When Mary stepped off the ship into the heat of New South Wales, she realized the ocean wasn’t a barrier—it was a graveyard. She watched her children, born into a world of dust and lashings, and decided that "survival" was a polite word for slow death. Freedom, she realized, wasn't a place you found; it was something you had to steal back from the gods.

In 1788, Mary Bryant didn’t just leave England in chains; she left behind the very idea that she was a human being. To the British Empire, she was "Convict 43," a girl who stole a cloak to keep from starving, now sentenced to the edge of the known world.

While the series covers the historical facts of her escape from the Botany Bay penal colony, a "deep story" focuses on the internal weight of her journey—the thin line between a survivor and a ghost. The Story: The Salt and the Iron

The journey back to England was a slow funeral. In the belly of the ship, Mary watched the ocean take everything she had fought for. First, her husband. Then, her son, Emanuel. Finally, her daughter, Charlotte. By the time the ship docked in London, Mary was a woman made entirely of iron and grief.

The "Part..." in your title likely refers to the two-part Australian miniseries The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant (2005), which dramatizes one of the most harrowing true stories of the 18th century.

In 1791, Mary, her husband Will, their two tiny children, and seven other convicts stole a six-oared cutter. They didn’t just navigate; they defied the map. For 66 days and over 3,000 miles, they battled the Pacific. Mary became the heartbeat of the boat. While the men saw the waves as monsters, Mary saw them as the only things honest enough to kill them without a trial. She rowed until her hands were leather and her soul was salt.