The woman’s hair was tumbled — two red spots burned in her cheeks — her eyes shone — and we knew that they were kissing feet under the table. She had changed the blue pinafore for a white calico dressing-jacket and a black skirt — the kid was decorated to the extent of a blue sateen hair ribbon. In the stifling room with the flies buzzing against the ceiling and dropping on to the table — we got slowly drunk.

“Now listen to me,” shouted the woman, banging her fist on the table. “It’s six years since I was married, and four miscarriages. I says to ’im, I says, what do you think I’m doin’ up ’ere? If you was back at the Coast I’d ’ave you lynched for child murder. Over and over I tells ’im — you’ve broken my spirit and spoiled my looks, and wot for — that’s wot I’m driving at.” She clutched her head with her hands and stared round at us. Speaking rapidly, “Oh, some days — an’ months of them — I ’ear them two words knockin’ inside me all the time — ‘Wot for’, but sometimes I’ll be cooking the spuds an’ I lifts the lid off to give ’em a prong and I ’ears, quite sudden again, ‘Wot for’. Oh! I don’t mean only the spuds and the kid — I mean — I mean,” she hiccoughed — “you know what I mean, Mr Jo.”

“I know,” said Jo, scratching his head.

“Trouble with me is,” she leaned across the table, “he left me too much alone. When the coach stopped coming, sometimes he’d go away days, sometimes he’d go away weeks, and leave me ter look after the store. Back ’e’d come — pleased as Punch. ‘Oh, ’allo,’ ’e’d say. ‘’Ow are you gettin’ on? Come and give us a kiss.’ Sometimes I’d turn a bit nasty, and then ’e’d go off again, and if I took it all right ’e’d wait till ’e could twist me round ’is finger, then ’e’d say, ‘Well, so long, I’m off,’ and do you think I could keep ’im? — not me!”

“Mumma,” bleated the kid, “I made a picture of them on the ’ill, an’ you an’ me an’ the dog down below.”

“Shut your mouth!” said the woman.

A vivid flash of lightning played over the room — we heard the mutter of thunder.

“Good thing that’s broke loose,” said Jo. “I’ve ’ad it in me ’ead for three days.”

“Where’s your old man now?” asked Hin slowly.

The woman blubbered and dropped her head on to the table. “Hin, ’e’s gone shearin’ and left me alone again,” she wailed.

“’Ere, look out for the glasses,” said Jo. “Cheer-o, ’ave another drop. No good cryin’ over spilt ’usbands! You, Hin, you blasted cuckoo!”

“Mr Jo,” said the woman, drying her eyes on her jacket frill, “you’re a gent, an’ if I was a secret woman I’d place any confidence in your ’ands. I don’t mind if I do ’ave a glass on that.”

Every moment the lightning grew more vivid and the thunder sounded nearer. Hin and I were silent — the kid never moved from her bench. She poked her tongue out and blew on her paper as she drew.

“It’s the loneliness,” said the woman, addressing Jo — he made sheep’s eyes at her — “and bein’ shut up ’ere like a broody ’en.” He reached his hand across the table and held hers, and though the position looked most uncomfortable when they wanted to pass the water and whisky, their hands stuck together as though glued. I pushed back my chair and went over to the kid, who immediately sat flat down on her artistic achievements and made a face at me.

“You’re not to look,” said she.

“Oh, come on, don’t be nasty!” Hin came over to us, and we were just drunk enough to wheedle the kid into showing us. And those drawings of hers were extraordinary and repulsively vulgar. The creations of a lunatic with a lunatic’s cleverness. There was no doubt about it, the kid’s mind was diseased. While she showed them to us, she worked herself up into a mad excitement, laughing and trembling, and shooting out her arms.

“Mumma,” she yelled. “Now I’m going to draw them what you told me I never was to — now I am.”

The woman rushed from the table and beat the child’s head with the flat of her hand.

“I’ll smack you with yer clothes turned up if yer dare say that again,” she bawled.

Jo was too drunk to notice, but Hin caught her by the arm. The kid did not utter a cry. She drifted over to the window and began picking flies from the treacle paper.

We returned to the table — Hin and I sitting one side, the woman and Jo, touching shoulders, the other. We listened to the thunder, saying stupidly, “That was a near one,” “There it goes again,” and Jo, at a heavy hit, “Now we’re off,” “Steady on the brake,” until rain began to fall, sharp as cannon shot on the iron roof.

“You’d better doss here for the night,” said the woman.

“That’s right,” assented Jo, evidently in the know about this move.

“Bring up yer things from the tent. You two can doss in the store along with the kid — she’s used to sleep in there and won’t mind you.”

“Oh, Mumma, I never did,” interrupted the kid.

“Shut yer lies! An’ Mr Jo can ’ave this room.”

It sounded a ridiculous arrangement, but it was useless to attempt to cross them, they were too far gone. While the woman sketched the plan of action, Jo sat, abnormally solemn and red, his eyes bulging, and pulling at his moustache.

“Give us a lantern,” said Hin, “I’ll go down to the paddock.” We two went together.