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Potato Factory

Page 60

by Bryce Courtenay


  Ikey now saw that her dress was soaked in blood, and that the pathetic whimpering sounds came from below her blood-stained skirt.

  He quickly sought the hem of her skirt and petticoat and gingerly pulled them over her thighs. Something was moving beneath the sodden cloth and, expecting rats, he jerked the material upwards. What an astonished Ikey saw squirming between the gigantic thighs, were two newborn infants. He gasped, reeling back in shock, and it took a moment for him to recover sufficiently to take a closer look. The tiny bodies were sticky with blood, but he saw that one was the reddish white of any newborn child, while the other was black as the devil himself.

  Ikey’s heart commenced to beat rapidly, thumping in his chest as though it might jump entirely from his person, for he could see that both infants were alive, their tiny fists tightly clenched and their little legs kicking at the stinking air about them. Each was still attached to the umbilical cord, and from the black one’s mouth popped tiny bubbles of spittle. Ikey reached inside his coat and pulled out a length of twine and a small knife he used for cutting plugs of tobacco for his customers. He cut the twine into two pieces about six inches long, tied off the umbilical cord at the base of each tiny navel aperture and then, some six inches higher, severed each of the bloody cords with the sharp blade. He had witnessed this procedure in a hundred netherkens in the rookeries of London where birth was often enough a public occurrence, and onlookers were charged a halfpenny for the privilege of attendance. But he was nevertheless surprised at how well he was coping with this startling emergency.

  With this messy task completed, Ikey walked to the water’s edge and washed the blood from his hands and from the blade of his knife, then retrieved the basket from where he had left it on the beach. He hastily emptied it by stuffing what remained of the contents into a dozen or so of the pockets in the lining of his coat.

  The sun had started to rise and the body of Marybelle Firkin was now clearly visible in the dawn light. Ikey closed his friend’s beautiful blue eyes. Then he removed the cloth which lined his tobacco basket, picked up each tiny infant and placed them carefully inside the basket.

  The moment they were lifted the babies began to scream and Ikey panicked and swung the basket one way and then another as if it were a cradle. ‘Shssh. . .shssh,’ he repeated several times. But when the crying continued he placed the basket down on the sand and instantly a dozen or more flies settled on the babies, attracted by the blood which still covered them. He picked up the cloth and flapped it to set the flies to flight, then covered the basket. To his surprise, the crying stopped. Ikey hastily pulled the hems of Mary-belle Firkin’s bloody petticoat and skirt back down to her ankles, and covered her exposed breast with the torn bodice. Then, squinting into the early morning sun, he took up his basket and trudged heavily back along the beach towards the Whale Fishery.

  It was completely light when Ikey passed the front door of the public house which was now firmly shut, the last of the drunks and drinkers having been evicted. Ikey walked around the back and left the lantern on the back doorstep. He checked the basket, lifting a corner of the cloth to see that both tiny infants seemed to have fallen asleep, and as quickly as his human burden allowed, made his way up the hill to the Potato Factory where he knew Mary Abacus would be long awake, grown impatient and somewhat cantankerous that he was late.

  Ikey tried to picture Mary’s surprise. She would, he knew, have cleaned the cold ashes from the hearth, set and lit a new fire and then taken the pot of oats which had been left to soak all night on the shelf above and hung it over the flames to boil. Small beer and a loaf of yesterday’s bread would be waiting for him on the table, the meal they shared together every morning when he arrived back from what Mary called his ‘caterwauling’. But today would be different and Ikey smiled to himself, not thinking for a moment that Mary might not take kindly to the gift of life he carried in the basket so innocently slung over his arm.

  Ikey entered the gate to the Potato Factory and passed down the side of the old mill building to the rear where a small wooden annexe had been built. This contained an accounting office Ikey himself used in the evenings, Mary’s bedroom, and the kitchen in which they ate, all facing onto a backyard piled high with beer casks, and which led directly down to the rivulet. The kitchen door was open, and he entered to see Mary stirring the pot of oatmeal porridge with a long-handled wooden spoon.

  ‘Don’t turn about, my dear, I have a surprise.’

  ‘Humph! The best surprise you could give me, Ikey Solomon, would be to be on time!’ Mary sniffed the air without looking up from the pot and brought her finger and thumb to her nose. ‘And the next is to wash! Wherever you ‘as been, you stinks worse than ever this morning!’

  Ikey ignored her remarks and continued in a merry voice. ‘A surprise what is a wish and a desire and a whole life of hopes and dreaming! A surprise what surpasses all other surprises and a delight you never thought you’d experience, my dear!’ Ikey started to do a small jig in the doorway.

  Mary was not accustomed to mirth from Ikey at such an early hour, and now turned at last towards him. ‘Is you drunk, Ikey Solomon?’ She placed her hands on her hips, still holding the porridge spoon. ‘Surprise is it? No surprises if you please. Sit down and eat. I have a long busy day to begin, while you be soon snoring your head off!’

  While she often talked in such a stern manner to Ikey, Mary’s remonstrations were seldom intended to be hurtful. She looked forward to his presence first thing in the morning, for he often brought with him bits of juicy gossip passed on by the servants of the pure merinos and the uppercrust in Hobart Town society. Mary had little time to listen to gossip during the day and Ikey often brought her both merriment and useful information.

  ‘Come and see, my dear, come and see what Ikey has brought for you!’ The excitement was apparent in his voice as he took three paces towards Mary and then, like a magician at a country fair, whipped away the cloth from the top of his tobacco basket.

  Mary reeled backwards, dropping the spoon, her hands clawing at her breasts. ‘Oh Jesus! Oh Gawd! What ‘ave you done?’ she cried.

  Ikey laughed and took another step towards her so that Mary now looked directly into the basket. ‘This little one be Tommo!’ he said, pointing to the tiny pink creature in the basket, then his long dirty index finger moved to the opposite end. ‘And this big little ‘un be Hawk! A black child to bring you luck and great good fortune, my dear!’ Ikey turned and placed the basket on the table. ‘What say you, Mary Abacus, my dear?’

  The names of the two infants had come to him without any thought, though later he would congratulate himself at the clever notion of splitting the word tattooed on Marybelle Firkin’s breast.

  Mary was not naturally given to panic and now she again placed her poor broken hands on her hips and looked most sternly at Ikey. ‘Ikey Solomon, I hopes you has a very, very good explanation!’ she shouted. But while her expression was grim, her heart was beating fast as her mind raced to embrace the notion of keeping the two infants. ‘Dear God, how could such a thing be possible?’ she said inwardly, her thoughts a whirl of confusion and hope. ‘Where? How? Whose be they?’ she demanded of Ikey.

  Ikey placed the basket on the table and calmly breaking a piece of bread off the stale loaf popped it into his mouth. ‘Why, they’s yours, my dear!’ he said, beginning to chew. He explained to Mary what had occurred. ‘Nobody knowed that Sperm Whale Sally were pregnant, my dear, it be possible that she herself did not know,’ Ikey concluded.

  ‘Ha! When they find her they’ll know!’ Mary replied, now somewhat recovered, then she added, ‘What about the afterbirth?’

  Ikey swallowed the crust he was chewing. Already the terrible private grief he felt at Marybelle Firkin’s death was hidden completely from view. ‘Rats, my dear, there be scores o’ rats by the fish pipe. By now there will be precious little o’ the birth bits left. They’ll think she been gorn an’ haemorrhaged, you know, internal like, and that be the cause
o’ her death. The coroner ain’t going to look too close, she were a whore after all! Natural causes, my dear, that be what he’ll say. With twice as much government money to be spent on a double-sized pauper’s coffin he won’t want no further complications or expenses!’

  ‘She’ll be buried proper, Ikey, in St David’s burial ground. You’ll see to that!’ Mary instructed. She ran her hand across her flat stomach. ‘But it don’t solve nothing. How did I give birth to twins overnight when yesterday I weren’t even pregnant?’

  ‘Left on the doorstep, my dear,’ Ikey said blandly. ‘The men and young Jessamy, they’ll stay stum, or even believe it if you say that be how it happened! Plenty o’ whores don’t want their newborn brats.’ Ikey shrugged his thin shoulders. ‘You are well known for your charity at the orphanage.’ Ikey paused and looked directly at Mary, his scraggy right eyebrow slightly arched. ‘O’ course, my dear, if you don’t want them two, I could always take them off to the foundling home and tell them there what happened this morning.’

  Mary gasped. ‘You’ll do no such thing, Ikey Solomon! That be a death sentence - more newborn brats dies in the Foundlin’ than lives to see their first week!’ This was true. The first hour of almost every day saw Reverend Smedley officiating at the burial of foundling infants who had not survived their first few days at the home.

  Mary had not taken her eyes off the two tiny babies and now she lifted the black one Ikey had named Hawk out of the basket and held him against her bosom. Hawk’s tiny mouth, feeling the skin of her neck against his lips, started to suck. That was all it took for Mary to fall utterly and completely in love. ‘Give me t’other, Ikey,’ she begged, her voice grown suddenly soft. Ikey plucked Tommo from the basket and laid him against her other breast where he too started to suck at the side of her neck. Mary knew, with a sudden, fierce happiness, that she would let no one take her new-found children from her.

  Mary looked up at Ikey and tears gathered in her eyes. ‘Thank you, Ikey,’ she said tenderly. ‘Thank you, my love.’ Then Mary kissed the fine, matted hair on the infants’ tiny heads and started to weep softly. She carried Tommo and Hawk into her bedroom, wrapped each of them in a blanket and placed them in the centre of her narrow bed. She told herself she must prepare hot water to wash away the blood, and tie down their little belly buttons with a strip of linen, then find two good wet nurses from the Female Factory. But for the moment all she could think to do as she looked down at the tiny creatures wrapped in the blanket was to clutch the Waterloo medal around her neck so tightly that the edges of the small medallion cut into the skin of her clenched fist. She turned to the window where the early sun touched the craggy top of the great mountain. ‘Please,’ she begged softly. ‘Please let me keep them! Let them be mine forever!’

  After a while she stopped crying and released her grasp on the medal. In the centre of her misshapen hand was a small cut where the edge of the medallion had punctured the skin, and from it oozed a bright drop of blood. Mary, not quite understanding what she was doing, dipped her forefinger into the blood and then returned to where the infants lay on the bed and touched the tip of her bloodied finger to their foreheads, first Tommo, then Hawk.

  ‘You be my life’s blood,’ she cried. ‘You be my everything, I shall never let you go!’

  CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

  For nearly four years Mary had been processing her own malt in her malthouse at Strickland Falls, crushing and preparing the barley mash using the power from the water mill she had constructed. At last she had the money to erect the first of her brewery buildings and to begin work on the chimney stack which would eventually be required. The chimney needed bricks and the skill of a master builder, so it could only be constructed a small section at a time as money became available. The other buildings were made of stone quarried on her own property. Mary’s plan was that one day the quarry would become a small lake to store water for the brewery and lend further beauty to the woodland surroundings.

  She still lacked the means to create a complete commercial brewery and it seemed unlikely that she would ever possess them. The steam turbines and huge fermenting vats and giant casks she required to compete against the likes of Peter Degraves’ modern Cascade Brewery needed the kind of finance she could only hope to raise with a wealthy partner.

  It was not a prosperous time in the colony. Several of the smaller banks had collapsed and more than half of the free colonists were insolvent. The Bank of Van Diemen’s Land would not readily invest in emancipists, particularly women, unless they had assets to secure the loan well in excess of the amount they wished to borrow. While there were private investors which a sharp lawyer might find in England, they usually demanded a controlling interest and Mary was determined that she would never allow anyone to threaten her independence.

  The new buildings gave her the capacity to make much larger quantities of beer using the crystal-clear water that flowed from the falls. Furthermore, using time-honoured methods, she knew she would eventually own a small complete brewery which produced ale of a very high quality.

  Though Mary was not considered a serious threat to any of the larger breweries, her Temperance Ale and Bitter Rosella had earned a reputation in the colony for their quality and some of the public houses not tied to the mainstream breweries now accepted Bitter Rosie by the barrel, which was a major boost to her production. In the past she had relied on supplying her beer in jugs brought by the purchaser, or in bottles. This had severely curtailed her output, for glass was a scarce commodity almost entirely imported from England.

  However, it was through the production of bottled beer that Mary was to make her reputation. Ikey’s nocturnal habits and excellent nose for gossip meant he was always the first to know what was contained in the manifest of any ship arriving into port. If there should be a consignment of bottles on board Mary instantly knew about it and purchased the lot before other merchants were any the wiser. She would also buy any bottles the ship used during the voyage, and many a ship’s master knew her as Queen Bottle. In addition, any urchin who could lay his dirty little hands on a bottle knew it would fetch him a halfpenny at the Potato Factory.

  Soon Mary had sufficient capital to order from England her first consignment of green quart beer bottles, which she used for her Temperance Ale, and so the Potato Factory became the first brewery to offer its product in sealed bottles to be consumed in the home. This meant that working folk, who could not afford to buy beer by the barrel, could purchase their beer not, as was the custom, by the jug, so that they had to hurry home in haste to keep the benefit of its good, creamy head, but in a sealed bottle to be enjoyed at their leisure.

  The other brewers sneered at this nonsensical notion. They sold their beer in barrels to be consumed in public houses, and those who wished to take it home could bring their jugs to the ale house to be filled. They felt certain that quantities as small as a quart sold in expensive glass bottles would never catch on with the poor, who were the largest portion of the population who drank beer. They also thought Mary’s Temperance Ale label another silly affectation as paper was relatively expensive, and a label on a bottle of three-penny beer was regarded as an outrageous waste.

  Although Mary was prepared to take a lower profit for her beer by bottling and labelling it, she would not compromise on its quality. The people of Hobart Town, and those who lived further out in the country, immediately saw the benefits of what they called ‘picnic beer’, which could be transported in small quantities and drunk at leisure.

  People soon realised that while they initially paid an extra halfpenny for the bottle, if they returned the empty for another full one they paid only the usual price of threepence for their beer. Furthermore, if they wished to surrender an empty bottle without buying an additional bottle of beer, Mary refunded the halfpenny they’d paid on the original deposit.

  Soon Mary was selling all the beer she could make, and it was only the lack of glass bottles which prevented her from selling more. Thus Mary inv
ented the concept of bottled beer with a paper label to indicate its quality and brand which would in time become commonplace on mainland Australia.

  Six years had passed since Mary had been granted her unconditional pardon, and she now found herself welcomed into the society of tradesmen, clerks and the free settlers of smaller means who were collectively known as third raters. As an emancipist Mary rightfully belonged two social ranks further down the ladder. But her great business success, ardent support of the Temperance Society, stubborn courage against the beer barons and quiet manners, together with her charitable work for the orphanage, elevated her to the lofty heights of the third social position in the class ranking of the colony, this, despite the knowledge that she employed the odious Isaac Solomon, whom it was rumoured as common scandal had once been her paramour.

  Any other woman of Mary’s dubious background would have greatly cherished this unexpected promotion to the better classes. Hannah, for instance, would have made much of the opportunity. But Mary was far too busy to profit from the social advantages of her newly acquired status. This was just as well, for it was soon enough to be taken away from her.

  Before long the rumours concerning Tommo and Hawk were spreading among the tattle-tongues of Hobart Town. The very idea that Mary, an unmarried woman, should take in as her own children these so-called twins, said to have been left on her doorstep, and the fact that one was obviously of aboriginal extraction, horrified the respectable classes. The infants had only been with Mary two months when she was summoned to see Mr Emmett at his offices.

 

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