Authors: Nick Earls
Moreton Bay colony, it turns out, was an early name for Brisbane. And the Swan River colony was in Perth. Where were those little nuggets among all the information sent to us by the Australian government before we came here? At least I'm a useful peer editor. Max has got a lot of content, but it turns out there's a bit I can do to help him with structure. And since I don't know anything I'm making sure he's covered all the basics.
When the siren goes for lunch, Max tells me he's getting his from the tuckshop. I've got ten dollars to buy lunch so I join him in the queue. But as I get closer to the front, I realise that everyone seems to be picking up pre-ordered brown paper bags.
Max notices the money in my hand. âDon't worry,' he says. âSomeone will've got sick after ordering. You'll be able to get something. There's a system for ordering it online. In advance.'
âOh, good, yeah.' It's embarrassing not knowing the score. I roll up the ten-dollar note so that no one else can see it. âI just didn't know what there was. Well, I wanted to see it first. See what was good.'
âNone of it's good,' he says. âDon't get your hopes up.'
We get to the front and a mother who recognises Max hands him his bag.
âThis is my friend Herschelle,' he tells her. âHe's just arrived from South Africa. He hasn't had the chance to put an order in, so have you got anything spare?'
âNo worries,' she says, and suddenly it's not a problem at all. âWe've got a serve of pizza, if that'd work for you?' There's a cabinet keeping the food warm and she opens the door to check. âIt's Hawaiian.'
âSounds great.' I've got my ten dollars ready when she lifts the pizza slice out and slides it into a bag. Grease spots appear right away. The pizza smells good.
I thank Max as we step away from the counter and he says, âNo problem. I knew they'd have something. So, for tomorrow, orders have to be in by 8am. You just go to the school website.'
âMy mom's signing up for tuckshop,' I tell him. âShe was the boss of her tuckshop shift back home. She's a great organiser. It's what she does. She'll be on all the committees here by the end of the week. Just watch.'
When we left, Bergvliet Primary gave her four glasses with the school crest to thank her for all her work. I'd never admit it to her, but it'll be good to have Mom behind the counter sometimes. I wonder how she went with Hansie.
I stick with Max, since if I don't, I'm sticking with no one. And I don't want to look like that kind of new boy â the kind who doesn't know how to buy lunch and doesn't have anyone to eat it with. It could have been embarrassing at the tuckshop.
We sit down at a table with Max's two friends from class. Nerd colony. I knew it.
âHerschelle, wasn't it?' one of them says. âI'm Harry Schulz.'
Okay, yes, he has a Transformers pencil case, but he's making me welcome, and he's not laughing at my name. Harry has two big homemade sandwiches and a banana in an Iron Man lunch box. He looks like he'd be my height, which makes him quite a bit taller than Max. The other guy, Ben Delvecchio, is somewhere in between and has black spiky hair. His knee keeps jogging while we're eating, and I can feel some of the vibration through the table. Unless cool works very differently in Australia, the nerd status of this group is rapidly getting closer to confirmed.
While we're eating, I take a look around at everyone else. One girl near us is plaiting another's hair, and that's just the kind of thing I'd see at Bergvliet. Lachlan, the guy who flicked the girl with the ruler in class, is standing with two friends, throwing his hat in the air and trying to catch it on his head. He shouts something out to a girl who walks past, but I don't hear it clearly. His friends laugh. No one else seems to stand out from the crowd.
I ask the others about Lachlan. Harry glances in his direction and says, âLachlan Parkes? Don't stare.'
Max looks down at the table and his knee starts jogging too. Ben kicks him and they both stop.
âWhy not? Not that I was staring.' I can't see what Harry's problem is. âI just thought those guys might be, you know, the cool crowd.'
âYeah, well,' Harry says, âthey aren't.'
Max swallows the last mouthful of his bread roll and pulls his old tennis ball from his pocket.
âYeah,' Ben says. âLet's go. Doubles?' He looks at me. âYou play handball?'
âYes. Definitely.' I might be hanging out with nerds, but finally I get to do something I was good at at home. Maybe today won't be too bad after all.
I line up with Max and start on the forehand side. Max is left-handed so it works pretty well unless they hit the ball hard right down the middle. As I'd thought, the rules aren't quite the same as at home, but they're close enough. Ben is quick on his feet but tends to just tap the ball back. Harry doesn't move much and swings hard.
The ball has lost most of its bounce. It keeps low, and that works well for me. They're ahead early after a few drives from Harry down the middle, but Max and I soon work out a system for blocking those shots back and keeping the ball in play without taking each other out. Max hits hard â his version of hard â straight at Ben, which cramps him and makes him pop the ball up. That sets me up to take a swing at it. I fake a big one, then let the ball drop and slice across it low to the ground. It skids under Harry's hand.
Max reaches up and high-fives me, and says, âDo that again.'
âHas to be a fluke,' Harry says, grinning, daring me to repeat it. âHas to be.'
Three points later, I repeat it almost exactly. Same result.
Max shouts, âYes!' and punches the air.
After a few times, Harry knows the shot's coming but he still can't stop most of them. I mis-hit a couple and Harry and Ben score points then, but, when I make it stick, the shot's a killer. It was always my best at Bergvliet too.
âAwesome,' Max says when we win. âI don't know how you do that. Are you like that with every sport?'
âWait till I try out for hockey.' I was a centre forward in Cape Town, and a pretty good one.
âHockey?' Max turns the ball over in his hand. âWhere would you do that?'
âHere. On the oval.' I've said something weird again. âAt school. For the school hockey team.'
âOh.' He frowns. âWe don't do hockey.'
âAh, sies!' Suddenly, my genius skidding handball shot is a lot less satisfying.
âSis? Cease? You want me to stop â'
âI just wanted there to be hockey.'
How could my parents bring me to a school that doesn't have it? How could they not have checked that and found somewhere better?
After lunch, Ms Vo talks about liquids, solids and gases.
She shows some video of people working with lumps of pitch and says, âCan anyone tell me what state that pitch is in?'
The person in the video clunks the pitch around on the table, then whacks it with a hammer and chunks break off. It looks like a kind of black rock.
Max puts his hand up and says, âIt's solid, isn't it? Or is this a trick question?'
âDoes anyone think anything different?' She looks around the room. âIs it a trick question?'
I put up my hand. I know the answer â we've already studied this at Bergvliet. It needs some emphasis, though. âYes. It's actually a liquid, Miss, but its rate of flow is bloody slow.'
Ms Vo looks surprised and says, firmly, âThe answer's right â it has the highest viscosity of any liquid â but that's not a word we use in the classroom, Herschelle. The “b” word.'
âSorry, Miss,' I tell her. I want to fix the problem right away, whatever it is. âI got it from a website. Koalanet.com.au I think it was. It means “very”, that's all. In Australia.'
âI know what things mean in Australia,' she says, and it feels as if I've made things worse rather than better. âI was born at the Mater.'
âI just mean I looked it up. There's a website. They gave examples like “b-word hard yakka”, except they used the actual word.'
Around me, quite a few people laugh and Lachlan's voice comes out with, âWhat does that even mean? Yekka . . .'
Ms Vo glares at him.
âIt's from a website.' I'm still stuck in the explanation. âHard yakka. Australian for hard work.'
âOh, well, if it's from a website, it's got to be true,' Lachlan says. âLike all those websites about people who reckon they've had alien probes up their â'
âLachlan!' Ms Vo says forcefully. âI wouldn't go there if I were you.'
Alien probes. The only alien in this room is Herschelle S van der Merwe, and he's not interested in probing anything. He's not even going to ask any more questions. Me, the swearing alien, who can't even pronounce Australian words in a way Australians understand. The new boy from Planet Hersch, population one. The stupid weird new boy who says âbloody' in class.
I can tell people are looking at me, so I look straight ahead, at the whiteboard. I decide to wait for Maths before talking again. Maths is safer. I'm going to try to speak only in numbers from now on. I can tell I've somehow insulted Ms Vo. âBorn at the Mater' â I don't even know what that means.
We finish the day with PE, and Ms Vo organises for me to borrow clothes from lost property. One of the admin staff sorts through what's available, but by the time we've found things that fit and I've run down to the oval, the tunnel ball teams have already been chosen.
It feels weird being in other people's clothes, as if anyone at any second might come up to me and say, âHey, that's my shirt,' and I'll look like I stole it. It's only made worse by turning up to the oval with my school uniform in a plastic bag with âSuzanne Grae' on it. I drop the embarrassing bag on the sideline. Everyone else has an official sports bag, in the official place, the change room nearby.
A spot has been kept for me on Max's team, with Ben and Harry. There are three teams of eight, and ours looks the dorkiest. Seven dorks and one alien in charity clothes.
Lachlan Parkes is bouncing a ball as if it's a basketball and his friends, Josh and Ethan, are shouldering him and pushing in to tackle him.
He pushes back, breaks through between them and jumps in the air, commentating while he fakes a shot. âHe shoots! He scores!'
I pick up our ball from the ground and bounce it once. I can't keep silent in PE. I'm about to challenge the others on my team to try to take it from me when Ms Vo claps her hands and says, âOkay, everybody. Time to focus. Start forming your lines please.'
We're even dorky at forming our line. I have to do a lot to get it straight. How do they not know that a bent line is death in tunnel ball?
Ms Vo blows the whistle to start. Next to us, Lachlan's team works smoothly. He gets the ball moving and then turns to the others, clapping and shouting, âGo! Go! Go!'
They're already comfortably ahead when Max's elbow bumps his knee and he drops the ball. It rolls out to the side and, when he tries to pick it up, he stumbles and kicks it further away. That's all it takes to make us a dismal third.
That's the worst it gets, but it doesn't get much better. I'm on the team that doesn't win and doesn't expect to. I keep telling myself it's only tunnel ball. It's only PE. And next time I can bring my own clothes in my own sports bag, change in the right place and stand in a different spot when teams are picked.
On the way to the change rooms, Ben nudges Max in the arm and says, âSo, how's your dad going with the new quad bike? When do we get to start racing?'
âRacing?' I want to hear more. Away from the miserable failure of tunnel ball, things are sounding a lot less dorky all of a sudden. âYou've got quad bikes?'
âYeah,' Max says. âDad likes to fix stuff, so he got a couple second hand, one of them just last week. It still needs a bit of work. He borrowed a bulldozer and made a track in the bush out the back of our place. It'll be good when we have two though, not just one.'
âI think one'd still be pretty good.' I've never been on a quad bike. Maybe cool
does
work differently in Australia. âHow fast do you get to go?'
âPretty fast.' He smiles. âDepends who's driving. Pretty fast if it's me.'
âSounds like a challenge,' Ben says.
âYeah.' Max pulls his hat off as we walk into the change room. âMaybe it will be.'
âHey, Herschelle,' Harry says, just as I'm about to push Max for some more details. âMy dad said people in South Africa have flamethrowers fitted under their cars. You know, to fire up if there's a carjacking. Did you get to do that? He said they can give a warning blast, or a serious burn or fatal incineration.'
I shake my head. There's no way that's real.
I'm about to tell them it's not true when Ben says, âHey, I've got my phone in my sports bag. I'll google it.'
âIt's called the Blaster.' Harry sounds pretty confident.
Ben types in âblaster flamethrower'. I want there to be nothing there. They want it to be true. They're imagining South Africa, my country, with all of us driving round in armoured cars, scorching people.
But it's real. It has a Wikipedia entry. It was invented in the late 1990s and it failed not because it was illegal but because it was too expensive. But obviously word got out, and it's now part of how some Australians think about us.
âLook.' I point further down on the entry. âThey only ever sold a few hundred, and none for years. So don't go thinking we've all got flamethrowers because of that, because we don't.'
âYeah,' Harry says, sounding disappointed. âFair enough. It's like that idea that you've all got these massive walls around your houses with barbed wire on them.'
I picture the barbed wire coiling along the wall near my Cape Town bedroom window. I think about the security guard and the locked gates. I think about the reason we left.
I'll talk about that one day, maybe. Not today.
âThere are lots of things Australians do that probably seem weird in other places,' I say.
I want to tell them Australia is at least as weird as South Africa. And everywhere is weird if you're from somewhere else. But I don't want to be a tour guide to South African weirdness. So instead I change the subject.