Freedom Ride

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Freedom Ride Page 1

by Sue Lawson




  Contents

  Cover

  Blurb

  Logo

  Author’s Note

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  About the 1965 Australian Freedom Ride

  Freedom Ride Participants

  Acknowledgements

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Endorsements

  Other Books by Sue Lawson

  Robbie knows bad things happen in Walgaree. But it’s nothing to do with him.

  That’s the way the Aborigines have always been treated. But in the summer of 1965 racial tensions in the town are at boiling point, and something headed Walgaree’s way will blow things apart.

  It’s time for Robbie to take a stand.

  And nothing can ever be the same again.

  A novel based on true events.

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  The novel Freedom Ride is historical fiction based on actual events. The confrontation between students and Walgaree residents in the novel is inspired by incidents that occurred during the 1965 Freedom Ride and information gathered by the students. I have merged and altered events and dates to suit the purpose of the story.

  Walgaree is a fictional town, cobbled together from many towns throughout not only New South Wales but the entire country.

  This novel features expressions and derogatory words that were commonly accepted in 1965. Today these words are accepted for what they are – ignorant, racist and demeaning.

  CHAPTER 1

  Sunlight reflected off house windows into my eyes and sweat pooled on the top of my undie elastic. The grass on the nature strip drooped, as defeated as me. Ahead, half a block away, the sun-bleached awning over the milk bar door shimmered in the heat. It had to be cooler inside the shop than it was out here, didn’t it?

  Stupid heat.

  Stupid Nan.

  It wasn’t me who finished the milk. Dad had used the last of it and put the empty bottle back in the fridge.

  But did I tell Nan that when she thrust coins at me and snapped, “Rectify the situation, Robbie”?

  Nope.

  I just scuttled out the back door, right past my bike, towards Wobbly’s milk bar.

  Beneath the milk bar awning, I wiped sweat from my face and pushed the door open.

  A bell tinkled and the smell of stale air and bread swamped me.

  Wobbly stood behind the counter watching Mrs Dixon, the town’s biggest gossip, count coins from her purse.

  “How are you, Robbie?” asked Wobbly, looking up.

  “I’m well, thanks, Mr Cavendish.” Everybody in Walgaree called Mr Cavendish Wobbly. Except me. Nan said calling him Wobbly was disrespectful.

  Mrs Dixon stopping counting coins and squinted at me. “How is Dawn, Robert?”

  “Well, thank you, Mrs Dixon.”

  Ethel Dixon used to play cards with Nan on Mondays – until she brought packet biscuits for morning tea two weeks in a row. Nan and her “card girls” voted Mrs Dixon out and Thelma Fielding in.

  The last thing I wanted to do was talk to Mrs Dixon. I hurried to the milk refrigerator at the back of the store. In my rush to avoid the old crow, I just about cannoned into an Aborigine waiting by the newspaper rack. She stared at the floor, arms wrapped around her stomach. Her dress was faded and shoes worn. She was too clean to be from the Tip and the Station, the government mission, was the other side of town. She was from the Crossing for sure.

  Mrs Dixon finished counting coins and glared at the newspapers. “May I also have The Sydney Morning Herald, Stan?”

  Wobbly sighed and limped out from behind the counter. As he took a newspaper from the rack, the Aborigine seemed to fold into herself.

  “Anything else?” asked Wobbly, when he returned to the counter.

  “That will be all, thank you, Stan.” Mrs Dixon pressed another coin on the counter.

  I placed my palms against the glass of the refrigerator and, once the chill had seeped into my bloodstream, opened the door. As I grasped the milk bottle, the bell above the entrance tinkled.

  “Barry!” boomed Wobbly. “When did you get back?”

  “Hello, Wobbly. Morning, Mrs Dixon,” said the man. “Arrived home last week.” His voice had the usual Walgaree drawl, but something about it reminded me of an ABC newsreader.

  “Barry Gregory.” Mrs Dixon clasped her gloved hands in front of her chest. “How is your dear mother coping?” Anyone who didn’t know better would think she actually cared about his mum. “I suppose she’ll sell–”

  The man cut her off. “She’s fine, thank you, Mrs Dixon.”

  Mrs Dixon’s eyebrows arched towards her silver hairline. Lips all tight, she put the paper and bread into her basket.

  “What can I do for you, Barry?” asked Wobbly.

  “Out of ciggies.” He glanced around the store. “Sorry.” He smiled at the Aboriginal woman. “You were here first.” He swept his hand from her to the counter. “After you.”

  My mouth fell open.

  The woman peeked at him from under her eyelashes but didn’t move.

  “I insist. Ladies first.”

  Mrs Dixon clucked her tongue. “Now, Barry. She can’t be served until you and Robbie have been, isn’t that right, Mr Cavendish?” She didn’t need to spell it out. White people were served before Aborigines in Walgaree, no matter what.

  Wobbly stood a little straighter. “That’s right.”

  Barry brushed his fringe back from his face. Unlike the rest of the male population of Walgaree, there wasn’t a hint of Brylcreem in his hair and instead of a chequered shirt and trousers, he wore a T-shirt, shorts and sandals. On a weekday.

  “You don’t mind waiting, do you, mate?”

  I jumped when I realised this Barry bloke was talking to me. Did I care if Wobbly served her first? I was supposed to, but … my shrug was more a twitch than a real movement.

  “Good on you, mate,” said Barry. “So, love, after you.”

  The Aborigine, eyes fixed on the floor as though the mysteries of the universe were printed across it, didn’t move.

  “Go on,” said Barry. “It’s okay.”

  Mrs Dixon jerked her head at the woman. “Stan, if you serve her, I’ll take my business elsewhere. And the Catholic Ladies’ Guild will hear all ab
out it.”

  Beads of sweat formed on Wobbly’s forehead. “Barry, you’ve made your point, mate.”

  “Please.” The Aborigine woman’s voice was a whisper. “I’ll wait.”

  Barry sighed. “At least serve the kid before me.”

  Wobbly’s breath rushed from him. “Just the milk, Robbie?”

  “Yes, thanks.” I stumbled past the black woman to the counter.

  Mrs Dixon huffed. As she left the milk bar, the bell above the door shuddered more than tinkled.

  Wobbly looked over my shoulder to Barry. “Now, Barry, you know how this town works. Don’t go stirring up a hornet’s nest.”

  CHAPTER 2

  The screen door slammed behind me. I counted – one, two, three.

  “Don’t slam the door,” bellowed Nan, right on cue. “How many times do I have to tell you?”

  Bluey the budgie screeched in support.

  I trudged from the darkened porch to the gloomy kitchen. Anytime the weather forecast was for a day of eighty degrees Fahrenheit or more, which was pretty much every day from October to April in Walgaree, Nan closed the curtains, blinds and doors to “keep the place cool”. It was as though she was a vampire, like Dracula, and scared of the light. All her closing up just made the house hotter and more depressing.

  Nan was still ranting about doorframes and springs and her poor nerves when I entered the kitchen. “Honestly, young man, I’m at my wits’ end, trying to civilise you.” She stood by the kitchen bench where she’d lined up the best china teacups ready for the card girls.

  Bluey screeched and flapped. Nan bustled to the cage and kissed the air.

  “Sorry, Nan,” I muttered, placing the bottle by the milk jug.

  “Next time we run out of milk, tell me.” She didn’t turn from Bluey.

  “Yoo-hoo, Dawn.” Thelma Fielding’s voice made me think of the cockatoos in the gum trees by the river.

  “She’s ten minutes early,” hissed Nan, before calling, “Coming, Thelma.” She turned back to me, voice flattening. “Fill the milk jug. And stay out of the sitting room.”

  “Yes, Nan.” Why would I want to go anywhere near old crones drinking tea and gossiping?

  She took off her apron, blew the budgie another kiss and bustled to the front door.

  Bluey fluttered around the cage. A spray of seed husks scattered across the lino.

  “How are you, Dawn, dear? Stinker of a day, isn’t it? Never mind …” Mrs Fielding’s endless stream of words swirled through the house like leaves caught in a northerly wind. The moment the kettle hinted at boiling, I filled the teapot and escaped to my bedroom.

  As soon as I opened the door, I knew Nan had been in here. It wasn’t the smoothed bedspread or the closed curtains that gave it away. The air was somehow bruised.

  Why couldn’t I have one place to escape from her and Dad?

  I stomped to the window and flung back the curtains. A blast of heat and light hit me. Once my eyes adjusted I stared outside, past the skeletal clothes line at the end of the cement path and the sagging wire of the chook house, to the giant gum tree looming over our backyard. Nan hated that tree because it dropped bark and leaves and twigs into our yard.

  At the top of the tree a magpie plunged its beak between its feathers. It shook itself, lifted its beak to the blue sky and warbled. A thought drifted into mind, riding on the back of the magpie’s carolling.

  Was this it?

  No nooks or crannies to escape into?

  A town of trees bowed by heat, grass sucked dry and dusty footpaths?

  A neurotic budgie, a pain in the bum grandmother and a father who didn’t care about anything except for the bank or the news?

  I pressed my forehead against the window. Not for the first time, I wondered how different my life would have been if Mum was alive, if we still lived in Inverell and if Dad wanted to be around me.

  With a huge effort, I pushed back from the window and crept to the kitchen to make a cordial.

  Voices, punctuated by Bluey’s chirps, filled the stifling air. Between Bluey, Mrs Fielding’s cockatoo squawk, Mrs Scott’s canary trill, Miss Johnson’s sparrow twitter and Nan’s goose honk, it was more an aviary than a house.

  “She’ll have to sell the caravan park,” trilled Mrs Scott.

  “Well, of course. It’s hardly the place for a woman to live alone, is it?” declared Nan.

  “Perhaps her son will help,” said Miss Johnson.

  “He’s overseas,” said Nan. “Has been for years. Didn’t even come back for his own father’s funeral.”

  “Hmmm.” I imagined Mrs Fielding’s beady eyes. That woman was made of animal parts. She had a bat’s face, a cockatoo’s voice, a wombat’s body and snake’s venom dripped from most things she said. “If you ask me, Arthur spent too much time with those darkies. And his son–”

  Nan took over with a scoff. “Always was too high and mighty. He won’t return to Walgaree.”

  “Didn’t you hear, Dawn?” China chinked. I guessed Miss Johnson had set her cup on the saucer. “Bet saw him yesterday at the petrol station. Didn’t you, Bet?”

  “Indeed, I did,” said Mrs Scott. “Scruffy-looking fellow these days. Needs a haircut and a good wash.”

  This time a chorus of squawks and tweets filled the soupy air.

  Gossipy old bags.

  I wrenched open the fridge as information shifted in my head, pieces slipping into place like tumblers in a lock.

  Dead husband.

  Son overseas.

  Scruffy, long hair.

  The Arthur they spoke about was Mr Gregory from Walgaree Caravan Park. His funeral was last week. I knew because I’d heard Nan on the telephone, mobilising the CWA troops to make cakes, scones and sandwiches for the afternoon tea at the RSL.

  I never met Mr Gregory, but I’d seen him around. Over the winter he worked at school, pruning trees and shrubs, looking after the rugby pitch and fixing the flaking paint on the gutters. When I was stuck on algebra or sick of Dickens, I’d watch him through the classroom window, his shirt buttoned to his throat and wrists, tucked into his belted trousers. His tools gleamed in the winter sunlight. One time, on my way home from school, I’d seen Mr Gregory behind the garden shed, hosing off his spade and rubbing oil into the handle with rag.

  The man at the milk bar with the long hair and strange accent, the one who asked Wobbly to serve the Aborigine first, had to be his son.

  “Eavesdropping, are we?”

  I hadn’t heard Nan enter the kitchen.

  “I was looking for lemon squash,” I stammered.

  She tsked, eyebrows pulled down. “Drink water. And Robbie …”

  I looked into her eyes.

  “Eavesdroppers never hear any good of themselves.”

  She turned and left the room before I could answer.

  Bugger this. I stormed out the back door and grabbed my bike.

  CHAPTER 3

  I opened the wire gate and wheeled my bike up the path to Keith’s house. Keith Axford lived in the police residence on Deakin Street with his mum, dad, three brothers and sister.

  Keith and Billy Weston were the closest things I had to friends. What bound us wasn’t that we were always chosen last for teams, or that we were the only boys in our grade who didn’t play rugby for the Walgaree Magpies or cricket for Walgaree Central. The glue that stuck the three of us together was we were outsiders.

  Even though my dad was born in Walgaree, I didn’t qualify as local because I’d been born in Inverell. That’s where Dad moved when he was twenty-one to take a promotion with the bank. He met Mum, married her, had me and stayed.

  Dad and I had moved in with Nan back at Walgaree twelve years ago, after Mum died. I was three.

  According to Nan, you had to live in Walgaree for fifty years to be a local – I had thirty-seven to go.

  Keith’s dad had been the Walgaree police sergeant for the last five years, so that made him less local than me.

  As for Billy, his dad to
ok over as manager of Willanbee, a massive sheep and cropping property twelve miles to the Narrabri side of Walgaree, three years ago. That made him even more of an outsider than Keith or me.

  I lay my bike on the patchy lawn in front of the police house and walked around the side to the back door.

  “Keith, for heaven’s sake, leave your brother alone,” yelled Mrs Axford, from somewhere inside.

  I knocked on the wooden doorframe. Mrs Axford came out of the kitchen frowning and wiping her hands on her apron. “Robbie. Come in.”

  She bellowed over her shoulder into the house. “Keith, Robbie is here.”

  Keith’s head popped around the kitchen door. “Want to go for a ride?”

  “Sure.”

  “That okay?” asked Keith, as he flung open the cupboard.

  Mrs Axford folded her arms. “Have you finished cleaning out your pigsty of a wardrobe?”

  “Yes, Mum.” Keith opened a tin and took out a handful of what looked like almond biscuits. He stuffed one into his mouth.

  “Be back in time for lunch. Dad is off-duty today, so we’ll all eat together.”

  “I’ll be back.” Biscuit crumbs sprayed from Keith’s mouth.

  “Offer one to Robbie.”

  Keith rolled his eyes and held out his hand. I took a biscuit from the top of the pile.

 

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