I
was only nine years old when my parents moved our family to a small
farm in country Victoria. I have two brothers and a sister who like
me, were looking forward to an idealistic existence in the country. I
looked forward to having animals. Something we had never had in the
city.
We'd
been at the farm about a year and my brothers and sister and I loved
the country. The birdsong in the morning, the rooster crowing, cows
mooing and the freedom to run wherever we wanted fulfilled our dreams
of country life. People say its isolated in the country, but I never
thought so. The people from neighbouring farms were friendly always
dropping in for a cup of tea and a chat. My mother had never
entertained so much in all her life.
My
brothers had made friends at school with Max and Johnny. Well Max and
Johnny were coming over at the weekend to watch a movie at our house.
“Nightmare on Elm Street”. For those of you who are not movie
goers. This is one creepy movie. Freddie Kruger is the most evil man
you would ever not wish to meet on a dark night. At the time, I had
never seen the movie and begged my mother to let me stay up with the
big boys to watch it.
Mum,
being a good mother said, “No, you can't Jack. You'll have bad
dreams and I'll never get any sleep. Your sister has to go to bed and
you can too my boy.”
Well
I wheedled and cajoled her into submission. I can be very determined
when I want to be.
“Alright,”
she said at last giving in out of frustration and worn out by my
nagging.
“Whoopee!,”
I yelled.
We
all sat in the dark in the living room. The television casting eery
shadows around the room. We weren't far into the movie when I knew I
was going to have nightmares.
“Sure
you don't want to go to bed?” said by biggest brother Billy. “Sure
it's not too scary for you?”
The
other boys snickered.
“It's
okay,” I said my voice quivering.
I
sat boggle eyed right through the movie and when it was finished I
was too scared to go outside to the dunny or even to pee outside the
kitchen door onto the veggie garden. I just went to bed.
I
woke in the middle of the night busting for a pee. I hopped out of
the bed and peered under it.
“Darn,” I muttered. Mum had forgotten to put the pot under the
bed. I climbed back into bed and lay there for about ten minutes. It
was becoming unbearable. I just had to get up and go outside to the
loo. The kitchen door creaked as I opened it setting the mood like
icing on a cake. It was pitch black outside and the wind was blowing.
I heard the sound of an owl hooting somewhere close by. There was a
whirr of wings over head. The safety of the enclosed dunny seemed
more appealing than standing vulnerable peeing in the vegetable patch
so I tip-toed over the wet grass my heart in my mouth hoping I would
not disturb any boogy men who might be lurking around behind the
dunny. When I had nearly reached it I ran like hell, opened the door,
slammed it shut and stood there. The relief was enormous. I was about
to make a dash back to our house, when I heard a rustling sound, then
some thuds. I was rooted to the spot. Could it be Freddie Kruger? I
never gave God a thought most of the time, but I did then.
“Please
God,” I prayed, “please, please save me from this monster.”
My
heart raced a million miles an hour. I wanted to pee again, but with
extreme effort put that thought out of my mind. I stood there
breathing heavily. I was hot all over. My hands were clammy. I felt
like I didn't have any legs, that concrete stumps were holding me up
instead.
I
waited another minute. There were those noises again, a thud and the
rustling of something. I slowly opened the dunny door a crack. Oh
gosh, something dark and monstrous was moving by the old broken fence
over on the other side of the back-yard.
It
was Freddie Kruger coming to get me. I just knew it! I'll have to run
I thought and terrified I bolted towards the kitchen door. Pyjama
pants falling down around my knees, I tripped up the back stairs into
the arms of my mother.
“What
in the hell do you think you're doing Jack,” she cried and turned
the back porch light on.
Standing
in the long grass, blinking in the bright light, her tailing thudding
to and fro against the fence was Betsy our house cow calmly chewing
her cud.