A Rose for the Anzac Boys

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A Rose for the Anzac Boys Page 1

by Jackie French




  To Private John ‘Jack’ Sullivan, who faced and survived it all; to (Colonel) Dr A.T. Edwards, who did his best to help; to ‘the boys’ of today, and their girls too; and most of all to those indomitable women, the ‘forgotten army’ of World War I, with love, respect and admiration.

  Table of Contents

  Cover Page

  Dedication

  Maps

  Lachlan

  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

  Lachlan

  Author’s Note

  The Forgotten Army

  TRUTH AND FICTION

  THE ROSES OF NO-MAN’S-LAND

  WHO WERE THEY?

  FROM TEA PARTIES TO HEROISM

  WORKING ON THE HOME FRONT

  THE WOUNDED IN WORLD WAR I

  A SHORT HISTORY OF WORLD WAR I

  NOTES

  ‘THE SKYE BOAT SONG’

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

  Other Titles by Jackie French

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  Maps

  The Route of the first Anzac Troops to WWI

  Western Front, France, 1916

  The Middle East during WWI

  Gallipoli, 1915

  Lachlan

  BISCUIT CREEK, ANZAC DAY, 1975

  At 10 a.m. the street was empty.

  The shops showed blank faces to the footpath. Even the Royal Café was shut, though the scent of yesterday’s hamburgers lingered. A kelpie lifted its leg against the butcher’s, then wandered up into the park. It was so quiet you could hear baaing in the distance. Someone must be rounding up sheep on the hill, thought Lachie, as Pa’s ute drew up outside R & G Motors. Dad had been crutching too yesterday. It had been a wet summer. The fly strike was bad.

  Lachie slid across the ute’s cracked leather seat and walked round to help Pa out from the driver’s side. You had to tug the driver’s door open, too, and Pa couldn’t manage it alone. Pa refused to buy a new ute. He wouldn’t even drive Dad’s. ‘This one will last me out,’ he’d said, when Dad tried to argue with him. ‘We’ve grown old together.’

  Last year Pa had marched in the Anzac Day parade by himself. That was before he’d fallen down the steps at the doctor’s and broken his hip. Pa could hobble again now. But not up the hill to the war memorial. This year Pa had insisted Lachie push him in a wheelchair. ‘He’s the youngest,’ was all Pa had said. ‘It’s important he remembers.’ As though that explained anything.

  It was going to be embarrassing walking up the street in front of everybody, pushing his great-grandfather in a wheelchair. Why couldn’t Grandad do the pushing? Grandad had even been in a war, though he never actually fought because they’d had to take his appendix out, and by the time he was better the war was over. He never marched on Anzac Day.

  What if Lachie ran out of puff halfway up the hill? If he had to stop and get his breath back with everybody staring?

  Pa looked at his watch. ‘Should be getting here now.’ Pa’s voice was always too loud. It came of being deaf, Dad said.

  Lachie handed Pa his walking stick and then lifted the rose out of its jam jar of water. It wasn’t much of a rose. It was pink, with a smudge of white, and its stem was short and floppy, not like the roses from the florist that stood tall and straight. Pa had picked the rose from the tangle that grew along the fence outside the kitchen, and Lachie had held the jar all the way into town, trying not to let the water spill.

  Now he handed Pa the rose. ‘The paper said everyone was to meet at ten-thirty.’

  Pa ignored the comment. He never argued. He just ignored what people said till they did what he wanted. He peered down the street, the rose drooping in his hand, just as Mum and Dad drove up with the wheelchair they’d borrowed from the hospital.

  Lachie ran to help them get it out of the back of the car, mostly so he didn’t have to stay and talk to Pa. He loved Pa, but talking to him was hard now. Pa could only hear these days if you yelled and moved your mouth clearly. Both were embarrassing in public.

  Dad pushed the wheelchair up to the ute. Some people looked helpless in wheelchairs, but Pa looked like he was royalty, about to be carried off by his slaves.

  That’s me, thought Lachie.

  ‘Are you sure about this, Pa? It’s a long way for a kid to push,’ Dad said, moving his lips so Pa could lip-read. ‘Bluey would be glad to help out.’

  Bluey Monroe was the butcher. He’d served at Tobruk, which was in World War II, the war that Grandad had almost been in, which was different from World War I, where Pa had fought, though the Germans had been the bad guys in both of them.

  It was hard to keep the wars straight sometimes, especially with all the other wars since.

  Pa ignored Dad, turning away. Pa used his deafness like a weapon. As far as he was concerned, it was settled.

  Pa never spoke much at any time. Dad said that came of being deaf too. The war—the First World War—had taken Pa’s hearing, though Lachie wasn’t quite sure how. When Pa did speak, he either said no more than was necessary or else he spoke lots, like he’d been saving it up in the cupboard of his mind.

  Another car drew up, and another. People appeared in the street now, strolling round corners or heading in from out of town, all making for the war memorial by the park, the men in suits and the women in their not quite Sunday best. The wind whispered up the street, an early breath of winter. Lachie shivered. He wished he’d brought a jumper.

  Other ex-soldiers began to gather outside R & G. Three men in uniform, with medals on their chests. A couple of old friends of Pa’s, in suits but with medals pinned to them. A woman in a naval uniform.

  Jim Harman slid out of his ute. It was a new blue one with a shiny bull bar. Jim had been in the Vietnam War, which wasn’t long ago, but he didn’t wear his uniform. Other men from Biscuit Creek had gone to Vietnam, but Jim was the only one here today. Jim hadn’t marched before. Pa lifted a hand to him. ‘Glad you made it, son,’ he said.

  There was something in Pa’s voice that puzzled Lachie. ‘Glad you made it’—was he just welcoming Jim to the march, or did he mean something more?

  The men lined up. There were fifty-six marchers now. Lachie had counted them. Pa was in the front row, which was extra embarrassing because what if Lachie couldn’t keep up with the others as he pushed the wheelchair? It was all uphill to the memorial. He wished he’d rehearsed it with Pa, tried pushing him uphill last week. But he hadn’t thought of it till now.

  Pa held the rose in his hand. It looked even floppier than it had at home.

  Mr Hogan from the school began to beat the drum.

  Boom. Boom. Boom.

  The men began to march, and Lachie pushed.

  It wasn’t as bad as he’d thought it would be, at least not at first. Up the main street with dozens of onlookers staring, the men with their hats off, the kids with their bicycles all standing still for these few minutes of respect. Even the dogs stared at the marchers curiously.

  Lachie’s arms began to ache.

  Boom, boom, boom.

  The men’s shoes clumped on the bitumen. Even with the drum and the beat of feet, Lachie had never heard the town so quiet. No one was talking. No one at all.

  Boom. Boom. Boom.

  P
ast the post office, the stock and station agency. He was going to make it! It felt good too, with everybody watching. He glanced at the men on either side. Mr Heffernan’s face was expressionless. But Lachie was shocked to see tears in Mr Byrne’s eyes. Mr Byrne had lost three brothers in the war after Pa’s, he remembered. It was funny to think of people missing their brothers even when they were old.

  Pa wasn’t crying, was he? Lachie looked down at him in his chair.

  Pa’s face, what he could see of it, was…strange. He wasn’t looking at the people in the street. He wasn’t even looking at the others beside him in the parade. It was as though he was watching something far away.

  Battles, thought Lachie. He’d seen battles on TV. Was that what Pa was watching? His friends blown to bits, maybe? Did they have guns back in World War I when Pa was young? Or was it swords and bayonet things? Nah, there must have been guns. Pa had a hole in his back from stuff he called shrapnel. He let Lachie put his finger in the scar sometimes.

  And then Pa smiled. Lachie saw his cheeks move and bent his head around to see more. It was a soft smile. A smile of love and happiness.

  No, thought Lachie, wherever Pa had been it wasn’t in a battle. It was some place good.

  They were at the war memorial statue now, the bronze soldier in his uniform with his rifle by his side, and the names of the men who had served and those who had died underneath. Miss Long at school said that the soldier’s uniform was Italian rather than Australian, which was why the Biscuit Creek Committee, who had raised the money, had got the statue cheap. But the soldier looked good at the top of the street, as though guarding the preschool and the dogs sniffing the trees in the park next door.

  The procession stopped. The speeches began. Lachie didn’t listen. He was good at not listening. Sometimes he could go through the entire school assembly not hearing a word.

  Pa wasn’t listening either, Lachie realised. Of course Pa couldn’t listen, being mostly deaf, but Lachie had a feeling that it made no difference. Pa was staring across the town.

  ‘I used to dream about those hills,’ he said suddenly to Lachie in his normal voice, which was half gruff and half yell.

  People stared. Lachie felt the blush prickle down his body. But no one looked cross. They just looked…tolerant. Even pleased. As though Pa was like the copy of Ned Kelly’s armour down at the museum, thought Lachie suddenly. Pa was their war memorial, even more than the Italian soldier.

  Suddenly the speeches were over. The wreaths were laid, six of them, all rosemary and bay leaves and florist’s flowers. Pa stood as the Last Post began to play, although Lachie didn’t see how he could have known. Pa saluted.

  The crowd began to move over to the rotunda for more speeches by the mayor and the president of the local RSL. Later the servicemen would head over to lunch at the Rissole, which was what Dad and Uncle Ben called the RSL club by the golf course. Their wives would have tea and scones or the roast chicken special at the Royal Café, while the kids headed for the park.

  Lachie waited. He knew what came next, though he’d never been so close before.

  Pa was still standing. Now he took a step—shaky, but upright—over to the memorial. He bent down. When he stood again, the single rose lay among the wreaths. It looked small and faded against the yellows, reds and greens.

  Pa saluted again. For a moment he didn’t look like an old man. His movements were as crisp as lettuce.

  ‘A rose for the Anzac boys,’ said Pa, a bit too loudly. ‘Rest in peace, my Rose.’

  And then it was over. Pa shuffled back and sat in his wheelchair, his trousers baggy on his skinny legs. Lachie took hold of the chair’s handles and pushed it over to the footpath where Dad was waiting to take Pa down to the Rissole.

  He glanced back. The rose was still there, now strangely bright among the plastic-looking florist’s wreaths.

  The rose for the Anzac boys.

  Chapter 1

  Miss Hollington’s School

  for Young Ladies

  Surrey

  England

  5 June 1915

  Dear Miss Davies,

  Thank you for the talcum powder and the handkachiefs. (I still can’t spell that!) It was good to get a birthday present from home, even though you’re not at Glen Donal any more. It’s hard to imagine you being a governess somewhere else. I hope the Mackenzie children are nice, but that you don’t think they’re quite as nice as me and Tim!

  Aunt Harriet and Uncle Thomas sent me a silver-backed hairbrush and mirror set. It was lovely but not the same as getting a present from someone you really know. I hoped I’d hear from Tim or Doug, but I don’t suppose Doug can just leave the war and gallop down to a post office in Flanders, or that Tim has time to write letters at that Gallipalli place (can’t spell that either) that’s in the papers so much. Aunt Lallie sent me a wonderful Egyptian bracelet, but I opened that weeks ago so it doesn’t count either.

  I’m liking school a bit better, though I still miss Glen Donal DREADFULLY. I still don’t see why Dougie had to dump me here when he decided to enlist in England. I could perfectly well have stayed at home with you and Mrs Campbell. After all, I was almost sixteen, not five years old!

  It’s not as though I’m learning anything useful here, just ‘how to be a lady’, which means walking with my tummy held in and learning embroidery. (I am never going to embroider another tea cloth in my life once I leave here!) Oh, and French irregular verbs, which are a fat lot of use as I can’t even holiday in France now, with the war, and I’ll never need them when I come home. Maybe I can say ‘Parley Vous Francais’ to the sheep and see what they say. Probably ‘Baa’ which is what I’d like to say to Mademoiselle some days.

  Sometimes I wake up hoping that when I open my eyes I’ll see the river and the willows out the window. I even try listening for the sheep and maybe a kea’s cry. Then Miss Jenkins plods into the dormitory bleating ‘Girls! Girls! Rally! Rally!’, which she does to wake us up every single morning. Miss Jenkins sounds a bit like a sheep and her hair is woolly too. But I don’t think you’d get much of a price for a bale of teacher hair.

  At least I have a couple of good friends now. Anne is the daughter of an earl, which makes her an Honourable and impresses all the teachers frightfully, though they try not to show it. Her mother is called Lady George, which makes me giggle every time I say it even though it’s the right thing to call an earl’s wife. If his name is George, anyhow.

  Ethel’s mother is dead like mine, and her father is a wholesale grocer and has pots of money. Of course it’s dreadfully rude to talk about how much money someone has, but somehow everyone at school knows Ethel’s dad has more money than—who was that ancient rich chap? Crokus? Him, anyway. Ethel’s family live in Yorkshire, which means Ethel has a broader accent than I do. But Anne says my New Zealand accent isn’t too bad, and that Ethel just clings to hers because she’s too stubborn to give it up.

  Ethel’s dad sent her here to make her ladylike. But Ethel isn’t interested in being ladylike. Or in French verbs or anything much. But she’s a good friend. She and Anne were wonderful to me when I first got here and was so lonely.

  There isn’t much news from Dougie, except what I read in the papers. He wrote to me last month but didn’t say much. I think he has forgiven Tim for enlisting under another name. It just wasn’t fair to expect Tim to wait another four years till he was ‘old enough’ to enlist when Dougie and I were gone. I am so glad Dougie didn’t report Tim to the authorities. Of course Tim wants to do his bit for England, just like Doug!

  Tim writes whenever he can, but maybe that’s because twins are closer than just brother and sister. He and I have great plans for after the war when we are both home again, so there is a lot to discuss.

  I am so very proud of having two brothers in uniform, and a cousin too, as well as an aunt who is a nurse. One of the girls in my class has three brothers in the army, but there are only six of us who have two. It’s hard to be a girl sometimes, stuck at sc
hool when there is such a great cause to fight for. We do first aid training here every Saturday and Wednesday, and bandage-rolling Tuesdays, and making baby clothes for refugees on Friday afternoons. But it isn’t like DOING something; it isn’t glory or adventure.

  I’m sorry this has been such a long letter. Writing to you makes it almost seem like I’m home. If you get a chance and if it isn’t too much trouble, would you mind putting flowers on Mummy’s and Daddy’s graves? Daddy always put flowers on Mummy’s grave for her birthday (it’s 19 July). It would be horrible to think that no one did this year, just because I’m at school in England and Tim and Doug are away at the war.

  Your loving ex-pupil,

  Midge Macpherson

  ENGLAND, 14 JUNE 1915

  It began with letters.

  Letters were delivered twice a day to Miss Hollington’s School for Young Ladies, but girls could only collect their mail after classes were over, from the table in the big hall that smelled of furniture polish. Pupils at Miss Hollington’s weren’t allowed to run, except on the lacrosse field, so Midge forced her feet to walk sedately across the courtyard’s too neat grass, her skirts swishing around her ankles.

  Would there be a letter today?

  Not that Tim’s letters said a lot since he’d joined up. The censor blacked out his words if he wrote much more than ‘Hello there, Sis old girl, don’t worry I’m well’. But he’d managed to tell her about a sandstorm before they left Egypt, the sand so deep it covered the barbed wire; and about marching through the desert, all of them so thirsty that men licked the dry taps, desperate for a stray drop of water.

  Please let there be a letter, Midge prayed. Tim was her only link to the future now—that blessed time when they would both be twenty-one. Tim would inherit half of Glen Donal and Midge would inherit the money her parents had thought more suitable for a girl than land. When that day came, when the war was over, when they finally sailed home, Tim would farm their land between the mountains and they’d use her money to build a house there, on the far bank of the river at Glen Donal.

 

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