Sally's Story
Sally Morgan's My Place is an Australian classic. Since first publication in 1987, My Place has sold more than half a million copies in Australia, been translated and read all over the world, and been reprinted dozens of times. Sally's rich, zesty and moving work is perhaps the best-loved biography of Aboriginal Australia ever written.My Place for Young Readers is an abridged edition, especially adapted for younger readers, that retains all the charm and power of the original. It is published as three separate books. Sally's Story focuses on Sally's childhood, and her growing realisation of the truth her family has been hiding.
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Sally's Story
Sally Morgan's My Place is an Australian classic. Since first publication in 1987, My Place has sold more than half a million copies in Australia, been translated and read all over the world, and been reprinted dozens of times. Sally's rich, zesty and moving work is perhaps the best-loved biography of Aboriginal Australia ever written.My Place for Young Readers is an abridged edition, especially adapted for younger readers, that retains all the charm and power of the original. It is published as three separate books. Sally's Story focuses on Sally's childhood, and her growing realisation of the truth her family has been hiding.
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Sally's Story

Sally's Story

by Fremantle Press
Sally's Story

Sally's Story

by Fremantle Press

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Overview

Sally Morgan's My Place is an Australian classic. Since first publication in 1987, My Place has sold more than half a million copies in Australia, been translated and read all over the world, and been reprinted dozens of times. Sally's rich, zesty and moving work is perhaps the best-loved biography of Aboriginal Australia ever written.My Place for Young Readers is an abridged edition, especially adapted for younger readers, that retains all the charm and power of the original. It is published as three separate books. Sally's Story focuses on Sally's childhood, and her growing realisation of the truth her family has been hiding.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781925162509
Publisher: Fremantle Press
Publication date: 12/01/2014
Series: My Place for Junior Readers
Sold by: INDEPENDENT PUB GROUP - EPUB - EBKS
Format: eBook
Pages: 142
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 9 Years

Read an Excerpt

Sally's Story


By Sally Morgan, Barbara Ker Wilson

Fremantle Press

Copyright © 1990 Sally Morgan
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-925162-50-9


CHAPTER 1

THE HOSPITAL


The hospital again, and the echo of my reluctant feet through the long, empty corridors. I hated hospitals and hospital smells. I hated the bare boards that gleamed with polish, and the flashes of shiny chrome that snatched my distorted shape as we hurried past. I was a grubby five-year-old in an alien environment.

Sometimes, I hated Dad for being sick and Mum for making me visit him. Mum only occasionally brought my younger sister and brother, Jill and Billy. I was always in the jockey's seat. My presence ensured no arguments. Mum was sick and tired of arguments.

We reached the end of the final corridor. The Doors were waiting for me again. Big, chunky doors covered in green linoleum. The linoleum had a swirl of white and the pattern reminded me of one of Mum's special rainbow cakes, cream with a swirl of pink and chocolate. I thought they were magic. There was no magic in The Doors: I knew what was behind them.

Sometimes, I pretended Dad wasn't really sick. I imagined that I'd walk through The Doors and he'd be smiling at me. 'Of course I'm not sick,' he'd say. 'Come and sit on my lap and talk to me.' And Mum would be there, laughing, and all of us would be happy.

Our entry into the ward never failed as a major event. The men there had few visitors. We were as important as the Red Cross lady who came around selling lollies and magazines.

'Well, look who's here,' they called.

'I think she's gotten taller, what d'ya reckon, Tom?'

'Fancy seeing you again, little girl.' I knew they weren't really surprised to see me; it was just a game they played.

After such an enthusiastic welcome, Mum would prompt me to talk. 'Say hello, darling,' she encouraged as she gave me a quick dig in the back. My silences were embarrassing to Mum. She usually told everyone I was shy. Actually, I was more scared than shy. I felt if I said anything at all, I'd just fall apart. There'd be me, in pieces on the floor. I was full of secret fears.

The men on the ward didn't give up easily. They continued their banter in the hope of winning me over.

'Come on sweetie, come over here and talk to me,' one old man coaxed as he held out a toffee. My feet were glued to the floor. I couldn't have moved even if I'd wanted to. This man reminded me of a ghost. His close-cropped hair stood straight up, like toothbrush nylon. His right leg was missing below the knee, and his loose skin reminded me of a plucked chicken. He tried to encourage me closer by leaning forward and holding out two toffees. I waited for him to fall out of bed; I was sure he would if he leant any further.

I kept telling myself he wasn't really a ghost, just an Old Soldier. Mum had confided that all these men were Old Soldiers. She lowered her voice when she told me. She had a fondness for them I didn't understand. I often wondered why Old Soldiers were so special. All of these men were missing arms or legs. Dad was the only one who was all there.

I tried not to look directly at any of them; I knew it was rude to stare. Once, I sat puzzling over a pair of wooden crutches for ages, trying to imagine what it would be like being lopsided. Could I get by with only one of my monkey legs or arms? That's what I called them. They weren't hairy, but they were long and skinny.

The Old Soldier rocked back on his pillow and I sneaked a quick glance at Dad. He was standing in his usual spot, by the side of his bed. He never came forward to greet us or called out, yet we belonged to him. His dressing-gown hung so loosely around his lanky body that he reminded me of the wire coat-hangers in our hall cupboard. Just a frame, that was Dad. The heart had gone out of him years ago.

Once Mum finished having a little talk and joke with the men, we moved over to Dad's bed and then out onto the hospital verandah.

The verandahs were the nicest place to sit; there were tables and chairs and you could look over the garden. Unfortunately, it took only a few minutes for the chairs to become uncomfortable. They were iron-framed, and tacked onto the seat and across the back were single jarrah slats painted all colours of the rainbow. When I was really bored, I entertained myself by mentally rearranging the colours so that they harmonised.

As Mum and Dad talked, I sniffed the air. It was a clear, blue spring day. I could smell the damp grass and feel the coolness of the breeze. It was such an optimistically beautiful day I felt like crying. Spring was always an emotional experience for me. It was for Nan, too. Only yesterday, she'd awakened me early to view her latest discovery. I had been in a deep sleep, but somehow her voice penetrated my dreams.

'Sally ... wake up ...' Even as I dreamt, I wondered where that voice was coming from. Faint, yet persistent, like the glow of a torch on a misty night. I didn't want to wake up. I burrowed deeper under the mound of coats and blankets piled on top of me. In my dream, they were heavy and lacking in warmth. I wrapped my hands around my feet in an attempt to warm them. Sometimes, I thought coldness and thinness went together, because I was both.

Every night I'd call out, 'Mum ... I'm cold.' And then, to speed her up, 'Mum ... I'm freezing!'

'Sally, you can't possibly be.' It was often her third trip to my bedside. She'd lift up the coat I'd pulled over my head and say, 'If I put any more on you, you'll suffocate. The others don't want all these coats on them.' I shared a bed with my brother Billy and my sister Jill. They never felt the cold.

I'd crane my head over the moulting fox-fur collar that trimmed one of the coats and retort, 'I'd rather suffocate than freeze!'

Nan had only to add, 'It's a terrible thing to be cold, Glad,' for Mum to acquiesce and pull out the older, heavier coats hanging in the hall cupboard.

Now, sitting on the hospital verandah, I smiled as I remembered the way Nan had rocked my sleepy body back and forth to wake me up. I finally came up for air and murmured dopily, 'What is it? It's so early, Nan, do ya have to wake me so early?'

'Ssh, you'll wake the others. Don't you remember, I said I'd wake you early so you could hear the bullfrog again, and the bird?'

The bullfrog and the bird: how could I have forgotten? For the whole week Dad had been in hospital, she'd talked of nothing else.

With sudden decision I leapt from my bed and shivered my body into an old red jumper. Then, barefoot, I followed Nan out onto the back verandah.

'Sit still on the steps,' she told me. 'And be very quiet.' I was used to such warnings. I knew you never heard anything special unless you were very quiet. I pulled my hands up inside my sleeves, wrapped my arms around my legs, and waited.

The early morning was Nan's favourite time, when she always made some new discovery in the garden. A fat bobtail goanna, snake tracks, crickets with unusual feelers, myriads of creatures who had, for their own unique reasons, chosen our particular yard to reside in.

I wanted spring to last forever, but it never did. Summer would come soon and the grass would yellow; even the carefully nurtured hospital grass wouldn't look as green. And the giant nasturtiums that crowded along our side fence and under our lemon tree would disappear. I wouldn't hunt for fairies anymore, and Nan wouldn't wake me so early or so often.

I'd heard the bullfrog yesterday; it was one of Nan's favourite creatures. She dug up a smaller, motley brown frog as well, and, after I inspected it, she buried it back safe in the earth. I shivered in the early morning breeze. I expected the bullfrog to be out again this morning. I gazed at the patch of dark earth where I'd last seen him. He'll come out any minute, I thought.

I felt excited. This morning, I was waiting for the birdcall. Nan called it her special bird. Nobody had heard it but her. This morning, I was going to hear it, too.

'Broak, Broak!' The noise startled me. I smiled. That was the old bullfrog telling us he was broke again. I looked up at the sky, a cool, hazy blue with the promise of coming warmth.

Still no bird. I squirmed impatiently. Nan poked her stick in the dirt and said, 'It'll be here soon.' She spoke with certainty.

Suddenly, the yard filled with a high trilling sound. My eyes searched the trees. I couldn't see that bird, but his call was there. The music stopped as abruptly as it had begun.

Nan smiled at me, 'Did you hear him? Did you hear the bird call?'

'I heard him, Nan,' I whispered in awe.

What a magical moment it had been. I sighed. I was with Dad now; there was no room for magic in hospitals. I peered at Mum and Dad. They both seemed nervous. I wondered how long I'd been daydreaming.

Mum reached over and patted Dad's arm. 'How are you feeling, dear?'

'How do ya think!' It was a stupid question; he never got any better.

Pelican shoulders, I thought, as I watched him hunch forward in his chair. The tops of his shoulders poked up just like a pelican's. His fingers began to curl around the arms of his chair. He had slim hands for a man. I remembered someone saying once, 'Your father's a clever lad.' Was that where I got my ability to draw? I'd never seen Dad draw or paint, but I'd seen a letter he'd written once, it was beautiful. I knew he'd have trouble writing anything now, his hands never stopped shaking. Sometimes I even had to light his cigarettes for him.

My gaze moved from his hands to his face. It dawned on me then that he'd lost more weight, and the realisation set my heart beating quickly. Dad caught my gaze; he was paler and the hollows under his cheek-bones were more defined. Only his hazel eyes were the same, confused, watching me.

'I'm making you something,' he said nervously. 'I'll go and get it.' He disappeared into the ward and returned a few minutes later with a small blue leather shoulder bag. There was maroon thonging all the way around, except for the last part of the strap, which wasn't quite finished. As he laid it quietly in my lap, Mum said brightly, 'Isn't Daddy clever to make that for you?'

I stared at the bag. I was trapped. I mumbled a reluctant 'yes'. I wanted to run and fling myself on the grass. I wanted to bury my face so Dad couldn't see. I wanted to shout, 'No! I don't think Daddy's clever. Anyone could have made this bag. He doesn't think it's clever, either!'

By the time I looked up, Mum and Dad were both looking into the distance.

'Can we go now, Mummy?' I started guiltily. Had I really said that? My eyes widened as I waited for their reaction. Then I noticed that they weren't even looking at me. I breathed a slow sigh of relief. The last time I had voiced that question out loud, Mum had been cross and embarrassed, Dad silent. He was silent now. Such sad, sad eyes.

The visitors' bell rang unexpectedly. I wanted to leap up. Instead, I forced myself to sit still. I knew Mum wouldn't like it if I appeared too eager. Finally, Mum rose, and while she gave Dad a cheery goodbye, I slowly prised myself from my chair. The backs of my legs must have looked like a crosswalk; I could feel the indentations the hard slats had made in my skin.

As we walked into the ward, the men called out: 'What? Leaving already?'

'You weren't here for long, little girl.'

The Old Solider with the Fantails smiled, and just as we passed through The Doors and into the empty corridor, a voice called, 'We'll be waiting for you next time, little girl.'

Strong, cool air blew through the window all the way home in the bus. I kept thinking, can a person be wrinkled inside? I had never heard adults talk about such a thing, but that's how I felt, as though my insides needed ironing. I pushed my face into the wind and felt it roar up my nostrils and down into my throat. With cold ruthlessness it sought out my inside wrinkles, and flung them onto the passing road. I closed my eyes, relaxed and breathed out. And then, in a flash, I saw Dad's face. Those sad, silent eyes. I hadn't fooled him. He'd known what I'd been thinking.

Dad came home for a while a couple of weeks after that, and then, in the following January, 1957, Mum turned up on the doorstep with another baby. Her fourth. I was really cross with her. She showed me the white bundle and said, 'Isn't that a wonderful birthday present, Sally, to have your own little brother born on the same day as you?' I was disgusted. Fancy getting that for your birthday. And I couldn't understand Dad's attitude at all. He actually seemed pleased David had arrived!

CHAPTER 2

SCHOOL


Mum chattered cheerfully as she led me down the bitumen path, through the main entrance to the grey weatherboard and asbestos buildings. One look and I was convinced that, like The Hospital, it was a place dedicated to taking the spirit out of life.

I was certain Mum would never leave me in such a dreadful place, so I sat patiently, waiting for her to take me home.

'Have you got your sandwich?' she asked nervously.

'Yeah.'

'And a clean hankie?'

I nodded.

Mum paused. Then, looking off into the distance, she said brightly, 'I'm sure you're going to love it here.'

Alarm bells. I knew that tone of voice; it was the one she always used whenever she spoke about Dad getting better.

'You're gunna leave me here, aren't ya?'

Mum smiled guiltily. 'You'll love it. Look at all the kids the same age as you. You'll make friends. All children have to go to school someday, that's the law. I couldn't keep you home even if I wanted to. Now don't be silly, Sally, I'll stay with you till the bell goes.'

'What bell?'

'Oh ... they ring a bell when it's time for you to line up to go into your class. And later on, they ring a bell when it's time for you to leave.'

'So I'm gunna spend all day listenin' for bells?'

'Sally,' Mum reasoned in an exasperated kind of way, 'don't be like that. You'll learn here, and they'll teach you how to add up. You love stories, don't you? They'll tell you stories.'

Just then, a tall, middle-aged lady, with hair the colour and shape of macaroni, emerged from the first classroom in the block.

'May I have your attention please?' she said loudly. Everyone immediately stopped talking. 'My name is Miss Glazberg. The bell will be going shortly,' she informed the mothers, 'and when that happens I want you to instruct your children to line up on the bitumen playground. And I would appreciate it if the mothers would all move off quickly and quietly after the children have lined up. That way, I will have plenty of time to settle them down and get to know them.'

I glared at Mum.

'I'll come with you to the line,' she whispered.

The bell rang suddenly, loudly, terrifyingly. I clutched Mum's arm.

Slowly, she led me to where the other children were beginning to gather. She removed my hands from her arm but I grabbed onto the skirt of her dress. Some of the other mothers began moving off as instructed, waving as they went. One little boy in front of me started to cry. Suddenly, I wanted to cry, too.

'Come now, we can't have this,' said Miss Glazberg as she freed Mum's dress from my clutches.

'I have to go now, dear,' Mum said desperately.

Miss Glazberg wrenched my fingers from around Mum's thigh. 'Say goodbye to your mother.' It was too late, Mum had turned and fled to the safety of the verandah.

'Mum!' I called as she mounted the last wooden step, 'Mum!'

She turned quickly and waved, falling badly on the top step as she did so. I had no sympathy for her wounded ankle, or for the tears in her eyes.

'Mum!' I screamed as she hobbled off. 'Come back!'

Despite the urgings of Miss Glazberg to follow the rest of the children inside, I stood firmly rooted to the bitumen playground, screaming and clutching for security my spotted, plastic toilet-bag and a Vegemite sandwich.

By the beginning of second term at school, I was the best reader in my class. Reading opened up new horizons for me, but it also created a hunger that school couldn't satisfy. Miss Glazberg could see no reason for me to have a new book when the rest of the children in my class were still struggling with the old one. Every day I endured the same old adventures of Nip and Fluff, and every day I found my eyes drawn to the back of the class where a small library was kept.

I pestered Mum so much about my reading that she finally dug up the courage to ask my teacher if I could have a new book. I felt quite proud; I knew she hated approaching my teacher about anything.

'I'm sorry, darling,' Mum told me that night, 'your teacher said you'll be getting a new book in Grade Two.'

There weren't many books at our house, but there were plenty of old newspapers, and I started trying to read those. One day, I found Dad's plumbing manuals in a box in the laundry, but the words were too difficult.

Towards the end of second term, Miss Glazberg told us there was going to be a night when all the parents came to school and looked at our work. Then, instead of our usual sheets of butcher's paper, she passed out clean, white rectangles, flat on one side and shiny on the other. I gazed in awe at my paper, it was crying out for a beautiful picture.

'Now children, I want you all to do a picture of your mother and your father. Only the very best ones will be chosen for display on Parents' Night.'


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Sally's Story by Sally Morgan, Barbara Ker Wilson. Copyright © 1990 Sally Morgan. Excerpted by permission of Fremantle Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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