It was probably a cold day in Cromwell. It’s usually cold in Otago, but I can’t remember. The only sensation my memory throws up is one of excitement. Mum had just asked us if we wanted to move to Australia and live with Dad again.
Unbeknownst
to me, my parents were officially separated at the time.
I’d been
under the impression that we’d left Bougainville because of the war and Dad
stayed because his job as the wharf’s foreman was important.
When the
situation became too dangerous for Panguna mine to continue operating Dad
returned to Australia to find work, eventually ending up in Blackwater.
Following his To Her Door moment, he asked Mum if we would join him. To
this day I’m not sure she would have if it weren’t for the enthusiasm expressed
by myself and her other child.
Blackwater
is representative of most Queensland mining towns in so much as it is a
shithole – a town so flat that the only slope suitable for a hill start when
taking your driving test is the library’s driveway. The persistent dry heat was
something I had no recollection of experiencing in my six years post-birth. Windows
and doors were left open, provided they had fly screens on them.
I remember
our first dinner when the kitchen screens were blanketed with flies as Mum made
Spag Bol. I also recall having to run around shutting windows when the wind was
blowing the wrong way and coal dust or dirt would engulf the town. Asthma was
rife among the children I found myself attempting to be educated with and I
wouldn’t be surprised to discover that the ground water is contaminated. Once,
some genius at the water treatment plant forgot to flick the “clean the water”
switch and every faucet in town was dispersing water straight from Bedford Weir
similar to the colour and consistency you expel from your bowel when suffering Salmonella
poisoning.
It wasn’t
all bad. There was a BMX track until they closed it, a Drive-In until “The
Thursday Storm” sent a section of the screen through the uninsured projection
room and the town pool wasn’t terrible except it was shut over “winter”. Like
the rest of Queensland, Blackwater folk know that anything below thirty degrees
Celsius is cold and it doesn’t get hot until the mercury hits forty (if you
hear a Queenslander complaining about the heat and it’s in the thirties, you just
need to wait for “the temperature’s fine, it’s the fucking humidity”).
Aside from
that there were two rugby league clubs, Aussie rules, pony, soccer, golf,
tennis and all the other clubs that exist in regional towns of medium size. But
there was still nothing to do. Sure, I played league for a while, soccer for a
bit, Tae Kwon Do and maybe two or three rounds of golf, but Blackwater is a
town that by its very nature forces children to entertain and educate themselves.
Trust me, if you ever need someone to catch some yabbies, herd a peacock and his
hens into your backyard or build a bomb from common household products, ask a
kid from The Coalfields.
We were able
to develop these skills because we had little parental supervision and really
only saw the police if venturing near the highway.
It’s not
like either entities were absent. Before Mum became the weekend librarian, she
was a stay at home parent. On my first day of school I took the scenic route
home because I had no idea which way home was. Being prone to panic Mum called
the cops to report me missing. I just rode around town until I recognised some
buildings Dad had driven past on our first entry to Blackwater as a family and oriented
myself.
I was only a
block away from my new abode when a marked police car pulled up beside me. The
officer inside addressed me by name and instructed me to put my bike in the
boot so he could drive me the hundred-odd metres to my house. Don’t start me on
White Privilege, I had no idea what that was when I was six, I mention it only
to demonstrate that this was the single interaction I had with the local cops in
the half-dozen years I lived in Blackwater full-time. Of course we had a PCYC at
which I attended events occasionally and sometimes I’d have to accompany a
parent to the local station on an administrative task, but they never came
after me for blowing shit up, trespassing, or any of my other indiscretions, of
which there were many.
I won’t say
that Blackwater turned me into a Hustler, but it was definitely where the
foundations were laid.
My Mother
will suggest to you that I was led astray by the company I kept. This suggestion
is wrong. If anything, the opposite is true, and Mum really needs to shoulder
some of the responsibility for her child’s criminality. It’s not her fault, but
not to identify her as a complicit enabler would be negligent of me.
As I have
already mentioned, Mum was the replacement librarian for a few years and
because it wasn’t feasible for me to spend all my time at the houses of the two
or three friends I had when both parents were working, the Library became
something of a second home. This became problematic around the time I’d
exhausted all of the age appropriate fiction and graduated to the sex heavy,
guns and killing people section of the book depository. A literary diet of
special agents, detectives, mercenaries and soldiers accompanied by a regular
injection of non-fiction serial killers, war and rape is probably not the best
education for a child but it served to open my eyes to the wider world and the
complexity of the human condition.
Comic books
were another medium that opened my eyes, but without many of those in the
library, I had to venture to one of the newsagents to get my fix. There were
two to choose from and in some strange confluence of Capitalism and Misogyny,
both decided to stock the Comics next to the Porn. While the Comics appealed to
a pair of my greatest loves, those being reasonable art and passable dialogue,
there was always an urge to pick up the magazines to my left.
I can’t
remember when I subversively (not subversively) started thumbing through the
smut pile, but I was probably eleven or twelve when, heart pounding in a
different style to what it had ever in
the past, palms sweating and ready to ride home in shame when refused service
for attempting to buy pornographic material, I picked a magazine from the shelf
and walked to the counter.
The girl
behind that counter looked at the cover and asked me for the price printed
there.
She smiled
at me, this girl, only a couple of years older than myself, as I fumbled with
the shrapnel in haste to pay her, worried she might change her mind, stuffing
the magazine down my shorts. She smiled at me as I handed over four or five two
buck coins’ I’d earned from baking cakes. She smiled at me as I scurried out
the door on my way to revel in masturbatory glory before my parents got home
and she smiled into the future as I swiftly became a regular consumer of
pornography from that store.
This is the
part where the blocks start falling into place. What I had figured out by this juncture
is that if you don’t have to pay for anything related to produce the product supplied,
you will be making one hundred percent profit. From baking cakes to peddling
pictures of pussy might seem a bit of a stretch so you’ll have to bear with me
as I unpack this.
My Father
taught me how to weld, drive a car, cook savoury food, operate a
drill/grinder/[insert power tool here] and swear like a sailor after smashing my
thumb with a hammer, but it was my Mother who taught me how to bake.
It wasn’t
something I’d planned, but on a whim one day I asked Mum if she would pay me
two dollars to bake a cake.
When she
agreed, I embarked on a determined campaign to bake as many cakes as I could in
the shortest amount of time possible. This foray into catering funded the
aforementioned purchase of my first pornographic magazine and many more, only
because I wasn’t paying for anything required to bake the cakes.
When The
Universe decided to intervene and set me on my path it was bright and sunny
outside, but I was ensconced in my room with my left hand turning pages while the
right was otherwise occupied. I’d taken advantage of Mum being in the backyard,
hanging out the washing (At that age, five minutes is easily enough time). I
was interrupted when the phone rang and stashed the magazine under the permanent
pile of crap beneath my desk. Expecting the caller to be someone seeking
conversation with one of my parents, I was pleasantly surprised to find one of
my friends on the other end of the line asking if I wanted to go and hang out
at his place. I yelled my request for permission from the kitchen and Mum
granted it.
Deciding
that the odds of her entering my room were pretty low, I left the magazine
where it was, ran downstairs, jumped on my bike and headed off to Haggis’ place
for air-conditioning and pay TV.
Cutting
through the high school, I rode behind the manual arts block where inside a
skip-bin I had previously found the briefcase which, after some persistence I’d
managed to unlock and turned into my smut safe. It is only with hindsight that
I realise the significance of this moment. At the time, I was wholly fixated on
getting to my mates and watching Soft Porn dressed up as Sci-Fi/Action movies.
Meanwhile
Mum had decided that day was ideal for cleaning my room. She must have been
bored because that was a task designated as mine. There was no phone call
demanding my return home, so I spent the afternoon blissfully ignorant,
watching boobs bracketed by bombs in climate-controlled comfort as my Mother
toiled and discovered my spoils.
An offer to
stay for dinner was not forthcoming that night so I headed home at the regular
time (for those who grew up in cities, it’s when the streetlights come on).
After
parking my bike and checking on the Guinea Pigs, I headed upstairs with the
intention of restoring my magazine to its rightful place in the briefcase only to
find a spotless room, sans porn. The briefcase was still there so I wasn’t
entirely bereft but the magazine in question was nowhere to be seen.
I’d been
busted.
Having
become quite adept at the ancient art of getting away with shit by not being
caught in the act – this was a serious failure on my part. I was no stranger to
punishment, which probably explains my ability to wriggle out of receiving
some.
Anticipating
the inevitable moment when Mum would confront me with the incriminating
document, I scrambled to prepare a justification.
She appeared
in the doorway with a smug look on her face and one hand behind her back.
As is her wont,
Mum stated the bleeding obvious by informing me that my room had been cleaned
before revealing the unescapable fact that in the process a magazine had been
unearthed. With more flourish than was necessary she revealed her prize and began
casually flicking through the pages while I mounted my defence, which was
essentially that I intended to sell it to another boy at school (this was not
my intention). Whether she bought the justification or not, the magazine was
handed over to me with a smile and words that have stuck with me forever.
‘I’m glad
you’re interested in girls’
Her tacit
approval surprised me and not only because I didn’t get in trouble but because
in a few months I would be shipped off to an “elite” all boys boarding school
in Brisbane. This isn’t abnormal for kids in the regions but most of them are
farmer’s children, whereas my Father was a miner and I’m a miner’s son. Dad was
still a Diesel Fitter at this point and while my parents could pay the school
fees, they couldn’t afford to.
Being a
(relatively) poor kid in a (very) rich school forced me to diversify my
entrepreneurial endeavours as I lacked the facilities to bake cakes, even
though the market was definitely there. I found myself in a situation where I
was receiving ten dollars a week in pocket money while my peers were averaging
between fifty and a hundred.
I had to do
something.
In
Blackwater I’d sold personalised drawings to classmates for a dollar or two, so
I tried that, but the privileged class will only support The Arts if it
benefits them – which is why I decided to start writing Smut. Having always
been a fan of the written word, I especially enjoyed Penthouse Forum and
took to mimicking the style of their writers. I managed to sell a few before actual
magazines began turning up in the dorm, usually bought from a boy in an upper
grade.
A picture is
worth a thousand words, they say.
With only
ten bucks regular income I had to find another revenue source and Porn was
clearly a commodity in a hormonally charged all-male environment. It was the
obvious choice. There were a few hurdles to clear before I could get my
business up and running but it wasn’t long before I had a plan in place.
The first
thing I needed was somewhere to steal Porn from, but being forced to wear the
uniform whenever we went to the shops, meant I had to acquire myself some day boy
friends who could facilitate me getting the fuck out of school over the
weekends. Not being recognised as being on the Asperger’s Spectrum until my mid-thirties
probably explains the difficulties I experienced during my adolescence when it
came to social interactions, but I managed to make a few mates.
With that
obstacle overcome, the next was to locate a secure storage space for my
product. Having been found in possession of a prohibited magazine early on in
my incarceration, I was well aware that to keep the material in the boarding
house would result in more lectures about morality from the reverend, possibly a
caning and my parents would be informed (Not that my Mother would care, she had
a Penthouse waiting for me the first time I came home on holidays. Weird,
right?). The reality was that although my parents wouldn’t discipline me
for something they clearly didn’t see as a serious character flaw – the school
would.
Noticing
that there were more day boy lockers than day boys. I used my meagre funds to
invest in a padlock and secured an empty locker in the area allocated to the
sporting house my mates were in.
All that was
required now was to stock my shelves.
Shoplifting
was a practice I had only dabbled in up to this point – a chocolate bar or one
of those blister packs that used to be stuck on the cover of a magazine with a
toy of some sort inside. Small things. Inconsequential really, but that had
been my training and it was all I had. In the examples I had seen on the small
and big screens, you would always be busted if you tried to stuff something down
your waistband.
Having taken
up skateboarding and the associated fashion of the time, I found myself decked
out in cargo shorts that allowed me to stand next to my prize and slide the
magazine up my leg into my waistband. After a few test-runs on the cheaper
publications near the bottom of the racks proved successful, I upped my game
and started going for the sought-after titles. While Picture and People
had been easy enough to sell, they weren’t turning the profit I was after.
Even though they were contraband they were considered second rate, Penthouse
and particularly Hustler were highly prized, but the publications sold
in sealed bags could make me a fortune.
With greater
risk, come greater riches.
When the
compulsory uniform rule outside school grounds was scrapped, I’d perfected my
method of acquiring stock. Even took a few private jobs for kids who didn’t
have the courage to steal it themselves but wanted a particular product
(obviously a surcharge was applied), but The Locker was the main earner.
The business
model was simple – cheap were two dollars, the higher shelves were two dollars
less than cover price and the sealed bags were two dollars above it. Remember,
this is all profit and the reason I wasn’t just charging the advertised price
is because the bagged books were obviously not “used” (yes, that is the sort of
language we employed), even though mine weren’t, I managed to undercut anyone
else who was charging cover price for “used” porn. By the time I was in grade
ten, I was the guy in the older grade that kids bought their porn from.
While I
wouldn’t suggest I was rolling in cash I was making enough to think about
diversifying again.
In prisons
the world over, cigarettes are a commodity and this one was no different. It
wasn’t too difficult finding customers willing to pay at least five bucks more
per packet than I had. There was also a steady market in individual smokes for
a dollar or a service. When I had been “gated” (grounded) or was too lazy to
walk to Domino’s or 7-11, a couple of darts was considered fair payment to get
someone else to do it.
By grade
eleven I’d added alcohol to my repertoire to see off a severe drop in revenue
from the porn sales due mainly to the internet becoming faster. I was also too
busy fucking my girlfriend (who was into porn and had internet) to be overly concerned
about the ejaculatory desires of others.
The Locker
had moved locations as the terms and years ticked by. Sometimes of my own
volition, on others because a locker inspection had occurred, and my stash had
been discovered. Because I didn’t use a school issued lock and The Locker wasn’t
allocated to anyone, the bolt cutters had to be employed. I was never present on
these occasions as I would be standing next to my bed (room by this point in
the narrative) but would be told the inevitable when classes resumed and wrote
it off as a business expense.
Dad
graduated Uni and got a job at the same mine, but out from under the grease. My
pocket money gradually increased to the hundred dollars my peers had been
receiving in grade eight. Some of them were now getting five.
I’d begun
avoiding Blackwater and would take any opportunity not to return (excluding
suspensions, two overnight train trips turned a three-day suspension into a
five-day holiday).
My last
visit to the town that had moulded me into a fat kid who could entertain
himself because he was awkward around people, then turned to porn because girls
weren’t interested in him was probably at the end of grade ten. I’d begrudgingly
gone home for a few weeks over christmas because no one else would have me
until New Year’s Eve, only to find nothing had really changed in Blackwater. Most
of my friends had moved away years ago but aside from that, it was the same as
the day I left when I was thirteen. It was me that had changed.
Taller,
faster and stronger, most of my fat had turned to muscle. I would jog around
town clicking my fingers in time with my footfalls. Body dysmorphia had made
exercise something of a religion to me.
Some of the
blokes I’d been friendly with in primary school rocked up to the pool one night
when I was swimming laps. Being both deluded and dedicated to my regime, I
reacted poorly when the son of my old league coach decided to tackle me in the
shallows as I was turning to start a new lap. Kicking away from him without
acknowledgement in order to finish my self-imposed kilometre, I cemented in their
minds the idea that I was a privileged prick from a private school.
They weren’t
wrong, I’d been indoctrinated but would only figure it out after I left the
pool without even waving farewell, I essentially shut the door on Blackwater. I
thought it offered me nothing.
For the rest
of my stay if I wasn’t exercising or eating, I was writing something or reading
a book. I existed in Blackwater but was removed from it. There were no longer
calls to ask me to go yabbying or anyone to herd peahens with if they happened
to turn up again. I’d given up on building bombs myself by this point but if an
invitation to an explosion was forthcoming, I would have been the first to
RSVP.
I
accompanied my parents to Dad’s christmas party where I discovered that desk
drivers have different parties to workers who sweat. Being the only child
deemed old enough to drink mid strength beer, I stood with my Father and his co-workers
until I was bored enough to walk home. For some reason, this is my last memory
of Blackwater, I can’t even remember if I left by car or train when I returned
to Brisbane.
Despite Mum
giving me the option of leaving school and getting an apprenticeship, I went
back and selected subjects I could pass with minimal effort. Learning has never
been hard for me, but I can honestly say that coasting through the last two
years of school and graduating with a mid-range final score that matched the best score achieved by Blackwater State High was somewhat satisfying. It’s
also indicative of the gap between bush public schools and their private
counterparts in the city. I know this because the woman with the highest score
from Blackwater was smarter than me.
For my final
two years I was granted the privilege of signing out to the unit my parents had
bought, under my own volition, which was probably all that prevented me from
being expelled and likely contributed to me securing the aforementioned
girlfriend.
While The
Locker had never been linked to me I was regularly in trouble for a wide range
of infractions and spent those last two years on a good behaviour contract.
In one’s
final year of boarding school it is customary to pass on the responsibilities
that somehow ended up being yours to a younger child. I handed off the duty of
bearing the house shield to intraschool competitions, to a farmer’s boy, which
resulted in it being nicked for the first time in four years, forcing me to be
involved in fisticuffs to ensure it’s safe return.
The Locker
was my creation but warranted a transfer of ownership in the spirit of condoned
traditions, despite undermining the establishment housing it.
Not wanting
to repeat my mistake with the shield, I interviewed extensively because I
realised the school needed it. The administration wouldn’t have approved but
they were incompetent – I’d run a black market under their noses for almost
five years and it had to remain a thorn in their side.
What I
realised in my final days when choosing my successor was that a shithole mining
town had provided me with the skill set required to operate a criminal
enterprise in an authoritarian environment for half a decade. I needed a
Hustler to continue operation of The Locker so I did what anyone with sense
would do and asked a kid from The Coalfields.
Great read and was crazy as I knew you back then
ReplyDeleteHow did you know me?
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