<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<p class='c012'>About a week after this conversation Hubert
dropped the local paper he was reading in the
evening with such a sudden exclamation that his
mother and sisters looked up in mild astonishment.</p>
<p>“‘Well I’m gormed!’ as Dan Peggotty has
it!” he said at length. “Nothing will ever
surprise me again as long as there is such a crop
of fools in the world—no wonder that rogues
like Dealerson flourish! After all I said too!
Listen to this! headed ‘Important Sale of
Station.—We have much pleasure in noticing
that our energetic and popular neighbour, Mr.
Dealerson, has completed the sale of his well-known
station, Wantabalree, with fifty-four
thousand six hundred sheep of a superior character,
to Colonel Dacre, a gentleman lately arrived
from England. Furniture, stores, station, horses
and cattle given in. The price is said to be
satisfactory.’ Well, the devil helps some
people,” said Hubert. “How that poor gentleman
could have run into the snare blindfold
after the talking to father and I gave him, I
can’t make out. Mark my words; he’s a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>dead man (financially) unless it’s going to rain
for years.”</p>
<p>“Dealerson is a very astute man,” remarked
Mr. Stamford, musingly. “As a persuasive talker
he has few equals. Fine, frank, engaging manner
too. Bold and ready-witted; I think I can
see how he managed it.”</p>
<p>“Well I can’t see—can’t make it out at all,”
said Hubert, “unless he is a mesmerist.”</p>
<p>“No doubt he made the most of being
on bad terms with Windāhgil. He would
rake up that old story of the disputed sheep;
tell it his own way; get that fellow Ospreigh,
who always goes about with him, to back him
up; also make small concessions such as furniture
and working plant; talk about the house
and garden—they would be attractive to a new
arrival; and if Colonel Dacre is at all impulsive—and
I think he is—he has thus landed him.
I wonder what the Colonel will think of
Dealerson about three years from this time?”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell him what <em>I</em> think of him, the next
time we meet in public,” said Hubert, squaring
his shoulders, while a dangerous light came into
his eyes. “If he could be tempted into giving
me the lie, I should like to have the pleasure of
thrashing him.”</p>
<p>“Gently, my boy!” said Mr. Stamford; “we
must not set up ourselves as the redressers of
wrongs for Lower Mooramah, Few people are
in a position to discharge the duties of that
appointment. I honour your righteous indignation
<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>all the same, and trust you will always
retain an honest scorn of wrong and wrongdoers.”</p>
<p>“I should hope so,” said Laura. “I can’t
imagine Hubert holding his tongue discreetly or
passing by on the other side. There are a
good many Levites in this part of the world,
I am afraid.”</p>
<p>“Oh, my gracious!” said Linda, who was
reading a closely-written letter; “think of this!
Isn’t his name Colonel John Dacre, late of the
75th Regiment? There is one redeeming
feature about the affair, at all events.”</p>
<p>“What can that be?” said Laura and
Hubert both together.</p>
<p>“Why! there’s a distressed damsel in the
case. If I didn’t know better, I should think
Hubert must have heard about her. Listen to
this!” And she read aloud:—“‘I hear that
you are to have delightful neighbours. I was
told that Colonel Dacre was going to settle in
your neighbourhood. He has bought Wantabalree
station—young Groves told me last
night. He is a widower, handsome and middle-aged.
But I don’t mean him. He has an only
daughter, also a son. Think of that! Jane
Robinson met her at Mrs. Preston’s, where she
is staying. She says she is most sweet—handsome,
though not objectionable in the beauty-girl
line, clever, sensible, distinguished-looking,
&c. Take care of Hubert, if you don’t want
to lose him for good and all.’ That’s from
Nellie Conway. Oh! isn’t that lovely?” and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>here Linda held the letter aloft, and danced for
joy.</p>
<p>“I don’t see what difference it makes,” said
Hubert, gloomily, “except that there are three
people to be ruined instead of one. You girls
are always thinking of marriage and giving in
marriage.”</p>
<p>“Now don’t be provoking, Hubert,” said
Laura, coaxingly; “we know somebody who is
not always thinking about cattle and sheep.
Now, listen to me. How long will it take for
Mr. Dealerson to ruin them?”</p>
<p>“About three years,” said Hubert; “depends
on the terms. Of course he’s got all the
Colonel’s cash, but he would take long-dated
bills rather than let him slip. Say three—three
and a half—that’s the very outside month.”</p>
<p>“That means that we are to have the society
and companionship of the very nice girl for
three or four years,” said Laura; “we can ask
her here for the last six months, you know,
I really think, Hubert, it won’t turn out such a
bad investment for the Colonel after all.”</p>
<p>“You’d better marry him out of pity,” said
Hubert; “get father to endorse his bills, and
that will effectually finish up the Stamford
family as well—stock, lock, and barrel.”</p>
<p>“I’ll complete the tragedy by marrying Mr.
Dealerson,” said Linda, “whom I shall afterwards
poison, then come on to the stage and
repent in white satin in my last agonies, having
by mistake taken some out of the same glass.
What a charming melodrama! Who says
<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>there are no Australian romances possible in
real life?”</p>
<p>“No; but nonsense apart,” said Laura, “I
intend to make a friend of Miss Dacre; she
will be rather lonely. There are no decent
people within twenty miles of Wantabalree.
You must drive us over to call directly we
hear that they have arrived at the station.
It is a pleasant house, and the garden is lovely,
to give Mr. Dealerson his due.”</p>
<p>“You girls generally manage to persuade
everybody to do as you like,” said Hubert,
making believe to be sulky still, but putting his
arm round Laura’s waist. “It’s a pity you didn’t
tackle the Colonel about not buying the beastly
place, instead of father and me. He’d have
dropped it like a shot most likely.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you worry yourself any more about
it,” said Linda. “You have been ‘faithful’
to the Colonel—as Mrs. Christianson always
says—and done the honest and disagreeable.
Now let it rest.”</p>
<p>“You’re bordering on a Levite,” retorted
her brother. “However, it was always the
fashionable side.”</p>
<p>About a fortnight after the return of the
family party, when most of the books had
been read, when all the songs had been sung,
when every conceivable incident that had happened
in Sydney had been described and dilated
on, after every new phase of intellectual growth
in the three young minds had been stated and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>reviewed, Hubert Stamford relinquished his
charge of Windāhgil, and departed for the
metropolis on his long-expected holiday. Not
without tears shed by his female relatives did
he leave Windāhgil, that true and sacred home
in every sense of the word—a family abiding
place consecrated by fervent, unselfish love,
which had grown and deepened since childhood’s
hour with every opening year. How could
they think without a sudden pang of the
possibility of an accident—of one of the everyday
mischances in this age of rushing, resistless
forces harnessed to the car of man’s feverish
need—depriving them for ever of the sight of
that pleasant face, those frank, kind eyes, that
manly form! Such might happen—<em>had</em> happened.
Therefore, there were averted heads,
fast falling tears, as the signal sounded, and
the punctual, pitiless steam-giant bore away
the hope of Windāhgil from the little platform
at Mooramah.</p>
<p>“Poor, dear Hubert!” said Linda, sneezing
violently, and then wiping her eyes; “it seems
ridiculous to cry, when he’s going away to enjoy
himself so much, and deserves it so well; but,
somehow, one can’t help it. There is a great
relief in tears. I think they are specially adapted
to the feminine temperament, a nice, comforting
sort of protest against circumstances. Dear me!
how lonely we shall be to-night.”</p>
<p>“I really believe father was afraid he would
‘give way’ too, as Nurse Allen used to say,”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>said Laura, “and that was the reason he declined
to come. Never mind; we shall have
a telegram to-morrow. He must have been
much more lonely when we departed. Fancy
you or me at home, Linda, and all the rest of
the family away!”</p>
<p>When Hubert Stamford had got over the
first feeling of parting with those whom he
loved better than his own life, the change of
place and scene which the fast-speeding mail
train rapidly furnished commenced to raise his
youthful spirits. After all, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>ce n’est que le
premier pas qui coûte</em></span>. Ah, but that first step!
Some people never can accomplish it, for things
good as well as evil, and a whole world of
delights and dangers remain unexplored.</p>
<p>In Hubert Stamford’s case the initiatory stage
was now accomplished. The journey, more
or less eventful to home-keeping youths—the
first really accredited visit to the metropolis
since his manhood, with all things made easy
for him, was now about to take place. Imagination
commenced to conjure up the various
wonders and witcheries which he was about to
encounter, as well as the campaign of business
which he hoped to plan out and engineer definitely,
if not finally.</p>
<p>Much revolving these pleasing and, in a
sense, profitable thoughts, the night became
reasonably far advanced. It then occurred to
him that, as he intended to have a long day
before him in Sydney, he might as well prepare
<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>for it by an orthodox allowance of sleep; so,
commending himself and those never-forgotten
idols of his heart to the mercy of the All-wise,
All-seeing Father of this wondrous world,
he wrapped himself in his rug and fell asleep.</p>
<p>When he awoke the train was speeding down
the long incline which divides the mountain
world of rock and dell-rifted peak and alpine
summit, from the lowlands of the Nepean River.
A few more miles—another hour. Farms and
home-steadings, orangeries and orchards, vineyards
and cornfields, alternated with wide
pastures, dank with river fogs and morning dew,
darksome jungles of eucalyptus which the axe
of the woodman had as yet spared. Yet another
terminus, suburbs, smoke, a distant view of the
great sea, a turmoil of railway sheds, carriages,
tramcars, and cabs—Sydney!</p>
<hr class='c007' />
<p>Comfortably established at Batty’s Hotel, to
the management of which he had taken the
trouble to telegraph for a room, and received
with that pleasing welcome accorded to the
guest who is known to spend liberally and pay
promptly, Hubert found the situation, as he
surveyed the harbour from the balcony with
after-breakfast feelings, to be one of measureless
content mingled with sanguine anticipation.</p>
<p>Oh! precious spring-time of life! Blest
reflex of the golden days of Arcady. What
might we not have done with thy celestial
hours, strewn with diamonds and rubies more
<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>precious than the fabled valley of the Arabian
voyager, had we but have divined their value.
For how much is it now too late? The scythe-bearer,
slow, passionless, pitiless, has passed on.
The irrevocable winged hours have fled. Opportunity,
fleet nymph with haunting eyes and
shining hair, has disappeared in the recesses of
the charmed forest, and we, gazing hopelessly
on the shore of life’s ocean, hear from afar the
hollow murmur of the maelstrom of Fate—the
rhythmic cadence of the tideless waves of eternity.</p>
<p>Hubert Stamford, more fortunate, had all the
world before him; moreover, nothing to do but
elect, with the aid of a sufficiency of cash, leisure
and introductions, to what particular pleasures
he should devote the cheerful day. He revolved
in his mind several kinds of entertainments of
which he would like to partake, but finally resolved
to present himself at the office of the
Austral Agency Company, having a great desire
to see the wonderful Barrington Hope, of whom
he had heard so much, as also to sound him as
to a Queensland stock speculation. He would
leave a card for Mr. Grandison at his club. If
no engagement turned up he would take a
steamer to Manly Beach, and afterwards go
to the theatre.</p>
<p>Having mapped out the day to his satisfaction,
Hubert betook himself to the Austral
Agency Company’s offices, by the splendour of
which he was much struck, and sent in his card.</p>
<p>He was not suffered to remain long in the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>outer office, but was promptly ushered into the
manager’s room and confronted with the head
of the department in person. Doubtless it was
a mutual pleasure. Hubert was impressed with
the autocrat’s appearance, the manner, as well as
the reserve of power which in every word and
gesture Barrington Hope displayed. The latter,
on the other hand, did full justice to the bold,
sincere countenance, the manly, muscular figure
of his young visitor. Reading between the lines,
he saw there written quenchless energy and love
of adventure, yet shrewd forecast.</p>
<p>“This youngster is not like other men,” Mr.
Hope said to himself, after the first direct,
searching gaze. “He only wants opportunity,
encouragement, and the backing-up of
capital to become a successful speculator. He
has enterprise, undying pluck, persistent energy,
and still sufficient apprehensiveness to shield him
from disaster. We must send him along. He
will do well for himself and the company. His
complexion and features are different—but how
like he is to his sister!”</p>
<p>Much of this he may have thought, but
merely said, “Mr. Hubert Stamford, I am sincerely
glad to make your acquaintance. Having
had the pleasure of knowing your family, I was
really anxious to meet you. I venture to predict
that we shall become friends and allies. I
trust you left all well at Windāhgil, and that
the season continues favourable.”</p>
<p>“Perfectly well, thank you,” said Hubert.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>“My father desired to be particularly remembered
to you. My sisters have not yet left off
describing their pleasant visit to Sydney. The
season is a trifle dry, but otherwise everything
that can be desired.”</p>
<p>“Thanks very much! Tell your sisters when
you write that a great melancholy fell upon me
when they left. We had been so much together
in town, fortunately for me.”</p>
<p>“I have been waiting for an opportunity to
thank you for the assistance you gave us at a
very critical time,” said Hubert. “My father
has, I daresay, told you all we thought about it.
But I always determined to speak for myself on
the subject.”</p>
<p>“It was a speculation, a purely business risk,
which I undertook,” replied Mr. Hope. “I
told your father so at the time. That it has
resulted so favourably, is of course, most satisfactory.”</p>
<p>“I see your point. All the same, it was
more than fortunate for us, and for Windāhgil,
that you happened to take that precise commercial
risk at that particular time. It is,
besides, more agreeable to work financially with
some people than others. And now, will you
come and lunch with me, so that we may have a
talk?”</p>
<p>“I am really sorry,” said Mr. Hope, looking
at his watch, “but shall not have five minutes
to spare till five o’clock, when I should like to
consult you on a business matter. If, afterwards,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>you will dine with me at the club, at seven
sharp, I will talk as much as you like.”</p>
<p>“That will do as well, indeed better,” said
Hubert, “as the day will be over, which is a
great advantage if one is to enjoy oneself. I
have a call or two to make, so adieu for the
present!” Making a direct point for the club
which Mr. Grandison ornamented, Hubert was
fortunate in discovering that gentleman just
emerging from the strangers’ room with an
elderly gentleman, whom Hubert recognised as
Colonel Dacre.</p>
<p>“How are you, Hubert, my boy?” said
Grandison. “What a man you’ve grown!
Nothing like bush air. Father quite well?
Mother and the girls? Glad to hear it. Let
me introduce you to Colonel Dacre, soon to be
a neighbour of yours at Wantabalree.”</p>
<p>“I’m very sorry for it,” blurted out Hubert.
“That is, in one sense, as I told Colonel Dacre
before. I said then, and think now, that he
made a bad bargain. That apart, I am, of
course, delighted to hear that he is coming with
his family to live so near us.”</p>
<p>“Oh! indeed; I didn’t know you had met
before.”</p>
<p>The Colonel bowed, and looking slightly
embarrassed, for a veteran, before so youthful a
soldier as Hubert, said, “I ought to thank Mr.
Stamford and his father for their sincere and
kindly advice about my purchase. I did not
take it wholly, and indeed acted on my own
<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>judgment and that of other friends in buying
Wantabalree. But I shall always feel grateful
for their well-meant counsel.”</p>
<p>“Why, how is this, Hubert?” said Mr.
Grandison with an important air. “You seem
to have been very decided on the subject. My
friend Barterdale, under whose financial advice
Colonel Dacre acted, says he is credibly informed
that it is a most paying purchase. And
Dealerson says it is the best bargain of the day.”</p>
<p>“For <em>him</em>, no doubt; but Dealerson is a liar
and a rogue,” said Hubert, bluntly. “I will tell
him so to his face, if ever I meet him. As for
Mr. Barterdale, he keeps Dealerson’s account,
and perhaps may not wish to offend a good
customer. The Colonel has been deceived and
robbed, that’s all! And having said enough,
perhaps more than is polite, I shall not speak
another word about the affair, except to assure
Colonel Dacre that all Windāhgil is at his
service in the way of neighbourly assistance.”</p>
<p>“Thanks very much!” said the Colonel,
looking rather crestfallen; “but have you
heard” Hubert felt quite ashamed of his savage
sentence as he remarked the old gentleman’s
humility of tone—“the price I have sold the
fat sheep at?”</p>
<p>“No,” replied Hubert, “I can’t say that I
have; but, assuming that the wool does as well
you are still in a dangerous position, with an
overcrowded run. However, I sincerely trust
that it may be otherwise.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>“And so do I,” said Mr. Grandison; “but
you’ve done your duty, my boy, and Providence
must do the rest. Colonel Dacre is coming to
lunch with me. Here’s the phaeton, jump in
and you will see Mrs. Grandison and Josie,
besides another young lady that you haven’t
before met.”</p>
<p>“I asked Mr. Hope to lunch,” said Hubert;
“but as he can’t come I am free. And so, if
Colonel Dacre isn’t offended by my plain speaking,
I shall be most happy.”</p>
<p>At luncheon Mrs. Grandison appeared with
the fair Josie, who welcomed Hubert so warmly
that he began to think that he was mistaken in
the opinion he had previously formed of both
these ladies. Certainly, in his boyhood, they had
expressed remarkably little interest in his welfare.
But being slow to think evil, he took himself
severely to task, and decided that Mrs. Grandison
was a warm-hearted matron, and Josie a very
attractive-looking girl.</p>
<p>At that moment a young lady entered the
room and apologised to Mrs. Grandison in so
sweet a voice, and with so much natural grace
of manner, for being late that his too susceptible
heart was immediately led captive.
Miss Josie’s charms receded to a register below
zero, where they remained as unalterably fixed
as the “set fair” in an aneroid barometer in
a drought.</p>
<p>“Allow me to introduce our cousin, Mr.
Hubert Stamford,” said the elder lady; “Miss
<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>Dacre, I think you are to be neighbours in the
bush.”</p>
<p>“I am happy to meet Mr. Stamford,” said
the young lady, bestowing a gaze on Hubert
so honest, kindly, and yet questioning, that his
subjection was complete. “Though, from what
papa tells me, it is not his fault that we are not
in some other district.”</p>
<p>“I was acting against my own interest—against
all our interests,” Hubert said, rather
nervously. “Believe me that the whole family
were most anxious to have you as neighbours.
So you must give me credit for honesty of
intention.”</p>
<p>“I shall never doubt that, from all I hear,”
said Miss Dacre. “Papa is rather sanguine, I
am afraid.”</p>
<p>“And perhaps I am not sufficiently so,” said
Hubert; “It’s all over now. Let us find a
pleasanter subject. When do you think of
going up?”</p>
<p>“Oh! next week at farthest. Are we not,
papa?”</p>
<p>The Colonel nodded. “I’m enthusiastically
fond of the country. I hear there’s such a nice
cottage, quite a pretty garden, a flowing stream,
a mountain, cows and pigs, and chickens, a fair
library—in fact, almost an English home.
You’ll admit that, I hope, Mr. Stamford?”</p>
<p>“I’ll admit anything,” said Hubert; “the
homestead’s the best in the district. My mother
and sisters will be charmed to put you <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>au fait</em></span> in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>all matters of bush housekeeping. And now,
Josie, are you going to the opera on Thursday
night, and would you like a cavalier?”</p>
<p>“We were thinking of it,” said she. “Mother
was doubtful, and father doesn’t care about opera.
If you can get some one else, I have no doubt
Mrs. Stopford would be glad to act as chaperon,
and Miss Dacre and I would go—if she would
like it?”</p>
<p>“Oh! above all things,” said that young
lady; “I am always ready to hear opera. And
I hear you have a very good company here. I
was stupid enough, when I left England, to
think I should never hear Italian opera again.
I feel ashamed.”</p>
<p>“We are not quite barbarians, nor yet copper-coloured,”
said Josie; “though I am afraid we
Sydney girls can’t boast of our complexions.”</p>
<p>“I am quite ready to make recantation of all
my errors,” said Miss Dacre. “I suppose it
need not be done publicly, in a white sheet. I am
divided between that and writing to the <cite>Times</cite>.”</p>
<p>“I believe you will make the best bush-woman
possible,” said the Colonel, with an
admiring glance. “Only we both have so much
to unlearn. I didn’t expect to see a room like
this, for instance, or such appointments,” he
continued, raising a glass of claret pensively to
his lips.</p>
<p>“It’s rather a bad thing for us, pappy, as we
have to live in the real bush, don’t you think?
We must forget it all as soon as possible.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>“It won’t make the least difference to you,
my dear,” said Mrs. Grandison. “If you had
seen Hubert’s sisters here you would have been—well—astonished
to see such girls come out of
the bush. For some reasons I begin really to
think it would be better for all of us to live
there.” Here she glanced reflectively at Josie,
who looked scarcely as self-possessed as usual.</p>
<p>“I shall not say another word about bush
matters,” said Hubert. “They will keep.
When Miss Dacre comes up she will judge for
herself. If my opinion is requested, I shall be
happy to give it, but shall not volunteer advice.
Will your brother travel up with you, Miss
Dacre?”</p>
<p>“Willoughby went to stay a few days with
a ship friend, who lives near Penrith, I think
it is, but he is quite as enthusiastic as I am
about beginning life in earnest. He will be in
town again on Friday.”</p>
<p>“Come and dine with us on Saturday, then,
Hubert,” said Mrs. Grandison, and I’ll ask
Mr. Hope and one or two of your rude bush
pioneers. Josie, can’t you get a couple of young
ladies for Hubert’s benefit and to show Mr.
Dacre?”</p>
<p>“I don’t think Hubert wants any more young
ladies,” said Josie mischievously; “but I’ll ask
the Flemington girls to come in—one of them
plays marvellously and the other sings. Her
voice is very like Parepa’s.”</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />