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Authors: Jen Banyard

BOOK: Riddle Gully Runaway
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He wiped his wet face with his T-shirt and checked the time on his iPod. Grabbing a tin of baked beans from the shed, he plugged in his earphones and set off up the road.

CHAPTER TEN

Will was on the platform, his blue backpack leaning against his leg, when Pollo arrived at the station. Beside him, his mother Angela jigged restlessly in the brisk breeze, her hands in her coat pockets. Not wanting any adults to start asking questions, Pollo tied Shorn Connery to a fence amid long grass a little way down from the platform and hurried under the station arch into the waiting room. She stood on tiptoes next to a window, from where she could hear Angela giving Will last bits of advice.

‘When you get off at Two Wells, don't muck around, love,' she was saying. ‘Get yourself over to the other platform right away. The train to Canberra waits for no one. And don't even think about stopping in at the café, even if it does have the best raspberry muffins in the universe.'

Will licked his lips with a faraway look as Angela continued. ‘You picked up those carrot sticks and sandwiches from the kitchen bench, I hope.'

‘Um … I might have overlooked the carrots.'

‘Oh, Will! You've got your phone, though? And your emergency money is somewhere safe?'

‘All in my backpack,' said Will. ‘Don't worry, Mum. Nothing's going to happen.'

At that moment Angela's mobile rang and Pollo took her chance. She poked her head around the corner of the waiting room. ‘Pssst!'

Will looked around. Pollo flapped her hand, beckoning Will. ‘Benson's run away!' whispered Pollo. ‘I got it from Mayor Bullock himself just now!'

‘Mayor Bullock told you that?' said Will.

‘Well, not exactly,' said Pollo. ‘But he told me his sister, Benson's mum, had emailed him to say Benson had caught the train home on Thursday.'

‘But you saw him getting on a sheep truck!' said Will.

‘Exactly! A sheep truck on the road to Maloola, not the city,' said Pollo.

Will scratched his chin. ‘Do you reckon the mayor was telling the truth? You don't think he was trying to trick you?'

‘I didn't get that impression. He didn't seem to care where Benson was, as long as he wasn't under his roof.' Pollo gnawed a thumbnail. ‘It's more likely Benson faked the email.'

‘Faked it? But he'd have to have been at his mum's computer for that, wouldn't he?'

‘Sometimes I wonder about you, Will,' said Pollo. ‘Anyone can send an email from any computer pretending to be someone else if they know the person's password. And adults usually have really easy ones they won't forget — like their birthdays and stuff.'

Will nodded sagely and made a mental note to change his own. Just then, the train hissed into the station, the first three carriages for passengers followed by twenty or so goods vans with big sliding side-walls, some open, some shut. Pollo and Will heard Angela calling him.

‘I'd better scoot,' said Will. ‘If I miss this train Angela will kill me. The rest of the day's services are out so she'd have to drive me to Two Wells!'

‘Out?' squeaked Pollo. ‘When you say “out”, do you mean cancelled? All the way to Maloola?'

‘Yeah, for track maintenance.' Will pointed to the wall. Above the timetables was taped a sign in black texta. The next train wasn't until Monday morning.
‘Well, like I say — gotta go! See ya next week I guess,' he chirped.

Pollo scrunched her face. ‘I can't wait till Monday!' She raced from the building, leaving Will alone in the waiting room scratching his head.

Two minutes later, the platform guard blew the all-aboard whistle. A minute after that, the train began to edge slowly from Riddle Gully station. Ten seconds after that, Pollo, dodging Shorn Connery's kicking hind legs, heaved her faithful assistant's rear end into an empty goods van and scrambled after him, sprawling on her stomach on the grubby floor as the train picked up speed.

CHAPTER ELEVEN

Baa-aa-aah!

Shorn Connery, tied to a railing in the goods van, didn't like Pollo's latest case one little bit. He scuffled back and forth on his stick legs with the rocking of the train, his yellow eyes rolled back in their sockets. Pollo huddled near him, her woollen beanie pulled low, watching the fields, trees and fence-posts strobe past. Her cheeks were mottled mauve and her teeth clacked as the morning chill whipped through her.

As the train rattled on, Shorn Connery settled enough for Pollo to lean into the thick wool around his neck. She wished he'd lie down so she could snuggle into him like a hot-water bottle. Had she gone too far this time? She hadn't planned and she wasn't prepared. She had no firm idea of where to find Benson, and her only tools
were her notepad, pencil and pen-knife — what she'd stepped out of the house with when she'd gone to visit Mayor Bullock. No phone, no money, no information! It was just her and her panicky sheep, freezing to death, hurtling across the countryside to who knew where.

Well, actually, that was one thing in her favour. She did know where — to Two Wells and on to Maloola. That was the good thing about trains. They didn't wander off. She blew warm air into her cupped hands and tried not to think of Will in his carriage up ahead somewhere, toasty warm and, by now, almost certainly tucking into his sandwiches. And she tried not to think of Benson — except to hope that somehow Mayor Bullock was right, that he really had gone back to the city.

Pollo unravelled her beanie so it covered her whole face. She hugged her knees and tried to imagine she was holding a mug of steaming cocoa. The train clattered onward, slowing down as it passed through tiny towns, but speeding up again without stopping.

Eventually, Pollo sensed the train slowing more than usual. She rolled up her beanie to see the stockyards of Two Wells coming into view — mobs of stony-coloured sheep penned behind steel-rail fences topped with barbed wire. As the train approached, they scampered
to the farthest corner of the pen, kicking up dust; as the carriages rolled by, they stared unblinkingly, as one. From the open door, Shorn Connery stared back at them silently.

A whistle sounded and they eased into Two Wells station. Pollo thought about getting off to have a quick look for Benson but, remembering there were no more trains to Maloola till Monday, decided against it. The trucks that ran the highway past Riddle Gully seldom detoured into Two Wells anyway. Benson was far more likely to be in Maloola.

Wary of being seen, Pollo crawled on her hands and knees to the van door and peeked out, relishing the sun's faint warmth. It was silly to hope to spot Benson, but you never knew. On the station platform by the head of the train, people were already walking briskly in different directions. Will would be among them, finding the right platform for his train to Canberra.

In the grey dirt of the stockyard alongside Pollo and Shorn Connery's van, a lone ewe, dusty-white but for a black left ear, stood apart from the mob of sheep. The tip of her snout was lifted toward them. It swayed delicately side to side, catching the strange new scents that had rolled to a stop in front of her.

Pollo sat back on her heels and smiled at the sheep. ‘Hello there, Ear!'

Meh-eh-eh!
The black ear twitched.

Baa-aa-ah!
Shorn Connery, roped to the end wall of the van, began tugging at his short lead. ‘Sorry old buddy, I forgot about you,' said Pollo, getting up to lengthen his rope. ‘I guess you want to stretch your legs while you can.'

As soon as Pollo loosened his lead, Shorn Connery broke free and clattered to the open van door. He stood rigid, sniffing towards Ear. Ear stared, transfixed, from the stockyard up at Shorn Connery. Shorn Connery half-closed his eyelids so that the vertical slots of his pupils were barely visible. His wet, hairy nostrils quivered.

Just as Pollo caught the end of his rope and wrapped it round her fist, Shorn Connery flung himself forward, landing with skittering hooves on the narrow stretch of loose gravel between train track and stockyard. To avoid being yanked out onto her face, Pollo had no choice but to jump down with him. Dragging his mistress over the loose stones, Shorn Connery barrelled forward, snorting, his ears pricked forward, to where Ear waited, her hooves stamping. The two animals stood nose to
nose either side of the barbed-wire-topped barrier.

Meh-eh-eh!
Ear blinked her stiff white lashes and twitched her black ear.

Shorn Connery flicked his handsome long tail.
Baa-aa-ah!

At that moment, a sharp whistle-blow cut through the air, signalling the train's departure. Pollo leaned back on Shorn Connery's rope lead. ‘C'mon, boy!' she huffed. ‘We have to get back aboard. There's no time for these shenanigans!'

Meh-eh-eh!

Baa-aa-ah!

‘Forget about her, old buddy,' pleaded Pollo. ‘She's from the wrong side of the tracks. It'll never work out!'

Meh-eh-eh!
Ear spun both ears and glared icily at Pollo.

Baa-aa-ah!
Shorn Connery ground his hooves into the gravel.

Pollo's guts clenched. They couldn't stay where they were! The train was kilometres long and the gap between it and the fence wasn't much wider than she was. She looked at the snarly barbed wire. There was no climbing over — not in a hurry. It was either get back on the train or pin themselves hard against the fence as
the train whooshed past, millimetres from their noses. And Shorn Connery's stuck out further than hers. She grabbed her faithful assistant around his middle and pulled, trying to keep calm, trying not to picture the swish and hiss of steel wheels flying by.

Suddenly Pollo heard the thudding of running feet. She craned her neck to see, from the other side of the goods van, a blue backpack fly through the opening and skid across the floor. Behind it appeared a grinning face.

‘Will!' she cried. ‘What …? But …? What are you doing here?'

‘Can I give you a hand?'

‘Can you ever!' Pollo passed Shorn Connery's rope up to her friend. ‘Of all the times to fall in love, Shorn Connery picks now! He won't budge. Quick, you pull and I'll push!'

A second whistle trilled — longer than the first. With Pollo shoving from the ground and Will tugging from above, they wrangled Shorn Connery, bawling and writhing, back aboard. Will lashed him to the rail.

Suddenly, the train hissed and jerked forward. Pollo flung herself upward, clawing the van floor with her fingertips. As the ground began to roll away beneath them, she hung suspended over the lip of the opening,
her legs thrashing in midair. Gradually the train jolted into a smoother rhythm. Will gripped Pollo's arms, wedged his feet against the edge of the big sliding door and leaned back. They were just passing the ‘Thank You for Visiting Two Wells' sign when Pollo, kicking and huffing, rejoined the early Saturday service to Maloola.

Meh-eh-eh!

Baa-aa-ah!

Meh-eh-eh-eh-eh!

Baa-aa-aa-ah-ah!

The train trundled onward, Shorn Connery bleating forlornly as the stockyard — and Ear — dissolved from view.

CHAPTER TWELVE

‘Why aren't you going to Canberra!' shouted Pollo as the train accelerated. ‘Angela and HB will murder you! Clive will murder you! Someone will murder you, anyway!'

Will smiled and shook his head. ‘No they won't.'

‘Why not? It's months since you saw your dad.'

‘Clive rang just as we left Riddle Gully,' said Will above the clanking of the train. ‘He says he's got the flu so camping's off. Tiff came on and said it was only a man-cold and I should come anyway, but if my dad doesn't want me around …' Will's voice trailed off.

‘Some people feel sickness more than others,' Pollo offered, rubbing her goosebumpy arms. ‘They can't help it.'

‘Yeah. He's one of them — a wuss.' Will unzipped his backpack and drew out a fleecy jacket. He plonked it
on Pollo's lap. ‘Here, take this. I'm warm enough in my windcheater.'

Pollo pulled on Will's jacket eagerly. ‘Thanks!' She prodded Will's sagging backpack with a foot. ‘Do you even have a change of clothes in there?'

‘Nup. I was going on a father-and-son camping trip, remember? The stinkier the better. Plus, I needed room for my art stuff.'

‘Always the artist,' said Pollo.

Will smiled wryly. ‘Always the artist with overdue art assignments.'

‘How did you even know we were on the train?' said Pollo, pulling her beanie down to her eyebrows.

‘Huh! You ran off at Riddle Gully like you had a lizard in your daks, so I guessed something was up. Then when I got off at Two Wells I heard Shorn Connery. It all came clear what you were up to — and it was totally clear that I wasn't going to call Angela and mizzle back to Riddle Gully just 'cos my dad's a wimp. I figured the more people looking for Benson, the better.'

‘When will you tell your mum and HB you haven't gone to Canberra?'

‘Hmm …' Will drummed his chin with his fingers. ‘I might forget to mention that for a while.'

Pollo tucked her knees to her chest and grinned. ‘That's what I like to hear!'

*

The train rattled onward, crops and sheep paddocks swishing by. ‘So, what's your plan?' said Will.

Pollo peeked through the slit between beanie and jacket. ‘I was hoping you wouldn't ask. I'm ashamed to say, I haven't got one.'

‘But when you jumped on the train at Riddle Gully it was to find Benson and tell him we knew he was in the clear, right?'

‘And to say sorry for ever printing that stuff about him.' Pollo picked at a thumbnail. ‘I still don't understand why he told us he'd done the robberies,' she said. ‘That was crazy. I'd never have written my story if he hadn't said that stuff.'

Will pulled a sandwich from his backpack. He picked out the tomato and tossed it to Shorn Connery, who swallowed it in one sniff. ‘Maybe not so crazy,' he said. ‘More kind of sad.' He bit and chewed. ‘Look at it from his side. Maybe he's already feeling like a scumbag for stealing whatever it was he stole at school. Then we come along and he thinks, “I'm already a scumbag — what difference does it make if I'm a bit bigger one?” You
know, like when you start on a packet of biscuits and eat more than you mean to — and then you think, “Well, I'm already a pig — I may as well finish the packet.”'

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