About the Book
It is January 1951, and after a year away Eleanor Webber has returned home to River Run, her family’s sprawling sheep property in western New South Wales. Fleeing a failed love affair back in Sydney, she hopes for some time and space to heal.
But with shearing of over 25,000 sheep about to commence, and the infamous and moneyed Margaret Winslow and her husband, Keith, staying in the main house as her mother’s guests, that dream is quickly dashed.
More worryingly, her half-brother Robbie is increasingly running wild, playing tricks on his governess, antagonising the jackeroos and obsessing about a communist invasion. Though only eleven, Robbie has appointed himself guardian of the property and, in his treehouse by the river, he readies for an imminent attack. Armed with a gun.
Then, with a storm looming and tensions rising in the shearing shed, a mysterious stranger appears on the horizon. And in one disastrous moment young Robbie entangles Eleanor in a situation that will have serious repercussions for every member of the Webber family …
Taking place over just one week, River Run is an unputdownable rural drama from the bestselling author of The Bark Cutters and Wild Lands.
Contents
Cover
About the Book
Title Page
Epigraph
January 1951: Friday: Readying for Invasion
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Saturday: Down by the River
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Sunday: The Day After
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Monday: Shearing Begins
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Tuesday: Arrivals and Departures
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Wednesday: The Great Escape
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Thirty-eight
Chapter Thirty-nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-one
Chapter Forty-two
Chapter Forty-three
Chapter Forty-four
Chapter Forty-five
Chapter Forty-six
Chapter Forty-seven
Chapter Forty-eight
Chapter Forty-nine
Thursday: Towards the Light
Chapter Fifty
Chapter Fifty-one
Tuesday: Beginnings and Endings
Chapter Fifty-two
Chapter Fifty-three
Chapter Fifty-four
Author’s Note
About the Author
Also by Nicole Alexander
Copyright Notice
An opal-hearted country
A wilful, lavish land –
All you who have not loved her
You will not understand
‘My Country’, Dorothea Mackellar
January 1951
Friday
Readying for Invasion
Chapter One
Lifting the corner flap of flyscreen, Robbie pushed against the stained-glass window of the schoolroom. The timber frames creaked ominously, revealing the steely bark of trees, scattered branches and a glimpse of bush beyond. Breath held, he waited for the footsteps of the governess on the veranda. When no board squeaked, Robbie tiptoed across the polished wooden floor to peek out the door. Sure enough, the woman was already sitting at the opposite end of the porch. He studied the pinched-face yard of pump water known as Miss Hastings, although Robbie called her Duck Face on account of her beady eyes and beaky nose. He watched and waited, knuckles still stinging from the harsh rap of the ruler. He wondered why it was so vital to be able to name each of the red-shaded countries on the large map on the wall. Everyone knew those lands belonged to England and, as he never intended leaving River Run, Robbie figured that he’d never need any more information than that.
The governess turned the pages of a book disinterestedly and then, leaning back in the cane chair, gazed out across the expanse of dirt to the green oasis of the homestead garden. Ponds and shrubberies were bordered by a white timber fence that stretched like a weathered spine past the house and thorny rose bushes, to where massive bougainvilleas proclaimed the entrance to the grounds. Somewhere within the house surrounds was a well dug by the first Rivers to have settled this land. It was filled in now, the water having been found brackish. Robbie’s mother explained that a tree was planted on the very spot. Rex, the gardener, said it was one of the bigger trees, on account of a stockman having been dropped down the deep hole. Excellent fertiliser, Rex explained. Robbie was yet to discover if the story was true or not, but it sure riled Duck Face.
The governess’s eyelids grew drowsy, her wrist slipping from the arm of the chair to hang languidly in the afternoon heat. Robbie retreated back inside the schoolroom, closed the study guide sitting on his desk and scrawled on the blackboard: finished. He studied the copper-plate handwriting with some satisfaction, before his attention was drawn to the teacher’s satchel. There was never much inside it. A lined exercise book, writing paper and envelopes, a long pencil box with a sliding lid and an outline of the day’s study.
From inside his flip-top desk, Robbie retrieved a glass jar with a screw-top lid and held the contents up to the light. The slimy tadpoles were tiny frogs now, although some retained stumpy tails. It didn’t take much to fish the little critters out, and they seemed pretty happy in Miss Hastings’ pencil box, their new home. With the slippery transfer complete, he replaced the box in the satchel and returned the jar to the desk.
At the window, Robbie wormed his slight body through the hole, angling down the side of the building until hard ground braced his palms. The toes of his boots caught on the sill, halting the escape, however, he twisted one way and then the other, and then slid himself to freedom.
Chapter Two
River Run village appeared deserted for a Friday afternoon. Eleanor Webber left her suitcase at the station master’s office, crossed the street and turned into the main thoroughfare. At the intersection, she tugged a beige hat over red hair and straightened her grey skirt and pink blouse. Old weatherboard houses, some dilapidated, others inhabited, intermingled with newer dwellings, vacant lots and public buildings, the line of randomly placed structures crowned by the two-storey Royal Hotel and the peaked roof of the Catholic church.
Two men leaning on the hitching post outside the Royal Hotel eyed Eleanor with interest as a willy-willy of red dust careered down the street, before turning a corner, caught by the changeable wind. Eleanor clutched at her flapping skirt as someone whistled appreciatively from the upstairs balcony. A row of men leant on the railings, a yellow dog among them. Feeling conspicuous, Eleanor lingered on the kerb as a truck with a load of hay came by, throwing up a cloud of dirt. The vehicle continued down the street, passing the church and the Memorial Hall to stop outside the garage. A few seconds lat
er the mechanic, Sweeny Hall, appeared. He talked briefly to the driver and then, lying on the road, pulled himself under the vehicle.
Cutting diagonally across the street, Eleanor headed to the Post Office-cum-telephone exchange.
Pattie Hicks stuck her head out the door of the building, a cigarette hanging from her mouth. ‘Thought I heard a pair of heels a-clacking.’ She stepped down onto the cement footpath. ‘You home for a visit then, Eleanor?’
‘I am. How are you, Pattie?’
‘Me?’ The woman took a puff of the cigarette. ‘Nothing that a trip to Sydney wouldn’t fix. You must find it right boring when you come back here.’
Boring wasn’t the word that came to mind. ‘Actually, I like the peace and quiet. It’s a nice change,’ Eleanor conceded, the sun biting at her skin through her blouse.
‘Well, I guess you have to have a change to know the difference.’ Pattie took a long drag then ground the cigarette out with a ruby-red sandal. ‘Missed the festivities, you did. We had a march and everything down the main street for the jubilee celebrations. Imagine, fifty years since federation, two wars, the blasted depression and now those slanty-eyed Koreans are picking a fight. Well, you chose your week, coming during this hot spell. Fry an egg on the pavement you could these past couple of days, and no sign of it ending soon.’ She stepped from the kerb onto the road, grimacing at the dirt. ‘Those Greeks down the road reckon I should be rubbing fat into my face to stop my skin from cracking up.’ She looked unconvinced. ‘Might as well sit a woman out in the middle of the road and cook her, I say. And what about the stink? Mutton lard on my face in this weather?’
‘I think they probably meant olive oil,’ suggested Eleanor politely.
‘I know I ain’t the prettiest in the west,’ Pattie lifted a foot, brushing dust from her toes, ‘but do I look like a flaming tossed salad?’
This time Eleanor didn’t risk an answer. Only a few years prior, the telephonist had stabbed a woman in the back of the hand with a blunt fork for making eyes at her beloved husband.
‘So then, what’s the news from the big smoke?’ She looked at Eleanor’s ring finger. ‘Nothing, eh? Well, maybe you’re the smart one.’
Not that smart, Eleanor thought. Dante had stolen her novella and published the work under his name. The man she’d fallen in love with, had given herself to, had betrayed her.
‘It’s not what everyone says it is, this marriage caper, and I should know. Had two of them I have. One dead and the other not far off.’
‘Oh, Pattie, I’m sorry. Is Bill sick?’
‘Sick? He will be once he feels the rolling pin on the back of his head. Good piece of wood like that, well, I mean, you can’t just be using something like that for making scones.’
‘I guess not.’ Eleanor did her best not to laugh. The glint in Pattie’s eyes suggested she was serious. ‘Could you call River Run for me and let them know I’m here?’
‘No need. Rex is in town picking up some trellis from Stavros. That’s if you’re happy to ride with the help,’ Pattie challenged.
Sure enough Eleanor could now see her father’s old blue truck parked at the far end of the street outside the General Store. ‘Of course I am. Thanks, Pattie.’
‘Unexpected visit, eh?’ the operator pried. And when no answer was forthcoming, she gave an off-hand wave. ‘Be seeing you, Eleanor.’
Rex March and Stavros Pappas, the owner of the General Store, were sliding the length of trellis into the tray of the truck as Eleanor approached. They were complete opposites, with one dark-haired and thick-set and the other wiry with skin burnt red from a life lived outdoors. Chuckling quietly, they only noticed her when she was a couple of feet away.
‘Miss Eleanor?’ Rex had droopy spaniel eyes and a craggy neck but his gap-toothed smile was one of the happiest she’d seen in quite a while. ‘It’s a treat for an old man to see you again.’
‘Hello, Rex, hello, Mr Pappas.’
Both men tipped their hats in greeting.
‘Miss Eleanor,’ Stavros Pappas said loudly, ‘welcome home. It is good to see you. You come when the sun is very hot, yes?’
‘Yes,’ she agreed.
‘You’re a sight then, Miss Eleanor,’ the gardener said, ‘appearing out of the blue.’
‘I thought I’d surprise Mother.’
‘That you’ll do. But she’ll be real pleased to see you.’ Rex unwound a length of rope and began to loop it through the trellis. ‘You’d be needing a lift,’ he surmised, securing the lattice-work to the truck.
‘That would be great. My suitcase is at the station.’
‘Well, I’ll just finish up with the River Run order,’ Mr Pappas said amiably, stepping onto the pavement and walking back inside the shop.
Rex tested the knot on the rope. ‘Stavros’s family has arrived from Greece since your last visit. Got here a good six months ago. Fitted in real well they have. One of the boys has taken up an apprenticeship with Sweeny Hall while the eldest girl is real fine with a needle. A new frock or a fresh wound, you name it, either way she’s a boon to the district.’
‘She’s a nurse?’ Eleanor noted the shiny new rabbit traps piled in the tray.
‘Served she has. Sad story there,’ Rex replied cryptically.
‘Mr Pappas must be happy to have them all out here with him at last. I know he’s wanted them to emigrate for a long time.’
Rex weighed her reply. ‘Yes and no. Neither of the grandmothers came. Couldn’t shift them with a barge pole, Stavros told me. They lost boys over there. Killed in the war. And those old ladies won’t leave them behind. But as I said to him, that’s their choosing and I can’t blame a person for not wanting to be buried in foreign soil. Of course it’s real hard on him and the others, leaving those two old girls behind in Athens, knowing they’ll never see them again.’
The wind blew down the main street, bringing with it the sounds of another vehicle. A battered taxi drew up outside the hotel to the interest of the shearers on the balcony above. One man got out, popped the boot, dropping a swag in the dirt.
‘Hey, Don Donaldson,’ a young man in a red and yellow flannel shirt yelled from above, ‘in the wrong district, aren’t you?’
The heavy-boned man with bunched muscles for arms looked up briefly but said nothing. Hefting the swag over a shoulder, he walked inside the building.
‘For a young pup you’ve got a mug on you,’ one of the men on the balcony accused the flannel wearer. ‘That man you’re chiacking with, well, he can throw a punch that would send your teeth to your feet, he can.’ The voice grew reverent. ‘Donaldson. Gun shearer from the Riverina, but he ain’t never come to River Run before.’
The inhabitants of the balcony, eight men and the mangy dog, craned their necks over the railing. The taxi lurched forward as if struggling to gain momentum before continuing down the street and out of town.
Rex resumed their conversation. ‘I should tell you too, Miss Eleanor, your mother’s having one of her weekends, so be prepared. Mrs Howell has been making a din in the kitchen since Wednesday.’
‘Oh, I didn’t time that very well.’ That was the last thing Eleanor needed. Her return home after a year’s absence was a last-minute decision. She needed to escape. To forget the Italian she’d so adored, so trusted.
‘And there’s shearing about to start. It’s a busy month ahead.’ Rex rubbed a lined cheek, his attention diverted by raucous laughter. There was a scuffle occurring on the hotel balcony. A thin, short man, the one who’d backchatted the gun shearer, was being edged over the wrought iron balustrade by Donaldson and dangled above the street by his ankles.
Eleanor’s eyes grew large. ‘Rex? What are they doing?’
The laughter from the men on the balcony grew loud and encouraging.
A dog barked. Someone yelled out you bloody mongrel and the man was dragged back to safety.
Rex gave a snort of laughter. ‘That’s some of the team. Started arriving in dribs and drabs a couple of days
back. I reckon a man would be right entertained just by pulling up a chair here on this very street and watching the village come alive at shearing time. Come every-which-way this year they have, girl. Came early to get their fill before heading out to River Run come Sunday.’ Noticing Eleanor’s confusion, he elaborated, ‘Dry camp. Some of them don’t drink, mind, and there are others happy to take a few weeks off the beer and rum to dry out, although they gripe about it. But there’s them that can’t exist without it. They can get real cranky.’ He rested cracked brown arms on the edge of the truck. ‘Ah, shearers. We were kings once, Eleanor. Kings. Forty-six degrees in the waterbag and each man’s tally two hundred and twenty ewes a day and rising. It was an honour to be in a good team with fast men. The rouseabouts back then were terribly religious. We kept them that busy that they’d drop to their knees at the end of the day and pray, pray for rain, so they could have a break. And the musterers and penner-ups, why, they could barely keep the sheep up to us. I shore in places where the boards were that long you could run a Stawell Gift.’
‘Dad always said you were a gun shearer,’ Eleanor replied with admiration. Rex stored so many stories that she’d never heard the same twice.
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