Authors: Jackie French
S
YDNEY
C
OVE
, 24 S
EPTEMBER
1793
The baby was beetroot, waving red fists as it yelled, its face scrunched up like a tiny monkey's. It exactly resembled the hundreds of other newborns he had held â and looked completely different too.
His son. His tiny, perfect, incredible son.
He glanced at Rachel, sleeping now, pale and still in the bed. He had sent a message on the ferry to Maria, out at Rose Hill, to come and help for a few weeks. She had come on the return ferry, glad of the chance to make a few coins, for the harvest had been poor.
Maria was downstairs, now chopping the last of the winter parsnips for a chicken broth and giving the peelings to the o'possum, as though she had never been away. Nanberry was on another voyage to Norfolk Island. The Surgeon held his son, wrapped in a swaddling cloth made from a carefully hemmed part of an old sheet, worn so thin that another kick from the baby might rip a hole in it.
He had dreamt of this day. His wife would be in her silk-hung bed, there would be carpet on the floor, and brocade curtains; they would hold a christening with silver cups and teething rings, and a fine dinner for all the guests afterwards, to toast the baby's health. Instead he was in a house of crumbling convict bricks; his son's mother was a convicted felon, still serving a sentence for theft.
He was not a well-regarded London specialist with honourable colleagues and friends; his brother officers were thieves and rogues, more intent on making as much money as possible, now that Governor Phillip had left, than on governing the colony.
But today none of it mattered. This small child meant more than anything he had ever known.
Rachel stirred in the bed. âWhat shall we call him?'
âAndrew Douglass Keble White.'
She frowned. âBut that's what you called Nanberry.'
âNanberry didn't want the name. Andrew Douglass was the Captain who recommended me for this post.' He smiled at her, this lovely woman, the mother of his son, his companion and his friend. âWithout him I would not be here.'
And the baby would never have been born. This miraculous child. His son. He touched the child's hair with one finger. It was dark already, like his, and he had the blue eyes of the very young. The baby let out a yell again.
âHe's hungry.' She held out her arms.
He let the baby go reluctantly. He sat on the bed, watching them both. âHe will be my true son,' he said softly. âEverything my eldest child should have will be his.'
Rachel smiled vaguely, too worn out to wonder at the meaning of his words. But the Surgeon knew. His son would not be brought up a convict brat. His son would be a gentleman, like his father.
His son must go to England.
S
YDNEY
C
OVE
, J
ULY
1794
Nanberry sat in the kitchen, teasing the o'possum, holding a crust of bread by the creature's nose, waiting till it ran up his legs to get it, then holding it high out of reach.
Graaah!
the o'possum muttered. It climbed onto Nanberry's head and stood on its hind paws. But the bread was still out of reach.
Rachel looked up from rolling out her pastry. âLeave off teasing it, do.'
Nanberry laughed. He bent and put the bread on the floor. The o'possum jumped down and picked up the food in its paws. It ate it reproachfully, growled again, then jumped up and out of the window.
The baby gave a chortle and then a cry from its cradle by the fire. The cradle had been made by a ship's carpenter, and the smooth wood was well joined together, unlike most of the makeshift furniture in the colony.
âPick him up, there's a lamb, while I finish this.'
Nanberry peered doubtfully at the baby, who was waving his tiny fists. âBabies smell. At both ends too.'
âThen he needs changing again. And it's a good smell, you silly boy. A baby and milk smell. Here, I'll take him.' She lifted the baby, then laid him on the table and took a clean napkin from the pile on one of the chairs.
Baby, baby, baby, thought Nanberry. It was all his father and Rachel could talk about now. The whole house revolved around the baby. Except the o'possum. He grinned. The o'possum had more sense.
Tomorrow he'd sail to the Cape, not as a cabin boy, but as a proper sailor, through the most dangerous waters in the world. Giant waves that crashed ships into splinters, sea monsters with gaping jaws, islands of ice that lured ships to their doom. A new land with different trees and people from this place and tiny Norfolk Island, with carriages pulled by horses, and giant buildings larger than anything he'd seen here, and giant animals called
elephant
and
lion
, with teeth the size of carving knives.
He could hardly wait.
C
OCKLE
B
AY
H
OSPITAL
; S
YDNEY
C
OVE
, N
OVEMBER
1794
The first of the thunderstorms had come, bringing hail that flattened the corn and stripped the baby peaches from the trees. But he would not be here to see either the peach or corn crop.
Surgeon White stood in his office at the hospital and stared at the pages in his hand, just delivered from the newly arrived
Daedalus
, along with its cargo of pale-faced wretches, sick or dying of scurvy and fever. But after so many years they were no longer his concern. Not now.
The paper was yellowed from damp and the voyage, the ink already fading even though the orders had only been written a year ago. His hand trembled as he read the words.
He had longed for this moment for years! At last he could sail from this accursed land! He had been ordered back to England, to civilised company. Back to the world.
Almost as good â and astonishing â was the news that his
Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales
had not only been published, but been a massive success, translated into German and about to be translated into French. He was a respected writer and had never known it. There was money waiting for him in England, far more than just his wages while he had been here. Enough money for a proper house, his own carriage and horses â¦
At last, finally, he was going home.
Let others deal with the ships of living corpses who screamed when they saw the sun, their bodies like walking sticks leaking dysentery, or typhus that spread like butter in the heat. He would be back in green England.
The Surgeon put the letter down and stared out the window. Now â somehow â he had to tell Rachel.
She was sitting in the chair by the kitchen fireplace, the boy on her lap, spooning mashed carrot and potato into his mouth. The child was just beginning to toddle now, holding onto chairs to steady himself. Soon he'd be running ⦠Pain gripped the Surgeon's heart. And he'd not be here to see.
Rachel smiled as he came through the door. âHe'll be finished in a moment. I made us a steak and kidney pudding and treacle dumplings â¦' She stopped, and looked at his face. âWhat is it?'
âMy orders have come through. I'm recalled back to England. I sail on the
Daedalus
.'
She stared at him. âBut ⦠I've a month of my sentence to serve yet. Can't you wait till my papers come?'
âRachel,' he said gently. âYou're not coming with me. You know that.'
She stared now at the child, all expression vanished from her face, then nodded. âIt's true. You never promised me that. Only that you would take care of me.'
âI will. I've arranged for you to keep this house as long as you want it. There'll be rent from the farm here, meat, milk, whatever they cost. I'll have money sent to you regularly, enough to keep you in comfort.'
âAnd Andrew.' She still gazed at the baby's face, not at him.
He shut his eyes. He knew what this would do to her. âRachel ⦠the child must come to England as soon as he is old enough to travel.'
âWhat?' It was obvious that she had never even thought of this. âNo! You can't do that!'
âHe is my son,' he said softly. âA father has every right to say what happens to his child. What is better for him? To stay here, as a convict brat, or come to England as a gentleman? I will send Andrew to school, Rachel â a proper boarding school. Buy him a commission in the army, perhaps.'
She stared at him, her face like the stone cliffs above the cove. âAnd if you marry? What then?'
âI will never marry a woman who does not respect my son and give him a loving home. Andrew will always be my eldest son.' He crossed over to her and held out his hand. âI have never lied to you. Never promised more than I could.'
âNo,' she whispered. She took his hand in hers.
âThen trust me on this too.'
She shut her eyes, perhaps to stop the tears. âA baby wouldn't survive the voyage. Not without his mother.'
âI know. There is no hurry. When he's five, perhaps, or six.'
A silence. At last she said, âWhen do you leave?'
âAs soon as the ship can be restocked.'
âSo soon!'
âThere may not be another ship for months. Rachel, I'm sorry,' he said. âI wish it didn't have to be this way. But we both have known that this was coming.'
She wiped Andrew's face, then stood, the little boy held over her shoulder. âI'll go and start your packing.'
He watched them leave. The boy had still to say his first word. I will miss that, he thought. Hearing him say
Papa
, watching him learn to walk, losing his baby teeth.
And Rachel too â¦
She would never know how close he had been to saying:
Come to England, as soon as you are free
. Despite what it would mean he had almost said the words.
She had been more than a mistress, more than a housekeeper, more even than the mother of his son. She had been a friend, someone he trusted utterly, a good woman. He would leave part of his heart here with her and the boy.
But he couldn't stay here. Couldn't stay and let the place destroy him, as it had Phillip. A man could only take so much. And if he went home he could make a future for his son.
This was for the best. It had to be for the best.
He wanted to go upstairs to Rachel, to spend as many of these last hours with her and the boy as he could. But she needed time to accept the news. She wouldn't cry in front of him, he knew. She wouldn't plead. Not Rachel.
Instead he stepped into his study, looking over at his specimen jars and leaf press, deciding which of them to take, for luggage on the ship would be limited and some would be spoilt by the damp air. He would bring some of the eucalyptus oil he had distilled: it was useful for afflictions of the lungs and skin. The dried eucalypt sap that had proved so effective against dysentery, just like the fern root had been: if he could create a demand for that it might bring him even more than his book. His preserved frogs and snakes, the bats, the paintings of the birds, each one exquisite, though none as beautiful as Rachel as she gazed down at his son â¦
All at once he remembered the French ships, long ago when they first landed at Botany Bay. The French were taking live
animals back with them, for men of science to study back home. A live kangaroo would certainly make an impression â¦
And just as certainly die on the ship. He shook his head. There was no point even trying.
Grahhha!
Something rattled the shutters in the next room. It was the o'possum, demanding to be fed again. Rachel must have shut them to keep out the draught.
âCome along now, here you are,' Rachel's voice sounded like she had been crying as she let the animal in. He crossed over to the door and watched her; the o'possum perched on the kitchen table, taking a cob of corn from her fingers.
Corn, bread, hard tack ⦠that animal ate anything. And it was small enough to keep in a cage in his cabin.
True, an o'possum wasn't a particularly interesting beast â so like an American o'possum it was hardly worth describing in his book. But on the other hand it was tame, would eat from his fingers. No one had ever managed to tame an American o'possum. He imagined it sitting in its cage while the members of the Royal Society listened to the talk he would give. The ladies would coo and the men feed it biscuits.
âBig Lon!'
The convict ran up from the woodshed. âSir?'
âFind me a cage. One big enough for the o'possum.'
Big Lon stared. âWhy, sir? The animal is tame enough.'
âBecause I am going home at last. And the o'possum is coming with me.'