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Jenny

One
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> Jenny
Jenny
and her mum lived alone on the farm. Dad
had died when Jenny was little. Now,
she was 9 years old, and helped Mum run the place.
They were out of town a few miles, with cows and chooks, and a hundred or
so sheep. Mr.
Thomas down the road sharecropped some wheat, but the day to day
survival on the farm depended on Mum and Jenny, and the rain water tank.
It
was dry country in summer. The
little dam on the creek would be dry just after Christmas each year and
everything depended on the rain water tank.
Even the sheep had to water from that big squatter's tank Jenny's father
had bolted together years ago. They
had never run out; it was a big tank. But
you never wasted water, either.
Jenny
came home on an old school bus each evening and did the chore of milking the
cows. Five jersey cows gave milk
and cream and a little bit of cash, although with summer coming on, the milk
yield was going down as the grass turned brown.
One
Arbor day half holiday, Mum was still away helping young Mrs.
Graham feed the shearers when Jenny arrived on the bus.
The milking began early and Jenny was still on her own as she lugged the
milk buckets into the barn by the separator.
Mum would turn out the cream after tea.
Jenny
leaned against the cream separator to rest.
Up on the stack of seed wheat opposite her was the forbidden fruit of the
farm; her father's old .303 from the rifle club.
Mum had kept it there in case of sick animals, or unpleasant swaggies. Nine year old curiosity finally overcame obedience, and Jenny
climbed up the rails on the shed wall and out over the bags.
Very
carefully she carried the rifle down to the floor and across to the old cool
safe. Out of the safe came the bolt
and three bullets. Outside Jenny
and fitted the bolt and one bullet. The
blast, and the recoil against a small shoulder left her shocked and
frightened. But as the pain
subsided a small thought began to wonder what a bullet would do when it hit
something. Unsteadily, and
unthinking,
the heavy muzzle of the gun directed itself back towards the house and rain
water tank, that source of life for the farm.
A .303 calibre bullet would very likely blow a hole the size of a fist
out the back of a 44 gallon drum and cause a disaster of unhideable and
untreatable proportions. But
Jenny's father had built a very large tank.
When the fatal shot came the tank tremored and shuddered but swallowed up
the force of the projectile. All
that remained was the small entry hole, two feet up from the ground, and a
suddenly horrified and all knowing little girl watching the farm bleed to
death.
There
was one other thing. A quarter of a
mile away, coming in off the road, was the sound of the Vanguard.
Mum was coming home. Jenny,
galvanised into inspiration, jammed a gum twig into the hole.
Only a trace of precious water seeped past.
Holding the weapon close she hastened into the barn and thrust it back
onto the top of the bags. There was
just enough time to scramble down the side of the heap and get over to the
house!
Mum
didn't see Jenny; you could get to the house from the barn whilst keeping the
tank between you and the track up from the road.
Jenny was in bed, in fact, when Mum searched her out.
Normally, if the milking had been done, Jenny would have been with the
cat in the garden. But Jenny was
not feeling well. She didn't look
well, but Mum, with the insight that Mothers have, was not sure that this was
the whole story. She could feel it;
something had Happened.
Jenny's
symptoms were rather vague, but she wanted no tea.
Out in the shed Mum wondered what was `up' as she wound over the heavy
handle of the separator and watched the thin stream of cream flow into the
churn. As her eyes wandered she saw the dull shining of the bolt
handle in the old gun, and knew. She
topped up the reservoir on the Coolgardie safe and then took the remaining
ammunition from the old safe. Before
she went to bed it had been safely hidden in a drawer inside, and locked.
Sick
Jenny was left alone in bed in the morning because Mum went back early to Mrs.
Graham's. But after the
sound of the old Vanguard died away the energy of a Saturday morning and a
night of planning took over. From
the barn she took a gutter bolt and nut, and a small piece of rubber off an old
inner tube. She would poke the bolt
into the hole and hold it with the old chair from the verandah.
Then in a previously unthinkable act, she would plunge down in through
the hatch in the tank roof, put the rubber over the bolt she had punched a hole
in it and screw on the nut. She had
seen Mum do the same on a rust hole in the cows' trough.
Tightened up the bolt would stop the leak.
A little splodge of mud over the bolt on the outside of the tank, and
Mum would never have to know. The
life of the farm would be saved.
Jenny's
desperate, almost heroic, subterfuge was never to succeed.
Carrying the chair around to the back of the tank where in a seeming
miracle the hole had been hidden from Mum's sight, she felt her feet squelch.
Dropping the chair in her horror she discovered the little twig, so
tight when she had dashed back into the barn, had popped out.
At the very beginning of summer all but the last two feet of water had
gone!
Nothing
could be done. Nothing.
The chair and the bolt and were put away. Jenny went back to bed and proceeded to become very sick
indeed! She was almost numb with horror as she thought of no water for the cows,
and then remembered the sheep. And
what would she ever say to her mother? How could she ever tell her mum what she
had done? Whatever would they do for water?
Back
from Mrs. Graham and the shearers, Mum found a little girl feverish and
withdrawn. Jenny was morose and cut
off from her only comfort, unable to say what she had done.
In
the evening there was a dry thunder storm; irritable air and harsh lightning
flashes. It seemed to Jenny to be
God's anger lashing out, anger that would come from Mum in a few weeks when the
tank ran dry. Jagged, thunderous
anger, and, of course, without any rain; she felt fallen beyond forgiveness.
Everything
at least seems to pass, and so did the fever.
On Monday, Jenny went back to school, still unable to say anything about
the happening. On the surface, life
went on. At night Jenny had bad
dreams; as she vainly tried to screw on the nut, the level in the tank dropped
and a large grotesque and angry figure found her exposed in the bottom of the
tank and locked her in the darkness.
The
end finally came. A billy of tank
water had been transferred to the parsley patch around from the tap when Mum
noticed an out of season green tinge just further along.
Exploring, she found a small hole, and remembered the gun.
Jenny's
mother stood between tank and house thinking of dry tanks and gunshot wounds.
Half formed thoughts of water carting mixed with pain at Jenny's
foolishness, and understanding love for a little girl's agony.
That little girl, coming out of the house, saw all this passing over
Mum's face, knew she was finally found out, and burst into tears.
Probably
the hardest thing to understand was mum's lack of outrage.
Jenny kept waiting for an out burst of temper which didn't come. Instead Mum seemed sorry for her and even cuddled her while
the whole painful confession was sobbed out.
Jenny felt closer to her than she had for a long while.
Later,
they fixed the tank together, with some tar added under the bolt and rubber to
stop rust. Jenny was allowed to
climb into the tank and push on the patch and screw the bolt.
There
was more summer thunder about. Standing
on the verandah with Mum, Jenny remembered the angry lightning of ten days ago;
that sign of a dry angry God which had so frightened her.
But tonight, with the love of Mum's arm around her, she thrilled to its
excited dance through the life giving rain.
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