
An Extract
When Rosanna was strapped by the nuns for speaking in her native
tongue it confirmed Isabella's belief that her origins, her language
and, daily, her school-lunch conspired to shame her. It strengthened
her resolve to quietly divest herself of everything that marked
her as different.
Everywhere she looked she noticed details that didn't fit. She
and Rosanna were like a couple of walnut trees trying to blend into
an apple orchard. The feasts their mother prepared for lunch were
a smorgasbord of smells that invited snorts of disgust, whispered
remarks and explosions of laughter from the other girls. She longed
for flat white sandwiches containing nothing more offensive than
a beige slice of devon. She just didn't have the heart to tell her
mother.
Mrs Martino took the high ground on these matters; her standard
response was to her daughters’ humiliations was to quote an
old proverb 'L'ignoranza fa rima con l'intolleranza' -
ignorance rhymes with intolerance. Isabelle nodded her head in agreement
but wondered privately what to do with this piece of information.
She didn't want to become ignorant or intolerant but more pressing
was how to avoid the attentions of those who were.
Isabella severely angered her father only once. She was fourteen
years old and he discovered she was calling herself Isabelle Martin
at school.
'Do you really believe this little 'o' at the end of your name
is the villain?' he shouted, striking her with the full force of
his anger and frustration. For days he could barely meet her eye
for shame. She lay on her bed and thought about those 'little o's'
and how they turned up in ugly words like wog and wop and dago and
was determined not to take hers back.
The most cutting punishment for Isabelle, however, was to witness
her sisters relentless efforts to be accepted. It wasn’t that
she tried hard to fit in – it was that she was stubbornly
oblivious to the fact she didn’t. Rosanna continued to invite
girls home from school, who, despite their promises, very rarely
came. And Isabelle hated it when they did come, because they gathered
evidence that, sooner or later, would be used against the sisters.
‘Charlotte Furnell has only invited six girls and I’m
one of them,’ Rosanna announced proudly over dinner one night.
‘ Mr Furnell is going to collect us in his car – it’s
a Chevrolet.’
Charlotte was the most popular girl in school; everyone knew that
she owned a horse named Bunty and had once flown in a plane to Queensland.
‘I don’t think you should go, Rosa,’ said Isabelle
anxiously.
‘I am going and all the girls are getting new frocks, Mamma.
We’re going to have afternoon tea at Charlotte’s house
and then go to the pictures in Tindall and Mr Furnell has arranged
to have a special birthday message for Charlotte up on the screen
before the movie. She’ll be famous!’
Franco laughed. ‘Famous for turning 12?’
‘I can go, can’t I, Babbo? They’re very high-class
people.’
‘What’s so special? We are very high-class people,
child,’ said Adriana. ‘And we can’t make a new
dress every time you get a party invitation. You can wear the white
one you had for the school formal.’
Rosanna leapt up from the table. ‘I want a party dress, Mamma.
Please. Blue with little white polka dots and a wide belt.’
She spun around, her hands clasping her waist. ‘And a swirling
skirt. Just buy me the material – Bella will make it for me
– won’t you, Bella darling?’
‘Sit down, girl, you’ll ruin your digestion. Bella
can cut down my dress with the pink roses for you.’
Rosanna scowled.
‘Perhaps you shouldn’t go,’ repeated Isabelle
quietly.
Rosanna pretended not to hear.
The day of the party Rosanna was up at dawn to complete her chores
and boil up the copper for a bath so she could wash her hair and
be ready for Mr Furnell’s arrival.
‘Ah, roses for my Rosa. What clever and beautiful daughters
I have,’ said Franco when he saw Rosanna in her cut-down frock,
hair smoothed into a ponytail. ‘And what time is the famous
Charlotte arriving?’
‘She’ll be here at two, I’ll be the last one
to be collected.’ She showed him the embroidered silk purse
Isabelle had made from scraps of fabric as a present for Charlotte.
Isabelle sat on the front step with her as she waited. ‘You
could still change your mind,’ she whispered. ‘I could
meet them at the gate and tell you’re not well.’
‘Silly goose – stop worrying.’ Rosanna gave her
sister a kiss on the cheek.
At two thirty Rosanna announced, ‘They’re just running
late. I’ll go to the gate and wait there. You stay here.’
Isabelle watched her walk down the drive. She seemed smaller, as
though she had lost her adolescent bravado and slipped back into
childhood.
Isabelle continued to wait on the step, listening for the rumble
of an approaching car. At four Rosanna came back up the driveway,
chin held high. She was silent as she passed her sister. She went
to her bedroom, took off the dress, rolled it into a ball and put
it in the bottom of the chest of drawers they shared.
‘Mr Furnell’s car probably broke down,’ said
Rosanna when she returned, sitting down on the step in her old work
clothes. Isabelle nodded. She tried put a comforting arm around
Rosa’s shoulders but was blocked by a black look and a raised
elbow. Rosanna sprang up and ran – to the river or the fields
– as fast as she could.
On Monday morning, as soon as they got on the bus, Marcia Simmonds
slipped into the seat in front of them. She twisted around to look
at Rosanna. ‘What a shame you couldn’t come yesterday,
Rosanna,’ she smiled. ‘We were just turning into your
road when Mr Furnell said, ‘She’s not one of those Eyetalians,
is she?’ Of course Charlotte said you were and I hate to say
that he was quite horrified. He turned the car around. Charlotte
stuck up for you but he got really cross and said that everyone
knew the Italians were thieves and he wasn’t having their
kids spying in his house. So unfair.’ The sisters said nothing,
their faces impassive. Marcia flushed a little. ‘I thought
you should know, anyway.’
Rosanna lifted the lid of her school case and feigned absorption
in its contents. Isabelle looked out the window. Perhaps now Rosanna
would understand that in order to survive they needed to blend,
to become as bland as devon on thin white bread.
Synopsis | Q&A
| Extract | Reading
Groups
|