Authors: Deborah Challinor
âGod.' Friday sat back in her chair. âI don't know how you've got away with it all these years. It's bloody hard enough being a woman when you are one. What about your beard and all that? Is that why you're so heavy-handed with the face powder?'
âI take off my visible body hair with a special lotion. And I wear scarves to cover this.' Bella tapped her throat, currently concealed by the high, lacy collar of her robe.
âYour Adam's apple?'
Bella nodded. âIt sticks out like dog's balls. I pad my bodice but I can't do much about my big hands and feet.'
âWhat do Becky and Louisa think about you being, er, you?'
âThey don't know. Or if they do, they know better than to say anything. Stupid pair of cows.'
âI always thought so. I wouldn't trust them.'
âI don't. I don't trust anyone.'
âNot even your family?'
âMy mother, yes. But not my sisters, and certainly not my brother, Jonah. He's here in New South Wales somewhere, making an arsehole of himself. My other brother was here, too, briefly, but he's dead.'
Friday choked on her whisky, which shot out of her nose, burning like fire. âJonah? Jonah Leary?'
âI believe you've already met him,' Bella said sourly.
âJonah's your
brother?'
âUnfortunately.'
âBut . . .' Friday had the most outrageous thought. âDid you change your name when you, you know, changed everything else?'
âOf course I did.'
Oh, no. She couldn't be. âYou're not, you weren't . . . Bennett Leary?'
âOh, well done.'
âOh, for fuck's
sake!
Do you know how much trouble that prick's caused trying to find you?'
âI've a fair idea.'
âAnd you just sat back and watched?'
Bella looked genuinely taken aback. âYou didn't expect me to help you, did you?'
âHe's your fucking brother!'
Friday shouted. âAnd he's looking for
you
! You selfish fucking bitch!'
Bella shook her head. âNo, you don't understand. He's looking for Bennett Leary. I'm not Bennett Leary, I'm Bella Shand, née Jackson.'
âOh, for Christ's sake. Show me your back.'
âWhat?'
âYour back. Show me.'
âOh, that.'
Bella turned modestly away from Friday, opened the ties of her robe and let it fall, then slipped her arms out of the straps of her chemise, revealing the tattooed map covering her pale-skinned back. It extended from a waist unnaturally narrowed from wearing a corset for years and up and across her protruding ribs to the bony flare of her shoulder blades; it was very detailed and well executed but showed no street names or landmarks of any kind.
âThat's
it
,' Friday exclaimed. âThat's what Jonah's been looking for.'
âI forget it's there,' Bella said, rearranging her chemise and robe. âIt belongs to my old life. And it doesn't matter now anyway.'
âIt bloody does to Jonah. He kidnapped a child and nearly killed me for it.'
âNo, it
really
doesn't matter. My father had me, Jonah and my other brother, Malcolm, tattooed years ago. If you look at the three maps together, they show where to find a swag of gold he stole. He thought my mother didn't know about it, but she did. She was always far smarter than him. She took it and gave it to me when I left for Birmingham.' Bella laughed. âJonah's been running around after something that's been gone for years.'
Incensed, Friday burst out, âYou could have bloody well told him!'
âWhy? He deserves a dose of misery and frustration. See how
he
likes it.'
âWe don't bloody well deserve what he's done to us.'
âWell, I can't help that.'
âYou could've. You could've helped a lot.' Friday shook her head in disbelief. âYou know, you must be the most self-centred, manipulative person I've ever met. I bet
no
bugger comes to your funeral.'
âWell, you'll soon find out, won't you?'
âWhat?'
Bella sighed, but it wasn't a sigh of regret or sadness, just impatience. âYou were right, I am dying.'
Sod
, Friday thought, all that time wasted getting those letters. âWhen?'
Bella shrugged. âA few weeks.'
âWhat's wrong with you?'
âI don't know. Neither does my physician.'
âDoes he know about . . . ?' Friday refrained from waving at Bella's groin again.
âNo. I haven't let him examine me that closely.'
âMight be why he can't tell what's wrong with you. Do you care?'
âAbout what?'
âThat you're dying?'
âNot particularly. I've lived more or less the way I've wanted to for ten years, and I think it's been enough. I've certainly made enough money. I'm tired, but most of all I'm lonely, and that's never going to change. Anyway, I don't have much choice, do I? My body's letting me down. Again.'
âWhat'll happen with the undertaker?'
âI do worry about that. I'd hate to have to leave this world as a man.' Bella took another drink and held out her tumbler for a refill. âTell me about you.'
Friday didn't know if she wanted to now, not after the revelation about Jonah Leary, but she'd made a deal.
âI started whoring when I was fourteen. Or was it thirteen? I forget. My mother was a whore, and taught me how to do that but not much else. She wasn't a very good mother. Don't know who my father was. I had a child when I was fifteen, named Maria, but she died a few months later. It was my fault.' Grabbing the whisky bottle, she filled her own tumbler almost to the brim. âI
had my first serious love affair when I wasn't much older, with a girl who killed herself after she was maimed by a cully. I never really bothered after that till I met Aria.'
âThe love of your life?'
Eyeing Bella for signs of sarcasm, Friday was surprised not to see any. âMaybe, unless I ruin it.' Whoops, she hadn't meant that to come out.
âWith your drinking?'
Not knowing whether she wanted to respond to such a rude comment from someone she hardly knew, and loathed heartily, Friday hesitated. But then, this was a bloody strange conversation to be having in the first place. Flippantly, she replied, âWho can tell?'
âI can,' Bella said. âYou will ruin it. Take my advice and quit the booze altogether or you'll lose her. I've seen it a hundred times. This is from someone who'd've killed for a love affair like yours.'
âI'm not taking advice from you!'
âFine.' Bella made a show of examining her fingernails.
âHave you finished preaching?'
âI have.'
âGood. What I was going to say was I bloody hated whoring. One or two of my regulars I could just about tolerate, especially the big tippers, but in general they gave me the shits. I hated their sweaty, leering faces and their stinking hairy bodies and piggy behaviour. Five pounds doesn't mean someone owns me, you know. I felt just like a lump of bloody meat.' Friday jabbed a finger at Bella. âYou reckon you're desperate to be a woman? Well, try having eight or nine coves in a row treating you like you're nothing more than a bucket to be emptied into and see how
you
like it. My bloody minge nearly fell off, some days. I hated it, I really did, but it's all I know how to do.'
âBollocks. You're not stupid.'
âThen stop saying I am.'
âYou could've learnt some other trade.'
âWhy would I? You said it yourself â with this hair and these tits, whoring was the easiest thing in the world. And the chink I was making! Though I don't expect I made anywhere near what you've got stashed away.'
âYou didn't.' Bella wiped beneath an eye and examined the smear of kohl on her finger. âI gather you make as much now as Elizabeth Hislop's flogging mistress?'
Christ, she'd done it again! âHave you been spying on me?'
Bella shrugged. âI keep my eyes and ears open.'
âWell, don't! My life's none of your fucking business. Anyway, I
had
to earn that money. I had no choice, thanks to you and your bloody blackmail demands. And we had responsibilities, friends in the Factory.'
âPoor, ugly Janie Braine and that kid of hers. And Rachel Winter's baby, of course.'
âYou shut up about Janie, and don't you
dare
say anything nasty about Charlotte. Or Rachel.'
Bella stopped fiddling with her face. âJanie always could look after herself. If she'd wanted to come and work for me, I'd willingly have taken her, kid and all. But she didn't. I did ask.' She was silent for a second, picking at a loose embroidery thread on her robe. âAs for Rachel Winter, I do regret what happened to her.'
It was all Friday could do to stop herself from belting Bella again. âYou regret it? You fucking
regret
it! You bloody well should. It was your fault! You gave her to Keegan.'
âI know. I admit I made a mistake there. I didn't realise quite what a bastard he was. But I couldn't pass up the blackmail opportunity when I saw what you'd done to him.' Bella glanced up. âWhich I did think he deserved.'
âYou
saw
what we'd done?'
Bella nodded. âI was in the warehouse. I watched the tail end of it.'
God almighty, Friday thought. Just our bloody luck. âShe came back, you know.'
âWho came back?'
âRachel.'
âFrom where?'
âWell, I don't know where folk go when they die, do I? But we've all seen her, and I think Harrie still does.'
For a moment Bella looked terrified.
To make her feel even worse, Friday added, âSo who knows, you might bump into her. You can say sorry to her in person. Are you religious?'
âCatholic. Lapsed. And I mean it: I am sorry about Rachel Winter. But I don't believe in ghosts or spirits or whatever you want to call them.'
âYour face does. You were shitting yourself a second ago.' Then Friday had an appalling thought. âIf you're a Papist, will you be buried with Clarence?' Because if she was, and his grave was opened to shove her in, they were bound to discover it was already a bit crowded.
âOver my dead body,' Bella said without a trace of irony. âI'd rather burn in hell than lie next to him for the rest of eternity. I'll burn in hell anyway. No priest will absolve me of
my
sins.'
âWorry about that when the time comes.'
âEasy for you to say. Also, I have amends to make.'
Oh, for God's sake, Friday thought. Bloody Catholics. There was always some sort of drama before they kicked the bucket, especially with the lapsed ones. âAre you making amends to us?'
âNo. Why should I?'
âBecause you've made our lives hell for the last three and a half years.'
âI have not. How?'
Friday wondered if Bella's illness or the medicine she was taking was affecting her brain. âBy demanding hundreds of pounds off us
and threatening to tell the police we killed Keegan! I've just told you how bloody hard I had to work to get that money, and poor Harrie went insane with the worry of it and from kicking the shite out of him in the first place. It had a
terrible
effect on her, not to mention your prick of a brother hounding her for months.'
âAh, but she ended up marrying decent, honest, well-off Dr Downey, though, didn't she?' Bella said. âAnd now she lives in a lovely home full of fine things with a view of the harbour, a lovely little adopted child, and her three siblings the good doctor brought all the way from London. And you, you don't have to make your money on your back any more, you have a beautiful lover, and plenty of money.' She snorted, blowing little flakes of drying blood out of her nose. âAny flies in your ointment are the result of your own ugly conduct. And that Sarah fell on her feet, too, didn't she, marrying a man she adores and spending her days making beautiful things out of gold and precious gems? All this and you're still convicts serving sentences! You're not doing too badly, you know, the three of you. No, I don't see why I should worry about amends.'
Friday gazed at her, for once unable to think of a suitable â or even an unsuitable â response. Because Bella was right; for convicts barely halfway through their sentences, they weren't doing too badly at all. They were living far more comfortably, and with more freedom, than many â no doubt most â convict women in New South Wales. But they'd damn well paid for that comfort and freedom.
It was time to go.
âAre we agreed then?' she said. âNo more blackmail?'
Bella reached for a brown bottle on her nightstand, drank straight from it then wiped her mouth with the back of her hand, smearing her lip rouge. âProviding you keep your side of the bargain.'
God, Friday thought, she looks a right fright now, with her messy face paint, bloody nose, bony cheeks and those great dark bags under her eyes.
Bella coughed, then rasped, âDid you hear me? Are you absolutely clear? What you saw and heard here doesn't go beyond these four walls.'
Friday gave a cursory nod. Of course I'm clear, you stupid woman.
âSay it,' Bella demanded.
âI'm clear!'
âSay “I won't tell a soul”.'
âI won't tell a soul.'
âBecause if you do,' Bella said, âI really don't think I could bear the shame.'
Startled, Friday stared at her. Of all the things Bella might have said, she hadn't expected that.
As Friday emerged from Bella's bedchamber, Becky barged in.
âGet out!' Bella bellowed.
Red-faced, Becky retreated into the hallway. âWhat was all the shouting and noise about?'
âNone of your business,' Friday replied.
âI heard a gun go off.'
âSo?'
âWhat did she say to you?' Becky looked suspicious, annoyed, worried and jealous, all at once.
âI said, none of your
business.
'
âWell, hurry up. I'll see you out.'
âI can see myself out.'
âNot likely. I'm not letting you wander around the house by yourself.'
Too late, Friday thought, Sarah's already done that. She followed Becky along the hall, thinking about everything she had to tell Harrie, Sarah and Aria. They'd be absolutely thrilled about the end of the blackmail, and
die
when she told them Bella was actually a cove.
But by the time she was on the carriageway outside, the notion of blabbing Bella's secret had lodged uncomfortably in her chest like a lumpy great cider burp that wouldn't come out, and she
didn't know why. She was standing there, trying to work it out, when Aria screamed.
âFriday!
The dogs!'
She didn't even look â though she could hear their horrible, yellow-clawed toes gouging the gravel as they raced towards her â and sprinted for the gates, slipping through with barely a second to spare. Sodding Becky.
âWhy were you just standing still, you fool?' Aria asked, smacking Friday's arm. âYou could have been savaged.'
âSorry, I was thinking.'
âWell,
don't
think. Sometimes it is not good for you. You were gone a long time. I have been worried. I heard a pistol shot. What happened?'
Relaxing into a smile, Friday kissed her as they walked. âIt's over. She's agreed to stop blackmailing us.'
She
. It was funny: now that she knew Bella was really a man, try as she might she couldn't stop thinking of her as a woman.
âYou have accepted her word?' Aria looked dubious.
âI have, actually.'
âAnd she admitted to stealing the upoko tuhi of my kin?'
With a stab of guilt, Friday realised she hadn't quite got around to getting a confession from Bella regarding Uncle Whiro's head. âShe pretty well admitted Furniss did the actual stealing â'
âI already know he did.'
âAnd Clayton's letters say she was behind everything. That's proof enough, isn't it?'
âNo.'
âIt is. It was enough to stop her blackmailing us.'
âWas it?'
Friday looked away, trying to avoid Aria's gaze, but Aria stopped, gripped her chin and stared into her eyes.
âOw, Aria, that hurts!'
âDo not turn away from me. What is it that you are not telling me?'
âNothing!'
âYou cannot tell lies to me, Friday. I will always know.'
âI had a drink. Of whisky.'
âI know. I can smell it. There is nothing else?'
Friday shook her head. âCan you let go of my face?'
Aria did. They started walking again.
âShe's dying,' Friday said, rubbing her jaw. Sometimes Aria forgot how strong she was. âIf we'd waited a bit longer, we wouldn't have had to do any of this.'
âDid she say she is dying?'
âYes. Becky wouldn't confirm it, but.'
âIt could be a ruse.'
âDon't think so. She looks like shite. What's the time?'
Aria produced her watch. âAlmost half past five.'
âChrist, is it? We'd better hurry up and get back to the Siren. Harrie and Sarah'll be there soon.'
On the way home, Friday pondered her unexpected reluctance to tell the others about Bella's secret, and thought perhaps she might know what was behind it. It was Bella's comment about being unable to bear the shame if folk found out. She hated to admit it, even to herself, but she and Bella had a very similar cross to bear. Because of her liking for girls, shame had been a constant presence in her own life, together with a grinding, ever-present fear that she would be found out and publicly ostracised for being a degenerate. It must be so much worse for Bella, though. It was awkward but certainly not impossible to explain away sharing a bed with a woman, especially when accommodation was at a premium, and it often was, but to be caught wearing a dress, rouge and kohl when you were a man â there wasn't much you could say in defence of that, was there?
For the hundredth time at least, she thanked a God in whom she didn't believe for Elizabeth Hislop, who didn't care a jot
that she was a tribade, for Sarah and Harrie and the girls she worked with at the brothel, most of whom didn't care either, and everyone at the Siren's Arms, who, if they did care, turned a blind eye.
But Bella had no one, did she? Becky Bitchface and Lardarse Louisa certainly weren't trustworthy. Friday had known them longer than Bella had, since Newgate Gaol in London, and if they did know what she was, they'd've been down the road and blackmailing her before the front door had slammed. No, Bella had to lie constantly and hide who she was from everyone, all the time, night and day, year after year. No wonder she was always in such a foul bloody mood.
Shocked at herself, Friday suddenly wondered why the hell she was defending their most devoted enemy. The bitch had been utterly vile since the moment they'd met. What was wrong with her? She must need a gin, that's what.
At the Siren, Jack said, âSarah and Harrie are here. I let them into your room.'
âYou go up,' Friday said to Aria. âI need the bog.'
But instead of the privy it was the linen cupboard she visited, for several large swigs from her stash of gin. Suitably fortified, she trotted upstairs.
Sarah and Harrie greeted her with expectant faces.
Harrie said, âAria says it's good news?'
âCertainly is,' Friday said, grinning and flopping onto the bed next to Aria. âShe's agreed to stop the blackmail. It's over. We're free!'
âWell, thank God for that,' Harrie said, beaming. âI feel . . . Oh, I don't know how I feel, actually. Quite strange.'
âDo you believe her?' Sarah asked, ever mistrustful.
âThat is what I asked, too,' Aria said.
Friday said. âI do.'
âWhy?'
âGod, Sarah, you're such a doom-monger,' Friday complained. âYou can never accept good news, can you? Does it give you hives or something?'
âI can if I believe it. Was it the letters?'
âYep.'
âShe was actually genuinely worried that the police finding out about her smuggling would trump us kicking Keegan to death?'
âWell, if you didn't think it was going to be enough, why did we waste our time fucking about burgling Bloodworth's house and visiting Clayton and all that?'
âBecause we had to do something.'
âShe's dying, Sarah,' Friday said. âMaybe she's, I don't know, making amends or something.'
âDying from what?'
âShe doesn't know. She's the size of a matchstick and coughing blood and her hands are all warty.'
Harrie shuddered. âEw. I hope you didn't touch her.'
Sarah said, âKnowing her, and we do, I'd've thought that if she knows she's dying, she'd want to wreak as much havoc as possible before she does. Making amends, my arse.'
âFriday is not telling the truth,' Aria said.
Sarah looked at her. âWhat do you mean?'
âSomething happened in the house. She will not tell me what.'
Sarah turned her gaze to Friday, her crossed leg beneath her skirt jiggling agitatedly. âWell?'
Oh God, Friday thought. Thanks a lot, Aria. Why did you have to say that? She felt two-faced and dirty, and hated that it bothered her. This was nasty, evil, vicious Bella after all. âWe had a fight. I belted her and she went arse over tit and her shift went up round her ears. She had nothing on underneath. I saw . . . she had . . . she's got a cock.'
Sarah, Harrie and Aria all gaped at her.
âWhat?'
Sarah exclaimed, astounded.
âShe's a cove. A man. She's not a woman at all.'
âBloody
hell!
She kept that well hidden.' Sarah frowned. âShe? Or he?'
âCan you do that?' Harrie asked, her eyes huge. âThat's . . . what about her beard?' She looked utterly bewildered. âBut she's got a woman's voice. And all those lovely frocks. And she's such a
cow.'
âThat's why she's agreed to stop blackmailing us, isn't it?' Sarah said. âI mean he. So you wouldn't tell. It wasn't the letters at all.'
Friday shrugged. âDoes it matter, as long as it has stopped?'
âBut you
have
told,' Aria said.
âI know, and now I feel â' Friday shut up just in time.
âWhat?' Sarah demanded. âBad? For God's sake, why?'
âI dunno.'
âYou fool.'
Friday was getting a bit sick of misery-guts Sarah. âDon't call me a fool. Look, who cares about any of that? It's her business, not ours.'
âDon't you mean his?' Sarah said.
âNo, I mean
her
. Don't be a bitch. She honestly feels she's a woman, and she can't help that. It's just . . . a mistake of nature. It does happen sometimes, you know. I've seen it before.'
âIt's bloody unnatural, that's what it is,' Sarah said, âand an offence in the eyes of God.'
Harrie gasped. âSarah Green, what a hypocrite. You don't even believe in God.'
âSarah, for fuck's sake, put yourself in her shoes,' Friday said. âIt must be bloody terrible for her.'
âWhy the hell should I? She's . . . he's . . . she â'
âSee? You can't stop calling her “she”, can you? That's because that's what she is. A she.'
â
Why
are you defending her?' Sarah almost shouted. âWhat's wrong with you? She's been an absolute bloody bitch to us. She
doesn't deserve any sympathy at all. None! If there's something amiss with her, she should just put up with it and get on with life like everyone else has to, and not prance around making a deviant of herself.'
âStop it!' Harrie blurted. âWe've just had the best news we've heard in ages, and you two are having a go at each other!'
Friday leant back on the bed, forcing herself to relax. âSorry, Harrie love. You're right. We should be celebrating. There'll be no more blackmail and Bella's doing the decent thing and kicking the bucket, so our problems are over. What more could we ask for?' Then: âShit, that's right. Do you know who she was before she turned into Bella Jackson?'
Sarah said, âNapoleon Bonaparte?'
âBennett Leary, that arsehole Jonah's brother.'
Harrie let out a little squawk. âSo he's been here all along, right under everyone's noses?'
âShe,' Friday said. âShe's got the map tattooed on her back and everything. But the treasure the three tattoos were supposed to lead to's long gone. It was a stash of gold. Bella's mother nicked it and gave it to her when she left Liverpool.'
âHow do you know all this?' Sarah asked.
âShe told me.'
âYou two had a right old chin-wag, didn't you?'
âWhen Bella was not firing a pistol at her,' Aria said. âWhich I heard with my own ears.'
Flapping a hand as though getting shot at barely mattered, Friday said, âShe missed. She's got this palsy thing as well as the warts. Though I admit I just about shat myself.'
Sarah said, âWhy has she told you these things? You, of all people? She hates you.'
âHow should I know?'
âDoes she know her brother's looking for her?' Harrie asked.
Wincing, Friday nodded.
âShe
does?'
Harrie burst out. âThen why the hell didn't she call him off? Then he might have left poor Charlotte alone! And me.'
âI don't think she wanted to. She ran away from her family ten years ago. They all hate her for being
âA cove in a dress?' Sarah offered.
âYes, except for her mother. And Jonah's such a bastard. We know that. I don't blame her for not wanting to have anything to do with him, do you?'
âPeas in a pod,' Sarah muttered.
âWell, I'm going to tell him,' Harrie said.
Friday turned to her. âYou can't.'
Harrie almost levitated off her chair with outrage. âWhy not? What is
wrong
with you? Charlotte's my
child
. What do you expect me to do? If telling him means he'll leave her alone, then I will.'
â'Cos you'll be telling Leary his brother's going round as a woman, and our deal with Bella will be off. We'll be back in the shit again, if not in gaol or swinging from the gallows if she decides just to tell the police.'
âOh, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck,
fuck!'
Harrie swore with such spitty vehemence her face went scarlet.
Everyone stared at her: she hardly ever said that word.
âI'm sorry, love,' Friday said. âShe'll be dead in a few weeks, a month at the most. You can say what you like then.' Though she felt uneasy about Leary seeing Bella in her woman's shroud, should he inspect her tattoo before she was buried, and she had no doubt he would see her. He would mock even though she was dead: Bella would absolutely hate that.
Harrie's eyes glittered with tears. âBut it's so
tiring
watching Charlotte every second of the day. I worry all the time. She doesn't like it, either. She thinks she's done something wrong.'
Sarah said, âDon't worry, I promise the minute Bella kicks the bucket, I'll come with you and we'll tell him, all right?'
Harrie nodded, got out her hanky and honked into it. âAre you sure she's dying?'