The story of Jessica Bergman is set in the countryside of Australia around 1910. She grows up helping her father, Joe and learning the life in the rural area, a very harsh one, encompassed by drought, lack of money and the constant danger of poisonous snakes. That is not the fate of Jessica's sister, though, Meg. She is her mother's preferred child and is spared to be a lady and marry a rich guy. She is also more beautiful and educated than Jessica. She learns the housework rather. For the need of money Joe and Jessica get a job at the richest family in the village during the shearing season. Jessica, who is better than a boy at the job, happens to work together with the 2 rich boys that Meg has always been after, Jack and Billy. They become good friends silently and Jessica wins their heart with her simplicity and friendship. Without realizing she is also stealing Jack's heart and will cause havoc at home ruining her sister's (and mother's) plan. It is to defend her from other boys that worked in the shearing shed that Billy challenges them to a fight. He is strong but is caught by surprise and an accident happens with Jack's horse stepping on his head. He will not die, but he will lose his mind for good and will be abused by his own sisters and mother, spoilt brats in the rich house. One day Billy, now called Billy Simple for his condition will take revenge and kill the mother and the 2 sisters. His escape leads him to Jessica's house. She learns from him what happened and helps him escape the lynch from a mob, delivering him to the magistrate in Narrandera. She almost dies in the attempt and is Jack ahead of the mob that takes care of her for a couple of days. Billy will be sentenced to death but Jessica wins both the admiration and the suspect of having more than a friendship with Billy, especially when she finds to be pregnant some months later. She is banished and gossip that she is mad spread by her sister and mom. Meg meanwhile tries to trap Jack by making love to him and forcing him to marry her, pretending to be pregnant. As Jack is leaving to the war in Europe he does marry Meg but promises his heart to Jessica. Meg tries to fake a miscarriage in front of the Church old organist unaware of a letter from Jack's uncle specifying the conditions of the wedding. They end up having to kill the witness as the plan does not work and Meg goes on with the fake pregnancy. Jessica meanwhile has been banished from the house and will deliver her baby alone. The same day, Joe dies and in the funeral, Jessica's baby is said to be Meg's and due to her aggressive reaction, she is sent to a mental institution.
Well, here the book takes a turn. Did the author not know how to continue and how to close up the drama? Jessica will meet some new people, a Jewish who will help her and also contact Billy's case lawyer to help her get part of the benefits that Meg stole through Jack's marriage. Jack died in the war. After 4 years in the mental institution, she is freed and goes back to the old home, happens to burn it down and moves to the hat by the creek where she delivered the baby. There what unfolds is a tale of help to the Aboriginal woman Mary Simpson who wants her kids back through some court cases. I found this development very odd. It seemed like the author did not have the inspiration to continue the original story, or...what? It is odd that the author sort of writes the first half of the book in a soap opera fashion, then abandons the style altogether and makes the book become a sort of court case story of Aboriginal (who, by the way, was not linked at all with the first half of the book), then closes it with a link to the romantic section: In the last page, Jessica simply dies by a snake bite and we got to know that her son was Jack's. The author spent so much time building Jessica's strong character and she never even went to her mother and sister to get a go at them. The second half of the book departs from the previous. When the fake miscarriage happens, the chapter ends with "because of this, xxxx will happen for the next 50 years to come"... but that isn't what the book will tell. It looks like two different books in one. I would not recommend it.