their feet to argue, then realised it was their midriff and not their face on-screen. But Clay felt like disappearing more permanently. If I shrink from this language and behaviour because it’s in my home, he mused, why is it OK elsewhere? Has the virus sensitised me to something?

Lawrie Stanford: It’s the Spoof!

To the Editor, Guns USA Magazine; 
from Chuck (‘Spoof’) Gunn-Smith Jnr

 I am a proud Amerigun,
 and carry firearms just for fun.
 To shoot them little critters 
 and keep them on the run.
  
 I wanna be like my ol’ Pa,
 so he’s proud of his first son.
 He’s a good up-standing man,
 a gun-totin’ son-of-a-gun.
  
 And my moral obligation,
 is to arm my own young son.
 So he will grow-up just like us,
 to take no crap from anyone.
  
 I swell-up with a father’s pride
 to see my boy with his six-shooter.
 There is nought you'll ever find,
 that you could say was any cuter.
  
 And I’m proud of US movies
 that celebrate our long tradition.
 Of autos, sex, crime and guns,
 we’re a society on a mission.
  
 Our mission is to secure
 our privileged way of life.
 And if we show any weakness,
 the vermin cause us strife.
  
 Jews and Blacks and Catholics,
 Commies, Unions, Homosexuals,
 Goons and Ayrabs, Islamists,
 and raving Left-wing Liberals.
  
 Terrorists and sympathisers,
 and The Feds, are all subversive. 
 They envy our sacred liberty
 and work in ways coercive.
  
 When they bully us good folk,
 our guns will stop them dead.
 It’s not true, that we won’t shoot, 
 as some commentator said.
   
 There’ll be no more atrocities
 like the twin-tower conflagration.
 With the death of goddam thousands 
 to our cries of indignation.
  
 While we shoot lots more of ourselves 
 than died in that horror flight—
 what the critics need to know is—
 it’s our constitutional right!  

David Hope: What is it About Deserts

The desert passes by the car window. 

People seem to think a desert is a sterile, barren place; an unending vista of not much, stretching to infinity.

Yet, what is passing by, is an everchanging scene.  

There is a straggle of undersized trees meandering across the land, marking a watercourse. Strangely, there is a sand dune a few metres high and on a sliver of the crest a grove of very green and tall trees; tall, that is, compared to the small trees along the bottom of the dune. How are those trees on the top of a dune so leafy and well-developed? Maybe a spring emerging there has helped their growth.

Against the horizon a noticeable leafy tree line clearly marks a major creek and a quick check of the map, shows the Warburton River flowing to Lake Eyre. Although, when it is crossed it is mainly dry.

There are a series of patches of gibber stones, interspersed with a variety of vegetation. Scrubby trees and at least four different bushes: the blue-green saltbush, a bright yellow-green; a lawn green and a dark green – I’ve no idea what they are, but it’s certainly variety. It’s not quite the green lushness of Ireland, either. In places it has obviously rained recently as there is a fair covering of grass.

The cerulean sky has a ruler-straight, pencil thin vertical crack in it. It’s a radio tower! And, getting closer, there are even thinner ruler straight lines angling off it; the guys to maintain it upright. It’s part of a network of radio towers across Australia that enable communication by pastoralists and travellers alike.

Don Sinnott: Walkers Follow Ridge

Today’s start point for our walk is near Woolshed Flat, a whistle stop on the Pichi Richi rail line, halfway along the pass between Quorn and Port Augusta. A road, now badged the southern section of the Flinders Ranges Way, shares the pass with the rail line and crosses it at several points. Whether you drive, or take the tourist train on its infrequent runs between Quorn and Port Augusta, it’s a picturesque trip between massive north-south rocky ridges of the South Flinders Ranges. But for us, neither road nor rail beckons: we park the car and it’s walking time. The route is not along the pass but up to the top of the western ridge before we head north towards Quorn.

What perverse folks the designers of the Heysen Trail have been. It seems that wherever the option of a gently undulating path appears, the trail markers point away to a challenging climb, because that’s the nature of bushwalking. It’s not the destination but the journey: the rugged climbs and descents, ankle-wrenching rock-hopping and prickly bushes—these mark our progress.

We clamber up the steep side of the ridge, trying to keep a trail marker in view and watching where our feet land. It’s a bit early in the season for snakes but we keep an eye out. The only significant wild-life we disturb on the steep section are ants, big and angry. An ill-advised rest stop by one of our companions on top of an unseen ants’ nest results in an anguished dance to shake them out of his pants. Too late—they’re at groin level! We leave him and his wife to strip off and deal with the biting insects.

We work our way further up towards the top of the ridge, marvelling at the view of the verdant pass that opens below us, the wattles and wild flowers just come into blossom and the grass trees with their seed shafts reaching for the sky. Then the way markers become less frequent—‘walkers follow ridge’ offers general guidance only and it’s up to you to make your own trail through the jumble of rocks and undergrowth. If you find yourself heading downhill, you’re off the ridge, so back up.

It’s a glorious spring day, big-sky country with scattered cloud; we exult in the freedom and the challenge of a world open only to walkers. Now the trail markers change to arrows, indicating it’s time to head down from this ridge. Be careful—long, wet grass conceals jagged rocks and abandoned lengths of fencing wire left by pioneering pastoralists who once tried to tame this land. The railway line appears and it’s time for lunch.

Then, a less pleasant walk along the line. Choose whether you want to match your stride to the sleeper spacing or keep to the rough ballast. The haul back to the outskirts of Quorn where we left the other car is less satisfying: ‘walkers follow ridge’ has marked the highlights of our day. Those supposedly perverse Heysen Trail designers knew their business.

Nell Holland: One Man and His Dog

It was the distant view that he liked. He could stand on this ridge and look over the tree canopy as far as Outer Harbour on a clear day. But not today. Today, the sun created stippled shadows, through trees flanking the path he’d just walked with the dog. The light occasionally blinded him, as branches moved in the breeze, but he gazed ahead, waiting for moments of clarity and respite from the glare. His wife was now permanently in the nursing home so there was no reason to hurry home. He no longer kept his life to any routine. When the day was fine, he walked, and let his thoughts wander. On top of this hill his problems seemed less important. Life found its own level.

He was alone here, apart from the dog sweeping enthusiastically with her nose, circling around him, enjoying the smells. He let her run, knowing he was always in her peripheral vision. He was never lonely with his dog, and this was one of many canine companions he’d had over fifty years. He thought about his dogs and counted them. Seven he’d had, and sometimes two at the same time. But this would be the last, and like a last child, she was indulged and well-loved. Her nights spent in a basket by his bed and his own days enjoyed in her company.

The light suddenly changed, blurring the green of the distant hills into the smoky blue-grey of the sky. There would be rain later, but right now, it was still dry, and the distant, leaden sky gave only a hinted threat.

He turned, whistled for the dog, and headed back. He’d done little that was productive, but he’d stood and thought about the past and the present; let his mind wander over problems and was returning home at peace. Like the skyline, the future was hazy. But life was still worthwhile

Edie Eicas: Temptation

I know I shouldn’t have, but it was too much temptation. Maybe it was boredom, or maybe it was my personality that looked for excitement and a laugh. I put the need for a laugh down to my parents known for telling jokes sourced from everyone who came into the shops.

My mother and father were multi-lingual, and their keen intelligence enjoyed the convolutions of humour embedded in the different languages. But, translated jokes into English sometimes don’t work – it’s a matter of the particular semiotics of each language: the play in sentence construction, puns, the contradictions within social structures and, the depth of cultural knowledge that sets the twist up for the explosion of understanding and laughter.

The joke teller, a parent, would laugh hysterically while I’d flounder not getting “it” and with the sensitivity of a petulant teenager taking everything personally, I would retreat with a huff, and a flick of my hair.

Of my parents, it was my mother who had wit, something I only appreciated as I got older. As long as her sarcasm and cutting observations weren’t targeting me, I was fine, and could enjoy her cruel side.

When I had my first child, an element in me took advantage of his innocence. I remember Andrew already walking, more like staggering around the house, and me, calling him. The hallway had a dogleg and excited at what I had planned, I hid in anticipation behind the wall. As Andrew toddled down the hall, I jumped out and screamed. He jumped and screamed in fright and turned to get away, running straight into the wall.

I couldn’t stop. I was hysterical with laughter at the unexpected reaction, while he was hysterical with fear. Oops.

Now he’s older, it’s about opportunity and redress. Now I’m the one who gets to jump at the unexpected as he screams and I scream in response.

Nell Holland: Double-Decker Day

The double decker buses of my childhood were the only mode of transport my family used on a regular basis as we didn’t own a car, and neither did anyone else I knew My favourite position on those red Midland buses, was upstairs, sitting right at the front where the wide windows gave an elevated view of the road ahead, and to each side..

From my seat I could watch men run for the bus as it left the bus-stop. While sprinting, they would hold out a hand for the steel pole in the middle of the doorway and nimbly jump onto the platform, thrilling me with what I considered to be Tarzan-like agility. Sliding casually onto a seat they remained alert, waiting for their destination. They’d then return to the platform, holding the pole and waiting for the bus to slow before stopping. Releasing the pole, they’d leap off while the vehicle was still moving, legs pedalling the air before feet hit the pavement at a reducing jog. It appeared a mark of manhood and I admired their agility each time it happened.

When I was ten years old, I once travelled on the bus with my grandmother to the nearest big town, about eight miles away.

Granny talked to me throughout the journey speaking English in the local Derbyshire dialect. Her speech was peppered heavily with words like, mardy, clarty, and jitty, and few passengers, unless they were from my hometown, would have understood much of what she said. I wasn’t encouraged to speak ‘local’ at home but could chat easily with Granny when we were together. However, when one of the men departing from the bus mistimed his exit leap, and made an undignified tumble, Granny exclaimed incredulously, ‘Na then! Is’t puddled? The nesh wazzerk’s clouts’ larruped’n mud’n rammel from’t causie. Ee bah gum, mi duck. He’ll be pigglin some scabs amorra  ̶  an scraitin! His tabs’l be burnin nah’s mucked up. Worra barmpot!’

{Look at that! Is he drunk? The silly man’s trousers are covered in mud and rubbish from the pavement. Well, he’ll be crying tomorrow, and his ears will be burning, knowing we’re talking about him making a mess of things. What an idiot!}

Everyone laughed at Granny’s explosion of home-grown vernacular – even those passengers with little idea of what she’d said!

Georgette Gerdes: Spectrum

 Why are you crying little girl?
 Lips buttoned, eyes red,
 snot dribbles,
 fingernails pick at scabbed bleeding scalp.
  
 What’s wrong sweetie?
  
 The void immense,
 a gulf
 abyss.
  
  
 The meltdown continues.
  
 Tears drizzle from bloodshot pools,
 pools hiding pain, in a room
 large and echoing, empty and cold.
  
 Meaning is unfathomable.
  
 The shudders and whimpers disengaged
 we’re in the dark,
 alone in that room
 no one understands
 none the wiser.
  
 Pleading for an answer, a signal, a message
 falls on deaf ears.
  
 Nothing forthcoming.
  
 only annoyance.
  
 Speech is dumb, impossible.
  
 My words ignite 
 howls, like gasoline on a bonfire
 limbs thrash, writhe, strike
 tension stretches through twitching fibres,
 incoherent cries and sobs persist.
  
 Please tell me darling, what’s wrong?
  
 The tiger speaks
 Don’t keep asking, leave me alone!
  
  
 Mother retreats, 
 leaves a blur of red agitation,
 cooks dinner empties dishwasher
 hours go by
  
 Over and over
 love unwanted,
 rejection anew;
 unredeemed.
  
 The aftermath
 grumpiness
  
 Reasons left unsaid.
  
 Time sprinkles healing 
  
 A furry canine head nestles in the tiger’s lap
 unspoken comfort
 when all else is:
  
 Disconnect 

Lawrie Stanford: Timeless Tales Retold in Verse – On the Farm

 Dad took us up to Angie’s farm
 to visit his older sister.
 He said we’d likely stay four weeks,
 it’d been a while and he missed her.
  
 We were greeted there with bad news,
 ‘Feathers’ the fowl had just expired.
 No more cluck-cluck or peck-peck’n,
 she was old and had grown so tired.
  
 But Angie wasn’t much bothered,
 it was just an every-day matter,
 she settled down to her work,
 that night was giblets in batter.
  
 Breakfast arrived the next morning,
 yielding chicken-liver paté.
 Served on toast, smeared with lard,
 made with chicken-fat I’d say.
  
 But lunch was much more wholesome,
 we were served up chicken wings,
 bulking-up the meagre portion,
 mashed entrails and other things.
  
 The next evening meal was special,
 drumsticks emerged at last,
 but shared among the many,
 it felt more like a fast.
  
 Then came the following morning,
 chicken again—we were aghast!
 Braised kidney, liver, spleen on plates—
 how long will this torture last?
  
 But Angie wasn’t much bothered,
 it was just an every-day matter,
 she settled down to her work,
 though we weren’t gettin’ any fatter.
  
 So lunch was bowl of chicken soup,
 head, feet what else—who knows?
 and as I looked more closely,
 there it was—the parson’s nose.
  
 That night there was a relative feast,
 it was a curried chicken-breast,
 but served with cloaca crackle,
 it proved to be quite a test.
  
 Together with heart and lungs,
 the third evening was chicken shank,
 thin legs, no bulk, were a problem
 and the smell was getting rank.
  
 Then chicken haggis in the morning,
 surely, the last chicken course?
 with a cheeky brown over-pouring
 of a blended ovarian sauce.
  
 But enter, divine salvation,
 well actually, more bad news,
 the pet lamb died of constipation,
 he hadn’t been doing his poos.
  
 Goodness me! I thought in wonder,
 about the death ‘round here of late,
 perhaps all the stock on this farm 
 had reached their use-by date?
  
 But Angie wasn’t much bothered,
 it was just an every-day matter,
 she settled down to her work,
 and prepared a cold-mutton platter.
  
 It was a sort-of relief that followed,
 to have confirmed, the change in the fare,
 lamb chops were served at breakfast,
 with a glaze, done medium-rare.  
  
 I swallowed the lamb-brains lunch,
 though a bit of a waste I fear,
 when I had to leave the table,
 with violent diarrhoea.
  
 But shank served up in the evening
 (despite my stomach’s contortions)
 as well as lamb’s-blood haggis,
 was at least, in decent proportions.
  
 The most horrible thing then happened,
 Uncle Don passed away overnight,
 while unknown exactly what killed him,
 his tummy seemed rather tight.
  
 But Angie wasn’t much bothered,
 though the matter she said was so-so,
 but Dad announced very quickly,
 there’s a problem at home
                        —we gotta go!