The Blue Gum Camp Chapter Sampler
The Blue Gum Camp Chapter Sampler
The Blue Gum Camp Chapter Sampler
Allen & Unwin acknowledges the Traditional Owners of the Country on which we
live and work. We pay our respects to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Elders, past and present.
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to reconcile him with the man who had, not so long ago,
shaved carefully each day, polished his shoes and chosen his
clothes for a style that suited academia, not comfort.
The slide into commonplace always seemed to be harder
fought by women, Charity thought. Until the last few years,
Mum had been a regular at the hairdresser and the nail
salon, and her wardrobe would never have featured elastic-
waisted Millers pants and stretchy tunic tops. Charity
hated herself for buying those items, but they were far more
manageable for Dad on the increasingly frequent occasions
when her mother rebelled against dressing.
‘The apple is oxidising,’ she said as Dad rummaged in
a kitchen drawer for his first-aid box.
Silence ruled the room. No one wanted to take the
apple—browning or otherwise—into the bedroom. Charity
sighed. It would be her. It always was. And she had no right
to complain: they had some respite care for Mum during
the week, so it was only evenings and weekends that were
consumed by the slow torture of the long goodbye.
‘Thank you, love,’ Mum said as Charity entered the
bedroom. It was bright and cheerful, despite the pervasive
autumnal gloom beyond the window. Yellow walls, fluffy
white bedcovers and pastel cushions: a false promise of joy,
like Christmas decorations in a palliative care ward. The
table was crowded with photographs of family and friends
in a way Mum would never have chosen, and Charity knew
the arrangement was a relic of a well-intentioned visitor
months earlier. ‘Is it a Pink Lady?’
Sudden hope surged through Charity. ‘Would I dare
give you anything else? The season’s finishing up, though.
the dust and straw, then lugged the bale toward the paddock,
adding a new layer to the grime that had seemed to infiltrate
his pores during the extended dry season. He took a moment
to let his gaze range the undulations of the paddock, gilded
with deceptively soft-looking golden summer stubble. Mum
was wrong. Whether he counted to ten or a hundred, it didn’t
banish his irritation. Hamish’s attack was a low blow, given
that their father had added to his regular level of sullenness
by becoming enough of a hermit to be the subject of gossip
around Settlers Bridge since cancer had taken Mum just
over a year back. Not that the small-town grapevine needed
much fertiliser to help it flourish while stalwarts of the CWA,
Lynn Lambert and Christine Albright, commanded the local
grocery shop or, in Christine’s case, seemed determined to
take over the running of the cafe, Ploughs and Pies. ‘You
know if the old man didn’t share the property with me, he’d
be happy not seeing another living soul from one fortnight’s
end to the next.’
‘Least he talks to you.’ An unusual trace of bitterness
crept into Hamish’s tone. Though they shared the family
trademark red-tinged blond hair, blue-eyed Hamish was
the spitting image of their mum, and it was no secret that,
for the past year, Dad had found it hard to set eyes on his
younger son.
‘Doesn’t, if he can avoid it,’ Lachlan replied brusquely.
On a property this size it wasn’t hard to dodge one another.
Particularly as Lachlan lived in the old caravan, rather than
share the house where he’d been born—and where Mum
had slowly died—with his father. ‘Anyway, my point is,
I get out. I’m not as bad as the old man.’
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old Neil. He pulled the knife from the sheath on his belt and
flicked it through the twine holding the bale, then carefully
wound the string into a tight ball and pocketed it.
‘We’re too smart to get ourselves in trouble.’ Hamish
grinned, bizarrely convinced he was winning the argument.
‘Besides, it’s your first chance to come along solo.’ Though
plugged as meet-ups for singles, plenty of couples turned
up at every B&S for the party and the bands. Lachlan and
Emma had been to a few over the years.
‘Why don’t you get Justin to be your wingman? He’s
not hooked up, is he?’
‘Juz is going to be pining for Sharna forever, you
know that. He said he’s going to try to make it for the gig
Saturday night but I’ve picked us up tickets for all three
days. Besides, you’ve got a shot at fame on Friday.’
Lachlan tried to ignore the pricking of his ears. ‘How so?’
‘There’s some kind of talent show as an extra fund-
raiser. I reckon we could take the guitars along and belt
something out.’
Lachlan’s fingers instantly twitched with a desire to
strum. Hamish knew how to get his attention. The oppor-
tunity to play anywhere other than the local pub was rare.
‘Maybe tell Juz he needs to be there early, get in on that.’
Justin had a rare talent with a chainsaw, producing works
of art amid a flurry of woodchips and sawdust.
‘Don’t reckon they’d be too keen on having that mess
onstage. They’re classing it up this year,’ Hamish said.
‘Pre-purchased admission only, that’s why I had to jump
on the tickets. They reckon they’re going to get as many
girls as guys.’
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had treated him the last year or so. ‘But, yeah, I chose
farming. And farming never finishes.’
‘Yup. That’s my point. Seeds need sowing,’ Hamish
said triumphantly. He chopped both hands in a V motion
toward his groin in case Lachlan had missed the inference.
‘The Beer and Sex Ball is perfect.’
Lachlan shook his head disgustedly. ‘You nearly had
me persuaded, but I’m out now. You’re on your own, little
brother.’
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‘My brother. See, you’re not the only ones named for
your ancestral heritage. He’s Hamish—or Ham—and I’m
Lachlan.’ He tapped his chest. ‘Descendants of a long line
of similarly named MacKenzies.’
‘Ham—Eggs?’ Charity snorted, then hid her mouth
with one hand, as though holding the amusement in.
‘You got it. At least my name doesn’t lend itself to
anything so bad.’
‘Hey, Lachie.’ Hamish’s head reappeared from the
popped boot at the rear of the car. ‘Grab the jack. I think
this spare’s okay.’
‘Sure.’
Lachlan strode to the HiLux, relieved to escape. For a
few minutes there, making conversation had been effort-
less and interesting, but the moment he’d let his mind focus
on what he was doing, his tongue had grown about three
sizes and choked his words.
By the time he retrieved the jack from the ute, Charity
had headed down the road to talk to Faith. Lachlan wasn’t
sure whether to be relieved or disappointed. Hell, what he
wouldn’t give for a dash of his brother’s cool. Thanks to
his relationship with Em, he’d never spoken to a woman
with intent, and had no idea how to do it without coming
across as either desperate or despicable.
Hamish was surrounded by mountains of luggage
and a couple of corrugated iron-and-twisted-barbed-wire
contraptions that wouldn’t have looked out of place at
the back of the junk shed. He nodded as Lachlan held
up the jack.
‘Goodo. You want to make a start?’
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