An iron town is dying.
Inside a fibro bungalow in a horizon-wide mirage Belle Furphy is watching from her kitchen window while her town is dismantled around her and trucked south. Ignoring the Dreamtime and spurning the Multinational and vowing to die here where she long ago dug the ashes of her family into the rock of the land, she's becoming they say no man is.
Flying in from the the south-coast is her estranged son jack with his Sunset Village brochures: snapshots of happy deaths on ergonomic beds with palliative carers hovering angelically overhead.
Out the front of her house in air-conditioned site-vans housewreckers play poker and read letters from her happily relocated neighbours at her through a megaphone. And they wait - for her resolve to give; or for her heart to give. Or for word finally to come through that, at last, nobody is watching . . .