The House That Isn't Ours

by Mikayla Exton

This essay was highly commended in the Open category of The Warren Trust Awards for Architectural Writing 2022.

Mikayla Exton

As we pull up into the drive, we search for the familiar pūkeko, painted onto a rock with the number 14 above.

He peers out from the depths of the overgrown flax and watches another family arrive to share his home. Gravel crunches under the car laden with swim gear, enough BBQ meat for our week and books for at least three weeks; the house comes into view. Blockwork, once a Tip Top vanilla yellow, has now been painted black. Even after 10 years, the only thing we know about the owner is her first name: Rosemary. She must think the new lick of paint will help modernise the house. We’re not sure how successful this will be, or why it’s needed in this spot 30 minutes from the nearest small town. But we will begrudgingly accept it for now and hope it’s the only change she’s made.

Grabbing only the most heat-sensitive of the shopping bags (beer, prawns and soft cheese) from the warm car, we head inside. With a bit of persuasion the front door opens and we’re greeted by the warm musty smell houses get when closed up for more than a few days in summer. The front door opens straight into the master bedroom, where scuff marks in the yellowed polyurethane floor hint at the different uses of the years: entrance, hallway, kayak storage, bunkhouse, and now decorated in the classic beach-Kiwiana chic that distinguishes a master from the other bedrooms. A carefully framed array of hand-tied flies by Rosemary’s grandfather holds pride of place over the bed. Across the room a poster lists the surrounding towns in too many fonts and too few tohutō. The room has also been the scene of a past crime: as it turns out, the narrow awning window is big enough for a teenager to wriggle through if the lock-box code is forgotten. Luckily, the window isn’t needed this time and we all cross the threshold to the house in the intended fashion.

Then suddenly we’re compressed into the hallway; a narrow space whose midway kink at an undefined angle blocks the view from both ends. But thin fingers of light from the lounge beyond stretch along the wall, searching and finding old cracks and new dents in the varnished timber panelling. A multitude of dark-timber cupboard doors line one wall, and black-and-white photos of the lake adorn the other. The cupboard doors that aren’t locked hit the opposing wall before they’re able to fully open. The locked ones, with round wooden handles worn shiny by use, remind us that some secrets aren’t ours to know.

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