INTRODUCTION & DISCLAIMER - How would you like to take a trip back in time to 1998, go to Sydney Australia and meet the Hawkins family? Well, the first two options are appealing but in real life you probably wouldn't want to meet the crazy and dysfunctional Hawkins family.
The father Alistair is an authoritarian, bigoted tyrant; the long-suffering mother Faye is completely stressed out; paranoid eldest son Brendan hides in his room and never comes out for fear of UFOs; mousy youngest daughter Erica tries to keep the peace; and then there's middle son Cornelius, a stupid and sadistic psychopath who makes it his life's work to wreak havoc both at home and in the community. Adding to the chaos is Danielle, Cornelius's sluttish and trouble-making wife, while Erica's sensible boyfriend Gavin is a frequent visitor to the Hawkins house.
With Cornelius constantly staging one crazy stunt after another and driving his angry father insane, whatever is going to happen next? Have fun meeting the Hawkins family and be very thankful they are not your family or your neighbours. Please note that this story series contains strong themes, language and violence, as well as scenes involving female characters using the toilet and having their periods, which may not be to every readers' taste. All characters and events are fictional, with any similarity to real persons living or dead coincidental and unintentional. Please enjoy, rate and comment, and look for more chapters as they appear.
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"Are you related to Cornelius Hawkins?"
As soon as this question was delivered to Erica Hawkins in her first class on her first day of high school in 1992 by a stern, strict, middle-aged male mathematics teacher who wore an expression of horror upon his scowling face, the Year 7 student knew that things were not going to be easy for her in secondary school.
When Erica confirmed that she was indeed the younger sister of Cornelius Hawkins, the teacher indicated for her to get up, then ordered her to switch seats with a boy who had been sitting in the desk immediately in front of the teacher's desk.
The young girl meekly complied with her teacher's directions, who then stood over Erica and said, "Miss Hawkins, this is your desk and whenever you are in my mathematics class, you will sit here and nowhere else. And if you think you can act like that maniac Cornelius, or put in zero effort in class like that other brother of yours Brendan then you have another thing coming Missy. I will be watching you like a hawk, and if I catch you talking out of turn, creating any disruption, slacking off, cheating or generally acting like the little madam you clearly are, you will be right where you belong, in detention. Is that clear, Miss Hawkins?"
"Yes Sir," Erica said in her soft, timid voice, many of the class members giggling before the teacher bellowed at them to be silent.
One kid who was not laughing was the boy sitting in the desk behind Erica, Gavin Baxter, a tall, slim, athletic boy with dark brown hair and blue eyes. He hadn't met Erica Hawkins nor any of the other kids in his new Sydney high school yet. Gavin's family -- consisting of Gavin, his older sister Lisa and their parents Neil and Sandra -- had only two weeks ago moved to Sydney when Mr. Baxter got a promotion at work. So the family had sold their house in the city of Wollongong, located about two hours south of Sydney and moved to Sydney's northern suburbs.
Gavin of course was nervous about starting high school in a new place where he knew nobody, but even back in Wollongong he would have been nervous. It didn't have a good reputation, and there were stories going around that on the first day of school all the Year 7 boys would be grabbed by gangs of Year 11 and 12 students who would inflict various sadistic acts of bullying, such as flushing their heads in the toilets.
So far, Gavin had avoided getting his head flushed down the toilet on his first day of high school, but seeing what had happened to Erica made him apprehensive about what the rest of the teachers were like. And why had this teacher singled Erica out for this treatment? Erica didn't look the type to cause trouble, in fact the opposite. She was a petite girl, clad in an ill-fitting girls' summer school dress, her long light brown hair back in a pony-tail. Her brown eyes were covered by glasses and her mouth was a mess of metal dental braces. Erica's general demeanor was like that of a little church mouse, and she looked nervous and skittish, far removed from a trouble-maker.
During the rest of the day, the same pattern was repeated, Erica being asked by teachers if she was related to Cornelius Hawkins, and when it was established she was his younger sister she was made to sit at the front of the class where she could be closely supervised. Gavin was puzzled and becoming more and more interested in this girl, so when the final bell rang he introduced himself.
"Hi, I'm Gavin," he said, shaking her hand.
Erica looked at the ceiling nervously, returned the handshake and responded shyly. "I'm Erica."
On the bus on the way home, Gavin had two sets of feelings. One was the feelings of a developing crush, accentuated by sitting next to Erica on the bus. The second was curiosity. What was this Cornelius like? Surely Erica's older brother couldn't be that bad? And what was the deal with the other brother, Brendan?
The bus pulled into the stop in the street where Gavin lived, and as he went to depart to his delight Erica got off too. "You live on this street too?" Gavin asked.
Erica nodded. "Yeah, just across the road." She pointed at the house with the street number 9, an average looking brick and tile house like many seen in suburban Sydney, and indeed the other cities and towns around Australia. It was much like the house that Gavin lived in with his parents and sister, only the Hawkins house had a granny flat attached to one side, a feature absent from the Baxter house.
"It's a nice house," said Gavin politely. "We live a bit further up, at number 24. We only moved in a few weeks ago."
"I thought I hadn't seen you around before," said Erica, the girl looking around herself nervously. "Well, I'd better be going."
With that, Erica turned on her heel and headed inside, opening her backpack to remove the front door keys. Gavin, while a little perturbed that Erica had shot off so quickly, turned and walked to his parents' house, the unmistakable feelings of a crush sweeping through his body as he thought about his petite, nervous, mousy little classmate and as it turned out, his neighbor too. What did the future hold?
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Erica and Gavin stepped off the bus, holding hands and making for the Hawkins house at Number 9. It was now 1998, and six years had now gone by since they first met on their first day of high school. They were now both aged 18 turning 19 in a few months' time, and had finished high school at the end of 1997, taking their HSC exams. Now Erica and Gavin were both first year university students in nursing degrees, while holding down part time jobs. Erica worked at a sandwich shop and Gavin at a supermarket, and they were a classic example of teenage sweethearts, two young people who had found the right person at an early age and very much in love.