Hand-cut collage on an open notebook with handwritten notes, featuring a large monarch butterfly, botanical cut-outs, blackberries, flowers, air plants, and four small skull drawings framed in black squares.

The Ferry and the Tree

The engines bark into life, the hull

shouldering off the pontoon, moving

into the river, then easing back

into a gentle turn, gliding

straight across the chestnut-coloured

water, spackled

with leaf litter from the rains.

The ferry is packed, people push

past one another,

unseeing.

At North Quay, passengers crowd the foredeck

before moving onto the pontoon, snaking

up the gangplank and into the city.

Heading south, a homeless

encampment crouches under

the Kurilpa Bridge

in the gardens.

It has expanded.

The only movement—

the slow flapping

of a blue tarpaulin.

Past that, the twin diesels rev hard;

the boat surges and a boy appears,

running in a green Raiders shirt

and yellow Crocs that

gleam in the sunlight,

leans over the gunwale, shrieking,

and I laugh.

But another boy—excited too—

insists a young man

clap—or slap one hand

against his thigh. He insists with his

hands. I do not hear him

speak.

I stop laughing,

and return to silence.

The river spreads its hands; the sky grows,

its blueness distinct behind

ephemeral clouds, sun bright and hard,

heat soaking into everything, the humidity

alive.

Throttle easing, we coast past Orleigh Park,

more beautiful than I remember.

Dark ficus tower over the lawns—

people are everywhere.

After Guyatt Park, the boat shudders into a full-throated roar,

lurching toward the shore, then dropping back,

coasting into an arc that meets the pontoon.

The engines reverse, wash surging violently

before cutting off. The hull bumps softly

against the pontoon and it’s time

to get off.

Along the river, people lie on blankets

in front of storm-wracked mangroves,

the sun blasting

moisture from the sodden soil,

lifting it

into the thick air.

Teenagers smile while

unmaking a Jack-o’-lantern

with a steak knife.

A large group is having a picnic,

a Buddhist monk in

maroon and yellow robes

among them. Children play

while the adults talk.

Alone on the lawn,

a tree:

broken branches lie on the ground, but

the leaves on the remaining branches

are sapling-green; still growing.

They don’t think.

The sun comes

and life happens.

All by itself.


Start Here → Next: [Under the Bridge] · [The Night is Young]· [after the storm]

Collage on an open notebook page with handwritten notes, featuring cut-out flowers, air plants, and four black-framed skull drawings arranged in a diamond pattern, topped by an orange monarch butterfly.

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