They Gave Her A Rise - Frank Sargeson
They Gave Her A Rise - Frank Sargeson
They Gave Her A Rise - Frank Sargeson
By Frank Sargeson
When the explosion happened I couldn't go and see where it was. I'd been working on the
wharves, and a case had dropped on my foot. It put me on crutches for a fortnight.
I was boarding with Mrs. Bowman down by the waterfront at the time. She was quite a good sort
though a bit keen on the main chance. But I didn't blame her because her husband had cleared
out, and to make ends meet she took on cleaning jobs several days a week.
Explosions are like fires, you can't tell how far off they are. But it was some explosion. Mrs.
Bowman and I were in the kitchen and the crockery rattled, and the dust came down off the light
shade. Sally Bowman was working out at the ammunition factory, and Mrs Bowman never said
anything but you could see she thought that's where it might have happened. Of course people
were talking out in the street and the news came pretty quick.
It was out at the ammunition factory. And they said some of the hands had been blown to
smithereens.
Well, we couldn't do anything. I went over next door on my crutches and asked the people if
they'd find out about Sally and whistle me. Then I'd break the news to Mrs. Bowman.
I went back and Mrs. Bowman was worse than ever. She'd been getting dinner at the time and
she sat with her head down on the table among the potato peelings. Her hair'd come all unput
too, and she looked awful. But she wasn't crying, and you sort of wished she had've been.
Oh God, she said, why did I make her go and work in that factory?
I don't want to see nobody no more, she said. Sally's all I was living for, and now she's dead. She
was a good girl, she said, she was good to her mother.
Sure, I said. Of course she was good to her mother. So she always will be.
I couldn't do anything. The worst of it was I had a sort of sick feeling that Sally had been blown
up. She was only seventeen and a nice kid too. And Mrs. Bowman as good as a widow. It was
tough all right.
Lord God Jesus, she said, give me back my baby. You know she's all I've got. Do please Jesus
Christ Almighty give me back my baby. Please Jesus just this once. Darling Jesus I know I done
wrong. I shouldn't ought to have made my Sally go and work in that factory. It was because of
the money. I had to make her go, you know I did. But oh sweet Jesus if you'll only give me back
my baby just this once I won't never do another wrong thing in my life. Without a word of lie I
won't, so help me God.
She went on like that. It sounded pretty awful to me, that sort of praying. Because I'm a Doolan
myself, and Mrs. Bowman was always down on the churches. You wouldn't have thought she had
a spark of religion in her at all. Still, it was tough. And I felt like nothing on earth.
The next thing was Sally was brought home in a car, one of those big limousines too. The joker
driving had been going home from golf and he'd volunteered. He had to help Sally out of the car
and up the steps because she was just a jelly. Her hat was on crooked and she couldn't stop
crying. Of course the neighbours all came round but I told them to shove off and come back later
on.
Well, Mrs. Bowman had kidded herself into believing that Sally had been blown to smithereens.
So when Sally walked in she went properly dippy and carried on about her having come back
from the dead. So I slung off at her a bit for being dippy and banged about cheerful-like getting
them a cup of tea. Sally wasn't hurt at all, but some of the girls had been killed so naturally she
was upset. Anyhow I slapped her on the back just to show her mother it wasn't a ghost that had
walked in, then Mrs. Bowman began crying and you could see she felt better. So both of them sat
there and cried until the tea was ready.
I can't believe my eyes, Mrs. Bowman said, I thought you was dead.
Mum it was awful. It was just like the noise of something being torn. Something big. A wind sort
of tore at you too. And then there was a funny smell.
Yes I know. But what about Peg Watson and Marge Andrews?
Then Mrs. Bowman roused on to me for putting too much sugar in her tea.
I thought I'd. never taste tea again, Sally said, not when I was knocked over I didn't.
Mr. Doran, Mrs. Bowman said, how ever much tea did you put in the teapot?
Sally said she wasn't ever going back to work in the ammunition factory again.
Why not? Mrs. Bowman asked. You could see she was feeling a lot better and she spoke quite
sharp.
Well I'm not. You never got knocked over by that wind.
I know you have, mum. But you never got knocked over by a wind like that.
Isn't it a shame? Poor Mrs. Andrews. Marge was getting more money than you, wasn't she?
Well, I left them to it. I went over next door to talk to the people, and you could hear Sally and
her mother squabbling from there.
Of course Sally wasn't off for long. And they gave her a rise.