Ian Higgins

Fred's Amazing Holiday


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      FRED’S AMAZING HOLIDAY

      Ian Higgins

      First published 2016 by Ian Higgins. All rights reserved.

      No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the publisher.

      Copyright © Ian Higgins 2016

      Fred’s Amazing Holiday is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

      ISBNs:

      9781925282061 pbk

      9781925282078 ebk

      Cover design by Ian Johnston, Geoff and Emma Higgins

      Digital distribution by Ebook Alchemy

      Dedicated to:

      Saul Peter Lindsay Taylor

      THE BEGINNING

      It all begins on the day, when our teacher, Mr Brown, says he’ll give threepence to any one in the class who can find a word without a vowel. He spent a long time explaining, that every word in English has to have at least one a, e, i, o, or u.

      I put up my hand first and call out, “I know! I know one!”

      Mr Brown says, “Not you again!” pauses and adds, “What is your bright answer?”

      I reply, “By”. Mr Brown says nothing. So I say, “Only got a ‘b’ and a ‘y’, Sir!, no a, e, i, o or u!”

      “Sorry... Y is a sort of vowel. I forgot to say that. No threepence for you.’’

      I say in a voice he can just hear, “That’s not fair.”

      “In this room, I decide what’s fair. You be careful boy. You’re sailing too close to the wind.”

      So I shut up: go into a daydream and remember. Earlier in the day I upset Mr. Brown, after he wrote on the blackboard, “1814: Lawson, Blaxland and Wentworth discover a way over the Blue Mountains. Easy to remember. Just think “LBW... Leg Before Wicket. It’s cricket.” And I say, “Please Sir, it is 1813 not 1814 and I think maybe Aborigines showed them the way.” Mr Smith jerks around and says, “You’re right Jones... Just testing.”

      Deep in my head, I know Mr Brown did get it wrong. I wonder why teachers tell lies, when they get something wrong. I think Mr Brown might be as big a fibber as me... He could just say, “Sorry, my mistake.” Better than the fake smile and, “Just testing.” And he says nothing about the Aborigines. Never hears what he does not want to hear. Just like what Mum says about me.

      How could I forget Mr Brown’s carry on, this morning with me? I must be going loco. After I help him fix the date, he goes funny... says, “Jones from now on I’ll call you Mr IXL. Know why?” Sometimes best to say nothing. Mum says, “Say Naught.’’ I shake my head and look dumb.”

      “Puzzled for once, Mr IXL? Well another Mr Jones manufactures IXL Jams. They are Export Quality. IXL means that I excel. You often act that way, Fred Jones.”

      I go into a day dream about our IXL tin of Orange Marmalade. We keep it in our ice-chest. I love marmalade on toast, better than baked beans. Suddenly the voice crashes into my daydream, “Are you listening, Fred Jones?”

      “No Sir! Oops, Yes Sir!” I feel like adding, “Three bags full, Sir”: but you got to be careful with Mr Brown sometimes... Doesn’t always like my jokes and helpful hints.

      ***************************************

      The day drags on, boring, boring. Mr Brown gets onto good diet and where our food originally came from... He talks on and on about potatoes coming from Peru in South America, not Ireland like Paddy said. Then out of the blue Mr Brown says, “Hands up everybody who loves eating potatoes. They are so good for you.” I see Doug does not put up his hand; nor do I. So Mr Brown says to me, “Fred Jones, and what do you like to eat with your sausages at tea, eh?”

      “Chokos Sir. We’ve got a vine that grows all over our tank stand and the dunny as well.”

      “We are not interested in your tank stand, or dunny.” The class laughs at his joke. Then he says in a nasty voice, “Chokos are mostly water.”

      “And you Doug, I suppose you like pumpkin!”

      “You’re dead right, Sir.”

      And Mr Brown is happy, real happy: gives Doug a proper smile and the lesson goes on to tomatoes from Mexico.

      “What are tomatoes good for? Anybody?”

      I know what tomatoes are really good for: but I am not saying anything this time. I’ll just think about that great afternoon, we had the tomato fight. That’ll help time to pass.

      That day after school we go into Mr Klavocosky’s vege. garden, outside his fence, beside the railway embankment, for the best tomato fight ever: till Mr. K hears us and comes yelling at us, waving his rake, like he is a Don Quixote windmill. We run fast and get away

      Later Mum is not happy with all the red stains on my shirt and shorts, even after we tried to hose them off. She is worse than Mr K then, even without a rake, or yelling. She uses that awful hard/soft voice, says she’s, “had enough” and, I am going to be, “the death of her.” All I say is “It was only a tomato fight. Nobody got hurt.” Then she gets onto the starving millions in China, once again. After the talking-to, from Mum, she shuts me in the bathroom till tea time. “So I will have time, to think about it.” Well I am still thinking about it. I’d love to go chucking tomatoes again. Tomatoes are better than chunks of watermelon rind that we throw at each other on the last day of the school year.

      Now Mr Brown again, “Paying attention, Jones?”

      “Yes Sir! Too right Sir! About tomatoes!”

      He says, “I hope so.” Nothing more.

      And now that Muriel with pig tails who sits right behind me, pokes me in the ribs, really hard with her steel ruler. I’ve had enough. So I turn around at her and do my kookaburra song right in her face.

      Mr Brown is furious.

      “Come out here Boy! Put out your left hand! Four cuts for you! I said your left hand not your right!”

      “Sorry, Sir, but I am left-handed, and my Mum says I should get the cane on my right hand.”

      “I told you before, and I will tell you again: we have heard enough of your blessed Mum for one day. We are not interested in what your Mum thinks”.

      He grabs my left hand, yanks it out straight, Whack! Whack! Whack!... Gives me eight cuts across the finger tips. “Four extra cuts! For extra cheek! That’ll teach you a lesson you won’t forget! Think about it!” All the time, I stare straight at Mr Brown’s face, right into his blue eyes. So Mr Brown can see I am not going to cry: no matter how hard he whacks.

      “Go back to your seat, boy. And just for once, don’t say another word.”

      So I don’t say a word but I do think about, “Four extra cuts for extra cheek.” Then I get it. Mr Brown listens to Little Mr Fourex, on 4BK on Friday nights, when Mr. Fourex in his squeaky little jockey voice, is giving his racing tips for the Saturday races at Eagle Farm or Doomben. On this radio program, the motto for Fourex Beer is, “For extra punch, for extra pep, Fourex beer is the logical step.” Dad drinks Fourex that comes in those big brown bottles, when playing cards with his friends on a Saturday arvo. He says, “Fourex is the best.” Grandpa says, “Bulimba beer is Best!”

      At last! The lunch bell goes. Freedom at last!

      ***************************************

      First thing after lunch, Mr Brown begins dictation ... I hate dictation. He looks up over his glasses, sees I am not writing, “Stand up, Fred! Just why aren’t you writing?”

      Stupidly, I think this