A for Across the Seas

#AtoZChallenge 2025 badge A

This is the story of a young man and his two friends who sailed to England in 1967 to see the world. Aerogrammes. letters, diaries and postcards help to tell the adventures of “Will” and his friends in this A to Z.

“Twist and Shout”  The Beatles ‧ 1963
Well, shake it up, baby, now (shake it up baby)
Twist and shout (twist and shout)
Come on, come on, come, come on, baby, now (come on baby)
Come on and work it on out (work it on out)


Friday, 6th January, 1967 Timor Sea

Distance from Sydney: 971 miles
Sea Temperature: 63 degrees
Average speed per hour: 15.98 knots
Address Noon Friday: Lat 39 34’ s Long 170 07’E
Seas: SSW force 3 wind

Dear Mum, Dad, Jack and Gail,

By the time you receive this we will have visited New Zealand and be heading back across the Tasman for Brisbane, even though we don’t call there.  All is well.  I have not even felt like being seasick and have missed only one meal.  We slept in after a long, late night at the Tasman Sea Party.  The porthole was closed so no one knew it was morning until 10 am.

Meals are good and the Italians are very entertaining.  We have learnt quite a few words so far including lots of Italian swear words.  We call our waiter “Buono Formagio” which means “good cheese”. 

The weather has been changeable – rough seas, cloudy, sunny, cold, warm, you name it.  I spent one day in the pool with the gang – about 20 of us have formed a club, “The Green Seals”.  We hook our toes over the railing on the edge of the pool, clap our hands and bark like seals. Membership is exclusive to Cabin 245 but we have nominated 16 other honorary members.  

The Green Seals

We have just come back from the engine room with Bruce Tobler.  Phil and I conned the guy into an inspection, strictly off limits.  The ship is an old troop carrier, 27 years old with two big diesels but only one propeller.  She’s a bit slow but quite comfortable.  She really rolled yesterday in a Force 4 Southerly but it’s down to Force 3 today and now swinging to Westerly.

I intend to go ashore at Wellington in the morning for a tour.  We pass Cape Farewell at 10 miles to starboard at 8.00 pm and enter Cook Strait at midnight.  The plan is to dock in Wellington at 4.00 am.  We should be just finishing our Farewell Party by then.  There must be half the ship disembarking there.  We can’t count the number of Australians going to New Zealand and New Zealanders returning home.

There are plenty of social activities arranged.  I play deck quoits, table-tennis and paddle slide, clay shooting from the stern plus poker in the lounge.  I saw Elvis Presley in “Fun in Acapulco” the other night. Dances are to the “Turin Quartet” and Bingo is on right now.

Games on the deck of the Fairsea

Things are cheap on board.  Cigarettes are 20c a packet (no good to me), beer 15c a can, Scotch and gin 15c a nip, electric radios, shavers etc are also cheap but we will get them cheaper in Singapore.  I have met a Malaysian student from Perth Uni named Tahja who is going to take us to his cousin’s wholesale place.  So, duty free wholesale cameras should be cheap.

Our cabin mate is Garry – a dress designer but a real great China plate.  His nickname is Gus.  

We have not seen land for four days and the only other lifeforms have been a school of porpoises, flying fish and two or three albatrosses which always follow the ship.  So, it will be good to see land, even in the distance, for a change.  It’s getting near dinner time so must finish and have a fairy bower (shower).  It will be a while before I get another chance to write but might send you a card from Singapore.

Thursday Island, Cape York Peninsula, Friday and Saturday 14th January, 1967

Hello, ten days at sea and life on board ship is just one great big, beautiful ball.  Since the last letter we have had some improvement as the trip from England officially ended in Wellington, NZ and the new trip to Southampton began.  Meals are excellent and the social life is really good.  The day’s activities are placed up on a board and you can follow whatever you like.  We have seen some good movies in colour and dances  have been on every night.  

Wellington was OK except it was Sunday and all the shops were shut so it was very quiet. We nearly got sea-sick walking down the street which seemed to roll under our feet – a horrible feeling. The government buildings are the largest wooden buildings in the Southern Hemisphere. We had milkshakes and walked up Mount Victoria. Also  rode in the cable car.  It is a city of hills around a magnificent harbour but bloody cold for the middle of summer.  Cars are varied types, many old and rusty and very expensive by Australian standards. For example a 1962 VW is £700 Australian. 

The Fairsea leaving Wellington

We reached the coast of Australia at Moreton Bay after seeing our first island with five trees and a lighthouse about 20 miles out.  I felt mildly homesick. Since then, we have seen thousands of islands and the Barrier Reef is just beautiful.  We passed Brampton and Hayman Islands in close and saw the “New Endeavour” under full sail about 100 yards away.  Saw also one of the “Roylan Cruise Boats” and now realise why you rave about this place. 

Islands of the Great Barrier Reef Postcard

The pilot, Captain Carter, came on board at Gladstone, and just as well by the look of things as there are coral islands in abundance and a fair bit of shipping about.  The pilot leaves Saturday afternoon 2 pm at Thursday Island where you get the last Australian stamp for some time.  We passed Cairns at 3 am this morning (Fri) and lights were visible.  Inside the reef it is as calm as Sydney Harbour and we have forgotten what a rocking ship is like.  

I have missed only one meal (dinner) as the whole cabin got dysentery (me last) for 24 hours but am eating well now.  I couldn’t get sea-sick even in a hurricane and the weather was quite rough in the Tasman with a strong southerly blowing.  Weather is hot and humid but comfy below decks in the air-conditioned cabins.

We had a pirate night last night and our mob stole the show.  

Will is unrecognisable as the pirate at the back between the two in the front

We are all sporting good suntans and the pool is good fun.  Air temperature is 90°F and the water temperature is 86°F.  We have a deck chair ($2.50) where we spend a fair bit of time.  There are lots of birds on board and a lot of schoolies.  I have danced with about 20 or 30 different girls in the last ten days.  Cheap grog is not hard to take and there have been some funny photos taken late at night. 

Days fly by and there doesn’t seem much time for anything, Writing letters is rare and our cabin motto has become, “Tomorrow we wash” (our clothes, that is).  I’m down to a pair of shorts and a shirt so I’d better do something about it today.

Rehearsals started this arvo for a Roman night in which I’m a senator and have to shout, “We want women”.

Rehearsing the Roman Night

Equator, Thursday 19th January, 1967, 1 ½ days to Singapore

Hi, you must be lucky because this is my third letter in 3 weeks but the paper and envelope is free and the stamp costs 17c Australian. 

Well, life on board since my last note from Thursday has been as good as ever.  The view was never better as we rounded Cape York Peninsula in sight of islands and coral reefs, and many were on deck to see the pilot leave.  It must have been tricky navigation as the radar worked all night and numerous lighthouses were visible.  We passed the Gulf of Carpentaria and into the Timor and Arafura Sea, close to an island with a smoking volcano.  Then with continuing hot weather we sailed into the Java Sea where we struck heavy rain and now the pool water is 84°F. The weather fined this morning and sun came out at last.  

Everyone should have a sea-trip!  I have been really enjoying it.  Our revue, “How Rome was Built” went on at 10.30 pm last Saturday.  It was a tremendous success and the crowd went wild.  The ship shouted us two beers for the effort.

Keith and Will on the Roman Night

This afternoon was the crossing of the line ceremony at which we remained comfortably out of target range as ten poor souls were splattered with spaghetti, chocolate sauce, eggs, soup, tomato sauce, cream and meringue cakes for initiation in front of King Neptune and his mermaids.  Quite a crowd came to watch and it was funny as long as you weren’t in the firing line. Tonight will be the Equatorial Ball.

As yet the only cabin parties have been in other people’s cabins like the one the other night where the ship’s butcher came too and we ended up eating salami and bread rolls with our Victoria Bitter about 3 am. One of our occupations is thinking up a reason for a celebration.  Some of the best so far have been Muslim Christmas (where we sang Jingle Bells and all) while Taj bought the grog.  We have our Farewell to Taj night soon. We had George Washington’s birthday.  Bobby Burns birthday is the 25th and Australia Day on the 26th January and I’m sure we’ll find numerous others.

Tonight is a secret menu for Crossing the Equator celebration so I’d better get cleaned up and put on some clobber.  The shower room and toilets we are convinced are our own private ones as there never seems to be anyone else around. 

Later: As for the spread one fellow who had travelled on all the P&O ships said he’d never seen anything as good. The Equatorial ball was a great show. When the ball finished amid streamers and balloons we had another party on the afterdeck. I received my certificate for the Kingdom of King Neptune and was baptised “Octopus”. 

Will dancing with Michelle. The ceiling was covered with blue balloons representing Neptune’s Kingdom under the sea.

The Swinging Sixties

AtoZChallenge theme reveal 2025 #atozchallenge

"I'll Never Find Another You"     The Seekers  •  1965
There's a new world somewhere
They call the Promised Land
And I'll be there someday
If you will hold my hand
I still need you there beside me
No matter what I do
For I know I'll never find another you

Three young men stand on the deck of the Fairsea waving to their families. They won’t see them for at least three years and will return as changed people. They will look back on this moment as the most significant of their lives and think that maybe nothing will ever be as intoxicating, thrilling or exhilarating as life in the “Old Dart”.

Our narrator, Will Price, was one of the three. They met at Wollongong Teachers’ College in 1961, qualified as Primary Teachers and had spent the last three years in their respective classrooms. Keith and Phil had been posted to tiny, remote, one teacher schools, meeting the daily struggles alone, with little or no help from the indifferent Department of Education. Will was placed in the western suburbs of Sydney with a “Headmistress from Hell”, who told him he would be better suited to life as a used car salesman.

It was Keith who inspired the others to dream of a better life. As the year 1966 came to an end the three friends had all but completed arrangements for their exodus. From left to right Phillip, Keith and Will are celebrating Keith’s 21st birthday.

We are fortunate that Will wrote frequently to his family. Those flimsy, pale blue aerogrammes were one of the only means of communication, along with postcards and slides (the cheapest form of photography). They reflect views and sayings which may not be considered politically correct in 2025 but are an accurate reflection of what it was like to be young and bursting with excitement in the “Swinging ’60s”. Out there, over the seas, was a big, wide world waiting to be discovered.

This is my 10th A to Z. Most of my blogs have been about family history or travel. I used to spend April frantically trying to complete my posts but now I spend a whole year intermittently working on them so they are ready to go on the day.

Before I close, my thoughts go to my friend Sue Martin who is no longer with us. She was an ardent supporter of my writing, giving me encouragement every year with her usual enthusiasm. She is greatly missed.

REFLECTIONS

  • Did you win?

Yes! I think this year was the easiest because I used something I had already written in an A to Z format  so it was an easy matter to set it up before April and go enjoy my cruise. It also allowed me to follow other bloggers as my little luxury on the cruise was good quality internet.

  • Do you believe your blog saw an increase in traffic and comments during April 2024?

I usually only publish in April so there was a huge increase in traffic compared to other months

  • Do you feel the A to Z Team (Arlee Bird, J Lenni Dorner, Zalka Csenge Virág, John Holton, Jayden R Vincente, and Ronel) supported you, your blog, and this challenge enough in 2024?

As usual the team put in an enormous amount of work to make this annual challenge work.  I can’t thank them enough.

  • Will you do the challenge again next year?

I’ve already started

Yes, used the letters A to Z and the banners

  • Is the HTML useful to you? 

Didn’t use it successfully but have done in the past.

  • Any suggestions for the team?

As another blogger suggested maybe there is some way to help bloggers who aren’t getting any comments.  We could volunteer to comment on those blogs getting a low volume of traffic.

  • Any thanks? Again, thanks to all the team and all the people who read and commented on my story.
  • Any post ideas or requests for our monthly posts on the blog from June to February?

I can only handle April and its aftermath at this stage.

  • Have you followed the social media of the A to Z Challenge? No
  • What was your favourite comment left by another A to Z participant on your blog during the challenge? 🏆

There were so many excellent comments but here is one of many I enjoyed.  I would love to know how your grandchildren reacted along the way, and whether their comments and questions were anything like ours. Well done! I really enjoyed following your writing again this year, and am in awe of your discipline and organization in getting the chapters lined up to post in advance while you cruised the high seas. Thank you for your thoughtful comments on my posts and here’s to the year! Josna

  • Did any other A to Z participant make you and your blog feel especially valued this year?

All the people who commented please know I appreciate your efforts and if I list you I am sure to miss someone. 

  • Do you have a favourite blog that you found during the challenge this year?

Life at 82 by Lois Roelofs showed me what to expect in the next ten years and Brizzy Mays Aussie Trivia is good fun. Tell Me Another by Josna is always thought provoking and Anne Young’s research is awe inspiring.  Then there is JB Insalaco’s DNA Insights that had me checking my own results again. So many others but I must finish Reflections or it will not get posted.  It’s taking me ages. Sorry all those others….

  • Do you feel you had a positive impact on the Blogging Community during the hop?

I tried to comment on as many posts as I could so imagine that helped.

  • Did you invite or encourage any other bloggers to join the challenge?

No one I know wants to write one as they are too busy.

  • Have you learned anything because of the #AtoZChallenge? 

I’m learning new stuff all the time reading other people’s posts and researching my own.

  • Did you use a theme in 2024? Any thoughts on themes? 

I don’t usually take much notice of the theme – I just go with whatever motivates me at the time.

  • Was taking part in the challenge a positive experience for you and your blog?

I love the communication with others about their blogs and mine.

  • Consider the significance of the April Blogging from A to Z Challenge, our values (community and inclusion), and your feelings about the experience. How may this influence your future blogging, learning, or actions?

It makes me want to continue with A to Z as long as I still have ideas in my head and can use a computer. I love the fact that the writers and readers are from all over the world and yet all feel part of a community of people who like to write.

  • Any other thoughts, feelings, and reactions to the #AtoZChallenge 2024?

It is a special time of the year I look forward to but I could only do it once a year as I intend to spend the rest of the year preparing for it.

  • Will you consider doing the challenge again next year?

I’m already busy typing up old letters and aerograms which will form the basis of next year’s blog.  Many of my blogs look into the past and this one will be set in the 1960s. It was a time without internet when phone calls were expensive and people wrote huge numbers of letters especially when they crossed the world. What a treasure to be unearthed of how things were almost 70 years ago!

Z for Zinger

(a striking or amusing remark)

Chapter 26

When Step finally made an appearance downstairs it was Sunday morning.  The others were all seated around the breakfast table, Dr Goodheart, Nurse Smiley, Peter, Tom, Wattle and Rose.  Even Woof was allowed in the kitchen for some strange reason.

“Welcome home,” they all chorused at once.

Step wondered what all the fuss was about but it seemed he was a hero.  All the newspapers had his picture on the front page.  Headlines like “Boy Catches Escapee” and “Step the Superhero” had made him famous, if only for a few days.

Nurse Smiley later explained what had happened to Phineas and his mate.  Of course, Phineas was in big trouble for escaping from gaol, but he was able to prove that he was not the one who shot Sad’s aunt and uncle.  His “mate” was sentenced to 30 years gaol and Phineas was retried and sentenced to five years for armed robbery.  Sad had been hidden under witness protection and could now rejoin his parents.

“And now,” said Nurse Smiley, “We are all going to lead peaceful, boring lives.  I couldn’t stand any more excitement.  I’ve had enough to last a lifetime.”

The last thread still had to be tied.  One day there was a knock at the door.  Dr Goodheart answered and was surprised to be given a flat piece of board by a tall thin policeman.  Following Step’s instructions the police had found their missing car and retrieved Step’s piece of wood.  There was no excuse not to get started on his Explorers of NSW project.

Nurse Smiley found Step in the back garden staring pensively at nothing.

“Anything wrong,” she asked. “You seem very quiet lately.”

“Well,” said Step, “it’s just that Sad has found his parents and Tear has her mother and a new family.  My dad said he would be back when his ship came in but I don’t even know what that means.”

“It means that when the situation is right for him to take you back he will come for you.  Maybe he is travelling and establishing a new life. If he is still with your stepmother he may think you are better off without her. I’m sure he is doing what he thinks is best for you.”

“What worries me is that he won’t know how to find me.  We have moved so many times since he left me on the steps of the Opera Orphanage for Unwanted Children he couldn’t contact me even if he wanted to.”  Step looked sadly at Woof and stroked his head.

“I’m sure he could find you if he really wanted to,” said Nurse Smiley, “and remember, until that time comes we will always be here for you.”

On a dark, wet and windy night two figures walked hand in hand, illuminated by the street lights.  One was tall, with a long overcoat and a hat pulled low over his head.  The other was very small, a young boy dressed in an ill-fitting jacket and long baggy shorts which reached well below his knees.

Step thought back to that fateful night.  He wondered what his father was doing now.  Was he still with that awful stepmother?  Was he able to get a job and move out of the grinding poverty that kept the three of them in perpetual squalor?

Spring arrived.  The trees were in blossom, leaves appeared on the deciduous trees and the days were warm, in the sun at least.  Step was leaving his school when he saw a tall figure he recognised loitering outside the gate.

“Dad….. you’ve come back!”

His dad wore a short-sleeved shirt and no hat.  He stood up straight and looked tanned and healthy.

“Hello, son,” he said.  “I’ve been searching for you for a long time and now I’ve found you. Things have changed since I saw you last.”

Step felt his heart harden.  Where had his father been while he was living in an orphanage?  As far as his father was concerned he could have been dead and he wouldn’t have known anything about it.

“I’m very happy where I am, thanks Dad. I live in a house with loving foster parents and brothers and sisters.  I like my school and my teacher and have lots of friends.  I don’t want anything to change.”

As he said those words Step realised they were true.  He didn’t want to change anything about his life.  He waited to hear what his dad’s response would be.

“I read about you in the paper.  That’s how I found where you live, or at least where you go to school, so I waited outside the gate hoping I might see you. I’m not with your stepmother any more.  She was bad news.  I’ve joined the Navy and will be away at sea for much of the time.  However, I would like to support you as much as I can.  Maybe you can take me to your foster parents and we can work something out? I’d like to see you when I can but if you’re happy with them then that is where you should stay.”

With that, the two figures walked hand in hand towards the terrace house where Step knew he would live until he grew up.  A sudden thought crossed his mind and he turned to his father, grinning.

“Hey, Dad,” he said. “Now I know what it means.  I may not see you all the time, but I will see you ….  when your ship comes in.”

THE END

Y for Young Driver on the Loose

Chapter 25

“Clutch, always depress the clutch”.  Memories of Peter’s driving lessons came back to Step as the ute gave a feeble shudder.  He stretched his left leg down to the clutch and pushed it in. He checked the gear stick.  It was in neutral. Then turning the key again he heard the engine catch and roar.  Moving the gear lever into first he slowly raised the clutch while pressing the accelerator and breathed a sigh of relief as the car moved forward.  He crept in first gear to the gate where, instead of getting out and opening it he kept driving, pushing it over.  Now to move into second gear and finally third.  He was moving quickly along the dark road, relying on moonlight as he didn’t want to be seen by his pursuers.  For surely they were after him by now.

The car began to hiccup.  Looking at the petrol gauge Step saw with horror that it was on empty.  If only he could find someone else on this lonely road before the ute stopped altogether!

A car came towards him flashing its lights and sounding its horn.  He realised his own lights were turned off, making driving in the dark quite dangerous.  However, the car swished past him and he was alone again on an empty road.

The ute finally came to a standstill in the middle of the road.  Should he run into the bush and hide?  Phineas and his mate were sure to come up behind him at any time.

Step left the ute where it was and began walking along the edge of the road.  Almost immediately he heard a car so jumped behind a thick bush, holding his breath.  The car stopped and he heard two men talking.  It was Phineas and his mate!  Someone tried to start the ute but it was obvious that it was out of petrol.

“I’ll siphon some out of my car,” said the burly man.  “You go look for the kid.”

Step was unsure whether to run or remain hidden. Phineas came closer.  Step could see his big boots.

“Got ya!”  Phineas grabbed hold of Step and pulled him towards the road.

Just then another car arrived.  There were no lights flashing or sirens blaring but to Step’s immense relief it was a police car. Phineas dropped Step like a hot potato but it was too late, both men were handcuffed and pushed into the back of the police car.  Step rode in the front, squeezed between two policemen.  Never had he felt so happy.

It took a while to sort out the mess, as Nurse Smiley called it.  Step was interrogated by the police who found his story incredible but they had no choice but to believe him.  He didn’t know what happened to Phineas and his mate but about an hour after arriving at the police station he was pleased to see Dr Goodheart coming through the door.  Soon he was asleep in the back of the doctor’s car, heading back to Sydney.  He had a vague memory of seeing Nurse Smiley and Tom and Woof before he was carried to his own bed where he sank into oblivion.

When he woke up late on Saturday morning his first thought was for his piece of wood.  Where had he last seen it? Aha! It would be in the police car locked in a shed somewhere in the bush.  He wondered if the police had found it and if he would ever get it back.  Then he fell asleep again.

END OF CHAPTER 25

X for eXtreme Danger

Chapter 24

Step hoped that the man would stop somewhere and leave the car behind.  After all, a police car was going to be easy to find.  However, the man drove furiously out of the city until Step could see gum trees flashing by the windows when he looked up.

Finally the police car came to a standstill and Phineas opened the door.  A swirl of dust entered the cabin causing Step to sneeze violently.  Phineas looked over to the back and swore loudly.

“Where on earth did you come from?  You’ll have to come with me or you’ll be be lettin’ the cops know my location.”

Fearing for his life at the hands of a convicted criminal, Step half ran and was half dragged into a shed where he was bundled into an old ute which smelt of cigarettes and dog.  Phineas turned the key but the ute only gave a low moan.

“Battery!” he muttered.  Back in the police car he drove close to the ute and then attached some jumper leads to the batteries in both cars.  Diving into the ute he tried the ignition and the engine roared into life.  Removing the jumper leads he drove out of the shed, parked and then drove the police car into the shed, closing the door.

“That should keep them searching for a while,” he exclaimed and leapt back into the ute, which had been running all this time.

Step was frozen with fear but eventually plucked up the courage to ask, “What are you going to do with me?”

“You think I’m going to hurt you, don’t you?  I’m not a killer.  I didn’t shoot that husband and wife although the judge gave me 25 years for a crime I didn’t commit.”

“But Sad saw you.  He testified in court.  He saw your hand and your tattoos.”

“Yes, I was there, but only after the attack took place.  We were only going to rob the place.  My partner got scared and shot two people.  He’s the one who should be in gaol.  That’s why I escaped.  I’ve got to find him and bring him to court.  He’s sitting somewhere nice and comfy while I get 25 years.”

Step didn’t know whether to believe the man as this mysterious missing person had not been mentioned before.

“Why didn’t you tell the judge what happened?”

“My legal counsel said not to.  I realise now he was being paid by my partner to keep him out of it.  I was dudded.”

“I don’t see how you are going to get him to tell the truth.  After all, you are the one the police are after.  When they catch you, your partner will go free.” Step was trying to understand what Phineas planned to do.

“Look, we used to be mates.  A mate doesn’t let his friend go to prison for something he hasn’t done.  I’ve got to talk to him and make him see reason.”

All the while they had been travelling upwards.  The road wound around the cliffs, zig zagging its way to the top.  It was a moonlit night and Phineas kept on only the  parking lights.  Phineas seemed to know where he was going.  Reaching a metal gate, he turned off the lights and opened it wide enough to drive the car through.

“Close the gate, will you,” said Phineas.

Step leapt out of the ute.  Now was his chance to escape but where would he go?  He was curious to see what would happen when Phineas confronted his mate but decided to keep well out of sight when that happened.  After all, if Phineas was correct, the other man had attempted a murder.  What he would do to Phineas was anyone’s guess.

So he closed the gate and went to get back in the ute.

‘Climb in the back,” said Phineas.  “Get under the tarp.  Safer.”

Step did as he was told.  The car drove slowly up a rough driveway.  Peeping out from the tarpaulin he could see a dim light coming from what appeared to be a farmhouse.  As the car stopped the front door opened wide and a burly figure was silhouetted against the light.

“Thought I’d see you sooner or later,” said the burly man.

“We’ve got some talking to do,” said Phineas.

The men disappeared into the house and closed the front door.  Step had to know what was happening so he quietly dropped off the back of the ute and crept up to a window, hoping to catch a glimpse of the men.  Moving around the house he finally heard voices and peered through a chink in the curtain.  To his surprise he saw the two men stretched out on lounge chairs drinking what looked to be bottles of beer.  They appeared to be two mates having a quiet yarn, not two criminals intent on killing each other.

Making his way back to the ute, Step noticed the keys were still in the ignition.  A thought crossed his mind.  If he could start the car and drive it to a town he could get help from the police and direct them to the farmhouse.  He had never driven a car but had watched other people do it heaps of times. Of course he would have to stop at the gate and undo it and then he would have no idea where he was going.  The man in the house would surely have a car and he would follow him.  What would happen if he caught him?

Step saw that he had no option but to try.  He climbed in the driver’s seat and turned the key.

END OF CHAPTER 24

W for Wandering Woodworkers

Chapter 23

Weeks went by and no more news about Sad was heard.  Step worried about his friend and hoped that he was just in hiding, maybe with a new identity.

Step’s roommate was Tom, who was in second year at the local high school.  Tom was now a different boy to the one Step was forced to share a room with at the Zipporah Magillacuddy Home.  When Step, Tear and Sad were in trouble for hiding a girl in the attic, Step had to share with the most unpopular boy in the home.  Although he didn’t know it, Step had turned Tom’s life around and despite their age difference, they were now the best of friends.

It was several months into the year and the cool winds of Autumn were blowing leaves along the street as Step walked home from school one Friday afternoon.  He was deep in thought about a project he was working on. He had already been to the local public library to find a book on Australian explorers.  He was planning a relief map of NSW using papier-mache, showing the Great Dividing Range and the major rivers and then painting the path of various explorers in different colours.  It would be about the size of a small table and he was wondering where he could obtain the wood.  He caught sight of Tom at the front gate and discussed his problem. Tom suggested going to the local joinery to look for offcuts and taking the dog for a walk at the same time.

Nurse Smiley and Dr Goodheart had a large, friendly dog called Woof who wasn’t allowed in the house except when going for walks.  Then he would patter along the corridor from the small back yard to the front door, have his lead clipped on and off he would go with one of his owners.  Sometimes Tom was allowed to take him for walks but Step was considered too young to control such a big dog.  He still like to play with him in the garden and was teaching him to shake hands and roll over.

Woof was very excited to be going out, so after letting Nurse Smiley know where they were going, the two boys and dog set off for the timber yard.  The owner was friendly and let them look through the scrap timber for something suitable.  Tom pulled out a piece of three ply that was exactly the right size.

“Now all you need is newspaper, glue and paint,” said Tom.  “I’ll bet Nurse Smiley knows how to make the glue.”

Woof was pulling hard to keep moving.  Tom was holding the wood in his other hand and lost his grip on the lead.  The dog leapt over the piles of timber and ran out the gate of the timber yard.  Tom thrust the wood into Step’s hands and began to chase after the dog.  Not wanting to lose his precious timber Step couldn’t keep up and was soon totally lost in a maze of unfamiliar streets.  How could he find his way home and what would Nurse Smiley say when he told them he had lost both Tom and Woof ?

He thought back to his experience in Tumbarumba after escaping from a farm where he was being held captive.  A policeman had found him sheltering in a doorway and taken him for a night in the police cells.  It was dry and warm in the cell and next day another policeman had driven him back to the orphanage.  All he had to do was find a policeman and he would end up home again.

There was no one around in the narrow lane where he found himself.  In the distance street lights were coming on as darkness fell.  He must find a busy road.  Clutching his wood he made his way towards the lights, searching in vain for a police car.  Finally, pulled up at the traffic lights, was what Step had been looking for.  Lights flashing, with the sign POLICE on the roof, it was a welcome sight.

Step tapped on the window, which opened up in front of him.  Two police, one male and one female, were in the front seats.

“I’m lost,” said Step. “Please could you take me home?”

“Hop in,” said the lady.  “We’ll take you to the station.”

As the lights changed and the car moved forward, a message came over the car radio.

“All units report to 16 Collins Street.  I repeat, all units to report to 16 Collins Street immediately.  This is high priority.”

“We just have to make a detour,” said the male policeman. “Just crouch down in the back seat so no one can see you and you will be all right.”

The two police leapt out of the car after arriving and dashed into a building.  Sirens were wailing all around them.  Step noticed the keys were still in the ignition but the engine was turned off.  A minute later a man jumped into the car and began driving at great speed away from the area.  Peering between the front seats Step saw with horror that the man had a short little finger on his left hand.  The left arm also had a tattoo of a dragon.  Step couldn’t see anything else but surely this was Phineas Crowe, the escaped prisoner!

END OF CHAPTER 23

V for Venturing Visitors

Chapter 22

It was several weeks into the school term when Byron raced up to Step in a state of great excitement.

“Dad says you can come over and stay for the weekend.  That is, if you want to.  He’s also arranged for Tear to come as well, to keep my sister company. Will you come?  Please, please.”

Step thought back to his last visit.  Byron had behaved in an immature and selfish manner and really spoilt the visit for the others but he seemed to have changed, so Step nodded enthusiastically and said he would check with Nurse Smiley and Dr Goodheart.

On Saturday morning the blue and white Ford Fairlane pulled up outside the terrace house where Step lived.  He scrambled into the back seat while Byron’s dad put his bag in the boot. Bethany and Byron were already there but they still had to go to Tear’s house to pick her up.

Step wondered where Tear lived now and how she was settling in with her new family.  He found out fifteen minutes later as the car pulled up outside a small semi-detached house.  On the front veranda Tear stood beside her mother, who was holding the new baby.  They exchanged hugs and farewells before Tear climbed into the front seat next to Byron’s dad.  She turned to look at the three children in the back seat.

“I can’t believe this is happening.  Lovely to see you again, Bethany and…..Byron.  Oh Step, are you OK? Is everything all right with Nurse Smiley and Dr Goodheart? How is your new school?  How did you find Byron and Bethany?”

“OK, slow down,” said Step. “Everything is fine and Byron goes to my school so we are friends. What about you?  How is your new dad?  Does he treat you well?”

“Oh yes! I have to help a lot with the baby but I enjoy doing that and it gives my mum a break as she is always tired.  My new dad is away at work a lot so I don’t see much of him. He’s promised to be home all weekend to help mum while I’m away.”

The four children chatted constantly on the way to Byron and Bethany’s  house.  They had to cross the Sydney Harbour Bridge and drive along windy and hilly roads until they reached the semi-circular driveway in front of the imposing villa.

Step waved to Tear as she disappeared with Bethany.  He wished he could talk to her some more but resigned himself to a weekend with Byron.  He was fearful that it would turn out like last time, with Byron losing his temper when things didn’t go his way.

Byron seemed genuinely different.  He asked Step what he would like to do and didn’t complain even when he lost at some game or other.

Byron turned on the TV.  “I watch the news now so that I can keep up with what is happening in the world.”

The TV screen showed a newsreader talking.  A headline flashed across the screen.    CONVICTED CRIMINAL ESCAPES GAOL

“Quick, turn the sound up,” said Step. “That face looks familiar.”

Sure enough, it was the man who had attacked Sad’s aunt and uncle.  Sad had just testified in court with the result that the man had been sentenced to 25 years gaol.  Apparently the man had hidden in a dirty clothes basket and been carried out to freedom in a laundry truck.

Step quickly told Byron the whole story.  He was worried that Sad might be in danger as the escaped prisoner could be seeking revenge on the boy who put him away.

“He would be too busy trying to escape recapture to hurt Sad, surely,” said Byron. “I wonder if there is anything we can do to help?”

“We can tell Tear and Bethany.  After all, Tear is Sad’s friend, so she might know what we can do.”

Tear was shocked when she heard the news but couldn’t think of any way to help except to warn Sad.

“Maybe we can ask Byron’s dad or mum if we can use the phone?  We need to get Sad’s phone number but only Nurse Smiley would know that.  I say we ring Nurse Smiley.”

Byron’s mum was resting in her room but they found Byron’s dad in his study.  He listened carefully to the story told by Step, with occasional interruptions from Tear and agreed to ring the house where Step lived.

Asking the children to wait outside the glass French doors, he dialled the phone and could be seen talking to someone.  

Ushering them back in the room, he sat down and ran his hands through his hair.

“Nurse Smiley is going to contact Sad’s parents although I’m sure they are aware of the situation.  I think it best if you just try to continue enjoying your weekend as there is nothing you can do.  I’m sure Sad will be protected if necessary.”

Step had to admit he enjoyed his stay with Byron and Bethany.  He realised how much he had missed Tear and was able to spend some time catching up on her news.  However, an uneasy feeling lurked in the back of his mind as he thought of Sad and the danger he might be in.

That feeling became stronger when he arrived back at the terrace house.  The TV was on and Nurse Smiley, Dr Goodheart, Peter, Tom, Rose and Wattle were clustered around it.

“Step,” Nurse Smiley stood between him and the TV screen. “Come into the kitchen with me please.”

She sat him down and held both his hands.

“It seems that Sad has disappeared.  The police think he may have been kidnapped by Phineas Crowe, the man who attacked his aunt and uncle.  Believe me, they are doing everything they can to get him back.”

END OF CHAPTER 22

U for Unlikely Underdog at Underbury School

Chapter 21

As Step walked to his new school with Rose and Wattle chatting just in front if him, he felt the loss of his two friends keenly.  They would be starting school today as well but in another part of the city, making new friends and going home to their parents each afternoon. He hadn’t felt so alone since his father bid a hasty goodbye at the front door of the Opera Orphanage for Unwanted Children all those years ago.  How could he bear the future without his closest friends?  He considered slipping into one of the narrow alleyways and spending the day roaming the area but common sense took over and he resigned himself to what lay ahead.  After all, Miss Smiley had trusted them to get to school on their own and he couldn’t let her down.

Step and the girls would be starting Fourth class. Their new school was much larger than the one at Clifton Beach, so their arrival was not as disruptive and they were spread out across three classes.  Scanning the room for friendly faces, Step was amazed to see a very familiar one glowering in the back row.

It was Byron.  Why would he be going to this school?  He lived in one of the leafy suburbs on the North Shore.  It was a puzzle he intended to solve as he sat down next to the obviously unhappy boy.

Byron looked at him with a snarl on his face but his expression changed to one of surprise when he saw who it was.

“Step!  I’m so pleased to see you!  Mate, you don’t how good it is to see a familiar face.”

Encouraged by Byron’s warm reception Step was about to ask what had happened to him when the teacher demanded silence and began speaking.

“Welcome to 4W at Underbury Public School.  My name is Mr Ward and I am a kind and considerate teacher IF you are a kind and considerate pupil. HOWEVER, don’t think you can try any silly business with me or you will find I have turned into someone who will make your life unbearable.  He caught the eyes of each and every student.  UNDERSTOOD?

“Yes, sir, “ they answered in unison.

Mr Ward handed out exercise books and the morning was spent labelling them and designing title pages.  There was no opportunity to talk as the teacher demanded absolute silence when he wasn’t talking about the year ahead.  He mentioned a school camp and an excursion to the museum.  Maybe, thought Step, this might be a better year than he had expected.  Now that Byron was here, at least he knew someone.

It wasn’t until playtime that he was able to ask Byron the burning question.  What was he doing at Underbury?

Byron looked sheepish.  “I was expelled from my last school so Dad had to find another school that would take me.  He works in the city, not far from here, so he thought he could keep an eye on me.  If I step out of line, he will be here like a shot.”

“What did you do to get expelled?” Step asked breathlessly.  It seemed like a terrible thing to be so bad that you were forcibly ejected from your school.

“I threw a chair across the room and the stupid teacher stood in front of it and broke her hand.  I had no intention of hurting anyone.  I was just really angry because she always blamed me for everything and this time it wasn’t my fault.  She said I stole her purse because I was in the classroom at lunchtime.  I mean, who leaves their money in an unlocked classroom?”

“Did you steal it?” Step asked quietly.

“No, of course not.  And I know who did, but I don’t tell tales, so I got the blame.”

“So were you expelled for hurting the teacher or stealing the purse?

“Both, I s’pose.  I’ve got a short fuse, as you know.”  He grinned at Step. “It wasn’t the first time I was in trouble, so the school said, ‘Enough is enough’ and I was out on my ear.  If I get into trouble at this school Dad is sending me to a strict boarding school where I can only go home for Christmas.”

“Well, its good to have a fresh start and I hope you’ll be my friend because I don’t know anyone here, except Rose and Wattle, and they don’t count because I don’t like them much anyway.”

“We are mates,” Byron put both hands on Step’s shoulders. “You are the only person who ever understood me. Together we will show this school who’s in charge.”

Step wasn’t sure what Byron meant by that but at least he no longer felt alone. Nevertheless he would have to do his best to keep Byron on the straight and narrow. The year ahead was promising to be much more interesting than he had imagined.

END OF CHAPTER 21

T for Transformation

Chapter 20

Step was very troubled.  He knew he should be happy for his friends but he felt his whole world was turning upside down.  Sad had visited the orphanage for one day to say he had testified in court and put the bad man back in gaol. Not only that but he was back home with his parents and would be starting a new school next year.  Tear went out for the day with her mother and it looked as though she too might be leaving the orphanage.  To top all that off the Zipporah Magillacuddy Childrens’ Home was to be sold and all remaining orphans were to go to Foster Parents or Group Homes.

Step held little hope that his father’s ship would come in, whatever that meant.  His Step Mother had not wanted him and said that they didn’t have enough money to look after three people so he had to go.  He didn’t want to live in the same house as her anyway as she was cruel to him behind his father’s back.

At least Tom was now friendly and was doing so well at school he was moved out of the class of rowdy children into a much quieter one where he was able to concentrate on his work.

Tear came back from her second outing with her mother bearing some exciting news.

“My mother is having a baby and wants me to come and live with her to help look after it.  Her new husband only just found out about me and said he would never have turned me away if he had known I existed.  I’m moving out next week, as soon as they have my room ready.”

Step forced a smile and wished Tear all the best.  With Sad gone and now Tear about to leave he felt unsure and insecure.  All too soon the school term ended and the remaining orphans stood in the hallway of the Zipporah Magillacuddy Childrens’ Home, small suitcases in hands, ready for the great unknown.  Matron and Nurse Smiley, usually so informative, had told them only that they were going to a Group House.  Maybe even they didn’t know what lay ahead for their young charges.

There were only five orphans left.  All the others had gone to Foster Homes or, in the case of Tear and Sad, to live with their parents. Step and Tom, Rose and Wattle and 15 year old Peter were the children nobody wanted.

Nurse Smiley called them outside to board a minibus.  They travelled away from the sunny coast, past outer suburban blocks until they reached narrow inner-city streets where the houses were joined together in uniform rows.  Each had an upstairs balcony of fancy lacework and a tiny garden in front of an equally tiny verandah.  The minibus stopped outside one of the houses and Nurse Smiley indicated they were to go inside along a dark corridor until they reached a large, brightly lit kitchen with a long dining table in the centre.  Here they all sat down around the table with Nurse Smiley and a strange man.

“May I introduce Doctor Goodheart,” Nurse Smiley began.  “As you know, I was recently married and this is my husband.  He works at the big hospital near here so that is why we have bought a house in this area.  It had to be a big house because…”. She paused and looked around at the orphans with a smile. “While I wanted to keep working as a nurse, we know that married women are expected to be at home.  I certainly didn’t want to just do housework and cook meals every day so we thought if we fostered the remaining orphans it would give me something worthwhile to do and solve the problem of where you will live.  We have three bedrooms upstairs and will turn the downstairs dining room into a bedroom for Peter.  The girls will share and so will Step and Tom.  What do you all think?”

The relief felt by all the orphans was so great that some started crying.  It looked as though everything was going to be all right.

END OF CHAPTER 20