The Seventh Day (33 page)

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Authors: Joy Dettman

BOOK: The Seventh Day
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I am never alone, and how joyfully Jonjan and I live. He can make his vehicle fly, and I fly with him, for we have become the new searchers, and there is much to find. Each season we discover new growth in the Morgan garden, and far down the mountain we have found evidence of Pa's town, which is rubble, with a chimney here and there, but many strange plants growing over them. Carefully we dig the immature plants from the earth and plant them in our valley or in the next.

We have flown over land once claimed by blacrap. It only survives in small patches now, and in our own rock-walled enclosure; my people find it a useful thing when controlled. During harvesting, we spread a roof across the enclosure and, without light, the black weed's hands fold over and wrap its head as if it sleeps. It does not spit. Many eat the fruit of it, which is removed by slashing the head of the weed, that to me is more like a fat belly, full of its young. I will not eat the black melon-shaped things, though it is said they are strangely sweet.

The juice from the head and pulpy hands is of immense value. When boiled it gives a thick scum of wax which we use for lights and other things; its long fibres we weave with flax or wool from the sheep. The residue from the boiling of the weed's leaf is not wasted; it makes an adhesive, necessary in the construction of the large nets strung high from the trees. Many hands are working now on new nets; we hope to roof the valley of the sheep, then settle it – when the central trees grow tall enough. I had wondered at this practice until Jonjan and I flew over the woven sky and through it saw no sigh of habitation, no garden valley.

My work here is with the children, with the teaching of reading and writing skills. There was much to be done before we could make a beginning to it, for we had little paper and no pens. There is much paper now, and pens, and we have fine ink made from soot and the blacrap weed, as with the ink for my printing machine.

I read daily to the children, so they will come to understand the magic of words and thus want to make their own. I read from Aaron Morgan's journal, from the Book of Moni and even from the ancients' Bible. This morning I read the page which tells how God created woman from the rib of man. How the children laughed at these words.

‘So, tell me what is written on this subject in the Book of Moni?' I asked.

‘That man tried to improve on nature and he failed.' Such a chorus of voices. So many come now to learn, the small and the tall.

‘And in our valley, how do we create both man and woman?'

‘In love, and in equality,' they chorused, then a lone voice added: ‘In the bed.' It was one of Sern's large-eyed boys, who are all full of talk.

‘Roden, imp of the long tongue, you may show us your skill and write your words for me,' I said to him. And he did, with more ease than I may have written them at his age: In bed, in lov and in eek wallaty.

What fine words are these. What a fine world is this, my home – and too long missed. What fine people are these, my people, and lost to me too long.

Seated on Granny's rocking chair at the mouth of my cave, my fingers content in mixing colours for my painting, I watch the late sun push aside a rain cloud.

And Lord, how very pleased is God with our ways, for He has taken to His sky with His own paintbrush and made a great arc across it, in greens and pinks, in golds and violet hues.

Such beauty!

I call to my Honey Dew, who is playing with her brothers nearby, and she runs swiftly to tell the others of this sight. They come then, one by one, two by two, both adult and child, and they walk into the end of day to look with awe upon God's art work.

My brush catches them thus, sheltered beneath the work of His hand.

I think this will be my finest painting when it is done.

(Excerpt from the New World Bible)

In the city there was much warring and great calamity and for seven years only the black weed in the fields and the rats in the cesspits thrived.

 

Then it came to pass that the sun left the sky, and for forty days rain come forth from the black heavens and it flooded all of the earth and the fields and the cesspits and it washed them clean.

 

And in the fields outside of the city the black Godsent weed rotted and its stench was vile.

 

Then the great winds blew wild. And they swept in from the oceans and they cleansed the stench from all of the earth.

 

And the sun returned and it warmed the earth. And over all of the graveyards of all of the known world the dandelion spread its golden carpet of life.

 

And it came to pass that a strange cloud was seen in the northern sky. And it was such as man had not seen before, for it was neither black nor grey, nor white, but of the purest gold.

 

And it moved slowly until it covered up the sun.

 

And there were those who bowed down before it, and those who hid their faces from it. And there were those who wept, for there had been too much death and destruction in this place.

 

Then a wide gash opened in the cloud and through it God's face appeared. And he yawned widely. Then he said unto the gathering: ‘Ah. It is the eighth day. So, what have you learned while I have been resting, my children?

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A stroke of unexpected humanity releases Ann from her world of silence, and she escapes her anguished childhood, finding love and a new life away from Mallawindy.

 

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‘We ride the crests and troughs of the Burtons' 30-year history with open mouths and saucer eyes . . . Dettman is an adept storyteller'

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‘A highly competent and confident debut novel'

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‘A compelling story, well told . . . it holds promise of further enthralling fiction from its author'

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‘A stunning debut; a rich and engrossing read; a tale of page-turning suspense and mystery; a postmortem of family ties; all this and more,
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From the bestselling author of
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‘ . . . a can't-put-it down story'

NW

 

‘
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‘Dettman knows how to tell a story'

THE SUNDAY AGE

Joy Dettman

Yesterday's Dust

The eagerly awaited sequel to the bestselling
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Yesterday's Dust
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In the 1990s, the Burtons are surviving as best they can, but Jack Burton continues to control his fractured family even in his absence. John has returned to Mallawindy unable to forgive his father and haunted by vengeful thoughts. Ann has three young sons and is soon to have another child, but still grieves for her firstborn daughter, Mandy.

 

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‘At the heart of this absorbing tale – the sequel to
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country-town propensity for rumour and allegation into a gothic narrative . . .
Yesterday's Dust
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Shocking, gripping, breathtaking.

 

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She will sell me to this cruel old woman, I thought, and experienced a thrill of terror. My mother stood with my hand in hers and gazed down at my upturned face. It is my last memory of her, those great, dark, lambent eyes searching my own, coming at last to rest upon the left. Through our joined hands, I felt the shudder she repressed.

Such a small thing on which to hinge such a fate. Nothing more than a mote, a fleck, a mere speck of colour. If it had been any other hue, perhaps, it would have been a very different story. My eyes, when they had settled, were that colour the poets call bistre, a deep and lustrous darkness, like a forest pool under the shade of the ancient oaks. Bistre, then, rich and liquid-dark, save for the left eye, where in the iris that ringed the black pupil, a fleck of colour shone. Thus did I enter the world, with an ill-luck name and a pinprick of living blood emblazoned in my gaze.

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