material from the shelf. She snatched up a reel of cotton and a length of pink ribbon that she fancied and dropped them down the front of her loose fitting blouse, and then with a cursory glance at the rather cheap-looking shoes on display, she carried the material to the counter. Her presence immediately raised the ire of the women who were of the social conviction that one should not mix with the daughter of a washer woman.
‘Perhaps, Mr Stevens, you wish to serve this person. Then we can complete our business in private.’ Mrs Webb held scented pomade to her nose.
Lauren dumped the potatoes on the counter and rested the material alongside. ‘This person has a name, Mrs Webb,’ Lauren announced, summoning her best toff’s voice that she decided was quite wasted in Wangallon Town, ‘which you know well enough seeing you can’t keep staff for more than a few months due to your own ill-humour and it’s me own mother who washes your dirty smalls.’
Mrs Webb opened her lips only to discover that embarrassment and anger rendered her silent. The older Miss Henrietta Webb took her mother’s arm and, pulling her aside amid whispers and furtive glances, the two women busied themselves examining some handkerchiefs of very poor quality.
Lauren winked at Mr Stevens, whose permanent brow furrow had mysteriously smoothed with shock. ‘A length for a skirt, if you please, a dozen fresh eggs, a tin of condensed milk and I’ll be having a couple of those,’ Lauren pointed at the boiled lollies. The shopkeeper was staring at her as if she were some criminal straight off the boat from the mother country. ‘How is Mrs Stevens?’ Lauren wet her forefinger, her saliva marking a line across the dusty counter. ‘You’ll be needing a cleaner next, Mr Stevens. You ask Mrs Webb. People what are incapable of looking after themselves always need someone handy. Me, for example, I could give those pipes of yours,’ she pointed at the wooden smoking pipes on the shelf behind him, then glanced at his crotch, ‘a real good blow out.’ Lauren enjoyed herself by standing stock still as her material was cut and wrapped and her purchases bundled into a paper bag. ‘And I believe I would still have credit.’ With her belongings pushed across the width of the counter, Lauren held out her palm. ‘I could check with Mrs Stevens?’ Lauren snavelled up the coin thrown onto the counter.
Mr Stevens cleared his throat. ‘You don’t have credit here no more, Miss.’ He looked at her meaningfully.
Lauren tucked the bag under her arm and winked. ‘Neither do you, Mr Stevens.’
With her business completed, Lauren walked slowly past the three Webb women. The eldest girl, a peaky, skinnier version of her own cat’s-bum-mouthed sister, considered herself above the inhabitants of Wangallon Town. ‘I’ll give Mr Luke Gordon your best, Mr Stevens.’
Lauren didn’t bother to look back, though she felt like one of those blue–green blowflies, sticky with interest. She needed to wash, eat and then position herself at the old box tree on the edge of town as if she were going for a walk. Of course it was possible that Luke wouldn’t return on this very day, but last year he had. Four days before Christmas when the sky was near white with heat and dust and the birds stopped flying for fear of fainting and a person lost their shadow, well, that was the hour Luke Gordon had walked his horses, pack horses and his blackfella mate into town. Lauren itched at the moisture gathering at her waistband and pushed a boiled sweet into her mouth.
For midmorning the main street was decidedly quiet. There were only three horses tethered to the hitching post outside the two-storey hotel and a black sulky. At the sight of the minister’s sulky Lauren decided to take the longer route home by crossing the dusty street diagonally. This direction would take her through Mr Morelli’s vegetable garden and past the Gee’s chook house before sneaking through the backyards of three rather cantankerous women. Lauren was almost in too good a mood for a fight; however, if necessary she could shout just as loudly as the next old hag. Besides, she figured no good would come of crossing the path of a minister, what with her having committed one mortal sin already this fine day. She didn’t think God would mind about the cotton and ribbon, after all it said nothing in the Bible about it being