Bettany's Book

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Bettany's Book Page 23

by Thomas Keneally


  Instead, the reply was full of Dimp’s own compelling business, though she thanked Prim for the report from Adi Hamit. ‘What a place! My little sister right there! Sometimes I wish I was with you, my clever, brave, unselfish sis, making a filmed record perhaps.’ But she passed quickly to the real news.

  Well, I can’t be. The annulment is at last through, and Bren is free in conscience to marry me, which is set to occur next February. I can’t express the happiness of this. To be his wife seems an extraordinary kind of reward – at the end of such a wait, too. Come and share my happiness. You’re overdue for leave. Couldn’t you come … please? Why not bring this Sherif fellow you’re so keen on? You’re so scant with details on the poor bugger! You just don’t satisfy the obvious questionings of your prurient sister. Let me see the bloke in person, and draw my own conclusions. Just think, he’d shake Sydney up! Why don’t you just settle here? Come home. You can swamp any memory of the Auger business by having a handsome African lover and being the most beautiful couple in Sydney.

  We’re talking about the last weekend of February, Saturday the 24th. We’ll be married by a Jesuit at St Canice’s, but without some of the florid touches of big church weddings. I’m ringing round restaurants to find which ones are available for that weekend. If you and Sherif came – that would be the star act!

  As for Bren, he’s as enthusiastic as a great loutish dog, and he’s going round sniffing out houses. There’s one at Double Bay, right on the harbour, above a little beach – Seven Shillings Beach. This house which, if he buys it will turn out to be the fanciest abode this poor blowsy body has known, is a sort of opulent Californian adobe expansion of what was once a plain old Federation two-storey. It has three enormous sundecks above the water! Does that enrage you adequately?

  So can you come back for the wedding, if not forever?

  Please make the arrangements if you can. We are, after all, sole close relatives to each other. Come home and be appalled by the way we live.

  All my love,

  Dimple D’Arcy-to-be

  Prim knew her sister had every right to expect her to be at the wedding. Without her, Dimp would be able to muster to the nuptials only an aging uncle and aunt-in-law. Contrary to all reason though, Prim felt stampeded by the thought of Sydney. Could she go back there as a chummy, affectionate sister?

  Out of shame she made a plane booking, but the thought of February still filled her with persistent terror. As it turned out, a severe malaria would come to her aid. Three months before the wedding, in December 1987, she felt an excruciating joint pain, an unprecedented headache, and her temperature mounted to 104 degrees. She was admitted on Sherif’s advice to the UN clinic in Khartoum and for five days suffered the most severe cerebral derangement in which the entire cosmos, from God to her dead parents to Auger to the Pidanu sisters, pressed in on her for urgent discourse. Hence a micro-organism rescued her from the need to travel home for her sister’s wedding. When her temperature fell to normal levels she was extremely weak and bedridden for a further two weeks, during which it was not difficult to manoeuvre a number of doctors, including Sherif, into doubting the wisdom of her flying to Australia soon. In fact, by the wedding’s date she was robust again, and disquieted with being in her office in Khartoum. But the day passed, and Dimp was off on a honeymoon in Thailand to which any hankering she might have had earlier for blood relatives wasn’t relevant.

  And Prim was busy. It was a time when the Sudanese military had withdrawn from direct civil government and permitted a new prime minister to be elected. It proved to be Sadiq el Mahdi, an urbane-looking man who wore a business suit rather than military or traditional garb. But that did not bring any change as regards the war in the South. It was still being fought, and refugees abounded, fallout from unrecorded village tragedies.

  It was an easy time to forget her failing of Dimp. Fergal Stoner, not content to fall back on his renown as proclaimer of the Darfur famine, had devised a scheme by which food could be equitably distributed, by permission of the combatant parties, in both the North and South. He presented the gleaming logistics of his plan to EC headquarters in Brussels and to the new government of Sudan, which was resistant, seeing itself forced, by typically self-serving Western appeals to conscience, into talks with those it perceived as Southern terrorists.

  For a while it had looked as if Stoner’s plan was stymied. Helene Codderby told Prim there was a chance Stoner would be sacked for over-reaching. ‘Darfur was famous, of course, but there’s a sense he talked the numbers up. And now the government suspects he’s had secret meetings here, in restaurants and rooms around the city, with rebel agents, you know, the SPLA.’

  Some system of relief was clearly needed. Only a scatter of aircraft had been permitted to take aid south, and had been shot at by Southern rebels not involved in the preliminary negotiations. The Red Crescent had distributed some relief food by Nile barge, but its ministrations had been limited to a few towns. In the end economics helped Stoner. An expensive government end-it-all campaign in the South has been blunted in the marshes and along the bush tracks which were the South’s roads. With the nation’s debt still rising, the prime minister came under pressure from the United States and the World Bank to settle the costly war. And if the South could be supplied with food, people would stay at home, and the government would not be burdened with masses of refugees.

  Stoner called Prim in her office. ‘Had you heard about my scheme for the South being, you know, picked up?’

  ‘Congratulations. What’s it called? The Stoner Plan?’

  ‘Ha bloody ha! It’s called Operation Safety. A hopeful title, right?’

  Prim worked on logistics at Stoner’s office in the New Extension, not far from her own office. Amongst other tasks she had to liaise with a UN official named Anwar, stationed in the Republic of Chad, over funding for a fleet of six Ilyushin transport planes he intended to bring to Khartoum. At last Prim assembled the funding for the charter from Australian, Canadian and Scandinavian NGOs operating in the Sudan, and a delighted Anwar told her it would be a mere few days before his Ilyushins, the UN logo freshly stencilled in lavender on their flanks, would land in Khartoum. They would be filled with rice, UN high protein biscuit, wheat and sorghum, and go south.

  She went with Stoner to Khartoum airport to greet Anwar’s armada as it touched down. It was piloted, in the spirit of the event, by men from everywhere: Kenya, Egypt, Belgium, New Zealand. Anwar himself was accompanied by his Bolivian lover Julio. They had found their haven in Chad, just as Prim had found hers in the Sudan.

  So as Anwar, Julio, Stoner crammed themselves along with her onto little seats, their knees tight up against the strapped cargo, it was not only possible to forget the larger questions, but also her failure of her sister. They were on their way to Aweil, after all, a dangerous market town and garrison to the west of the Nuba Hills.

  Prim was with Stoner when he held respectful talks with the Sudanese brigade commander in the fortified military headquarters in the town. The commandant gave his permission for the opening of a feeding centre at a site south of the town. In this clearing, in a landscape of tall grass, palms, and equatorially lush trees, Stoner and Prim helped to pitch UNESCO bell-tents for Anwar and Julio to live in as they set up this first station and established a network of depots in the Bahr el Ghazal province. Trucks rented from contractors in Aweil, with ‘laissez-passer’ on both sides, would move the food.

  At a small table in the depot clearing, Prim and Stoner ate dinner of wheaten bread and kebabs with Anwar and Julio on the second night. During the meal, tall men in military fatigues turned up to share the food. They proved to be rebel officers, long-limbed, lean-handed, ritual scarring on their cheeks, dining within sight of the garrison lights of Aweil. The night air, laden with heat and ambiguity, swelled the throat.

  Flown back to Khartoum, Prim spent unexciting but utterly engrossing weeks resupplying Anwar and Julio, whose depot was merely the first gesture of a broader
plan to feed, restock and reseed a thousand villages depleted by war. She intended to fly back to Aweil, and had Austfam’s permission to take Dr Sherif Taha with her. His health survey at Adi Hamit had been so useful. Now he would conduct an investigation into the health and morale of the refugees on the edge of this southern town. On the strength of Austfam’s approval of him, he had the grudging permission too of the Sudanese Ministry of Health. His proposed study was considered, for good or ill, ground-breaking, at least in its potential.

  All this activity, all this application to the needs of Southerners, distracted Prim from the truth: that she had abandoned her sister to marriage, and her solitary monomania over ancestors.

  Letter No 3, SARAH BERNARD

  Marked by her: NOT FOR SENDING

  Dearest Alice

  I have begun to think of strong means to make up for my weakness. Yes I would face hanging for murder if I needed to. There are knives sharp and blunt at table. I envisage myself taking them to hand. I see in my mind blood and potato falling from the mouth of Steward Pallmire and I hear the howls of Mrs Matron while I say: You thought I lacked any power but I was able to do this. It would be a lesson to all. I am ready to try it and only sometimes think what will befall my Alice on her own and inside that place where you are – and this where I am.

  Well vice has been forestalled in its path and so has revenge. Because up from the river come one hundred and twenty further women from a new Dublin ship Eurydice. I note amongst the freckled ones a number of fair beings and wonder in my shame can some of them stand as victims in my stead.

  And I find that Mrs Pallmire seeks me out in all the rush of settling these women in and wishes to drink tea with me. I cannot explain how she wants that. But in some way I have suddenly become her familiar. She tells me: You are a true lady. It is strangeness itself yet who can say that drinking tea in her kitchen is not an improvement over what last happened. In the Tory in my new and sudden standing as servant and confiding friend to Mrs Pallmire I am safe from mockery. But I see Mrs Pallmire pause by a young woman fresh from Eurydice who grows silent and raises her eyes to the exalted Mrs Matron and there is in them a cow-like fear. I know this was the same exact gaze the poor girl raised to the magistrate at trial. It is a gaze pleading for punishment though she does not know that.

  That same Mrs Pallmire takes from me the burden of destroying Mr Steward Pallmire. She is suddenly pleased to count herself my protector. I am meant to work in her house. But chiefly I sit and listen to her talk. She tells me that she met Pallmire when they were seventeen years – he working as an errand boy and porter in training at the county orphanage in Guildford and she as a servant. He was always very wry – so she says. She gleams when she says it. This is a very strange affection between them. She says he always had funny little songs. Then she asks me about my husband.

  I say: I was married to Corporal McWhirter. He was tall and had pale skin but he was moderate in drink. He did not have funny little songs. He went to Jamaica with his regiment. When in Manchester City prison I had a letter from his brother who was a soldier in another regiment. Fever had killed him. It kills men in greater numbers in the West Indies than any cannon. But though I was really widowed M for married somehow went beside my widowed name when I was put onto the ship.

  I commence bawling at that or rather tears leak out. I want to say he was a good man which was as much as I can remember to say for him. But I will not say it in front of her since it has no meaning for her. She thought Steward Pallmire a good man and a trump and likely rogue. Nothing to be said to her that means anything! In any case and whatever their condition – married or widowed or in exile – women cannot speak. Or they can speak but are not heard. Their words do not cause the smallest change in the course of this world which belongs to men.

  And Mrs Pallmire asks: You did a silly thing when he was sent away to Jamaica?

  I confessed to her that that is what some said. They said of me: Foolish girl without the love and guidance of her husband! The magistrate tempered my sentence to fourteen years on that account but could not overlook the offence. As for innocence it is a word a person does not utter here without creating gales of laughter. The other women believe you my dear Alice when you tell how you were incited to poison your husband and what a Cyclops he was. They are reverent when you talk of your old husband. Doting son of an aged mother who exhorted him on her deathbed – as you have told me my dear – to mind his health by taking small dosages of arsenic and mercury salts – all of which he had to hand being a dyer.

  They listened in silence when you tell them you took from his dyeing shop the substances of his trade. Red alizarin from the madder root. Mixed with alkaline salts it was potent but merely made him queasy. Yellow picric acid and Prussian blue were what you were driven to. It is an ornate crime and it stands telling again and again and is so unlike the dreary daily crimes of the rest of us. For them we cannot cry: Innocence!

  And as I sit drinking tea with Matron Pallmire I am but one year done with my sentence and have six years to run before I get the half freedom of my ticket. I believe that as soon as I have done the correct services by you my Alice and given you rescue I must surely lie down under the weight of that time and perish by my own will.

  We spend an hour together – this is Mrs Pallmire and me – when the tin box of tea on the sideboard has only a few leaves in it. Go across the hallway – says Mrs Matron – and into the side bedroom. Take the tin with you and fill it from there. I walk as she has instructed and open a door and find myself in a room where it is hard to move for hampers of piled soap on one side and cases of tea of which one has its lid prised. From it in that hushed cave of treasures I refill the tin not using a measure but holding up handfuls of dark china leaf. See how it falls into the caddy. I have lived by measures – an ounce here and one and a half ounces there – since I was first imprisoned. The room beggars my belief and it is for this room – for the permission to conduct this room and other rooms and fill them with plenty – that Mr Steward Pallmire is permitted by his wife to have his compensation from the girls in the Factory. This room contains what Mrs Pallmire finds precious and its piled-up preciousness with her can be felt in here.

  I had discovered them in their hoarding – these two Pallmire people who give the women in the Tories four ounces of soap to last them for two weeks for body and clothing. These people who eke to each of us a few ounces of tea and there are women here who would sell their souls for tea or tay as the little red brick woman Carty calls it. Her sweetest comfort. All the riches of soap and tea are in this room and God knows what in other rooms!

  Yes – so I tell the Pallmires silently – you have been careless with me and I shall make a record. I am not a stupid woman. I have the cleverness to write a letter. And when next I am sent to a room like this one I shall make a count.

  Knowing this I feel well at once. I feel too that small amounts are the failing of the convict women. We were innocent enough to take small quantities – crimes in ounces and mere pinches – not in pounds and pounds stored up.

  I say to myself then: I have you two! I have Mrs Julius Caesar Matron and Mr Julius Caesar God-Almighty Steward Pallmire. I am altogether very pleased without thinking how rash it is to think this way inside the Factory. I think that our rescue Alice is in knowing what I know.

  I put my name to this now and one day she shall read.

  Sarah

  I TAKE OUR WOOL TO SALE

  Clancy and I with our towering load, and with the axles holding up splendidly, slept at night beneath our wagon. We avoided Goldspink’s homestead, and the man’s odious company, and so traversed the limestone plains, sheltering only one night in an overseer’s bush hut before our approach to Goulburn. I set Clancy to camp near the racecourse but rode up on Hobbes to Finlay’s house. I was quite elated at the idea of a proper bed and glass windows and good china, as well as breathing within brick and exactly timbered walls after months of living in the midst of bark and b
eefwood.

  The convict woman who was housekeeper met me at the door and asked me in at once, but I was disappointed to find that the house possessed a cold air, as if it were being only half lived in. Of course, with the lively Phoebe gone there was bound to be a sense of vacancy.

  The housekeeper had told me that Mrs Finlay was away visiting relatives in Yass, but that Mr Finlay, who was out at the moment, had particularly said he wished to see me when I came through. Did I need anything?

  Since my only baths in the past months had been in the Murrumbidgee River, I asked her could a bath be poured. A zinc tub was quickly filled for me, and I sat amongst the steam in miraculous luxury, contemplating my coming wealth and mulling over the maker’s name imprinted in the flange of the bath: Tatlow and Sons, Manchester. That man, I thought, that Tatlow and not only his sons but also his daughters would one day wear cloth woven from the pastures of Nugan Ganway. Since I had made wool out of the world of Nugan Ganway, I felt an interest in all that was made on earth. Bettany was, like Tatlow and Sons, a creator.

  I shaved off a large part of the beard I had grown, and then shaved again in case handsome Mrs Finlay returned home. Then, emergent from the bathroom, I was given the choice between a bedroom to rest in and a library to read in, and chose the library. The Sydney Herald had an essay on the grief convict servants caused their masters.

  It was nearly six o’clock that evening when the housekeeper knocked on the library door and told me Mr Finlay was waiting for me in the front parlour. It was said in a hushed way, as if Mr Finlay were not used to being delayed. I found him behind his big front window, looking out at the sweet blue of an Australian dusk. He held in his hand, which was extended as if he had just finished reading, several sheets of writing paper.

 

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