CHAPTER SIX
Kiri lay awake in her bed, unwilling to open her eyes and come to terms with the emerging new day. As always the early hours at The Gables were the most peaceful. Even the gentlemen who drank far too much from the superb selection of wines and spirits in Madam Jane's private lounge, always had the good sense to leave the steamy beds of her beautiful girls well before the first identifying streaks of dawn's light.
There were usually around ten girls living at The Gables. All were young and desirable. In order to ensure absolutely no interference from the authorities, Madam Jane made sure at least two or three girls were registered prostitutes, as required by law.
When recruiting, Madam Jane took her pick of the cream of the so-called, `fallen women.' She selected only the loveliest of unfortunate young women who found themselves pregnant, destitute, and abandoned by lovers who chose to avoid paternal responsibility, under legislation which deemed the age of consent in the colony to be just twelve years old.
Madam Jane offered them a way out of their predicament, which was usually gratefully accepted as by far the most preferable option available. She would pay the girl's boardinghouse and living expenses until the baby was born. Then she would pay the charges of babyfarmers, unscrupulous matrons who took in, and for a huge fee, cared for the illegitimate children of Madam Jane's girls for as long as their mothers worked at The Gables.
The girls were allowed to visit the baby farmers once a week to ensure their babies were being well cared for. With an infant mortality rate approaching seventy-five percent among Brisbane's baby-farmers, Madam Jane knew that visits to healthy children, and the paying of a small, but not entirely unreasonable percentage of their earnings back to the girls, was the key to the success of her thriving enterprise.
Kiri's room was well furnished and tastefully decorated. But she had come to loathe it. For weeks she had been a virtual prisoner inside its four floral-patterned papered walls, while Madam Jane had conducted her rigorous training. A great deal of time had been spent teaching her to speak the Queen's English in Madam Jane's own refined manner; and careful attention had been paid to instruction in lady-like poise and deportment—a quality which came easily and naturally to Kiri.
A shaft of sunlight streamed through a window directly onto Kiri's face. Reluctantly she opened her eyes and pushed back the bed-covers. She got up and walked over to the window. From where she stood she could see the river, swollen high by a full tide. A blackened old steam barge, with the markings STARK & CO painted in huge yellow letters along the length of her hull, blew a column of thick black smoke high into the air as the vessel forced her way upstream.
Kiri turned away from the window and looked back toward the bed. The day before, Madam Jane had told her that her training was over and now she must begin to pay her own way in that bed, and to willingly perform any or all of the sexual acts she had been forced to witness in secret between the white girls and their gentlemen callers.
Kiri closed her eyes, suddenly consumed again by the utter bewilderment, despair and loneliness which tore at her heart and mind every minute of every waking hour. Even the flames of anger and resentment, which had earlier fuelled her resolve to escape from the Faithful had been all but extinguished by the hopelessness and despondency that had descended upon her since she arrived at The Gables.
Her mind drifted to the Island of Kiriwina, then to the man with the pigtail on the dock, and to the caring shopkeeper with the sing-song voice. Kiri's thoughts of kinder times were soon interrupted by muffled sounds from around the house. The Gables was beginning to awaken.
*A cloud of jet black smoke rising above the tree line beyond the bend in the river heralded the impending arrival of a steam-barge at Jarrah. When Ben saw it he dropped what he was doing and ran bare-chested down the paddock to the riverbank.
Ben had spent the first few months at Jarrah settling in and planning for the future. He was keen to establish the brickyard as soon as possible. The arrival of the barge signaled a start to the work which lay ahead. Of top priority was the construction of a jetty to accommodate the loading of river-boats which would transport bricks to Brisbane. Ben watched as the barge veered from mid-stream in toward the shore. Soon he could see workmen sitting on building materials piled high all over the deck.
The skipper maneuvered the barge as close to
the river bank as the vessel's shallow draft would allow. When it
was secure he called out to Ben.
`You... run up to the house and tell the owner I require him to lay
out the exact position of his new jetty. And tell him there is
other business to be settled before my crew can commence
work.'
`I am the owner of this property,' Ben called back. `I am Ben
Luk.'
A crewmen laid down a gang-plank between the barge and the
river-bank. The skipper strode ashore. He was a short stocky man
with long prematurely white hair, clear blue eyes, and a friendly
face blackened by coal dust.
`I'm not used to seeing gentlemen in these parts with their shirts
stripped off and doing honest labor,' the skipper said with a grin.
He held out a calloused hand. 'I'm Jack Stark, I'm in charge of
this crew.'
Ben pointed to two stakes he had driven into the river-bank
earlier. `Mr Stark... I want the jetty to extend outward between
these two markers and I want the supporting piles driven as deeply
as possible into the river-bed. Now, what other business is it you
wish to discuss?'
Jack Stark rubbed his jaw thoughtfully. `I expect my crew will be
camped here at least three or four weeks. It is customary on camp
jobs on private property for fresh food to be supplied daily to our
cook at the owners expense. Either that or your household provides
each man with three meals a day, in which case our cook will be
available to work on the jetty.'
`I am new to this property, Mr Stark. I have no household staff as
yet, but I have arranged for the local shopkeeper to supply and
deliver whatever food your men may require on a daily
basis.'
`Excellent.' The skipper waved a hand and the barge came alive.
Soon a ten man camp was set up in the shade of a clump of gums, and
close to it, a work area with sawyers benches, a large grindstone,
and a blacksmith's hearth and anvil.
That evening Ben sat in the moonlight on the veranda of the house.
From his chair he could see the glow of a fire under the gums
beside the river. Some time later he noticed a flickering light
emerge from the trees and move up the paddock towards the house.
Soon Jack Stark appeared at the veranda with a lantern in his
hand.
`Good evening Mr Luk. I've brought up a list of victuals from the
cook.'
Ben waved to a chair beside his own. `Would you care for a brandy
Mr Stark?'
Jack Stark sat down and Ben went into the house. He returned with
brandy and glasses and poured two tots by the light of the lantern.
Stark emptied the glass with a single swallow and looked out over
the river. It glistened in the moonlight.
`This has always been one of the prettiest properties upstream of
Brisbane', he said, `even after sundown.'
Ben looked surprised. `You have been on this property before, Mr
Stark?'
`Oh yes, many times. When I was skipper of a supply barge,I used to
deliver grog here by the barrel-full to the remittance
man.'
`The remittance man?'チ
`You haven't heard about him?'チ
Ben shook his head and poured Stark more brandy.チ
`Son of an English lord he was, or so the story goes... disgraced
his family in some way in the old land and came here and built this
place. By all accounts he received a generous allowance on the
condition he never return to England.'
`And he did return I take it,' Ben said.
`God no, he's buried down in the brickyard. Drank himself to death
about a year ago he did. No surprise to anyone.'
`Did he live here alone?'
`Yes, well except for Ho Lim—the old Chinaman who lived in the
brickyard hut. Some say he made the finest bricks in the colony. He
built the fireplaces in this house and a good number of others in
the district. The remittance man let him live in the hut down there
and make a living off the bricks. In return Ho Lim cooked, drove
the carriage, and did whatever was required of him, you know—a sort
of gentleman's man-servant.'
`And where is Ho Lim now?'チ
`Don't really know Mr Luk. I heard when the remittance man died, no
one knew who his next of kin was except the bank that held the
mortgage on the property. When they notified his father in England
he stopped sending his son's remittance draft to them, so they
foreclosed and kicked Ho Lim off the place.'
Ben took his first sip of brandy. `I
am going to produce bricks commercially on this property Mr Stark.
I shall need men to assist me. One of them could well be Ho Lim.
Were I to try and find him, where would you suggest I
start?'
Stark watched as Ben poured more brandy.
`Ho Lim was old and had no family and no money. You would know
better than most Mr Luk the likely fate of a destitute Chinese on
the streets of Brisbane. There would be no offers of work, but
plenty of senseless beatings at the hands of the louts and
larrikins.' Stark downed his drink in one gulp and stood up to
leave. `I would say either Ho Lim is dead, or if he is alive, he
would be in the pauper's asylum at Dunwich.'
The next morning Ben was awoken just after dawn by the loud
pounding of the barge's pile-driver sinking the foundation timbers
of the jetty into the river bed. He got up quickly and crossed the
room to the fireplace, where he ran his hands over the superb
brickwork, just as he had done as soon as Jack Stark left the night
before.
After a few minutes he dressed and walked down to the camp at the
river. When he boarded the barge he had to shout above the clatter
of the pile-driver in order for Stark to hear him. `Where is the
Pauper's asylum you spoke of last night, Mr Stark?'
`At Dunwich, a few miles across Moreton Bay from the mouth of the
Brisbane River on North Stradbroke Island,' Stark shouted
back.
`I have decided to look for Ho Lim,' Ben said. `I expect to be away
only a few days.' *
A small steamboat bearing the emblem of the Stonehouse Shipping
Company on it's tiny funnel arrived at Dunwich after steering a
course well clear of the leper colony on neighboring Peel
Island.
Ben was the only passenger. A crewman told him the vessel would
return to the mainland as soon as the provisions it carried were
unloaded, and if he wished to avoid being stranded on the island,
he should make his visit as brief as possible.
The Dunwich asylum was within walking distance of the jetty. It was
a dismal collection of ramshackle wooden shacks scattered around a
large treeless compound. Ben made straight for a building near the
entrance of the enclosure where a faded Union Jack flew from a tall
pole outside. Inside, an elderly clerk sat penning entries into a
journal at a small dusty desk.
`Good-morning, I am Ben Luk. Have you a Chinese here by the name of
Ho Lim?'
The clerk reached for a thick leather-bound register and opened it.
A frail but nimble finger ran down the columns of a number of long
pages. On the fifth or sixth page the finger stopped.
`Yes we do have an inmate by that name,' the clerk said. `Why do
you ask?'
`I wish to speak with him.'
チ`Please wait.'
The clerk got up from his desk and disappeared down a dingy
corridor. After a few minutes he returned with a younger, more
officious looking man wearing a soiled white shirt beneath the
threadbare jacket of a dreary black suit.
`I am the assistant administrator of this institution Mr Luk,' the
man said. `I understand you wish to see ...'
`Ho Lim,' prompted the clerk.
`Yes, Ho Lim.' The administrator eyed Ben solemnly. `According to
the register, this inmate has no living relatives. Now Mr Luk, you
are obviously a man of some means. You must be aware that the
government has the power to force relatives to provide for their
own, thus preventing paupers becoming a burden on the
taxpayer.'
`No I was not aware of that,' Ben said quietly. `But the matter is
of little consequence. I am not related toHo Lim.'
The administrator's expression became dubious. `Oh, please forgive
me Mr Luk,' he said patronizingly, `but for what
otherreasonwouldyou cometothis place? After all you are Chinese, or half Chinese at least.I just
naturally assumed...'
Ben felt his blood rise. He had seen the look of the man in the
threadbare jacket many times before—on thefaces of government
inspectors, zealously extracting the Chinese poll tax from coolies
on the goldfields. But he remained calm and his voice was steady
when he said: `Then you were mistaken, sir. I have never met Ho
Lim. I came here to possibly offer him employment. Now may I see
him please?'
`Very well,' the administrator said stiffly. `But I must advise you
that you will not be allowed to take the Chinaman off the island
without signing an irrevocable deed binding you to financial
liability for him in the future.'
Ben followed a burly warder down a fenced lane which ran between
two enclosures separating the male from the female inmates, husband
from wife, and mother from son. In these compounds were the
forgotten people of the colony, living in loathsome conditions, out
of sight and out of mind of the rest of the population on the
mainland.
Ben saw the utter despair in their faces. They wandered about like
wretched lost souls: the useless aged, the blind, the crippled,
together with the drunkards past salvation, the medically
incurable, and the plain unfortunates, reduced to the ultimate in
destitution and deprivation, and forced into pauperism.
The warder opened the door to one of the huts and Ben waited while
he went inside. Even from where he stood the stench from inside the
hut was overpowering. Soon the warder returned leading a little
barefoot Chinaman out behind him by his pigtail. The Chinaman wore
a filthy undershirt and ragged baggy trousers, cut off below the
knee and held up with a length of string. His smooth skin was
drum-tight over a thin bony face and a near-bald head. A clump of
sparse grey hair hung from a sharp angular chin. He stood before
Ben tight lipped, his eyes lowered, and his hands tightly clasped
together in front of him.
`You are Ho Lim?' Ben asked.
The Chinaman nodded without raising his eyes.
`You made bricks on the river-bank at the home of the remittance
man in Graceville?'
The Chinaman nodded again.
`I now own that property and wish to make bricks, a great number of
bricks to be sold commercially. I have come here to see if you wish
to work for me. If you do you may leave this place with me today
and return to your hut by the river.'
Ho Lim lifted his eyes. His tight lips quivered for a moment then
parted in a muffled shriek as he fell to the ground and kissed
Ben's feet.
Ben strode briskly back to the administrator's office, anxious to
leave the Dunwich asylum and its terrible misery far behind him. Ho
Lim trotted along a few paces behind. They were almost at the end
of the lane between the compounds when Ben heard a shrill voice
call out his name. He turned toward the women's compound. A number
of old hags peered out through the pickets. One called out his name
again:
`Mr Luk. For the love of God... Mr Luk.'
Ben moved toward the woman. She was nothing more than a pile of
filthy rags with a thin drawn face and tear drenched cheeks. Her
blue eyes stared desperately into his own, imploring recognition.
Then her bony hand reached out through the boards and clutched his
arm.
`God Almighty Mr Luk... don't you know me? It's me. It's Mrs
Llewellyn.'
Ben's eyes widened in amazement. `I was told about the store Mrs
Llewellyn, but I never dreamed things could be his bad for you.
Tell me, is Kiri here with you?'
Mrs Llewellyn shook her head and her tears began to flow
again.
*
The well dressed driver of the brand new carriage which reined in
at Jarrah barely resembled the little
Chinese wretch Ben had found at Dunwich asylum. Despite his age, Ho
Lim hopped down smartly and opened the carriage door. Ben stepped
out, then turned and offered his arm to his new
housekeeper.
Mrs Llewellyn wore crisp new clothes, and already there was some
color back in her kind face. But Ben knew it would take a good deal
longer for her to fully regain her dignity, and the weight she had
lost since being transported to Dunwich, after being found
sleeping, penniless and starving, in the streets of Brisbane.