Forgiven_BooksGoSocial Historical Fiction Page 14
own humble, day to day existence, I had actually been far
happier than she had. It was difficult to fathom how that could
be.
After a while, mother cleared the air.
“You know, it’s a good thing you going to Whanganui. It’s
time you branched out on your own; found your own niche in
life.”
“I know, I’ve been thinking the same for some time.”
“Rachel’s a nice girl. You are lucky.”
“I’m glad you think that. It’s important to me that you two
get along.” There was another pause. After a few minutes,
Mother cleared her throat again.
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“I’m going to miss you. I know you will do well. You
always have.”
“Thanks Ma.” Another silence.
“A word of warning – don’t fight with her. It won’t do you
any good. She has suffered a great deal of humiliation and
consequently, she is likely to be excessively sensitive about
certain things. Your loyalty will have immense significance to
her. You are her bastion of hope, her Richard the Lion Heart.
She looks to you to give her the sense of belonging she needs.
If she gets the idea in her head that you have abandoned her in
any way, she will react badly. You will be in more trouble than
you have ever been in your life.”
I looked at Mother in surprise. “For goodness sake, you
make her sound formidable!”
“That’s because there is more to her than her appearance
might suggest. She is intelligent without doubt and has almost
certainly had a far better education than you have, so don’t
make the mistake of underestimating her capacity to work
things out. I have seen the way she looks at you. You will be
wise to keep her that way. If you distress her, you will reap a
whirlwind.”
Silence reigned. The horse plodded on. It would seem there
were more hidden perils in relationships than I realised.
“Promise me you will not sleep with her.”
I blinked. “What? No Mother, I wouldn’t, honestly!”
“I think you mean that, but I don’t think you understand
how close to the cliff you are. I think Rachel might spread her
legs if you asked her to, which is precisely why you must not.
Understand?”
I was shocked. I had never heard my mother talk like this.
It seemed my love life had brought out a dimension of her that
I never knew existed. She touched my arm. I turned my head
to look at her and she glared straight back.
“Promise me you will not sleep with her. Promise me! Say
it!”
“Yes, yes, I promise!” I looked away. There was an
awkward silence.
“Understand son, that out here nobody cares if you get
some poncy town girl up the duff. But her family will be
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extremely conscious of their standing in the community. They
will have already suffered enough humiliation, which
incidentally, was not due to any fault on their part, and if she
became pregnant while unmarried, they would suffer
significantly worse. They would probably insist that you marry
her for the sake of the child and they would never want to see
the two of you again. Do you want that? Is that the way to get
the girl you say you love? If you did that, you would not
deserve to have her!”
I didn’t answer. I brooded. Things were getting messier by
the minute. Why was anything to do with women so damn
complicated? Still, I understood where she was coming from.
Mother was right.
That was something else I hadn’t thought about. What if
Rachel did become pregnant? I would endure the wrath of her
family and mine. I would marry her anyway and take her to
Northland, or better still, Nelson in the South Island. It was
only one day’s sail away with a good wind to a place where no
one would know us. I would do everything possible to
compensate her for the loss of her family, although it would be
unlikely that I adequately could. I’d try though, I was too mad
about her to do anything else.
The train slowly gathered speed and Rachel fell back in her
seat. For a while, she stared absently out of her window, but
her mind was so crowded with incoherent thoughts that she
never noticed the scenery that slipped past. She couldn’t
believe what she had done once the chain of events had started;
she had astounded herself just how spontaneous her reaction
had been.
When she’d arrived here she was Miss Sophisticate Elite,
the society belle who understood the need to keep sensitive
things secret and never before had she put a foot wrong. She
never consciously intended to tell Richard that she loved him,
at least not quite like that and she never had the remotest
intention of telling anyone that she was the object of scandal
either. Without blinking or even thinking, she had blurted it all
out; shamelessly bared to the core her wretched innermost
feelings and afterwards, the sheer intensity of the relief she felt
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had surprised and shocked her every bit as much as the rest of
it had shocked the Wilsons.
She was now on her way back to the real world and was far
from happy to be going. In spite of everything though, the last
few days had turned out surprisingly well. After her
confession, Richard’s family had virtually closed ranks around
her, adopting her as one of their own. Agnes and Emma had
hugged her and there were tears in their eyes. In doing so, a
huge anxiety had lifted from her shoulders and she felt so
accepted that she would have preferred to stay in Patea
indefinitely.
There were compensations for having to return to
Whanganui though. Incredibly, Richard was coming. She
could hardly believe it; she was elated by the knowledge that
soon he would never be far away. How would they
communicate? He could leave messages for her at the law
office until she could announce him formally at home. That
would create a stir, as the staff at the law office would be agog
if Richard turned up and asked for her. She beamed, but then
her smile gradually faded. She knew that once she returned
home, there would be new problems to overcome.
She understood that the biggest problem of all was Richard
himself. He was not from the wrong side of the tracks, but he
wasn’t from the right side either. He neither owned a house nor
a business; nor did he have a brick of gold in the bank.
Frankly, she didn’t care about any of that, but Father would
have a different view, a very, very, different view.
After arriving at Aramoho station she alighted and claimed
her luggage. A porter carted her suitcases to the opposite side
where she settled in to wait. She realised now that Richard had
totally altered her perception of herself and the world around
her. She no longer felt like a victim in an unforgiving world.
She also realised that the rumours no longer mattered. She had
&
nbsp; a goal and a direction in her life that even a few short days ago
would have been unimaginable.
The suburban rolled and rattled into the station where it
stopped with a shudder and a screech of brakes. Her luggage
was loaded aboard and she found a seat. If her parents would
not reconcile Richard as part of her life then damn them, the
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two of them would elope! She would not be denied. She had
already decided that if they were foolish enough to force her to
choose between Richard and them, Richard would win hands
down. Failure was not an option.
At Central Station, her father was on hand to greet her and
assisted her with her luggage.
“Good day Father,” she said cheerfully and hugged him.
“My, you look happy,” he replied, looking her up and
down. “Evidently a few days in the country agrees with you
m’dear. I haven’t seen you in a mood like this for ages.”
“Oh, yes indeed,” she chirped, but offered no further
explanation.
Once they reached home, her father helped her bring in the
luggage, then returned to Warner’s. She crossed the threshold
and hugged her mother, who had also noticed something
different about Rachel, although she couldn’t pick what it was.
Rachel was brighter, that much was certain, but not in a
frivolous way. She seemed to exude a calmness and maturity
that Emily Ellen had never noticed before.
Once Rachel had unpacked, she put the kettle on and sat
down with her.
“I have something to tell you,” Rachel began. “I have met a
very special man.”
Emily Ellen was taken by surprise. “Really, did you meet
this man in Patea?”
For the last two years, Rachel had been avidly avoiding
everyone and men in particular.
“Yes, I did indeed,” came the response.
Emily Ellen hesitated, trying to fathom the expression on
Rachel’s face. “Does this man intend to court you?”
“Oh yes, he certainly does.”
“How does he intend to do that then, if he lives in Patea?”
“He’s moving to Whanganui and he will be here very
soon.”
“Do you mean to tell me that a man who has only just met
you is going to move here to be closer to you?”
“Yes,” replied Rachel, grinning from ear to ear and
nodding.
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Emily Ellen went silent; she had heard of stranger things,
but this was still unusual.
“I had met him previously,” said Rachel matter-of-factly,
smiling at the thought. It was not exactly untrue either, but it
did sound better than it actually was. She could hardly admit
that the first occasion she had hit him with a brolly and the
second time she had purposely avoided him.
“So, how old is this man of yours?”
“I never asked, but I’d guess that he’s about twenty-four.”
Again, Emily Ellen was silent. It was evident that she
considered twenty-four to be rather young to be seriously
considered as a suitor. Obviously, older men were potentially
better providers. “What does he do for a living?”
“He works on the family farm near Patea,” replied Rachel,
dreading the reaction.
Emily Ellen studied her hands. It was also evident that a
farm labourer was a bit on the low side socially, however his
family obviously owned some land and that at least was
something to be thankful for.
“Look, Mother,” Rachel said tersely. “I know what you are
thinking and it isn’t that bad. Richard is a decent man who
comes from a good family. They are hardworking, God-fearing
people and when you meet him you will like him.”
Emily Ellen blinked and looked at her daughter. Rachel’s
tone made it plain that she was prepared to spring to his
defence, which was in direct contrast to all the others that had
come here. This man, whoever he was, had obviously made an
impression on her.
“Very well dear, we will leave it at that, shall we? I don’t
think Father needs to know about this just yet, so it will be our
little secret.” To Emily Ellen’s surprise, Rachel threw her arms
around her and hugged her.
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Chapter Twelve
RENSBURG, Cape Colony. South Africa
Two weeks later, we were ordered to march to Rensburg and
report to a divisional HQ which had been recently established
there. Rensburg was a remote small town of mostly stone or
adobe mud-brick buildings, the bulk of which were adorned
with grit-like dust and radiated an air of neglect. Only the
railway station appeared to have been swept or painted with
any regularity.
We rode at a walk down the broad main street in no
particular order, unmindful that we didn’t look particularly
military. We had just come thirty miles after two months of
constant hard campaigning so we were too damn weary to care
whether we were in column of twos or not. We drew level with
a double storeyed hotel that had verandahs running around it
on both floors, from which a flagpole leaned outwards and a
Union Jack hung listlessly from the pole head.
Below that sprawled a large sign with the word ‘Royal,’
painted in big, red letters and on the verandah above it a
young, blonde-haired woman watched solemnly as we trooped
wearily by. She was attractive and wore an ornately
embroidered lace-trimmed blouse, the like of which none of us
had ever seen before. As we trooped on past, the drab reality of
these surroundings made her seem like a vision of the Virgin in
a place of devastation.
The woman studied us with an expression that mingled
curiosity with apprehension and as our eyes met, I gave her a
nod and a wink. Instantly, I realised I had made a mistake, for
the corners of her mouth dropped and she glared back with a
look of distaste.
None of us had washed in weeks and we lived in our soiled
clothes. We were gaunt from rough living and weary from
over-work; silent, unshaven and unsmiling, we seemed to
invoke a muted, almost negative reaction from those who
looked on. We were crisscrossed with ammunition bandoliers
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like Latin American bandits and there was little in our
appearance to suggest that we had anything in common with
her majesty’s colonial forces.
We stared at her, unrepentant. She was beautiful and
represented all that was noble and civilized, while we were the
horsemen of the apocalypse and unloved. As we continued
along, there were other people standing under shop fronts who
also watched. None cheered, although some did wave and all
looked on solemnly, as if unsure whether we had come to fight
for them or had come to raid and pillage instead.
Opposite the railway station was a broad expanse of flat
land and a large military camp, with row upon row of buff
coloured, bell tents, with temporary corrals for horses and
mules. A large array of transport w
agons was parked around
the perimeter, nose to tail and side by side, in addition to some
that sat in an adjacent park.
When we reached the camp there was another reaction
similar to that of the town. As we rode in, groups of British
soldiers appeared and stood watching, while comments passed
back and forth. We were getting used to such attention; we
were the men from Maoriland and our reputation as an elite
fighting force was growing.
In the field we were unmilitary in bearing, due to the
irregular work we did. It was normal to be out on
reconnaissance for days on end; living rough and sleeping
among the rocks. We could be employed scouting ahead of a
battalion, or acting as flank guards when escorting troop
columns or wagons. We would be on the horizon, shadowing
the column from dawn to dusk, far from field kitchens or other
comforts. We mainly lived on army biscuit which was as hard
as plaster, or anything else we could beg, borrow or steal;
earning a reputation for being the worst thieves of the colonies.
To the bewilderment of the English, we accomplished our
tasks with consummate ease and they viewed us as a strange
new breed of antipodean horse warriors. The ‘Tommies’ liked
our sense of humour and would generously share their rations
with us, for more often than not we were usually starved and
lacked any rations of our own.
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In contrast, their officers reviled us. To them, we were the
most unsoldierly and ill-disciplined rogues who ever had the
distinction of serving the Queen. We found them equally
distasteful, even appalling, for they were rampant
disciplinarians and demanded absolute obedience. Our
response to their pointless and demeaning orders was to find
devious means to circumvent them and in turn, they resented
our wilful and skilfully applied independence.
We functioned best when far from those in command – we
were able to do our job the way experience had shown was
best and we were free from the nit-picking trivia that was
typical of the middle chain of command. Wherever we went
the English and colonials alike were usually baffled as to what
to make of us, all of which served to enhance our mystique and
our burgeoning reputation.
After arrival we were paraded, where we were addressed
by Major Matlock. We were told that tents had already been set