Chronicles of the
Children of Destiny
‘Harvest’
6,000 SC
2,030 CE/AD
Chapter One
It is always interesting you know when things come together in the
end. It is always interesting when you
see those weaves and strands of this great tapestry of life come together from
a seemingly haphazard beginning, yet gradually form a picture and, when
complete, show something to be shown off and remembered. And the tapestry of life for the Gilmore
family, an old farming family of the Monaro region of New South Wales, wove
itself a beautiful pattern for those special months just three years ago when
all the harvests of life for these particular members of the Gilmore clan came
into fruition.
Jenny Gilmore was the youngest of the Gilmore clan, but her sister
Fiona was expecting and Jenny knew her position as the baby of the family and
the apple of her father, Stewart’s eye, was in jeopardy. But oh well, such was life. Stewart, while he was never really known as a
family man, so worried about the constant drought and need of rain for the
fields, still took somewhat of an interest in his eldest daughter’s first
pregnancy, despite Fiona’s stubborn refusal to reveal the father of the child,
much to the annoyance of her grandmother.
But Stewart was a practical man, necessary for farming in Australia, and
had such morals that if his daughter wanted to go it alone with the child then
he would stand behind her. Funnily
enough he wanted a grandson anyway - someone to leave the farm to, as he
himself had no sons and worked the farm alone, apart from his two daughter’s
help and his elderly mother who made the meals, gathered the eggs and
occasionally helped with the milking.
Jenny and Fiona could share with you many a tale of their father’s
laments over the lack of rain for their farmstead. They lived on a property outside of Dalgety
in the Snowy Mountains area of the Monaro region, where it was extra cold in
winter and snowed often, but still quite warm in Summer. Yet rain, which was a constant worry for
Aussie farmers, was the blood of life for their farm, as without it they had to
rely on their yearly ration of water from the Snowy River which, these days,
was often just a trickle. Fiona had shared
with Jenny that she felt their father exceeded his ration from time to time,
something many farmers in the region likely did, but despite maintaining this
she had no real proof. Jenny liked to
think her father would do the right thing by the local council and uphold their
family’s good reputation, but she was a realist as well. She knew her father was only human, and
susceptible to the same temptations common to all.
The Gilmore’s property ran sheep and cattle, but they grew corn and
lucerne also, as well as housing a small vineyard. Stewart would often say that with one good
harvest they could pay off their debts and live a far better quality of
life. ‘Even buy a few more fields, a new
tractor, and fix the fences,’ he would often say, speculating on how he would
spend his win fall if it ever occurred.
Jenny wanted a car, now that she was nearly sixteen, but Fiona called
all such speculations fantasy. ‘Live in
the real world,’ she would often say to the dreams of her family. Stewart liked that in his daughter. So like her mother – practical, realistic and
down-to-earth. It was a perfect attitude
for the struggle of the farming life.
The one Gilmore, though, who had not a care in the world, it seemed, if
the farm prospered or not, the elderly Janet Gilmore, Stewart’s mother, was not
so taken with how well they reaped the fields, but how well she was reaping
souls in her life-long commitment to the great commission of Christ. She was a dedicated Jehovah’s Witness, the
unspoken official religion of the family, taken seriously mainly by Janet
herself. Yet Janet was indeed one
dedicated witness, determined to reap souls for the Kingdom. Despite her elderly age of 82 she still went
out on the doorknocking crusades the Watchtower regularly undertook through the
Monaro region and she thought privately to herself that she must have handed
out, now, over 10,000 copies of the sect’s magazines. She had not harvested greatly, though – never
had done. Yet she kept the faith and
believed her God would one day reward his faithful servant for her lifelong
commitment.
Jenny Gilmore was not overly religious like her grandmother, reflecting
more of her father’s attitude of live and let
live. And, perhaps, such an attitude was
necessary for the life of Jenny Gilmore.
She was not a popular girl at school or in the district – in fact she
was markedly unpopular in many ways. She
had worn thick glasses since a young age and always looked quite square. And of course she’d had horrible acne since
about 13. These, coupled together, did
not help her in the boys department and as she was also something of a tomboy,
being raised to work on the farm, and with the less then feminine looks of her
youth still persisting Jenny Gilmore was not exactly the happiest of rural
teenagers. But everyday, looking in the
mirror, she told herself that the acne ‘seemed’ to be getting less and less all
the time and that as she was developing in her looks she ‘seemed’ to be growing
more feminine. And of course, something
her father had often promised her, but always backed out on due to lack of
funds, she could always have the eye laser surgery that had been recommended to
her which would supposedly cure all her seeing problems. Yes, Jenny Gilmore had problems, but there
were solutions coming down the road a little she constantly reminded herself – she just had to be patient.
‘How about Jenny? That’s a good name.’
‘Get serious,’ replied
Fiona Gilmore to her sister’s suggestion of her own name for that of the child
in Fiona’s womb. ‘Jenny is the last name
on earth I would choose.’
‘Gee, thanks,’ replied
Jenny, less than pleased. But Fiona had
a grin on her face.
‘Only kidding
sis. I love
your name. You know that. But we can’t have two Jenny’s in the
family. Could you imagine the confusion
at dinner time?’
Jenny laughed,
imagining to herself such a situation.
She placed her hand on the belly of her sister who pulled up her t-shirt
to let Jenny see if she could feel the baby kick.
‘Seven months to go,
Jen. Seven months and then a special
Gilmore child is born.’
‘Gilmore?’ queried
Jenny.
‘Well, you know. I am hardly going to name the child after its
father.’
‘And why not?’ asked
Jenny, another member of the Gilmore clan keen to know who the father was.
‘Because this
child of mine is a Gilmore through and through. I just know it. Besides, I don’t think the father will really
care that much in the end. I don’t think
he really loved me, like the way he said he did. He just wanted sex. That’s all they really want you know Jenny,’
she said turning to her sister. ‘That’s
all boys really want in the end. They
want to screw you and then they want to screw you – leave you up the duff.’
‘They’re that bad are
they?’ asked Jenny, still somewhat naïve of the opposite sex she dreamed about.
Fiona moved Jenny’s
hand to where she imagined the baby was kicking.
‘There. There! Can you feel it?’
Jenny nodded, but
persisted with her question. ‘And boy’s
are really that bad are they?’
Fiona confessed
then. ‘Well, no. Not really.
No sis, boys are what they are.
Boys will be boys, as they say.
We need them, we love them, but boy how we hate them as well. But we can’t live without them in the
end. Funny that, how I
lucked out. But who knows what
the future holds? Who knows?’
‘The future holds good
things,’ said the elderly Janet Gilmore, coming into the kitchen of the Gilmore
homestead, having just risen from a sleep-in, now at 5 past 11 in the morning.
‘Yes, but you would
say that Nan. You’re supposed to, aren’t
you? Like a good Christian.’
‘Watch your mouth
Jenny Gilmore. Remember, the eyes of the
Lord are everywhere to know who has done good and bad and who has spoken
against him.’
Jenny nodded, used to
such a rebuke. ‘I’ll be careful,’ she
promised her grandmother.
‘You’ve had a good
sleep-in, gran,’ said Fiona to her grandmother.
Janet Gilmore carefully lowered herself onto one of the ancient wooden
seats at the kitchen table and picked up the newspaper. Reading through it she turned to Fiona to
reply. ‘Sleeping in is the prerogative
of the elderly, dear grandchild of mine.
Remember Solomon did say a foolish son sleeps through the harvest.’
‘Your point?’ queried
Fiona, puzzled.
‘Well he said nothing
about Grandmothers,’ replied the elderly Gilmore.
Both Fiona and Jenny
smiled at their grandmother’s wit. Janet
continued to read through the newspaper as Jenny again felt Fiona’s stomach
trying to feel the baby kick. Janet
stopped reading the paper momentarily to watch her grand-daughters. She doubted, at just under two months, Jenny
would feel the child kick, but the teens perhaps liked to think so. She’d had three children of her own, one boy
and two girls, and she had fond memories of others feeling her belly in
likewise a manner. One of the mysteries
of life, she thought to herself.
‘So what do the
Gilmore children have planned for such a fine day as this?’
Fiona picked up on the
question. ‘Children? You haven’t called us children in years?’
‘Oh, you will always
be children. Always
the daughters of somebody, God to not say the least. You will always be my babies, and I love you
so.’ Jenny got up and hugged her
grandmother affectionately, saying, ‘And we love you to gran.’
Fiona nodded as
well saying, ‘Always, gran.’
‘That is very good to
hear, young Gilmore’s. Now what are the
day’s plans? Or has that son of mine got
you busy with farm-work this Saturday morning?
He really should let you have more of your Saturday’s to yourself. You are still young and need to enjoy your
youth. God knows the farming life will
always be there for you, but it can wait.
Something Stewart never nearly enough brings to mind. Far to worried about
this farm he is. He should just trust in
the Lord and let things run themselves.’
Fiona picked up on
that comment. ‘But the farmwork still
needs to be done, Gran. The cows won’t
milk themselves after all.’
‘Won’t they!’ exclaimed
Jan Gilmore in a bout of spiritual zeal, almost prepared to say they
would. But she softened. ‘No, I suppose you are right Fiona. They won’t milk themselves. Which reminds me, do we have any eggs in the
fridge? I haven’t been out for them for
days now.’
Fiona got up and
checked the fridge and produced two eggs which she showed to her grandmother.
‘Well that does
it. I am going senile. Forgetting to gather the
eggs.’
‘Don’t say that
gran. You are just getting older. Not old, mind you. Just older.’
‘Oh you flatter me
Jenny. But I know I am getting over the
hill. Still I will go get those eggs now
so I can at least have a decent fry up for breakfast.’
‘I’ll help you,’ said
Jenny, getting to her feet, but her grandmother would have none of it.
‘No, Jenny. I am still perfectly capable of gathering
eggs despite my age. You go off now and
have some fun today. I will tell Stewart
to leave you alone for the day. You are
young and need to be happy. Look,’ she
said, reaching into her purse, bringing forth a fifty dollar note. ‘Here, take this and ride into Dalgety. Spend the day with your friends in town and
do what teenagers do.’
Jenny was about to say
no but thought better of it, happily accepting the fifty dollar note.
‘Not that I have that
many friends in Dalgety, gran.’
‘What was that?’ asked
Janet Gilmore who had already turned to pick up the egg basket and go and
gather eggs.
‘Oh, never mind,’
replied Jenny.
Her grandmother nodded
and went off to gather the eggs.
Jenny looked at the
fifty dollar note in her hand. ‘Wow,’
she said to herself, mildly sarcastically.
‘Fifty bucks.’
‘Now don’t go spending
that all at once,’ said Fiona with a smile on her face. ‘Nan is not always that generous.’
‘I won’t,’ replied
Jenny. ‘In fact I doubt I will spend it
at all. I don’t want to ride into
Dalgety. Nobody likes me there. Nobody ever has.’
Fiona nodded,
empathising with her sister. While Fiona
herself had been a popular enough girl from a young age she had known Jenny had
lucked out in that department. But
things could change and Fiona knew boys.
And noticing the way in recent months that Jenny, although she would
never say it to her, but noticing the way the acne was receding and her looks
gradually turning more and more feminine and appealing – well her sister might
very soon start attracting the attention of the boys she so eagerly sought.
‘Look, sis. Try your luck. Ride in, go to the café and order a
hamburger. And if any boys are around
try talking to them. You never know your
luck, ok. Trust me.’
Jenny looked at her
sister, years of frustration peering out through her eyes. Years of doubt. But she was still an optimistic enough youth
and eventually nodded to her sister’s request.
‘But don’t blame me when I say ‘I told you so,’’ she retorted to Fiona.
‘I won’t. Now go on, get going. I can handle the farming duties today – there
is not much on today and pretty light work.
And the doctors say these days they like a healthy mother when it is
time to give birth. Now go on,
get.’ Fiona shooed her sister, who left
the room and went to her bedroom.
Looking in her
cupboard she pulled out her red skirt and black t-shirt with the big red
Loveheart in the centre of it she had bought in Cooma earlier that year. If she was ever going to attract the
attention of a boy she had to look her most appealing. Looking in the mirror, bemoaning her glasses,
she reluctantly said, ‘well here goes,’ and left the room, making for her
bicycle and the 7 Kilometre trip to Dalgety.
* * *
* *
It was a sunny day in late summer, but not that hot with sufficient
cloud coverage to keep a cooler temperature.
Jenny had walked the distance from home to Dalgety many times in her
younger years, mostly with her sister, but now she rode on her mountain
bike. It was not too hilly a ride and
after about an hour she was nearing Dalgety.
Approaching the long steel bridge which ran across the Snowy River which
ran through Dalgety Jenny brought her bike to a stop on the side of the bridge
and peered down to the water. She had
swum in that river a number of times, especially on her own property were the river passed through, and knew it well. When she was very young, around 7, she had
played occasionally here in town with a small group of friends of boys and
girls, but that had only lasted a couple of years. They had grown apart and now seemed to have
disowned her. It was late summer at the
moment and weather in the snowy mountains region of the Monaro at this time of
year was usually warm enough, if not hot, but today was quite pleasant. Peering down into the water she picked up a
loose rock from the road and threw it down, watching it make a circular wave
pattern. Later on she might go down to
the river and fling some smooth rocks across the surface to watch them bounce a
few times on the water. It had always
fascinated her in her younger years, seeing how many times she could make the
rock bounce before plummeting below the surface. She once swore she had made it bounce ten
times with a huge fling once, but in later years perhaps felt she might have
been exaggerating somewhat.
She continued past the bridge and came to the oval were a game of
cricket was in progress. The men were in
traditional white playing in the local Monaro district competition. Her father Stewart had played cricket in
younger years but given it up with the demands of farming. But he’d told her tales of the century he
once scored playing for Dalgety and also boasted he was not that bad a
leg-spinner in his day. Jenny had no
real interest in the game, not even the big matches on television, and she
swore that test cricket bored her to death.
Seriously, five days to determine the winner of a silly game like
cricket, and half the time it was either washed out or ended in a draw. No, such foolery was not for the attention of
Jenny Gilmore. Yet, despite that
attitude, she parked her bike at the side of the oval and sitting under the
trees watched the game in progress.
There was a small crowd gathered watching the match, likely just family
and friends which was the usual turnout for the smaller Monaro competition,
unlike some of the crowds the big city matches occasionally got her father told
her. She sat watching for a couple of
hours as the first batting side completed its innings with some big hitting in
the last few overs. It was one of the
pub sides from Cooma and they had amassed 236 in their allotted overs. A good score which would be hard to beat for
Dalgety Jenny thought to herself. She continued watching for a little while and
was about to leave when one of the Dalgety players came over to say hello. A lad of about 17 who
looked strangely familiar to Jenny.
‘Jenny. Jenny Gilmore. How the hell are you?’
Jenny smiled, but was
not sure what to say. Eventually she
stumbled out a reply. ‘Uh,
yeh. Uh, hi. Umm, do I know you?’
The blonde lad smiled,
shaking his head somewhat. ‘You don’t
remember, huh? Surely it hasn’t been
that long. But I suppose it is. I’m Craig.
Craig Coleman. We used to play
under the bridge over there when we were younger. You even let me kiss you once.’ Jenny blushed, somewhat embarrassed, but was
starting to remember.
‘Craig? Yes, I think I do remember you. But didn’t your family move out of town?’
‘Oh, we still kept the
property. My uncle and his wife and two
kids stayed behind. But we returned
earlier this year. The city life wasn’t
really working out for us and dad reckons the farming life is probably in his
blood in the end. No point in being a
fish out of water after all.’
‘I guess not.’
Craig came and sat
down next to her, turning to look at her more closely. ‘So how have you been Jen? It’s been a while.’
‘Oh, you know. The same I guess. A little older. Maybe a little wiser, as gran would say.’
Craig chuckled at
that. Looking at him Jenny could not
help but notice that he had grown into a strong and attractive looking young
man. He had broadish shoulders, strong
looking arms and fine legs. He had
really developed well.
‘So tell me,’ began
Jenny. ‘Will Dalgety win the match?’
Craig grinned. ‘It could be close, but I think we might do
them, just. I am opening by the
way. I played for a club in Canberra and
did well. The city competition is a lot
harder so maybe the big match practice might put me in good stead. We’ll see, anyway. Well, are you going to stay and watch me
bat? Or do you have to get going soon?’
‘Oh, I will watch you
bat. I rode in,’ she said indicating the
bike near the tree. ‘I don’t really have
to be back until sundown. So I will
watch your whole innings.’
He smiled,
a smile which brightened Jenny’s lonely heart.
‘Thanks Jenny. Well, the team is
having a talk and I can’t miss it. But I
will come and say hi again once the match is over.’
‘Sure,’ replied Jenny,
watching him get up and walk back over to his mates.
‘We bat in about 20
minutes,’ he yelled to her as he walked off.
Sitting there she was a little thirsty.
The café was only a short walk away and she had time to get a drink and
a burger. She got to her bicycle and
rode to the café and ordered a cheeseburger with chips. She sat on the café porch, looking down
towards the oval, eating her chips and drinking cola. It had turned out to be a good day so far
after all. Who knows what would happen
with the rest of it.
* * *
* *
‘Six!’ yelled the small crowd and as if in response the umpire but up
both arms signalling the score. The
situation was exciting for young Jenny Gilmore – very exciting. Craig was on 93, the team on 211, with 4 over
to go and 26 runs needed for victory. It
couldn’t be any closer. The next over
was the final over of the spinner and he bowled very tightly only conceding 4
runs. But Craig hit a 6 off the last
ball of the next over and with the other batsman having scored 5 runs off the
over himself the team only needed 11 runs off two overs with Craig on 99. They were 9 down and close to victory, but
one wicket would give the victory to the pub team from Cooma. The over stared with the best bowler from the
Cooma team brought back into the attack and Dalgety were getting excited. But to no avail, the second ball of the over
the number 11 blocked but the ball deflected off the bat skywards and was
caught by silly-mid-on. The game was
over – the Cooma team had won.
Jenny got to her feet and clapped as Craig came off the field. Despite losing the match Craig was really
still a hero and had come as close as you possibly can to scoring a century
without actually doing so. The crowd was
clapping and shortly the man of the match was named as Craig Coleman. Jenny sat watching the hoo-hah for a while,
deciding it might be time to leave. But
as she was walking her bike back to the road Craig ran over.
‘Hey, are you going
already? We’re going to the pub for a
drink. I am just under age so will have
to sit out the front and drink soft drink, but you can do that with me if you
like. What do you say?’
Jenny hesitated. Despite telling herself a number of times
that afternoon watching that match that Craig, perhaps, had just been polite
introducing himself to her it seemed that Mr Coleman, perhaps, had other things
on his mind. And that seemed to include
getting to know Miss Jenny Gilmore a little better. She was flattered. This was what she wanted – what she really
wanted – but now that she might have it, she almost instinctively wanted to say
no. She was nervous and butterflies were
in her stomach. Perhaps she was simply
not ready for this. Perhaps all the awkward
things which had happened to her were simply nature’s way of saying the time
was not right. But looking at him,
looking at the pleading look on his face, she knew she could not say no.
‘Sure. I’ll come along.’
‘Great,’ he replied.
As they sat in front of the pub were
the other underage players were gathered Jenny was somewhat nervous. Craig spoke to her occasionally, but was
mostly talking to his other team-mates about the match. But he was a boy after all, and that is what
they liked to talk about. As the
afternoon waned and the players gradually disappeared she found herself alone
with Craig who was drinking a cola and looking at the fading sun. An idea came to him and he spoke up.
‘Why don’t we go down
to the river, you know, like old times. Just to have a look
around.’
She nodded. Walking down to the river pushing her
bicycle, Craig walking alongside, Jenny Gilmore was suddenly quite happy. It was nice.
Nice to have a boyfriend, well, sort of boyfriend. Of course, nothing official had actually
happened yet, but he seemed to like her and relationships had to start somewere
after all.
They came down to the river and, as
she had thought of earlier that day, picked up flat pebbles and started
flinging them across the surface of the river, seeing how many times she could
make them bounce. Craig soon copied her
and she noticed instantly how much more adept he was at this thing. But he was a boy in his prime – not really
that surprising.
As the sun began to wane Jenny
realized the time was getting late and she should really get going. Her family likely knew were she was and would
come looking if it got too late, but it would be best not to make them
worry. She signalled to Craig and said
she really needed to leave soon. He
smiled and put out his hand. She took it
and shook it while he said, ‘It has really been good catching up again
Jenny. Somehow I feel like a missing
part of my childhood has returned to me.
Hopefully we will see more of each other.’
Jenny nodded,
responding, ‘Yeh. Yeh, I’d like
that.’ She waved then and started
pushing her bike back up to the bridge, Craig falling in behind her. As she sat on her bike she turned to look at
him and he waved, turned and made his way back towards the oval were his car
was parked. As she began riding along
Jenny thought to herself that maybe, just maybe, things were finally changing
for the better in the life of young Jenny Gilmore. It least it was a start. Things could only get better from here.
Riding along the sun finally set and
the sky darkened a little. It would be
bright for some time yet, this time of the year, but she would arrive home in
late twilight. But try as she might she
could not bring herself to have any concerns over her late arrival home that
day. Her father might be a little
worried but she would talk to her sister that night and share her news. And despite the lecture she felt coming from
her father for disappearing without letting him know and doing any work, for
the meeting of Craig Coleman she felt it was just about worth it. In fact she was sure of it.
* * *
* *
‘Good grief, Jenny. You were
late because of a boy?’ Jenny’s father,
Stewart Gilmore, stood there shaking his head, wondering were his youngest
worker had been all day. Fiona had not
commented and Janet had remained silent just about, simply saying the girl must
be doing what young girls do at her age.
And seemingly that had been the case.
‘Well, he was a guy I
had known as a kid, ok. Craig
Coleman. His family has moved back to
the region and he was batting all afternoon, so I couldn’t exactly leave. He nearly made a hundred after all.’
‘The Coleman’s, huh,’
said Stewart, taking off his akubra hat and wiping off the sweat of a hard
day’s work. ‘So John Coleman is back in
the region. Doesn’t
surprise me, though. He was never
a city boy. Too much
country in him.’
‘That’s what Craig
said.’
Stewart Gilmore looked
down at his young daughter and thought better of rebuking her anymore. She was young after all and, in the end, he
wanted both daughters married rather than being spinsters.
‘Look, its ok
Jen. I could have used you today, that’s all. There
were a few things I needed your help with.
But your young and you need to find yourself. I can’t ask everything of you, with your
schoolwork and all. But I will need you
tomorrow so don’t go off skedaddling, alright.
I want you up bright and early.’
‘Sure daddy. And sorry about today. I know I should have told you I was going but
gran told me to get going. And you know
how she is.’
‘Don’t I ever. I’ll have to
have words with her.’ Stewart looked
down at his daughter silently pleased that she seemed to finally being
attracting the attention of boys.
‘Now if you want this
Craig fellow to like you, show yourself a lady.
And don’t you go getting in any trouble like your older sister. You see how she ended up, and without a man I
must say. Besides, I don’t think your
grandmother would approve of any fancy business.’
‘Nor you daddy?’ asked
Jenny, gently inquiring.
‘Well, no, I
guess. I mean you know how I am with
mum’s religion. It never has really been
for me. Heck, I guess I believe in God,
but you can take things too far. And I
think your grandmother suffers from that.
Thinks she’s bloody Christ himself the way I see it. Trying to save every Tom,
Dick and Harry.’
‘It’s just her
religion, dad. It’s important to
her. Gives her
something to occupy herself with.
Besides, I don’t think people mind in the end, really.’
‘I don’t know. There’s lots of
bloody arguments about religion. Same as politics. And
especially were the Jehovah’s Witnesses are concerned. Worst of the lot, some people say. Same as those Mormons.’
‘Good grief. Nan is far from being a Mormon. She would faint if you said so.’
‘Ah, they’re all the
same in the end, those fundamentalists. Same as the Baptists and those Pentecostals. You know religion isn’t really for me, but I
have studied the denominations somewhat from time to time, and I listen to what
people say. It seems to me there are
normal churches and then there are the ones which try and tell everyone what to
do. As if they are the
special chosen ones.’
Jenny was curious
about that point. ‘And what is a normal
church?’
‘Probably your
mothers, the Anglicans.
I attended a few times back in the day with her. And you and Fiona were both baptized in that
church as I recall it.’
Jenny looked
startled. ‘We were baptized? But Nan has been hassling
us to do that for years. She never said
anything like this.’
‘Oh, don’t worry about
that. Every church wants to baptize you
in their own church.
And a lot of them don’t mind fishing for members from other churches. I think there is a strong competition with
Jesus for which church can win the most souls.’
Jenny smirked at that
and Stewart had a big grin on his face.
‘Anyway, enough
with the religious discussion.
I am glad you have found yourself a man, but I need you bright and early
tomorrow morning, ok hon. Bright and early.’
Jenny nodded as her
father left the kitchen, off to his room.
Jenny looked into the pot which was
simmering on the stove top. It seemed to
be a stew of some kind and looking in the oven there were potatoes and pumpkin
baking. It would be a good dinner. She left for her room and decided to get
changed into her pyjamas. Sitting at the
dresser, looking into the mirror, Jenny Gilmore was pleased with herself. As if today she had accomplished the first
part of a long held goal to improve her life.
Of course, in reality, she’d had to do little of the work herself,
mainly just go with the flow. Craig had
introduced himself to her and done all the asking. She’d simply gone along with the ride. Perhaps, thinking to herself,
that was how it was supposed to be for the fairer sex as they were called. Perhaps men were supposed to do all the
asking, like Nan occasionally said, and women were meant to choose which one
appealed to them the most. But Jenny
Gilmore could not say that she was anything if fussy. She had been almost prepared to take any
interest in any boy whatsoever who came along.
Ok, perhaps not any boy – there were reasonable exceptions. But she had been in such a state of her lack
of friendships that practically anyone could have become her friend. But now, with that new friend, perhaps, being
the quite handsome Craig Coleman, it seemed as if God had answered her silent
prayer in a way most pleasing. In fact,
thinking on Craig, most pleasing indeed.
A knock came to her door and Jenny
said ‘Come in.’ Her
sister Fiona came inside, sat on the bed, and looked straight at her.
‘A boy. Is dad really telling me the truth? A boy talked to you today?’ What was his name? Dad didn’t say.’
Jenny smiled. Of all the things in the world to talk with
her sister about it seemed, finally, she had something womanly to chat
about. And about time
too.
‘It was Craig. Craig Coleman. A kid I knew growing up.’
‘Oh,’ said Fiona,
instantly making the connection. ‘I know
Craig pretty well. I think I knew him
more than you did after he stopped hanging around you. They were just trying to be cool in those
days, sis, and you were never seen as being cool. But really, don’t let it worry you. Times change. They always do. But Craig, he was a good kid. Always polite and caring. He hung around some rough nuts from time to
time, but he was always worth getting to know.’
She paused, thinking over younger years.
‘So the Coleman’s are back in town? Well that is good to know. They were always a strong part of our
community. They really never should have
left.’
‘Craig sort of said
the same thing,’ responded Jenny.
‘Well, did he ask you
out? Or was he just being friendly. A girl has to know these things.’
‘Uh, no. He didn’t ask me out exactly. But he said it would be nice if we caught up
again sometime. So I think that means he
is interested.’
‘Not necessarily. He might just be being friendly. Perhaps you are just a person from his
childhood which he wants to remember fondly.
Perhaps that is all it is. But if
he does like you the next time you see him, well you will know.’
‘How exactly?’
‘You just will. Take it from me, guys are obvious.’
‘Ok.’
Fiona stared absentmindedly,
seemingly thinking over her sister’s good fortune, before coming back to
herself.
‘Well, you get some
good sleep after dinner, ok. Dad wants
you up bright and early. I thought you
might get into trouble with what gran suggested, but you are young.’
‘You sound like dad.’
‘Very funny. Come on, lets go
eat. Nan is about to serve up.’
The two of them got to
their feet and made their way to the kitchen of the Gilmore homestead. Janet had just started dishing out the meals
and motioned for the girls to be seated.
Shortly Stewart joined them and when the meals had been served,
Grandmother motioned for silence and asked her offspring to close their eyes.
‘Dear lord,’ she began
praying. ‘We thank you for this
wonderful day. You are so good to us to
provide for all our need and we thank you for this food from your creation and
ask you to bless it to our bodies. In
Jesus name we pray. Amen.’ The Gilmore’s opened their eyes and began
their meal.
Finishing off desert Jenny put her
bowl on the sink. While she occasionally
washed up the dishes, Janet seemed happy enough to have that as one of her
chores for the household. Going into the
living room she turned on the television and sat down watching the last half
hour of 60 minutes. But she was not really
concentrating on the program and as her father came into the room and sat down
near her, lighting up a cigarette and staring at the box, Jenny’s mind was
alive with thoughts of Craig Coleman.
The family had given her a good impression of the Coleman family. They seemed like real salt of the earth
people, people who she could trust. So
if anything were to ever eventuate between herself and Craig, which she now
hoped did occur, it would perhaps be good for all concerned. Providing the Coleman family liked her, that
is.
Later that night, as she drifted off
to sleep, Jenny Gilmore was quite pleased.
It had been a tough few years since her mother’s passing, and the
Gilmore’s had knit together because of it.
But Laura’s passing was now something which the mourning of sorrow had
turned into the strength of going on.
They were stronger as people, now.
More capable of handling the difficulties in life. And while she missed her mother greatly and
could think of nothing more she would like to do than share her stories of
Craig Coleman, she thanked God that she at least still had her sister and her
grandmother, and even her father, despite his malehood. It had been a good day for Jenny Gilmore and
as she finally found sleep and dreams invaded her head she was happy. It seemed, now, things were finally turning
around for the youngest of the Gilmore clan.
It seemed, now, things were getting better. Getting better indeed.
Chapter Two
Stewart Gilmore, 49, husband to the late Laura Gilmore, mother of his
two daughters, whom he had loved dearly, was a farmer through and through. And an Aussie through and
through. His family, so the
family chronicle told, went all the way back to convicts from the first
fleet. And they were amongst the first
settlers in the Monaro region, coming to their current homestead in the 19th
century, as belied the age of the home.
Oh, it had been modified and rebuilt somewhat over the years, but you
still saw the age in the place. And in
some ways you also saw the age in Stewart Gilmore, so anxious and worried for
rain he had become in recent years.
Stewart knew he had no son, which he constantly told himself
should not bother him as he was the proud father of two beautiful
daughters. Yet there was something about
having a son, something part of humanity since ancient days, which spoke of
leaving a legacy and having someone walk on further in your shoes to live the
family dreams. Yes he wanted a son and,
silently, prayed that Fiona’s child would be a baby boy who
he could teach the ways of farming and have carry on the Gilmore name.
Stewart was not a religious man like his mother who was a very
dedicated Jehovah’s Witness. He’d had a
number of arguments with his mother over the years, especially in his turbulent
teens in which he had abandoned religion totally. His father had been non-religious in most
ways and Stewart had seemingly followed that trait. But Janet Smith had captured the late Fred Gilmore’s
heart, despite being part of that newer Christian denomination full of zeal,
the Jehovah’s Witnesses of the Philadelphia Watchtower and Tract Society. And having made it her lifelong desire to
convert her husband and then her son to the society Janet had lectured him on
religious morality since a young age.
But he’d never been baptized having decided against it when he seemingly
had the choice made to him in his teenage years. Stewart was questioning – still questioning –
and had no firm beliefs to speak of in relation to the big questions. He knew he was an agnostic in reality,
despite thinking that God probably was there.
But despite thinking the creator of all likely did exist he could simply
not make the leap of faith to absolutely affirm such a truth. There was still too much doubt in the heart
of Stewart Gilmore.
Stewart was proud of his daughters, Fiona and Jenny, but kept his
praises mainly to himself. If anything,
the miracle of life his daughters represented were the main reason he did
suggest God likely existed. Seeing his
own face mirrored in some way in the faces of his children just spoke to his
heart of the miracle of life and gave him quiet, heart-warming solace. And that miracle, from time to time, he saw
expressed in the farming life. When a
new calf was born, or ducklings which were on their farm started attaching to
their mother and running after her, or even when they occasionally had a good
harvest, Stewart was reminded why the life of a farmer, which was in his blood,
was the life he had never left. Part of
nature – part of the natural cycle – producing food for the rest of society –
was an idea central to much of the philosophy on life of Stewart Gilmore.
Now, three and a half years on since the passing of Laura, Stewart had
healed. And healed so much that, despite
pretending he would never speak to his daughters about it, he had been having a
romantic friendship with a widow who lived in town. They had met at the pub, but he had known her
a little over the years, occasionally saying hello. But when Laura had passed, after a few months
he felt the need for intimacy again, and this stranger who he knew had been
widowed a while suddenly seemed quite appealing. He had first talked to her in the pub just
after a year since Laura’s passing. He
had wanted to ensure he waited the year as a sign of respect to his late wife,
but when his mourning was complete the lady in question seemed quite willing to
embark upon a new relationship with him and they had been meeting at her house
for over two years now and slept together often. It was funny, that. His mother might possibly say they were
fornicating which Stewart knew was supposed to be a sin. But he had read the scriptures from time to
time and gotten the impression that, for widows and widowers, later on in life,
having proven faithful, that God probably didn’t mind that much. Which in a strange way was
important to him. Oh, he had not
really confessed any great faith, but he still exercised a degree of caution,
and did not really want to offend the Almighty should he be up there in heaven
keeping score.
Stewart, generally, was happy enough with his lot in life. Things could be better, especially if they
got more rain, but the farm managed to get by and the bills were usually, if
often late, paid. He had two daughters
who he loved and watching them grow each day and face similar trials of youth
he had grown through gave him joy at the wisdom life brought simply with
experience. He was very happy that Fiona
was expecting, and the son he expected would make a welcome addition to the
family. And now, of all things most
surprising, young Jenny might finally be showing signs of getting herself a
man. Which reminded
him strongly of his promise to her.
Yes, he had long promised the surgery for her eyes, which would
definitely improve her appearance, and felt he soon could make good on that
promise. He had been putting a little
aside for a few months now and while the surgery was not exorbitantly
expensive, it had usually been just out of reach. But soon, very soon, he would make good on
his promise and give his daughter the sight she so richly deserved.
Yes, all things considered, Stewart was happy with his life. It was nothing remarkable, perhaps unlike a
prime minister, or a great author, or noble laureate. But it was a life which pleased him and, all
things considered, he wouldn’t change it for the world.
‘Come on little piggy. Come
on. Come get your food.’ The little pig grunted and came out of his
little hut as the scraps were tossed into the sty. They’d had pigs a number of times, always ending
up slaughtering them for the delicious pork, ham and bacon such pigs
delivered. Stewart had never really
committed to the idea of breeding pigs though, used to his other main sources
of income, but they purchased piglets from time to time at the markets to
fatten up and slaughter for food. He
admitted to himself that he loved the taste of bacon and over the years through
particular feeding habits he had practiced he was sure that he was getting a
better quality of bacon. But his mother
said it all tasted the same to her. It
was Sunday morning, around 9, and Jenny was out on the motorbike moving the
sheep to another field, while Fiona was tinkering with the tractor which needed
fixing. Fiona was a mechanically minded
child, very fortunate for a girl considering he didn’t have a son, but perhaps
it was simply the way he had raised both girls to be men to look after the
farm. He had no son so had to make do
with what he had. He thought to himself
these days that if he were to have an accident with the tractor or some other
misfortune befell him the girls, now, would likely be able to manage the
farm. They knew the shearers they had to
get in during shearing season and would likely manage that okay, an integral part
of their income; and all three Gilmore ladies knew how the milking machines
worked. Harvesting the corn and lucerne
was a little trickier, but Fiona was starting to get the hang of it, and Jenny
had no problems with the grapes and making wine for the small wine label they
ran. ‘Gilmore Monaro Estate’ was not
exactly a best selling wine label, as they did not produce a great quantity of
wine, never really committing the necessary resources to do so. But it sold well, usually, and they had
outlets throughout the region which happily enough sold their product.
As the pig went through its meal Stewart thought on his plans for the
evening. By now he knew his daughters
must be thinking something was up, so many times had he spent the night away
from home when he claimed he was just going to Dalgety pub. They weren’t stupid - they were Gilmore’s
after all. But despite the worry that
somehow they would find out, he could not stop seeing Michelle. She was his girlfriend, now. And while he had sworn to himself that the
memory of his daughter’s mother was something sacred for him and his daughters
to share, he likewise had to face reality.
Sooner or later he would have to tell them about Michelle. And perhaps sooner, before they found out for
themselves anyway.
Watching the pig finish off its eating returning to its hut, Stewart
looked at the sky, took off his akubra, and wiped his brow. They would only work to midday today. He never really felt comfortable working any
longer on Sunday knowing they both needed the rest and his mother’s religious
concerns for that day. There was work to
do in the winery, fixing some of the vines to posts which had come off during
last nights strong wind gusts. And he wanted
to take a drive around the property to do a full stocktake of the fences,
something he had been putting off for some while. There were a few nagging fence lines which
had been on his mind, and a gate which really needed looking at, but funds had
been scarce recently. Still they had
enough for now, but what he really hoped and prayed to the God he was not
really sure he believed in was for good rain for the next few months. Come spring later on in they year, if they
had good rain, harvest could be good this year.
And with a good harvest and good crops came good money. And with good money he could attend to things
which had been lagging and perhaps give all the Gilmore’s a special few months
to be remembered.
* * *
* *
Fiona had been tinkering with the tractor all morning. The Gilmore family had two tractors, the other
one quite old which was generally past its use by date but, if necessary, could
be fixed up to run as well. And
throughout the morning she occasionally felt they may have to in fact do just
that. She was not exactly a mechanic but
knew enough by now that she could likely carry the title of Mechanic’s
apprentice without too much trouble. She
had cleaned the spark plugs that morning, thinking that was the main problem,
but then it still hadn’t worked. She’d
spent a couple of hours looking through the engine, trying to work out what the
problem was, but to no avail. But now
she thought she was stupid. And having
just checked the key starting mechanism, she found it loose. Tightening it up she tried the key and it
cranked over the engine and the engine started.
‘Success,’ she smiled to herself.
Stewart came over to see her and motioned for her to turn off the
tractor so he could speak.
‘What was the problem
then sweetie?’
‘Just a loose
starter engine for the key switch.
It took me ages to find the problem, but its all working fine now.’
‘Good. Well I’ll need her tomorrow, so you can clean
her up if you like and then take the rest of the day off. I’ll probably be finishing shortly anyway.’
‘Sure thing
dad.’ Fiona got
to work checking the oil and fuel and noting the fuel was low drove the tractor
over to the farm’s diesel pump and filled her up. Diesel was delivered regularly and they had a
pump which they used for the farm vehicles.
Filling the pump Fiona thought about
the child within her womb. She was only
19, which often to her seemed young to have a baby. But not really, she reminded herself. Nature had dictated she was ready so she
would have to accept the consequences for her infidelity. Well, not infidelity exactly, but pre-marital
shenanigans. Fortunately gran had not hassled her too much, generally showing sympathy and
understanding for her situation which relieved her greatly. Fiona was like her father somewhat in
religious thinking and morality but had a little more sympathy for the faith of
her grandmother. She did believe in God,
a jump her father had not committed to, but did not pursue religion with any
great zeal. Fiona, in general, saw
herself as a down-to-earth country girl.
A true blue Aussie. She had been reasonably popular in her school
years and had dozens of casual friends and a few close ones. And in fact it was one of those closer
friends, one of the males, which had gotten her into her current situation. He was a Cooma lad, the main town of the
area, apart from Canberra further up north.
She had gone to school with him at Monaro high in Cooma, he being in the
year above her. And when they had left
school he had gone off to university, only returning home for holidays. In fact, it was December the previous year
when he had been back in town that they had caught up and done the deed which
led to her current state. He had
promised he would look after her but had recently returned to Canberra and his
university life. ‘And the other women’,
Fiona often thought to herself. But she
did love him. She knew that much. And if he ultimately did prove faithful to
her and her child, well, if marriage became an option she likely would not
decline.
Fiona had plans for the future, and she had no plans. More like dreams which were less than
concrete which was surprising because she was a very practical girl at heart
and noted often. Oh, she reminded people
to live realistically, and she presumed in the end she did, but she fantasized
about being a country singer from time to time and seeing the kind of life that
could bring. She also had dreams of
working somewere in Canberra or Sydney in a high-flying career. But deep down she was a country girl and
realized the farming life her father had brought her up in would likely be the
bread and butter of the rest of her days.
But that didn’t bother her. At
times it was a lonely life, stuck out on a farm near Dalgety at the back of
nowheresville. But while that was not
completely true, apart from the farm itself there was
not much to do. There was a Dalgety
dance night every now and again, which the girls had attended for a number of
years now, but Fiona was less interested in that now, concentrating on her
child. Yes, it seemed that her baby
would occupy much of her life now and the dreams she had for herself, well, the
child could carry on and live those dreams for her. But that was life, wasn’t it. We make plans and then along come children
who take over our dreams and become the central rock of our lives in our sense,
teaching us to be responsible and dependable citizens. Fiona knew that. She knew that was what being pregnant had
done to her so far – taught her to be more responsible and less flaky. She realized she had been raised well, to
respect her elders and to have good values and she knew the importance of
passing on such values to her own child.
They were the things which got you through life and taught you how to
relate to the rest of society.
A bigger family would be good for the
Gilmore’s, now that their mother Laura had passed. Oh, they got along well, but it had seemed
for a while as if something was missing, as if with the passing of Laura there
was still an empty place which should not have been at the kitchen table. But perhaps the little child in Fiona’s belly
would make a difference to that. Fiona
liked to think so. Oh, she could never
replace her mother with her child, but it would give everyone in the family,
especially her father Stewart, something to focus on since Laura’s death. In every way Fiona felt the child had come
just at the right time. She had names,
Jonathon if it was a boy and Laura, after her mother, if it was a girl. And while she felt it would be wonderful to
have a female child named after her mother she couldn’t help but believe it was
a boy to satisfy her father’s desires.
Either way in around seven months she would find out.
Jenny was dear to Fiona. The little sister she had held in her arms at
only 3. She loved her – loved her
dearly. And she had a heart for her
little sis and the problems of life which had beset her. Oh, they were nothing drastic in the end, but
being unpopular was something Fiona had never really had to face, unlike
Jenny. But, it seemed, in her sweet
sixteenth year Jenny Gilmore might finally be showing signs of blossoming into
a fine young lady. Indeed the acne was
less now and she was looking more and more feminine each week virtually. The eyes would hopefully have the surgery
they needed soon – and especially soon if this new boy was interested. Jenny had never had a boyfriend, unlike Fiona
who’d had a few by Jenny’s age. But if
Craig Coleman was to be won by Jenny, well she needed every advantage she could
possibly get.
Stewart, her father, was in many ways
now the rock of Fiona’s life. Like so
many young daughters, their mother was their role model and the one they looked
up to with questions on life and all the worries they had. But Fiona had lost her mother at 16 and since
that time it had been her father and to a lesser degree her grandmother she had
grounded upon. And because her father
was so important to her life she tried to help him with the farmwork as much as
she possibly could, even in her current pregnant state. Something she admired about her father was
his dependability and faithfulness. He
would not cut and run on his children – something which seemed totally
impossible to the doting Fiona Gilmore.
No, no matter how tough things got, and they were often quite tough,
Stewart would stand behind his family like a fair dinkum father, and see them
through both the tough times and the good.
And she loved him because of it.
Janet Gilmore, her grandmother, was,
while Fiona was growing up, not exactly the kind of grandmother she thought
fitted the normal mode. Her mother,
Laura, had often told her that Gran was a religious zealot and to not take too
seriously the things she said. Fiona had
been shaped by her mother’s words about her grandmother from a young age, but
recently had come closer, somewhat, to understanding her grandmother’s
perspective on life. She had been to the
Jehovah’s Witnesses Kingdom Hall meetings a few times in her life and had
gained something of an understanding on were her grandmother was coming from. And, in Fiona’s mind, it was something of a
persecution complex. They were sometimes
called cultic by other branches of Christianity, mainly because they refuted
the trinity doctrine. And from what
Fiona saw this created a backs-to-the-wall mentality amongst her grandmother’s
fellowship, one which viewed itself as being against the whole world. And because Fiona had grown to understand
that, and appreciate that her Grandmother had spend 82 years in such a mould,
it was easier to understand were her Nan was coming from and relate to her
because of it. She really didn’t think
other Christians were as against her grandmothers church as her grandmother
herself thought. In fact, from
discussions, most people just thought they were another church these days. But, perhaps, the old stigma was alive in her
grandmothers thinking, something which continued to motivate her in her
evangelistic zeal. But that was her
grandmother, and despite thinking she might like to from time to time, she
probably wouldn’t change her for the world.
Ultimately, things were generally good
enough in the life of Fiona Gilmore. She
was not really sure if she would change anything at the moment, so satisfied
she was with it all. Oh, she could
always win the lottery, which she supposed a lot of people dreamed about, but
being realistic things were as they should be.
Life was good and the new baby would be the icing on the cake when it
arrived.
‘Fiona, do you have a moment?’ Jenny Gilmore had come from the homestead out
to see her, with some query on her mind.
Fiona was pumping diesel into the tractor but sensed she’d put enough
in. She finished off, replaced the pump
handle, and put the tractor fuel plug back on.
She turned to her sister, wiping her hands on her overalls.
‘What’s up sis?’
‘I’m back at school
tomorrow. Dad has decided the cold I had
is definitely over with so it is time to get back to school, even though I
start late this year.’
‘You’re only a couple
of weeks late. You will catch up.’
‘I hope so. But I am in year 11 now and they sometimes
dress a little casual at Monaro in year 11 and 12.’
‘Don’t I know it,’
replied Fiona. ‘We are starting to be
called adults by year 11, sis. The
teachers are less worried about what we wear then. They assume we are mature enough to know how
to dress.’
‘Right,’ said Jenny,
gaining a firmer understanding. ‘Well,
you know Craig?’
‘Yes, I know Craig,’
said Fiona smiling. ‘What about him?’
‘Well, he is in year
12 this year, just above me. And,
well. Umm.’
‘Spit it out.’
‘Well, what should I
wear at school? For him to notice me,
you know?’
Fiona smiled. Her sister was such a girl. Funny that, though – what
else should she expect.
‘Look, it is not so
much what you wear, sis. But how you wear it.’
‘What’s that supposed
to mean.’
‘It means your
attitude and how you come across is far more important. Who you are as a person will last a lot
longer than how you dress, if you take what I mean.’
Jenny nodded. Her sister sounded wise.
‘Yeh, you’re probably
right. I shouldn’t worry so much, huh?’
‘Just be
yourself. If he is going to like you he
is going to like you for you – for who you are as a person. And there is no point in trying to be what
you’re not. You will only betray
yourself in the end.’
Jenny nodded. Yes her sister was wise.
‘Well, I will just
wear what I wore in year 10. That will
have to do.’
‘Probably for
the best.’
‘Thanks sis.’ Jenny put up her hand in a little wave and
walked back to the house. Watching her
go Fiona thought on the things she had said to her. They were true words, words which came from
her mother from her early teens. And she
trusted her mother’s wisdom. If Jenny
was to find a man, she could not be anything but what Jenny Gilmore was in the
end. To try to be otherwise was a
betrayal, and that was not something the Gilmore’s were into. Not something at all.
* * *
* *
Janet Gilmore loved Jehovah. She
loved her God with all her soul, mind and strength. But sometimes, just sometimes, she wondered
if her God felt the same way. Yes, she
knew what the scripture taught and what the elders who ministered to her from
the pulpit continued to remind her in relation to the fidelity of God’s love –
but sometimes she questioned wether he really was listening. Oh, he had always taken care of her. She was now 82 years old and had lived a
long, fruitful and rewarding life. She
had seen wars, droughts, childbirth and any of the other conditions common to
society – but one thing, which made her question the love of God – was wether
he really was paying attention or not to her prayer requests for souls to be
given into the kingdom. And that was the
biggest priority of all for Mrs Janet Gilmore.
First and foremost of all the souls
she truly desired to come to know the love of Jehovah was her son, Stewart. Stewart, in his pre-teen years, had attended
the watchtower services when his father permitted, but had left this faith
entirely in his teenage years. She still
remembered strongly the arguments she had with Stewart over the existence of
God and why, amongst a world full of religions, that her particular strand of
Christian faith was the truth when so many others also made that claim. Certainly, she had answers she could give,
and gave them often, but he was too jaded in the end to really take seriously
the viewpoints of his mother. As a
theologian might say, God was ineffable to her son Stewart, beyond
understanding and even really knowing for sure.
But she loved him and had prayed for him just about every day of his
life to come to know her heavenly father.
The other souls she was most
interested in were, naturally, her two grand-daughters, Fiona and Jenny. Fiona seemed accepting of
her grandmother’s faith, but non-committal. As if she perhaps already
had a worldview on God and religion which she didn’t intend changing from. And Jenny, well the lass was still young and
mouldable, but she seemed destined, to Janet, to follow in the footsteps of her
older sister or father, or a mix of both.
But there were other
souls in the district who Janet Gilmore had witnessed to many a long year on
the virtues of firstly Christian faith and then the teachings of her own
movement in particular. But,
despite a lifelong commitment to the great commission of Christ, apart from the
occasional visitor to the assembly whom she had given a copy of ‘Awake’ or the
‘Watchtower’ magazine to, she had never really reaped any souls for the
kingdom. And this she desired to do
strongly, knowing Christs words on the importance of bearing fruit.
Yet, despite her situation, and
despite the questions she had towards Jehovah who should indeed be keeping
faith with his faithful servant, Janet had concluded that if she kept the
faith, in the end, the reward would come.
She just had to be patient.
In other aspects of her life she was
generally content with things on the Gilmore homestead. She had met Fred Gilmore decades back, who
she found one of the more handsome men in the district. It had not taken him long to propose and no
sooner were they married than she was pregnant with her first child, Fiona,
Stewart’s sister. Fiona lived just a few
months before dying of cot death. It had
been a tragedy for her and Fred to face, but she fell pregnant very quickly
afterwards and the birth of their second and final child, Stewart, seemed to
console the couple somewhat.
Fred had never really liked her
religion. He had been brought up a
nominal Anglican, but never really attended church. And so, having met Janet, the religious
divide between them had been a non-issue.
Life with Fred Gilmore on the farm had been good – very good. She had been a faithful and loving wife, as
her faith taught her to be, and through the hard times and the good times she
had grown to trust her God, that he would always be there for her, providing
for her in ways beyond her. And he had
always, thankfully, done so.
And then, a while back now, but
seemingly only yesterday, Fred had passed and she was left with Stewart and
Laura and the children and then only Stewart and the Children. Funny how life brings loved ones into your
life and then just as easily takes them away she had thought to herself. Funny that.
But she had faith for those gone from her that she would meet them again
one day in the world to come and for now concentrated on where she was in life,
loving those the Lord brought to her.
Sitting in her upstairs room of the
Gilmore homestead Janet was looking through the recent issue of the
‘Watchtower’ magazine. It was nothing
out the usual but she still answered the questions ready for the next
service. She often travelled into Cooma
to attend the Kingdom Hall there, but often just studied at home as well. While she still drove she was a little
shakier on the road in recent months. It
could well come down to her needing to ask her son Stewart to take her to
assembly and, while that was not the end of the world, she sensed there might
be some problems. Just then a knock came
to the door and Janet spoke ‘Come in.’ Young Jenny came into her room,
dressed in her school clothes. Of
course, she would be back at school tomorrow, now that she was over her summer
cold. ‘Yes Jenny. What is it?’
‘Well, Gran. I don’t really know how to say this, but,
well.’ She gathered herself. ‘I mean, I totally respect what Fiona says
and agree with her, but boys do like you to look good, don’t they? I mean they like you to dress well don’t they?’
‘What has Fiona been
saying to you?’
‘She says that it
doesn’t really matter how I dress. A boy
should like me for who I am rather than what I look like.’
Janet nodded to
herself. Perhaps her wisdom from life
should speak on this.
‘While I should rebuke
myself for saying this, child of mine, but while a woman needs to show herself
gentle and feminine it is often the sad truth that those who dress in a way which
attract a man’s attention will often get the prize others miss out on.’
‘So I should dress up
then?’
‘Don’t look like a
harlot, mind you. But yes. It is still a very feminine and natural thing
to want to look good for a man. It is
natures way dear Jenny.’
Jenny nodded. She had been through a phase that afternoon
of questioning everything she knew on this subject, but still felt boys wanted
a girl who looked good, something her grandmother seemed to reinforce.
‘Be yourself
Jenny, in what you say and do. But dress
well as well. Look good for him.’
‘Thanks gran,’ said
Jenny and hugged her grandmother. It was
exactly what the teenager wanted to hear.
‘Is that all?’ Janet
asked her granddaughter.
‘Yes that’s all. I’ll go and pick something now.’
Janet nodded as her
granddaughter left the room, happy to have offered some advice.
As she returned to her magazine her
mind drifted to her younger days. She
had dressed very formally when first dating Fred Gilmore. Of course it was different in those days. Before the 1960s came along
and the sexual revolution began.
Oh, they weren’t naïve in her day – they knew what was what. But it seemed to her they had lived in the
shadow of the bygone Victorian era with all its morality and then, suddenly,
the 60s hit and sexual morality had not been the same since. In some ways, despite the very conservative
inclinations within the heart of Janet Gilmore, it was a relief. What had been kept in the shadows could at
least now be discussed in some way and she really felt people at least deserved
to be educated on the subject before making an informed decision. She queried to herself from time to time what
God, the great creator of sex in the first place, really did think on human
mating rituals. Perhaps they were an
area of amusement to him, or was he really the king of sexual morality that the
scriptures seemed to maintain. It would
be something she looked forward to learning about for certain in the world to
come.
She was tired, and though dinner was
due shortly, she felt she might just have a little nap. It couldn’t hurt. As she lay there she gently drifted off to
sleep and dreams of boys from her youth filled her mind and one particularly
handsome Fred Gilmore pledged, in her dream, that he would be hers forever and
ever.
* * *
* *
The breakfast table, early Monday morning, Jenny due back for school on
the bus to leave shortly, was alive with chatter. Fiona had ironed Jenny’s clothes twice at
Jenny’s request as the girl really did want to make a good impression on her
first day in Year 11. Fiona felt, maybe,
she was fussing to much but understood as well. Janet Gilmore was also at the table having
risen early. Today she was out
doorknocking for her church with another Jehovah’s Witness from the Dalgety
area. That morning they were eating
bacon, eggs, tomatoes and hash-browns – a traditional Aussie breakfast.
‘And remember,’ said Fiona to her sister whose mouth was full of
bacon. ‘This is your big year, nearly
the biggest of them all. HSC is next
year so you will want to study hard this year, more than ever, to get ready for
that. If you really want to go to
university getting good scores on your HSC is absolutely essential.
‘But I heard,’ said
Jenny through mouthfuls of bacon, ‘that you can get into
university as a mature age entrant at 21 anyway? So what does it matter if I am late a few
years?’
‘I think its 20
sis. But surely you want to get on with
your life and not waste a couple more years at the farm. You have always been good at school and we
all think you could do well at uni.’
‘But I like the
farming life as well, you know. I didn’t
know you were that eager to get rid of me.’
Fiona came and hugged her sister.
‘We’re not,
Jenny. But you could have a great
life. And a university degree goes a
long way to achieving that. Don’t take
year 11 and 12 lightly. Believe me. The harder you study now the easier it will
be later on when it is important.’
Jenny nodded,
believing her sister.
Janet Gilmore spoke
up. ‘In my day it was still not quite
the done thing for a lady to attend university.
Oh, the suffragettes brought us our liberties, but women still had a
fight to get somewere on their own in those days. For myself, not that I
would have chosen otherwise, but the married life was about the only real
option. So think carefully Jenny
Gilmore about your future. You have so
much promise and can offer so much to this world. Let your dreams come alive and chase
them. They are what you have in the
end.’ Jenny nodded as she chewed on the bacon. She had heard similar things from her
grandmother before.
Stewart came in the room and looked at
the bacon in the frying pan. ‘Hey, is
this for me?’
‘And the hash
browns and tomatoes.
Sorry, we’re out of eggs.’
Stewart loaded up a plate and sat down at the kitchen table, looking at
his daughter in her school clothes.
Jenny had done up her hair and had a small hair scarf to make herself
look attractive.
‘My, don’t we look a
treat,’ he said to his daughter.
‘Daaad,’ moaned Jenny.
‘I mean it. You look a peach, Jenny. I am sure Craig or whatever his name is is bound to notice.’
‘Don’t embarrass the
girl,’ said Janet Gilmore. ‘You can see
she is nervous for her big day. I
remember your first day at school. You
couldn’t stop talking about all the new kids you had met that afternoon.’
‘I remember,’ replied
Stewart.
Jenny looked at the
clock and finished stuffing down her bacon.
‘Ok. I gotta go. The bus will be out the front in about 10
minutes so I can’t wait.’ Fiona came
over to her.
‘Ok. Do you have everything?’
Jenny looked at her
sister. ‘Yeh, I think so.’
‘And don’t be nervous,
okay. I know it is a big day and you are
looking forward to maybe seeing Craig.
But just be yourself. You will be fine.’
Jenny nodded. Fiona gave her a hug and Janet waved at her,
while Stewart smiled at his daughter.
Three minutes later she was out the door, heading to the unsealed dirt
road at the front of the property were the Dalgety School Bus drove past.
Watching her go Fiona thought on all
her glory days in school. They had been
good days, great days many of them, but they were gone now. And now the regular humdrum of life which all
adults had to face put its nose in. She
was lucky, in a way. She now had a child
to look forward to and in that way could show she was important to the
world. But she had been worried just
last year, living out on the edge of Dalgety, nobody really to talk to that
much, stuck on a farm. It was almost as
if life had forgotten her temporarily.
But now she had something to look forward to and could share in the
excitement of her sister’s life for now.
And soon, very soon, the patter of tiny little feet to
bring new joy to her heart.
Yes, it was another bright new day for
the Gilmore clan and as they went about their business for the day the bright
summer sun rose steadily in the sky, another new and glorious day of hope and
untold promises.
Chapter Three
Jenny looked at the notebook in front of her. Year 11 Advanced
Mathematics. She had studied the
higher grade of maths all the way through high school and had enrolled for year
11 Advanced Maths as well. She should be
ready but some of the problems looked challenging. The teacher, Mr White, said he would help her
out and give her a few tutoring lessons in lunch time until she caught up, but
she was reluctant to agree to that at first because she wanted to be ‘seen’ at
lunch. But she knew it was in her own
best interests and without a reasonable excuse agreed.
Sitting there in the library that
lunch time, Mr White had just left after helping her for about 10 minutes on
some of the introductory material. She
was doing her best to really concentrate – she really was – but she couldn’t
help but feel anxious to get outside and see if she could find Craig. But, funnily enough, as she got stuck into
her studies someone had crept up behind her and sat down at her desk. It was Craig Coleman.
‘So whatchya doin?’
He asked, picking up her maths book.
‘Maths, Craig,’
responded Jenny, ever so pleased to see him, but not wanting to let him know
that.
‘Yeh, I know I
probably should be studying in the library at lunch as well. Can’t get anywhere without
studying my dad always says.’
‘He’s probably right,’
replied Jenny who had put down her pen.
Craig picked up the scientific calculator.
‘This,’ he said,
indicating the calculator, ‘becomes a lot more fun in Year 11 and 12. We use it a lot more.’
‘I always assumed we
would,’ responded Jenny.
‘Yes, you would. Your smart, aren’t you?’ Jenny just blushed at that.
Craig opened the old
text book and looked at the inside cover carefully.
‘What are you looking
at,’ asked Jenny.
Craig kept the
textbook open and handed it to her, pointing to a little note which had been
written inside the cover of the book. It
read ‘Turn to page 414.’ She turned to
page 414 and found another note which read, ‘Turn to page 311.’ She turned to page 311 and found another note
which read, ‘Turn to page 66.’ She
turned to page 66 and found the final note which read ‘You suck!’ She laughed out loud and Craig grinned.
‘How did you know that
was there?’
‘This was my textbook
from last year. I wrote it in there.’
Jenny grinned and
pushed his shoulder. She stared at the
note saying ‘You suck’ for a few moments, before returning to her sums.
After a few moments of Craig casually
using her calculator he spoke up. ‘You
know, Jen. I don’t really have a
girlfriend. So if you want to hang out
with me, well that would be okay by me.
I mean it doesn’t have to be anything serious. We can be just friends, you know. Friends.’
This was something
Jenny Gilmore had longed to hear in the last couple of days. And now it had happened and she was not sure
what to say, caught off guard at first.’
‘Uh, yeh, well,’ she
stuttered.
‘Well?’ he said,
looking straight at her.’
She came to
herself. ‘Yeh, sure. We can be friends. I would like that.’
‘Great!’ He replied.
‘Well, I am heading off now and I know you have to study, but I will see
you on the bus this afternoon. I wasn’t
on this morning because I had a doctor’s appointment, but I will be taking the
bus with you each day now. And we can
sit next to each other if you like.’
‘Sure, that would be
great.’
‘Cool.’ He got to his feet, typed something into the
calculator and handed it to her and walked off.
She looked at the calculator. It
read ‘58008’. But she turned it upside
down and read ‘Boobs.’ She smiled to
herself. He had a sense of humour did
this Craig Coleman. Someone
to watch out for.
* * *
* *
That afternoon during her final class for the day, economics, Jenny
could barely concentrate on the lesson.
She was looking forward to the long trip back home to Dalgety and her
time chatting with Craig Coleman.
Already she was fantasizing about perhaps being his unofficial
girlfriend; but of course it was just that, unofficial. But that didn’t matter. If she made a good impression, which she felt
she already had, he would like her and might be interested in having her as his
girlfriend one day.
The clock ticked over to half-past three and the school bell rang. She finished off her notes from the board,
put her notebook in her bag, and started making her way towards the western
front entrance to the school were the buses would be. She found her bus and looking on it didn’t
yet see Craig, but the bus wasn’t due to leave for a few minutes and she was
sure he would arrive. A couple of other
students from Dalgety who were in her year said hello to her, as they had that
morning, seemingly taking a little more of an interest than previous years. And she was just starting a conversation with
Natalie Cooper when Craig sat down next to her.
He smiled to Natalie and said hi but then turned his attention to Jenny. ‘How’s tricks?’
‘Oh, everything is
alright,’ she replied nervously. She
could feel the eyes of Natalie Cooper on both of them, but didn’t want to say
anything. There was nothing to say,
anyway. They were just friends after
all.
Shortly the bus took off and did its
rounds of the Cooma schools and then started making its way out of Cooma,
headed for Berridale. From Berridale
they would turn south for the trip to Dalgety.
All that long afternoon, which seemed
to last forever, Craig chatted about this and that and Jenny felt like she was
dramatically falling in love. Of course
that wasn’t true but she was very soon smitten with Craig Coleman with all the
attention he lavished upon her. When
they finally reached Dalgety he got off at the main stop. She was almost tempted to get off as well,
but stayed on the bus and waved him goodbye as she continued along. When she got home coming through the kitchen
door finding Fiona all her conversation was on Craig Coleman. Yes, indeed, the lass was
smitten.
* * *
* *
The following day followed a similar
routine to the previous except that morning she rode on the bus with
Craig. Craig introduced her properly to
his Dalgety friends and, it seemed, Jenny Gilmore was now becoming something
she had desired for so long - popular.
That lunch-time at school she was
again in the library catching up on her maths study when Craig found her
again. They chatted casually but he
sensed she was concerned with her work so he started helping her. Craig was an A
Average student, very used to getting high grades in most of his subjects. He was in Advanced Maths for year 12, and
handling it, and found little difficulty in helping Jenny understand her
problems. For Jenny it was the right
person to become her friend at the right time for so many reasons, and was she
ever grateful.
But no new romance ever gets off
without a problem, and that problem, for Jenny Gilmore, was found in the person
of Natalie Cooper. Natalie was in year
12, Craig’s year, and ever since he had gotten back to the region she had been
mildly flirting with him. And that
afternoon on the bus, thinking it had just been her imagination yesterday, she
was confronted with another woman after her man. Of course, Jenny was a gentle and reserved
type of girl and when put to the test, which she was,
she did what came instinctively and withdrew from the challenge. Craig himself seemed to like the attention of
both girls but, from what Jenny could see, he particularly liked the close
attention that Natalie was giving him.
When both Craig and Natalie got off at the Dalgety stop Jenny was tempted
to get off as well, as she did not like the thought of losing her boyfriend
before she even had gotten him, but something in her heart, something about
Fiona’s words, told her that if Natalie could steal him away from her, then he
wasn’t really for her in the first place.
And so she remained silent and calm the following morning and afternoon
while Craig was being flirted with by Natalie but, to Jenny’s relief, he came
with her the extra few kilometres after the Dalgety stop saying he would walk
home from Jenny’s place. Natalie had
gotten off at the Dalgety stop but there was a look of defeat in her eyes. Sitting there in the front of Jenny’s
property Craig said something which relieved Jenny’s fears.
‘Yeh, I like
Natalie. She’s a fun girl. But I’m not interested in her, okay. Not in her.’
Jenny nodded, quietly taking in that information. She showed him the property briefly but he declined
an invitation to be introduced to her family.
‘Perhaps some other
time, okay. But I gotta run. See you tomorrow.’ And he took off.
She was more certain
of herself now and had growing confidence in Fiona’s words. If she just remained herself then boys would
see her for who she was, not what she looked like. And she would trust in that.
* * *
* *
‘Honey. Do you ever think, well maybe. Maybe you could tell your daughters about
me. It has been over two years now. They are grown girls. I’m sure they will understand.’
Funnily enough,
despite thinking he really did not want to hear this from Michelle Brooks right at the moment, Stewart Gilmore felt perhaps he
should.
‘Yes, I suppose you’re
right. I have been putting it off for
ages, now. Finding excuses not to tell them. Mainly
Laura, you know.’
‘I know.’
‘But there will never
be a right time. Not with news like
this.’
‘Hon, they’re grown
girls. They know how the world
works. We move on, after a while. All of us do.
And when someone we love has left us – well we are only human, and we
still need a little loving.’
With other such words
Michelle gently persuaded Stewart to share the news of her existence with his
family and Stewart finally assented.
‘But not right at the
moment. Just give me a few months,
okay. Only a few more
months. I need the time to work
up to it and find the right moment.’
‘Sure thing
honey. I’ll trust
you’ll know when. Now come over here and
give me some lovin.’
Stewart dutifully rose
from the couch of Michelle’s home and they made their way to the bedroom and a
night of pleasure.
* * *
* *
Stewart got home late that night but as soon as he walked into the
kitchen, noting the time of 5 past 1, Fiona caught him with news. ‘Time is right. Chloe is about to give birth. Should be any time tonight.’ Chloe was a mare, one of 3 horses, the
property ran and she had been pregnant.
Tonight was the night by the looks of it, and Stewart knew
the time was about right. ‘Jenny and
Gran are with her. I was waiting here
for you.’
‘Come on then,’
replied Stewart.
They came into the barn were the horses were stabled and found Janet
and Jenny watching over the mare. The
other horses were grunting, seemingly in expectation. It was a long night and the horse moaned many
times, but around 4.20 in the morning she heaved her final heave and the foal
came out. They cleaned up the new foal,
it was a male, and the mother soon made its way to nursing it. As Stewart watched on he again gave thought
to the miracle of life and thought on the God of his mother which apparently
made all things possible. And looking at
Fiona his daughter, and the seven months to go to his first grand-child, things
were starting to make sense to Stewart Gilmore.
Things on how the circle of life all flowed and worked
in harmony together. And he
prayed a silent prayer of thanks because of it.
The colt grew quickly over the next few months and they named him
Stanley. It was a time of growth for
many of the Gilmore’s, including the colt.
Jenny and Craig remained good friends, but as Craig
had put it that time in the library, just good friends. Nothing more had yet eventuated. Jenny had noticed that her acne was
definitely much less now and soon, she hoped, it would be gone entirely. Every day to the other Gilmore’s it seemed as
if Jenny’s time of life had come and she was now shining in the way all young
girls ought to shine in life. As autumn
passed and winter began the property, much to Stewart’s great relief, was
seeing a reasonably good bout of rain. Nothing to break the drought in the region, if such a thing were
really possible, but good rain nonetheless. Fiona felt the baby in her womb, definitely
kicking now she thought, and the Gilmore’s each day, anxiously awaited the
moment. And Janet Gilmore continued to
pray each day for her offspring, patiently waiting on the miracle her God would
deliver for her.
It was mid winter, just past the solstice, when Jenny had news for her
sister. Craig had finally asked her
out. To go see a movie
at the Cooma cinema this up and coming Friday night. It was a big action flick but Jenny really
didn’t care what was showing. It was
intimate time with Craig that she had really looked forward to. She pestered Stewart all that week, but he
never gave her a firm answer. But Friday
morning, just as she was leaving for school, he gave his consent to her seeing
the movie that night with Craig. ‘But be
sure you are home at a decent hour, okay.
Before 11 if possible.’
That day at school Craig was more attentive than normal promising her a
night to remember with a subtle smile on his face which Jenny was not quite sure
about. But it was her big night so she
let that subtle smile go.
The movie was one of those big action blockbusters about aliens and
robots and Jenny had a hard time following what was happening but realized
later that it was just a show movie, not to be taken seriously, and mainly for
the male audience. Half way through the
movie Craig had put his arm up above her seat and then, gradually, lowered
it. Jenny was nervous but didn’t
object. She knew he liked her. After the movie they were eating snacks in
the foyer when Stewart suggested they see a Cooma lookout before returning to
Dalgety. Jenny had no objections so they
were soon making their way back towards Berridale before veering at the top of
the four mile and taking the dirt road up to a restaurant which had good
views. When they arrived they found that
the restaurant had close but Craig parked the car and looked at his
girlfriend. ‘You know Jen. I like you.
I really like you. And I thought
tonight could be really special for us, if you know what I mean.’
Jenny smiled. She wasn’t naïve but she was not quite sure
what he was driving at. But when he
grabbed her and started kissing her for the first time, quite roughly, she
didn’t really want to push him away. But
when he grabbed for her jeans and started unbuttoning them she was in a
panic. She thought on her sister Fiona
and what had happened to her because a boy had been too eager. And again she thought on those words of her
sister, those cutting words. ‘He should
like you for WHO you are and not WHAT you can give him.’ And instantly she made a decision. She pushed him away, but he got a little
rough and said, ‘you know you want it, babe.
Don’t fight it.’ But she tried
again to push him away, but still he persisted.
She was getting nervous and almost anticipated he might rape her when
something in her rose up and yelled ‘NO!’
That was the point Craig took the hint and stopped what he was
doing. He had her jeans around her knees
but that was as far as they had gone.
She tried not to cry but pulled up her jeans and buttoned them. ‘Can we go home now Craig,’ she said, with a
frozen voice which scared Craig Coleman.
It was quiet all the way back to
Dalgety and when he let her out at her home she barely said a word. She had seen a side of Craig Coleman which
she was not sure she liked at all. Yet,
as he drove away, she did remind herself that he had stopped when she
insisted. He was a guy, but he was not a
rapist. And she reminded herself that
when she slipped into her room to go to bed that night.
* * *
* *
‘What’s gotten into you? The big night and suddenly not a word.’ But Jenny remained silent, not responding to
her sister’s question.
‘What, did he try and
rape you?’ she said exaggeratingly. But
when Jenny looked at her immediately with a big shocked look on her face, Fiona
knew something had happened between them.
She got off her seat and came and stood in front of Jenny, looking down
into her eyes. ‘Seriously
Jenny. What happened? He didn’t force you, did he?’ But Jenny just turned her head away, too
embarrassed to say anything. Fiona,
though, was very anxious. ‘Did he… Did he rape you?’
She asked incredulously. Jenny finally
responded, looking at her sister.
‘No. He didn’t rape me. Okay.
But he wanted to go all the way and he got pretty heavy about it. But I shouted ‘No’ and he finally stopped. He had my jeans around my knees.’
Fiona let out a breath
which she had been holding and sat back down.
It was not like the Craig Coleman she knew, but he was a guy. And he was getting older and at that time of
life when these sort of things could happen.
‘And I thought he was such a nice guy,’ she said to herself, which made
Jenny respond.
‘He IS a nice guy,
Fiona. He just got carried away. He did stop when I yelled.’
‘Look, seriously
Jenny. ‘I don’t think he is the kind of
guy for you. If he has
to go that far and be yelled at to stop…. Well next time he might not
listen. Know what I mean.’
‘Don’t say that.’
‘I am telling you this
for your own good, okay. I think perhaps
you and Craig Coleman need a breather for a while. Just stay away from him for a while,
okay. Give yourself time to think about
it and were it is going. You don’t want
to end up like me after all.’
Jenny looked at her
sister’s belly and almost, despite knowing she should think otherwise, finding
that it might not be that bad to be pregnant and have a new life growing inside
her. But she banished the thought just
as soon as it came, knowing she should know better.
‘Please, don’t tell
dad okay.’
‘Don’t tell me
what?’ said Stewart Gilmore, just entering the room.
Fiona responded
quickly after Jenny gave her a nervous glance.
‘Nothing that concerns you Mr Gilmore. Private woman’s business. No need for a male to interfere.’
‘If you say so,’
responded Stewart, who poured himself a bowl of corn
flakes. The conversation went silent and
Jenny soon left for school. But all that
day Fiona worried for her sister and prayed a few times that God would resolve
the situation for the good of all.
Jenny did not talk to Craig on the bus that morning and she hid in the
library at lunch-time to escape him as well, not hanging out at there usual
spot. She thought he might come looking
and he did, but he just looked at her for a few moments. She looked at him as he stared at her and he
put up his hand in a wave and then left.
While she was not really sure, she felt he had been convicted and was
sorry.
But, that afternoon, he did not again speak to her on the bus but spoke
with Natalie Cooper all the time. It was
silence, an awkward silence, but perhaps for the best as Fiona had said.
* * *
* *
It was at dinner time, when Stewart again found the girls secretly
talking, that he finally had enough.
‘Anyway, how did that date with that Craig fellow go. It must be what you two are whispering
about.’ Jenny looked convicted. She looked at her father, but then stared
down at her dinner plate. Stewart was
perplexed.
‘Did I say something
wrong,’ he asked nobody in particular, but Fiona answered.
‘The date didn’t go
well,’ Fiona said to her father. Jenny
looked at her sister with daggers in her eyes and said, ‘You promised you
wouldn’t tell.’
‘He needs to hear,’
replied Fiona. She turned to her
father. ‘Craig. Craig Coleman, well he got ambitious with
Jenny. If you know what I mean.’
Stewart looked from
Fiona to Jenny, and while staring at Jenny said to Fiona, ‘Tell me exactly what
you mean, Fiona.’
‘He got physical with
her. But Jenny yelled No before they did
it. I mean, he had her jeans around her
knees before they stopped.’
That was as much as
Stewart Gilmore could take. He rose to
his feet, glared at his daughters, and then walked across the room and grabbed
his coat. ‘I am going out. A certain Gilmore family to
see.’ Jenny and Fiona ran after
him but they were too late. He had
gotten to the four wheel drive and as they watched him go Jenny was in
tears. ‘He’ll kill him,’ she
screamed. But Fiona knew better. She knew her father would have words, but
leave it at that. But
words to be remembered.
* * *
* *
‘So tell me,
John. Why did you raise your son to be a
rapist?’
John Coleman took
affront at that word, but remained silent.
He had a good idea, now, what had happened between his son and Stewart’s
daughter, but wanted to hear it from Craig himself. He called the lad in who dutifully came into
the room, looking nervously at Mr Gilmore.
‘Craig’ began
John. ‘Could you please tell me what
happened on Friday night between you and Jenny.
And be precise son. Mr Gilmore
wants to know exactly what you did.’
Craig began nervously. ‘Well, we
went to the movie and I suggested we go up to that lookout near the four
mile. She said okay.’
‘And what happened
then,’ asked John.
‘Ok, I tried it on
with her. But nothing happened,
okay. Nothing happened. She said no, I stopped, and we went home.’
‘It was a bit more
than that according to my daughter,’ responded Stewart with unveiled
hostility. Craig softened.
‘I told her today at school
I was sorry. I mouthed it to her in the
library. But nothing happened. I mean, I’m sorry Mr Gilmore, but I really
like your daughter. I think I love her
in fact.’
‘It is a funny way of
showing love, Craig. You practically
forced her from what I was told.’
‘But I stopped,’
insisted Craig in return. ‘Really,
unless she had agreed, I never would have done it with her. And that is the way it was. I stopped.
I got her home again. Look, I am
really sorry okay. It just got out of
hand.’
‘I’ll say it did,’
retorted Stewart.
John turned to his
son. ‘Okay, Craig. You can go to your room. We’ll have words later, okay.’ Craig left, and
Stewart stared at John Coleman.
‘Look, Stewart. I am really sorry okay. But you know Craig as well. He’s a good kid. He really just likes the girl a lot. He has been talking about her for months
now. But these things happen, you know. But I am sure he respects her. I am sure of that.’
‘He’ll be respecting
Jenny Gilmore, I can tell you that.
He’ll be respecting Jenny Gilmore.’
He looked at John, satisfied he had said his piece, and picked up his
hat from the sofa. ‘Okay. I’ll be going now John. But tell your son this. If he wants any future with my daughter, well
he better rethink his ways. He better
rethink them strongly.’ John nodded and
Stewart, satisfied, left.
Later that night Stewart and Janet were in the kitchen, in front of the
open fireplace, with Stewart sharing what had happened with his mother. Fiona was in the next room, but listening as well
as she could. Stewart had calmed down
somewhat, but did say one thing which Fiona later shared with Jenny. ‘The kid took it like a man. I could see it in his eyes, though, when he said he loved her. He meant it.
Like he really cared and wanted to be with her.’
‘The passions
of youth, son of mine.
The passions of youth.’
Stewart nodded at his
mothers words of wisdom. They had
consoled his pride somewhat, but there was still something to be said to his
daughter. She would not speak with Craig
Coleman for a good long while. As far as
seeing each other, well they were grounded.
She needed to learn her lesson if she had not done so already and as far
as Stewart Gilmore was concerned so did Craig Coleman.
All that week at school Jenny, as per her father’s wishes, did not
speak with Jonathon Coleman. On Thursday
in the library he came to see her and said again he was sorry. She accepted his apology but told him that
for now she couldn’t see him because of her father. And it seemed that was too much for the lad
because the following morning on the bus he was strongly in conversation with
Natalie Cooper and throughout Friday she saw him kissing her at lunch
time. And then Friday on the way home on
the bus they kissed as well and they were officially together as an item the
kids on the bus said. Jenny was
heartbroken. Despite thinking she should
know better according to the words of her family, she was still distraught and
that afternoon, getting home from school, she ran to her room and burst into tears. Fiona followed her in shortly and could see
she had been crying.
‘What’s the matter
Jenny?’
Jenny sobered up
somewhat. ‘It’s Craig. Him and Natalie
Cooper are now boyfriend and girlfriend.
I’ve lost him,’ and saying that she burst out in tears.
All that evening all
Stewart Gilmore would say was that it was best it had happened now. No point in prolonging a friendship which was
doomed to failure. But Jenny still
missed Craig.
* * *
* *
Yet, life moves on. It inevitably does. And as winter continued its steady march from
July into August, the Gilmore family returned to its steady routine.
Jenny’s geography class had an
excursion up to the snowfields. It had
been snowing that winter and even Dalgety had gotten a bit. Her class was to go up and identify certain
geographical formations around Mt Kosciusko and write up a report on them. Jenny had been to the snow a number of times
since her youth as they lived on the back door virtually to the
snowfields. When the bus got to Jindabyne
there was a bit of snow around the town, but later as they got higher up the
mountains they encountered more and more hills and valleys covered with
snow. Mr Jones the teacher instructed
them that they had an hour and a half as soon as they arrived to enjoy
themselves, eat lunch and play in the snow.
But after that the serious work would need to begin.
Jenny was in her warm winter clothes
and on the bus trip up she had excitedly looked out the window, noting the
familiar landscape. But try as she might
she couldn’t get her mind off of Craig and Natalie. She had lost her boyfriend before they had
even been official and it really looked as if the bout of unpopularity she had
encountered since a youth was set to continue.
But looking out the window of the bus, looking out at the glorious
scenery, she tried to put away such thoughts and concentrate on having a good
time that day.
She had brought with her Fiona’s
digital camera and had already taken a number of pictures. The Camera could take hundreds of pictures
and it was empty so she happily snapped away all that morning and
afternoon. She took pictures of the
small glacier, of some crows which were hanging around a dead kangaroo which
she found in the snow and of all sorts of wildlife. Of course she took many photos of Mt
Kosciusko which was mainland Australia’s highest mountain. It was not exactly the most impressive of
peaks – there was no real glory about it – but it was the highest point on
mainland Australia and she was tempted to leave the group and run up to conquer
the peak. But perhaps some other time
she thought to herself as she returned to her schoolwork.
She did manage to take some
spectacular shots of mountain views and later on that night, having returned
home, she was in front of the computer downloading the pictures. She liked one view quite a lot and set it as
the wallpaper for the computer – a pleasant reminder of a wonderful day.
* * *
* *
The colt had grown and while Stewart
still refused Jenny to ride it, she was tempted to sit on its back and go
around the stables a little. But it was
still young and needed its freedom, her father told her. It would be broken in soon enough
Life on a rural farm was generally
pleasing enough to Jenny Gilmore. But as
her sister and father reminded her she was a bright lass
and could have a good future before her if she wanted to. She had been to Canberra quite a number of
times in her 16 years and Sydney as well, and while she more instinctively
chose the country life as the life that would be for her there was something
appealing about living in a fancy flat or unit in the big city, working a real
career and earning big bucks. She could
have all the fancy things in life she really wanted, have nice clothes, even
nice jewellery (which she didn’t really wear anyway), and live somewere
spectacular. When they had recently been
in Canberra visiting the Questacon science centre they had driven past some new
flats on the shores of Lake Burley Griffin in the heart of Canberra. The flats looked beautiful to Jenny – so much
more impressive than anything in Dalgety, Jindabyne or Cooma. And living in one of them working a real
career – well it certainly had an appeal to it.
And thinking these thoughts over a couple of weeks Jenny decided that
possibly, just possibly, that might be the kind of lifestyle she would end up
choosing for herself. Oh, she loved her
father and didn’t know how she could ever possibly leave the farming life. But, in the end, as her grandmother would
say, it was her life and her own destiny to find for herself. And because of that, and the temptations to
the good city life before her, Jenny dove into her schoolwork with more passion
than ever before. If she was going to
make it in life she needed a good education with good grades. That was no mystery. And despite the affairs of the heart still
interested in a certain Craig Coleman her new zeal for her studies seemed to
abate that somewhat.
Jenny again took to taking photos with
Fiona’s digital camera around the farm.
When Fiona had first gotten the camera she had let Jenny use it when she
wanted to but Jenny had only a little interest at first. But after the trip to the snow and seeing all
the wonderful types of pictures she could take an interest in photography
itself sparked and she began taking photos of all aspects of farming life. After a few months she had an extensive
collection of photos on the family computer and had even bought a few USB
drives to keep her different collections on should the computer hard drive ever
break down. She didn’t really think
about it initially, but after a while she wondered to herself wether
photography itself could be a career worth pursuing. She certainly liked taking pictures – she
could happily do that all day – and a career counsellor at school had said the
best professions, in the end, are the ones in which you are doing work that you
enjoy doing. Work that
is no work in that sense. And
Jenny certainly enjoyed taking photos.
One afternoon Stewart got out his
fathers old Kodak camera from years ago.
Looking at it, though, it seemed to come from the mid 1960s and seemed
quite advanced for a camera from that era.
But Stewart told her that cameras and photos were a big thing by then
and that the big companies had produced some real quality items by that
era. Film and producing the shots would
be expensive but Stewart forked over some cash for her to spend it on and she
had the government youth allowance to buy film with as well. Taking the digital photos and printing them
off on a computer printer had been alright, but the quality of the photos had
always been second rate. Doing it the
old fashioned way, Jenny found, produced a far superior photo and something to
be treasured and remembered.
And in that zeal Jenny Gilmore took to
taking more photos around the farm and throughout the nearby Dalgety
region. Once she found a magpie with a
broken front beak. She ran to the house
to get some bread and threw the bread at the magpie but it disappeared. But it returned about ten minutes later and
starting eating the bread. Carefully,
very carefully, she came closer to the magpie, which seemed to mind less after
having been fed by the stranger. She got
half a dozen beautiful shots of a magpie with a broken beak and when they had
been developed she put them up on her wall.
She’d had them blown up a few sizes from the regular photo size but
didn’t mind the extra expense. They were
excellent photos and made Jenny think of the harshness of nature and how living
things learn to cope with obstacles in their path and still survive.
And then, surfing the web, she found a
local Cooma photography competition. The
entry fee was $15 and it was open to all entrants in the local Monaro
district. She thought it over for about five
minutes and then, rushing to her father to borrow his credit card which she
needed to pay online, something which Stewart was reluctant at first to let her
use, but understanding her impulsive desires to enter the competition straight
away, relaxed and let her use, Jenny entered the competition and began planning
out what could be a winning photo. She
had a number already which she might be able to use, but no. She wanted something special. If she was going to win the competition the
winning picture would have to stand out and look something different and
wonderful. And so, writing in her
notebook, she began writing down all the ideas which entered her mind.
It had been an engrossing few weeks
for Jenny Gilmore, caught up with her studies and then with her photographs,
and for a while her heart was forgotten as she was occupied with her dreams,
thoughts of Craig Coleman and Natalie Cooper almost forgotten. Almost, but not quite.
Chapter Four
Craig Coleman sat on
the porch of the Coleman homestead, just south of Dalgety, thinking about life. Natalie was on his mind. His current girlfriend. And while they’d had sex just the once, Craig
was rethinking, now, wether he really wanted Natalie as his girlfriend at
all. Now that he’d had what he so
desperately wanted with Jenny with Natalie instead he felt like he was cheating
on Jenny. For, in a strange way, it was
as if he had already promised himself to Jenny Gilmore. Not so much in word, but in choice of
heart. He remembered her from growing up,
playing under the Dalgety Bridge. It was
one of those faces from childhood you never quite forgot and he had kissed her
once, asking her to marry him, to which she had just giggled. But now, several years later, it seemed as if
Jenny Gilmore was still the real girl who he desired a commitment with. Oh, Natalie was alright, but he didn’t feel
himself drawn to her in the way he felt drawn to Jenny Gilmore. It was as if something deeper was at
work. Call it fate, call it destiny, it
just seemed to Craig Coleman that when he did the romance sums everything added
up to equalling Jenny Gilmore. And
because of that he had made a decision.
He would break it off with Natalie Cooper. As carefully, as sensitively as possible, he
would tell her he was no longer interested and leave it at that. But he would wait a little while – a few
weeks, maybe a month or so, and then, with time passed since his mistake made
with Jenny Gilmore, try and give it another go with her. This time, if he was careful, things could
hopefully work out much better for him.
As he sat on the porch, the sun
setting in the distance, Craig resolved himself on
that point. Really, Natalie was fun, but
not the kind of girl he would ultimately want to settle down with. Not so much a personality clash, but a clash
of worldviews. She was a fun, good time
girl, which he liked and needed as well.
But Jenny Gilmore was more down-to-earth. More realistic about life
and its possibilities. And it was
Jenny Gilmore which had won the heart of Craig Coleman more than Natalie
Cooper. And so, yes, he was
decided. He would indeed break it off
with Natalie, wait a while, and see were things went
from there. For now that would be his
plan.
* * *
* *
Stewart Gilmore looked at the clouds.
They looked promising – very promising.
So far this winter they’d had good rain on the property. Much better than the last
few years. In fact, with another
few good showers he was almost confident enough to say they would have their
best harvest in years – perhaps ever.
And for the life of an Australian farmer such news was of paramount
importance.
He was out on Chloe, moving the sheep from one yard to another the old
fashioned way, whistling and yelling to his kelpie sheepdogs ‘Shiner’ and
‘Bluey’ all the time. Usually he would
take the motorbike but funds were getting scarce and horses cost nothing,
practically, to run. So he had mounted
Chloe and was moving the sheep from the southernmost paddock to one on the
eastern side of the property. He moved
the sheep regularly as they chewed through paddocks. He would let one paddock be whittled down and
then move the sheep to another paddock, letting the old one start growing
again. It was the usual practice for
sheep farmers and Stewart continued on in the traditions his father Fred and
his father before him had handed down.
He knew what he was doing, was confident in his work, but just prayed
silently for a good harvest every now and then to make all their hard work
worthwhile. It was those good years which
made the farming life worth it in the end.
Oh, it was a lifestyle you would ultimately have to choose for yourself
if you wanted it. It had its ups and
downs, good times and bad. But you
really needed the temperament for the challenges it brought if you were going
to survive. But harvest, when everything
was going well, well that was what it was all about. And Stewart had a growing confidence that in
the upcoming spring they would have a harvest to remember.
As he whistled and yelled he looked out
over the property. It was not a huge
amount of land, but it was good land, close to the river, and you could do a
lot of things with it if you had to.
There was an old dump were they tossed their rubbish and old things up
on a corner of the property were the girls had often adventured to in younger
years. Up there were a number of older
farm vehicles which had passed their use by date as well as this and that piece
of old no longer functioning farm machinery.
He could just imagine if he got the grandson he desired that the little
tyke would have no end of fun playing at the dump, crawling over the old trucks
and machinery, getting into no end of trouble.
But that was one of the real joys of the farming life. And thinking to himself
Stewart knew he wouldn’t have it any other way.
‘Those clouds look good Chloe. We best get about our business before it
comes down.’ He got back to work,
whistling and yelling in the way to taught to him and after a little while had
finally moved the sheep to the next paddock.
He closed the gate of the paddock, as he had done for each and looked at
the clouds. They were about ready to
burst. As he made for home, going along
the dirt track, down to the river and then crossing it, the rain did pummel
down and as he came into to the farmstead kitchen he grinned at his mother who
was sitting at the table. ‘I think your
Jehovah God has done something right for a change.’
‘He always does the
right thing,’ responded his mother.
‘And today is a
beauty. We will have hours of rain with
those clouds. And forecasts are good for
the week. Its
just what we need for a bumper harvest. Just what we need.’
Janet Gilmore
nodded. She was pleased for her son, but
not really worried either way. The
farming life had its ebb and flow and that was that.
Later on that evening, having watched
the weather report on the news, Stewart was grinning to himself. Rain all week for the
region. Big cloud coverage all
over the state. Not enough to break the
drought, so they said, but good nonetheless.
He celebrated by going out to the pub for the night and, heading over to
Michelle’s, enjoyed a good night with a ladies company. Better times were coming for the Gilmore
family. Stewart was sure of that.
* * *
* *
Fiona sat at the family computer in
the living room of the Gilmore homestead looking through hundreds of Jenny’s
digital photos. The girl had really
taken a shine to taking pictures and there were all sorts of colourful and
lively photos of the homestead and outlying area. It made Fiona think, now that Jenny had
rumoured a possible career in photography, of wether there was something she
could do herself around the farm to occupy herself with and perhaps make some
sort of living from. Certainly, she had
the farmwork and at this stage was set to take over from her father one day as
the main worker on the farm. But that
was still a couple of decades away – a lot could happen in that time. She sat down in her room one afternoon with a
notepad and a piece of paper and wrote down all the possible things she could
do to occupy herself and perhaps make a little money as well. A career had been at the back of her mind
since leaving school, but she had just gone with the flow of the farm for the
meantime, nothing better having yet come along.
But now, out of inspiration from her younger sister, she had a few ideas
and wanted to see if anything could come of them.
Right on the top of her list she
stupidly wrote ‘Photographer’ borrowing Jenny’s idea, simply because she had no
other idea to start the list. But after
a while, looking at that idea, she wondered if they could, after learning the
craft, go into business together. It
could be interesting. But
no. She crossed out the word
after a while and went to sit out the back to think up things she could pursue
as some sort of occupation apart from the farmwork. Sitting there for half an hour or so she
produced the following list of ideas.
·
Selling woolly jumpers, socks and
other woollen items online from farm wool and knit by myself and Nan
·
Concentrating on the winery and
seeing if dad will let me take it over
·
Writing fiction books
·
Writing Poetry
·
Artistic painting
·
Woodworking
·
Making pottery
·
Copperwork
·
Making basic jewellery
And finally
·
Studying an online university
degree
She felt, if she were to be serious, the last option may possibly be
the best one if the farming life was ultimately not for her. But she knew if she gave it further thought
she could produce a whole page full of do-it-yourself items which she could
potentially sell online through a website.
It was simply a matter of finding the most suitable idea, one which
worked well with her talents, and pursuing it with dedication and
commitment. If Jenny’s photography ever
took off she could thank her sister for the being the source of inspiration and
the motivation should she herself ever prove successful.
When Jenny got home from school Fiona shared with her the ideas she had
come up with and Jenny was very supportive.
‘It is good to have something we like doing to keep ourselves occupied,
sis,’ were Jenny’s words of encouragements.
In some way it seemed sound advice and keeping that in mind Fiona would
sleep on the issue and give it a few weeks of careful thought to decide how she
would proceed. Certainly, there was no
rush, and she had a baby due soon which would take up much of her time. But the child needed a future like herself
and planning was important. Success came
through careful planning so her grandmother often remarked and Fiona Gilmore
decided that to be her motto for now.
With careful plans her foundation for the future could be laid. It was all in her own
hands and all before her. Something to be excited about and something to be thankful for she
thought to herself as the days ticked by.
* * *
* *
‘Just for the record, Stewart, you know I love you don’t you son of
mine.’ Stewart smirked to himself but
knew he shouldn’t have. And while his
mother’s affectations were never unwanted it seemed in recent weeks she had
gotten even more emotional towards her family.
Perhaps it was just her old age.
Perhaps she feared dying along in some paranoid state of mind. Or, perhaps, she really just did love
him. He suspected religious motivation,
knowing his mother and her devotion to her lord, but still, in the end, she had
said the words and he loved her for them.
He got up from the sofa came over to his mum and gave her a hug. ‘I love you to mum. Don’t forget that.’
‘I won’t, son of
mine.’ She seemed to be happy after that
Stewart noticed which made him happy as well.
It was good being happy.
Janet Gilmore knew she had to say those words. They had been on her heart for some
time. Something within her asking her
this: If you really love your family,
have you let them know? And so she had
decided she would show love to her family from then on, even more so than in
the past, and be the rock of love her family always and continually needed.
* * *
* *
‘Look, Craig. I really don’t know if that is for the
best. Dad is still upset with you.’ Jenny looked at Craig, a little anxious as
she still had strong feelings for him, but understanding she had to obey her
father’s wishes.
‘Jenny, look. I am not perfect, ok. Really, I am far from it. And while I had fun with Natalie Cooper she
just doesn’t compare to you. What words
can I say to tell you that I am really sorry?
What words can I say?’
Jenny softened at
that, a little voice in her heart saying, ‘Its ok. He means it.’
‘Well, alright. I accept your
apology. I know you can get out of hand
but I also know you can control yourself if you have to. Look, I’ll talk to dad tonight. I’ll try to persuade him you have
changed. He might listen, but I can’t
promise anything.’
‘That’s all I ask.’
As he walked away
Jenny thought on how she would communicate her desires to her father. Stewart could be stubborn at times,
especially when it came to the welfare of his family. But he had a soft heart as well. A soft heart which would
listen to the gentle voice of his daughter if it was one of true sincerity.
* * *
* *
With her pottery business up and running, Fiona was happy with
life. Stewart had paid for the kiln and
after a few weeks of lessons in Cooma she had started designing her own
works. The first few efforts were rather
average, but after that she noticed a gradual improvement in the styles and
quality of her work. And what she was
learning in her lessons wasn’t hurting either.
Sitting in her shack studio which Stewart had built near the barn, Jenny
wandered in.
‘Hey sis, what’s up,’
said Fiona.’
‘Oh, nothing. What you doing?’
‘Some mugs. I have a basic design which I am working on
constantly to make them as durable as possible.
Once they are up to scratch and after I have painted and glazed them
they will go online on to my website.
And then, if I’m lucky, in comes the money.’
Jenny nodded, but only
seem half interested.
‘Is something on your mind,’ asked Fiona.
‘Well, uh. Yeh. It’s Craig.
He wants to get back together with me.
He says he has changed and that he is really sorry.’
‘I know Craig is, deep
down, a good guy Jenny. But you should
be careful ok. He can get a bit out of
hand as you know well.’
‘I know. But, well.
I think probably have feelings for him.’
‘You think? You either do or don’t. There is no in between, really. I mean, I guess you could be uncertain, but
you need to know Jen. Do you? If you do that means something.’
‘Yeh, I do,’ said
Jenny nodding.
‘Then go tell
dad. Tell him you love him, if that is
what is really in your heart.’
‘Thanks Fiona.’
‘No Worries.’
* * *
* *
A few months later Stewart Gilmore was
a happy man. Spring was bearing good
results for the farm and as Summer neared he knew
Harvest was coming. A
great harvest. It had taken him a
while, and initially he had said no, but he had finally allowed Jenny to date
Craig Coleman again, but under strict rules.
They had to be home by 8 pm at the latest, and no going off anywhere
secret or private. And while he had
concerns that Craig might try something he knew Jenny would keep him in line.
And now, with the way things were
working out in his life, Stewart Gilmore had started attending the Kingdom Hall
assemblies with his mother. He was not
really convinced of any faith yet, and doubted he ever would be. But he wanted to make his mother happy in her
latter years and the preaching was fine.
He had gradually grown accustomed to what the Kingdom Hall went on
about. Sitting there, on the back porch,
watching the sun go down, it had been a hard day’s work, but thinking over his
life he was happy enough with it and felt, in the morning, he would make his
announcement. The time was now right to
share with his family his girlfriend,
* * *
* *
‘This is Michelle.’ Jenny, Fiona and Janet looked at Stewarts
girlfriend, a somewhat anxious look on his mother’s face, but the girls seemed
fine with it. Fiona came forward and
gave Michelle a hug. ‘Good to meet you,
Michelle. I guess it is about time Dad
moved on. It’s been long enough.’
‘Nice to meet you,’
said Jenny, offering her hand which Michelle shook. Michelle turned to Janet.
‘It is Good to meet you at last, Mrs Gilmore.’ Janet looked at Michelle and looked at
Stewart, who just waved his head in the direction of Michelle urging his mother
to respond.
Janet turned to Michelle. ‘Well,
the pleasure is all mine Michelle. Come, let us go into the sitting room and you
can tell me all about yourself.’
Michelle and Janet disappeared leaving Stewart with two curious
daughters.
‘So, you have moved
on, huh dad?’ began
Fiona.
‘Well, don’t tell this
to your grandmother, but I have been dating Michelle for a fair while now. I just wanted it to be the right time for her
to get to know you. To
let Laura’s memory still be the number one thing between us.’
Jenny came forward and
hugged her father. ‘Thanks,
dad. And we don’t mind. We know you need someone too.’
‘That’s good too
hear,’ responded Stewart Gilmore, a greatly relieved father.
Michelle, after a couple of months, moved in with the Gilmore’s and
seemed to be a happy new cog in the family.
Jenny and Fiona quickly bonded with her and Stewart, seeing how the
relationship had slowly come together and worked well was generally a happy
man. Things were smooth at the
moment. Very smooth.
* * *
* *
‘Harvest. A bloody good one.’
‘So how much will we
take in,’ asked Fiona to her father.
‘Money in fair
words, Fi. Money in fair words.’
And, indeed, as payday came around that Summer,
a good harvest was indeed taken in by the Gilmore family. A harvest which brought a
blessing to one of the oldest Dalgety families. And then, another surprise,
a surprise from Jenny.
‘He’s proposed,’ asked
Fiona, totally shocked at her sister’s announcement to the family.
‘Oh, that is good
news,’ responded Michelle.
Stewart looked at his
daughter Jenny, suddenly quite impressed with the young lady. ‘Well, as a gift young Jenny, you can have
that surgery now if you want to. For your eyes. I have
enough put aside for it and you can look beautiful on your wedding day.’
Jenny came forward,
hugged her father, and said thank you’s after thank you’s.
* * *
* *
One of the largest weddings in Dalgety
history took place in early Autumn in a blessed year
for the Gilmore family. Jenny looked
radiant, dressed in virginal white, and Stewart was
ever so proud as he walked his daughter down the aisle in the outdoor ceremony
on the farm. There was quite a turnout
with half of Dalgety present and numerous family and friends. The Harvest of the Gilmore Family had blessed
them greatly and as the year turned over and the new one got under way, tiny
little feet belonging to the firstborn child of Craig and Jenny Gilmore were
placed on the lap of Janet Gilmore as she held her great-grandson Jamie. ‘Now, little Jamie. Listen to me on this. You have a stubborn grandfather, and your
mother and aunt are in his mould. But
for heaven’s sake, please come along to service when you are grown. I must have at least one regular member of my
family at our services.’ And, as if in
response, the cherubim angel Jamie burped and Janet Gilmore smirked. Another little happy day in
the life of the Gilmore family of Dalgety in the Monaro region of New South
Wales, Australia.