Authors: Nicole Alexander
âYes, sir,' Madge replied.
When the two girls were alone again Madge rejoined Kate, watching the young girl as she wound the length of cotton around her head. Madge tied the ends of the material together, her tongue poking out between her lips in concentration. âFell on your feet, didn't you?' she commented, not unkindly. âWell we both did, so we're even, for now.'
âWill Mrs Lambeth get a flogging?'
âMaybe, it depends on what the Reverend says. But that would be fitting, blood deserves blood. Come on now. Let's get you up for a bit.'
Kate allowed Madge to pull her up from the pallet. In the kitchen she sat down quickly, her head throbbing.
âWith Lambeth gone, you and I will be feasting from now on.' Taking a bubbling pot from the fire, Madge stirred the gluggy
contents. âToday it's kangaroo, bread and potato.' Ladling a small amount of the stew into a bowl, she pushed the serving across the table. âEat it slowly, mind, you've only been on soup.' Removing her apron, Madge selected a straw hat from the peg on the wall. âWell, I'm off for the oysters. You best chop four potatoes and put them in water to boil. Add a pinch of salt and sit the pot in the embers. And no wandering off leaving the fire unattended.'
After Madge left, Kate selected some potatoes from the shelf and, placing them in the centre of the table, crossed her arms and stared at them. One of the spuds had a black spot on its dirt-crusted skin, which appeared to move up and down as if winking at her. Kate held a hand over her weak eye and the spot stopped moving. She couldn't believe that she was finally going to be able to sleep in the same room as her mother. That they would be together once again. But now she didn't want to go. Kate was angry with her mother and she hated the Reverend. She thought of what Madge and Mrs Lambeth had said and of the night Kate had seen the Reverend and her mother together. Sitting at the table she began to pick at the black spot on the potato with a knife. If God was truly going to strike her down he may as well do it while she slept in the pallet beside rag-doll-haired Madge, than in the bed her mother and the Reverend Horsley had lain on.
After supper Kate went to her mother's room. Lesley sat on the bed wearing a plain beige cotton dress that fell in soft gathers from her bust. Lesley smiled and patted the coverlet.
âI'm so pleased to see you up and out of bed, Kate.' She fingered the bandage, straightening it a little and tucked a length of matted hair behind Kate's ear. âWe daren't wash your hair until the wound is dry. Tomorrow we'll sit you in the sun for a bit. That will help.' She held out a bone-handled hairbrush. âI would have
come to see you more often but you know how demanding the Reverend is.'
Kate held onto the wooden bedstead for balance. âMadge said I should have had a doctor.'
âCome now, sit on the bed and brush my hair and we'll talk like mothers and daughters should. One day you will be doing this very thing with your own daughter, Kate, and probably in this gown.' She fingered the material. The dress was slightly worn in places but had been carefully looked after. âI have always loved this dress of my mother's. Of course it's really verging on the unfashionable, even with all the alterations. One only has to walk down the street to see that the high bustlines are slowly dropping downwards.' She sat the hairbrush on the bed and unwrapped a package, unfolding a thick swathe of material. âLook, cotton and muslin.' Lifting the gauzy fabric, her mother pressed it to her face with obvious delight. âAnd,' a card held a length of wide cream lace, âimagine, a lace hem and collar.'
âIs it for a wedding dress?' Kate asked.
Her mother folded the lengths of material, a line forming between her eyes. âNo. It's for a day-dress.'
âOh.' She wanted to say âgood', that she didn't want the Reverend for a father, instead Kate brushed the front of her own cotton dress. It was smeared with dirt from tree-climbing, blood from the cut on her head and patched with marks from the greasy washing-up water that she tossed outside after the dishes were done.
âIt's for church. And for other occasions. The Reverend is a particular friend of Reverend Lang, who built the Scots Church of St Andrew's in Sydney. I imagine there will be various gatherings we'll have to attend.'
âHe's not really a Reverend, you know.'
âWho told you that?'
âEveryone knows it,' Kate replied, secretly pleased at the deepening scowl forming on her mother's brow. âThey say he left England
with nothing but a bible. That he read it and then set himself up to be a Reverend.'
âBusybodies and mischief-makers, that's who told you.' Her mother placed the material on the plain wooden dresser. âA person who ministers to his congregation is a Reverend. Come now, Kate, be a good daughter and sit by my side.'
Kate couldn't understand why her mother would pretend that everything was as it had always been. Ignoring the outstretched hand, she moved to the opposite side of the room to gaze out the window. Dusk made the trees shadowy, the sky a pinkish red. One of the women who worked on the Reverend's farm waddled out of the hut she shared with the other female convicts and tossed a bucket of dirty water into the dirt.
âWell, I suppose you're a little old for brushing your mother's hair.'
Kate decided that once her head was mended that she would climb out the window every night if she wanted, blanket in hand, and sleep among the comforting roots of the fig tree. She would have to wait until it grew dark of course, and everyone slept, but if it got cold she could always lie down in front of the kitchen fire. A floorboard creaked. Her mother's hands were light but insistent on her shoulders.
âOne day, Kate, you will know what it is to be a woman in a man's world. You will understand that sometimes it is necessary to succumb to less than we deserve simply in order to survive. Your father and I had a good life, a wonderful life together. It was not filled with material things, a superior house, tasteful furnishings nor fine gowns for me or a tutor for you, my darling, but it was filled with love. Love, that most wondrous of qualities. Only love truly nurtures.'
Kate wriggled her shoulders. Lesley released her grip, but remained close.
âDo you love the Reverend?' Kate concentrated on the convicts as the men and women sat outside the two huts, spending their
free time grinding their grain ration into flour, smoking pipes and talking. The Reverend locked the men and women inside every night. And although everyone knew it was to stop them from running away, he said it was for their safety. And there were fights between women, between men, between men and women, Kate had seen them. One woman had been belted unconscious for sleeping with another man.
âNo, but he provides ⦠things. Things for me, for us.'
One of the male convicts began to play a wooden pipe. The homemade instrument produced a whistling sound. Sitting on a tree stump he tapped his foot in time to the music and soon a woman began to sing about a long voyage and lost love.
âThose men and women are being made to do much needed work for the colony, for the Reverend. But things may get better for some of them. One day they may be pardoned, like your father was, and grow successful through hard work and thriftiness. Their lives may change as ours have changed. From good to bad, bad to liveable. Governors come and go, new roads are built, children are born and men die. We are beyond controlling every part of our lives, which means that we too must change. Do you understand?'
âNo.' Kate folded her arms across her chest.
âThe Reverend is a good man, Kate. And one mustn't deny the consolation that the Lord's word gives to the humblest among us. I have received great solace from the Almighty these past months. He has helped me come to terms with your father's death.'
âSo you've found religion too, like the Reverend?' Kate pursed her lips and spat the words out like Madge would.
Her mother grasped her shoulder, turning Kate to face her. The action made her head throb terribly. âListen to me. Not everything I do for us to survive in this world will be perfect and not everything that you do will be right either. Three days ago you chose between yourself and Mrs Lambeth. Mrs Lambeth knew that you had done her wrong and she has paid for your lie.'
Kate kicked at the gappy boards underfoot. As she hadn't been struck down three days ago, the Reverend and her mother could say what they liked about religion.
âI'm sorry, Kate. I know things are difficult for you and that you've had to grow up too fast since your father died, but he's been buried many months. It's time to stop your wanderings. It's time to behave for the good of both of us.'
âI don't like it here.'
Her mother knelt at her feet and took her hands in hers. âWe need a home, food, protection. The Reverend provides all this and more.'
âYou were just meant to be his housekeeper.'
âHe has agreed that you may sleep with me in this room. And I am to start a school in the building where we gather to worship God.'
âI don't like him.'
Her mother lifted a finger to her lips. âShush. I wasn't sure of him either to begin with, but he has his ways, and I have mine. Together we have an agreement. One which benefits all of us. You see that, don't you, Kate? For if there is another man you know of, a man of means who would take us in immediately, without hesitation, then certainly I would listen to your suggestion.' She waited patiently for a response. âYou see then, we must be happy with our lot.'
Kate brushed away a tear. âIf Father had not got sick â¦'
âCome now. Let us pretend that everything is perfect. Your father wouldn't want to see you sad.' Her mother returned to sit on the bed and held out the hairbrush.
Begrudgingly, Kate climbed up onto the bed and, sitting behind her mother, began to unpin her long hair.
A few minutes later her mother gave a little cough. âSometimes the Reverend might want to visit me at night.'
Kate dropped the hairpins onto the bed. âWhat for?'
âOh, to talk, things like that. When he does I'll let you know, and then you'll have to go back to your old pallet for the night. But I know you won't mind because the Reverend is being very kind letting you share this room with me.' She began to hum.
Kate brushed her mother's hair with long, slow strokes and did her best to stop the tears from running down her cheeks. She wanted to tell her mother that she'd seen her and the Reverend together and that Madge had called her mother a whore, and Kate knew that was very bad but the words wouldn't come. Instead, Kate thought of her father. She just knew he wouldn't be happy either.
âEverything will be fine, Kate. You'll see. Things will get better. One hundred strokes,' Lesley reminded her daughter. âOuch, careful. You've grown careless.'
Pressing her lips together, Kate untangled hand and hair and began to brush. The dark lengths soon grew soft and shiny beneath the bristles and as Kate worked she noticed her mother's breathing begin to slow and her shoulders droop. Her father would be angry at her for pulling her mother's hair. He would remind Kate that they were alone now, that they only had each other left in the world, as he had on his deathbed. âMy two little women forced to fend for themselves.'
Lesley reached out and stilled her daughter's hand, squeezing it tightly. A single tear traced Kate's cheek. Maybe everything would be all right. Maybe her mother was right.
âI think it best that you sleep with Madge while you're still healing. Besides, tonight I think I will want this room to myself.'
Kate's grip tightened on the bone-handled brush.
Ten years later
1837 July â eight miles west of Sydney
Kate looked up into the sheltering foliage of the fig tree and wished she were ten years old again. If she were ten she would change the way she had behaved, she would have been nicer to her mother. Kate would have forgiven her for staying with the Reverend Horsley, for living in sin, and she may have tried, just a little, to please the Reverend. She even would have excused Madge and the other convicts for their knowing looks and snide remarks. But she had done none of those things and in the not doing, she and her mother had slowly drifted apart.
Last night, after they had said prayers for Lesley Carter, when the finality of her mother's illness had become apparent, Kate had eaten for the very first time with the Reverend at his round table. She'd had little appetite but there was leftover burnt parrot pie, fresh fruit and a cordial made from tart lemons and too much sugar. Madge's skill had never quite matched Lambeth's, and Kate's life had never changed the way her mother hinted it might.
The Reverend had been guarded in conversation. He spoke of the cost of funerals, of the simplicity required of God's creatures in both life and death, of the good fortune granted to Kate since her arrival in his household and how compassion was not infinite, charity not to be considered a right. For her part, Kate said very little. Her relationship with the Reverend had been one of feigned politeness. The man, her provider these many years, had every right to throw her out. The thought made Kate ill with worry. Her mother was dying. Very soon she would be alone in the world.
As their conversation waned the Reverend turned his attention to the windowsill and the single leech that lay motionless in the bottom of a water-filled bottle, a piece of rag over the opening. There will be a frost in the morning, he'd stated, tapping the base of the phial. The leech didn't stir. The bloodsucker was the household's indicator for all matters pertaining to the weather. The day before the creature had moved continuously in its watery confines, only to stop immediately just before a southerly wind began to blow. If only God had made man with such intuition, the Reverend had remarked.
Kate had excused herself from the table and returned to her bed, the pallet next to Madge's. Last night she'd dreamt that she was the leech, bottled-up for all eternity, with the Reverend tapping at the glass trying to get in.
The smudge of grey light changed slowly to a frosty pink. Kate blew on the tips of her fingers as the first warming rays of a wintery sun struck her face. Frost layered the ground, it latticed the grass with ice and spun a cobweb stretched across the woodpile into a line of pure white.
A group of Aboriginals walked across the far edge of the wheat field. Fear seizing her, Kate quickly hid behind the tree. The line of men draped in animal hides against the chill moved purposefully. Kate often saw men, women and children, the original inhabitants
of this land. All knew to be wary of them and the continuing reports of attacks on outlying farms made everyone fearful.
Everyone except the Reverend. It was said that he'd sat down with the warriors that walked across his farm and treated with them. His neighbours laughed, calling such attempts a folly, but they'd never had a person attacked, and although their crops were plundered regularly, they never wiped the farm's stocks out. The Reverend had kept peace with the Aboriginals by allowing them to come and go as they pleased, and by giving them grain on a monthly basis. When he saw them the man bowed, often sinking to his knees in prayer, although his pistol was always at the ready. Other larger farms had not been so fortunate in their inter actions. Shepherds were occasionally speared and livestock stolen.
Out of habit Kate now watched the warriors until they merged with the green-brown tangle of bushland, finally disappearing. Only then did her sense of unease depart.
One of the convicts appeared to collect wood for the fire. He was an old man, with perpetually watery eyes who'd been pardoned some years prior, but with nowhere to go he'd stayed on at the Reverend's small holding in exchange for food and a roof over his head. A piece of old leather made a strap for the musket he carried and he hefted the rifle across bony shoulders. On seeing Kate he lifted a hand to his cap in acknowledgment, pausing as if he wanted to say something to her. He couldn't. Barely a word of English passed the Welshman's lips. The moment was broken by the crunch of icy grass.
âHe wanted to say he was sorry for your mother.' Madge hugged a blanket around her shoulders, her breath appearing as a puff of whiteness in the air. âDidn't you?'
His convict woman, who'd helped in the kitchen, had died a few years earlier. Both Kate and her mother had tried their best to nurse her back to health. It had been a messy business. The
woman had been ill until there was nothing left to sick up. Then the runs had begun.
The convict nodded, shifted the wood from one arm to the other, and then left the two women alone.
âThe natives just came through.'
Madge shivered. âBut they're gone now?' She relaxed a little when Kate informed her they'd moved on. âHow is she then?' Madge had grown skinny and coarse of skin with age. âNone of us thought she would last the night.'
Kate thought of her own sleepless night as she looked through the row of stout orange and lemon trees to where children began to arrive and play near the little church-cum-schoolhouse. âNeither did I,' she finally replied. The timber walls of the building had been well-sealed with mud, but it would be cold inside without the sun's warmth.
âWill you be moving then? Into the room, you know, after your mother â'
âNo. I would never,' Kate replied quickly.
âNo need to get crotchety,' Madge answered, equally blunt.
âI hadn't thought about it,' Kate admitted, then frowned. âI hadn't thought about what would happen next.' She lifted a finger to her lips and nibbled on a fingernail.
Madge grabbed her arm and studied the nail-bitten hand before freeing her. âSure you have. No point pretending otherwise, Kate. I know you as well as the next person here, probably better than your own mother. It's me that's been snoring next to you these many years.'
âDon't I know it.' A brief smile touched Kate's lips.
Madge laughed. âSo take a bit of advice from this old maid then, Kate Carter. I know you've had it hard compared to your mother. Don't give me one of your uppity stares, your mother got the best of the arrangement, everyone knows it and that's fair. The woman kept you housed and fed these many years in the best way she
could, but now it's your turn.' Madge had never been a considerate person, but she touched Kate's arm briefly. âThis is your opportunity. You have to look after yourself, do what's best for you, that's what your mother did and there are worse places than here. Think on it. There's no need for hand-wringing and nailbiting.'
âWe've never got on, he and I. You know that, Madge.'
âBut you ate with him last night. It's a beginning.'
âYes, and he told me that a person couldn't expect charity.'
The cook's expression barely changed. âBut who will run the school, his house?'
âMaybe he's found someone else already?'
A screech broke their conversation. Madge pointed to the group of children. Three of the boys were arguing and a fight quickly followed. âYou best settle them before the Reverend gives 'em all a belting,' she suggested, as one of the boys was pushed to the ground. âAs for me, I've got a bag of wheat as big as old Lambeth to grind, and a sheep's tongue to boil and toast for the master's midday feed.' She sniffed, walking back through the wet grass towards the kitchen.
Kate lifted her skirts and moved quickly towards her charges. The fight had ended with a punch and a bawling child. At her approach the children formed a half-circle around the fallen boy, who was now sitting upright in the wet grass, tentatively probing his face. They were a mixed lot. The convict children were bedraggled and bare-footed; while the sons and daughters of free settlers and emancipated convicts-made-good were neatly dressed with leather shoes.
âGet inside, the lot of you,' Kate chastised, âbefore the Reverend takes to all of you with the stick.' A baker's dozen of girls and boys ran towards the building as Kate dusted off the injured seven-year-old Thomas, pressing the underside of her skirt to his bleeding lip. âThere, no harm done,' she said gently, brushing his clothes free of grass and leaves. His short pants were soaked through from the
wet ground. She turned to a young girl who was weeping beside them. âWhat are you crying for, Lizzy? Were you in the fight too?'
The girl twisted her skirt between her hands. âI'm hungry.'
Kate had tried in the past to entice the Reverend to give the children a piece of bread and water mid-morning but he'd countered her arguments with the cost of such an endeavour and the impossibility of getting coin from convict parents. âWell, then, the sooner we start our lessons, the sooner you will be able to go home and eat.' Lizzy wiped her runny nose and opened her mouth to protest. âGo with Thomas now. I'll be in directly.'
The boy dawdled. He was bow-legged with a large boil capped with pus on his neck. âDon't you want to know what we was fighting about, miss?'
âNo, Thomas, not this morning, I don't.'
âBut Mrs Carter always does.'
âWell, I'm not Mrs Carter. Go inside now.'
âBut Fred said that the teacher would die. If she dies I'll have to go with the rest of them who've convicts for parents and learn a trade. They take you away, they do, to some big building, then when the learning is done they send you out to work. Them that you work for own you, they do. My ma and pa they had an awful fight about me getting lessoned by the Reverend. My pa was against it 'cause there's no food or bed and me mother got a black eye. I got me lessons. But if the Missus dies, and there ain't no school, me pa will send me out, he will. She won't die, will she?'
Kate didn't want to talk about what would happen when her mother died. It was taking every ounce of her strength just to get through the morning. âThere'll always be a teacher here, Thomas,' Kate replied. âHaven't I been teaching you these past few months? Now go inside and tell the others to start finishing the hats we were making.'
The boy couldn't look more pleased. He ran off towards the schoolhouse chanting, âI was right, I was right.'
Although partially obscured by the fruit trees and the spreading branches of the large fig, the Reverend's cottage appeared almost quaint. Inside, in the room that looked directly across to the convicts' huts, her mother lay on a bed, waxen-faced. Kate often thought of the woman Lesley Carter had once been. The image that came most often to her now was of her holding Kate's father's hand and giggling. Giggling. Such laughter seemed to have crumbled forever. Her mother had never worn the white gown with the lace collar and cuffs to any grand receptions, but in the ten years they'd lived here she'd slept each night in a warm bed that was off the ground and never once went hungry. Kate took a deep breath. Her heart was beating too quickly. It wasn't fair. Her mother was only thirty-eight years of age.
Smoke was streaming from the cottage chimney, twirling into a sky grown clear and bright with the rising sun. The Reverend had done well for himself. He now had a lucrative farming enterprise of four hundred acres. Fields were planted to wheat and corn every year, and there were cattle and sheep. The cabbage-tree hat business was ongoing, with the schoolhouse providing a new source of labour, a boon with the decreasing number of convicts available as workers. The Reverend was not a wealthy man, but he wanted for nothing. And Kate and her mother had also been provided for. Kate wished she'd been a better daughter, a more loving child, for Madge was right â Lesley had done her best for the both of them.
Reverend Horsley came to Kate in the schoolhouse as lessons ended. She assumed the worst, however his attention went immediately to the pile of cabbage-tree hats stacked on a rear bench. He lifted each finished item and checked the quality of the work. Small fingers made for intricate weaving of the palm fronds. The
Reverend's charitable school of plain education aligned itself nicely with Governor Macquarie's original model, for the children's lessons also included the learning of useful industry.
The children ran past Reverend Horsley as he approached, a sword jingling at his side, his pistol obvious against the black cloth of his suit. âShe lingers,' he explained to Kate, allaying her fears. He clasped the King James Bible to his chest. âBut I am not here to talk about the dying. I am here to discuss your future.'
Kate's throat went dry. She was not ready for this. Surely he would give her a week's grace to think on her situation, especially as her mother was yet to depart this world.