'What would Germaine do?' This is the mantra that Skip and Marlo Wells turn to as they navigate their way through the twists and turns that life brings. Such as the sectioning of their mother Karen Jane. Marlo puts her faith in her hero, Germaine Greer, and twelve-year-old Skip trusts her clever big sister to know the right thing to do. But when the sisters are forced to move to their Auntie Noreen and Uncle Doug's home in the backwater city of Crater Lakes even Marlo can't think of a solution. At age sixteen, Marlo is forced to quit school and work in the family hardware store. Skip manages to get on her auntie's bad side from the get-go and is an outcast at school as she vehemently declares the injustice of the Vietnam War - not what Noreen wants to hear with her precious son Barry off fighting. Skip and Marlo dream of escape from Crater Lakes but with Karen Jane's release nowhere on the horizon they resign themselves to their new life. Before long they make the acquaintance of the Novak brothers - Skip's classmate Honza and his eternally cheerful older brother Pavel. Marlo becomes entangled with the local drama teacher, leaving Skip to explore the town's haunts with Honza. Skip learns about the mysterious Dansie residence, a secluded house that once belonged to Roger Dansie - an actor and the closest thing to a local hero that Crater Lakes ever had. As the days roll on the Wells sisters are drawn ever deeper in to the lives of their new acquaintances, learning that their first impressions of Crater Lakes may not be as accurate as they believed. Against the backdrop of a broken home, the fight for equality and a far off war Volcano Street is a heartfelt tale of acceptance and belonging, and learning what family truly means.
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Volcano Street
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Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Authorās note
Note on the Author
Chapter One
My fault. All my fault.
The judgement sounded in Skipās head. All the way from Adelaide she had heard it, in the rattling windows, in the snores from other seats, in the tyres as they juddered over the country highway. She told herself it wasnāt true, but still it came in the swish of passing vehicles: that station wagon, chalky with dust, with surfboards lashed to the roof; that farmerās truck, tight-packed with sheep, that thundered by and wafted back its sharp, shitty stench, filling the Greyhound for desperate minutes.
Marlo, with her book, had moved across the aisle. How placid she looked, how self-contained: hairband like a halo, neat across her crown; elbow crooked against the chrome window frame, propping up the hand that shaded her eyes.
Skip picked up her comic. Lex Luthor held Metropolis to ransom, threatening to destroy it with a death ray aimed from space. Never mind, Superman would sort it out. She wished she were Superman. Not Supergirl, in that dinky little skirt. Skip didnāt just want to be super, she wanted to be a man. If she were a man, she would be blamed for nothing.
She rested her head against the window. September: the beginning of spring. The afternoon sun was pale and lemony. Monterey pines in neat plantations had replaced the flat paddocks, barbed-wire fences and scattered grey gum trees that had reeled by for hours. Abundant moist undergrowth seethed between the trees, testament to the cool green winter just gone.
Skip loped across the aisle, dropped her head into her sisterās lap, and looked up, wide-eyed. āCattus cattus?ā Their old joke (If a ratās rattus rattus, is a cat cattus cattus?) had become a greeting. Usually Marlo laughed; today she sighed impatiently and shifted her book.
āIām starving!ā Skip sprang up. āHow much longer?ā
āYouāve had lunch.ā
āSoggy sandwiches from a BP roadhouse!ā
āWolfed them down, didnāt you?ā
āIām a growing boy.ā
The Wells sisters ā half-sisters, really ā might not have been related at all. Skip, small for her age, was a freckled tomboy with a head of coarse bright straw, cropped as if with pinking shears; Marlo, almost a woman and womanly with it, was porcelain pale, with hair that crested her shoulders in rich dark waves. Today Skip wore a nautical sweater, once white, over a plaid shirt, faded jeans with threadbare knees, and sneakers that were falling apart. Marloās white blouse, blue blazer, grey skirt and shiny black lace-ups could have been her uniform from Adelaide Ladiesā College, minus cap, tie and tie pin.
āMarlo ā¦ā Do you blame me? Skip almost said, but gestured instead to the book in Marloās lap and asked what Germaine was on about now.
āCunt hatred.ā Marlo did not drop her voice.
On the open pages Skip picked out a few words: sex, prostitute, sex, cunt, fuck, cunt. She liked Germaine. Germaine was radical: she pissed people off.
Sunlight flickered greenly through the pines. Sometimes it was dull to have a serious sister. Skip supposed she should shut up, but instead dug Marlo in the ribs and made a joke about the pig-faced lady who had left the coach at the last stop. Was she hurrying home on her trotters? Was she oinking?
āIn a pigās ear,ā said Marlo, and Skip, delighted, twisted around, hitched her chin over the seatās high vinyl back, and surveyed the other passengers. They were few: a fat man with a short back and sides who read the Sunday Mail with an affronted air; a thin lady in a chamberpot hat; two carrot-headed little boys who had torn up and down the aisle until the driver roared at them to bloody well cut it out. A soldier in a slouch hat, young and spotty, gazed out the window. Just back from Nam? Fascist. Skip pictured him, in grainy black and white, sloshing through a swamp. Cradled in his arms was a machine gun, and his eyes darted suspiciously through steamy haze. Skip knew all about fascists. When they got to San Fran, Karen Jane said, theyād march against the war. Everyone in San Fran was radical and marched against the war.
The chamberpot lady looked at Skip and frowned. Skip ducked beneath the seatback. āThat lady looks snoogish.ā
āYou look snoogish,ā Marlo said.
āWhatās her name? Iāll bet itās Miss Sweetapple.ā
āWhat Sweetapple?ā
āRhonda. Can you do better?ā
Marlo turned a page. āRead your comic.ā
Loneliness expanded in Skipās chest like a black balloon pressing behind her ribs, growing bigger with each breath she took. Her comic lay on the seat across the aisle. Caper, long ago, had given her a Superman comic from America. It was better than Australian ones: colour all through, not just on the cover, and the paper had an exciting foreign smell. Superman, Batman, Justice League: in the local reprints the heroes were the same, but Skip thought of them as the Australian versions, and not so good by half.
āWhat about school?ā she said to Marlo.
āWhat about it?ā
āItās Sunday. Weāll be starting tomorrow, wonāt we? I suppose you canāt mix with first years. Youāll ignore me.ā This, Skip knew, was dangerous ground. For Marlo, the worst aspect of their exile was giving up her scholarship to Adelaide Ladiesā College. āBut youāll look my way, wonāt you, when no one else can see? Exchange glances. Roll your eyes.ā
Wearily, Marlo shut The Female Eunuch. āYou realise Iāve exams in a couple of months? My whole future depends on this.ā She had said so before, and Skip wondered: Whole future? What was a whole future? She could imagine next week. She could imagine next month. But a whole future?
āYouāll be all right, Marlo. What do you need with that snoogish college? Youāll sail through those exams. Youāll be the smartest girl in Crater Lakes High.ā
Marloās laugh was bitter. āCrater Lakes High!ā
The approach to Crater Lakes discloses nothing remarkable. The highway neither curves around the several collapsed calderas, brimming with water, which give the town its name, nor affords much view of the remaining dead volcano that rises above them to no notable height. No dramatic ascent, no twisting and turning, signals that the town is near; the road sweeps on, flat and straight, as if impatient to cross the border into Victoria, leaving dull South Australia behind.
The town comes like this: abruptly, regimented grids of trees, awaiting chainsaws row by row, give way to green flatlands; paddocks with sheep; paddocks with horses; a long, rusted galvanised-iron shed; a homestead, set well back from the road; signs announcing the speed limit; signs touting business (LAKES MOTEL ā YOUR HOME FROM HOME); a sign welcoming the visitor to the City of Crater Lakes, South Australia, twinned with Gopher Prairie, Minnesota, and declaring the population (16,025 in the year this story happened); then service station, warehouse, car yard, supermarket, as the Princess Margaret Rose Highway turns for a mile or so into Volcano Street, the townās main drag.
The time had just gone five. The girls stood on the pavement. Ranged around them was all they owned: two smallish suitcases, one tartan, one leather-look; a Qantas bag; Marloās Olivetti Lettera 22 in its zippered case; a wicker shopping basket that had been Karen Janeās before she decided it was too bourgeois.
Anxiously, Marlo turned this way and that. The fat man with the short back and sides had waddled away around a corner, Sunday Mail tucked beneath one arm; Rhonda Sweetapple had climbed into a Ford Falcon next to a grey, defeated-looking husband. A bustling group, all freckled, all carrot-topped, surrounded the little boys. A smaller group had turned out for the soldier: a father guffawed, a mother sobbed, and a grinning brother cuffed the slouch hat from the young manās head.
From an alley beside a newsagentās emerged an Aboriginal man dressed in dungarees. Silently, he began unloading freight from compartments under the coach ā tea chests, cardboard boxes, parcels wrapped in string ā while the driver stood by. Once he barked at the Aborigine; more than once he glanced at Marlo. Catching her eye, he winked at her, tongue making a castanet click. āGot someone meeting yous, have yous?ā
āOur Auntie Noreen,ā said Skip. āAnd Uncle Doug.ā
āDoug and Noreen Puce? Kazzaās kiddies! Should have known. Forgot yous was coming.ā The driver was a big man with shaggy grey hair and a seamed brown face, like a surfer grown old. His rolled-back sleeves exposed hairy forearms, burned almost black, and his belly ballooned over a chunky belt. A badge above his breast pocket declared his name: SANDY CAMPBELL. āYousāll be living with Doug and Noreen, then?ā
Marloās reply was reluctant. āSort of. For a while.ā
Across the street, the carrot-tops had dispersed to a battered truck; large numbers of them, piled in the flatbed, caterwauled āYou Are My Sunshineā as the vehicle shuddered away with many a wheeze, clatter and bang.
Skip scuffed the pavement with her sneaker. At several stops on their journey, Sandy Campbell had tried to talk to Marlo; Skip had headed him off each time. That was what Skip did. Boys, men, creeps of all kinds tried to crack on to Marlo, and Skip made sure they didnāt. That, at least, was the idea: Marlo needed protecting and Skip protected her. But she hadnāt done her job properly. If she had, they wouldnāt be in Crater Lakes now.
Marlo murmured, āShall we ask how far it is?ā
āAuntie Noreenās place?ā Skip approached the driver. Smoke curled from a roll-up in his lips. She, or her question, seemed to amuse him, and he bent down to her height. Behind them, the Aborigine struggled with a tea chest, pushing it along the alley with much grunting and gasping.
The roll-up waggled. āThat Kazza was a wild one.ā
āKaren Jane?ā said Skip. āStill is.ā
āAll the blokes round these parts reckoned so. Missed her when she went up to the smoke, we did.ā The grey head jerked towards Marlo. āLike mother, like daughter, eh?ā Grinning, Sandy Campbell chucked Skip under the chin and straightened to full height. āDonāt worry, love, Iāll run yous out when weāve finished here ā Iāll take yous,ā he added, raising his voice for Marloās benefit.
Skip, outraged by the manās familiar manner, was about to tell him where he could stick his ride when an open-topped Land Rover tore down the street and drew up with a screech behind the coach. A young man jumped down from the driverās seat and gasped out, as if he had been running, āYous the Wells sisters? Iām late. Old Ma Puce is gunna be real pissed off.ā
The new arrival was a gangly fellow, more boy than man, with a darkish complexion and prominent teeth: almost horsy, but not unhandsome. His brown eyes were limpid, his brow tall, and his bronze hair bubbled over the top like a potion from a test tube. A grey apron covered his T-shirt and jeans, with pencils poking out of a narrow, high pocket.
āSo Noreenās sent the slave.ā Sandy Campbell seemed a little put out. āGirls, meet Pav ā Crater Lakesā most eligible bachelor. Heās a wog, but not the worst kind.ā
āPavel Novak.ā The young man, still puffing, extended his hand to Marlo. āI would have been on time but the shop floor was a mess. Stocktaking,ā he explained.
Sandy Campbell dropped his cigarette butt; it lay on the concrete, smoke upcurling. āPav hereās one of your uncleās employees,ā he told the girls. āOr should I say your auntās? Who would you say was your boss, Pav ā Noreen or Doug?ā
Pavel, not answering, sprang to help the Aborigine, who, after a break, had resumed work on the tea chest. āLift it from the bottom. Bend the knees,ā Pavel said kindly, while Sandy Campbell, watching the two of them struggle down the alley, called, āHeās paid to do that! Leave the abo retard alone.ā
The Aborigine, who perhaps indeed was retarded, dropped his side of the chest, almost crushing his fingers. He was little and bent, with a broad flattened face like an ebony carving, and oil-dark curly hair, thick and long.
Uncertainly, Skip and Marlo loaded their suitcases, the Qantas bag and the wicker shopping basket into the back of the Land Rover. With particular care, Skip passed her sister the Lettera 22. āYouād better hold Olly.ā
āSo itās goodbye for now, eh? Careful with the wog boy,ā said Sandy Campbell. āVolcano Street aināt been safe since that bugger got his licence. Used to be my Land Rover, this oneā ā he pronounced it āLan Droverā ā ābefore I flogged it to young Pav.ā He patted the vehicleās green flank. āWrecked it, he has. Buggered the suspension. Buggered the transmission. Spit and chewing gum, thatās all that keeps this crate on the road.ā
Pavel returned, sweating. He stripped off his apron and tossed it in the back. Resuming his place at the wheel, he gestured for Marlo to sit beside him in the front. Skip climbed in next to the luggage, then thought better of it, scrambled over the long front seat and thudded down between them.
āYou donāt mind, Pav?ā She punched his arm.
āSkip, donāt be rude,ā said Marlo.
The Land Rover moved off down Volcano Street, and Pavel apologised again for being late. He drove carefully, even too carefully, as if in deference to the girls. Skip was disappointed: she had expected a r...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Authorās note
- Note on the Author
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