Showing posts with label new beginnings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new beginnings. Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 October 2012

Forgiving Michael Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Twenty-nine
Forgiveness is the final form of love
Reinhold Niebuhr


Wiseman's Creek, August, 1875
"So, Kathryn, now that Annie's married and gone to live with the Quinns, tis just you and Hamlet, eh? It must be odd to have all your children married now?’
     ‘Not so much odd as a sense of completion, like that part of my work on earth is done. I'm glad that Suzannah and Johnny and the little ones are living with us though. It reminds me there's still plenty for me to do. We have eleven grandchildren now, can you believe it? Tis wonderful for Hamlet. Gives him a good excuse to sit a while instead of working flat out. With a child on his knee he feels very useful.’
     ‘Yes, I do know that feeling. I'm so looking forward now to going back to Forbes to see Rebecca's little ones. It's hard when they're not close by.’
     ‘It sounds like there's likely to be more little ones out there soon.’
     ‘True. Once she and Nels are married in November, I've no doubt there will be more.  Who'd have thought a few years back that Rebecca would be writing to me and telling me she wants me to come and help her prepare for a wedding? I'm very excited and so is Mary. She's insisting on coming with me this time. Bob Atkins said he'll find someone to fill in and her job will be there when we come back. She's a great little worker.’
     ‘Not so little, sure she's not.’ Kathryn frowned. ‘She's twenty-two and should be looking to be married herself. Hasn't there been anyone wanting to court her?’
     ‘Not a sign of one. I think she meets plenty of young men at the Inn, but apparently not the right one. And I'm just as pleased. I don't want her making the mistakes I did…and Rebecca did. I think she's learned from us. At the moment, she's chuffed enough being an aunt.’
     ‘Rebecca is going to be happy, isn't she? She is making a good choice now?’
     ‘I think so.’ Norah nodded. ‘Since she got the news that the children's father is really dead, she's more relaxed. It's awful to say but they're all better off without the fear of him turning up again.’
     ‘Well, she's not alone in that,’ Kathryn said with her usual candour.
     ‘She wants to have a wedding with all the trimmings,’ Norah continued without acknowledging Kathryn's remark. ‘As much to show the people of Forbes that she's going to be respectable as anything else, I'm guessing. She's determined to live down her reputation. Even started going to church with Nels. I do pray that she'll find her peace with God and have the support I've had from our church. That's my hope for her now.’


As the small party spilled out of St John's church they were met with a blast of hot air.  Norah blinked as her eyes adjusted to the glare and her hand went up to stop her bonnet from being blown from her head. Her full skirt clung to her legs as the wind pushed against her. It was a hot, gusty November day, not unusual for summers in Forbes, the locals said. Their greatest fear was that a fire would sweep across the farmlands, wiping them all out, for there was nothing that would stop a blaze in the tinder dry conditions.  There had been no rain to speak of for more months than they cared to count.
     Norah knew that Rebecca's life out here would not be easy, not as a farmer's wife and not as a resident of Forbes. Even now, as she looked across the street, there was a huddle of local women, their interest in the wedding anything but friendly. She could see the disapproval on their faces.
     ‘A woman with five children out of wedlock having the audacity to marry in the church,’ she could imagine them clucking. ‘And her in a long cream dress, no less, with a veil and flowers clutched to her waist, parading like a real bride, making a mockery of the decorum with which decent women conduct their lives.’
     Norah had overheard such comments around the town as she had bought ribbons and lace for Rebecca's dress, and searched for the brush and comb set she had eventually settled on to give her as a wedding gift. She was well aware of what the women of this town thought about her daughter and others like her, who they considered had brought upon themselves misery and no end of criticism by their own choices and actions.
     But that was passed now and Norah prayed that at least some of the people here would give Rebecca a second chance, for surely it was the Christian thing to do. Most of these women, no doubt, paraded into church each Sunday, professing themselves to be godly women. Well, here was a test for them, Norah thought. Could they forgive someone who had offended their sensibilities, who needed Christian charity and was sincerely trying to change to be a better person? Time would tell. She prayed Rebecca would have the courage and confidence to live out the plans she and Nels had made, with or without the approval of these sharp beaked biddies who were still whispering and twittering across the street.
     Nels helped Rebecca climb into their cart. He smiled up at her admiringly as her lustrous curls fluttered around her face. Her cheeks were rosy with health and her eyes glowing with happiness. He proudly ushered her five children in behind her before he climbed up beside his new wife. Norah followed with Mary, William and Theresa in a second cart which had been loaned to them by one of the church families.
     A few of Nels' friends from the church and the local area waved and whistled as the carts headed down the main street, one of the young women catching the bouquet of flowers that Rebecca threw ceremoniously as she passed the small group of onlookers. Then she turned to the pinched-faced huddle on the other side of the street and waved, laughing over the clatter of the string of tin cans that had been tied to the back of their cart. The women pulled back, their mouths pursing, their hands grabbing at their shopping baskets as if they were afraid of being assaulted. Or perhaps afraid they had been caught in the act of unchristian gossip, Norah thought, smiling at the courage of her daughter. Perhaps she would survive here just fine.


As the family settled back into their chairs and cushions on the floor, their stomachs bulging from the spread that Norah had prepared before the ceremony, Norah glanced around the cottage that Nels had lovingly built for Rebecca. He had lived in little more than a tent when he arrived, using strips of bark and rough planks to protect himself from the worst of the weather and the animals that foraged for food wherever their noses led them. But gradually, he gathered the stones and wood, and bought the other materials needed to build what was a comfortable and cosy cottage for his bride and the five children to whom he would now become father. 
     It was quite an undertaking, Norah acknowledged to herself, one that gave her confidence that Nels would take good care of her daughter and her grandchildren. He was young and strong and obviously totally in love with Rebecca, who sat in one of the two large soft armchairs that Nels had brought home last week, insisting they would be kept for he and his wife to rest in at the end of the day. They would discuss their plans and their problems from these chairs, he had said proudly. They would warm themselves by the large fire in the corner, drink tea and remind each other how fortunate they were and what a fine life they would build.
     He had said all this in the short speech that he made earlier, having carried Rebecca across the threshold of the cottage as Mrs Glander for the first time. The children had all clapped, delighted to see their mother so happy and in awe of the room which would be theirs to sleep in. It was the first time that they had been in a house with a plank floor, having always lived on packed dirt. They kept tapping their boots on the boards, amused by the noise they could make as they walked across the room. Even having boots was a novelty, for they had spent most of their childhood barefooted. They had gradually spread themselves more spaciously around the table as they had eaten dinner, surprised to find that the long benches on either side of the wooden table provided ample room for them all. 
     Norah watched William, as he sat in one corner of the small parlour; Thomas and John on either side of him. Rebecca's two sons had found it hard to take in that this boy, just three years older than Thomas, was their uncle. And he could read! He had shown them in the local newspaper how he could understand the neat print, which to ten-year-old Thomas and nine- year-old John were just strange and uninteresting marks.
     Now William was suggesting that in fact the words in the papers were not uninteresting at all. What's more, he was telling them, there are wonderful story books which tell exciting tales of brave men and of animals and birds and huge fish that live in the ocean. Their eyes almost fell out of their heads as William explained that an ocean was like a river that was bigger than all of Australia and that huge boats could float from one side of the world to the other. Their grandmother had come in one of these, all the way from Ireland, he said, which was a faraway land. They all stared at Norah, admiration spreading on their face. She smiled at them and wrinkled her nose.
     ‘You could read about the explorers who are travelling across Australia, too,’ William was saying, enjoying his raptured audience.
     Even Mabel had settled at her brother's side and was listening intently to the stories.  ‘See here. Just a few weeks ago this explorer, Ernest Giles, arrived in Perth, which is a big town a long way west of here, right at the edge of the ocean. He and eight men crossed the desert on camels, which they call ships of the desert, because they can go for much longer without needing to drink than horses can.’
     William paused to watch the nods of his nephews and niece, making sure they understood, just as his brother, Tom, had always done. ‘It was the third time that this explorer tried to cross the desert for it's a very long way and it's very hot and dry. No one has done it before so he wasn't sure which way to get across.’
     Rebecca's attention was drawn to the little group on the floor. She had just finished feeding baby Arthur and put him down at her feet where Theresa was waiting to play with him. She listened to William for a few moments.
     ‘He's just like Tom, isn't he, Ma?’ She smiled at Norah.   
     ‘Yes, William is much like his older brother and if I'm not mistaken, so is your Thomas.’
     ‘Perhaps,’ Rebecca mused. ‘I always thought Tom was a clever boy. Not that I ever let him know that.’ She grinned sheepishly. ‘But he was very bossy and…I guess I was jealous of him. It's hard for me to see my Thomas like that. He certainly rounds the other children up here and makes them help, but he's not smart like Tom. He can't read or anything.’
     ‘Has he been taught?’
     She shook her head. ‘There are no schools out this way and I'd hardly be able to take him into Forbes. We'd be thrown out, for sure.’
     ‘Then you don't know how smart he is, do you? Tis just a chance he needs, sure it is.  Like the rest of them. They need to be learning, Rebecca.’
     ‘Why?’ Rebecca bristled a little. ‘They'll probably just go onto the land, like most other boys around here. It's more important they learn to ride a horse than read a book.’
     ‘No, tis not,’ Norah insisted. ‘They may not want to be farmers. They may want to travel to the big towns and work there. They might want to be teachers or doctors.’
     ‘Ma.’ Rebecca chortled. ‘You always did have such notions. I'll be happy if they get alongside Nels and help him with this farm. He has plans to grow wheat and get some more cattle. He'll need all the children to help.’
     ‘That's fine for now, but you never know what they might like to do as they get older.  It pays to be prepared.’
     ‘Dishes all done,’ Mary announced coming from the kitchen at the back of the cottage. Nels followed her back into the parlour, having helped her wash up.
     ‘I was just telling Rebecca how important it is for young children to learn to read and write,’ Norah explained, yawning.
     It had been a long day and she was ready for sleep. It had been a wonderful time here helping Rebecca prepare for her marriage, but now she was looking forward to getting back to her own room in Wiseman's Creek. It was time for this little family of her daughter's to get on with their own lives. 
     ‘I agree, Ma,’ Mary said quietly, sitting on the chair beside her mother. ‘That's why I've decided to stay here.’ She smiled innocently, as if it had been something everyone was prepared for.
     ‘What?’ Norah recovered from her drowsy state.
     ‘Nels and I have been discussing it,’ Mary said. ‘I said I'd like to stay and help with the children. Rebecca could do with another pair of hands and I could teach the children to read and write as well.’ It seemed a simple and obvious solution to Mary. ‘What do you think, Rebecca? We never did have much time together as sisters and I think I could help you a lot.’
     ‘Why, it would be wonderful.’ Rebecca sat up, her face breaking into a wide smile.  ‘I'd love it. Yes, I think it's a grand idea.’
     Norah sat back. Her first thought was that she was to lose another daughter. But then she turned to Rebecca and saw the look of gratitude on her face. Rebecca was overwhelmed, clearly not thinking that she deserved such grace from her sister. Yes, it would be good for her, not only to have help with the children but to receive the love and acceptance her sister was showing and to know that she was worthy of it, no matter how much she had held her family at bay these past years. It would be a new chapter in her daughters' lives. A good chapter.
     ‘Well.’ Norah sighed, satisfied. ‘That's decided then.’


‘Gwandma, Gwandma.’ Young Catherine ran to the door to welcome her grandmother home from Forbes.
     Norah dropped to her knees to receive the five-year-old's hug. ‘Tis so good to see you, my sweet. My, I think you've grown while I've been away.’
     ‘I drawed you a picture, Gwandma. Come and see.’
     Norah followed the little girl to a chair in the parlour and dropped into it gratefully before carefully examining and marvelling over the drawings her granddaughter produced.
     Within minutes, Elizabeth appeared with a pot of tea on a tray. Marianne was walking slowly behind her mother, her eyes trained on the small plate of biscuits she was carrying. Norah grinned as she watched little Rebecca, now fifteen months old, pull herself up on the arm of the chair and reach for a biscuit the minute her sister had laid them down on the small table.  
     ‘So, do you think this one will look like her namesake, Ma?’ Tom said after hearing how beautiful his sister had looked at her wedding. He drew his youngest daughter onto his knee. 
     ‘She doesn't have your sister's dark curls, does she?’ Norah smiled at the infant's pale brown hair.
     ‘No, Catherine's the one who's going to have her Aunt Rebecca's and her Grandma's curls.’
     ‘Not Gwandma's,’ Catherine piped in authoritatively. ‘Gwandma's hair is grey…isn't it, Gwandma?’ The little girl turned to Norah, looking for agreement.
     ‘It is now, my darling, so it is.’ Norah pushed her fingers through her still thick hair.  ‘But once it was red just like yours.’
     ‘Truly?’ Catherine's eyes widened. ‘But Daddy's hair is black. So why wasn't your hair black?’
     ‘Well, your daddy's hair is more like his…Pa's.’ Norah faltered. She noticed Tom tense. ‘It seems the time is coming when there'll be difficult questions to answer,’ she said quietly across the child's head. 
     ‘Hmm,’ Tom murmured. ‘Now, Catherine, did you show Grandma all those beautiful pictures you drew?’
     ‘Me too,’ Marianne attempted to push her older sister aside and nestle into her grandmother's knee.
     The interruption distracted Catherine from her question and she focussed on competing with her younger sister for their grandmother's attention.
     Elizabeth chucked Rebecca under the chin and smiled warmly at her mother-in-law.  ‘I just hope this little one gives us as much pleasure as her name sake is now giving you.  It must have been a wonderful day for you to see Rebecca happily married.’
     ‘Yes, it was, and not only happily married, but happy with herself. I've waited a while for that blessing.’
     Between biscuits and more cups of tea, Tom and Elizabeth listened to Theresa's and William's stories of their time in Forbes, the gestures of the two older children keeping the little ones amply entertained throughout.
     When the chatter slowed, Tom suggested they go out the back and have a play before dinner, and then he turned to his mother. 
     ‘Have you decided what you're going to do with that jewellery from the box, Ma?’
     ‘Oh, that again. I'd like to take it to the police and hand it in. Tis stolen property, after all. But that would surely spell more trouble for your father. I'm not wanting to do that, even though I know he deserves it. I couldn't possibly benefit from it, though, Tom. All those years I tried to get him to change his ways…perhaps I didn't try hard enough. But now I couldn't bring myself to use things he stole from other people. I still have trouble thinking about the gold we found in his coat being used to fix up this house. It just doesn't seem right.’
     ‘I understand, Ma, but how could I possibly find out who really owned that. I wouldn't know which of the men after Pa were robbers themselves and which had really dug for those nuggets. It's even harder to imagine how the jewellery in that box could ever be returned to the people it belongs to. It would be impossible after all this time for even the police to establish that. And what difference would it make if they went after Pa for it? He could be charged with so many thefts. Sooner or later, something will catch up with him. Or he'll completely lose his mind and have to be locked up anyway.’
     ‘It's a sad end, Tom.’
     ‘But hardly surprising, Ma. In the end you won't be able to prevent him having to face the consequences of his life…in this world, or the next.’
     ‘I know, but I can still be sad about it.’ She sighed deeply. ‘So what do you suggest I do with the jewellery?’
     ‘I think Hamlet's right. Pa's children might well do with getting something from their father's life. Not me, of course. I've all I need. But what about Theresa? Or Mary…now that she's embarking on a new life out there at Forbes? Or Rebecca? She and Nels might like a bit of help. Joseph and Mick can work for what they need. They don't deserve to benefit from his thieving. Not after they aided Pa in some of his later escapades. And William, well I suspect he'd rather earn his own way as well.’
     ‘So the boys can earn their own way, and the girls should benefit from some criminal means of gain. Is that what you think?’
     ‘Oh, Ma, don't put it like that. I just thought perhaps they could do with some help.  But on second thought, I guess their husbands would prefer to support them by other means. Of course we don't know when Mary or Theresa will have husbands, do we?’
     ‘Mary could meet someone any time now, but it's a long way off for Theresa, seeing as she’s only ten. She actually found the jewellery just before we went to Forbes and was parading around in one of the necklaces as if she was a queen with the crown jewels. She's not had too many pretty things. But I still don't want her wearing something her father stole from some poor woman.’
     ‘It's up to you, Ma. But it won't do to leave it around the house too long. As you see, Theresa found it. We can't hide it forever. What did you tell her about it?’
     ‘The truth. I couldn't lie to her. She seemed hardly affected at all. Tis the only kind of thing she's heard about her father all her life, sadly enough.’
     ‘Well, I hope she doesn't say anything to Joseph. I didn't tell him what was in the box besides the brooch and I don't think he needs to know. He does seem to have settled down but I'd not want to tempt him too much. And I certainly don't want Mick finding out about it.  Goodness knows what he'd do.’
     ‘We have no idea when we might see Mick again, do we?’ Norah’s heart still ached for her wayward son.’
     ‘No,’ Tom murmured, his face darkening.
     ‘Do you think you'll be able to put the past behind you now, Tom?’
     ‘What do you mean?’
     ‘I mean will you be able to let go of your anger with your father and your brother?’
     ‘You mean, can I forgive them?’
     ‘Tis a hard thing, I know, but if we can't let go of all that, then it will haunt us into the future.’
     ‘I'm trying to put it behind me, Ma. But forgive is a pretty strong word. I don't believe my father deserves forgiveness.’
     ‘Perhaps, but then, who of us really does? We all do wrong one way or another.’
     ‘Most of our wrongs hardly compare to Pa's.’ Tom shook his head. ‘He's followed every wrong path he could find since he was a young boy, don't you think? And Mick may not be much different, I'm afraid.’
     ‘Now, Tom, please don't have Mick judged so harshly before he's even a man. We don't know that he won't turn his life around, as Joseph has done. We must hold out hope for him.’ Her voice wavered as she thought about Mick. ‘But even as far as your father's concerned, ultimately tis not up to us to judge him. That's a job for God alone.  Ours' is to forgive…for our own sakes, if not for his.’
     ‘I don't know how you can think like that, Ma…after all he put you through.’
     Norah could hear the hardness in her son's voice. ‘He put all of us through a great deal, Tom. And I'd never say it wasn't wrong of him. He's caused a lot of heartache and provided little of what I'd hoped for from a husband and father. But to harbour resentment would only bring us further heartache and trouble. We must let it go if we're to have a happy future. Heaven knows, he needs our prayers more than anyone. He's a scoundrel but he was spoiled early. Only God can help him.’
     ‘We can't be sure we won't have more trouble from Pa yet to come…and perhaps from Mick. It's a bit soon to be forgiving, isn't it?’
     ‘We can't always wait for a person to change before we forgive, Tom.’ Norah sighed deeply, feeling the years of pain. ‘I'm sorry for the past. But I want us to be free to enjoy the future.’
     Tom pushed his hair from his forehead and took a deep breath. ‘Well, let's just concentrate on the wonderful things ahead, then, eh? Lizzie and I have some news.  We're pretty sure, aren't we, sweetheart?’
     He turned and smiled warmly at Elizabeth. ‘Looks like we'll be having another child next year. This time I'm praying for a son… for Lizzie's sake.’ He squeezed her hand and her face lit up. ‘Do you think God might grant her that?’
     ‘I wouldn't be surprised, Tom. He's very gracious.’
     ‘Oh, oh, they're back.’ Elizabeth laughed as Rebecca bounced gleefully at the sight of her sisters coming back into the room.
     ‘Catherine's done another drawing, Ma,’ Theresa said. ‘She's very good at it.’
     Catherine came directly to Norah and proudly placed a drawing on her lap.
 ‘It's Mummy,’ she announced.
     ‘So it is.’ Norah nodded. ‘She's looking very beautiful.’
     ‘Yes, she has brown hair. And a green skirt and a white shirt.’
     ‘She does, and what's this on her shirt?’ Norah pointed to a small circle on the drawing.
     ‘That's her brooch,’ Catherine exclaimed, as if it should be perfectly obvious. ‘With her picture on it. See?’ She moved close enough to her mother to point at the brooch which was pinned to the top of her blouse.
     ‘Well, I do see that now…but it's not your Mummy's picture on there, my sweet.  That's your great grandmother's picture.’
     ‘No, it's Mummy,’ Catherine insisted forcefully.
     ‘It looks a lot like her, doesn't it? But it's your Grandfather Pollard's mother.’
     ‘Truly?’ Catherine's face screwed into a doubtful expression.
     ‘I have told her that before,’ Elizabeth said, ‘but she finds it hard to understand.’
     ‘Of course it's hard to understand, my sweet.’ Norah drew the little girl back into her arms and kissed her lightly on the cheek. ‘It's hard to imagine people from such a long time ago, isn't it? But one day I'll tell you all about your great grandmother Pollard. She was a very special lady and that brooch is a precious treasure. One day you'll understand, I promise.’  

You will know that forgiveness has begun when you recall those who hurt you and you feel the power to wish them well.  Lewis B.  Smedes

 THE END


Carol Preston


Sunday, 19 August 2012

Forgiving Michael Chapter Seven

Chapter Seven


Fogiveness is the answer  to the child's dream of a miracle by which what is broken is made whole again.   Dag Hammarskjold

Wattle Flats, June, 1851

The countryside was swarming with over two thousand diggers. The children of local farmers around the Turon River marvelled that there were so many men in the world. The chaos had begun in earnest in May, when the government released news of E. H. Hargraves's find at the junction of Lewis Ponds and Summer Hill Creek, about thirty-five miles from Bathurst. Using panning methods he had learned on the goldfields of California, Hargraves had ridden into the valley around Lewis Ponds Creek, certain that there was gold under his feet because of the similarity of the countryside to the gold bearing country of California. Later, it was learned that a two hundredweight nugget had been found by an Aborigine at Murroo Creek; this bigger than anything found in California. Like wildfire, the news of the discoveries spread. One man had found a nugget weighing eleven pounds and a party of three diggers had divided the sum of sixteen hundred pounds between them after a fortnight's work. 
     As numbers increased on the fields a scarcity of provisions set in and the prices of flour, tea, sugar, bacon and other foods had soared. Bread was an unheard of sixpence a loaf. In Sydney and Bathurst, diggers cleared shops of garden implements, wash basins, tin pots and colanders, all to be used as makeshift tools for gold panning. Men deserted their farms and jobs in the cities, their enthusiasm barely dampened by the government's decree that only persons who paid a licence fee of thirty shillings a month would be permitted to dig. 
     By mid June, the general lack of fortune was such that diggers were meeting together to protest against the fee, but it didn't stop men from flocking to the gold fields. Wattle Flats resembled a human ant heap, usually with three men to a fifteen square foot claim; one man digging, one wheeling or carrying dirt to the water and another working the cradle. The low hills were riddled with shafts, drives, open cuts and mullock heaps.  Bearded, weather beaten, ragged bodies could be seen everywhere, rushing in a frenzy from one claim to another. Some were filling a pint pot with gold most days, others a wooden match-box. Many scarcely got enough to pay for their tucker. Some hoarded their findings quietly. Others displayed their haul, bragging. 
     Shanty buildings were appearing all over the fields; set up as supply stores, sly grog sellers or dance halls, all anxious to relieve the men of their new found wealth. The more circumspect diggers used Saturday afternoons to exchange their gold for necessary provisions from the stores. They lined up with chamois leather bags of dust and nuggets, waiting their turn for the storekeeper, who would weigh the bag and pay each one what their gold was worth. Then, cash in hand, the men would pass along the counter and be served their groceries. 
     Norah knew much of this because Michael brought back news from his jaunts around the various claims and his evenings of drinking at the Diggers Arms, colloquially known as McCarthy's Pub. Although he insisted he had a small claim on the other side of the hill, Norah had never seen signs of his having done any digging. He worked alone, which in itself indicated he was not likely to be successful, and although he often returned with a small bag of specks, she wondered, fearfully, if he was up to his old methods of picking up his finds.
     She had insisted he swing the pick and use the shovel to at least carve her out a small vegetable plot and he had brought back pumpkin seeds on more than one occasion; a gift from one of the local farmers, he had assured her. 
     Norah watched as some of the tents were replaced by bark humpies or wattle and daub huts. Small gardens began to appear. Potato and pumpkin patches spotted the outskirts of the diggings. Small tin pens for fowls were tacked around the base of trees to protect the birds from the native cats, snakes and dingoes. Along the river banks and creeks, an unsightly mess of kerosene tins, wooden cases, bags and jam tins appeared.  
     The little contact Norah had with other women served only to remind her that the gold field was anything but a safe place for a family. There were the ever present dangers of falling trees or shafts collapsing; smothering diggers or trapping those who stumbled into the holes as they swaggered home from a drinking bout. There were no qualified medical men in the camp, just the local quack, known as Doctor Tom, who could set a broken leg or stitch a cut. Death by apoplexy had been reported of some diggers who laboured hard in the heat from early morning until late in the evening and then were overexcited by their meagre finds. There was also the risk of bushrangers and other unscrupulous characters, who would sooner steal their find than dig for it and weren't adverse to shooting any reluctant donor. And to top it off, there was the constant fear of the notorious summer bushfires which raged through the fields, ravaging everything in their paths. 
     These predictions and fears, which were regularly recited by the women, did nothing to ease Norah's own concerns. She hardly ever ventured into the centre of the growing camp, except on the rare occasion that Michael sent her into the store on a Saturday afternoon to exchange a few specks of gold for a pound of flour or sugar. The women she met most often looked like they had been working the claims alongside their husbands, for they were caked with mud, their skin crinkled and burnt, their bare feet swollen and bruised. She was too ashamed to socialise, afraid she would find out that Michael was unknown amongst the diggers apart from his nightly excursions to the pub. 
     So she focussed on feeding her family. She learned to set the traps in the surrounding bushland, catching roo rats and possums which made a reasonable stew. She worked her small plot of garden. She mended and remended the few pieces of clothing she and the children had. The coldest part of winter was the most difficult time and many afternoons she and the children huddled in the tent, dragging all their rugs around them, crawling into their swag as soon as the sun disappeared behind the hills, their stomachs often barely satisfied with some hot, sweet tea and a small johnny cake which she had baked on the coals of their fire.


By the beginning of Spring, she had a small patch of potatoes growing, a pumpkin vine producing and two fowls in a tin pen that laid a few eggs and were the prospect of a Christmas dinner. She had refrained from asking where the fowls originated. Rebecca and Thomas were hardy children and once the warmer weather made it more pleasant, they amused themselves by spotting birds and checking the traps, and cheering on those animals that managed to escape the dastardly end which saw them headed for the stew pot. They ventured occasionally to some of the closer claims, watching with interest as men dug and sluiced, alternatively whooping with the joy of a small find or dragging themselves downheartedly back to their rock piles, empty handed. 
     The greatest enjoyment for Norah came on Sundays, when many of the families downed tools and gathered under one of the large spreading trees by the creek to sing a few hymns and listen to one of the locals remind them that God was watching their endeavours and that they should be mindful to remain obedient to His word. Some of the men would change out of their moleskin trousers, blue shirts and monkey jackets for their Sunday outing and appear, looking quite dapper, in corduroy pants and frock coats, their Wellington boots rubbed clean of mud. Those who were doing well wore flowered or embroidered vests and broad collars with flowing ties to advertise their good fortune.  
     Even Michael attempted to spruce himself up for Sundays and sat with Rebecca and Thomas, one each side of him on a log, singing in loud voice and echoing the preacher's comments as if they'd come from his own heart. Norah wanted to believe that her husband was genuine in his sentiments but she had to constantly push away her doubts about his sincerity. 
     It was little Michael who was Norah's greatest concern, for he was a weak child. His complexion was sallow, his eyes dull and, at eleven months old, he was barely crawling about. He was too thin, she knew, for her milk was poorly and they had both suffered badly with a cold during the winter. Michael dismissed her worries, assuring her that he would be up and running by Summer, that all he needed was a good feed of possum stew to see him started. However, Norah could not interest the child in the broth from her stew and, at best, could only get him to suck on a crust of damper.
     When she heard that Bishop Broughton, the Church of England Bishop of Sydney, was to visit the area late in October, she begged Michael to take her the few miles to Sofala to hear him. Perhaps he would pray for their son, she pleaded, for Catholic or not, he must be a man close to God. But Michael scoffed at the idea.
     ‘I’ll not ‘ave an English toff, an’ a Protestant to boot, presumin’ to ‘ave a ‘and in my son’s good health.’ 
     Sadly, Norah's concerns proved valid and two days after Christmas, little Michael succumbed to the fever which had overtaken him a few days before, rendering him listless and grey faced. Although Norah spent thirty-six hours awake, her efforts to keep his temperature down were all in vain and in the early hours of the morning, he died in her arms. Michael went on a drinking spree that lasted five days and on the sixth day he didn't come home at all. A week later, Norah was sure she had lost her husband as well as her son. 


When Michael returned early in January, his appearance frightened Norah almost as much as his disappearance had. He was haggard and sunburnt, his bearded face was scratched and bruised, his arms torn. Dried blood was caked to his elbows. His clothes were filthy. 
     ‘Dear God, Michael, where have you been? Sure, I've had you dead and buried in one of those wretched holes out there?’ Norah flew at him, unsure whether to throw her arms about him or thrash him with all her fury.
     ‘Don't fuss, luv.’ His voice was strangely calm. ‘We'll be fine now, sure we will, for I've 'ad some luck at last, an' there'll be no more scroungin'.’
     With that he dragged a small leather bag from under the sash around his waist, opened it and dropped two nuggets into the palm of his hand. He sighed deeply, as he waited for Norah to realise what this would mean.
     ‘They're worth a lot, girl,’ he continued when she stood, speechlessly staring at his hand. ‘A lot,’ he insisted, clearly disappointed in her lack of response.
     ‘Michael, where did you…?’ Norah's mind was racing. She turned her head as he began to speak, for she knew he was going to lie to her before the first word was out.  ‘No, don't be telling me some story that a fool wouldn't believe, for I've had enough of it. You've stolen them, haven't you? You've left me and the children alone in our grief, and gone out to God knows where, stolen from some hard working family, and put us all in mortal danger, sure you have. How could you do that, when our poor wee baby has died and we should be begging God to forgive us for the life we've lived? What will we have to endure, tell me that, before you'll change your ways and help us live a decent, God fearing life?’
     Norah was almost hysterical now, her cries ringing across the valley. She was thrashing about at Michael, her blows glancing his face and chest as he ducked and weaved, trying to avoid her fists.
     Finally, he grabbed her by both arms and pinned them down, hissing into her face. 
     ‘Quiet, you stupid girl, or you'll 'ave someone 'ere to see what the racket's about, sure you will. You're talkin' rot, and you'll shut yer mouth right now, or I'll shut it for yer.’
     Norah continued to weep. Deep shuddering sobs racked her body. Rebecca and Thomas watched in horror as their parents raged at each other. When their father turned his glare on them, they both backed into the tent, whimpering.
     ‘Now, you get yourself into that tent, my girl, an' get packed. You 'ear me?’ He growled at Norah and shoved her backwards. ‘We'll be leavin' 'ere, before the mornin' light, with or without your bits an' pieces, an' I'll not 'ear another word about me stealin' anythin'.  You'll be grateful for what this'll bring us, or you can make your own way in the world.’
     Norah had never heard his voice so hard, had never seen the cold glint in his eyes that now stared her down. She rubbed her arms where his grip had surely bruised her and wiped her eyes. She could hear Rebecca and Thomas crying inside the tent and she turned slowly from her husband's face and went to them.


Before the sun rose, they were pulling away from Wattle Flat, their faces both steely as they gazed at the track ahead of them. The children were still half asleep, having been lifted from the swag and laid in the back of the cart before they woke. By the time they were approaching the outskirts of Bathurst, Michael had calmed down. He glanced occasionally at Norah, waiting for the usual softening of her face which would indicate to him that she was ready to put the past behind her.
     He had learned that she had a heart to forgive and a natural optimism that he could draw out. He had always been able to woo her, get himself back into her good graces, charm her into believing that the future would be better. And this time, she must surely believe it, he thought, as he touched the small sack at his waist, for their fortune lay against his skin and soon his wife would see the results of it. He meant to do the right thing this time, for he knew he had sorely tested her patience. He would get the land she had always wanted now; farm land where she could grow vegetables and keep fowls; where the children could run and play safely. He could apply himself to farming, he was sure, for it couldn't be that hard to raise a few sheep or cows. 
     He had had a close call getting this last haul, for he had taken a greater risk; reckless and angry in his grief, careless in his planning. He had rushed in, thought little about the men he had chosen to relieve of their riches. He would have to stay put for a while, in a place well away from the diggers, where he could become known as a man of the land.  He would also be well clear of the gold commissioner, who had made the gold field a man trap by insisting on seeing a miner's licence at a moment's notice. Yes, it was time to move on. An honest, God fearing man was what his wife wanted, so that's what he would be. 


Norah looked up and down the wide streets of Bathurst as their cart slowly moved past store fronts, pubs and a post office. She stared at women in wide, swishing skirts, holding coloured parasols, men in top hats and bright waistcoats. There were children scurrying behind parents; clean children with shiny hair and fresh clothes and new boots. Her spirits lifted in spite of her deep anguish and her determination to be angry. She sensed hope arise in her heart again, and her unrelenting longing for something better. She allowed her eyes to drift sideways, searching Michael's face. Could she ever trust him again? She would not easily be convinced but perhaps she could give him another chance in this new place, with her last vestige of strength. 
     The Bathurst Free Press was filled with news of the rush for gold. In Victoria, as in New South Wales, men were leaving their farms, their business, their families, and tearing off to gold fields where stories of nuggets, small and large, of fortunes made and lost, sent men into a delirium of gold fever. Norah glanced through the paper, shaking her head. Her gaze kept returning to Rebecca and Thomas on the floor of the tiny room they had taken in the Royal Hotel. She couldn't believe how different they looked after the bath that they had all soaked in. The smell of real soap was still fresh on their skin, their hair was gleaming, their cheeks rosy. They had to dress in their old clothes, of course, but Michael assured her that would change this very day, as soon as he returned with the money he would get for his nuggets. He would go to the local land council as well, for he knew that there were farms now readily available on the south east of Bathurst; farms abandoned by men seeking their fortunes on the gold fields in the north.  They would be settled on a small place of their own before the end of the month, he had assured her, and until then they would busy themselves here in Bathurst, gathering together the makings of a life on the land. 
     ‘Farm land this time, girl, I promise, you'll see, sure you will, an' has Michael ever broken a promise to you, eh?’ He chortled his old laugh and tousled her red curls, planting a kiss on her nose and winking cheekily. 
     ‘He's incorrigible, so he is,’ she thought. ‘Just as has always been said of him but it's so hard not to love him. Dear God, let it be right this time.’


Many miles to the east, in Campbelltown, Kathryn Pollard was staring at the small graves under the tree. She and Hamlet had been trying to grieve their losses but there were still too many conversations where one of them would break into a flood of tears.  James was nearly seven and Mary Ann just turned five. Anyone could see they were too often trying to comfort their mother and father. They were too young to feel such a burden. Kathryn had even noticed little Johnny, at three, with his face crinkled into a frown as if he was trying to work out how to take away his parents' sorrow. It wasn't fair to him, poor little mite.
     And now there was baby Elizabeth, born just before Christmas. She and Hamlet had watched the sweet baby like hawks around a nest for weeks after she had been born, afraid to take their eyes off her. But she was thriving now and they knew that they needed to stop hovering about anxiously, frightening their older children. Kathryn knew that she had spent enough time sitting under this tree with her lost babies. She must get up and move on, for her living children and those that would surely still come. She touched the graves lovingly and said her final goodbyes. 
     She and Hamlet had talked since Christmas about moving further out where land was cheaper to lease now that so many farms had been abandoned. They did not have enough saved to get their own place around the Campbelltown area as they had hoped to do. But if they could make a new start somewhere further west, perhaps their dream could still come true. 


To be continued....


Carol Preston  www.carolpreston.com.au