This is a handy tip if you are
going to relocate to the other side of the world: take up smoking.
Here are a few things about Fat
Shite you may be interested to learn. He was unemployed for 21 years. He filled
his evening with PlayStation games and beer consumption. His only friends are
his two younger, gullible brothers. His mother has wrapped the apron strings
tightly around his gonads. He has a girlfriend – I did mention Sour Puss, didn’t
I? – three years his junior and she suffers from a terrible superiority
complex. He organised a job from Ireland in Melbourne coaching a soccer team,
and it was this team’s head coach who organised the house we would be
temporarily staying in. And here’s another news-flash – I pretty much hate his
guts. That’s about everything note-worthy there is to report about good old Fat
Swine.
My initial impression of said
house was tarred by the giant two-metre tall “For Sale” sign that blocked my
view. The Boyfriend and I stared at it for a while, our bulging suitcases at
our sides, our pockets significantly lighter after paying the gibbering taxi
man. There was also a car parked in the drive. We checked the address Fat Shite
had provided us with. We were at the right place, anyway. So I had a cigarette.
We waited for an hour and finally
Fat Shite and Sour Puss rocked up. They had been shopping – for a can of deodorant.
Fat Shite informed us that the car in the drive had been gifted him by the same
guy in the soccer club who had organised the limousine escort and the house. He
kicked one of the back wheels, declared it embarrassing and shuffled up the
steps to let us in. I had a cigarette.
Fat Shite gave us a grand tour.
He and Sour Puss had gotten the bigger, better room and i had no qualms with
that, of course, as it had been his contacts that had sorted the arrangement
and therefore it was his prerogative to call dibs. The house smelled of old
people, the wallpaper was outdated and stained, the carpet was a bit squishy
underfoot – but it had a roof and we were content enough with that.
After making pleasantries with
the other two, The Boyfriend and I retreated to our room. It was a decent size
and we even had a wardrobe. So we had a celebratory hug and a giggle, revelling
in the realisation that all our planning and dreaming had a chance of coming to
fruition now that we were in Australia. I jumped on the bed.
There was a crack and the noise
of springs straining. Rubbing my injured face, I pulled back the sheets. “We’ve
no mattress,” I intoned, hardly surprised. We surveyed the metal mesh and the
bars that made up our bed. After several minutes, I went out for a cigarette.
Fat Shite called that he was
heading to Woolworths and whether we would like to go with him. Starving and
sore from my face-plant on to the make shift bed, I happily agreed to an
outing. Two miles down the road, Woolworths was huge and busy. We gathered up
some basics – bread, sugar, wine – and headed back to Fat Shite’s complementary
car. And then he did something that cemented my opinion of him forever.
“So can I get ten bucks off you
for petrol?”
I had a cigarette.