Authors: Jackie French
âThis place?' Maria shook her head.
âWe have the best harbour in the world, Mrs Jackson. That's all a town needs to become a city. That and good grazing and whales in the water.'
A cry came from the kitchen â Andrew, feeling neglected.
He toddled in, one shoe off, his face smeared with jam. He glanced at the stranger then at Nanberry. âDance!' he commanded.
Nanberry looked at Rachel, then at Mr Moore. Nanberry took Andrew's hand. âWe'll dance in the kitchen,' he said. Maria gave another small curtsey and followed them out.
Mr Moore met Rachel's eyes. âYou can find many things in the stores of Sydney Town, gossip being one of them. It is still small enough here for everyone to know his neighbours' business.'
She tried to keep the flush from her cheeks. âWhat do you know about me, then?'
He hesitated. âMistress Turner, your case at the Old Bailey made you famous for a time. A servant girl betrayed by her master, defended by a man in court.'
Her flush grew deeper. âI wasn't guilty of the crime, but I wasn't innocent either. The Master gave me those gifts for a reason and I accepted them. And I lived with Surgeon White as his wife, with no wedding ring.'
âBut you've lived with no man since. I've lived a long time without marrying, Mistress Turner, back and forth on whatever ships will pay me best. Maybe by now I don't think of marriage the way a young man might, back in England. I don't want a young innocent. I want â¦'
He struggled to find the words.
âSomeone to trust? To talk about your day with? To share your life with?' It was what she wanted, so desperately, she thought.
He grinned at her. Despite his many voyages, his teeth were still good. âSee? I knew we'd be well matched. You're highly thought of, Mistress Turner. A woman I would be proud to have as my wife.'
She still couldn't believe it. âYou could have anyone. Far younger than me,' she added frankly. âI ⦠I saw you with a young lady in the store that day.'
He laughed. âThat's Mrs Marsden, the new clergyman's wife. I'm sure you'll meet her soon. I offered her an escort through the streets while her husband was away. As I said, I weren't coming to you till I had my shore job and my house.'
âYou could set up in business back in England.'
âAnd be a workman all my life? Can you read, Mistress Turner?'
âI've taught myself a bit, the last few years. I'm no hand at writing though.'
âI can do neither, though I can do some figuring. But here I can make myself a gentleman. There's land grants and free labour from the convicts. There's mills hungry for wool back in England and we can send it to 'em. The colony needs ships and I can make 'em. By the time we've been ten years wed you'll have a diamond necklace, I promise you that. And I keep my promises.'
He does, she thought. At least he'd kept this one.
âAnd you haven't said no,' he added with satisfaction.
She hadn't, she realised. She had doubted he knew what he was doing. But it had never occurred to her to say no.
âThere's no hurry,' he said gently. He looked like a man who was used to getting his own way. But it would be a good way and he would be kind to all about him.
He stood up. She had a feeling he wasn't a man to sit still long. âHow about we take young Andrew to see if this boat I've made will sail in the stream? It'd be a poor lookout if a boatbuilder made a toy boat that sank. We need to give it a trial, before I make a bigger one.'
It was a joke, she thought. He was laughing. To her surprise she found she was smiling too.
âI'll get my bonnet,' she said.
They married the next January, in the Reverend Johnson's new church. It hurt, a little, to leave the Surgeon's house, to see new folks move in there.
But Mr Moore's house was bigger, with rooms for Andrew and Maria and Nanberry too, as well as rooms off the kitchen for a maid and a man to do the heavy work. There were silk carpets from China and carved chests from India, bought on his travels; a set of fine porcelain dishes that he'd found in a foreign port and carried to Sydney Town in his sea chests. But best was the furniture he had made with his own hands in the last few months â the tables, the bedsteads, as well as the carved shelves he had made during many long days and nights at sea.
Yes, this man knew exactly what he was doing. He dreamt of it, he planned it and then he did it.
But more than that, he was honourable and generous. I have been lucky, she thought. Three men in my life and two have been kind. This last was the kindest of all.
Her life was so rich now. Rich in friends, in good deeds, a grand colony to build, her husband, and her son.
S
YDNEY
C
OVE
, J
ANUARY
1798
A hand on his arm woke him. Andrew saw his brother's face, grinning at him from above the bed. Sometimes visitors stared when he said that Nanberry was his brother, because Nanberry had black skin. But Nanberry was the best brother in the world.
âWake up,' whispered Nanberry.
âWhy?'
âShh. Don't let anybody hear.'
Andrew sat up. Dawn was a grey haze behind the window shutters. âIt's still night.'
âNo, it isn't. It's almost dawn. The best time of the day to go hunting.'
âHunting!'
His brother grinned again. âWould you like to hunt with me? Or stay and do lessons with Mama?'
âGo hunting,' said Andrew. He blinked at Nanberry's spear. âCan I use that today?'
âOne day. Not yet. A warrior has much to learn before he may use a spear.'
Andrew swung out of bed and reached for his boots.
âNo boots,' said Nanberry softly. âAnimals hear boots. They smell them too.'
âMy boots aren't smelly!' Papa Moore had bought them from an American whaler last week. Mama said no boy in the colony had boots as fine as these.
Papa Moore was the best man in the colony. He could make ships and carve a penny whistle and he let Andrew ride on his shoulders and pretend he was a horse. Most men in the colony were drunk most of the time. Like all Sydney Town children Andrew had learnt early how to tell when a man was angry drunk, and to stay clear of fists and kicks.
But Papa was never drunk. He laughed a lot too. Andrew hardly ever saw grown-up men laugh, unless they were drunk, except Nanberry.
Now Nanberry looked at him as though they shared a private joke. âYour boots are smelly to animals.'
Nanberry waited while Andrew pulled on his shirt and trousers. He was proud of them. It wasn't so long ago he'd worn a little boy's smock. He followed Nanberry down the stairs as quietly as he could.
Nanberry paused in the kitchen and propped a piece of paper on the table. Andrew tried to read it, but there were too many big words.
âIt says I have taken you for a walk,' said Nanberry. âA friend wrote it for me yesterday.'
âWhy don't you learn to write? Papa Moore is learning. Mama writes beautiful letters, now, all curly.'
âAnyone can do my writing and my reading. I know other things.'
It was cool outside, the breeze from the south still blowing, and fresh, the cook fires still smouldering under their banks of
night ashes. They walked swiftly up past the headwaters of the Tank Stream, down a gully and over two hills.
A shadow moved from the trees towards them. Andrew stopped.
It was a native savage. A stranger. Mama warned him never to talk to strangers. The boy looked to be a couple of years older than him.
Andrew took it for granted that almost everyone around was guilty of some crime, except Papa and the Reverend Johnson and Mrs Johnson, and the Governor, Mr Hunter. Even most of the officers were what Papa called
thieves and bounders
.
Andrew wasn't sure what a bounder was. Maybe it meant they were good at jumping. Though there wasn't a law against jumping, was there?
Strange natives could kill you with their spears. At least this boy had no spear.
Nanberry took Andrew's hand, as though he knew that he was scared. âThis is your friend,' he said.
âI don't know him!'
âYou will know him after today.' Nanberry knelt down to Andrew's level, as the native boy walked towards them. âAndrew, I have to go away tomorrow on the
Reliance
. When I get back â¦' He hesitated. âI have to see my own people then.' He shook his head. âI am a sailor and a warrior. There isn't time to show you the things you need to learn.'
âPapa Moore says I will have a tutor â'
âNot for these things.' The native boy had come up to them now. He stood listening, though Andrew thought he didn't understand the words Nanberry was saying. Most natives didn't know proper words, Maria said, only their own savage tongue.
âYou were born in this land, Andrew. Your body is made of its earth, just as mine is. I remember that when I am travelling. You must remember it too.'
Andrew nodded. It didn't make sense. But so much adults said didn't make sense.
âGarudi learns things from his clan. Now you are his friend he will teach them to you.'
Andrew looked at the boy suspiciously. He was naked, like most of the savages. His hair was tangled. His feet looked as though they had never worn boots at all. How could a boy like this teach him anything?
The boy looked back, equally suspicious.
âCome,' said Nanberry. He spoke more words to Garudi, a long patter of words that sounded like o'possums' grunts, not real words at all.
The boys followed him into the shadows of the trees.
The horizon was pink now, out at the edge of the sky and sea. The day was warming up. Nanberry stopped and put his hand up for silence. He pointed to a pile of rocks.
Garudi grinned. Andrew looked at him with dislike. What was funny about a pile of rocks?
He looked at the rocks more closely. There were faint scratches â¦
Suddenly something moved between the rocks. Nanberry froze. So did Garudi; they were almost not breathing like they had become rocks too, or trees. Andrew tried to do the same.
Nanberry pounced. He held something up in triumph.
It was a goanna almost as long as Andrew, with great sharp claws and a snake head and skin like old grey lace. It wriggled a bit as Nanberry held it up, but not too much.
Garudi said something.
Nanberry spoke to Andrew. âA good hunter doesn't run. He waits. Waits by a waterhole for the animals to drink. Waits where he sees o'possum scratches or where goanna claws have been. This
gan
has been asleep all night, when it was cold. He sleeps all winter too. But when the rock is warm in summer he comes out early. But he is still too asleep to try to fight me.'
Nanberry casually whacked the creature's head against the rock. The skull cracked, and Andrew stared as blood seeped through the skin.
Nanberry grinned. âNow we make a fire.'
The remains of the goanna lay by the ashes of the fire, shreds of skin and bones, the skull and claws. Flies buzzed about it, sounding lazy in the heat.
Andrew felt sleepy too. He lay back against a tree, like Nanberry and Garudi. The goanna had tasted strange: food in a dream. It tasted like smoke, like dirt, like animal. He had never tasted meat that tasted of animal before. Vaguely he knew that lamb chops came from sheep, and salt beef from cattle. But to pluck the meat straight from the body â¦
It had tasted good.
Nanberry's eyes slid open. âWould you like the claws?'
âWhy?'
âFor a necklace. Or to wear on a string around your waist.'
Andrew considered. âDo you think Mama would let me keep them?' he asked cautiously.
Nanberry laughed. âNo.' He looked at Andrew seriously. âSome things women don't need to know.'
âWhat about Papa Moore?'
âHe is from the land called England. He doesn't know these things either.'
âPapa Moore knows lots of things!'
âHe does. But not these.'
Garudi was awake now. He looked at Andrew with what might have been contempt. He spoke again in the strange language. Andrew was starting to make out word shapes in it.
âWhat did he say?'
âHe said you were a little caterpillar who doesn't know how to break out of its cocoon.'
âIs that bad?'
âYes.'
âWell, he is a savage who doesn't know how to ⦠to brush his hair or wear clothes.'
Nanberry looked from boy to boy. At last he said, âWe'll go swimming. Come on.'
It was a cove several bays along from the houses. The cliffs seemed too steep, the boulders too piled up to get down. But Nanberry knew a way. The boys followed him.
Below the cliffs a tiny curve of sand edged the waves. Nanberry unbuckled his belt, took off his trousers and then his shirt. Garudi had already waded into the water and plunged under the lapping waves. Now his head burst into the sunlight again.
Only savages swam naked. Only savages swam, though Mama let him swim with Nanberry. He thrust his trousers down and pulled off his shirt. He ran to the highest boulder, then glanced at Nanberry for approval.
Nanberry nodded.
Andrew dived, just as Nanberry had shown him before Christmas, jumping up then swooping down. I am a dolphin, he thought. I am a whale. His head burst into the water, bubbles all around him. He let himself rise, his feet treading water, to find Garudi staring at him and Nanberry smiling on the shore.
He laughed for the first time that day. Garudi couldn't dive! Suddenly the day seemed full of light. He splashed Garudi, saw him grin through the water dripping down his face, dived under the water again and grabbed Garudi's legs. They came up kicking and splashing at each other, in the bright, clear water.
But Garudi was laughing too. Andrew thought: This means that we are friends.