<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p class='c012'>Linda began to look out of the window at
least two miles from the Mooramah railway
station. A few seconds before the train stopped,
she discovered Hubert on the platform.</p>
<p>Waving his hand to her, he was at the window
in a moment, receiving, indeed, personal tokens
of welcome long before the guard could open
the door and collect the tickets.</p>
<p>“Oh! I <em>am</em> so glad to see you again,
dearest, dearest Hubert,” exclaimed Linda.
“You have no idea how nice and large
Mooramah looks. I am sure I shall never
stir away from dear old Windāhgil for a year.
I don’t feel proud at all, do you, Laura? I
am sure we are both immensely improved,
though. Don’t you think so, Hubert?”</p>
<p>“You must wait till you are at home again,
and I can turn you round and examine you
both carefully,” said Hubert; “there are too
many people here at present. I think mother
looks splendid, and the governor gets younger
<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>every time he sees Sydney. I shall have to go
soon, or our ages will be reversed.”</p>
<p>“Poor, dear old Hubert!” said Laura, looking
at her brother’s sun-burnt face, and spare,
muscular figure; “I’m sure you’ve been working
yourself to death while we were away, with
nobody to stop you. Never mind, we’ll soon
make a difference—if we don’t talk you to
death the first week.”</p>
<p>“I can hear all you’ve got to say,” said Hubert;
“but just now let us get the luggage counted
and ready for Jerry to put in the spring cart;
then we’ll rattle home in the buggy. Don’t
the old horses look well?”</p>
<p>“Splendid!” said Linda. “They have
beautiful coats too, which I did not expect.
They’re not quite so aristocratic in demeanour
as Mr. Grandison’s carriage horses, but they can
trot about double as fast, I daresay.”</p>
<p>“They look very different to what they did
this time last year,” said Hubert, running his
eye over the middle-sized, well-bred, wiry pair.
“Do you remember poor old Whalebone tumbling
down—Whipcord was nearly as bad—as
we were driving to church, from sheer weakness?”</p>
<p>“Oh! yes,” said Linda; “we had to tie up
the pole of the buggy with our pocket-handkerchiefs;
poor old dear! He looks as if he could
pull one’s arms off now.”</p>
<p>Once fairly off behind the fourteen-mile-an-hour
buggy horses, spinning along the smooth
<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>bush road—the best wheel track in the world in
good weather and in a dry country, that is, its
normal state—the spirits of the party rose
several degrees. Mr. Stamford and his wife
were calmly happy at the idea of returning to
their quiet home life, having had enough of the
excitement of city and suburb for a while. The
girls were continually exclaiming, as each new
turn of the road brought them within sight of
well-remembered spots and familiar points of
the landscape, while Hubert, much too happy
to talk, kept looking at his relatives, one by
one, with an air of intense, overflowing affection.</p>
<p>“It’s worth all the loneliness to have you
back again,” he said, patting his mother’s cheek;
“but it was horribly dismal for a time. I felt
as if I could have left the run in charge of the
boundary-riders, only for shame, and run down
to Sydney myself. Fortunately, Laura wrote so
regularly that I seemed to know what you were
doing and saving, as well as almost everything
you thought.”</p>
<p>“I wrote too, I’m sure,” said Linda, with an
injured air.</p>
<p>“Well, you were more spasmodic. Though
I was very glad to get your letters too. I
acquired a deal of information about the
‘Queen’s Navee,’ in which department I was
weak. However, I suppose it’s as well to know
everything.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure you are most ungrateful,” pouted
<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>Linda, “If you only knew how hard it is to
write!”</p>
<p>“Oh, ho! quoting from Lord Sandwich’s
lines:—</p>
<div class='lg-container-b c021'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>‘To all you ladies now on land</div>
<div class='line in2'>We men at sea indite,</div>
<div class='line'>But first I’d have you understand</div>
<div class='line in2'>How hard it is to write.’”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>“You are too clever altogether, Hubert,”
said Linda, with rather a conscious laugh.
“You must have been taking lessons in mind-reading,
or some such stuff, in our absence.
But oh! there are some of the Windāhgil
sheep. How well they look! I’d almost forgotten
there were such dear creatures in the
world.”</p>
<p>“If it were not for them and their fleeces
there would not be any trips to Sydney, or
bachelors’ balls, or picnics,” said Mr. Stamford;
“so keep up a proper respect for the merino
interest, and all belonging to it.”</p>
<p>“They never looked better than they do
now,” said Hubert; “the season has been a
trifle dry since you left, but I think they are
all the better for it. And did not the wool
bring a capital price?” he continued. “I see
you sold it all in Sydney—two and a penny,
and two and threepence for the hogget bales.
The wash-pen was paid for over and over again.
However, I have a plan in my head for getting
it up better still next year.”</p>
<p>“That’s right, my boy,” said his father;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>“stick well to your business and it will stick to
you—a homely proverb, but full of wisdom.
How does the garden look?”</p>
<p>“Not so bad. I had it made pretty decent
for mother to look at. I kept all the new
plants watered—they’ve grown splendidly, and
I managed, with a little help, to get up a
‘bush house’ in case mother brought up any
new ferns, or <em>Coleus</em> novelties.”</p>
<p>“The very thing I am wishing for, my dear
boy,” said his mother. “I was just wondering
how I could manage; I did get a few pot plants
and ferns.”</p>
<p>“A few!” said Mr. Stamford, making believe
to frown. “You showed a correct estimate
of your mother’s probable weakness, however,
Hubert. I don’t know that you could have
spent your leisure time more profitably.”</p>
<p>“Home, sweet home!” sang Linda, as they
drove up to the well-known white gate. “How
lovely the garden looks, and everything about
the dear old place is flourishing; even the
turkeys have grown up since we left. I feel
as if I could go round and kiss everything—the
very posts of the verandah. That is the
advantage of going away. I really think it
is one’s duty to do so; it makes you value your
home so when you come back.”</p>
<p>“I shall have no curiosity about the great
world for a year at least,” said Laura. “It
will take us nearly that time to read all the new
books; and to properly enjoy the garden, I am
<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>going to have a fernery of my own. I bought
the <cite>Fern World</cite> out of my own money, and
somebody—I forget who it was—promised to
send me some rare New Zealand and South
Sea Island ferns. After all, the pleasures of
country life are the best, I really do believe;
they are so calm and peaceful and yet satisfying.”</p>
<p>That first meal, lunch or dinner, as it might
happen to be, in the old familiar room, was an
unmixed delight to all. The two servants,
having just returned, had exerted themselves
to prepare a somewhat <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>recherché</em></span> repast for the
family, to whom they were attached, and whose
return they hailed with honest expressions
of welcome. The cookery and arrangements
generally met with special commendation, while
in the intervals of talking, laughing, and sudden
exclamations of delight, Linda repeated her conviction
that she had never enjoyed eating and
drinking so much since she left Windāhgil.</p>
<p>Immediately after this necessary performance,
Hubert and Mr. Stamford betook themselves
to one of the outlying portions of the run,
where the son was anxious for his father to
behold the success of a new dam lately constructed.
This piece of engineering had “thrown
back” the water of a creek nearly two miles,
thus affording permanent sustenance for a large
flock of sheep.</p>
<p>“These weaners were formerly obliged to
come in to the frontage, you remember governor,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>where they were always mixing with the other
sheep. The water dried up regularly about
this time. Now they can stay here till next
shearing, and I think the country suits them
better, too.”</p>
<p>“They are looking uncommonly well,” said
Mr. Stamford, running his eye over a flock of
fine, well-grown young sheep, which were just
moving out to grass after their noonday rest.
“They ought to cut a first-rate fleece this
year.”</p>
<p>“Yes; and the wool is so clean,” said
Hubert. “There is nothing like having your
sheep within fences; no running about with
dogs and shepherds; they don’t get half the
dust and sand into their fleeces. But I’m afraid
this is about the last improvement Windāhgil
wants doing to it. It’s getting too settled and
finished. How I should like to tackle a big,
wild, half-stocked run in new country, with
no fencing done, and all the water to make!”</p>
<p>“You must bide your time, my boy,” said
Mr. Stamford, with a serious face. “It will
come some day—in another year or two, perhaps.
You mustn’t be in too great a hurry
to leave us all. Windāhgil is not such a bad
place.”</p>
<p>“On the contrary, it’s getting too good
altogether. There’s only half enough work,
and next to no management required. Why,
you could do all the work yourself, governor,
with a steady working overseer!”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>“Thank you, my boy, for the compliment,”
said Mr. Stamford, taking off his hat.</p>
<p>“Oh, you know what I mean, father! so
don’t pretend you don’t. I’m not growing
cheeky because things have gone well lately;
but really there’s only enough managing to
keep you in exercise. It will half break my
heart to go away, but what’s the use of settling
down on a small comfortable place like this?
And how can I feel that I’m doing the best
for the family, when I hear of fellows like
Persse, and Grantley, and Philipson taking up
that new country beyond the Barcoo by the
thousand square miles; splendid downs covered
with blue grass and Mitchell grass? Grand
water, too, when you come upon it. Think
what all that country will be worth in a few
years.”</p>
<p>“I understand you, my boy,” said the proud
father, while a sudden emotion stirred his heart,
as he remembered the days of his own youth,
when he too had nourished the same high
thoughts of adventure and discovery, and had
played his part amid the dangers and privations
of frontier life. “You can talk it over with
Mr. Hope. We’ll see what can be done.”</p>
<p>“I suppose,” said Hubert, after a while,
“when you’ve been up a week or ten days,
and I’ve talked over everything with mother
and the girls, from the regatta to the last new
waltz step, I may as well take my holiday. I
haven’t had one for three years. I begin to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>forget what the sea looks like, and I think
a month in the ‘big smoke’ and a few new
ideas will do me no harm.”</p>
<p>“Have your holiday, by all means, and enjoy
it too, my boy. Thank God, it is not a
question of money now. I have the fullest
belief in the sanitary value, mentally, of a trip
to the metropolis now and then.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, father. I’m sure it will
brush me up a little; besides, I want to go
to the Lands Office for certain reasons. I want,
above all, to have a good talk with this Mr.
Barrington Hope that I’ve heard so much
about.”</p>
<p>“You’ll find him an uncommon sort of
person. The more you see of him, the more
you’ll like him, I feel certain. He is just the
man I should like you to make a friend of.
Try and get him to return with you, if he can
spare the time.”</p>
<p>After the tea-things were cleared away, and
the large, steadfast, satisfactory table was left
free for reading, writing, or needlework—for
all of which purposes it was equally well
adapted—what a season of rational enjoyment
set in! The book box had been opened before.
The beautiful new uncut volumes, the titles of
which were received with exclamations of joy,
were placed upon a table. The collection of
new music was inspected, Linda going there and
then to the piano and dashing off a waltz;
making, besides, a running commentary upon
<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>half-a-dozen songs which she and Laura were
going to learn directly there was a minute to
spare. Mr. Stamford took his accustomed chair,
and devoted himself to the <cite>Sydney Morning
Herald</cite>. Mrs. Stamford resumed the needlework
which is apparently a species of Penelope’s
web for all mothers of families, while Hubert
and Laura, somewhat apart from the rest, kneeling
on their chairs as if they had been children
again, made a cursory examination of the new
books, exclaiming from time to time at passages
or illustrations.</p>
<p>“I feel inclined not to go to Sydney till after
I’ve read most of these books,” said Hubert;
“only that would make it so late. But it seems
a pity to leave such a lot of splendid reading.
Certainly there’s the Public Library in Sydney,
but I hardly ever go in there, because I find it
so hard to get out again. I did stay there once
till the lamps were lit. I had gone in for a few
minutes after breakfast.”</p>
<p>“What a queer idea!” said Laura, laughing
outright. “How strange it must have felt to
have lost a whole day in Sydney. Never mind,
Hubert! There are a good many young men
to whom it would not occur to spend a whole
day in a library, public or private. Everything
in moderation, though. You must have another
station at your back before you can read all day
long.”</p>
<p>“Please God, we’ll have that too,” replied
he with a cheery smile, “or else the new country
<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>will be taken up very fast. I don’t think Windāhgil
will see me after next shearing; that is
if the governor doesn’t forbid it.”</p>
<p>“You don’t care about breaking our hearts,
you naughty boy!” said his sister, pressing her
cheek against his, as they looked over the same
book. “What are we all to do when you are
gone! You don’t think how lonely and miserable
the place will be.”</p>
<p>“Are you going to stay here all your life,
Laura? If you will, I will. But don’t think
I shall not feel the parting bitterly; I quite
tremble to think of it. How miserable I was
when you were in Sydney! But what is a man
to do? A few years of self-denial and hard life
now will make things easy for the rest of our
days. I am the working head of the family
now. Father is not the man he used to be.
And if I take life too easily for the next few
years, all these great opportunities will be gone,
and we shall regret it all the rest of our lives.”</p>
<p>“But the risk!” sighed Laura; “the wild
country, blacks, thirst, fever and ague. Every
paper brings news of some poor fellow losing
his life out there. What should we do if
you were taken? Remember how many lives
you carry about with you.”</p>
<p>“You set a great value on Hubert Stamford,”
he said jokingly, while something in his eyes
showed a deeper feeling. “Other people
wouldn’t think any great loss had taken place
if I dropped. But men still go to sea, though
<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>wrecks occur. Think how nice it will be when
I return bronzed, and illustrious, a gallant explorer
with a whole country-side taken up for
‘Stamford and Son,’ with runs to keep and to
sell, and to give away if we like.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid you won’t be stopped; you are
an obstinate boy, though no one would think it.
I think I shall take possession of the piano and
sing you that lovely ‘Volkslied,’ though I’m
afraid my voice is weak after the night journey.”</p>
<p>Laura had taken a few lessons in Sydney, very
wisely. Her naturally sweet, pure voice and
correct intonation were therefore much aided by
her later instruction.</p>
<p>“You <em>have</em> improved,” said her brother. “I
never expected you to turn out such a <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>prima
donna</em></span>, though there is a tone in your voice that
always makes me wish to cry, as if that would be
the height of enjoyment. You brought up a
duet for me, didn’t you? Well, we won’t try it
to-night. You’re rather tired, I can see. We’ll
attack it some morning after breakfast, when
we’re fresh.”</p>
<p>From this day forward, life flowed on with
uninterrupted felicity for the Windāhgil household.
It was nearly a week before the excitement
passed away of enjoying all the treasures
and novelties brought from the metropolis.
The weather even became favourable to the new
development of the garden, in which Mr.
Stamford and his wife were principally interested.
Genial showers refreshed the soil—always
<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>inclined to be thirsty in that region—so
that Mrs. Stamford’s ferns and flowers, and
plants with parti-coloured leaves, as well as her
husband’s new varieties of vegetables, shrubs,
and fruit trees, all partook of the beneficence of
the season.</p>
<p>As for Hubert and his sisters, they rode and
drove about by day whenever the weather was
favourable; indeed sometimes when it was not.
They read steadily at the new books by night,
and by that means, and a few visits to old
friends in the neighbourhood, filled up every
spare moment in a mode of life each day of
which was consciously and unaffectedly happy.</p>
<p>In addition to these quasi-pastoral occupations,
one day brought the exciting news that a new
proprietor—indeed a new family—was about to
arrive in the district—now the owner of a
sheep station distant from Windāhgil about
twenty miles had for some months, indeed since
the change of season, cherished hopes of selling
out to advantage.</p>
<p>An astute, unscrupulous speculator, he had
purchased sheep largely, at low prices, directly
the weather broke, had crowded on to Wantabalree
all the stock it could hold—and more,
had sent the rest of his cheap purchase “on the
road.” This means, in Australia, travelling for
grass to a distant undefined point in a neighbouring
colony whence at any time they could be
ordered back; subsisting at free quarters, on
other men’s pastures till shearing.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>He then offered Wantabalree for sale, at the
high market price of the day, describing it as a
magnificent pastoral property with a stock of
sheep of the highest quality and breeding;
puffed up the grass, the improvements, the
homestead, the water supply, directly and indirectly,
and having done all this, awaited quietly
the usual victim provided with cash and deficient
in experience.</p>
<p>In Australia, as in other countries probably, it
is a fact patent to observers of human nature
that the weak points of any particular locality
are rarely obtruded upon the incoming proprietor
or tenant. He is, in a general way,
prone to spend money on a liberal scale for the
first two or three years.</p>
<p>The interests of other proprietors are, in a
way, identical. Assuming that the newly-arrived
purchaser has made an indifferent bargain—that
is, has misunderstood wholly the value
of his investment, or bought in total ignorance
of the peculiar drawbacks of the district, it
is rarely that any one volunteers to enlighten
him.</p>
<p>Such information, if unfavourable, might
tend to depreciate the value of property locally.
It was none of their business. Every one had
enough to do to look after their own affairs.
They might want to sell out themselves some
day.</p>
<p>Besides, after all, the seasons might prove
wet for years to come, in which case a tide of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>general prosperity would set in, quite sufficient
to float Colonel Dacre’s as well as the other
partially stranded argosies of the period.</p>
<p>This was the mode of reasoning which mostly
obtained around Mooramah—possibly not
wholly unknown in other centres more or less
connected with financial operations.</p>
<p>Even an experienced Australian pastoralist
may be placed at considerable disadvantage
when he comes to inspect station property in
a region previously unknown to him. He may
under-rate or over-estimate the changes in
pasture produced in varying seasons. He may
be wholly ignorant of probable or latent disease.
Summer’s heat or winter’s cold may surprise
him by their diverse results. Such men may
make—have indeed made—the most astonishing
mistakes in purchasing stations in unfamiliar
country. How much more so the wholly inexperienced,
newly-arrived buyer from Europe,
or Hindustan—ignorant of the very alphabet
of pastoral science! He is indeed delivered
over as a prey. The net is, in a manner, spread
for him. Unless he be clearly warned, and
indeed vigorously frightened away from this all-tempting
enclosure, he is very apt to be enmeshed.
After his entanglement—from which
except by the blindest chance he rarely emerges
save with despoiled plumage and drooping
crest—he can hear from his too reticent neighbours
doleful tales of loss and distress, a portion
of which information would have been sufficient
<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>to deter him from (as he now believes) so
suicidal an investment.</p>
<p>To do the Stamfords justice, they were not
the sort of people likely to stand by and see an
injustice perpetrated without protest. Colonel
Dacre, on arriving in the district, had called at
Windāhgil, and informing Mr. Stamford that
he felt disposed to buy Wantabalree, which was
then offered for sale with so many sheep, so
much purchased land, &c., had asked his opinion
of the policy of the purchase.</p>
<p>Hubert and his father looked at one another
for a moment. Then the younger man burst out—“I
think it’s a confounded shame that any
gentleman coming to a fresh district should be
taken in, utterly deceived in a purchase like this
one of Wantabalree. It is known to every
child within fifty miles that the place is over-stocked
by nearly one-half. The reason the
run looks so well is that a lot of sheep that
were travelling have just been put on. They
haven’t had time to eat down the grass yet. If
a dry season comes they’ll die like flies.”</p>
<p>“You must be careful in making statements
to Mr. Dealerson’s prejudice,” said his father.
“We are not on good terms with him. That
should be, perhaps, considered by Colonel Dacre.
At the same time, I endorse every word you
have said.”</p>
<p>“I know I hate the fellow like poison,” said
Hubert. “He’s mean and dishonest—and deserves
to be had up for false representation to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>boot; but I would say the same if he were my
own brother. The sale of Wantabalree with
the stock at present on it, under the advertisement
of a fairly-stocked run, is a deception and
a robbery. I give Colonel Dacre leave to repeat
my words to Mr. Dealerson or his friends.”</p>
<p>“I gather from what you say,” said the
Colonel; “that the stock upon Wantabalree
is in excess of what it would be safe to depasture
in ordinary seasons; that the buyer would
probably, in the event of an unfavourable season,
be at a disadvantage—--”</p>
<p>“Such a disadvantage that he would lose
twenty or thirty thousand sheep to begin with,”
replied Hubert; “and even under the most
favourable circumstances the place could never
carry its present stock.”</p>
<p>“Yet the sheep look very well—are indeed
fit for market—as I am informed by the person
the agents recommended me to consult.”</p>
<p>“This is the finest season we have had for
five years. It is the best time of year also,”
said Hubert. “Any run about here would carry
double its ordinary stock for a few months—till
winter, for instance. If a third more sheep were
put on now, say on to this run, neither sheep
nor run would exhibit much difference until
the autumn was well over.”</p>
<p>“And what would happen then?” asked the
Colonel.</p>
<p>“Then they would merely begin to starve—become
weak and die—thousand after thousand,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>while all the survivors would be impoverished
and lessened in value.”</p>
<p>“Good Heavens!” said the astonished
soldier. “I never imagined such deceit could
be practised in a pastoral community. It
amounts to obtaining money under false pretences!”</p>
<p>“Not legally,” said Mr. Stamford; “but every
word which my son has told you is substantially
true. Wantabalree with its present stock is
nothing better than a trap skilfully set to catch
the unwary purchaser. Mr. Dealerson is, so to
speak, an enemy of ours, but I will do Hubert
the justice to say that a friend acting similarly
would have fared no better at his hands.”</p>
<p>“Well! forewarned is forearmed,” said the
colonel. “I feel deeply indebted to you, but
your conduct has been in marked contrast to
that of all the other residents to whom I have
spoken on the subject.”</p>
<p>“Unfortunately, there is too much caution or
apathy in matters of this sort,” said Mr.
Stamford. “We should have been delighted to
have you as a neighbour, believe me, but not at
such cost to yourself.”</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />