The teens—Jasmine, 16, her cousin Koda, 15, and his friend Levi—had been recruited because they were the only young people in Wilcannia who could code. And because Aunty Meryl had threatened to tell their grandmothers they’d refused.
He scrolled to a new comment left on the tutorial page. It was from Aunty Meryl.
They launched the app on New Year’s Eve, not with a press release, but with a barbecue by the river. The kids from town downloaded it immediately. So did teachers, nurses, and even the whitefella cop who’d learned to say yitha yitha (slowly, slowly).
But the moment that broke everyone came on a Thursday afternoon. Koda was at the shop buying milk when old Mr. Thompson, the station manager who’d never shown interest in anything Aboriginal, shuffled up.
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