Read A Woman of Courage Online
Authors: J.H. Fletcher
The customers there were a lot different from the ones she'd known in Hindley Street: office workers and arty types, two blokes always playing chess at a corner table. One night she met someone called Sean Madigan, over from Western Australia on holiday. Sean was the sort who knew how to pick them.
âThe cream of the crop, you are,' he told her.
âQuite the talker, aren't you?'
âSo they tell me.'
She didn't mind; she quite fancied him, but still talked him into buying the most expensive items on the menu. He knew what she was doing but didn't seem to mind.
âAnything for you, darling.'
He told her she'd have a big future in WA.
She mocked him. âSandgroper country? What's there?'
âBig things coming. You'll see.'
âIf I ever get there.' Walking on the moon seemed more likely.
âI'm serious.'
âWhat would I do there?'
âAnything you like. Try selling. You'd be good at that.'
âMe?'
âWhy not? You got the looks, the personalityâ¦'
It was hard to believe but he seemed to mean it. âI talk like an ocker.'
âSo do something about it.'
Thinking about it afterwards she decided that was what had impressed her most: his being straight enough not to hide the truth. She started to listen to how the café customers talked. At night she practised in front of the mirror.
Two days later Sean was back. After that it was every night, and always wanting to talk to her.
âYou make a conquest there,' said Costa, the café owner.
She began to think Costa was right. It could be a nuisance when she was busy but on the whole she decided she liked it.
The café had one of the new television sets. She watched it whenever she had a moment: the idea of someone performing in a studio in Sydney while their picture appeared hundreds of miles away in a café in Adelaide fascinated her.
âHow do they do it?'
Nobody seemed to know.
Johnny O'Keefe was on the box, a new medium and a new sound to get the blood and feet jumping.
âThat's what I'd like,' Hilary said to Sean.
âSing?'
âVoice like mine? You got to be kidding.'
âWhat then?'
âTo be able to watch what I like. The music, the stars. People like Johnny O'Keefe. Not this crap.' Because the other programmes were mostly useless.
âYou'd need to own your own TV station to choose the shows.'
She thought about it but only for a moment. âAll right then. That's what I'll do.'
âPlanning on being a millionaire, are we?'
âMaybe not this week.'
She let Sean walk her home after the café closed. She wouldn't let him through the door but he kissed her and she kissed him back, feeling electricity striking sparks through her body.
âI like you, Hilary. Like you a lot.'
âI like you too.' Although all this was new territory. âNot much use, though, is it?'
âHow come?'
âWith you over there and me here? When you going back to Perth?'
âTomorrow. You could always come over yourself. I mean it. I would love to see you again.'
âGive me your phone number,' she said. âI ever get over I'll look you up.'
âDon't leave it too long.'
She smiled but kept her mouth shut.
After he'd gone life went back to normal. She missed him more than she'd expected. Cleaning, waitressing, solitary walks on the beach. Solitary nights in her room. That was the point; solitary walks, solitary nights. There was only one person she wanted along and he wasn't there. Sean's absence confirmed his presence. But she had to fill her spare time. She had energy and the union card. She talked to two of the other waitresses and asked if they'd like to earn some extra cash.
âThat bloke comes in some evenings? The one with the red hair? He told me he worked for a printers and I got him to run off some handbills for me.'
âHow'd you manage that?' asked Madge.
But Hilary only smiled.
âWhat did the handbills say?' asked Freda.
âOffered to do house cleaning for a fee. I took them round to all the flats and houses in the area.'
âAnd?'
âI got half a dozen interested. So I thought, if you'd like to give me a handâ¦'
It was awkward to begin with, both for the team and the customers, but it didn't take them long to get used to it. For a couple of months they were making good money. Then disaster.
The first thing Hilary knew was a young bloke turning up at the café and wanting to see her. She was out the back when Costa came looking for her. She squinted at him round the kitchen door.
âWho is he? I never set eyes on him.'
âWhy you ask who is he?' It never took much to set Costa off. âI dunno, Hilary, no more than you. But I know the type.' He patted his hairy nose. âHe has official stink about him. Afterwards you tell me what's going on, OK?'
Hilary wiped her hands and went out to see the man. âHelp you?'
Cocky face; know-all smile. âAnywhere we can talk?'
âOnly outside.'
âLet's do that, then.'
Hilary followed him out into the street busy with people. âWhat's going on?'
âI was going to ask you the same thing.'
He flashed his card. Detective Constable Symons. Bloody hell. Hilary's first thought was that the home had tracked her down. After all this time? She was eighteen, for God's sake. Would she never be rid of them?
She composed her face. âHow can I help you?'
âWe've had a complaint.'
âAbout what?'
âAbout stolen money. Know anything about it?'
At least it wasn't the home. But relief was tempered with caution. âI don't know what you're on about.'
âOf course you don't.' His smile said she was a liar, like all the world. âYou been cleaning flats, right?'
âMe and a couple of mates.'
âWe've had a complaint money's gone missing.'
âFrom where?'
He consulted his notebook. âForty-three Windsor Lane. Mr and Mrs Thomas. Mean anything to you?'
âThat's one of ours, yeah. They saying we nicked something?'
âForty quid. From a drawer in a bedside locker.'
âNot one of mine. I think Freda does that one. Freda Gale. But she wouldn't nick anything. Straight as a die, Freda.'
âOf course she is. Got an address for her, have you?'
âShe works here. But she's not on tonight.'
âAddress?'
âNo idea.'
âHow convenient. When she's on?'
âTomorrow I think.'
Symons snapped his notebook shut. âI'll be back.'
He nodded and walked away. Hilary went back into the café. Her foot was barely inside the door before Costa grabbed her.
âWho was that fellow?'
âThe police. He wants to talk to Freda.'
âWhat you tell him? The policeman?'
âI never told him nothing. It's a misunderstanding.'
It had better be, she thought as she went to see Freda after work. Freda, wouldn't you know it, had her boyfriend with her and didn't want to open the door but Hilary kept ringing the bell until she did.
âFor Pete's sake, Hilary⦠I got company, OK?'
âYou'll have more company than you want if you don't let me in.'
Freda with a tatty robe dragged about her. Hilary guessed she had nothing on underneath. Fat lot she cared about that.
âThe boys in blue been round asking questions.'
âWhat about?'
âAbout you. Mr and Mrs Thomas? Forty-three Windsor Lane? They're saying forty quid's gone missing from a drawer.'
Freda went white. âOh my God.'
âTell me you didn't nick it.'
âI was crook so I got a mate of mine to stand in. Girl called Olga. Oh my God.'
âHow well you know this Olga?'
Freda's face said it all.
âAny way to get hold of her?'
Freda shook her head. âShe was moving to Queensland. I let her do it as a favour because she needed the dough.'
âBloody well found it too, didn't she? And you never thought to tell me, did you?'
âWhat we gunna do?'
âI'll tell you what we're gunna do,' Hilary said. Never mind la-di-da talk; for the moment, at least, ocker was back. âFirst thing tomorrow morning you and me are going to see the Thomases and tell them what happened. Hope to God they believe us. And you'd better have forty quid to give them.'
âI don't have forty quid.'
That'd be right. âThen I'll give it to them and you can pay me back later.'
Mr Thomas was not very nice about it, going on and on about breach of trust and how disappointing it was and how they would tell all their friends what had happened.
âI gave you the chance because I like to encourage initiative. But after this my wife wouldn't have you inside the door.'
âI quite understand, Mr Thomas.' Grovelling was the only option but inside Hilary was spitting tacks.
At least Mr Thomas said he'd withdraw the complaint.
âBeauty!' Freda said as they walked back. âOff the hook.'
âOff the hook nothing,' Hilary said. âYou still got to pay me my forty quid.'
âDon't keep on about it,' Freda said. âYou'll get it.'
But next day Freda didn't show up to work and when Hilary went and rang her bell the neighbour said she'd moved out.
âIf you see her,' Hilary told the neighbour, âtell her I'll kill her when I catch up with her. My oath I will.'
She knew it was no good but other than kick the bin as she went back down the stairs there was nothing she could do.
It made you wonder whether Freda had nicked it after all.
Nor was that the end of it. Two evenings later Detective Constable Symons was back.
âSeems the Thomases don't want to pursue the matter,' he said. âA pity, in my opinion, but there you are. Don't think you're in the clear. I got my eye on you. One step out of line and I'll have you. Got it?'
Hilary as meek as milk. âYes, Mr Symons.'
But her thoughts were bloody. I'll strangle the bitch if I ever get hold of her.
Nor was that all. She suspected Symons was the sort to check-up on her. She wasn't sure how he could do it but she wasn't game to risk it and she didn't know where she stood over the business of the home or whether they could do anything about her having done a runner from the Pattinsons. As long as she was in Adelaide she would be at risk but out of sight out of mind once she was gone. If she wasn't around she doubted Symons would bother to follow her up.
She remembered Sean Madigan. The following morning she dug out his phone number and gave him a call. Hearing his voice gave her quite a kick although he didn't sound too pleased with her.
âWhat time you call this? It's six o'clock in the morning, for God's sake!'
She'd forgotten about the time difference. âSorry about that but I wanted you to be the first to know. I'm heading west.'
1
She had thought she'd hitch a lift across the Nullarbor but in the end decided to fly. She'd been lucky with Mike but she wasn't stupid; lots of truckies weren't like him and there was plenty of empty space between Adelaide and Perth. Being screwed on the journey, willingly or heaven forbid unwillingly, was not part of her plan and she had already decided it paid to play the percentages. It would cost her â worked out at sixty-three quid, a fair bite out of her reserves â and she still hadn't repaid Tim his hundred quid, but she was conscious of time passing. She was eighteen years old and so far had got nowhere in her life. No matter. Her union card said she was twenty-two and she told herself that coming to this new place would be the first step along the highway that would lead her to the heights she was determined to scale.
âWatch me,' she said as the tired old Dakota came limping in to land. âFive years and I'll have my first million.' God knew how but somehow she'd do it. My oath she would.
The plane doors opened.
âWelcome to Perth,' the steward said.
2
She came down the boarding ladder lugging the case that contained all her worldly possessions. She put one foot on the tarmac, looked around her and thought, Bloody hell. She'd known WA was the sticks but
thisâ¦
If she'd had the money she'd have hot-footed it straight back to Adelaide. Or Melbourne. Or Timbuktu. Anywhere. I mean,
look
at it, more bush than airport. Someone on the flight had told her Perth Airport had been an aerodrome in the war and by the look of it nothing had changed. Sandgroper country indeed. Mars would have been a better bet.
Worse yet, there was no sign of Sean. That'd be right. Hilary felt a surge of anger. Anger was good; anger gave her the lift she needed. So she'd flown what felt like halfway round the world to find herself stood up in what looked like a desert? Tough. She was there and it was up to her to make the best of it. She strode across the tarmac to the terminal, if that was what it was. The sun was a ball of fire in a sky white with heat. A light wind lifted plumes of sand from the endless plain and she wondered where the hell Perth was in this emptiness.
A car was coming helter-skelter, dust billowing behind it, and she heard the screech and roar of the tormented engine. Standing in the shade of the terminal building Hilary began to smile. Maybe things were going to work out after all.
The car skidded to a stop. The door banged. Sean came running.
âI was afraid I'd miss you.'
âYou nearly did.' It gave her a hot feeling just to see him again â yes, she thought, I was right to come â but she was careful to talk as though it hadn't mattered either way.
She climbed aboard. The car was like an oven and a pretty beat-up oven at that but at least it got them there. After the horror start Perth was a pleasant surprise, with gracious buildings on both sides of the Swan River and a bridge that Sean told her was brand new and would be the making of the state.