Published in Overland Issue 241 Summer 2020 · Poetry Lake Eucumbene Rico Craig Eucumbene has fallen below the stump our old lives lift their lips through the water surface to sip air. In the umbrage of our kitchen my mother is frying trout, there are crumbs on the bench, flesh sticking to the pan, butter smokes. She flips the fish onto a plate, cuts more butter into the pan it smooths to a quivering pool. She asks me why I’ve been so long. Adaminaby has risen from the water, my mother has told this story in bubbles since she passed. We know there are waves. When she walks from the room, I try not to follow. Outside her kitchen, there’s a crumpled church dying in the mud; the bag I packed has split open, my clothes have disappeared, five decades of silt has covered a stack of dinner plates. The parts we don’t need have been turning into clouds they open on other lakes break the surface. Rush into rivers, fall into the mouths of fish, buried in a stomach shaped by gills. We are fluid as broken promises, the water recedes before us. We walk into the mud, bare feet, graceless ankles, sliding, stones at our heels Read the rest of Overland 241 If you enjoyed this piece, buy the issue Or subscribe and receive four brilliant issues for a year Rico Craig Rico Craig is a poet, writer and workshop facilitator. Bone Ink (UWAP), his first poetry collection, was winner of the 2017 Anne Elder Award and shortlisted for the Kenneth Slessor Poetry Prize 2018. His recent collections Our Tongues Are Songs (2021) and Nekhau (2022) are published by Recent Work Press. More by Rico Craig › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 8 November 20248 November 2024 · Poetry Announcing the final results of the 2024 Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers Editorial Team After careful consideration, judges Karen Wyld and Eugenia Flynn have selected first place and two runners-up to form the final results of this year’s Nakata Brophy Prize! 6 November 20246 November 2024 · Poetry TV Times Kate Lilley I try out for Can Can after school / knowing I’m not cut out for the high kicks / Ballads chansons show tunes ok / I can belt out Judy Garland and all the songs from Oliver / “Who Will Buy”/”As Long as He Needs Me” / Wher-e-e-e-ere is love