The Bush Beckons
By Linda Watt
()
About this ebook
"I reckon if there's a heaven on earth, this is it. Lying under an open sky shimmering with stars, my dog and I drift into fearless sleep to the crescendo of cicadas . . . A family of cackling kookaburras and hordes of chirruping crickets call in the morning. The bush beckons us into endless rising dawns and settling dusks, out of earshot of any motor, and with only safe adventures waiting around every bend in the dirt track . . ."
When a fatal car accident uncovers her boyfriend's infidelity, Linda's seventeen-year-old heart shatters, seemingly beyond repair. Even her treasured horse brings no comfort. Aimlessly, she becomes entangled with a law-breaking boss and is soon staring down the barrel of criminal charges herself. The losses keep rolling in as she wakes from surgery to be told she may never conceive a child. When a Fraud Squad Detective offers some fatherly advice, it will take all the courage she can muster to run from an abusive relationship. Unbeknown to Linda, God is also pursuing her, but she is blind to His love and deaf to His knocking. The Bush Beckons is the true story of God's relentless, redeeming love-not just for Linda, but for anyone who struggles to find hope or to believe that God could love so broken a person.
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Reviews for The Bush Beckons
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Book preview
The Bush Beckons - Linda Watt
Linda gives us a vivid glimpse into her life and loves with startling clarity and honesty. I taught her at Bible College and admired her quest for truth and wholeness and her compassionate support for so many people. Her journey in life will inspire and encourage you in yours. God’s love and grace transformed Linda’s life as it can transform yours, and her story can fill you with hope and faith in your own journey through life. You’ll be blessed and inspired as you read and will probably pray the same honest, heartfelt prayers typical of Linda.
—Geoff Waugh
Founding editor of the Renewal Journal, author of The Life of Jesus and over twenty books on ministry and mission
You will find hope in this account of God’s love for a woman who is desperately searching for a Savior. You will be inspired as you read this miraculous story of God’s ability to pick up the pieces of a broken life and fully restore it for His honour and glory. Linda’s unique story shines a light on God’s redemptive work of grace and love.
—Kate Dreston
Christian author, podcast host,
and founder of Kate Dreston Ministries
This is a deeply personal and radical autobiography of a woman rescued, redeemed, and ultimately completely and irrevocably transformed by the grace of God. With captivating style, Linda shares her loves and lures, trials and triumphs, family and fears. Often confronting and raw in its imagery, this stark and honest account presents the reality that was hers and offers a way forward for readers amid their own struggles. Any who are passionate about embracing life’s challenges and opportunities need this book on their shelves. Anyone involved in caring professions will find this a useful resource. I highly recommend it!
—Reverend Dave Thomas
Uniting Church Minister
The Bush Beckons is a fascinating read that tracks the various ages and stages of Linda Watt’s incredible journey. Life has required much of Linda, leaving her to navigate times of scarcity, betrayal of trust and seasons of barrenness. She’s arrived on the other side of these challenges, not just surviving, but thriving. For anyone dealing with major transitions and needing to discover the hope to start over, this book is for you.
—Jonathon Schroder
Senior Pastor, Axis Church
If you are thirsty for hope, encouragement, or simply the reassurance that lives can turn around and hearts really can be healed, this is a book you won’t want to ignore. With good humour and characteristic steadiness, Linda walks her readers down the bush tracks of her life, navigating the bumps, dodging peril, avoiding the ruts, and ultimately making it to a destination where she finds peace and safety. A beautiful account of resilience in the face of hardships and the capacity of kind-hearted people to touch a life in significant, lasting ways, The Bush Beckons is a story that will delight, inspire and captivate even the most casual reader.
—Anya McKee
Head of Culture and Quality, Torn Curtain Publishing
For my miracles
Chapter One
Dad's remedy for my
broken heart was a one-way ticket to a country full of strangers.
I wore the skirt and short-sleeved top I’d sewn from light white cotton splattered liberally with sweet blue flowers. It was my first time on a plane, and I felt small as I walked past the other passengers towards the plane’s tail-end and stretched on tiptoes to reach the overhead bag storage.
Seventeen. Was that old enough? Old enough to die? I couldn’t muster enough pieces of my shattered heart to decide, or to hope that changing countries would make a scrap of difference.
* * *
It was post-war,
1952. Italy was slowly rebuilding, scarce on manpower, animals, tools, root-crops, and seeds. One day, a council man visited their small Abruzzi farm to inform my father’s family that ten men from the province of Chieti would be selected to emigrate to Australia. It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, and he suggested the youngest brother of two should apply.
At the age of twenty-four, leaving his home country had never crossed my father’s mind. But as he thought about it and reasoned with his father, he agreed that if he was accepted (which was unlikely), he would return home within two years. His father, wanting to guarantee the safety—and sure return—of his son, insisted on buying a comprehensive insurance policy. The insurance money would be kept in an Australian bank account, and the family could rest easy knowing funds were available to bring my father home if he got sick or injured overseas. It would also allow him to return in good time to fulfil the arrangement between his family and another—to marry their daughter.
The emigration process was rigorous, and any hint of association with the mafia resulted in instant disqualification. But in what he calls destiny, my father was one of the chosen ten emigrants, and farewelling his Italian famiglia, he set sail on the San Giorgio bound for the land ‘down under’. Perhaps ‘destiny’ would have docked his ship had he known he would never see his father or stepmother again.
For forty-four days the brave adventurers voyaged across the Indian Ocean. On board, Dad offered free, amateur haircuts which greatly offended the ship’s barber—a story he’ll happily recount if you have an hour or so to spare. Dad often says, to make the story short . . .
but it never is—so be prepared to settle in!
When the ship finally disembarked in Melbourne, a group of passengers, including Dad, were taken by train to the Bonegilla Migrant camp set up by the Australian Government to receive and train migrants and refugees. The first and most pressing challenge was to learn English. Speaking the language would help with the second challenge of securing a job.
The arranged marriage back home to a woman he hardly knew, morphed into a plan to wed by proxy with Dad’s brother standing in for him in Italy. But those plans quickly faded into the Australian landscape and melted away under the hot outback sun, when Dad met a beautiful, gentle Aussie woman in a small corner store. Fortunately, his betrothed in Italy was relieved as, in Dad’s absence, she too had fallen in love with someone else.
Six-and-a-half years after disembarking on its shores, Dad pledged his commitment to Australia. This meant renouncing his Italian citizenship.