<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p class='c012'>The eminent solicitor, than whom no man in
his profession held more family confidences, not
to say secrets in trust, here fixed a pair of keen
grey eyes, not unkindly in expression, but
marvellously direct and searching, upon his
visitor.</p>
<p>“You have had a communication with reference
to the subject of this letter,” said Mr.
Stamford, placing it before him.</p>
<p>“Ah! Wallingford, Richards and Stowe—first-class
men in the profession. Now you
mention it, I certainly have, and I congratulate
you heartily upon it. I have heard generally
about your affairs, Mr. Stamford; losses and
crosses, bad seasons, and so on. It has come at
the right time, hasn’t it?”</p>
<p>“It certainly has; but, curiously, I had
managed, with the aid of the grand change of
season, to do without it. Now I have at once an
explanation and an uncommon request to make.”</p>
<p>Mr. Worthington settled himself in his chair
and took a pinch of snuff. “My dear sir,”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>said he, “pray go on. I am in the habit of
hearing uncommon requests and curious explanations
every day of my life.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps I may surprise even you a little.
In the first place, does any one know of this
rather exceptional legacy which I have received,
or rather to which I am entitled?”</p>
<p>Mr. Worthington unlocked an escritoire,
opened a drawer labelled “Private,” and took
from it a letter in the same handwriting as the
one before them. “Here is Wallingford’s letter.
It has been seen by no eye but mine. It was
answered by me personally. No other living
soul is aware of it.”</p>
<p>“I have reasons, connected with my family
chiefly, for not desiring to permit my accession
to a fortune, for such it is, to be known by
them, or by the public generally, till, at any rate,
a certain number of years has passed. Can this
be done?”</p>
<p>“Most assuredly, I can receive the money,
which will then be at your disposal. No one
need be a jot the wiser.”</p>
<p>“That’s exactly what I want you to do for
me. To invest the amount securely, and to let
the interest accumulate for the present. At the
same time, I may, upon notice, be compelled to
draw upon it.”</p>
<p>“That can be easily done. The interest will
be lodged in the Occidental Bank—they have no
directors there, by the way—to be drawn out if
required, by cheque signed by you and me or
<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>my partner at my decease—must provide for
everything, you know. If you require the whole,
or any part, you have but to let me know, and
I can send you the firm’s written guarantee that
the money will be at your credit at the bank
referred to, on any given day.”</p>
<p>“I am not likely to require the principal, but
the interest I may draw upon from time to time.”</p>
<p>“The arrangement can be made precisely as
you desire. When you authorise us on that
behalf, the principal sum can be transmitted to
this colony without delay. You will be able to
secure seven or eight per cent. interest upon
mortgage here without risk; and, as I said
before, to draw, should you require, by giving
reasonable notice. The course you are about to
adopt is unusual; but I presume your reasons to
be adequate. It is not my business to be concerned
with them further than regards their legal
aspect.”</p>
<p>“You have made my course easy, my dear
sir, and relieved me of some anxiety. I wish
now to give instructions for the addition of a
codicil to my will, which is in your office. That
being done, our business will be over.”</p>
<p>This truly momentous interview was at length
concluded most satisfactorily, as Mr. Stamford
thought. He made his way back to his hotel
in a serious but not uncheerful state of mind,
reserving till the following day a last interview
with Mr. Barrington Hope.</p>
<p>On the morrow, when he betook himself to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>the offices of the Austral Agency Company, he
smiled as he thought with what different feelings
he had made his first entrance. How
agitated had been his mind with hope and fear!
Scarcely daring to believe that he would receive
other than the stereotyped answer to so many
such requests—“Would have been happy under
any other circumstances. Stock and stations
unsalable. The money market in so critical
a condition. The company have decided to
make no further advances for the present. At
another time, probably,” and so forth. He
knew the formula by heart.</p>
<p>How fortunate for him that it had been the
policy of this company, shaped by the alert and
enterprising financial instinct of Barrington
Hope, to entertain his proposal; to make the
sorely needed advance; to float the sinking
argosy; to risk loss and guarantee speculative
transactions for the sake of extending the business
of the company and gaining the confidence
of the great pastoral interest. The bold stroke,
carried out as to so many larger properties than
poor, hardly-pressed Windāhgil, had been successful.
The daring policy, now that the rain had
come, had turned out to be wisely prescient.
Capitalists began to talk of the man who, comparatively
young, had shown such nerve and
decision in the throes of a financial crisis—such
as had just passed, thank God! The oft-quoted
succour might have proceeded chiefly from a
superior quality of head.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>But Mr. Stamford told himself that to his
dying day he should always credit Barrington
Hope with those attributes of the heart which
were rarely granted to meaner men.</p>
<p>At the present interview there were of course
mutual congratulations.</p>
<p>“Had rain, I saw by the telegram, my dear
sir. Heartily glad for your sake—indeed, for
our own. Squatters fully appreciate the benefit
their class receives by such a glorious change in
the seasons. I wonder if they always remember
their hard-worked brethren, the managers of
banks and finance companies, upon whose weary
brains such a weight of responsibility presses.
Well, ‘to each his sufferings, all are men condemned
alike to groan,’ &c.; we must bear our
burdens as we best may. But this is very
frivolous. It must be the rain. Nearly six
inches! Enough to make any one talk nonsense.
What can I do for you at present?”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford shortly gave a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>résumé</em></span> of
Hubert’s letter, and mentioned the store sheep.</p>
<p>“Certainly, by all means; if, as I assume,
you will have grass to spare. Buy for cash and
save the discount. Would you like to telegraph?
Excuse me.” He summoned a clerk.
“Mr. Stamford wishes this telegram sent at
once.” He had written: “Buy store sheep at
once—for cash. Draw at sight.—<span class='sc'>Barrington
Hope.</span>—<span class='sc'>Hubert Stamford</span>, Esq., Mooramah.”</p>
<p>“Is that right? Mr. Bowker, you will see
that message sent through.” The door closed.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>“It is best not to lose time in these matters.
Don’t you think so? Prices are rising every
hour; sheep might be withdrawn.”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford was quite of the same opinion,
and was moreover delighted with the promptness
with which the transaction was concluded.</p>
<p>“Shall you want more sheep before shearing?
If so, don’t scruple to buy.”</p>
<p>“Well, we shall have more grass than we
know what to do with, Hubert says,” commenced
Mr. Stamford, rather aghast at this
magnificent manner of buying all before him;
“but I don’t know whether there is not a risk
of over-stocking.”</p>
<p>“None whatever, I should say; take
advantage of a good season when it comes,
that’s the modern stock policy. Some very
successful men, whose names I could tell you,
always practise it. You will consult your son
when you go home and let me know. But,
admitting that you bought up to your carrying
capacity, and sold all but your best sheep directly
after shearing, you might make all safe, as they
say at sea. Our Queensland constituents are
buying largely to stock up new country. As
your district has a good name for wool, you
would have no difficulty in quitting them at a
profit.”</p>
<p>“That makes a difference, certainly,” said
Mr. Stamford, to whose mind—long a <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>tabula
rasa</em></span> as regards speculation, having been too
deeply occupied in compassing mere existence
<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>(pecuniarily speaking)—gorgeous enterprises
and profits commenced to present themselves.
“I will talk it over with Hubert, and let you
know.”</p>
<p>“Certainly; wire rather than write, though;
in matters of importance time is generally most
precious. You are going; good bye! Most
happy that our business intercourse has
progressed so favourably.”</p>
<p>“You must permit me, my dear Mr. Hope,
to say that I feel most grateful,” said Mr.
Stamford, standing up and holding out his hand,
“deeply grateful personally, for your kindness
and courtesy, outside of any business relation
whatever. No, you must not stop me. I shall
feel it to my dying day, and I trust you will
come and see us at our home—the home you
saved for us, I shall always think—whenever
you visit our part of the country.”</p>
<p>The hand-clasp was sincere and hearty; the
interview terminated. The squatter went his
way musingly down narrow, not over-straight
George Street, on either side of which towering
freestone buildings seemed to be uprising daily;
while Barrington Hope addressed himself to a
pile of letters from which he hardly raised his
head until the closing of the office. As for
Mr. Stamford, his day’s work was done. He
mechanically thought over the store sheep
question, but his face suddenly changed as he
remembered in such matters he would be
absolved from all anxiety or doubt in future.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>What rest—rest—all blessed rest of mind and
body, would be his for all time to come!</p>
<p>Are there any disorders, sorrows, misfortunes,
here below which so surely, if gradually, eat
away the heart of man as those which spring
from pecuniary dearth or doubt?</p>
<p>How the days are dimmed! How the nights
are troubled! The glory of the sky, the
beauty of the flower, the breath of morn, the
solemn hush of midnight, Nature’s best gifts
and treasures, how unheeded all, if not despised
are they, when exhibited before the wretched
thrall of debt!</p>
<p>To the galley slave in old classic days what
were the purple waters of the Egean—the
haunting beauty of the temple-crowned promontory?
The choral dances, the flower-wreathed
fanes of the Greek Isles were but
mockeries to the haggard rowers of the trireme
as she swept by, all too close to land. The
grim jest of the old-world humorist was keenly
close—that even the demons of the nethermost
pit disdained to torture the luckless debtor, so
wasted and dried up was every attribute of body
and soul!</p>
<p>And was he indeed the same Harold Stamford
that paced this very street wearily and so
despondingly but one poor week agone? “And
without the timely aid of the Austral Agency
Company,” thought he, “I was even then so
near to safety, to triumph! I feel like the
man who clung so long to a marsh pile the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>long night through, in dread of drowning, and,
dropping from exhaustion, found himself in
four feet of water. And how wretched and
despairing was I, how little hope was there in
the world apparently! But for Linda and the
children, I could have found it in my heart to
make a quick end, in the harbour, of the misery
which was becoming unendurable. It shows
that a man should never despair. There are
always chances. Hundreds, as poor Hubert
said. But shall I ever forget Barrington Hope
and his kindness? No, or may God forget me
in my need. And what a grand fellow he
seems to be!”</p>
<p>Having satisfactorily finished his soliloquy,
Mr. Stamford bethought himself that he would
make a parting call upon his friends, the
Grandisons. He was going home in a day or
two now and should be tolerably busy, he knew
by experience, what with commissions and other
matters which he was but too apt to put off till
the last moment.</p>
<p>The ladies were engaged. Mr. Grandison
was, however, at home, and, as it turned out,
not in that cheerful frame of mind which
befitted so rich a man. He had the world’s
goods in profusion, but as Stamford marked his
anxious brow and perturbed countenance, he
saw that something had gone wrong.</p>
<p>“Oh, it’s you, is it?” Mr. Grandison said.
“I was afraid it was a young fellow just out
from home—got letters to us—the Honourable
<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>Mr. Devereux; he’s not a bad chap, but I
don’t feel up to talking to a youngster I never
saw before and won’t see again after next week.
Come into my den and have a yarn, Harold.
I want to talk to you. And, I say, stop and
have a quiet <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tête-à-tête</em></span> dinner. They’re going
out—Josie and her mother—to one of Ketten’s
recitals, as they call it. I’m in no humour for
musical humbug, I can tell you. I’m worried
to death about that eldest boy of mine, Carlo.
Stay, like a good fellow, and you can advise
me. I’m fairly puzzled.”</p>
<p>This was a matter of charity, and old friendship
besides. Stamford’s heart was touched at
the spectacle of his old comrade troubled and in
distress. He forgot the obtrusive magnificence,
and thought of the long past days when they
rode together beneath burning sky or winter
storm, before one had found the road to
fortune and the other had taken the bye-path
which had only ended in happiness. “All
right, Bob,” he answered. “You shall have all
the help I can offer. I’m sorry you’ve cause to
be uneasy about the boy. We must hope for
the best though. Youthful imprudence is not
so uncommon.”</p>
<p>“It’s worse than that,” said Mr. Grandison,
gloomily—with a portentous shake of his head.</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>
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