The Cairns Post

Life in the shadow of volcanoes

THE STORIES OF AN ISLAND COMMUNITY INSPIRED JACKIE FRENCH TO WRITE ABOUT THE COST OF IGNORING THREATS

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There is a pot of tea, a basket of scones, and Natalie is wearing one of Aunt Bertha’s petticoats as a dress, gloriously embroidere­d silk from 100 years ago. We sit in the garden while Natalie tells us the story of her grandmothe­r, who “walked the beaches” of her remote island, till she found an injured sailor washed up in the rocks – “a beachie” – and carried him home.

Sailors’ voyages lasted three years, or longer. One in four died per voyage … husbands were scarce. Women ruled that South Atlantic island, and on many islands where the men go off sailing. So when a woman found a “beachie” she cosseted him with delicious food and exotic love making, and her knitting secured him. Each household had its own patterns. Once a man wore a woman’s socks he was hers, even if he didn’t realise it. No other house would steal him.

Like Mair in my novel The Sea Captain’s Wife, Natalie’s grandmothe­r violated island custom and left with her beachie. Mair’s husband has a business to return to, unlike common sailors delighted to stay in their new comfort.

Back in Australia, Mair is expected to join the tradition of sea captain’s wives, living in the family mansion along with her new husband’s grandmothe­r, mother, and cousin, all waiting for their own sea captains to return, bringing gifts and joyous reunions. After three months the husbands leave again in their repaired ships. The women cry on their “widow’s walk”, watching the ships sail off, then go back to the rich lives they thoroughly enjoy, with no men to cosset or obey: concerts, theatre, embroideri­ng exquisite underwear while one reads novels to the others.

I wrote the first version of The Sea Captain’s Wife 50 years ago, studying Golding’s Lord of the Flies in Year 11. The wrecked boys became barbarians: humanity is instinctiv­ely violent.

I didn’t believe it. I wrote a trilogy in rebuttal. In book 1 young people survive a wreck on the Great Barrier Reef. In book 2, they decide to create their own utopia. In book 3 utopia has been reached – by constant supervisio­n by hidden cameras. The heroine rebels; poisons the hero’s dinner, but as he eats he explains what he will announce tomorrow: the cameras were faked. The islanders already understood that being kind and cooperativ­e brings happiness. He dies in her arms as she melodramat­ically sobs a confession. Well, I was only 14.

The Sea Captain’s Wife is not a story of a utopia – or rather, it is a utopia, because the inhabitant­s have learned that helping each other to live happily is the best way to survive. Their castaway ancestors created a paradise on the slopes of a soil-less, rocky volcanic island, living on what they could gather from the sea or what drifted onto its shores.

By the time Mair searches for her beachie, sailor sons and husbands have brought fruits and seed from all over the world; gardens and even forests have been created, families share their leftovers and every woman has a good stone house and sheltered courtyard built for her.

The island women are loving, compassion­ate and capable. They are also ruthless. If a ram is stroppy, it’s eaten. If a beachie hits a woman he vanishes over the cliff. The community also exists below a volcano, but just as humanity prefers not to look at the dangers ahead, the islanders refuse to notice that the volcano is becoming more active until

Michael, the beachie newcomer, points out what they’ve ignored.

Back in Australia, Mair has found another kind of “volcano” – one by one the heirs to their family ship-owning fortune are being killed. Someone, either family or friend, is a psychopath.

Right now each of us lives in the shadow of a volcano. Floods, fires, heatwaves and storms unthinkabl­e 50 years ago are changing our lives. If we keep ignoring the danger, we’ll perish, not just in bushfires but in wars for resources, where we fight instead of building solutions.

Solutions already exist for every major problem our world faces. We need the courage to accept tomorrow won’t always be like yesterday. We need to change our home designs, our ways of farming. We need our kids to learn that helping others creates community bonds, the kind needed when disaster strikes.

Kindness and co-operation are what make us truly human, just as I believed when I was 14.

■ The Sea Captain’s Wife by Jackie French is available now, published by HQ Fiction.

■ Keen to read it? Let us know at the Sunday Book Club group on Facebook.

■ And check out our Book of the Month, Abigail Dean’s Day One. Get it for 30% off the RRP at Booktopia with the code DAYONE. T&Cs: Ends 30-Apr-2024. Only on ISBN 9780008389­277. Not with any other offer.

 ?? ?? Jackie French’s new novel has been bubbling for decades. Picture: Martin Ollman
Jackie French’s new novel has been bubbling for decades. Picture: Martin Ollman
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