Authors: Nicole Alexander
When Mrs Kable finally announced that the women would retire, Kate was quick to leave the table. Without a backward glance she followed the older woman out into the hallway as the men laughed and chairs were dragged across the timber floor.
Once ensconced in the parlour, Mrs Kable lost a little of what affability remained. âI will forget your recent outburst, Miss Carter, but while you are under my roof you will refrain from any further outspokenness. Agreed?'
Kate gave a slight nod. The anger that had welled up within her was only just beginning to recede.
âNow to the matter at hand. Is it true that the Reverend led you here under false pretence? And if so, one must ask what occurred? There is no need for a response, men do what they wish and leave their women-folk to make the best of things. It is more important perhaps to ask if you have other means of support, a parent perhaps, or a relative?'
When Kate was not immediately forthcoming, Mrs Kable directed her to sit in one of the sofas near the fire. The room was comfortably warm. The effects of the food and brandy made her sleepy.
âYou are of marriageable age, Kate. Any number of young men would be quite willing for your hand. Lieutenant Wilson is certainly enamoured.'
âI had not thought of marriage,' stated Kate, sitting stiffly erect, her hands folded in her lap.
Mrs Kable seated herself on the opposite sofa. âWe of the weaker sex must seize upon an opportunity when it presents itself. Someone in your position â'
âMarriage is not something I have considered,' Kate repeated. Her personal state was none of this woman's business, and she was beginning to resent her dictatorial manner.
âMy dear, an assumption on your part has led you down a path that it now appears you do not wish to take.' She rose to stand before the fire. From the direction of the kitchen came a crashing sound and then a loud shriek. âHeavens! I am off to Sydney at week's end, but my travel is sullied knowing I leave my household in the grip of servants.'
A condemning voice quickly stilled the ruckus from the kitchen and Mrs Kable returned to her seat, rearranging her skirts. âNow, I can understand your reluctance to travel inland. My husband's cousin has selected land beyond the boundaries of the colony. Such an ungodly place to raise a family. We have two of their younger children here, out of harm's way, while the boys are safely returned to England this past year for education. But there is one child with them and our old cook, whom my husband forced upon them. The woman is partially blind so if you do accept the position, be wary of the ingredients she uses.'
The older woman wrung her hands together. In the firelight the creases that fanned from her eyes were etched deeply into fine skin. âThey should never have gone, at least Sarah, Samuel's wife, shouldn't have. She is at risk simply by virtue of her sex and yet she would not leave his side. Samuel, though his qualities are many, is an adventurer of means, the worst sort of husband. They would have been better to have remained in England, but I admit that to exist on two hundred pounds a year in London would be a sorry life. Perhaps he will be lucky, perhaps he will amass a great sheep holding and breed blood horses and create a seat in the north equal to his family's lineage in London, faded though it may be. Of course he could have sent a manager or an agent to establish the farm, as my dear husband suggested, but Samuel is all for taking the lead, and five thousand pounds is an
outlay that demands attention.' Mrs Kable took a breath. âI should tell you that I have heard the most dreadful of tales â of homes made out of sticks, of starvation and attacks by the Aboriginals. I think now of Governor Macquarie. I had such time for him and his good wife and their attempts at cultivating a relationship with the natives, but even here I feel the danger of uppity emancipists, wayward convicts and the Aboriginals. It will be far worse up-country for there will not be another living white soul within some miles. If I were you I would not go, but then I have already waved Sarah off. It would certainly reassure me if you were to journey northwards and provide her with the feminine companionship she must so sorely be in need of.'
The fire was beginning to die down. âMay I think on it?' Kate said, rising, although it was more statement than question. Her hostess frowned and Kate realised that she'd not been given permission to take her leave. There was a reason free settlers such as the Kables were known as
Exclusives
, but her hostess was forgetting that Kate's mother's grandparents were of similar stock, albeit not as wealthy.
âOf course,' Mrs Kable agreed, somewhat reluctantly. âAnd should you not want to journey forth I am sure that we can find a suitable husband for you. Native born or not, there will be a gentleman out there grateful for one such as you and I am sure we could find you a very good match, one that would not have been afforded to you had you been in England. Even with your background and that slight scar marking you as it does, the dearth of women in the colony makes even the most unappealing of our sex of high value, as I am sure you well know.'
âAnd if I have no wish for marriage?' Kate wondered if Mrs Kable had any other thoughts on a woman's role. She doubted it.
âEvery woman wishes for marriage, Kate. We have three stages in our lives: daughter, wife and mother. There is nothing else to aspire to. You are simply in a state of flux and have clearly not
had the exposure to young gentlemen, which is as it should be, although a good marriage could have been arranged some years ago. Think on Lieutenant Wilson.' She halted briefly for emphasis. âIt is, however, the immediate future that we must consider. If you decline the current position offered, you would require housing and suitable employ. There are a number of large establishments seeking the services of a housekeeper. I myself could use you, however knowing your background, well, it is one thing to be native born and under the care of the Reverend Horsley, quite another for your mother to have lived in his household for many years in the capacity of husband and wife. I am only too aware that such understandings are far from uncommon in the colony but I, for one, cannot countenance such immoral behaviour.' Mrs Kable produced a lace handkerchief from the sleeve of her gown. âIt quite ruined your arrival,' she sniffed, âespecially having only lately discovered that following your mother's passing you have continued to live there without a chaperone. You do understand how such an arrangement appears. But there are others, others more, shall we say, more avant-garde where such matters are concerned. But of course should you join Mr and Mrs Hardy up-country,' she continued brightly, âone can make a new life and a new reputation.'
Kate walked to the door, lifted her hand to the brass knob and then, changing her mind, faced her condemner. âMy mother is dead, Mrs Kable, and their “arrangement”, as you put it, was all that was available to her following my father's passing. On his death our land was sold off to pay our debts following his illness, leaving my mother to care for me. We uppity descendants of emancipists and free settlers have had our difficulties, but I'll not be condemned, nor my mother before me, when the Reverend Horsley sought her out and offered his home without the sanctity of marriage. I would add as well that as the Reverend was complicit in the very action that has so damned me and my mother in your eyes, that I wonder you had the temerity to let him break bread with you.'
Mrs Kable's lips trembled with barely suppressed indignation.
Kate left the parlour quickly, the creamy cotton and muslin of her skirts swishing as she selected a candlestick from the hallway table. Pinching the wick with the metal snuffer to ensure the candle's brightness, she lit it from one left burning and walked back towards her room.
1837 July â on the western side
of the Blue Mountains
The sun was dipping towards the horizon. Streaks of red-gold merged with the haze in the west, dappling the dull greens and browns of the land with a brightness that heralded a warming in the weather. Adam jogged rhythmically, his line of sight focused in the direction of the tribe's camp, his gait never varying. Song did not come to him as it did with Bidjia and the others when they travelled long distances, their minds turning inwards. Instead he concentrated on the passing world. Native plants were beginning to sprout. Male birds, intent on finding partners, displayed their plumage, strutting across the ground before attentive females. Soon the cold earth would warm. The chilly nights would be a memory and the welcoming breath of the female sun would entice.
At this midpoint between the Lycett home and the tribe it was easy to forget the world of man. All Adam need do was turn north or south. Both directions would lead him away from the current problems that he'd found himself in the middle of. He yearned to leave them to their fights and their folly but it was simply not in
him to desert the man who'd saved him and the other who'd taught him something of the world from which he'd come.
In a couple of hours it would be dark and the tribe would be settling for the night. The anger he'd felt had subsided a mile or so ago but it was a rage that stemmed from the intolerance displayed by Mr Lycett and the tribe. Neither would give way to the other, even just a little. What was to become of Bidjia and what remained of his clan if he stuck so stubbornly to the old ways? And how did the Lycetts expect to exist and flourish in this land if they were not considerate of those whose understanding and use of the country went beyond monetary concerns? Both parties were trying to manage the land and live off it in very different ways. There were lessons to be learnt that could benefit everyone, but Bidjia and Archibald Lycett were like two old rams butting heads. The former was unable to grasp the invasion of their land and the settlers' use of it; and the latter was a product of Britain's great class hierarchy, desperate to create a prosperous business, indifferent to the plight of the colony's original inhabitants and supported by the Crown.
Surely this was enough to fill his head without the added concern of Winston's friendship with Merindah.
Winston.
He was as fixed in his attitude and ideas as one of the many stars he was so entranced with. But Winston's moodiness and his tendency towards inflexibility were unwelcome traits made worse by an unforgiving nature, all of which had attributed to the fractious relationship with his father. These same characteristics made friendship with Winston difficult at times and despite the length of their association, Adam knew that as adults their relationship survived only because they no longer saw each other often.
âFather says you're to be schooled with me,' Winston, aged six, waited eagerly beside his mother.
âIt's alright, Adam, I have spoken to Bidjia. He has agreed to this.'
âHe should stay with us, Archibald, not with them.' Mrs Lycett gestured to where two Aboriginals retreated into the bush.
âFirst things first, Georgina. Now, Adam, why don't you go with Winston and sit on that bench under the tree? See, over there. Mrs Lycett will be there directly. Today she's going to teach you about England and the King and the great dominions he rules over, including this colony.'
âWhere is Bidjia?'
âShush, lad. Bidjia is a good man for he found you and cared for you, but you are not one of them, Adam. You are one of us. You must learn your place in the world. He has agreed to this and in return I have agreed that we will send you back to him in the evenings.' Mr Lycett met his wife's gaze. âFor the time being.'
âMy name's not Adam. It's Bronzewing,' he remembered saying, eager to be gone. He didn't understand everything these people said. Bidjia had promised to show him how to use a throwing stick and the kindly Mr Lycett, with his owl-ringed reading glasses and wooden pipe, was keeping him from practising with it.
Mrs Lycett grew impatient. The books she held were moved from one arm to the other. âIt is not a proper name, Adam. It is the name of a bird, a pigeon. Bidjia said that you told him your name when he found you. That name was Adam.'
âI like birds,' Bronzewing replied, his toes curling in the dirt. He watched as Winston ran to the verandah of the Lycett house. Dragging a chair to the hanging birdcage, he returned with the cane enclosure within which was a small brightly coloured bird.
âI like birds too,' Winston grinned.
Later that afternoon the two boys freed it, but when Mr Lycett asked who was responsible, Winston blamed Bronzewing.
Jardi was waiting for Adam a half-mile from the camp. He was sharpening a stick with a knife, the slender shavings falling on the long trousers he wore. Though his feet and torso were bare, Jardi liked wearing white man's clothes, especially during the cooler months.
âYou have been gone a long time. You have missed the hunt. Bidjia thinks that one day you will go back to the world you came from and not return.' He sheathed the blade and the pointy stick quickly, securing both at his waist and then picked up the spear lying on the ground.
âI had some thinking to do, and anyway I'm not particularly welcome in the white world at the moment,' Adam admitted.
âYour time with Lycett did not go well?'
Together they walked through the timber as the sun's rays lengthened. âNo, it didn't.' He noticed splats of blood on the man's trousers. âDo we eat tonight?'
Jardi was slow to answer. âSheep. It was wandering alone when we came across it and there was no-one about,' he explained quickly.
âDamn. I suppose it belongs to Lycett?'
The younger man shrugged. âIt doesn't matter. No-one will know.'
âThey always know and if they don't, they guess.'
âIt is a pity to waste such a skin. It would be good when the days grow short and the earth cold.'
âYou kept the hide? You can't. You must bury it.'
Jardi reached out an arm and stopped Adam from walking further. âThe child died and Merindah has given birth to another. It is early, by two moons, but Annie says it should survive.'
He nodded. âSo it's healthy?'
âIt is best that you see for yourself,' Jardi said cautiously.
âWhy? What's wrong with it?'
At the camp half a sheep roasted on the fire. The scent of the meat was strong and gamey in the still air. Adam knew they would have left the rest of the unwanted carcass lying in the grass where it had been killed. They only ever took what they needed. The smell of the cooking meat was enticing but if the wind picked up, a person would be able to smell it half a mile away. The skin lay in the dirt, ants crawling over it. Annie looked up from where she'd
been stoking the coals. âYou too late,' she said bluntly. âBidjia gone. The others go find him.'
âWhat do you mean he's gone?' He turned to Jardi. âWhere did he go to?'
The woman exchanged a brief glance with the younger man but said nothing.
âBury the skin,' Adam told her.
The woman didn't move.
âAnnie, you must bury it or there will be trouble.'
âI know trouble. Trouble come when whitefella come to our place.' She spat in the dirt and turned back to the fire.
Adam tossed the skin behind a log beyond the campsite. It was too quiet. There was no sign of the other children. âAre you going to tell me what happened, Jardi?'
The younger man shadowed his steps as Adam walked the thirty feet to where Merindah lay on her side by a humpy. There was blood on the ground where she'd cut herself in her grief for the dead child and a pile of sickness where she'd brought up the little she'd consumed that day.
On seeing Adam, Merindah sat up weakly. Her right eye was swollen and a cut to her lip was caked with dried blood and dirt. Jagged bloody welts on her chest and arms and a blood-edged tomahawk in the dirt showed the girl's pain had been etched for eternity. Adam squatted near her, Jardi lingered some feet behind him. The question that needed to be asked caught in his throat. Had Bidjia learnt of Merindah's relationship with Winston? Had he gone to see his friend? On the ground was the dress she'd shown him earlier. It was shredded.
âHow long ago did Bidjia leave?' At best there was a chance that Bidjia might use this insult to negotiate the tribe's movement across the Lycett farm, to reach an understanding on their continued use of the disputed land. Such bargaining was rare, but Bidjia and Jardi had grown to understand white ways.
âShow him,' Jardi said roughly. âShow Bronzewing the child.'
The girl's tear-rimmed eyes were glazed but she retrieved the small bundle from the shadows of the hut, laying the child on the ground and unwrapping the blanket. The movement woke the baby. The child was tiny, its face pinched, but it moved its arms and legs with weak determination and let out a mewling noise. As Merindah leant forward to pick the baby up, Adam turned to Jardi.
âBidjia cannot forget such a thing,' Jardi said curtly.
Adam looked back at mother and child. One dark-skinned, the colour of polished ebony, the other neither white nor black, but somewhere in between. âWhose is it?' asked Adam, although even as he asked the question he knew Winston was responsible. Who else could it be?
âThere is nothing you can do.' Jardi placed a hand on his shoulder.
Bidjia had been wronged. There would be retribution.
âSo he knows who the father is?' Adam asked hesitantly.
âI not tell, but â¦' The girl's voice faded. It was clear that Bidjia had thrashed the truth from her. She leant forward in the dirt. âHelp him, Bronzewing, he's your friend,' she sobbed.
âDamn.'
âNow you are back you can come with me.' Jardi snatched the baby from Merindah's arms. The girl screamed.
âI can't be part of this,' Adam argued. âIt's not right. It's not the child's fault.' He ran his fingers roughly through his hair. âGive the baby back, Jardi. Do it now.'
âNo.' He pressed the tiny bundle to his shoulder. âIt is the mother's place to rid the child, but as she will not,' Jardi turned angrily to the weeping young woman, âthen it falls to another.'
âBloody hell.' Even if Jardi did leave the baby alone, one of the other clan members would return to abandon the half-caste child in the bush. âI have to go after the others,' Adam decided.
âYou can't follow Bidjia. You must leave my father alone. Retribution is his by right. Come.'
âI've got to stop him. If he hurts Winston â¦'
âAnd what if Bidjia is wounded? Colby or Darel?' Jardi retaliated. âOr do you place your bond with the white above that of the tribe?'
âIf a white is killed, Jardi, the police will come after the whole clan,' Adam stated. âIs that what you want, to be hunted down like a dog? All for the sake of a woman?'
âMy
father's
woman.' Jardi turned on his heel and vanished into the scrub with the baby.
Merindah's screams haunted Adam as, musket in hand, he ran off in the direction of the Lycett farm. From afar came the dull but unmistakeable thud of a shot being fired.
The sun was at its lowest point on the horizon by the time Adam reached the creek and the lightning-struck tree. There'd been rain somewhere in the mountains for the small bubbles that raced along the water's surface spoke of it rising, enough to freshen the waterway. He drank thirstily, leaning over to cup the cool liquid with one hand. At the base of the woody plant, he examined the area for any signs of blood. Winston's sketch pad and charcoal lay discarded in the dirt. There were footprints, mixed with the marks made by his friend's boots, but no blood. By the impressions on the ground and the direction the prints went it appeared that Winston had run off towards the homestead on Bidjia's approach, and that Colby and Darel had followed the men some time later.
A second shot sounded.
Adam got to his feet and ran like the wind. Leaping over stubby bushes and weaving through the trees, his heart pounded within a tightening chest. There was no birdsong, no kangaroos or emus scattering at his approach. There was nothing. When the high-pitched woman's scream began and went on and on, eventually fading into the silent void that the surrounding bush had become,
Adam knew it was all over. His knuckles grasping the musket turned white. He was too late.
He approached the house cautiously. The bench beneath the schooling tree was empty, the contents of Mrs Lycett's needlework basket strewn across the ground. The parrot still hung in its cage on the verandah and squawked agitatedly, the chatty bird fluttering at the cane sides of its enclosure, desperate to get out. The desk and chair were overturned. Movement in the doorway of the house caught Adam's attention. He dropped to his knees and waited.