<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p class='c006'>Mr. Stamford was at once strongly prepossessed
in favour of the man before whom he
had come prepared to make a full statement of
his affairs, and to request—to all but implore—temporary
accommodation. Bah! how bald a
sound it had! How unpleasant the formula!
And yet Harold Stamford knew that the
security was sound, the interest and principal
nearly as certain to be paid in full as anything
can be in this uncertain world of ours. Still,
such was the condition of the money market
that he could not help feeling like a beggar.
His pride rebelled against the attitude which he
felt forced to take. Nevertheless, for the sake
of the sweet, careworn face at home, the tender
flowerets he loved so well, he braced himself for
the ordeal.</p>
<p>Mr. Barrington Hope’s appearance, not less
than his manner, was reassuring. A tall, commanding
figure of the true Anglo-Saxon type,
his was a countenance in which opposing
qualities seemed struggling for the mastery.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>In the glint of the grey eyes, in the sympathetic
smile, in the deep, soft voice there was a
wealth of generosity, while the firm mouth
and strongly set jaw betokened a sternness of
purpose which boded ill for the adversary in any
of the modern forms of the duello—personal or
otherwise.</p>
<p>“Mr. Stamford,” he said, “I have heard
your name mentioned by friends. What can I
do for you? But if it be not a waste of time
in your case—though you squatters are not so
hard-worked in town as we slaves of the desk—we
might as well lunch first, if you will give me
the pleasure of your company at the Excelsior.
What do you say?”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford, in his misery, had taken scant
heed of the hours. He was astonished to find
that the morning had fled. He felt minded to
decline, but in the kindly face of his possible
entertainer he saw the marks of continuous
mental exertion, mingled with the easily-recognised
imprints of anxious responsibility. A
feeling of sadness came over him, as he looked
again—of pity for the ceaseless toil to which it
seemed hard that a man in the flower of his
prime should be doomed—that unending mental
grind, of which he, in common with most men
who have lived away from cities, had so cordial
an abhorrence. “Poor fellow!” he said to himself,
“he is not more than ten years older than
Hubert, and yet what an eternity of thought
seems engraven in his face. I should be sorry to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>see them change places, poor as we are, and
may be.” He thought this in the moment
which he passed in fixing his eyes on the
countenance of Barrington Hope. What he
said, was: “I shall have much pleasure; I
really did not know it was so late. My time in
town, however, is scarcely so valuable as yours.
So we may as well devote half an hour to the
repairing of the tissue.”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford’s wanderings in Lower George
Street and the unfamiliar surroundings of the
metropolis had so far overcome the poignancy
of his woe as to provide him with a reasonable
appetite. The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>cuisine</em></span> of the Excelsior, and
the flavour of a bottle of extremely sound Dalwood
claret, did not appeal to his senses in vain.
The well-cooked, well-served repast concluded,
he felt like another man; and though distrusting
his present sensations as being artificially
rose-coloured, he yet regarded the
possibility of life more hopefully.</p>
<p>“It has done me good,” he said in his heart;
“and it can’t have done him any harm. I feel
better able to stand up to hard Fate and her
shrewd blows than before.”</p>
<p>They chatted pleasantly till the return to the
office, when Mr. Hope hung up his hat, and
apparently removed a portion of his amiability
of expression at the same time. He motioned
his visitor to a chair, produced a box of cigars,
which, with a grotesque mediæval matchbox, he
pushed towards him. Lighting one for himself,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>he leaned back in his chair and said “Now then
for business!”</p>
<p>The squatter offered a tabulated statement,
originally prepared for the bank, setting forth
the exact number of the livestock on Windāhgil,
their sexes and ages, the position and area of
the run, the number of acres bought, controlled
or secured; the amount of debt for which the
bank held mortgage, the probable value of the
whole property at current rates. Of all of
which particulars Mr. Hope took heed closely
and carefully. Mr. Stamford became suddenly
silent, and indeed broke down at one stage of
the affair, in which he was describing the value
of the improvements, and mentioning a comfortable
cottage, standing amid a well-grown
orchard on the bank of a river, with out-buildings
of a superior nature grouped around.</p>
<p>Then Mr. Hope interposed. “You propose
to me to take up your account, which you will
remove from the Bank of New Guinea. You
are aware that there is considerable risk.”</p>
<p>(“Hang it!” Mr. Stamford told himself;
“I have heard that surely before. I know what
you are going to say now. But why do you
all, you financiers, like to keep an unlucky devil
so on the tenter-hooks?”)</p>
<p>Mr. Hope went on quietly and rather
sonorously. “Yes! there has been a large
amount of forced realisation going on of late.
Banks are tightening fast. The rainfall of the
interior has been exceptionally bad. I think it
<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>probable that the Bank of New Guinea has none
too good an opinion of your account. But I
always back my own theory in finance. I have
great reason to believe, Mr. Stamford, that
heavy rain will fall within the next month or
two. I have watched the weather signs carefully
of late years. I am taking—during this
season, at any rate—a strong lead in wool and
stock, which I expect to rise. Everything is
extremely low at present—ruinously so, the
season disastrously dry. But from these very
dry seasons I foretell a change which must be
for the better. I have much pleasure in stating
that the Austral Agency Company will take up
your account, Mr. Stamford, and carry you on
for two years at the same rate of interest you
have been paying.”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford made a commencement of
thanking him, or at least of expressing his
entire satisfaction with the new arrangement;
but, curious to relate, he could not speak. The
mental strain had been too great. The
uncertain footing to which he had so long been
clinging between ruin and comparative safety
had rendered his brain dizzy.</p>
<p>He had been afraid to picture the next scene
of the tragedy, when the fatal fiat of the Bank
Autocrat should have gone forth,—the wrench
of parting from the dear old place they had all
loved so well. The unpretending, but still
commodious dwelling to which he had brought
his fond, true wife, while yet a young mother.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>The garden in which they had planted so many
a tree, so many a flower together. The
unchecked freedom of station life, with its
general tone of abundance and liberality. All
these surroundings and comforts were to be
exchanged—if things were not arranged—for
what? For a small house in town, for a lower—how
much lower!—standard of life and society,
perhaps even for poverty and privation, which
it would cut him to the heart to see shared by
those patient exiles from their pastoral Eden.</p>
<p>When Mr. Stamford had sufficiently recovered
himself he thanked Mr. Hope with somewhat
unaccustomed fervour, for he was an undemonstrative
man, reserved as to his deeper feelings.
But the manager of the Austral Agency
Company would not accept thanks. “It may
wear the appearance of a kindness, but it is
not so in reality,” he said. “Do not mistake
me. It is a hard thing to say, but if it seemed
such to me, it would be my duty not to do it.
It is the merest matter of calculation. I am
glad, of course, if it falls in with your
convenience.”</p>
<p>Here he looked kindly at his client—for such
he had become—as if he fain would have convinced
him of his stern utilitarian temperament.
But, as he had remarked before, Mr. Hope’s
eyes and his sentiments contradicted one another.</p>
<p>“You have saved my home, the valued outcome
of many a year’s hard work—it may be
my life also. That is all. And I’m not to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>thank you? Do not talk in so cold-blooded a
manner; I cannot bear it.”</p>
<p>“My dear sir,” said Mr. Hope, with calm,
half-pitying expression, “I am afraid you are
not a particularly good man of business. It is
as unfair to praise me now for ‘carrying you
on’ for another year or two, as it will be to
blame me for selling you up some fine day, if
I am compelled to do so.”</p>
<p>“Anyhow, it is a reprieve from execution.
When shall I call again?”</p>
<p>“To-morrow morning, before twelve, let us
say. I shall want you to sign a mortgage—a
necessary evil; and if you bring me an exact
amount of your indebtedness to the Bank of
New Guinea, I will give you a cheque for it.”</p>
<p>“A cheque for it!” How magnificent was
the sound. Mr. Stamford had drawn some
tolerably large cheques in his time, which had
been duly honoured, but of late years the
cheque-drawing method had fallen much into
abeyance.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, he felt like Aladdin, suddenly
gifted with the wonderful lamp. The sense of
security and the guarantee of funds, for even
their moderate and necessary expenses, appeared
to open to him vistas of wealth and power
verging on Oriental luxury.</p>
<p>He lost no time; indeed he just managed to
gain his bank before its enormous embossed
outer door was closed, when he marched into
the manager’s room with so radiant a countenance
<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>that the experienced centurion of finance
saw plainly what had happened.</p>
<p>“Don’t trouble yourself to speak,” he said.
“It’s all written on your forehead. We bankers
can decipher hieroglyphs invisible to other men.
‘Want my account made up—securities
ready to be delivered—release—cheque for
amount in full.’ Who is the reckless <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>entrepreneur</em></span>?”</p>
<p>“The Austral Agency Company,” he replied,
feeling rather cooled down by this very
accurate mind-reading; “but you seem to know
so much, you ought to know that too.”</p>
<p>“My dear fellow, I congratulate you!” Mr.
Merton said, getting up and shaking him warmly
by the hand. “I beg your pardon; but really,
any child could see that you had been
successful; and I began to think that it must
have been one of Barrington Hope’s long
shots. A very fine fellow, young but talented;
in finance operates boldly. I don’t say he’s
wrong, mind you, but rather bold. Everything
will be ready for you to-morrow morning. Look
in just before ten—by the private door.”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford did look in. How many times
had he walked to those same bank doors with an
aching heart, in which the dull throb of conscious
care was rarely stilled! Many times had he
quitted that building with a sense of temporary
relief; many times with a more acutely
heightened sense of misery, and a conviction
that Fate had done her worst. But never,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>perhaps, before had he passed those fateful portals
with so marked a sense of independence and
freedom as on the present occasion.</p>
<p>He had cast away the burden of care, at any
rate for two years—two whole years! It was
an eternity in his present state of overwrought
feeling. He felt like a man who in old days
had been bound on the rack—had counted the
dread contrivances for tearing muscles and
straining sinews—who had endured the first
preliminary wrench, and then, at a word, was
suddenly loosed.</p>
<p>Such was now his joyous relief from inward
agony, from the internal throbs which rend the
heart and strain to bursting the wondrous tissue
which connects soul and sense. The man who
had decreed all this was to him a king—nay, as
a god. And in his prayer that night, after he
had entreated humbly for the welfare of wife
and children in his absence, and for his own safe
return to their love and tenderness, Barrington
Hope came after those beloved names, included
in a petition for mercy at the hands of the All-wise.</p>
<p>It was not a long business that clearing of
scores with the Bank of New Guinea under
these exceptional circumstances. Such and such
was the debit balance, a sufficiently grave one in
a season when it had not rained, “to signify,”
for about three years, when stock was unsalable,
when money was unprecedentedly tight, but not,
perhaps amounting to more than one-third of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>the real value of the property. Here were the
mortgages. One secured upon the freehold, the
other upon stock and station, furniture and
effects.</p>
<p>“Yes!” admitted Mr. Stamford, looking
over it. “It is a comprehensive document; it
includes everything on the place—the house and
all that therein is, every hoof of stock, hacks
and harness horses, saddles and bridles—only
excepting the clothes on our backs. Good God!
if we had lost all! And who knows whether
we may not have to give them up yet.”</p>
<p>“My dear Stamford,” said the banker,
“you’re almost too sentimental to be a squatter,
though I grant you it requires a man of no
ordinary power of imagination to look forward
from your dusty pastures and dying sheep (as I
am informed) to a season of waving grass and
fat stock. Why only this morning, I see that
on Modlah, North Queensland, they have lost
eighty thousand sheep already!”</p>
<p>“That means they’ll have a flood in three
months,” answered Stamford, forcing a laugh.
“We <em>must</em> have rain. This awfully sultry
weather is sure to bring it on sooner or later.”</p>
<p>“Ah! but when?” said Mr. Merton, corrugating
his brow, as he mentally ran over the
list of heavily-weighted station accounts to
which this simple natural phenomenon would
make so stupendous a difference. “If you or
I could tell whether it would fall in torrents
this year or next, it would be like—--”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>“Like spotting the winner of the Melbourne
Cup before the odds began to shorten—eh,
Merton? Good Heavens! to think I feel in a
mood to jest with my banker. That dread
functionary! What is it Lever says—that
quarrelling with your wife is like boxing with
your doctor, who knows where to plant the
blow that would, maybe, be the death of you?
Such is your banker’s fatal strength.”</p>
<p>“I envy you your recovered spirits, my dear
fellow,” said the over-worked man of figures,
with a weary smile, glancing towards a pile of
papers on his table. “Perhaps things will turn
out well for you and all of us after all. You
are not the only one, believe me, whose fate has
been trembling in the balance. You don’t think
it’s too pleasant for us either, do you? Well,
I’ll send young Backwater down to Barrington
Hope with these documents. You can go with
him, and he will give a receipt for the cheque.
For the rest, my congratulations and best
wishes.” He pressed an electric knob, the door
opened, a clerk looked in. “Tell Mr. Overdue
I am at liberty now. Good bye, Stamford, and
God bless you!”</p>
<p>On the previous day Mr. Stamford had betaken
himself to his hotel immediately after
quitting Mr. Barrington Hope’s office, and
poured out his soul with fullest unreserve in a
long letter to his wife, in which he had informed
her of the great and glorious news, and with his
usual sanguine disposition to improve on each
<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>temporary ray of sunshine, had predicted wonders
in the future.</p>
<p>“What my present feelings are, even you, my
darling Linda—sharer that you have ever been
in every thought of my heart—can hardly realise.
I know that you will say that only the present
pressure is removed. The misfortune we have
all so long, so sadly dreaded, which involves the
loss of our dear old home, the poverty of our
children, and woe unutterable for ourselves, may
yet be slowly advancing on us. You hope I will
be prudent, and take nothing for granted until
it shall have been proved. I am not to relax
even the smallest endeavour to right ourselves,
or suffer myself to be led into any fresh expense,
no matter how bright, or rather (pastoral joke
of the period) how cloudy, the present outlook,
till rain comes—until rains comes; even then to
remember that there is lost ground to recover,
much headway to make up.</p>
<p>“My dearest, I am as sure that you have got
all these warning voices ready to put into your
letter as if you phonographed them, and I recognised
the low, sweet tones which have ever
been for me so instinct with love and wisdom.
But I feel that, on this present occasion—(I hear
you interpose, ‘My dearest Harold, how often
have you said so before!’)—there is no need for
any extraordinary prudence. I am confident that
the season will change, or that something advantageous
will happen long before this new advance
is likely to be called in. Mr. Hope assures me
<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>that no sudden demand will at any time be made,
that all reasonable time will be given; that if
the interest be but regularly paid, the Company
is in a position, from their control of English
capital, to give better terms than any colonial
institution of the same nature. I see you shake
your wise, distrustful head. My dearest, you
women, who are said to be gifted with so much
imagination in many ways, possess but little in
matters of business. I have often told you so.
This time I hope to convince you of the superior
forecast of our sex.</p>
<p>“And now give my love to our darlings. Tell
them I shall give practical expression to my fondness
for them for this once, only this once; really,
I must be a little extravagant. I shall probably
stay down here for another week or ten days.</p>
<p>“Now that I am in town I may just as well
enjoy myself a little, and get up a reserve fund
of health and strength for future emergencies.
I don’t complain, as you know, but I think I
shall be all the better for another week’s sea air.
I met my cousin, Bob Grandison, in the street
to-day. Kind as usual, though he studiously
avoided all allusion to business; wanted me to
stay at Chatsworth House for a few days. I
wouldn’t do that. I don’t care for Mrs.
Grandison sufficiently; but I am going to a
swell dinner there on Friday. And now, dearest,
yours ever and always, fondly, lovingly,
<span class='sc'>Harold Stamford</span>.”</p>
<p>Having sent off this characteristic epistle,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>Mr. Stamford felt as easy in his mind as if he
had provided his family with everything they
could possibly want for a year. He was partially
endowed with that Sheridanesque temperament
which dismissed renewed acceptances as
liabilities discharged, and viewed all debentures
as debts of the future which a kindly Providence
might be safely trusted to find means to pay.</p>
<p>Capable of extraordinary effort under pressure
or the excitement of emergency; personally
economical; temperate, and, above all, benevolent
of intention towards every living creature,
it must be admitted that Harold Stamford was
instinctively prone frankly to enjoy the present
and to take the future on trust.</p>
<p>Much of this joyous confidence had been
“knocked out of him”—as he familiarly
phrased it—by the austere course of events.
He had for five years worked harder than any
of his own servants. He had contented himself
with but the bare necessaries of food and clothing.
Nothing had been purchased that could
in any way be done without by that much-enduring,
conscientious household, the members
of which had made high resolve to do battle
with remorseless Nature and unmerited misfortune.</p>
<p>And well indeed had all fought, all endured,
during the long, dreary, dusty summers—the
cloudless, mocking, rainless winters of past
years. The family garrison had stood to their
guns; had not given back an inch. The men
<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>had toiled and ridden, watched and worked,
from earliest dawn to the still, starlit depths of
many a midnight. The tenderly-nurtured
mother and her fair, proud girls had cooked the
dinners, washed the clothes, faithfully performed
all, even the humblest, household work, with
weary hands and tired eyes, for weeks and
months together. Still, through all the uncongenial
drudgery, their hearts had been firm
with hope and the pride of fulfilled duty. And
now Harold Stamford told himself that the
enemy was in retreat, that the siege was about
to be raised.</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>
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