<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<p class='c012'>So at Windāhgil and Wantabalree the calm,
uneventful bush life went on as usual. That
life so peaceful, so wholesome for the spirit, so
chiefly free from the sharp cares and anxieties of
city existence—where the eye is refreshed daily
with nature pictures, at once grand and consoling.
The early morn, so fair and fresh, when the sun
first glorifies the pale mists of dawn, changing
all the Orient with magic suddenness to opaline
hues and golden flame. The green gloom, the
august solitude of the boundless forest, the glowing
sunshine which pierces even its inmost recesses
at midday; the wavering shadows, born
of the inconstant breeze; the tender eve when
a solemn hush falls alike on stream and valley,
on mountain-side or wildwood glade, and all the
ancient majesty of night awes the senses. For
the Windāhgil family, the placid days came and
went, lightened, as of old, by the regularity of
customary home duties, by books and music, by
walks along the rippling river, by rides and
drives through the winding forest paths. Occasional
<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>expeditions to Wantabalree made salutary
change for all. As the summer months wore
on—as the days lengthened, and the mid-day
heat became intense; as the fiercer sun rays
commenced to wither the bush herbage of the
river meadows, the many-hued wild flowers of
heath and hill; as the watercourses, fed by
spring showers, commenced to trickle faintly—there
was a tendency to complain of the tyrant
Summer, and yet to long for the Christmas-tide
as a period of mirth and enjoyment—this year
invested with a special charm.</p>
<p>For had not a telegram from some unknown,
unknowable place, and costing quite a small
fortune, arrived, which stated that Hubert,
the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>bien aimé</em></span>, would return at Christmas—actually
return? “Like the prodigal,” as Linda
said, “only that it was the reverse in everything
except the coincidence of its being ‘from a far
country.’”</p>
<p>“The coincidence being so very slight, Linda,”
said her mother, “perhaps it would have been
as well to refrain from Scriptural parallel altogether.
Don’t you think so, Miss Dacre? I
had given up expecting him after his last letter,
in which he said there were insuperable difficulties
in the way.”</p>
<p>“He has managed to surmount the insuperable
apparently,” said Linda. “Hubert always
was a wonderful boy for accomplishing things
just at the last moment. I don’t think I ever
knew him beaten by anything he made up his
<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>mind to do, though he used to leave things
rather too long.”</p>
<p>“That is one of Hubert’s worst points—or
rather, most pronounced weaknesses,” said
Laura; “he won’t be wise in time except on
what he thinks are occasions of importance. It
seems a defect with people of energy and resource.
For instance, I can’t imagine Hubert
saying he will cross a river or accomplish a
journey and failing to carry out his purpose,
whatever happened. He is one of those people
who seem made for difficulties.”</p>
<p>“But difficulties which come upon the unprepared
are apt to be disastrous,” said Miss
Dacre; “for my part, I am strongly in favour
of taking every imaginable precaution before
the time of need.”</p>
<p>“The principle is good, but it doesn’t apply
to Hubert,” said Linda, still unconvinced.
“Difficulties and impossibilities only stimulate
his resources, which are innumerable. When
another man would lie down and die, he
would be quite in his element, ordering, inventing,
combining, and finally pulling through
triumphantly.”</p>
<p>“It must be interesting to watch such a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tour
de force</em></span>,” said Miss Dacre; “but I prefer the
generalship which surveys the field, and places
the battle in advance. Hit or miss, conquerors
find their Moscow some day.”</p>
<p>“Hubert has made a glorious campaign this
time,” said Laura. “What a day of days it will
<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>be when he shows his brown face at Mooramah
again! Doesn’t it seem an age since he went
away, Rosalind?”</p>
<p>“I am sure papa and Willoughby will be
very glad to see him again,” said she. “I
know they wish to have his advice about the
sheep and the season. They are getting quite
anxious.”</p>
<hr class='c007' />
<p>No! The engine did not break down. The
steamer with the Chinese name, from the far
north, the <em>Ly-wang-foo</em>, did not founder or take
fire. The floods did not sweep away the railway
bridges. There was not even an earthquake.
All these phenomena and abnormal occurrences
were, in Linda’s opinion, almost certain to
happen because Hubert was coming home to
spend Christmas with the family, and envious
Fate would be certain to interfere. Everything
had gone so prosperously hitherto that Destiny
must be propitiated by sacrifice. Mr. Barrington
Hope was coming up also, as he had looked
forward to a holiday—of course <em>he</em> would be
disappointed, and so on.</p>
<p>Wonderful to relate, a few days before Christmas,
again the family trap was in requisition,
driven by one of the boys.</p>
<p>The door of the first-class carriage
opened, and a bronzed, Indian-officer-looking
man stepped out. The boys at first did not
know him. But when a tall, broad-shouldered
gentleman, who followed him, proposed to send
<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>a porter for their luggage, the younger boy
shouted out—“Why, it’s Hubert! Hubert!
What a lark! We didn’t know him. Why
you <em>have</em> changed! You’re ever so much
thinner, and your eyes are larger, and your face
browner. What have you done to yourself?
We’ve come for you and Mr. Hope. Is this
him?”</p>
<p>“Yes, this is he, Master Maurice. Your
grammar appears to have stood still, though you
have grown such a big fellow. See about the
luggage, and have it put in the buggy; it will
hold it all, unless it has got smaller. Well,
how are mother and father and Laura, and
Linda, and Waterking, and everybody? Why
didn’t they come?”</p>
<p>“Well—they thought they’d be hugging you
before all the people, and they’d better wait and
do it at home. So they sent me and Val with
the buggy. You’d better drive.”</p>
<p>“That is my intention, Maurice. I prefer to
drive, though I know you can handle the reins.
But tell me about Windāhgil. What is the
grass like? Had much rain?”</p>
<p>“Only enough for sprinkling the garden
these three months. I heard old Jerry, the
shepherd, tell Paddy Nolan that he thought it
was going to set in dry—the west wind was
always blowing. <em>We’ve</em> lots of feed yet.”</p>
<p>“Old Jerry is a good judge of the weather at
Mooramah; he’s been watching it these fifty
years. And how are they at Wantabalree?”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>“Very poor, almost starving.”</p>
<p>“What?” said Hubert. And then laughing
at the boy’s strictly pastoral ideas, he said—“You
mean the sheep in the paddocks, I
suppose.”</p>
<p>“Yes, of course; they’re getting as bare as
your hand. What they’ll do with all those
sheep in another month or two nobody knows.
Half of ’em’ll die before winter.”</p>
<p>“You seem to take a practical view of
things, Maurice,” said Mr. Hope. “Are matters
as bad as all that?”</p>
<p>“Well, I’m about a good deal, and I can’t
help seeing. It’s a pity, too; they’re so nice, all
of them.”</p>
<hr class='c007' />
<p>Hubert at home again! After all the doubts,
fears, delays. Maurice had not exaggerated the
amount of hugging, as he disrespectfully expressed
it, which the returning hero had to
undergo, and which would probably have created
a stoppage on Mooramah platform. Mr. Hope
stood by with a tolerant air, and even made
some light remark to Miss Dacre as to their
being left out of the extremely warm greetings
which prevailed. A very short time, however,
was suffered to elapse before all due apologies
were made to their guests, and the cordiality of
Laura’s manner perhaps caused Barrington
Hope to overlook any overweening measure of
love bestowed upon the long-absent brother.</p>
<p>“How her eyes sparkled, how her cheek
<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>glowed, how she seemed to devour the young
fellow with her eyes!” he said to himself. And
he argued favourably, knowing something of
womankind, of the probable devotion to her
husband should she ever condescend to endow
mortal man with that supreme and sacred
title.</p>
<p>It was in vain to expect much general conversation
that day. If the visitors had been less
sympathetic persons they might easily have been
aggrieved at the predominance of Hubert’s
personal adventures, opinions and experiences in
all subsequent intercourse.</p>
<p>For the moment, everybody thought him
much altered and changed, wasted even in
frame, sunburned, blackened by exposure, but,
on the whole, improved. There was a determination
in his expression which had not so
habitually marked his features before—a look as
of a man who has confronted the grim hazards
of the waste—who has dared the odds which in
the desert land of the savage are arrayed against
him; dared them only to conquer. It was the
face of the conscript after the campaign and
the battle-field. If there was less than the old
measure of schoolboy gaiety and frolicsome
spirits, there was an added infusion of the
dignity of the man.</p>
<p>Then his adventures. He must relate some
of them. Even Miss Dacre joined in this
request. Like the knife-grinder, “story he had
none to tell,” but could not escape owning to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>having been laid up in a bark hut with fever and
ague, that had pulled him down so; nearly
drowned in crossing a flooded river; had a
brush with the blacks, who rose up from the
tall grass all round him; horse speared under
him, and so on. All this, though Hubert made
light of it with characteristic modesty, seemed
to his hearers of the nature of thrilling and
exciting romance.</p>
<p>“Hubert must feel like a troubadour of the
Middle Ages,” said Linda, “reciting before the
lady of the castle and her maidens. It must
have been an awful temptation to improvise
situations, and I dare say they did. Fancy if we
had no books, and were dependent entirely upon
wandering minstrels!”</p>
<p>“It mightn’t be altogether such a bad thing,
Miss Linda,” said Barrington Hope. “A
handsome young troubadour would be more
entertaining than a dry book, or even an
indifferent novel.”</p>
<p>“It wouldn’t be such a bad trade for the
unemployed,” said Laura; “but I suspect
neither their manners nor their education would
be found suitable.”</p>
<p>“Some of the swagmen in Queensland would
fill the requirements so far,” said Hubert. “I
have seen more than one ‘honourable’ on the
tramp. Only it would not do to trust them
too near the sideboard.”</p>
<p>“What a pathetic picture,” said Miss Dacre;
“fancy the son of a peer trudging along the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>road, with his knapsack on his back, actually
begging from door to door!”</p>
<p>“It is not regarded as begging in outside
country,” said Hubert. “It is the recognised
mode of locomotion for labourers and artisans.”</p>
<p>“And can they not procure steady employment?”
said Miss Dacre, in a tone of deep
anxiety. “Surely it only needs some one to take
an interest in them, and give them good advice.
Now, don’t smile in that provoking way, Mr.
Stamford, or I shall think you have brought
back unimpaired one of your least amiable
traits.”</p>
<p>“Forgive me, Miss Dacre, for presuming on
my part to hint that you do not appear to
be cured of what I supposed you would have
learned by this time to distrust—an unlimited
trust in your less favoured fellow creatures.
The men of whom I speak live at free quarters
when they travel, are occasionally received on
equal terms, and are paid, when they condescend
to do work, at the ordinary high rate of wages,
viz., from thirty shillings to two pounds per
week, with board and lodging.”</p>
<p>“And are they not encouraged to save this?
They could soon put by quite a small fortune.”</p>
<p>“Their misfortune is that they never <em>do</em> save.
They invariably gamble or drink—generally the
latter—till all is gone. Once lapsed, they follow
the habits of the uneducated working man with
curious fidelity.”</p>
<p>“What a terrible condition! What a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>terrible country where such things can take
place!”</p>
<p>“On the contrary; it is the best land attainable
by the confirmed prodigal. In England,
I take it, the dissipated, improvident men of
their order go rapidly and thoroughly to the
bad, passing swiftly out of knowledge. Here
they have intervals of wholesome labour and
compulsory sobriety, which recruit the constitution
and give them opportunity for repentance,
if they ever <em>do</em> repent.”</p>
<p>While this conversation was proceeding, Mr.
Stamford and Barrington Hope had been having
a quiet semi-business talk, and this being concluded,
Miss Dacre was persuaded to open the
piano, after which Mr. Hope gave them some
of the latest <cite>Parsifal</cite> morceaux fresh from
Bayreuth, where he had a musical correspondent,
having spent there some of the days of his
youth. Music now absorbed all attention for
the rest of the evening, everybody being more
or less of an amateur; and even Hubert showing
that he had not been wholly without the
region of sweet sounds by bringing back and
displaying two new songs.</p>
<p>“Who played the accompaniments for you,
Hubert?” said Linda. “Somebody did, or
you couldn’t have learnt them so well.”</p>
<p>“Do you suppose there are no ladies in the
‘Never-Never’ country?” said he. “Quite a
mistake. People of culture abound.”</p>
<p>The next day was adjudged by common consent
<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>to be spent at Wantabalree. Miss Dacre
was anxious to get home, and would by no
means consent to stay another day at Windāhgil.
Mr. Hope thought he would like to see Wantabalree,
of which celebrated station he had heard
so much, and to pay his respects to the Colonel.
So it was arranged that Hubert should drive
Miss Dacre and Linda, while Laura went under
Mr. Hope’s guidance in the Windāhgil trap.
Mr. and Mrs. Stamford elected to stay at home
to take care of the house, and talk quietly over
Hubert’s return, personal appearance, prospects,
and generally interesting belongings.</p>
<p>Arrived at Wantabalree, the Colonel met
them with his usual courteous and hospitable
manner. He congratulated Hubert on his safe
return from Queensland, and hoped he had not
taken up all the good country, as it seemed to
him that other people would have to migrate, if
the season did not improve.</p>
<p>“Not for another year or two, Colonel, at
any rate,” said Hubert, cheerily; “you’ve
plenty of water here, and Willoughby must
do a little ‘travelling’; anything’s better than
throwing up the sponge.”</p>
<p>“I see little else for it,” said the Colonel,
who had come to wear an anxious expression.
Miss Dacre grew grave as she marked her
father’s face, but she controlled herself with an
effort, as it seemed to Hubert, and telling Linda
to go into the drawing-room and admire her
flowers, followed her guests. The men remained
<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>outside and lounged into the stable yard,
where the horses and traps were being arranged,
looking about them, and chatting on indifferent
subjects before going to the house.</p>
<p>“What a pretty situation you have here!”
said Hope. “The accomplished Mr. Dealerson,
of whom I have heard so much, must have been
a man of taste. How picturesquely the creek
winds round the point near that splendid willow;
the elevation is just sufficient, and the flat seems
made on purpose for a few fields and the fruit-garden.
The view of the distant mountain-range
completes the landscape. Capital stabling
too.”</p>
<p>“Oh! confound him!” growled Willoughby;
“he was sharp enough to see that a smart
homestead like this was just the thing to catch
‘new-chum’ buyers. It’s not bad in its way,
but I hate the whole thing so, when I think of
the price we shall have to pay for it, that I
could burn the house down with pleasure.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know so much about that,” said
Hope; “it doesn’t do to be hasty in realising
in stock matters any more than in purchasing.
You and Hubert had better have a good talk
over accounts before I leave, and if he can
suggest anything, perhaps we may manage to
tide over for a while. He’s quite a rising man
of business, I assure you.”</p>
<p>“I wish to heaven the governor had remained
in Sydney with my sister, and sent me out to
Queensland with him,” said the young man;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>“but it’s too late to think of that now. We
must make the best of it. But I won’t stand
grumbling here all day, Mr. Hope. Come in
and we’ll see if there’s any lunch to be had.
‘Sufficient for the day,’ and so on?”</p>
<p>Hubert had found his way into the drawing-room
before this colloquy had ended, and was
looking over a collection of Venetian photographs
which Miss Dacre had collected during
their last visit to that city of the sea.</p>
<p>“I wonder if I shall ever see the Lion of St.
Mark again?” she said. “I feel as if we were
in another planet.”</p>
<p>“It is difficult to say where we shall all be in
a few years’ time,“ said Hubert. ”<em>I</em> am not
going to stay here all my life. But you won’t
run away from Australia just yet, Miss Dacre?”</p>
<p>“I should think not,” she replied, cheerfully;
“matters don’t look like it at present. The
doubt in my mind is whether we shall ever be
able to leave it. I don’t say that I am dissatisfied,
but I should like to see the Old World
again before I die.”</p>
<p>“When Willoughby has made his fortune, or
other things come to pass, you will be able to
go home and do all sorts of fascinating travel,”
said Hubert. “We must look forward.”</p>
<p>“I feel certain you are not laughing at me,
Mr. Stamford,” she said, fixing her eyes upon
him with a wistful expression; “but if I did
not know you so well I should suspect it.”</p>
<p>“Nothing, of course, is farther from my
<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>thoughts,” said the young man, meeting the
gaze with equal directness; “but I really see
no reason to doubt your seeing Europe within
the next five years, so many changes take place
in this Australian world of ours.”</p>
<p>“Hardly such a change as that,” she replied,
smiling apparently at the absurdity of the idea;
“and now I think I hear the luncheon bell.
You must have thought I meant to starve you
all.”</p>
<p>That no intention of this kind had actuated
the fair hostess was made apparent as they were
ushered into the dining-room, a large and
handsome apartment wherein the furniture and
appointments were in keeping with the general
plan of the house. Everybody was in capital
spirits; youth and hope were in the ascendant
in the majority of the party, and as their conversation
became general, everybody seemed as
joyous as if Wantabalree were the best paying
and the most fortunate station in the district.</p>
<p>“What a lovely place this is altogether!”
said Linda. “Mr. Dealerson must have had
some good in him after all. If father and
Hubert had not been so prejudiced against him,
he might have married and settled in the district.
I believe he’s not so bad-looking.”</p>
<p>“I should never have come to see you, for
one,” said Hubert, “if you had been the lucky
girl that carried off such a prize. But I should
like to have condemned him to work out this
place, with its present stock, in a dry season;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>that would have been a truly appropriate punishment
for his iniquities. The ancients used to
think of fitting fellows in another world in their
own line. But this savours of shop. Willoughby,
did you get any snipe this spring?”</p>
<p>“Made two or three capital bags, but they
went off as soon as the weather got dry. Hares
are getting plentiful too, and I was going to get
up a couple of greyhounds, but all that sort of
thing’s knocked on the head now.”</p>
<p>“Oh! nonsense; you mustn’t give up your
shooting. ‘Never allow your business to interfere
with your pleasure’; we have little enough
recreation in Australia. You should have
seen the brown quail in the Mitchell grass in our
new country. I used to put up bevies of them
looking like partridges. I must take some
setters up next time.”</p>
<p>“Isn’t the heat very dreadful up there?”
inquired Miss Dacre.</p>
<p>“Rather tropical,” said Hubert; “but there
is a freshness in the air that carries you through.
The mosquitoes and sandflies, are perhaps the
worst evils. But with a good pisé house, which
you could shut up and keep cool, they might be
greatly reduced.”</p>
<p>“Then the blacks; they seem nearly as bad
as the North American Indians?”</p>
<p>“Not quite. I suspect ‘Sitting Bull’ or
‘Red Cloud’ would have given us a deal more
trouble. Not but what we have to be careful.
The best way, I find, is to treat them with perfect
<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>justice, to keep your word with them for
good or evil. They learn to respect you in the
end. After a while we shall have no trouble
with them.”</p>
<p>During the afternoon, which was devoted to
nothing in particular, a very agreeable arrangement
which leaves guests at liberty to amuse
themselves as they feel inclined, Hubert found
himself in Miss Dacre’s company at the end of
the lower walk of the orchard which followed
the winding bank of the creek.</p>
<p>The bank was high at this particular spot,
having been partially worn away by flood waters,
leaving a wide, low shore at the opposite side.
A deep pool had been formed, which now
gleamed and sparkled in the lowered sun
rays. A grand weeping-willow, self-planted,
perhaps, in the earliest days of the occupation
of the station, shaded it with trailing green
streamers.</p>
<p>“Wantabalree is certainly the show station of
the district,” said Hubert. “You were fortunate
in some respects in having so pleasant a
home in which to make your first Australian
experiences.”</p>
<p>“I have been very happy here,” said she;
“but that will make it all the more painful to
leave, as I fear we shall be obliged to do at no
distant period. I do not so much care for my
own sake, but it will be discouraging to
Willoughby, and my father is certain to feel
the change more than any of us.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>“Matters look bad, and we are going to
have another dry season, I believe,” replied
Hubert. “I don’t like these westerly winds,
and clouds coming up without rain. Still there
is hope.”</p>
<p>“But had we not a drought two years before—just
before my father made this purchase?”</p>
<p>“Quite true, but of late years, unfortunately,
that has been no reason why another should not
follow in quick succession. It is rather unfair of
<em>Madre Natura</em>, but there is no help for it.”</p>
<p>“And what shall you do at Windāhgil, for I
suppose we shall all be in the same boat?”</p>
<p>“I shall persuade my father to start every
sheep he has, with the exception of the best
flock, for my new country. The Wantabalree
sheep had better take the road too. I must
have a talk to Willoughby.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I do so wish you would, Mr. Stamford.
I am sure he and papa are growing very troubled
about our prospects. Willoughby and I can
bear all that may come, but it will be a terrible
blow to poor papa.”</p>
<p>“Miss Dacre, if you will permit me to confide
in you—I have been concocting a little plot.
If carried out it may—I say only it may—perhaps
serve to improve the aspect of things.
If you thought the Colonel would like to
consult with me and Willoughby about the
coming difficulty, I should be very glad to
make the attempt.”</p>
<p>“Nothing would give my father more
<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>pleasure, and, indeed, tend to relieve his mind.
I feel certain he has been anxious to consult
you, Mr. Stamford, but hardly likes to begin
the subject.”</p>
<p>“We must have a council of war then,
which will include Mr. Barrington Hope.
He is a tower of strength, as I know by experience,
and it’s a piece of luck his being here
now.”</p>
<p>“We should be grateful to you all the days
of our lives, you may be sure, whatever happens,
for the interest you have always shown in our
welfare. If your advice had been taken in the
first instance, all would have been well.” And
here the young lady looked at Hubert with such
an approving expression of countenance, that
he felt as if he could throw up the new country
and devote himself to the Sisyphean task of
getting Wantabalree out of debt, if only she
would promise to repay him by an occasional
smile such as this one, the memory of which he
felt certain would haunt him for an indefinite
period.</p>
<p>“I can’t, of course, guarantee success, but
I think I see my way towards lightening the
ship and getting steerage way on her.” This
nautical simile had probably been derived from
his late maritime experiences, and was, perhaps,
not altogether appropriate; but Miss Dacre
was evidently not by any means in a critical
frame of mind, for she again looked approvingly
at him, and then led the way to the verandah,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>where Laura and Willoughby, Mr. Hope and
Linda, were apparently having such an animated
conversation that they seemed to be trying who
could make the most noise.</p>
<p>The principal contention was whether a town
or country life was the more wholesome and
enjoyable. Laura and Willoughby were in
favour of rural felicity, while Linda and Mr.
Hope brought all the arguments they could
think of in favour of cities—greater stimulation
of the intellect, removal of prejudice, leaning
towards altruism; in fact, higher general development
of the individual. When Miss
Dacre arrived, she, being appealed to, in the
capacity of referee, unhesitatingly gave her
decision in favour of a country life, stating her
arguments so clearly that she completely turned
the scale, besides causing Hubert the keenest
enjoyment by, as he supposed, thus laying bare
her own predilections.</p>
<p>After this contest of wits the Colonel appeared
on the scene, having returned from his
usual afternoon’s ride; and Hubert, with some
address, managed to interest him in a discussion
on station management, and the probable profits
of agriculture, listening with deference to his
senior’s ideas and suggestions.</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />