The Mariners
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Jon Fisher and Harry Ryan return to Australia.
At their return, Jon Fisher learns of the problem that his family are facing with the conflict of the wealthy squatters and the so-called 'selectors'. The threat of war and internal fighting looms over the family as we near the turn of the century.
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The Mariners - Vivian Stuart
The Mariners
The Australians 20 – The Mariners
© Vivian Stuart, 1988
© eBook in English: Jentas ehf. 2023
Series: The Australians
Title: The Mariners
Title number: 20
ISBN: 978-9979-64-245-9
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchase.
All contracts and agreements regarding the work, editing, and layout are owned by Jentas ehf.
The Australians
The Exiles
The Prisoners
The Settlers
The Newcomers
The Traitors
The Rebels
The Explorers
The Travellers
The Adventurers
The Warriors
The Colonists
The Pioneers
The Gold Seekers
The Opportunists
The Patriots
The Partisans
The Empire Builders
The Road Builders
The Seafarers
The Mariners
The Nationalists
The Loyalists
The Imperialists
The Expansionists
CHAPTER I
Misa had quickly readapted to life at the mission. The hardest part of it was the early morning rising. Like her father and the rest of her people, she could never understand why white men felt that the day was wasted if not begun before the sun. But she followed the rules without question, her compliance made easy by the fact that she enjoyed the work with the children. Her job was to teach them to speak English, and when she was immersed in her work, there were times when she could forget her disgrace, could be unaware of the growing life in her. But gradually her girlish shape began to be distorted, so that by the time Tui came to visit her, many weeks after she had left the village, she was protruding quite noticeably.
When she was told that she had a visitor, she half expected to see her father. She ran from the classroom with a great smile on her face, and the smile faded only briefly when she saw Tui. He, too, was smiling broadly, and the smile stayed on his face even as his eyes fell to her bulging stomach.
Misa,
he said. You are as beautiful as the sunrise on the sea.
You look well, Tui,
she replied, very conscious of her stomach.
I would have come sooner, but Molo told us that you had eloped with a man from one of the far islands. Only recently did I learn you were here.
You see me,
she said. You know why my father feels that it is necessary to lie.
I was there,
he said. Remember? I left you with the white man, knowing that you intended paying the debt for all of us.
She said nothing.
Come, walk with me.
He took her hand and led her away from the mission to an overlook. In the bay below, a full-rigged ship was moving toward the German port.
She felt comfortable with Tui. Once you said you would go to sea and someday be captain of such a ship as that,
she said.
He laughed. It took only a few days at home for me to forget such foolishness. I have had enough to do with the white man.
He looked at her searchingly. I suspect that you may feel the same way.
Our life with the white men is just beginning,
Misa said, shaking her head. The Reverend McDougall, who runs the mission, conducts a class for older students in which he teaches the ways of the white men, and their history. He tells us that we must adapt to the white man’s ways. He says that we cannot continue to live in the way we have always lived.
We must don breeches and do manual labour for a few coins?
Tui’s tone was bitter. Not this one. Not as long as there are fish in the sea and fruit on the trees.
Things are changing, Tui,
Misa said. I have learned from the Reverend McDougall that the white men of three great nations are contesting for our islands.
"But they are our islands. Your words admit it. What right has the white man to contest for them?"
We don’t have great ships,
Misa answered. Nor cannon, nor guns. We do not make things of iron and steel. Our numbers, compared with the people of any one of the great nations who come here, are few.
They want only our copra,
Tui said contemptuously. "And they offer tin trays and glass beads in return. I, for one, can do without the white men and their trade goods. I would wear bark cloth, instead of this cotton, if it would make the white man go away."
They want more than copra,
Misa said. I do not fully understand, but the Reverend McDougall says that the real prize in Samoa is our harbours. He says that the English, the Germans, and the Americans are here for that, to control our harbours, and thus to hold dominion over all the seas around.
The oceans are open to all who dare to brave them
was Tui’s only answer.
Misa was becoming frustrated at his refusal to understand. "The Reverend McDougall says that there might be war over our islands."
Let them fight, then,
Tui said. We will go into the hills until they have killed one another and all their ships rest on the bottom of the sea.
She said no more. Even after living with the white missionaries, Misa herself understood little of the ways of the white man, and trying to explain them to Tui was next to impossible.
No more talk of the white man and his foolishness,
Tui said, as if reading her thoughts. He took her hands in his. I have come for you, Misa.
Puzzled, she cocked her head questioningly.
This,
he said, touching her stomach, does not matter. When the white man’s child is born, we will leave it with the good missionaries, who seem to like taking care of the white man’s bastards.
This last word was in English and had no meaning in the Samoan tongue, but Misa nevertheless felt her face flush. Abandon her child? The thought had never occurred to her.
I have loved you long, Misa, and now, since you are no longer forbidden to me, I want to have you. We will leave Upolu and go to one of the smaller islands, where the white man finds little to attract him. There we will live and love and produce children of our own in the manner of Samoa.
She pulled her hands from his and turned her back.
Here, what’s this?
He put his hands on her shoulders and turned her to face him. Will you not have me, even now?
Tui, you are so dear to me,
she said in a whisper.
Then we will go.
I can’t.
Why?
The child. I could never leave my child.
Then we will keep the white man’s bastard.
Again the word pained her. There is more,
she said.
Once you said you loved the white man. To continue to do so now, when you will never see him again, is stupid.
"Then I am stupid," she suddenly flared, surprised at her own outburst.
His face darkened, but only briefly. That, too, will change,
he said. Come with me, Misa. We can leave today—now.
I can’t. I have a job to do. I can’t leave them after they’ve been so good to me.
Perhaps it would be best, then, if you stayed here until the child was born. Then you might feel differently, and I will come again for you.
She nodded. As I told you once before, if I take any man, Tui, it will be you.
Misa’s son was born in a small room in the mission house. Had she given birth in her native village, she would not have been alone, as she was, with only the Reverend McDougall’s wife, Jane, as midwife. At home all her relatives would have been in the house, eating, laughing, coming to check on the progress of the birth at regular intervals, sitting up all night if the labour happened to be long, as it often was with a woman’s first baby. At the mission there was only Jane, a kindly, red-haired woman who expressed continual amazement at Misa’s ability to withstand the pain of childbirth without writhing or crying out. But to Misa it was not a difficult birth, although the labour was long, and when Jane lifted the little boy and spanked air into his lungs with a lusty whack on his bottom, Misa looked at the damp, bloody, tiny form and knew that she would never, never give him up.
Jane cut the cord with a kitchen knife. She was smiling and cooing as she put the boy next to Misa.
Mrs. McDougall,
Misa said, as Jane turned to the job of cleaning up, could you please do something for me?
Of course, child.
Jane was immediately at her side again.
The cord,
Misa said. Could you please take it and throw it into the sea?
Whatever for?
So that he will grow up to be a skilled fisherman.
Jane frowned only briefly, then patted her hand and nodded. Samoans customarily burned the cord from a girl baby under a mulberry tree—from the bark of which cloth could be made—to ensure that the girl would be a good worker. If the cord from a boy was buried under a taro plant, he would be a farmer. Misa was relieved that the missionary’s wife saw no harm in humouring her. Yes, as soon as I’m finished here I will take it and throw it into the sea.
By the time Tui came, two days after the child had been baptized, Misa had made up her mind. She told him that she was going to stay at the mission, that it was now her home and would be the home of her son. When Tui left, she knew in her heart that he would not return, that she had refused him for the last time. She knew doubt, then, for life with Tui would have been pleasant. But there was now another element to her thinking. As reluctant as she was to admit it even to herself, she had come to appreciate living with the McDougalls in a real house, with doors and windows. She liked eating off fine porcelain plates instead of a banana leaf. Indeed, under the benevolent tutelage of Kevin and Jane McDougall, Misa was undergoing a transformation that the enforced separation from her village had made possible. As a brown-skinned woman, she could never, truly, be a part of the white society, Misa knew, yet it was equally true that she could never be at home again among her own people.
She had another visitor when her son was two weeks old. Molo came and, with ungrudging affection that brought tears to her eyes, hugged her in his arms as he had when she was a child. Then he looked at her and said, This life seems to suit you, Daughter.
She showed him the boy. To Misa’s sorrow, however, he did not touch his grandson and soon turned away. He did not even ask what she had named the boy. After talking with her a while longer he left, having made but one half-hearted effort to let her know that she was welcome to visit the village at any time.
The days blended into the next, and months quickly passed. Storms came, as they do, and repairing the damage they wrought became almost routine work, as it had been back in Misa’s village. By the end of the boy’s first year, it was evident that Jon Fisher’s blood and the beauty of the Samoan girl had blended well. Though his hair was pitch black, he was of lighter skin than most of the half-breeds at the mission, and after he began to run off his baby fat, he quickly shaped into a most handsome little boy. Jane McDougall doted on him. Misa was as indulgent as any Samoan mother, and the older children, also in the Samoan way, tended him and did their best to spoil him. He grew up a happy child, full of love and laughter.
Misa called him Tolo, in a variation of her father’s name, but the McDougalls insisted on addressing him by the name she had agreed upon for his christening, Thomas.
"I christen this child Thomas Fisher," Kevin McDougall had said at the ceremony of baptism, and the words had since stayed in Misa’s mind and in her heart. But she called him simply Tolo, and never pronounced aloud the child’s last name.
After two years of looking forward to her daughter’s wedding, Magdalen Broome now had only two weeks remaining before her future son-in-law’s ship was ready to sail, and she was harried. When, over dinner with Johnny and Kitty, Jessica announced almost nonchalantly that she was going to be an on-board wife, that she would sail with Sam when the Roamer left Sydney, Magdalen gasped and actually dropped her fork.
I think, dear, that you should discuss this with your father,
she managed at last to say.
That would be difficult,
Jessica replied, "since in all likelihood he’s somewhere out on the China Sea. I suspect, though, he’ll be pleased to see me when and if the Roamer makes port in Hong Kong."
I just don’t think it’s the right thing for you to do.
Magdalen eyed Sam in mute appeal.
Mother,
Jessica said, Claus Van Buren took Mercy with him on his voyages for years.
She drew herself up. Who knows, I might just become a heroine, like that American woman who took command when her husband fell ill, and brought his ship safely into port after weathering dreadful storms.
Oh, dear.
Magdalen did not look in the least assured. I do wish your father were here.
Just think, Mother,
Jessica went on, I’ll get to visit England and perhaps New York. You should be happy for me.
In the absence of Red Broome, Red’s brother, Johnny, gave the bride away in a ceremony that, at least to Sam, seemed eternal. Claus and Mercy Van Buren had arrived in Sydney Cove only hours before the wedding and showed up at the church with a handsome and distinguished-looking couple whose dress identified them, in the eyes of the well-travelled, as Dutch. The church was packed, and only a few—Magdalen chief among them—were aware of the notable absences: Red, of course, and Jessica’s brother, Rufus, and Harry Ryan—although Magdalen, for one, was relieved that Harry was not in Australia.
At the reception, Sam began to get a better idea about just what sort of family he was marrying into; many of Sydney’s leading citizens were there—traders, politicians, high-ranking military men.
It was only at the tail end of a hectic afternoon that Sam and Jessica were introduced to Claus and Mercy’s guests. Professor Conrad Berg, half English, half Dutch, had studied at Cambridge. He had inherited his height from his Dutch father, along with a thatch of well-kept blond hair. He was of a pleasant mien, spoke English with a cultivated accent, and was obviously proud of his bride of a year, a lovely Dutch woman named Vanya, who was sunny, buxom, blonder than her husband, and had eyes only for him.
You’ve come a long way, sir,
Sam said, when Claus Van Buren informed him that the Bergs lived at Anjer, on the northwest coast of Java and the Sunda Strait.
It was a condition of our marriage that Conrad get away from his bugs for a honeymoon trip,
Vanya said with a charming accent and a little guttural laugh that caused Conrad to look at her fondly. But it’s taken us more than a year to get around to the honeymoon.
Bugs?
Jessica queried, not certain she had heard the woman correctly.
Horrid mosquitoes,
Vanya said.
Perhaps I should explain,
Conrad Berg put in. My field is medicine. Not to bore you with details, but there is some evidence—at least to my mind—that malaria is associated with mosquitoes.
I tell him,
Vanya said, that if malaria and mosquitoes were connected, then there would be malaria all over the world.
She keeps me humble,
Conrad said fondly.
Actually I act as his—how do you say?—his devil’s advocate,
Vanya explained.
Through the work of Alphonse Lavaran in Algeria, we know that a blood parasite is the cause of the disease,
Conrad went on. I am in correspondence with researchers in several countries— England, the United States, and of course with Lavaran in Algeria. Patrick Manson in England and Ronald Ross in India agree with me in suspecting the mosquitoes, even if my Vanya doesn’t.
"It is such an unpleasant subject, Vanya said,
especially on one’s wedding day. Put away your bugs, Conrad, and I will allow you to kiss the bride—but only softly, on the cheek."
The Dutchman laughed, bent his big, solid frame to touch Jessica’s cheek with his dry lips.
Vanya hugged Jessica and whispered, What a splendid couple you make—and how handsome is your man!
Before Jessica could reply, Vanya said Come,
took her hand, and led her out of the others’ hearing. Claus tells me that you are to join your husband on his ship.
Yes,
Jessica said, puzzled.
Ships that sail these seas come through the Sunda Strait sooner or later,
Vanya said. When yours does, both Conrad and I would be greatly disappointed if you did not stop to visit our home. We almost never have visitors, and the setting is quite lovely, really, when one gets accustomed to the easygoing way of the native Javanese and the heat.
Why, thank you,
Jessica said, but she was thinking no further ahead than the next few hours, to the time when the house would be empty of guests and she would be going up to her room—not alone, as she’d been doing all her life—but with a man, with her husband. And like the Bergs, they would have to postpone a honeymoon trip. The Roamer would be sailing soon, and the voyage, for all it would be work for Sam, would have to do as her honeymoon.
When, at last, Johnny and Kitty, Kitty with her stomach protruding with child, ushered the Van Burens and the Bergs out, leaving the newlyweds alone with Magdalen, Jessica could not bring herself to look at Sam.
My, my,
Magdalen said, collapsing into a chair, What a day this has been.
Sam smiled at her. Mrs. Broome, you have done yeoman’s service. I consider myself very fortunate in having such a mother-in-law.
Magdalen motioned to them. Sit down, please, both of you.
They sat side by side, not touching, on a sofa. Don’t worry,
she said. I’ll not be keeping you. In fact, in just a moment, I’ll be joining Claus and Mercy at their hotel for the night.
Jessica flushed. The two servants would soon be finished cleaning up the remnants of the reception feast, and when they had gone to their quarters, she and Sam would be alone in the house.
I just wanted to tell you before I go,
Magdalen said, that both Red and I highly approve of our daughter’s choice of a husband. I wish you every happiness, it goes without saying. I have to admit, though, Sam—I feel I can call you that now—that I’m not overly pleased with your taking Jessica off, and away from me.
She held up a hand to cut off their protests. But I think that I’ll be able to weather that storm somehow. Just you take good care of her.
I will,
Sam said, You need have no worries on that account.
Good.
Magdalen rose, kissed both Sam and Jessica and went to find her wrap. Jessica accompanied her, clinging to her fiercely in the hallway.
I’ll be home around midday,
Magdalen said, squeezing her daughter’s hand. Have a good night, darling.
Sam was holding two fine-stemmed glasses when Jessica came back into the parlour. He handed her one of them and said, To my wife, who is the most beautiful woman in Australia and, as far as I can tell, the entire western and eastern worlds to boot. May she forevermore be my lover, my friend, my sailing companion, and my life.
Jessica’s eyes overflowed as she sipped the wine. Any hint of awkwardness she had felt had been dispelled by those few words. She went to him, took the glass from his hand, and placed herself in his arms for his kiss.
To his everlasting credit, he was not precipitate. He was the soul of tenderness and consideration. When, at last, they were in Jessica’s bed, and the last garment separating them had been cast aside, their union was directed by Sam slowly, carefully, and tenderly, and, as Jessica discovered the full meaning of womanhood, she knew finally and with no trace of doubt that she was right in having vowed never to be separated from this man who was now hers.
During the next several days Magdalen felt almost a stranger in her own house. Sam and Jessica were polite and attentive when she spoke, except that they rarely looked at her for more than a few seconds at a time, having eyes only for each other. Magdalen wrote to Red: "Their love burns as brightly as a falling star, making for—how shall I say it?—a rather