Jessica continues to sob, her head buried again in her arms. Hester and Meg, brought to silence, look to Joe, stunned.
âJessica, your mother's right. If it gets out that you're pregnant to Billy Simple we'll all be destroyed. It will be the end of us as a family. Nobody is ever to know you're in the family way. You hear me, girl? You will not be seen by anyone. You'll not show your face anywhere. You will not leave this house.'
Jessica looks up at Joe again, appealing to him. âShe's not going to kill my baby, then, Father?' Jessica turns to Hester. âI swear if you try, I'll tell the whole world you done it, you killed my baby!' she howls.
âHa, she's mad!' Hester snaps, turning her back on Jessica.
âJessie, go to your room,' Joe commands. âYou stay there until you're called. Meg, you go to yours too, I want to talk to your mother.'
Jessica gets up from the table and walks towards her bedroom. Her nose is running and her eyes are red and swollen from crying all day. She lets out an involuntary sob as she passes Meg, standing with her arms folded, the hint of a cruel smile at the corners of her mouth. âNow you've gone and done it,' Meg says smugly, so that only Jessica can hear. âYou've got a bastard in your stomach.' Jessica is too forlorn to answer her and continues past her to her own room. âYou're disgusting, a whore,' Meg hisses after her.
In the kitchen Joe sighs. âPerhaps it's someone else's,' he says hopefully.
Hester looks up sharply. âWhose?'
âI dunno â there's other lads she works with at Riverview Station.'
âShe's had no work at Riverview for months now. Except for going to Wagga for the trial, she's been here working with you.'
âMaybe someone she met at the trial? I wasn't always with her. It were a boarding house where we stayed - other men were about.'
âJoe, the trial was one month ago. She's two and a half months gone!' Hester looks knowingly at her husband. âHe's the only one Jessica's been with alone. It was two and a half months ago she spent the whole night with Billy Simple when she took him to Narrandera. Your daughter's no heroine, Joe, she's a tart, a floosie, call it what you like. I dare say she's been doing it with him for some time. I can't even think about it, it's that horrible. I should have listened when Ada Thomas, God rest her soul, said Jessica was always around the monster when she went over to work at Riverview.'
Joe looks up at his wife. âThat's because they were mates. I don't believe you, Jessie's not like that. Maybe something happened on the way to Narrandera, but it would be only the once.'
Hester sighs. âOnce is quite enough. It doesn't matter if it's once or a dozen times, she's pregnant to a monster, Joe. What will the child be like, have you thought of that?'
âWhoa, wait now, Billy Simple weren't born a wrong âun. It were the horse kicked him that done his brain in.
He were a strappin' lad, no fool neither â his children will be normal as you and me.'
âJoe, he's a murderer
and
an Irish Catholic. There's bad blood there and that's passed on,' Hester says darkly.
âWhat about young Jack? It could be him, they're out alone in the bush often enough,' Joe says. âHe's been over here from time to time, brought the bull over once, took it back, that's twice. There were other times. We could tell him Jessica's pregnant. If he'd done it to her he'd say so, he's a decent enough lad. He'd do the right thing.'
âJoe, don't you dare! Nobody must know about this, least of all Jack Thomas. It would ruin Meg's chances.' Joe looks at her. âWhat chances? It's too late now. She's done her dash â he's off to Sydney on Sunday.'
Hester clears her throat and then swallows hard. âThere's news you don't know yet and God knows this is not the time to tell you.' She shrugs her shoulders.
âIt's that ... â
Joe looks up suspiciously. âWhat?' he interjects. âIt's Meg. She could be pregnant to Jack Thomas.' Joe stares at Hester, unable to comprehend.
Hester holds up her hand. âNo, wait â don't say anything, let me explain.'
Joe brings his hands up to cover his face. âOhmegawd! What are you saying, woman?'
âRemember how you once said it would be the only way Meg could get him? Well, it happened while you were away. Jack saw the fence posts the timber-getter brought and I happened to mention to him they were in the wrong place and would need to be shifted to the north paddock. He came over on Wednesday, quite unexpected.' Hester tries to look contrite. âI mentioned your bad back and he offered to load them and move them.' Hester pauses and says, âI'm sorry Joe, but you could have gotten hurt moving them.'
âThat were decent of him,' Joe growls, though plainly unhappy. âBut him knowing I've got a bad back ain't gunna help me. You shoulda known better, Hester. Shearing season's coming up, I need the work at the station.' âJack won't be there, Joe. He's off to the war. He's not going to tell George Thomas â they're still not on speaking terms.'
âAnyway, what's the fence posts got to do with him and Meg?' Joe asks.
âWell, I wasn't here Wednesday night. I was called over to see old Mrs Baker â you know, the organist at St Stephen's. She's got a bad heart â you know how she's always going on about it so that nobody takes much notice â but she was took ill and sent for me. I rode over in the sulky and when I got there she was that unwell I decided to stay the night and mind her.' âSo, what yer tellin' me, him and her was alone? Jack and Meg?'
âWell, I wasn't to know that he was coming over, was I?' Hester protests. âMeg naturally asked him to stay for tea, to thank him for moving the posts.' Hester pauses and shrugs. âTwo young people in love left together all night ... It's not surprising under the circumstances.'
âYou mean Meg saw her big opportunity?'
âShe loves him, Joe!'
âEh? That one only loves herself. She bloody saw her chance and took it, grabbed it with both hands. I'll bet she couldn't get her bloomers down fast enough.'
Hester sighs. âYou're wrong about Meg, but I won't argue with you, Joe Bergman. The fact is, we can't ask Jack about Jessica.'
âOh, I see, you
do
think he could've done it to Jessie as well?'
âNo, Joe, I don't. You know as well as I do whose child Jessica's carrying. It's Billy Simple's. She'd have told us if it was Jack's, if only to spite Meg.'
Joe frowns, thinking. âI dunno. Jessie's not foolish, she's not that sort of girl.'
âHa, little do
you
know!' Hester exclaims.
âWhat do yer mean by that?'
âNothing,' Hester says, covering up. âJust that she's a young girl.'
âBullshit. That's not what you mean. What are you saying about Jessie?' Joe demands. âWell, she does things.'
âDoes things? What sort o' things?' Hester sighs. âJoe, it's not something you ought to know about.'
âJesus! The girl's pregnant to a fucking monster and it's not something I oughta know about?' Joe yells.
âWhat
bloody things, woman?'
âShe fiddles with herself, does unnatural things to herself.'
âWhat's that supposed ter mean?'
âIn places where she ought not.' Joe looks at his wife, bemused. âWhat places?' Hester sighs. âWomen's places. Places a man hasn't got.'
A look of astonishment appears on Joe's face. âYou mean ... ? Do women do that?'
âNo, Joe, only very wicked ones, dirty buggers.' Hester taps the side of her head. âJessica's been doing it a long time.'
âHow do you know?'
âI'm her mother. I saw it with my own eyes â she left her bedroom door open, and I saw her!' âDoes Meg do it as well?'
âOf course not! Meg wouldn't. It isn't decent. Meg's a nice clean girl.'
Joe looks suspiciously at his wife. âYou're not making all this up, are you, Hester?' âI swear it, on my life.'
Joe is silent for a while, then says gruffly, âIt don't mean nothing. Just growing pains.'
âHa! Joe, it explains everything,' Hester protests, then stabs her finger at Joe's chest. âMight as well hear it from me, Jessica is a slag. She's been doing filthy things to herself since she was eleven years old. I tell you, it isn't natural and it's what's made her go loony, too!'
âBullshit! I don't believe she's mad, not for a minute,' Joe protests, but he's out of his depth with such women's talk. Hester senses his confusion and is quick to take advantage.
âJoe, listen to me. Jessica's not well.' Hester taps her head. âWho knows what she'll do the way she is at the moment? Besides, she doesn't know about Meg and Jack.' Hester sighs. âWhat I'm saying is, if Meg is pregnant to Jack he could use the scandal of Jessica's pregnancy to Billy Simple to get out of marrying her. Then where would we be?
Both
Bergman girls pregnant out of wedlock, the one to a murderer and a madman, the other trying to entrap the richest lad in the Riverina before he goes to war? Jack Thomas would have the sympathy of the whole community. They'd urge him not to marry Meg, not to go near the little gold digger. We'd be dirt and people would say we deserve all that's coming to us.' Hester spreads her hands, appealing to her husband. âJoe, don't you see â it's not just Meg who's involved, it's all of us!'
âShit, shit, shit! How did all this happen?' Joe says despairingly, then looks up at Hester. âOne night don't guarantee nothing. What if Meg ain't pregnant?'
Hester shrugs. âWe still can't take the chance of telling Jack about Jessica, not in the next three days anyway. Maybe later â he'll be in Sydney for at least ten weeks. We'll know for sure by then.' Hester walks over and takes Joe's hand in a rare pretence at affection. âJoe, don't you see? It's Jack's child with Meg who needs to be protected. Jessie's carrying Billy Simple's bastard and if that gets out, it's the end of all of us.'
Joe sees the logic in Hester's argument, sees clearly that they've been caught between a rock and a hard place. He brings his hands to his forehead and then wipes them slowly across his face. âWe'll have to decide about Jessie, what to do,' he says wearily.
âJoe, we've got to get rid of it. There's a woman in Wagga I've heard about ... â
âNo!' Joe looks up at his wife sharply. âNo, I won't hear of it, you understand? I've heard of them backyard doings, knitting needles and bits o' fencing wire to hook it out. Come what may, I ain't putting Jessie's life in danger. She's still our daughter.' Hester sniffs. âYours maybe.'
Joe pretends he doesn't hear. âWe'll have to think of something else. We could keep her in the house and when folk ask where she is we could say she's had one o' them nervous breakdowns like the newspapers said.' He glances at Hester hopefully. âWe could admit to that, it's better than the other. They'll soon enough figure out that she's gorn a bit in the head, like. They'll understand that. It's not too unusual anyway, especially her being through what she's been.' Joe stops and seems to be thinking. âAfter a while she could get better an' all,' he says, again hopefully.
âTrue enough,' Hester sniffs and then adds sarcastically, âand her going loony has put a lot of weight on her at the same time, all of it in front, so she looks just like she's pregnant! Joe, she can't just stay in the house for the next seven months until her baby comes. Even if we manage to keep her hidden, then what? What do we tell people? The stork brought us a brand-new baby? A bastard who looks just like Billy Simple? It come down the chimney one dark and stormy night?'
âShe's not getting rid of it, that's all there is to it. You heard what she said, she wants to keep the baby.'
âJoe, she's not right in the head. Don't you see? She's not responsible, not normal. What does Jessica know about babies, eh? I ask you! Would anyone normal who has a murderer's bastard child, a madman's brat in her stomach, want to keep it? I know I wouldn't. Meg wouldn't. No sane woman would! Can you imagine the future for the child? For Jessica herself? People pointing at her and the child, never forgetting where it came from. “There goes mad Jessie with the murderer's bastard child”,' Hester mimics. âJoe, she'd be better off in her grave, and the child with her!'
Joe cannot believe he has heard Hester correctly.
âBetter off in her grave?
It's all about Meg, ain't it? All about your precious daughter. Not spoiling her chances,' he says coldly.
âIt's about us, Joe,' Hester now says urgently, âall of us!' She is close to tears. âMeg hasn't let us down, she deserves her chance!'
âWell, if it's about all of us, then we stick together. Jessie is us, she's our daughter. I don't give a fuck about what folk say. I come from nowhere, I'm nothing, nobody, but I won't destroy me own. Jessie's not to be tampered with, you hear me, Hester?'