On 29 June 1915, Maud and Harry Nash marry in the Presbyterian manse in Ellice Street, Mt Victoria.
Before the wedding Maud makes a terrible mistake. She decides she will tell Harry the truth. There is no Mr Seaward. There was never any engineer. She is not a widow. She made it all up, but it was a necessary tale, because otherwise she would be a single woman with a child in tow, a social pariah, like Hawthorne's Hester Prynne and her daughter Pearl, each a liability to the other.
A resentful Nash feels he has been doubly deceivedâfirst, by Maud's lies, and second, by the timing of her confession. The invitations have already gone out. It is too late to recant and cancel the wedding.
A different question now occurs to Nash. If there is no Mr Seaward, then who is the father of the child?
Maud will not say.
Nor would Hester Prynne as she stood on a scaffold with her child before a hostile crowd, facing down a clergyman's insistence that she name âhim who tempted you to this grievous fall'.
âSpeak and give your child a name,' demands a voice in the crowd below the scaffold.
âNever,' she replies.
She is further condemned for her obstinacy and reminded of âthe vileness and blackness' of her sin.
The scene shifts to a courthouse where an old minister is instructed to examine Pearl for the Christian qualities as would befit a child of her age. Pearl escapes through an open window to stand on an outside step âlooking like a wild tropical bird of rich plumage, ready to take flight into the upper air'. Peering out the window the old man asks, âWho made thee?' Pearl sticks her finger in her mouth to consider the question. She announces she was not made at all, but (in a variation of my own cabbage-patch origins) was âplucked by her mother off the bush of wild roses that grew by the prison door'.
In frustration the magistrate turns to the physician who undertakes to analyse the child's nature and âfrom its make and mould, to give a shrewd guess at the father'.
Maud's refusal to name my mother's father enrages Nash. Someone has got away with something for which he must pay. He stomps about with moral indignation. But, I wonder, is that what really galls him? Or is it Maud's evasiveness on the subject of the father, the fact that she will not reveal the man's name or say anything bad about him? If she won't, then he willâand he ends up feeling foolish for slandering a ghost.
What does her silence mean? He turns his attention to Betty. She is someone else's love child. He is the sop who picks up the bills. He lifts her up and tries to shake her father's name out of her. She doesn't understand, of course, that she is a meteorite that has crashed into Nash's world or that what he holds in his hands is not just a child, but evidence of Maud's alternative object of affection.
Over the coming months Nash comes up with a formula designed to satisfy him and make Maud miserable. She must be made to understand that the world will not bend to her will. She cannot have the child and also expect to have him, not after the exposure of Mr Seaward as a fabrication. If she won't reveal the identity of the father, Maud must choose between Nash and her daughter.
It is easy to see where Eric and Ken have sprung from. Harry can find plenty in them that is reassuringly familiar. He is present, and so is Maud. But the man Maud won't name is also presentâin my mother's face, inside Harry's house, sitting up to the table, almost one of them.
Nash takes to bullying and humiliating mother and child in public.
By now, Mum and the Nashs are living in Manley Terrace, Newtown, and it is here that things spiral into violence.
One afternoon Maud comes home to find my mother bleeding from the face. Harry says the child cut her nose on the bars of the cot as he was lifting her out. Maud looks at the blood on the floor, and at my mother, and accuses Nash of striking her. Infuriated at having his word questioned, Nash raises his hand to hit her, whereupon Maud runs into the kitchen for the carving knife.
What the neighbours see is Harry Nash backing out of the house onto the street and Maud in the doorway holding the knife.
Some weeks later, the same neighbours witness Maud hanging out of an upstairs window. Two male hands grip her.
Whose hands are they? Harry Nash's? Who else could they belong to? In which case, are those hands trying to save Maud? But from whatâself-harm? Or are they threatening to drop her out the window?
The neighbours rush inside the house and pound up the stairs to find Maud on the bed, exhausted, with a black eye and red marks on her face.
The same neighbours report rows at nightâHarry playing his piano ever louder, Maud retaliating on her violin, scratching her notes, sawing into Nash's brain; Nash violently crashing his hands down on the piano keys. On it goes until the neighbours call the police. On their arrival, the transformation in Harry Nash is remarkable. He is suddenly calm, thoughtful, concerned.
By the time I enter the world the stain has spread. Maud is callous and dreadful and manipulative. But no one had bothered to wonder why.
In 1923 separation and divorce were the business of the court, and anyone willing to go through the ordeal had to face a jury, like a criminal, and the prospect of their dirty washing hung out for all to see.
For Maud, the courtroom has turned itself into a version of the scaffold on which Hawthorne's Hester Prynne was made to stand with her daughter Pearl and atone for her sins.
Nash's case is based on proving that Maud is guilty of mental cruelty towards him. Maud denies the charge, and for her own reasons is just as eager to prove that Nash is guilty of cruelty towards her with physical and verbal abuse of her and her child. And worseâblackmail, which is how the name of O.T. Evans surfaces, although his name never makes it into the newspaper coverage of the trial.
I read the letters between Maud and O.T., then returned to the court transcript. I picked up the letters. I read them more carefully a second and third and fourth time. I went back to the transcript. I didn't know what to think or whose word to take. Maud is as mad as a snake. Nash is a violent man. The transcript is infuriatingly inconclusive. However, the tinder and flames that produced the long smouldering silence that hovered over my childhood are there.
My mother was present all those times Maud and Nash traded blows. She was there when Nash dragged her mother about the house and jumped on her stomach. She was upstairs in the house in Manley Terrace when Nash attempted to throw her mother out the top-floor window. She was definitely there when Nash followed mother and daughter through the streets of Newtown shouting indignantlyâas if from some bizarre local remake of
The Scarlet Letter
âthat the child there is a bastard child!
By today's standards, such a charge is absurd. But the charge doesn't matter as much as the shame of having it yelled in the street, and shame is toxic.
Perhaps after a while these humiliations turned into the distant rumble of passing thunder. I imagine Mum was too young to know that the argument in that marriage was all about her, and that the lies Maud told were to protect her and her father.
Seeing everything so plainly set out, the âfacts' or, I should say, the nakedness of the factsâI didn't expect to feel the revulsion that came over me.
A woman who is my grandmother, a stranger up to this point, suddenly appears before meâon the pageâwaving a carving knife in her husband's face. It was embarrassing to meet her first up like this. I even felt oddly implicatedâshe is my grandmother after all. We may not have set eyes on one another but she is partly responsible for the genes spilling around inside me, and so I found myself looking for and finding traces of self-recognition, not so much in the violenceâapart from her attack on Nash's piano with an axe (I once took an axe to a blow heater which had exacerbated my hayfever)âbut in her persistence and the quiet indignation that sat behind it.
I read on. Maud throws filthy nappies in Nash's face. She aims a heavy enamel billy at him but instead strikes new baby Eric on the head. Nash dashes from the house with the baby in his arms thinking it is dead. Maud attacks Nash with a carving knife as he sits down to breakfast. She threatens to kill Nash, and attacks him with a towel-rack. The following day she chases him from the house with a table knife. She repeatedly insults Nash in front of his customers and staff, calling him a liar and âthe son of a convict'âthe unfortunate Nash was born in Melbourneâpossibly in retaliation for Nash calling her âthe mother of all lies'. She hurls an electric iron at him; attacks him with scissors; smashes a window in a fit of ill-temper; scratches his face, disfiguring him; kicks him in the groin while he is cutting the hedge and forcing him to his bed for a week. Soon after that, she flies at Nash with a pair of scissors. She sets fire to Nash's walking stick. âIn a fit of rage' she smashes a window with a clothes brush.
After a lifetime of hardly knowing a thing about Maud, suddenly there's too much. She is not the person I took her to be. She is worse.
Once more I make myself reread everything in the court transcript, and this time I decide differently. She is a quiet woman who, nonetheless, happens to be armed with a carving knife. She is a schoolteacher, a woman with blue eyes and blonde hair seeking a ârefined home for herself and her little girl' who, nonetheless, happens to be armed with a carving knife.
Why?
Harry Nash has applied to the court for a Decree of Separation. He is the petitioner; Maud is the respondent. In the language of the law Maud is charged with having
pursued a course of conduct calculated to break down [Nash's] spirit and to cause his health to break down, [Maud] having constantly heaped abuse upon [Nash], having frequently assaulted [Nash] and his children by a previous marriage, and having attempted to humiliate [Nash] before his employees and customers.
Nash's evidence must fit the charge. As the petitioner he also has first say. Maud's violence appears indefensible. But deeper into the transcript the picture changes. I found myself taking a more sympathetic view.