The next morning, it was strangely quiet in the bathroom. Dad was gone, and the bathroom door was open. There was no creaking roof, and no blasting wind. Finally the cyclone was over.
‘Peanut?’ I whispered, creeping down to the kitchen. ‘Peanut, are you here?’
Dad was looking out the back door, but he swung around when he heard me. ‘Good morning, sleepy head,’ he said. ‘How are you this morning? One heck of a night, wasn’t it?’
I yawned and rubbed my eyes. ‘Have you seen Peanut?’ I asked.
Dad came over to give me a hug. ‘No, not yet. I was just checking out the damage. Doesn’t look too bad out there, to be honest. Not after all that racket last night.’ He held me at arm’s length. ‘I’m so glad you’re here with me,’ he said, looking at me kindly. ‘Shall we go check the house for your chick? I’m sure the little critter’s here somewhere.’
My grin was so wide it hurt my cheeks. ‘Yeah, okay. Thanks, Dad.’
We found Peanut jabbing at the cane rubbish basket in Grandad Barney’s bedroom. He looked up, like he’d been sprung. I couldn’t help but grin even wider.
Peanut pecked my toes and then Dad’s. When Dad snatched his foot away, Peanut jumped and perched on the edge of the basket. But the basket tipped over with his weight and landed like a trap door over his whole body.
Dad and I laughed.
‘See, he won’t hurt us,’ I said. ‘He’s cute.’
‘He is pretty funny,’ admitted Dad. ‘Not cute, but funny.’
I bent down and scooped Peanut up. ‘He needs our help. Can we call Cathy and tell her?’ I asked. ‘Or Walter?’ After hearing Dad’s story about Big Blue, I finally realised I couldn’t care for my hide-and-seek chicks. If their dad really was lost, it was time to have them cared for properly.
Dad reached into his back pocket and pulled out his phone. He pressed the power button and then gave it a shake. ‘We could,’ he said, ‘except my phone’s dead. We’ll have to walk into town if we want to make any calls. Which reminds me, Mum will be worried sick. We should ring her first.’
‘Let’s go,’ I said, putting Peanut back down on the floor. ‘But before we do, I have to tell you something.’
‘Yes?’ said Dad, scratching his stubbly chin.
‘There’s another one. I called him Jumble. He and Peanut go everywhere together, but I couldn’t find him last night, and with all that wind, and the rain and …’ A giant lump blocked my throat. ‘He could be dead by now.’
Dad brushed a stray lock of hair from my forehead. ‘It’s okay, Flynn,’ he said. ‘I’m sure he’s out there somewhere. How about we walk into town and tell Walter what’s happened? He and Cathy will sort it out. They’re the experts on stuff like this. They do it every day.’
‘But … how will we get to town?’ I stuttered. ‘Won’t all the roads be dangerous?’
Dad smiled. ‘Good point. They just said on the radio that the cyclone was only a category 1, though, so the damage won’t be too bad.’
I nodded. ‘Can we bring Peanut with us?’ I begged. I couldn’t risk losing another cassowary.
Branches and leaves covered the road on the walk into town. Wild waves lashed the rocks, and the tide was at the very top of the beach. The Welcome to Mission Beach sign lay twisted and buckled, and a caravan had tipped over onto its side. The supermarket and ice-cream shop were shut.
Rain cascaded down the glass of the public phone box as Dad and I squashed ourselves inside it, with the extra feathery lump under my rain jacket snuggled up warmly against my stomach.
‘Mum?’
‘Flynn! Are you and Dad okay? I’ve been so worried! I’ve been watching the news. I know it wasn’t the biggest of the big, but still …’
‘We’re fine, Mum. You should have heard the wind. It was like a train.’
‘And the house?’
‘The house is okay. Some of the banana plants are wrecked, but Dad said it wasn’t too bad, as far as cyclones go.’
‘And Dad?’
I covered the receiver and glanced at Dad. ‘She wants to know if you’re okay,’ I whispered.
Dad raised his eyebrows and smiled.
‘Dad’s fine,’ I said. ‘He told me what happened. You know, to Grandad Barney?’
‘What’s that noise? It sounds like a chicken.’
‘Oh, that,’ I pushed Peanut’s head back down into my jacket. ‘It’s a long story, and I have to go. We’re in town. We’re going to find Walter. But Dad wants to speak to you first. Bye.’
‘Bye, honey.’
I ducked under the chord and passed the phone to Dad. Peanut was chirping and wriggling, so I unzipped my jacket to let him breathe more easily. His claws scratched my belly as he tried to get comfortable. Riding shotgun in someone’s rain jacket wasn’t a natural position for a cassowary chick.
*
‘Glad you guys are okay,’ said Walter when Dad and I found him inside the Visitor Information Centre. He and Abby were helping to organise volunteers to clean up the town.
Abby’s pink raincoat hood was pulled firmly round her face. ‘Hey,’ she said, glancing at the bulge in my chest.
‘Hey,’ I said back. ‘Is the rehab centre okay? Did any cassowaries escape?’
Dad winced, like talking about escaping cassowaries was the same as having green ants bite you all over. But he listened for Walter’s answer just as eagerly as me.
‘Everything’s fine,’ said Walter ‘Your mate Big Blue’s had a good feed and is as happy as Larry there this morning.’
‘That’s a relief,’ said Dad, releasing the tension in his jaw. ‘Don’t really want him on the loose again.’
People in rain jackets and gumboots streamed in and out of the centre. They carried buckets and ladders and sheets of tarpaulin.
‘Flynn, do you have something you want to tell Walter?’ said Dad.
My pulse took off like a space shuttle. It was now or never. ‘Walter?’
‘Yes, kiddo?’
I pulled open my raincoat and Peanut’s yellow head popped out.
‘Peep. Peep. Peep,’ he chirped, his little beak gulping fresh air.
Walter’s blue eyes crinkled. ‘Well, well, well,’ he marvelled. ‘We finally get a squiz at your treasure!’ He winked at Abby, whose face immediately flushed. ‘Didn’t I tell you?’ he said. ‘Flynn’s another Mister Cassowary! Where’d you find this little beauty?’
‘In the swamp, before the cyclone,’ I said, glaring at Abby. ‘There’s actually two of them, but I could only find one. And I don’t even know if the other one’s still there …’
‘I already told Pop there were two,’ said Abby.
I narrowed my eyes at her. Obviously.
‘And Pop said you’d bring them in,’ she added. ‘And he was right. You did.’
‘Well, only one of them,’ I said, my voice trembling. ‘I don’t know if Jumble made it.’
‘No worries,’ said Walter, easing Peanut from my hands. ‘Leave it to me. We’ll get Cathy out to your grandad’s place this afternoon and she’ll find the little guy for you, quick as a flash. No Dad I gather?’
I shook my head. ‘I think … well, I’m not sure, but I think he might have been hit.’
Dad stared at me, his lips silently repeating ‘hit’. ‘You mean by a car? Oh!’ He reached an arm around my shoulders. ‘That’s why you’ve been so caught up about the chicks? Oh, Flynn. I’m sorry. I should have realised.’
I scuffed my shoe against the concrete floor. ‘It’s okay, Dad. It’s only a theory but …’
Abby’s eyes flicked between me and Dad. I’d have to tell her about Grandad Barney, but not now.
Meanwhile Dad was turning back to Walter. ‘Before we go,’ said Dad. ‘I was wondering—’
‘Listen, Steve, can I get back to you? Right now …’ Walter nodded towards the line of volunteers. ‘I think they’re keen to get started.’
‘Oh yes, I’m sorry. Of course. We can help, can’t we, Flynn?’ said Dad, rubbing his hands together. ‘No job’s too big or small for us.’ We looked at each other and smiled. ‘We’re quite a team these days, aren’t we, Flynn?’