<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
<p class='c012'>Before the Windāhgil party returned on
the following day a council of war was held,
at the conclusion of which the Colonel’s face
assumed a very different expression from that
which it habitually wore. The four men met
in his study, where the accounts, assets, and
liabilities were laid before the financial authority,
who scanned them with keen and practised
eye.</p>
<p>After what appeared to the others, and
especially to Willoughby and his father, an
astonishingly short examination, he raised his
head and asked these pertinent questions: “I
see your next bill, £12,437 14<em>s.</em> 10<em>d.</em>, falls due
in March,” he said. “After that, there is
nothing more to be met but station expenses
for another year, against which there will, of
course, be the wool clip. You have 54,786
sheep, more or less, on the run. Is that so?”</p>
<p>“Half of which are to die this winter,
Hubert says. Oh, yes—they’re all in the
paddocks,” replied the younger Dacre, in a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>tone of reckless despair, while the Colonel’s
face set with steadfast resolve, yet showed by
the twitching of his lips how severe was the
repression of feeling—how tense the strain of
anxiety.</p>
<p>“Never mind about that just yet,” said
Barrington Hope. “We’ll see into the available
assets first. About this next bill, Colonel;
how do you propose to meet it?”</p>
<p>“By the sale of sheep, I suppose. There is
no other way. And if this drought comes to
pass I am informed they will be next to valueless.
How is the next one—of equal amount,
and another still, to be paid? In such a case
I see nothing but ruin staring me in the face.
Good God! that I should have brought my
poor children to such a pass!”</p>
<p>Here the brave soldier, who had fought with
cheerful courage on more than one battle-field,
when comrades lay dead and dying around him—who
had been the first man across the breach
when the rebel artillery were mowing down his
regiment like swathes of meadow grass at Delhi,
appeared quite unmanned.</p>
<p>“It will never do to give up the fight before
the end of the day, Colonel,” said Mr. Hope,
gently. “As a military man, you must know
that reserves may come up at any moment. I
will promise to give you a decided answer at the
end of our colloquy. But we must move
according to the rules of war.”</p>
<p>“You must pardon me, my dear sir,” said
<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>the Colonel, with a faint smile. “I trust not
to embarrass the court again; but the fact is, I
am a child in commercial affairs, and the probable
loss of my children’s whole fortune touches
me too acutely.”</p>
<p>“Have <em>you</em> any advice to offer, Hubert?”
queried Hope. “I understand we are all here
on terms of friendly equality.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I have,” said the young man, with an
air of decision. “You can judge of its value.
All the Windāhgil sheep, with the exception of
a couple of flocks of studs, start for our Queensland
country in January. The dry belt likely
to be affected by the coming drought is a narrow
one not more than two hundred miles wide, and
as the sheep are fairly strong now, though they
won’t remain so, they should cross that with
trifling loss. Donald Greenhaugh, a first-class
man, has agreed to go in charge. Sheep are
sheep over there now for stocking up new
country, and we can sell to advantage what we
do not want for Windāhgil Downs. The larger
the number sent in one overland journey like
this, the smaller the expense of droving per
head. I propose that Wantabalree should be
cleared in the same way. Willoughby can go
in charge of his own sheep, and we can share
the expense.”</p>
<p>“I see nothing to prevent your idea from
being carried out,” said Mr. Hope. “I am
aware that sheep of good quality, as the Wantabalree
sheep proverbially are, are scarce, and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>saleable at high rates, in the new country. The
main thing will be to have a first-class road
overseer.”</p>
<p>“Greenhaugh has been out with an exploring
party over all that country,” said Hubert;
“and as a head drover is worth his weight in
gold. A sober, steady fellow, too, and a good
hand with men. No better bushman anywhere.”</p>
<p>“I’m ready to start next week,” said
Willoughby, with the fire of ardent youth in
his kindling eye. “I never expected to have
such a chance. But—” and here his face
became grave and thoughtful—“what do you
say, father? Will you and Rosalind be able
to get on without me?”</p>
<p>“We must try, my boy. The time will
pass heavily, I doubt not; but,” and here he
walked over to Hubert, and put his hand on
his firm shoulder, “your father did not grudge
you in the path of honourable ambition, nor
can I be more selfish. God bless you both, my
boys! and bring you safe back once more to
gladden our hearts. It seems to me as if
Providence had decided this issue, and that I
have little hand in it.”</p>
<p>“I wish now to understand, Colonel Dacre,”
said Hope; “if, upon their arrival in Queensland,
you will place 20,000 sheep in our hands
for sale—at such prices as may be then ruling—and
whether by the terms of your mortgage to
Mr. Dealerson—who has of course, taken care
<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>to tie you up as tightly as he could—you have
the power of disposing of so many.”</p>
<p>“It so happens that I have permission to
reduce the stock—I believe that’s the expression—by
just such a number,” said the Colonel
more cheerfully; “and I most willingly invest
you with the power of disposing of them.”</p>
<p>“Then I will take upon myself to state that
the Austral Agency Company will guarantee to
take up your bill next coming due, and to
provide you with funds to carry you over the
next shearing, when we may perhaps make a
more complete and satisfactory arrangement.”</p>
<p>The Colonel gazed at Mr. Hope with an
expression as of one not fully realising the effect
of the words he heard with his outward ears.
Then suddenly stepping forward, he stretched
out his hand, and taking that of the younger
man wrung it silently.</p>
<p>He retreated to his chair, where he sat down
with an expression of relief too deep for words.
He then left, apparently, all further transactions
of the interview in the hands of the “coming
race.”</p>
<p>They began to go into detail a little, as if
about <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>un fait accompli</em></span>, Hubert, more particularly,
talking rapidly, in order to cover any appearance
of awkwardness on the part of his hosts.</p>
<p>“You know,” he said, “that by doing this
travelling business, we ‘hedge,’ so to speak,
instead of standing to lose on the double event
of a dry season and a panic in the money market,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>more than any of us can afford. If the weather
breaks in February, of course we needn’t have
started, but we can’t lose anything, as our sheep
will be regularly run after when we get them
over, and at high prices too. They talk of
maiden ewes being worth a pound from the
shears, and anything else fifteen shillings, while
if it holds dry for three or four months here,
sheep will have to be given away, or next thing
to it.”</p>
<p>“I suppose I shall have to hire a lot of shepherds,”
said Willoughby; “that will be a nuisance,
won’t it?”</p>
<p>“If I were you I’d leave all that to Greenhaugh;
he’s accustomed to these fellows, and
knows how to talk to them on the road, which
you don’t. You’d better, ostensibly, be second
in command of the expedition. You won’t have
much responsibility, and will be able to pick up
heaps of experience. All you will have to find
will be your own horses. He’ll arrange everything
else and keep the accounts of rations and
wages, which you and I can settle when you
get there.”</p>
<p>“I suppose there’s a strong probability of a
drought setting in,” said Mr. Hope; “if not,
you will be rather premature.”</p>
<p>“The more I see of the weather signs, the
more certain I am that we are on the edge of
another drought, perhaps worse than the last,”
said Hubert. “You’ll see that a great many
people will hang on, expecting it to break up;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>then, making sure of getting the ‘tail end’ of
the tropical rains, and generally trusting to the
doctrine of chances until their sheep get too
weak to travel, and then—--”</p>
<p>“And what then?” asked Willoughby. “I
haven’t had the pleasure of witnessing a dry
season as yet.”</p>
<p>Hubert smiled grimly. “You will thank
your stars the Wantabalree sheep cleared
out in time. You would never have forgotten
it as long as you lived. Some squatters will
lose half their stock, some two-thirds, some
even more. A man told me he lost a hundred
thousand sheep in the last drought. But <em>he</em> could
afford it.”</p>
<p>“If it’s going to be so bad, what will your
governor and mine do with the sheep we leave
behind, for we must leave some.”</p>
<p>“They will have all the grass and water to
themselves, which will give them a chance, and
then, if it gets very cruel, they must cut scrub
and oak for them.”</p>
<p>“Cut the trees down!” said Willoughby,
with astonishment. “I never heard of such a
thing!”</p>
<p>“You’ll find out everything in time,” said
Hubert. “‘The brave old oak’ has an antipodean
signification here. I don’t know what we
should do without him in a dry time. I’ve
known sheep kept in good condition that hadn’t
seen grass for eighteen months.”</p>
<p>Before the drive back, which took place after
<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>lunch, in the midst of pathetic leave-takings
between the Windāhgil girls and Miss Dacre,
the latter young lady took an opportunity of
expressing to Hubert her sincere gratitude for his
organisation of the opportune alliance which was,
so to speak, to raise the siege of Wantabalree.</p>
<p>“It has made dearest papa quite young again,”
she said. “For weeks he has not been able to
sleep at night, but used to get up and go wandering
up and down the garden. I really began
to fear for his reason. And now he seems quite
a different man. I am so happy myself at the
change for the better, that I cannot feel properly
sorry that dear Willoughby is going away from
us.”</p>
<p>“He is going among friends, at any rate,
Miss Dacre,” said Hubert, pressing the young
lady’s hand warmly in the agitation of the
moment. “He will be well looked after, rely
upon it. I feel certain it will be for everybody’s
benefit in the long run.”</p>
<p>“I shall always think that you and that good
genius, Mr. Hope, have stood between us and
ruin,” said she, and here her bright, steadfast
eyes were somewhat dimmed. “If papa does
not say all that is in his heart, believe me that
we are not ungrateful.”</p>
<p>“<em>Nothing</em> could ever lead me to think that,”
said Hubert meeting her eyes with a glance
which expressed more than that simple sentence,
if freely translated. “Whatever happens, I am
more than repaid by your approval.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>By this time Whalebone and Whipcord,
harnessed up and having their heads turned
homeward, began to exhibit signs of impatience,
which caused Linda to call out to Hubert that
she was sure Whipcord would throw himself
down and break the pole if they didn’t start at
once, which appalling contingency cut short the
interview, to Hubert’s secret indignation. This
expressed itself in letting them out with a will
and quitting Wantabalree at the rate of fourteen
miles an hour.</p>
<p>Some people would have felt nervous at proceeding
along a winding, narrow bush road,
well furnished with stumps, at such an express
train rate, but the sure hand and steady eye of
Hubert Stamford, in combination with the light
mouths and regular if speedy movement of the
well-matched horses, engendered the most absolute
confidence in his driving.</p>
<p>“What do you think of bush life generally,
Mr. Hope?” said Laura—after the first rush of
the excitable goers had steadied into a twelve-mile-an-hour
trot—“and how do you like
Wantabalree?”</p>
<p>“I think the Wantabalree people perfect in
their own way, worthy to be neighbours of
Windāhgil,” he added with a slight inclination
of his head. “A man could live there very
happily, ‘with one fair spirit to be his minister,’
if Miss Dacre would condescend to the office.
It’s a lovely verandah to read in. It would be
like the days of Thalaba, while it lasted.”</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>“And why should it not last?” demanded
Laura. “The bush appears to me the place of
all others where the feelings and emotions are
the most permanent and deep-seated.”</p>
<p>Barrington Hope fixed his eyes upon her as
she spoke with a gaze wistful and almost
melancholy in its earnestness.</p>
<p>“Can anything endure that is fair, joyous,
dreamlike, in this uncertain life of ours?” he
said. “Is the ideal existence realised for most
of us, or, if so, does it continue? You are
more fortunate than I in your experiences, if
such is your belief.”</p>
<p>“Surely you have no reason to talk of
despondency,” said she, turning towards him
her bright face, in which the summer-time
seemed idealised. “You, who have made a
success in your profession, and whom everybody
talks of with—with, I won’t say admiration, it
might make you conceited—but high approval.”</p>
<p>“I have done fairly well, I <em>suppose</em>,” he said.
“I may take it as the natural consequence of
twenty years’ hard, unrelieved work. I have
coined my brain, my very heart’s blood, for it;
and I will not say but that I have had my
reward in a proved success and high consideration.
But, at times, a feeling comes over me of
unrest and of doubt, well-nigh despair, as to the
reality of human happiness—the value of success—against
which I can scarcely defend
myself.”</p>
<p>“You have been working too hard lately.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>Reaction has set in. In old days Hubert used
to suffer so, occasionally doubting whether life
was worth living, &c. But with men it is
generally a temporary ailment. You must take
life easily for the next few weeks, and, like the
old farm labourer in the village church, ‘think
about nothing’—Linda and I must cultivate
part-singing, and improve our acquaintance with
Wagner, now that we have the benefit of your
criticism.”</p>
<p>“It is a passing weakness, I suppose,” he
said; “still, you would wonder at its intensity.
But I didn’t come here to bore you with my
whims and fancies. One thing I shall carry
away as a pleasant souvenir—that Hubert and
I have been able to lighten the load on poor old
Colonel Dacre’s heart.”</p>
<p>“I <em>am</em> charmed beyond measure,” said Laura.
“Hubert told me something—though he is
such a close creature when he is speaking about
himself that I could get next to nothing out
of him. Willoughby will be able to get the
sheep away to Queensland, I suppose, with ours,
and they may not be ruined after all.”</p>
<p>“They will have a struggle, but I really
believe the station will pull through with
Hubert’s assistance and advice. If anything
serious does happen at Wantabalree, it will
not be for want of all the aid that an energetic
young friend can furnish. I can see as much as
that.”</p>
<p>“And so can I,” said Laura; “he could
<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>find no better or sweeter reason if he looked for
a century.”</p>
<p>Linda and Hubert, according to their wont
and usage, were embarked in such an animated
argument that it is probable they did not hear
this last confidential reference; more especially
as—perhaps for the greater convenience of
separate converse—the speakers’ voices had
become somewhat lowered, and Hubert’s attention
was partly taken up with his horses.</p>
<p>The twenty miles were accomplished in less
than two hours. The horses in as hard condition
upon the now partially-dried summer
grasses as if they had been stabled, apparently
treated the drive as the merest trifle, trotting
off down the paddock, when released from
harness, apparently as free from fatigue as if
they had not gone a mile.</p>
<p>“I must say your bush horses surprise me,”
said Mr. Hope. “They are like Arabs of the
desert for speed and hardihood.”</p>
<p>“These two are a little out of the common,”
said Hubert; “not plentiful here or anywhere
else.”</p>
<hr class='c007' />
<p>The merry Christmastide was nearly spent—a
season fully enjoyed in those newer Englands,
which are growing fast and blooming fair
beneath the Southern Cross, in despite of the
red summer sun, and brown crisp pastures—a
blessed time of rest from toil, “surcease of
sorrow,” gathering of friends and kinsfolk.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>Barrington Hope had thoroughly enjoyed his
holiday; more, he averred than on any previous
vacation of his life. There had been walks,
drives and rides, picnics to the limestone caves
in the vicinity, where vast halls were explored
by the light of torches, stalactites brought home
in triumph, and wondrous depths of gloom and
primæval chaos penetrated; fishing parties on
the river, where, although the water trickled
faintly over the gravelly shallows, the wide
reaches were deep and sport-permitting. Occasional
visits to Mooramah township, their communication
with the outer world, helped to fill up
the term, and drive away the dreadful thought,
uppermost in the hearts of the Windāhgil family,
that Hubert was so soon to leave them for the
far north land.</p>
<p>As soon as Christmas was well over the
serious work of the year—only interrupted by
this “truce of God”—began again with even
greater energy; the industrial battle, never long
pretermitted in Australia, raged furiously. So
there was great mustering on Windāhgil and
Wantabalree. Counting of sheep and tar-branding
of the same with the travelling “T,”
hiring of shepherds and “knock about” men.
Purchase of rations, tools, horses, drays, harness,
hobbles, “bells, bells, bells”—as Linda quoted—in
short, the thousand and one road requisites
for a long overland journey.</p>
<p>Towards the end of January Mr. Donald
Greenhaugh arrived, riding one serviceable horse,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>and leading another, whereon, disposed over a
pack saddle, was all his worldly wealth deposited.
A keen-eyed, mild voiced Scottish-Australian,
sun-bronzed, and lean as an Arab, who looked
as if the desert sun had dried all superfluous
moisture out of his wiry frame, he superintended
the preparations at Windāhgil in a
quiet, superior sort of way, occasionally offering
suggestions, but chiefly leaving Hubert to manage
matters as he thought fit. He also found time
to go over to Wantabalree, where he remained
a week, meeting with apparently greater exercise
for his generalship.</p>
<p>At length the great day of departure arrived.
The first flock of two thousand took the road
through the north Windāhgil gate, followed by
a second, at a decent interval, until the whole
thirty thousand sheep passed out. Next day the
advanced guard of the Wantabalree contingent
showed themselves—Greenhaugh having decided
to keep a day’s march between them. Forty
thousand of these came by. The fat and saleable
sheep of both stations had been retained. After
these had been sold in the autumnal markets
there would be but a small and manageable
balance on either station.</p>
<p>The Colonel came as far as Windāhgil, and
even a stage further, with his daughter, to see
his boy off. They were dreadfully downhearted
and saddened in appearance as they called at
Windāhgil on their homeward route, but cheered
up a little under the attentions of sympathising
<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>friends. Hubert had remained behind, not
choosing to follow for another week. He
was already beginning to assume the air of a
large operator and successful explorer. “Greenhaugh
can do all that business as well or better
than I can,” he said. “It’s no use paying a
man and doing the work yourself; I can catch
them up easily before they get to Banda.”</p>
<p>“Then we might have had Willoughby for
another week,” said Miss Dacre, with a slightly
reproachful air.</p>
<p>“I don’t suppose it would have made much
difference,” admitted Hubert; “but it is perhaps
as well that he made the start with the
sheep. He has a larger lot to look after; I
don’t know but that it’s as well to have the
wrench at once, and get it over—like a double
tooth, you know.”</p>
<p>“It’s the most philosophical way to look
at it,” said the girl, smiling through her tears,
“and no tongue can tell the comfort it has been
to us to know that matters are in a comparatively
favourable train. I must not weary you
with protestations, but papa and I can never
adequately express our gratitude.”</p>
<p>“That could be done easily enough,” thought
the young man; but he said: “At present it’s
only a case of good intentions; we must wait
to see how they turn out. How will you and
the Colonel get on by yourselves?”</p>
<p>“Better than I at first thought; Willoughby
left us our working overseer, who will do excellently
<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>to look after a smaller number of sheep.
It will just give papa exercise, and occupation to
help him to manage them, he says. Laura and
Linda must be good neighbours, and perhaps
Mr. Stamford will come over now and then and
indulge papa with a game of whist.”</p>
<p>“I will undertake everything,” said Hubert,
“for our people, but you and the Colonel must
reciprocate. If both families make common
cause till ‘Johnny comes marching home’—I
mean Willoughby—you will find the time pass
more quickly than you anticipate.”</p>
<hr class='c007' />
<p>Those last days of a pleasant holiday time,
what an element of sadness pervades them.
How swiftly they fly! Ah, me! The flowers
fade, the sky clouds over as if at the touch of
an untoward magician. The land of faery recedes—the
region of plain prose, of arduous
effort, and heroic but dreary self-abnegation
looms painfully near. Much, however, of this
sombre aspect of the inevitable is relieved in
early youth by the kindly glamour of high
hope, and the ardent imagination of the as
yet successful aspirant. For him the forest
gloom is but the high road to the castle of the
enchanted princess; the sternest tourney is
more than recompensed by the smiles of his
queen of beauty; the burning summer day, the
drear winter night, but aids to fortune and
accessories to boundless wealth.</p>
<p>So, for Barrington Hope and Hubert Stamford,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>the tranquil days came and went, scarce
tinged with melancholy, till the fateful morn of
departure arrived; before noon Windāhgil was
left desolate and forsaken of its heroes. Hubert
fared forth along the north-west trail, bound for
the sea-like plains of the Lower Warroo, where
the wild orange flowers bloom on their lonely
sand islands, bright with glossy-leaved shrubs;
where the emu rears her brood undisturbed
under the sad-hued myall, that waves her
slender streamers and whispers ghost-like at
midnight to the pitiless desert moon.</p>
<p>Mr. Barrington Hope, on the other hand,
betook himself by rail to the metropolis, to
plunge once more, with the eagerness of a
strong swimmer, into the great ocean of speculative
finance, which there “heaves and seethes
alway.” But before he departed he had transacted
a rather important interview, in which
Laura Stamford was the person chiefly interested;
had, indeed, promised to revisit
Windāhgil before the winter ended.</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>
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