The hitch-hiker.
It had been nearly two years since my life partner of two decades had died, and in February 2014 I had finally made the move away from the Australian capital to rural eastern Victoria.
The sale of my previous home had allowed me the luxury of buying suitable land in the quiet seaside village of Marlo, where the Snowy River meets the ocean. I'd had a large kit home erected and fitted out, and had specified a lot of energy-saving features like double-glazing and lots of insulation. I wanted to be comfortable without spending a fortune on heating and cooling.
When I chose my kit home I had elected for a four-bedroom job, even though I was living on my own. I was thinking about resale value, in case I ever had to go into a residential care situation. And I had insisted on an extra-large double garage with plenty of room for storage - you can never have too much garage space.
The downside to living in Marlo was that the nearest hospital was in Bairnsdale, a hundred kilometres away, but I was banking on not needing the hospital any time soon. At the age of 66 I was still fit and healthy, and drove to Bairnsdale every Tuesday and Friday afternoon to do my boxing training class there. I had settled into a comfortable routine in the five months since the move. Grocery shopping was on Tuesday after training, so I didn't get away from town till after 6.30pm. I usually had my oven timer at home programmed to cook or re-heat a dish of food so I would have a hot meal waiting when I arrived home around 7.30pm.
This particular Tuesday I was heading home from Bairnsdale on a chilly mid-July evening, and it was already dark. As I left the built-up area of the town, I spotted a hitch-hiker thumbing a ride. It'd been years since I had given anyone a ride, in fact it was quite uncommon these days to see anyone hitching. But there was plenty of room to pull over to the side of the road, and I did so without a second thought.
The hitch-hiker was a young lad, probably only about 15, carrying a large backpack. "Where'ya headed" I asked and learned the boy was going to Sydney.
"I'm only going as far as Orbost, about an hour from here, then I have to turn off for home, that ok?"
"Better than walking, thanks" replied the boy, and added "my name's Luke".
"I'm Denis, and I don't mean to pry, but isn't it a bit risky hitching at night in the middle of nowhere?" I ventured, to which he responded tersely "Got nowhere to go, so it'll have to do".
I turned up the heating and the music and settled into the drive I'd come to know well since moving here. Luke had closed his eyes and seemed to be sleeping. A little while later, he asked if there was a McDonalds in Orbost. I laughed, and told him Orbost was barely big enough for a McDonalds.
I probed a little by asking "so, how long since you ate?" and he slowly replied "This morning, before I left Melbourne". I followed up with "so you've been on the road all day?" to which the response was a rather dejected "yeah".
Soon the Orbost turnoff appeared ahead. "Hey Luke, this is near where I turn off, I'll pull up in a minute, ok?" I announced as I steered the vehicle to a spot where I could safely stop. Luke undid his seatbelt, and I felt sick in the gut imagining the kid hitching on such a cold night.
"Luke", I said, "stop and think about this. You could freeze to death out there, or fall in the dark and get badly hurt. Why not stay at my place tonight, there's a spare bedroom, then I can drop you back here in the morning. There's no catch, no strings attached. I'm not going to hit on you or anything sick like that. And I have a big dish of lasagne in the oven on a timer, should be almost ready to eat when we get there."
Luke hesitated for a few seconds, but the thought of a hot meal and a bed won out. "OK" he whispered, then added a "thank you". The boy had some manners at least.
Fifteen minutes later we arrived at my house and I showed Luke the spare bedroom. I put a towel on the bed and suggested he have a hot shower to freshen up, and then we'd eat.
I had a quick wash in my en-suite , then took the lasagne from the oven so it could stand for five minutes and whipped up a small salad for us. Luke appeared at the door and I asked him to put out some cutlery for us. He commented that the kitchen was "nice", then added that "I used to cook for my mum and me, just simple stuff".
"Your mother didn't do the cooking?" I queried, and saw the boy's face fall. "Sorry mate, I don't mean to be nosy, I guess maybe you like cooking then?"
"Not especially" came the reply, "but if I didn't do the shopping and cooking she'd just order takeaway every night. I got sick of takeaway pretty fast."
"O-Kay" I murmured, then "well let's serve up and you can tell me whether my cooking is any good".
We tucked into the lasagne and it was obvious the boy was ravenous. I'm not a slow eater but Luke was finished in no time. He looked up from his empty plate, and found me smiling at him. "That hungry, huh? Better serve yourself some more".
Luke wasted no time dishing out another helping of pasta and some more salad, and I couldn't help pressing him for more information about his family circumstances. I asked Luke who he was going to stay with in Sydney, and the reply was disturbing - "I'll find something".
I had visions of this kid ending up on the street in Sydney, begging for money to buy food, and anyone can see what could go wrong with that.
"Luke, please level with me. Where is your home?"
The boy seemed to freeze for a moment, then almost whispered "I was living in Melbourne but my mother is mostly out of it on drugs, and her latest boyfriend isn't a nice person". He paused for a few seconds, before continuing. "He caught me looking at porn on my phone yesterday, and he called me a faggot and said he'd bash me if I did it again. So I packed a bag last night and I headed out first thing this morning. I'm not going back there, no way."
"Jesus, Luke, you should never have to put up with that sort of shit, that guy is an arsehole".
I watched Luke's face as he clearly struggled with his thoughts, then he blurted out "but its true, I am a faggot".
"Luke", I answered "there's nothing wrong with being gay, except that some people have fucked-up attitudes to gay people. I know because I'm gay myself. And I meant what I said earlier, I would never touch a teenager. You're safe here, Luke."
He seemed to relax a little after this exchange. We had some apple pie and ice-cream while the boy opened up a little and told me he was halfway through year 10 study but now he'd just try to get a job somewhere. I told him that I thought by law he had to finish year 10, and that we really ought to figure out some better options than ending up on the streets in Sydney's winter.
"Please trust me Luke, I need to ring one of the guys from my gym, he's a cop and he should know what we can do to help you."
Luke was clearly afraid of being sent back to his home, and said he'd rather be dead than go back. I told him not to panic, that I was on his side and we'd work something out.
I texted Brian, and asked if it was convenient for me to call him - he answered affirmatively so I dialled his number, switched it to speaker mode so Luke could hear both sides of the conversation, and explained the situation. I said I had no reason to doubt what Luke had told me, and I wanted to help him.
Brian told us he needed to file an incident report just in case there was a missing person bulletin for Luke, so I handed the phone to Luke and let him provide his details.
Brian told us we'd need to come to the police station in Bairnsdale and see the duty officer in the morning to make a detailed statement. Then we should see the child services people at DHSS and apply for an emergency temporary care order. If that was approved Luke should be able to stay with me for a while till DHSS had time to fully investigate Luke's circumstances. I thanked Brian and ended the call.
I told him "Luke, if the child services people let you stay here with me, then maybe we can get you into the college at Orbost and you can finish year 10."