On her visits to see Billy, Jessica keeps well clear of Ada Thomas and the two girls, afraid of what they might say to Hester and Meg.
Jack respects Jessica for spending time with Billy and Jessica was surprised the first time he’d said so. ‘Jessie, he likes you. You and me are all he has. It’s sometimes nice to know there’s someone who has the time to sit with someone else,’ he’d remarked.
Jessica knows he doesn’t only mean Billy Simple. She will sit quietly next to Jack when he’s gone bush after his old man has roused on him. Then, after a bit, she’ll try and cheer him up. Like she’ll say, ‘Don’t let the old man getcha, Jack. One day he’ll be that agitated his nose’ll blast right off his fat face and he’ll have his great hairy arm down yer throat tryin’ to fetch it back.’ She’ll try to make Jack laugh. ‘Then, when he can’t reach it, he’ll have you shitting in the porcelain potty next day looking for his flamin’ hooter!’
Jack will sit there, looking down between his parted knees, a twig in his hand, drawing squiggles in the dirt at his feet and she’ll see him trying not to smile.
‘There it’ll be, your old man’s nose with the wart on the end, sticking out the top of the rest of what’s in the potty, trying its hardest not to sneeze!’
Her teasing will usually get him back to his old laughing self again. Funny that, she wouldn’t do the same for any other bloke except perhaps for Joe. Though she couldn’t imagine ever teasing her father.
Jessica knows that Joe’s relationship with George Thomas hasn’t improved at all. George Thomas likes to humiliate a man and make him sing for his supper. She’s seen it herself often enough in the four years she’s worked on and off at Riverview Station.
‘That’s the problem with being a poor feller,’ Joe once confided to her. ‘You can never sort things out man-to-man with a rich bastard like George Thomas. Not the way it ought to be possible between two blokes. Even if he has it coming to him, and you’ve got every bloody right and a charter from the flamin’ King of England. You can’t have a go at him, can’t square with him, or punch him, can’t expect justice when he’s done the wrong thing by you, because, as sure as God made little green apples, you’re gunna have to go cap in hand to him one of these flamin’ days.’ He’d paused and watched a couple of bush doves fly overhead, their wings fluting the air. ‘Being poor is like the drought: when the rains come and the paddocks are up to a sheep’s belly in green grass, remember that the mud is only wet dust waiting to dry out.’ That was Joe, ever the gloomy one.
Sooner or later George Thomas has a go at everyone who works for him at Riverview. Although he didn’t fire her after Billy’s accident. Jessica had been too upset at the time to care whether he did or not, but after a week Mike Malloy had told Joe to fetch her back to the shearing shed. Since then she’s stayed out of the owner’s way, though she expects that one of these days her turn will come.
She likes to imagine she’ll give him some of his own back, stand toe-to-toe and trade abuse. Show him a real woman doesn’t have to take that from any man! Tell him to his face that he may be able to get away with it when it’s his son, because the lowest thing a boy can do is hit his father, but she won’t put up with his abuse when she’s done nothing wrong. She’ll go on to say he can yell at the poor stockmen or shearers all he likes — they have to take it on the chin, because they need the money to feed their scrawny kids. But she won’t put up with him, he can go to Hell.
Yet she knows, if push came to shove, she probably doesn’t have the courage to trade insults with Jack’s father. George Thomas is an ex-riverboat captain (Jack says it. must have been a slave ship) and he has more blow-hard than a sperm whale and most of it ugly enough to fry the hair off your head.
Folk say he made his fortune carrying stuff up the river when the water was low and the other boats couldn’t navigate the shallows. He’d sunk and capsized his boat dozens of times until, shortly after the railway was put through, he’d sunk it one final time, claiming he’d struck a fallen tree and split the bow in two. The boat had conveniently gone down in one of the deep holes in the river so his claim could never be substantiated. He’d collected the insurance from North British & Mercantile, bought himself a fancy horse and rig and walked out a while with Ada Murphy, the only daughter of Jack Murphy of Bindaloo Station. He’d married her for her money and Riverview Station, the property she’d inherited from her grandfather.
Jessica sighs to herself. Now she thinks about it, there isn’t much she can do if George Thomas has a go at her. Joe doesn’t pay her wages, she eats at his table and shares the good seasons with the bad, the plenty with the nothing. It doesn’t occur to either of them there may be any other way. So working on the Thomas property is the main source of Jessica’s income. Apart from musterin
g cattle, the shearing shed goes eight weeks and while most of what she earns there goes to Joe he gives her threepence in the florin, which makes up the bulk of her income. That and a bit of work she can sometimes get from one of the smaller stations that may be shorthanded.
Jessica depends on the few shillings she earns to pay for her moleskins, flannel shirts and boots, all of which, with the exception of her hat, Hester refuses on principle to supply now that she’s a grown woman.
‘You want to look like a man, you pay for it!’ her mother insists.
Hester reluctantly accepts, however, that a bonnet isn’t practical for the sort of work her youngest daughter does around the farm. She also makes her pinafores, which Jessica wants plain without any flounces, like a carpenter’s apron. Meg, thinking she’s being funny, always embroiders a pink half-opened rosebud with stem and leaves on the pocket of the apron, no doubt hoping her sister will object. But Jessica wouldn’t give her the satisfaction — in fact, she rather likes the little decoration.
With the money she earns from working at Riverview, Jessica is also saving up for a new saddle, which she reckons is going to take her as long as it will take the rosebud on her apron to grow into a rose bush.
While Joe needs the money she earns, Jessica secretly welcomes the opportunity to work at Riverview Station. Often lonely for company of her own age, she looks forward to Jack Thomas being on the horse beside her on a muster. They’ll grin at each other every time they ride up close to turn a beast in the right direction, shouting instructions through a haze of grey dust. Then they’ll gallop off furiously, hooves kicking up clods of earth behind them, laughing and skylarking all the day long. The fear of George Thomas turning on her may never be far from her mind, but Jessica reckons it’s worth it to work with Jack and do what she loves best. And deep down, she feels pretty sure that if George Thomas really lost his rag with her for no good reason, her father would have a piece of him, no matter how poor they happened to be at the time. Maybe Mr Thomas knows that Joe Bergman has a reputation for being a hard man.
Joe had once shot a man and got off scot-free when the judge in Sydney said it was self-defence. Jessica didn’t know the exact details, he’d never told her about it himself, but she thought it had something to do with his settlement. This was Crown land, which had been appropriated by the Great Peter’s Run, a vast station belonging to John Peter, and which was said to stretch all the way to the Victorian border.
Joe’s government settlement interrupted John Peter’s run and so his foreman had taken to knocking down Joe’s fences as soon as they were erected. Joe had re-erected the fences twenty times or more before he’d finally had enough. One bitter winter’s morning he’d gone to see John Peter’s foreman, a notorious bully named Dutch Miller. As Joe approached the foreman’s camp on horseback he’d been challenged and then threatened. The foreman had drawn a gun and claimed he’d kill Joe unless he moved off what he claimed was rightfully John Peter’s land. Joe had refused, waving the land certificate which entitled him to two lots of 640 acres in the parish of Ourendumbee.
‘I don’t give a damn what the paper says, Joe Bergman, that land belongs to John Peter by right of use and we’re taking it back,’ Dutch Miller shouted. Then he’d fired at Joe, the bullet from his revolver chipping the bottom of Joe’s collarbone and travelling to the side of his chest, coming out directly under his left arm. Then Joe finally lost his patience and he calmly raised his Winchester and shot the man, his aim not nearly as careless as the foreman’s, the bullet making a neat hole in the centre of his forehead. Or so the story went, anyway. The wound Joe had received left a lovely scar for the judge in Sydney to see, and a hole in Joe’s best and only overcoat front and back.
The oven is now ready and Jessica places the four bread tins in it and unhooks the milk pail, ready to milk the cow. She fills a billy with what was left of the water in the kettle to wash the cow’s udder and teats and then, carrying the milk pail in one hand and the billy in the other, she steps out into the yard.
She’s only gone a few yards from the homestead when the dogs start up again. Jessica stops in her tracks. She is certain now that they are onto something, that the kelpies have disturbed some sort of intruder, a dingo or a fox maybe, probably have it bailed up. She returns to the kitchen, puts the milk pail and the billy on the table and picks up the shotgun. Then, carrying both cans in her right hand to save her sore shoulder, she slings the shotgun over her left shoulder. Jessica leaves again through the kitchen door, heading for the small paddock where they keep the jersey cow and her calf.
When she draws close enough she whistles for the dogs. They stop barking for a moment and then continue. The kelpies are trained to the whistle and when she doesn’t see them coming Jessica places the pail and the billy at her feet and works the hammers back on the shotgun. Then she retrieves the cans and walks towards the barking dogs, carrying the shotgun in her right hand so if she needs to move fast she can drop the cans and quickly bring the gun up to her shoulder. She realises that she’s forgotten to fit the shoulder pad and hopes it’s all a false alarm.
Then she sees the dogs near the cow paddock, standing around the base of a pepper tree, barking up into the branches. Can’t be a snake, she thinks. Dogs use a peculiar bark when they’re around a snake, a small whine and then a sharp bark and then a whine again and a growl—but the kelpies aren’t barking like that now. Jessica whistles to them again and this time they leave the tree and turn, Red leading them, reluctantly padding towards her but turning around every few steps to bark back up at the tree. Jessica puts the pail and the billy down and starts to move forward slowly. Sensing her caution, the dogs turn and rush back to the tree, jumping, their paws scrabbling against its trunk. Jessica whistles again and the dogs stop barking and immediately go down on all fours, whining and growling their excitement. Then she sees a boot and part of a man’s leg hanging from a branch. She’s almost reached the tree but stands in open ground — if whoever is up the tree has a rifle she is dead meat. But then, if he is armed, she tries to reason in her growing panic, he could long since have shot the dogs and made his escape. ‘Come down!’ she calls, ‘or I’ll bloody fire!’
‘Dogs!’ she hears a man’s terrified voice call from the pepper tree. ‘Dogs! Dogs!’
Jessica moves closer with the shotgun now held against her shoulder and pointed up into the pepper tree. ‘Get down, they won’t hurt you. Get down, or I’ll fire!’ she commands, her voice sounding braver than she feels.
Then the voice in the tree begins to howl like a small child.
‘Billy?’ Jessica calls out in surprise. ‘Is that you?’