<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V</h2>
<p class='c012'>Just as dinner was announced, the carriage
behind the grand three hundred guinea browns—perhaps
the best pair in Sydney—rolled up to the
door. Mrs. Grandison and Miss Josie fluttered
down the stairs a few minutes afterwards in the
full glory of evening costume. As host and
guest stood in the hall, the lady of the house
vouchsafed a slight explanation, mingled with
faint regret that the latter was not coming with
them.</p>
<p>“You know, Mr. Stamford, this is one of
that dear Ketten’s last recitals. We really
could not afford to miss it—especially as our
friends, the Cranberrys, will be there. Lady C.
sent a private message to Josie that she <em>must</em>
go. I wanted to stop, for we really are
miserable about that wicked boy Carlo; but
Josie said it couldn’t make any difference to
him, and why should we punish ourselves
because he chose to be selfish and extravagant.”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford could not wholly assent to
these philosophical propositions. He thought
<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>of what Laura’s pleasure in hearing the musical
magnate would have been on the same evening
that Hubert had been declared a defaulter as to
play debts, and was socially, if not legally, under
a cloud.</p>
<p>He simply bowed coldly. Then he saw the
pained maternal expression in Mrs. Grandison’s
face, in spite of her worldliness and frivolity,
and his heart smote him.</p>
<p>“My dear Mrs. Grandison,” he said, taking
her hand, “I feel for you most deeply.”</p>
<p>Then suddenly came a voice from the
carriage, in which Miss Josie had ensconced
herself. “Mamma, I shall catch cold if we wait
one moment longer. Hadn’t you better postpone
your interesting talk with Mr. Stamford?”</p>
<p>Mrs. Grandison started, and then recovering
herself, shook Mr. Stamford’s hand. “You
will talk it over with Robert, won’t you? You
are old friends, you know. Don’t let him be
too hard on poor Carlo. I’m sure he has a
good heart. Pray come and see us again before
you leave.”</p>
<p>The portly form of his hostess moved off at
a swifter rate than her appearance denoted. The
footman banged the carriage door, and the grand
equipage rattled out over the mathematically
accurate curves of the drive. The dinner gong
commenced to resound after a warlike and
sudden fashion, and caused Mr. Stamford to
betake himself hurriedly to the drawing-room.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>There he found Mr. Grandison standing by the
fire-place in a meditative position.</p>
<p>Mr. Grandison turned at his friend’s entrance.
“Seen Mrs. Grandison? Has she told you
about it? Well, they’re gone now, and we can
talk it over quietly. Come in to dinner. I’ve
no appetite, God knows! but I want something
to steady my nerves.”</p>
<p>The dinner, somewhat restricted for the
occasion, was extremely good, though his host
ate little, confining himself to a cutlet and some
wonderful brown sherry. Not until the dessert
was placed before them and they were alone did
he begin the subject which lay so near to his
heart.</p>
<p>“Of course I know, Stamford, that young
fellows like my boy can’t be expected to live in
a town like Sydney upon a screwy allowance—at
any rate not if they are to be seen in good
company. Therefore I’ve always said to Carlo,
‘Let me see you make your mark, and live like
a gentleman. That’s all I ask of you, and you
sha’n’t want for a hundred or two.’ I hadn’t
got it to spend when I was his age—you know
that, Harold; but if I like my youngster to be
a bit different in some things, that’s my own
affair, isn’t it, as long as I am willing to pay for
it? Well that’s all right, you say. Take some
of this claret, it won’t hurt you. It’s my own
importation from Bordeaux. Of course I didn’t
want the boy to slave in an office, nor yet to
live in the bush year after year with nothing but
<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>station hands to talk to. If Mrs. Grandison
had done what I wanted her to do, while the
children were young, and lived quietly at
Banyule, it might have been different. There
we could have had everything comfortable;
nearly as good as here. It would have been
better for me, and them too, I expect. But she
wouldn’t see it, and that’s why we’ve always
lived in town.”</p>
<p>“Still,” interposed Stamford, “though you
have been well enough off to afford to live
where you pleased, I can’t imagine why Carlo
should not keep the course and run straight,
even in Sydney, like other young men of his
age.”</p>
<p>Mr. Grandison sighed and filled his glass.
“Some do, and some don’t, that’s about the
size of it. I don’t know why the lad shouldn’t
have enjoyed himself in reason like young
Norman McAllister, Jack Staunton, Neil
O’Donnell, and others that we know. They’ve
always had lots of money, too; they’ve been
home to the Old Country and knocked about
by themselves, and I never heard that they’ve
got into rows or overrun the constable. How
my boy should have made such a fool of himself
with a father that’s always stuck well to him, I
can’t think. I’m afraid we’ve thought too
much of his swell friends’ names and families,
and not enough of their principles. I’ve told
my wife that before now.”</p>
<p>“But what has he done?” asked Stamford.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>“If it’s a matter of a few thousands, you can
settle that easily enough—particularly now
we’ve had rain,” continued he, introducing the
pleasantry as a slight relief to his friend’s self-reproachful
strain.</p>
<p>“Yes, of course, I can do that, thank God!
rain or no rain, though it made a matter of
thirty thousand profit to me on those back
Dillandra blocks—more than that. I shouldn’t
care if the money was all; but this is how it is.
I may as well bring it straight out. It seems
that Carlo and Captain Maelstrom (d—--n him!—I
never liked a bone in his body) and some
others were playing loo last week with a young
fellow whose father had just died and left him a
lot of money. The stakes ran up high—a deal
higher than the club committee would have
allowed if they’d known about it. Well, just
at first they had it all their own way. This
young chap was a long way to the bad—thousands,
they say. Then the luck turned,
and after that they never held a card. He
played a bold game, and the end of it was that
Carlo and the Captain were ten thousand out,
and of course neither of them able to pay up.
The Captain managed to get time, but Carlo,
like a fool, went straight off and said nothing
about it. He was afraid to come to me, it
seems, as we’d had a row last time; so he did
the very worst thing he could have done and
cleared out to Tasmania. We got a letter
yesterday. He’s over there now.” Here Mr.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>Grandison fairly groaned, and looked piteously
in his old friend’s face.</p>
<p>“Well, well! but after all,” said Mr.
Stamford, “of course it’s bad enough, gambling—high
stakes and folly generally; but if you
pay up, things will be much as they were, and
it will be a lesson to him.”</p>
<p>“I hope it may be, but the worst of it is,”
went on Mr. Grandison, “that the whole thing
came out, and there was a regular <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>exposé</em></span>. The
young fellow, Newlands, made a disturbance
when he wasn’t paid, swore he’d horsewhip
Carlo whenever he met him, and went on tremendously.
Then the committee of the club
took it up and talked of expelling Maelstrom
and him for playing for stakes above the proper
limit, and if the affair’s raked up it’s possible
they will. I paid up in full, of course, as soon
as I could get to know the amount. Newlands
apologised very properly and all that. But the
mischief’s done! Carlo can’t show his face in
Sydney for I don’t know how long. All our
hopes about his turning steady and settling
down are disappointed. It’s a round sum of
money to throw away for nothing, and worse
than nothing. And what to do with the boy I
don’t know.”</p>
<p>“It certainly <em>is</em> a hard case for his parents,”
said Mr. Stamford, thoughtfully. “I scarcely
know what to advise. A year or two on a
station, or a turn at exploring in the far north
used to be thought a remedy, or, at any rate, to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>hold out reasonable hope of amendment by
change of scene and fresh interests, but—--”</p>
<p>“But that wouldn’t suit Carlo. He hates
bush life—can’t live away from excitement—and
I’m afraid, if I sent him away against his
will, he’d take to drinking, or do something
worse still. I’m at my wits’ end. He seems to
have got it into his head that I’m to provide
for him under any circumstances, and the consequence
is he never thinks of doing anything
for himself.”</p>
<p>“How do you think travel would act upon
him? He has never seen the Old World, ‘the
kingdoms of the earth and the glory of them.’
Surely that would rouse sufficient enthusiasm to
counteract the meaner pleasures?”</p>
<p>“Carlo would never get further than Paris if
I trusted him alone. However, I shall have to
try it, I suppose. The long and the short of it
will be that we shall be obliged to move <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>en
famille</em></span>. I can’t send him by himself after what
has happened.”</p>
<p>“I really do think it is the best thing you
can do. You can afford it easily. Station
property is likely to look up for a few years
now. You have excellent managers, and it will
most likely benefit the other young people. I
don’t see any objection; indeed everything
seems in favour of it.”</p>
<p>“Of course we can do it,” said his friend,
doubtfully; “but I didn’t intend to leave for a
year or two yet—until we could have entered
<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Cecil at one of the universities, and, in fact,
made other arrangements. But Carlo is the
master of the situation at present—he must
be, as usual, considered before everything and
everybody. Well, I’m much obliged to you,
Stamford; indeed I feel most grateful; it has
been a great relief to my mind to be able to
talk the matter over with you quietly, and I
really believe this idea of yours of travel abroad
will suit everybody. Mrs. Grandison and Josie
will be wild with delight, I feel sure.”</p>
<p>“I hope you will all have reason to be satisfied
with the results of the step; and now, as it
is getting late, I will say good night.”</p>
<p>“Good night, and thank you very much, old
fellow! By the way, this rain has reached
your part of the world, I see; I suppose your
affairs are improving a bit now—look brighter,
eh!”</p>
<p>“I have been enabled to make satisfactory
arrangements lately,” said Stamford, shortly.
“I have placed my account with the Austral
Agency Company and we got on very well.”</p>
<p>“Ah, indeed. Rising man, that Barrington
Hope. I wish—but it’s no use wishing. Well,
good night again! Nothing like being independent
of the banks; that’s always the safest
line!”</p>
<p>“Safest indeed,” thought his guest as he
walked down the gravel drive, just in time to
miss the blazing lamps and chariot wheels of
Mrs. Grandison’s equipage, which bore herself
<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>and her daughter back from the hall where the
<span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>maestro</em></span> had been delighting the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>crême de la crême</em></span>
of fashionable musical Sydney. “Safest indeed;
but how is one to manage it with
droughty seasons, and markets practically closed?
I think Master Bob might have asked that
question before. But his own troubles have
been greater than mine, poor fellow—greater,
ah, a thousandfold. What bribe, indeed, would
tempt me to change places with him?
However, we must hope for the best, though I
am afraid Carlo will only substitute Baden Baden
for Bent Street. Miserable boy!”</p>
<hr class='c007' />
<p>The sacrifice at the altar of friendship being
duly performed, Mr. Stamford addressed himself
to the arrangements necessary for a speedy
return to the home which he had quitted under
such depressing conditions. How different were
the sensations with which he set about preparing
for departure from those which he had good
reason to fear would have overshadowed his
return journey! “The sad companion, ghastly
Care,” had retired, indefinitely banished, as far
as human foresight could discover.</p>
<p>All difficulties, all doubt as to ways and
means, had vanished. The kind hand of
Providence had been specially exerted for his
benefit. He hardly recognised in himself the
sanguine individual that had replaced his boding,
desponding entity, tortured by vain regrets and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>undefined dread; hopeless of succour alike from
God and man!</p>
<p>He went about his business with alacrity and
a cheerful enjoyment of life that even surprised
himself. He seemed to have renewed his
youth. Tastes and fancies which had long been
relegated to the realm of the impossible
reappeared like the wild-wood flowers of his
own land after the gracious rainfall of which he
had received tidings. He was now enabled to
indulge them in moderation with a clear
conscience.</p>
<p>And he savoured them with a relish akin to
that of the returned traveller after perils by
land and sea, of the desert-worn pilgrim who
sees again the green fields and rippling brooks
of the fatherland which he had despaired of
again beholding.</p>
<p>What a novel joy was it to him to awake at
midnight—at early dawn—to realise with
returning consciousness that safety, comfort,
honourable independence were to be the portion
of his loved ones henceforward and for ever!
What a relief to turn again to his pillow, and
sink into untroubled slumber with a heart filled
with gratitude—with peace unutterable!</p>
<p>One of his first expeditions in the shopping
line was to the chief book mart, an establishment
where he previously had been wont to
linger but for short intervals, regarding with a
melancholy interest the rows of new, enticing
works, into the pages of which he hardly dared
<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>to look. Now he boldly produced a list of
standard authors, magazines, works of travel,
science, autobiography, fiction, what not; commanded
that they should be packed in a suitable
case and forwarded to the railway station to his
address. How he relished the actual writing of
a cheque for the amount! How the thought
of being able to enjoy them with an untroubled
mind, in the peaceful evenings at Windāhgil,
caused his spirits to rise, his heart to expand!</p>
<p>Hubert’s modest commission was not forgotten,
nor the less-developed literary needs of
Maurice and Ned, while at a neighbouring
establishment he chose a collection of music,
vocal and instrumental, which would keep Laura
and Linda moderately well employed for a
twelvemonth. A new piano the girls must have,
but not yet, not all at once, whispered Prudence.
He must not show his hand too suddenly. All
in good time. And, as a young professional of the
period ran his fingers lightly over the notes of a
lovely Erard semi-grand, Mr. Stamford almost
waltzed out of the shop, to the seductive strains
of “Auf Wiedersehn.” His last and crowning
exploit was to procure, after, perhaps, rather
more personal exertion and loss of dignity than
were expended on the foregoing transactions, the
services of a well-recommended, capable female
domestic, whose scruples at going so far into the
bush he combated by a liberal rate of wages, and
a promise to pay her return fare if she remained
for twelve months in his service. After all this
<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>Mr. Stamford paid a farewell visit to Mr. Barrington
Hope, with whom he arranged for
shearing supplies, and, finally, at the close of an
exciting day, he found himself in the mail-train
in a state of high contentment, in charity with
all men, and honestly grateful to that Almighty
Ruler who had uplifted him from those dark
depths, at the remembrance of which he still
shuddered.</p>
<p>At a reasonably early hour on the following
day the unpretending architecture of Mooramah
emerged from the forest hills which encompass
that rising township, and there was Hubert sure
enough, with the well-worn buggy and the good
old horses, still high in bone, though, like himself,
much improved in spirits and demeanour.</p>
<p>“Why, governor!” quoth that young man,
after an affectionate greeting and the gradual
absorption into the recesses of the buggy of the
tolerably heavy miscellaneous luggage of his
parent, “you’re quite another man. Let me
look at you. Fashionable and distinguished-looking,
I declare! Thought you were a gentleman
from England. Mother and the girls won’t
know you. I suppose it’s the rain, and Mr.
Barrington—what’s his name, Hope or Faith,
isn’t it? He seems to have lots of the latter
requisite, doesn’t he? We ought to have made
his acquaintance years ago. And this is the new
servant, I suppose. Very glad to see you, Mary
Jane. Not Mary Jane? Isabella; well, that
sounds nicer—country looks grand, doesn’t it?
<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>Old Mooramah’s quite another place. But I
can’t take my eyes off you, governor! You
look ten years younger.”</p>
<p>“I feel so, my boy, I assure you. Things
have gone well, I needn’t tell you. I found
Mr. Hope a most satisfactory person to do business
with. And of course the rain has crowned
everything.”</p>
<p>“Satisfactory! I should think he was! Smartest
man we’ve ever worked with. I closed with
old Saville, and bought six thousand Riverina
ewes bred at Broongal. Sent a wire to him, had
his answer, and nailed them before dark. I believe
I could make a half-a-crown profit a head on the
whole lot. That’s something like business, if
you like.”</p>
<p>“And you’re sure you’ll have grass enough
for them and our own, too! It doesn’t do to
run risks, you know, Hubert!”</p>
<p>“Grass!” retorted the young man scornfully.
“Wait till you see the old place. Now that the
stock are all off the frontage, the prairie grass
and trefoil are coming up like a hayfield. Why,
we sha’n’t be able to <em>see</em> the sheep in it at shearing
time. Don’t the old horses go differently?
They’re picking up hand over hand, though of
course they’ve not had time to lay on flesh yet.
The sheep are quicker about it, and they look
wonderful. You’d hardly know the dry flocks.
We’re not far from the river, now; it’s just
crossable again. Wait till you come to the outer
gate. But it’s all alike. I feel almost too happy.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>If I hadn’t had a good lot of hardish work just
at first, I think I should have gone off my
head.”</p>
<p>Harold Stamford put his hand on the boy’s
shoulder, and looked with loving pride into his
clear eyes and bold, frank brow. “God in His
mercy be thanked for our prosperity, my son!”
he said. “May He keep us in health of body
and mind, and long preserve us to each other.
I feel, also, as if my cup was almost too full.
May He aid us to enjoy and use wisely the
benefits He has conferred on us!”</p>
<p>The young man turned and wrung his father’s
hand silently.</p>
<p>“Great Heaven!” thought Mr. Stamford to
himself, as he noted the clear bronzed cheek,
the manly, frank impression, the muscular frame
of his first-born, the whole figure instinct with
the splendid health and graceful vigour of early
manhood when developed to maturity amid the
wholesome influences of a country life. “What
a contrast does he present to Carlo Grandison!
Surely I am wise in shielding him from the disturbing
forces, the crowding temptations, with
which wealth besets mankind. I dislike every
aspect of deception, but surely the postponing
the dangerous knowledge, which would relieve
these children from all necessity for self-denial, is
a justifiable exercise of my discretion as the
head of the household. It will, it must, I feel
convinced, be for their ultimate advantage.”</p>
<p>By the time the train of reflection induced by
<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>this consideration had come to an end, the river
was forded—tolerably high indeed; so much so
as to cause the new domestic some natural misgivings,
but the strong, temperate horses
breasted the swirling current, and landed them
safely, under Hubert’s experienced guidance,
upon the pebbly beach of the farther shore.</p>
<p>“So far, so good,” said the charioteer; “we
couldn’t have done that yesterday, and it’s not
every pair of horses that would fancy all that
rushing and bubbling of the stream. Don’t
you remember Mr. Round nearly making a
mess of it last year at night in this very place,
with the governess and all the children too?
He had a pretty bad quarter of an hour after
he broke his pole. Now look at the grass,
that’s something like, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford had seen such things before in
his pastoral experience. Not for the first time
did he look upon the marvellous transformation
wrought in “dry country” by forty-eight hours’
rain. But he could not avoid an exclamation of
surprise when he gazed around him. Was this
the same place—the same country even, which
he had driven over so lately to catch the train,
with the self-same pair of horses too?</p>
<p>Then the river trickled in a thin rivulet from
one pond to another in the wide, half-dry bed
of the stream; then the dusty banks were lined
with dead sheep; the black-soiled alluvial flat
was innocent of grass in root or stalk or living
herbage as the trampled dust of a stockyard.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Now a thick, green carpet of various verdure
covered all the great meadow as far as eye could
see, and brought its bright green border to the
very verge of the sand and shingle of the river
shore.</p>
<p>The half-flood which had resulted from the
rainfall nearer the source had swept away the
carcases of the sheep and cattle and deposited
all saddening souvenirs of the drought amid
the reed beds of the lower Mooramah. All
was spring-like and splendidly luxuriant, though
as yet but in the later autumn season. It was a
new land, a new climate, a region recovered
from the waste.</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />