<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="height: 8em;">
<br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/></div>
<h1> HARRY HEATHCOTE OF GANGOIA </h1>
<h3> Tale of Australian Bush-Life </h3>
<h2> By Anthony Trollope </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>HARRY HEATHCOTE</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. — GANGOIL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. — A NIGHT’S RIDE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. — MEDLICOT’S MILL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. — HARRY HEATHCOTE’S
APPEAL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. — BOSCOBEL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. — THE BROWNBIES OF BOOLABONG.</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. — “I WISH YOU’D
LIKE ME.” </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. — “I DO WISH HE WOULD
COME!” </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. — THE BUSH FIGHT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. — HARRY HEATHCOTE RETURNS IN
TRIUMPH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. — SERGEANT FORREST. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. — CONCLUSION. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h1> HARRY HEATHCOTE </h1>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER I. — GANGOIL. </h2>
<p>Just a fortnight before Christmas, 1871, a young man, twenty-four years of
age, returned home to his dinner about eight o’clock in the evening.
He was married, and with him and his wife lived his wife’s sister.
At that somewhat late hour he walked in among the two young women, and
another much older woman who was preparing the table for dinner. The wife
and the wife’s sister each had a child in her lap, the elder having
seen some fifteen months of its existence, and the younger three months.
“He has been out since seven, and I don’t think he’s had
a mouthful,” the wife had just said. “Oh, Harry, you must be
half starved,” she exclaimed, jumping up to greet him, and throwing
her arm round his bare neck.</p>
<p>“I’m about whole melted,” he said, as he kissed her.
“In the name of charity give me a nobbler. I did get a bit of damper
and a pannikin of tea up at the German’s hut; but I never was so hot
or so thirsty in my life. We’re going to have it in earnest this
time. Old Bates says that when the gum leaves crackle, as they do now,
before Christmas, there won’t be a blade of grass by the end of
February.”</p>
<p>“I hate Old Bates,” said the wife. “He always prophesies
evil, and complains about his rations.”</p>
<p>“He knows more about sheep than any man this side of the Mary,”
said her husband. From all this I trust the reader will understand that
the Christmas to which he is introduced is not the Christmas with which he
is intimate on this side of the equator—a Christmas of blazing fires
in-doors, and of sleet amid snow and frost outside—but the Christmas
of Australia, in which happy land the Christmas fires are apt to be
lighted—or to light themselves—when they are by no means
needed.</p>
<p>The young man who had just returned home had on a flannel shirt, a pair of
mole-skin trowsers, and an old straw hat, battered nearly out of all
shape. He had no coat, no waistcoat, no braces, and nothing round his
neck. Round his waist there was a strap or belt, from the front of which
hung a small pouch, and, behind, a knife in a case. And stuck into a loop
in the belt, made for the purpose, there was a small brier-wood pipe. As
he dashed his hat off, wiped his brow, and threw himself into a
rocking-chair, he certainly was rough to look at, but by all who
understood Australian life he would have been taken to be a gentleman. He
was a young squatter, well known west of the Mary River, in Queensland.
Harry Heathcote of Gangoil, who owned 30,000 sheep of his own, was a
magistrate in those parts, and able to hold his own among his neighbors,
whether rough or gentle; and some neighbors he had, very rough, who made
it almost necessary that a man should be able to be rough also, on
occasions, if he desired to live among them without injury. Heathcote of
Gangoil could do all that. Men said of him that he was too imperious, too
masterful, too much inclined to think that all things should be made to go
as he would have them. Young as he was, he had been altogether his own
master since he was of age—and not only his own master, but the
master also of all with whom he was brought into contact from day to day.
In his life he conversed but seldom with any but those who were dependent
on him, nor had he done so for the last three years. At an age at which
young men at home are still subject to pastors and masters, he had sprung
at once into patriarchal power, and, being a man determined to thrive, had
become laborious and thoughtful beyond his years.</p>
<p>Harry Heathcote had been left an orphan, with a small fortune in money,
when he was fourteen. For two years after that he had consented to remain
quietly at school, but at sixteen he declared his purpose of emigrating.
Boys less than himself in stature got above him at school, and he had not
liked it. For a twelvemonth he was opposed by his guardian; but at the end
of the year he was fitted forth for the colony. The guardian was not sorry
to be quit of him, but prophesied that he would be home again before a
year was over. The lad had not returned, and it was now a settled
conviction among all who knew him that he would make or mar his fortune in
the new land that he had chosen.</p>
<p>He was a tall, well-made young fellow, with fair hair and a good-humored
smile, but ever carrying in his countenance marks of what his enemies
called pig-headedness, his acquaintances obstinacy, and those who loved
him firmness. His acquaintances were, perhaps, right, for he certainly was
obstinate. He would take no man’s advice, he would submit himself to
no man, and in the conduct of his own business preferred to trust to his
own insight than to the experience of others. It would sometimes occur
that he had to pay heavily for his obstinacy. But, on the other hand, the
lessons which he learned he learned thoroughly. And he was kept right in
his trade by his own indefatigable industry. That trade was the growth of
wool. He was a breeder of sheep on a Queensland sheep-run, and his flocks
ran far afield over a vast territory of which he was the only lord. His
house was near the river Mary, and beyond the river his domain did not
extend; but around him on his own side of the river he could ride for ten
miles in each direction without getting off his own pastures. He was
master, as far as his mastership went, of 120,000 acres—almost an
English county—and it was the pride of his heart to put his foot off
his own territory as seldom as possible. He sent his wool annually down to
Brisbane, and received his stores, tea and sugar, flour and brandy, boots,
clothes, tobacco, etc., once or twice a year from thence. But the traffic
did not require his own presence at the city. So self-contained was the
working of the establishment that he was never called away by his
business, unless he went to see some lot of highly bred sheep which he
might feel disposed to buy; and as for pleasure, it had come to be
altogether beyond the purpose of his life to go in quest of that. When the
work of the day was over, he would lie at his length upon rugs in the
veranda, with a pipe in his mouth, while his wife sat over him reading a
play of Shakspeare or the last novel that had come to them from England.</p>
<p>He had married a fair girl, the orphan daughter of a bankrupt squatter
whom he had met in Sydney, and had brought her and her sister into the
Queensland bush with him. His wife idolized him. His sister-in-law, Kate
Daly, loved him dearly—as she had cause to do, for he had proved
himself to be a very brother to her; but she feared him also somewhat. The
people about the Mary said that she was fairer and sweeter to look at even
than the elder sister. Mrs. Heathcote was the taller of the two, and the
larger-featured. She certainly was the higher in intellect, and the
fittest to be the mistress of such an establishment as that at Gangoil.</p>
<p>When he had washed his hands and face, and had swallowed the very copious
but weak allowance of brandy-and-water which his wife mixed for him, he
took the eldest boy on his lap and fondled him. “By George!”
he said, “old fellow, you sha’n’t be a squatter.”</p>
<p>“Why not, Harry?” asked his wife.</p>
<p>“Because I don’t want him to break his heart every day of his
life.”</p>
<p>“Are you always breaking yours? I thought your heart was pretty well
hardened now.”</p>
<p>“When a man talks of his heart, you and Kate are thinking of loves
and doves, of course.”</p>
<p>“I wasn’t thinking of loves and doves, Harry,” said
Kate. “I was thinking how very hot it must have been to-day. We
could only bear it in the veranda by keeping the blinds always wet. I don’t
wonder that you were troubled.”</p>
<p>“That comes from heaven or Providence, or from something that one
knows to be unassailable, and therefore one can put up with it. Even if
one gets a sun-stroke one does not complain. The sun has a right to be
there, and is no interloper, like a free-selector. I can’t
understand why free-selectors and mosquitoes should have been introduced
into the arrangements of the world.”</p>
<p>“I s’pose the poor must live somewheres, and ‘squiters
too,” said Mrs. Growler, the old maid-servant, as she put a boiled
leg of mutton on the table. “Now, Mr. Harry, if you’re
hungered, there’s something for you to eat in spite of the
free-selectors.”</p>
<p>“Mrs. Growler,” said the master, “excuse me for saying
that you jump to conclusions.”</p>
<p>“My jumping is pretty well-nigh done,” said the old woman.</p>
<p>“By no means. I find that old people can jump quite as briskly as
young. You have rebuked me under the impression that I was grudging
something to the poor. Let me explain to you that a free-selector may be,
and very often is, a rich man. He whom I had in my mind is not a poor man,
though I won’t swear but what he will be before a year is over.”</p>
<p>“I know who you mean, Mr. Harry; you mean the Medlicots. A very nice
gentleman is Mr. Medlicot, and a very nice old lady is Mrs. Medlicot. And
a deal of good they’re going to do, by all accounts.”</p>
<p>“Now, Mrs. Growler, that will do,” said the wife.</p>
<p>The dinner consisted of a boiled leg of mutton, a large piece of roast
beef, potatoes, onions, and an immense pot of tea. No glasses were even
put upon the table. The two ladies had dressed for dinner, and were bright
and pretty as they would have been in a country house at home; but Harry
Heathcote had sat down just as he had entered the room.</p>
<p>“I know you are tired to death,” said his wife, “when I
see you eat your dinner like that.”</p>
<p>“It isn’t being tired, Mary; I’m not particularly tired.
But I must be off again in about an hour.”</p>
<p>“Out again to-night?”</p>
<p>“Yes, indeed.”</p>
<p>“On horseback?”</p>
<p>“How else? Old Bates and Mickey are in their saddles still. I don’t
want to have my fences burned as soon as they’re put up. It’s
a ticklish thing to think that a spark of fire any where about the place
might ruin me, and to know at the same time that every man about the run
and every swagsman that passes along have matches in their pocket. There
isn’t a pipe lighted on Gangoil this time of the year that mightn’t
make a beggar of you and me. That’s another reason why I wouldn’t
have the young un a squatter.”</p>
<p>“—I declare I think that squatters have more trouble than any
people in the world,” said Kate Daly.</p>
<p>“—Free-selectors have their own troubles too, Kate,”
said he.</p>
<p>It must be explained as we go on that Heathcote felt that he had received
a great and peculiar grievance from the hands of one Medlicot, a stranger
who had lately settled near him, and that this last remark referred to a
somewhat favorable opinion which had been expressed about this stranger by
the two ladies. It was a little unfair, as having been addressed specially
to Kate, intending as it did to imply that Kate had better consider the
matter well before she allowed her opinion of the stranger to become
dangerously favorable; for in truth she had said no more than her sister.</p>
<p>“The Medlicots’ troubles will never trouble me, Harry,”
she said.</p>
<p>“I hope not, Kate; nor mine either more than we can help.”</p>
<p>“But they do,” said Mary. “They trouble me, and her too,
very much.”</p>
<p>“A man’s back should be broad enough to bear all that for
himself,” said Harry. “I get ashamed of myself when I grumble,
and yet one seems to be surly if one doesn’t say what one’s
thinking.”</p>
<p>“I hope you’ll always tell me what you’re thinking,
dear.”</p>
<p>“Well, I suppose I shall—till this fellow is old enough to be
talked to, and to be made to bear the burden of his father’s care.”</p>
<p>“By that time, Harry, you will have got rich, and we shall all be in
England, sha’n’t we?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know about being rich, but we shall have been
free-selected off Gangoil.—Now, Mrs. Growler, we’ve done
dinner, and I’ll have a pipe before I make another start. Is Jacko
in the kitchen? Send him through to me on to the veranda.”</p>
<p>Gangoil was decidedly in the bush—according to common Australian
parlance, all sheep stations are in the bush, even though there should not
be a tree or shrub within sight. They who live away from the towns live a
“bush life.” Small towns, as they grow up, are called bush
towns, as we talk of country towns. The “bush,” indeed, is the
country generally. But the Heathcotes lived absolutely and actually in the
bush. There are Australian pastures which consist of plains on which not a
tree is to be seen for miles; but others are forests, so far extending
that their limits are almost unknown. Gangoil was surrounded by forest, in
some places so close as to be impervious to men and almost to animals in
which the undergrowth was thick and tortuous and almost platted, through
which no path could be made without an axe, but of which the greater
portions were open, without any under-wood, between which the sheep could
wander at their will, and men could ride, with a sparse surface of coarse
grass, which after rain would be luxuriant, but in hot weather would be
scorched down to the ground. At such times—and those times were by
far the more common—a stranger would wonder where the sheep would
find their feed. Immediately round the house, or station, as it was
called, about one hundred acres had been cleared, or nearly cleared, with
a few trees left here and there for ornament or shade. Further afield, but
still round the home quarters, the trees had been destroyed, the run of
the sap having been stopped by “ringing” the bark; but they
still stood like troops of skeletons, and would stand, very ugly to look
at, till they fell, in the course of nature, by reason of their own
rottenness. There was a man always at work about the place—Boscobel
he was called—whose sole business was to destroy the timber after
this fashion, so that the air might get through to the grasses, and that
the soil might be relieved from the burden of nurturing the forest trees.</p>
<p>For miles around the domain was divided into paddocks, as they were there
called; but these were so large that a stranger might wander in one of
them for a day and never discover that he was inclosed. There were five or
six paddocks on the Gangoil run, each of which comprised over ten thousand
acres, and as all the land was undulating, and as the timber was around
you every where, one paddock was exactly like another. The scenery in
itself was fine, for the trees were often large, and here and there rocky
knolls would crop up, and there were broken crevices in the ground; but it
was all alike. A stranger would wonder that any one straying from the
house should find his way back to it. There were sundry bush houses here
and there, and the so-called road to the coast from the wide pastoral
districts further west passed across the run; but these roads and tracks
would travel hither and thither, new tracks being opened from time to time
by the heavy wool drays and store wagons, as in wet weather the ruts on
the old tracks would become insurmountable.</p>
<p>The station itself was certainly very pretty. It consisted of a cluster of
cottages, each of which possessed a ground-floor only. No such luxury as
stairs was known at Gangoil. It stood about half a mile from the Mary
River, on the edge of a creek which ran into it. The principal edifice,
that in which the Heathcotes lived, contained only one sitting-room, and a
bedroom on each side of it; but in truth there was another room, very
spacious, in which the family really passed their time; and this was the
veranda which ran along the front and two ends of the house. It was twelve
feet broad, and, of course, of great length. Here was clustered the
rocking-chairs, and sofas, and work-tables, and very often the cradle of
the family. Here stood Mrs. Heathcote’s sewing-machine, and here the
master would sprawl at his length, while his wife, or his wife’s
sister, read to him. It was here, in fact, that they lived, having a
parlor simply for their meals. Behind the main edifice there stood, each
apart, various buildings, forming an irregular quadrangle. The kitchen
came first, with a small adjacent chamber in which slept the Chinese
man-cook, Sing Sing, as he had come to be called; then the cottage,
consisting also of three rooms and a small veranda, in which lived Harry’s
superintendent, commonly known as Old Bates, a man who had been a squatter
once himself, and having lost his all in bad times, now worked for a small
salary. In the cottage two of the rooms were devoted to hospitality when,
as was not unusual, guests, known or unknown, came that way; and here
Harry himself would sleep, if the entertainment of other ladies crowded
the best apartments. Then at the back of the quadrangle was the store,
perhaps of all the buildings the most important. In here was kept a kind
of shop, which was supposed, according to an obsolete rule, to be open for
custom for half a day twice a week. The exigencies of the station did not
allow of this regularity; but after some fashion the shop was maintained.
Tea was to be bought there, and sugar, tobacco, and pickles, jam, nails,
boots, hats, flannel shirrs, and mole-skin trowsers. Any body who came
might buy, but the intention was to provide the station hands, who would
otherwise have had to go or send thirty miles for the supply of their
wants. Very little money was taken here, generally none. But the quantity
of pickles, jam, and tobacco sold was great. The men would consume large
quantities of these bush delicacies, and the cost would be deducted from
their wages. The tea and sugar, and flour also, were given out weekly, as
rations—so much a week—and meat was supplied to them after the
same fashion. For it was the duty of this young autocratic patriarch to
find provisions for all who were employed around him. For such luxuries as
jam and tobacco the men paid themselves.</p>
<p>On the fourth side of the quadrangle was a rough coach-house, and rougher
stables. The carriage part of the establishment consisted of two “buggies”—so
called always in the bush—open carriages on four wheels, one of
which was intended to hold two and the other four sitters. A Londoner
looking at them would have declared them to be hopeless ruins; but Harry
Heathcote still made wonderful journeys in them, taking care generally
that the wheels were sound, and using ropes for the repair of
dilapidations. The stables were almost unnecessary, as the horses, of
which the supply at Gangoil was very large, roamed in the horse paddock, a
comparatively small inclosure containing not above three or four hundred
acres, and were driven up as they were wanted. One horse was always kept
close at home with which to catch the others; but this horse, for
handiness, was generally hitched to a post outside the kitchen door. Harry
was proud of his horses, and was sometimes heard to say that few men in
England had a lot of thirty at hand as he had, out of which so many would
be able to carry a man eighty miles in eight hours at a moment’s
notice. But his stable arrangements would not have commanded respect in
the “Shires.” The animals were never groomed, never fed, and
many of them never shod. They lived upon grass, and, Harry always said,
“cut their own bread-and-butter for themselves.”</p>
<p>Gangoil was certainly very pretty. The veranda was covered in with striped
blinds, so that when the sun shone hot, or when the rains fell heavily, or
when the mosquitoes were more than usually troublesome, there might be
something of the protection of an inclosed room. Up all the posts there
were flowering creepers, which covered the front with greenery even when
the flowers were wanting. From the front of the house down to the creek
there was a pleasant failing garden—heart-breaking, indeed, in
regard to vegetables, for the opossums always came first, and they who
followed the opossums got but little. But the garden gave a pleasant
home-like look to the place, and was very dear to Harry, who was, perhaps,
indifferent in regard to pease and tomatoes. Harry Heathcote was very
proud of the place, for he had made it all himself, having pulled down a
wretched barrack that he had found there. But he was far prouder of his
wool-shed, which he had also built, and which he regarded as first and
foremost among wool-sheds in those parts. By-and-by we shall be called on
to visit the wool-shed. Though Heathcote had done all this for Gangoil, it
must be understood that the vast extent of territory over which his sheep
ran was by no means his own property. He was simply the tenant of the
Crown, paying a rent computed at so much a sheep. He had, indeed,
purchased the ground on which his house stood, but this he had done simply
to guard himself against other purchasers. These other purchasers were the
bane of his existence, the one great sorrow which, as he said, broke his
heart.</p>
<p>While he was speaking, a rough-looking lad, about sixteen years of age,
came through the parlor to the veranda, dressed very much like his master,
but unwashed, uncombed, and with that wild look which falls upon those who
wander about the Australian plains, living a nomad life. This was Jacko—so
called, and no one knew him by any other name—a lad whom Heathcote
had picked up about six months since, and who had become a favorite.
“The old woman says as you was wanting me?” suggested Jacko.
“Going to be fine to-night, Jacko?”</p>
<p>Jacko went to the edge of the veranda and looked up to the sky. “My
word! little squall a-coming,” he said.</p>
<p>“I wish it would come from ten thousand buckets,” said the
master.</p>
<p>“No buckets at all,” said Jacko. “Want the horses,
master?”</p>
<p>“Of course. I want the horses, and I want you to come with me. There
are two horses saddled there; I’ll ride Hamlet.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER II. — A NIGHT’S RIDE. </h2>
<p>Harry jumped from the ground, kissed his wife, called her “old girl,”
and told her to be happy, and got on his horse at the garden gate. Both
the ladies came off the veranda to see him start. “It’s as
dark as pitch,” said Kate Daly.</p>
<p>“That’s because you have just come out of the light.”</p>
<p>“But it is dark—quite dark. You won’t be late, will you?”
said the wife.</p>
<p>“I can’t be very early, as it’s near ten now. I shall be
back about twelve.” So saying, he broke at once into a gallop, and
vanished into the night, his young groom scampering after him.</p>
<p>“Why should he go out now?” Kate said to her sister.</p>
<p>“He is afraid of fire.”</p>
<p>“But he can’t prevent the fires by riding about in the dark. I
suppose the fires come from the heat.”</p>
<p>“He thinks they come from enemies, and he has heard something. One
wretched man may do so much when every thing is dried to tinder. I do so
wish it would rain.”</p>
<p>The night, in truth, was very dark. It was now midsummer, at which time
with us the days are so long that the coming of the one almost catches the
departure of its predecessor. But Gangoil was not far outside the tropics,
and there were no long summer nights. The heat was intense; but there was
a low soughing wind which seemed to moan among the trees without moving
them. As they crossed the little home inclosure and the horse paddock, the
track was just visible, the trees being dead and the spaces open. About
half a mile from the house, while they were still in the horse paddock,
Harry turned from the track, and Jacko, of course, turned with him.
“You can sit your horse jumping, Jacko?” he asked.</p>
<p>“My word! jump like glory,” answered Jacko. He was soon tried.
Harry rode at the bush fence—which was not, indeed, much of a fence,
made of logs lengthways and crossways, about three feet and a half high—and
went over it. Jacko followed him, rushing his horse at the leap, losing
his seat and almost falling over the animal’s shoulders as he came
to the ground. “My word!” said Jacko, just saving himself by a
scramble; “who ever saw the like of that?”</p>
<p>“Why don’t you sit in your saddle, you stupid young duffer?”</p>
<p>“Sit in my saddle! Why don’t he jump proper? Well, you go on.
I don’t know that I’m a duffer. Duffer, indeed! My word!”
Heathcote had turned to the left, leaving the track, which was, indeed,
the main road toward the nearest town and the coast, and was now pushing
on through the forest with no pathway at all to guide him. To ordinary
eyes the attempt to steer any course would have been hopeless. But an
Australian squatter, if he have any well-grounded claim to the character
of a bushman, has eyes which are not ordinary, and he has, probably,
nurtured within himself, unconsciously, topographical instincts which are
unintelligible to the inhabitants of cities. Harry, too, was near his own
home, and went forward through the thick gloom without a doubt, Jacko
following him faithfully. In about half an hour they came to another
fence, but now it was too absolutely dark for jumping. Harry had not seen
it till he was close to it, and then he pulled up his horse. “My
word! why don’t you jump away, Mr. Harry? Who’s a duffer now?”</p>
<p>“Hold your tongue, or I’ll put my whip across your back. Get
down and help me pull a log away. The horses couldn’t see where to
put their feet.” Jacko did as he was bid, and worked hard, but still
grumbled at having been called a duffer. The animals were quickly led
over, the logs were replaced, and the two were again galloping through the
forest.</p>
<p>“I thought you were making for the wool-shed,” said Jacko.</p>
<p>“We’re eight miles beyond the wool-shed,” said Harry.
They had now crossed another paddock, and had come to the extreme fence on
the run. The Gangoil pastures extended much further, but in that direction
had not as yet been inclosed. Here they both got off their horses and
walked along the fence till they came to an opening, with a slip panel, or
movable bars, which had been Heathcote’s intended destination.
“Hold the horses, Jacko, till I come back,” he said.</p>
<p>Jacko, when alone, nothing daunted by the darkness or solitude, seated
himself on the top rail, took out a pipe, and struck a match. When the
tobacco was ignited he dropped the match on the dry grass at his feet, and
a little flame instantly sprang up. The boy waited a few seconds till the
flames began to run, and then putting his feet together on the ground
stamped out the incipient fire. “My word!” said Jacko to
himself, “it’s easy done, anyway.”</p>
<p>Harry went on to the left for about half a mile, and then stood leaning
against the fence. It was very dark, but he was now looking over into an
inclosure which had been altogether cleared of trees, and which, as he
knew well, had been cultivated and was covered with sugar-canes. Where he
stood he was not distant above a quarter of a mile from the river, and the
field before him ran down to the banks. This was the selected land of
Giles Medlicot—two years since a portion of his own run, which had
now been purchased from the government—for the loss of which he had
received and was entitled to receive no compensation. And the matter was
made worse for him by the fact that the interloper had come between him
and the river. But he was not standing here near midnight merely to
exercise his wrath by straining his eyes through the darkness at his
neighbor’s crops. He put his finger into his mouth to wet it, and
then held it up that he might discover which way the light breath of wind
was coming. There was still the low moan to be heard continually through
the forest, and yet not a leaf seemed to be moved. After a while he
thought he caught a sound, and put his ear down to the ground. He
distinctly heard a footstep, and rising up, walked quickly toward the spot
whence the noise came.</p>
<p>“Who’s that?” he said, as he saw the figure of a man
standing on his side of the fence, and leaning against it, with a pipe in
his month.</p>
<p>“Who are you?” replied the man on the fence. “My name is
Medlicot.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Medlicot, is it?”</p>
<p>“Is that Mr. Heathcote? Good-night, Mr. Heathcote. You are going
about at a late hour of the night.”</p>
<p>“I have to go about early and late; but I ain’t later than
you.”</p>
<p>“I’m close at home,” said Medlicot.</p>
<p>“I am, at any rate, on my own run,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“You mean to say that I am trespassing?” said the other;
“because I can very soon jump back over the fence.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t mean that at all, Mr. Medlicot; any body is welcome
on my run, night or day, who knows how to behave himself.”</p>
<p>“I hope I’m included in that list.”</p>
<p>“Just so; of course. Considering the state that every thing is in,
and all the damage that a fire would do, I rather wish that people would
be a little more careful about smoking.”</p>
<p>“My canes, Mr. Heathcote, would burn quite as quickly as your grass.”</p>
<p>“It is not only the grass. I’ve a hundred miles of fencing on
the run which is as dry as tinder, not to talk of the station and the
wool-shed.”</p>
<p>“They sha’n’t suffer from my neglect, Mr. Heathcote.”</p>
<p>“You have men about who mayn’t be so careful. The wind, such
as it is, is coming right across from your place. If there were light
enough, I could show you three or four patches where there has been fire
within half a mile of this spot. There was a log burning there for two or
three days, not long ago, which was lighted by one of our men.”</p>
<p>“That was a fortnight since. There was no heat then, and the men
were boiling their kettle. I spoke about it.”</p>
<p>“A log like that, Mr. Medlicot, will burn for weeks sometimes. I’ll
tell you fairly what I’m afraid of. There’s a man with you
whom I turned out of the shed last shearing, and I think he might put a
match down—not by accident.”</p>
<p>“You mean Nokes. As far as I know, he’s a decent man. You
wouldn’t have me not employ a man just because you had dismissed
him?”</p>
<p>“Certainly not; that is, I shouldn’t think of dictating to you
about such a thing.”</p>
<p>“Well, no, Mr. Heathcote, I suppose not. Nokes has got to earn his
bread, though you did dismiss him. I don’t know that he’s not
as honest a man as you or I.”</p>
<p>“If so, there’s three of us very bad; that’s all, Mr.
Medlicot. Good-night; and if you’ll trouble yourself to look after
the ash of your tobacco it might be the saving of me and all I have.”
So saying, he turned round, and made his way back to the horses.</p>
<p>Medlicot had placed himself on the fence during the interview, and he
still kept his seat. Of course he was now thinking of the man who had just
left him, whom he declared to himself to be an ignorant, prejudiced,
ill-constituted cur. “I believe in his heart he thinks that I’m
going to set fire to his run,” he said, almost aloud. “And
because he grows wool he thinks himself above every body in the colony. He
occupies thousands of acres, and employs three or four men. I till about
two hundred, and maintain thirty families. But he is such a pig that he
can’t understand all that; and he thinks that I must be something
low because I’ve bought with my own money a bit of land which never
belonged to him, and which he couldn’t use.” Such was the
nature of Giles Medlicot’s soliloquy as he sat swinging his legs,
and still smoking his pipe, on the fence which divided his sugar-cane from
the other young man’s run.</p>
<p>And Harry Heathcote uttered his soliloquy also. “I wouldn’t
swear that he wouldn’t do it himself, after all;” meaning that
he almost suspected that Medlicot himself would be an incendiary. To him,
in his way of thinking, a man who would take advantage of the law to buy a
bit of another man’s land—or become a free-selector, as the
term goes—was a public enemy, and might be presumed capable of any
iniquity. It was all very well for the girls—meaning his wife and
sister-in-law—to tell him that Medlicot had the manners of a
gentleman and had come of decent people. Women were always soft enough to
be taken by soft hands, a good-looking face, and a decent coat. This
Medlicot went about dressed like a man in the towns, exhibiting, as Harry
thought, a contemptible, unmanly finery. Of what use was it to tell him
that Medlicot was a gentleman? What Harry knew was that since Medlicot had
come he had lost his sheep, that the heads of three or four had been found
buried on Medlicot’s side of his run, and that if he dismissed
“a hand,” Medlicot employed him—a proceeding which, in
Harry Heathcote’s aristocratic and patriarchal views of life, was
altogether ungentleman-like. How were the “hands” to be kept
in their place if one employer of labor did not back up another?</p>
<p>He had been warned to be on his guard against fire. The warnings had
hardly been implicit, but yet had come in a shape which made him unable to
ignore them. Old Bates, whom he trusted implicitly, and who was a man of
very few words, had told him to be on his guard. The German, at whose hut
he had been in the morning, Karl Bender by name, and a servant of his own,
had told him that there would be fire about before long.</p>
<p>“Why should any one want to ruin me?” Harry had asked. “Did
I ever wrong a man of a shilling?”</p>
<p>The German had learned to know his young master, had made his way through
the crust of his master’s character, and was prepared to be faithful
at all points—though he too could have quarreled and have avenged
himself had it not chanced that he had come to the point of loving instead
of hating his employer.</p>
<p>“You like too much to be governor over all,” said the German,
as he stooped over the fire in his own hut in his anxiety to boil the
water for Heathcote’s tea.</p>
<p>“Somebody must be governor, or every thing would go to the devil,”
said Harry.</p>
<p>“Dat’s true—only fellows don’t like be made feel
it,” said the German, “Nokes, he was made feel it when you put
him over de gate.”</p>
<p>But neither would Bates nor the German express absolute suspicion of any
man. That Medlicot’s “hands” at the sugar-mill were
stealing his sheep Harry thought that he knew; but that was comparatively
a small affair, and he would not have pressed it, as he was without
absolute evidence. And even he had a feeling that it would be unwise to
increase the anger felt against himself—at any rate, during the
present heats.</p>
<p>Jacko had his pipe still alight when Heathcote returned. “You young
monkey,” said he, “have you been using matches?”</p>
<p>“Why not, Mr. Harry? Don’t the grass burn ready, Mr. Harry? My
word!” Then Jacko stooped down, lit another match, and showed
Heathcote the burned patch.</p>
<p>“Was it so when we came?” Harry asked, with emotion. Jacko,
still kneeling on the ground, and holding the lighted match in his hand,
shook his head and tapped his breast, indicating that he had burned the
grass. “You dropped the match by accident?”</p>
<p>“My word! no. Did it o’ purpose to see. It’s all just
one as gunpowder, Mr. Harry.”</p>
<p>Harry got on his horse without a word, and rode away through the forest,
taking a direction different from that by which he had come, and the boy
followed him. He was by no means certain that this young fellow might not
turn against him; but it had been a part of his theory to make no
difference to any man because of such fears. If he could make the men
around him respect him, then they would treat him well; but they could
never be brought to respect him by flattery. He was very nearly right in
his views of men, and would have been right altogether could he have seen
accurately what justice demanded for others as well as for himself. As far
as the intention went, he was minded to be just to every man.</p>
<p>It seemed, as they were riding, that the heat grew fiercer and fiercer.
Though there was still the same moaning sound, there was not a breath of
air. They had now got upon a track very well known to Heathcote, which led
up from the river to the wool-shed, and so on to the station, and they had
turned homeward. When they were near the wool-shed, suddenly there fell a
heavy drop or two of rain. Harry stopped and turned his face upward, when,
in a moment, the whole heavens above them and the forest around were
illumined by a flash of lightning so near them that it made each of them
start in his saddle, and made the horses shudder in every limb. Then came
the roll of thunder immediately over their heads, and with the thunder
rain so thick and fast that Harry’s “ten thousand buckets”
seemed to be emptied directly over their heads.</p>
<p>“God A’mighty has put out the fires now,” said Jacko.</p>
<p>Harry paused for a moment, feeling the rain through to his bones—for
he had nothing on over his shirt—and rejoicing in it. “Yes,”
he said; “we may go to bed for a week, and let the grass grow, and
the creeks fill, and the earth cool. Half an hour like this over the whole
run, and there won’t be a dry stick on it.”</p>
<p>As they went on, the horses splashed through the water. It seemed as
though a deluge were falling, and that already the ground beneath their
feet were becoming a lake.</p>
<p>“We might have too much of this, Jacko.”</p>
<p>“My word! yes.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want to have the Mary flooded again.”</p>
<p>“My word! no.”</p>
<p>But by the time they reached the wool-shed it was over. From the first
drop to the last, there had hardly been a space of twenty minutes. But
there was a noise of waters as the little streams washed hither and
thither to their destined courses and still the horses splashed, and still
there was the feeling of an incipient deluge. When they reached the
wool-shed, Harry again got off his horse, and Jacko, dismounting also,
hitched the two animals to the post and followed his master into the
building. Harry struck a wax match, and holding it up, strove to look
round the building by the feeble light which it shed. It was a remarkable
edifice, built in the shape of a great T, open at the sides, with a
sharp-pitched timber roof covered with felt, which came down within four
feet of the ground. It was calculated to hold about four hundred sheep at
a time, and was divided into pens of various sizes, partitioned off for
various purposes. If Harry Heathcote was sure of any thing, he was sure
that his wool-shed was the best that had ever been built in this district.</p>
<p>“By Jimini! what’s that?” said Jacko.</p>
<p>“Did you hear any thing?”</p>
<p>Jacko pointed with his finger down the centre walk of the shed, and Harry,
striking another match as he went, rushed forward. But the match was out
as soon as ignited, and gave no glimmer of light. Nevertheless he saw, or
thought that he saw, the figure of a man escaping out of the open end of
the shed. The place itself was black as midnight, but the space beyond was
clear of trees, and the darkness outside being a few shades lighter than
within the building, allowed something of the outline of a figure to be
visible. And as the man escaped, the sounds of his footsteps were audible
enough. Harry called to him, but of course received no answer. Had he
pursued him, he would have been obliged to cross sundry rails, which would
have so delayed him as to give him no chance of success.</p>
<p>“I knew there was a fellow about,” he said; “one of our
own men would not have run like that.”</p>
<p>Jacko shook his head, but did not speak.</p>
<p>“He has got in here for shelter out of the rain, but he was doing no
good about the place.”</p>
<p>Jacko again shook his head.</p>
<p>“I wonder who he was?”</p>
<p>Jacko came up and whispered in his ear, “Bill Nokes.”</p>
<p>“You couldn’t see him.”</p>
<p>“Seed the drag of his leg.” Now it was well known that the man
Nokes had injured some of his muscles, and habitually dragged one foot
after another.</p>
<p>“I don’t think you could have been sure of him by such a
glimpse as that.”</p>
<p>“Maybe not,” said the boy, “only I’m sure as sure.”</p>
<p>Harry Heathcote said not another word, but getting again upon his horse,
galloped home. It was past one when he reached the station, but the two
girls were waiting up for him, and at once began to condole with him
because he was wet. “Wet!” said Harry; “if you could
only know how much I prefer things being wet to dry just at present! But
give Jacko some supper. I must keep that young fellow in good humor if I
can.”</p>
<p>So Jacko had half a loaf of bread, and a small pot of jam, and a large jug
of cold tea provided for him, in the enjoyment of which luxuries he did
not seem to be in the least impeded by the fact that he was wet through to
the skin. Harry Heathcote had another nobbler—being only the second
in the day—and then went to bed.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER III. — MEDLICOT’S MILL. </h2>
<p>As Harry said, they might all now lie in bed for a day or two. The rain
had set aside for the time the necessity for that urgent watchfulness
which kept all hands on the station hard at work during the great heat.
There was not, generally, much rest during the year at Gangoil. Lambing in
April and May, washing and shearing in September, October, and November,
with the fear of fires and the necessary precautions in December and
January, did not leave more than sufficient intervals for looking after
the water-dams, making and mending fences, procuring stores, and attending
to the ailments of the flocks. No man worked harder than the young
squatter. But now there had suddenly come a day or two of rest—rest
from work which was not of itself productive, but only remedial, and
which, therefore, was not begrudged.</p>
<p>But it soon was apparent that the rest could be only for a day or two. The
rain had fallen as from ten thousand buckets, but it had fallen only for a
space of minutes. On the following morning the thirsty earth had
apparently swallowed all the flood. The water in the creek beneath the
house stood two feet higher than it had done, and Harry, when he visited
the dams round the run, found that they were fall to overflowing, and the
grasses were already springing, so quick is the all but tropical growth of
the country. They might be safe, perhaps, for eight-and-forty hours. Fire
would run only when the ground was absolutely dry, and when every twig or
leaf was a combustible. But during those eight-and-forty hours there might
be comparative ease at Gangoil.</p>
<p>On the day following the night of the ride Mrs. Heathcote suggested to her
husband that she and Kate should ride over to Medlicot’s Mill, as
the place was already named, and call on Mrs. Medlicot. “It isn’t
Christian,” she said, “for people living out in the bush as we
are to quarrel with their neighbors just because they are neighbors.”</p>
<p>“Neighbors!” said Harry; “I don’t know any word
that there’s so much humbug about. The Samaritan was the best
neighbor I ever heard of, and he lived a long way off, I take it. Anyway,
he wasn’t a free-selector.”</p>
<p>“Harry, that’s profane.”</p>
<p>“Every thing I say is wicked. You can go, of course, if you like it.
I don’t want to quarrel with any body.”</p>
<p>“Quarreling is so uncomfortable,” said his wife.</p>
<p>“That’s a matter of taste. There are people whom I find it
very comfortable to quarrel with. I shouldn’t at all like not to
quarrel with the Brownbies, and I’m not at all sure it mayn’t
come to be the same with Mr. Giles Medlicot.”</p>
<p>“The Brownbies live by sheep-stealing and horse-stealing.”</p>
<p>“And Medlicot means to live by employing sheep-stealers and
horse-stealers. You can go if you like it. You won’t want me to go
with you. Will you have the baggy?”</p>
<p>But the ladies said that they would ride. The air was cooler now than it
had been, and they would like the exercise. They would take Jacko with
them to open the slip-rails, and they would be back by seven for dinner.
So they started, taking the track by the wool-shed. The wool-shed was
about two miles from the station, and Medlicot’s Mill was seven
miles farther, on the bank of the river.</p>
<p>Mr. Giles Medlicot, though at Gangoil he was still spoken of as a
new-comer, had already been located for nearly two years on the land which
he had purchased immediately on his coming to the colony. He had come out
direct from England with the intention of growing sugar, and, whether
successful or not in making money, had certainly succeeded in growing
crops of sugar-canes and in erecting a mill for crushing them. It probably
takes more than two years for a man himself to discover whether he can
achieve ultimate success in such an enterprise; and Medlicot was certainly
not a man likely to talk much to others of his private concerns. The mill
had just been built, and he had lived there himself as soon as a
water-tight room had been constructed. It was only within the last three
months that he had completed a small cottage residence, and had brought
his mother to live with him. Hitherto he had hardly made himself popular.
He was not either fish or fowl. The squatters regarded him as an
interloper, and as a man holding opinions directly averse to their own
interests—in which they were right. And the small free-selectors,
who lived on the labor of their own hands—or, as was said of many of
them, by stealing sheep and cattle—knew well that he was not of
their class. But Medlicot had gone his way steadfastly, if not happily,
and complained aloud to no one in the midst of his difficulties. He had
not, perhaps, found the Paradise which he had expected in Queensland, but
he had found that he could grow sugar; and having begun the work, he was
determined to go on with it.</p>
<p>Heathcote was his nearest neighbor, and the only man in his own rank of
life who lived within twenty miles of him. When he had started his
enterprise he had hoped to make this man his friend, not comprehending at
first how great a cause for hostility was created by the very purchase of
the land. He had been a new-comer from the old country, and, being alone,
had desired friendship. He was Harry Heathcote’s equal in education,
intelligence, and fortune, if not in birth—which surely, in the
Australian bush, need not count for much. He had assumed, when first
meeting the squatter, that good-fellowship between them, on equal terms,
would be acceptable to both; but his overtures had been coldly received.
Then he, too, had drawn himself up, had declared that Heathcote was an
ignorant ass, and had unconsciously made up his mind to commence
hostilities. It was in this spirit that he had taken Nokes into his mill,
of whose character, had he inquired about it, he would certainly have
heard no good. He had now brought his mother to Medlicot’s Mill. She
and the Gangoil ladies had met each other on neutral ground, and it was
almost necessary that they should either be friends or absolute enemies.
Mrs. Heathcote had been aware of this, and had declared that enmity was
horrible.</p>
<p>“Upon my word,” said Harry, “I sometimes think that
friendship is more so. I suppose I’m fitted for bush life, for I
want to see no one from year’s end to year’s end but my own
family and my own people.” And yet this young patriarch in the
wilderness was only twenty-four years old, and had been educated at an
English school!</p>
<p>Medlicot’s cottage was about a hundred and fifty yards from the
mill, looking down upon the Mary, the banks of which at this spot were
almost precipitous. The site for the plantation had been chosen because
the river afforded the means of carriage down to the sea, and the mill had
been so constructed that the sugar hogsheads could be lowered from the
buildings into the river boats. Here Mrs. Heathcote and Kate Daly found
the old lady sitting at work, all alone, in the veranda. She was a
handsome old woman, with gray hair, seventy years of age, with wrinkled
face, and a toothless mouth, but with bright eyes, and with no signs of
the infirmity of age.</p>
<p>“This is gay kind of you to run so far to see an auld woman,”
she said.</p>
<p>Mrs. Heathcote declared that they were used to the heat, and that after
the rain the air was pleasant.</p>
<p>“You’re two bright lassies, and you’re hearty,”
she said. “I’m auld, and just out of Cumberland, and I find it’s
hot enough—and I’m no guid at horseback at all. I dinna know
how I’m to get aboot.”</p>
<p>Then Mrs. Heathcote explained that there was an excellent track for a
buggy all the way to Gangoil.</p>
<p>“Giles is aye telling me that I’m to gang aboot in a bouggey,
but I dinna feel sure of thae bouggeys.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Heathcote, of course, praised the country carriages, and the country
roads, and the country generally. Tea was brought in, and the old lady was
delighted with her guests. Since she had been at the mill, week had
followed week, and she had seen no woman’s face but that of the
uncouth girl who waited upon her. “Did ye ever see rain like that!”
she said, putting up her hands. “I thought the Lord was sending his
clouds down upon us in a lump like.” Then she told them that some of
the men had declared that if it went on like that for two hours the Mary
would rise and take the cottage away. Giles, however, had declared that to
be trash, as the cottage was twenty feet above the ordinary course of the
river.</p>
<p>They were just rising to take their leave, when Giles Medlicot himself
came in out of the mill. He was a man of good presence, dark, and tall
like Heathcote, but stoutly made, with a strongly marked face, given to
frowning much when he was eager; bright-eyed, with a broad forehead—certainly
a man to be observed as far as his appearance was concerned. He was
dressed much as a gentleman dresses in the country at home, and was
therefore accounted to be a fop by Harry Heathcote, who was rarely seen
abroad in other garb than that which has been described. Harry was an
aristocrat, and hated such innovations in the bush as cloth coats and
tweed trowsers and neck-hand-kerchiefs.</p>
<p>Medlicot had been full of wrath against his neighbor all the morning.
There had been a tone in Heathcote’s voice when he gave his parting
warning as to the fire in Medlicot’s pipe which the sugar grower had
felt to be intentionally insolent. Nothing had been said which could be
openly resented, but offense had surely been intended; and then he had
remembered that his mother had been already some months at the mill, and
that no mark of neighborly courtesy had been shown to her. The Heathcotes
had, he thought, chosen to assume themselves to be superior to him and
his, and to treat him as though he had been some laboring man who had
saved money enough to purchase a bit of land for himself. He was,
therefore, astonished to find the two young ladies sitting with his mother
on the very day after such an interview as that of the preceding night.</p>
<p>“The leddies from Gangoil, Giles, have been guid enough to ride over
and see me,” said his mother.</p>
<p>Medlicot, of course, shook hands with them, and expressed his sense of
their kindness, but he did it awkwardly. He soon, however, declared his
purpose of riding part of the way back with them.</p>
<p>“Mr. Heathcote must have been very wet last night,” he said,
when they were on horse-back, addressing himself to Kate Daly rather than
to her sister.</p>
<p>“Indeed he was—wet to the skin. Were you not?”</p>
<p>“I saw him at about eleven, before the rain began. I was close home,
and just escaped. He must have been under it all. Does he often go about
the run in that way at night?”</p>
<p>“Only when he’s afraid of fires,” said Kate.</p>
<p>“Is there much to be afraid of? I don’t suppose that any body
can be so wicked as to wish to burn the grass.” Then the ladies took
upon themselves to explain. “The fires might be caused from
negligence or trifling accidents, or might possibly come from the unaided
heat of the sun; or there might be enemies.”</p>
<p>“My word! yes; enemies, rather!” said Jacko, who was riding
close behind, and who had no idea of being kept out of the conversation
merely because he was a servant. Medlicot, turning round, looked at the
lad, and asked who were the enemies.</p>
<p>“Free-selectors,” said Jacko.</p>
<p>“I’m a free-selector,” said Medlicot.</p>
<p>“Did not jist mean you,” said Jacko.</p>
<p>“Jacko, you’d better hold your tongue,” said Mrs.
Heathcote.</p>
<p>“Hold my tongue! My word! Well, you go on.”</p>
<p>Medlicot came as far as the wool-shed, and then said that he would return.
He had thoroughly enjoyed his ride. Kate Daly was bright and pretty and
winning; and in the bush, when a man has not seen a lady perhaps for
months, brightness and prettiness and winning ways have a double charm. To
ride with fair women over turf, through a forest, with a woman who may
perhaps some day be wooed, can be a matter of indifference only to a very
lethargic man. Giles Medlicot was by no means lethargic. He owned to
himself that though Heathcote was a pig-headed ass, the ladies were very
nice, and he thought that the pig-headed ass in choosing one of them for
himself had by no means taken the nicest.</p>
<p>“You’ll never find your way back,” said Kate, “if
you’ve not been here before.”</p>
<p>“I never was here before, and I suppose I must find my way back.”
Then he was urged to come on and dine at Gangoil, with a promise that
Jacko should return with him in the evening. But this he would not do.
Heathcote was a pig-headed ass, who possibly regarded him as an incendiary
simply because he had bought some land. This boy of Heathcote’s,
whose services had been offered to him, had not scrupled to tell him to
his face that he was to be regarded as an enemy. Much as he liked the
company of Kate Daly, he could not go to the house of that stupid,
arrogant, pig-headed young squatter. “I’m not such a bad
bushman but what I can find my way to the river,” he said.</p>
<p>“Find it blindful,” said Jacko, who did not relish the idea of
going back to Medlicot’s Mill as guide to another man. There was a
weakness in the idea that such aid could be necessary, which was revolting
to Jacko’s sense of bush independence.</p>
<p>They were standing on their horses at the entrance to the wool-shed as
they discussed the point, when suddenly Harry himself appeared out of the
building. He came up and shook hands with Medlicot, with sufficient
courtesy, but hardly with cordiality, and then asked his wife as to her
ride. “We have been very jolly, haven’t we, Kate? Of course it
has been hot, but every thing is not so frightfully parched as it was
before the rain. As Mr. Medlicot has come back so far with us, we want him
to come on and dine.”</p>
<p>“Pray do, Mr. Medlicot,” said Harry. But again the tone of his
voice was not sufficiently hearty to satisfy the man who was invited.</p>
<p>“Thanks, no: I think I’ll hardly do that.—Good-night,
Mrs. Heathcote; good-night. Miss Daly;” and the two ladies
immediately perceived that his voice, which had hitherto been pleasant in
their ears, had ceased to be cordial.</p>
<p>“I am very glad he has gone back,” said Heathcote.</p>
<p>“Why do you say so, Harry? You are not given to be inhospitable, and
why should you grudge me and Kate the rare pleasure of seeing a strange
face?”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you why. It’s not about him at this moment;
but I’ve been disturbed.—Jacko, go on to the station, and say
we’re coming. Do you hear me? Go on at once.” Then Jacko,
somewhat unwillingly, galloped off toward the house. “Get off your
horses, and come in.”</p>
<p>He helped the two ladies from their saddles, and they all went into the
wool-shed, Harry leading the way. In one of the side pens, immediately
under the roof, there was a large heap of leaves, the outside portion of
which was at present damp, for the rain had beaten in upon it, but which
had been as dry as tinder when collected; and there was a row or ridge of
mixed brush-wood and leaves so constructed as to form a line from the
grass outside on to the heap. “The fellow who did that was an ass,”
said Harry; “a greater ass than I should have taken him to be, not
to have known that if he could have gotten the grass to burn outside, the
wool-shed must have gone without all that preparation. But there isn’t
much difficulty now in seeing what the fellow has intended.”</p>
<p>“Was it for a fire?” asked Kate.</p>
<p>“Of course it was. He wouldn’t have been contented with the
grass and fences, but wanted to make sure of the shed also. He’d
have come to the house and burned us in our beds, only a fellow like that
is too much of a coward to run the risk of being seen.”</p>
<p>“But, Harry, why didn’t he light it when he’d done it?”
said Mrs. Heathcote.</p>
<p>“Because the Almighty sent the rain at the very moment,” said
Harry, striking the top rail of one of the pens with his fist. “I’m
not much given to talk about Providence, but this looks like it, does it
not?”</p>
<p>“He might have put a match in at the moment?”</p>
<p>“Rain or no rain? Yes, he might. But he was interrupted by more than
the rain. I got into the shed myself just at the moment—I and Jacko.
It was last night, when the rain was pouring. I heard the man, and dark as
was the night, I saw his figure as he fled away.”</p>
<p>“You didn’t know him?” said Miss Daly.</p>
<p>“But that boy, who has the eyes of a cat, he knew him.”</p>
<p>“Jacko?”</p>
<p>“Jacko knew him by his gait. I should have hardly wanted any one to
tell me who it was. I could have named the man at once, but for the fear
of doing an injustice.”</p>
<p>“And who was it?”</p>
<p>“Our friend Medlicot’s prime favorite and new factotum, Mr.
William Nokes. Mr. William Nokes is the gentleman who intends to burn us
all out of house and home, and Mr. Medlicot is the gentleman whose
pleasure it is to keep Mr. Nokes in the neighborhood.”</p>
<p>The two women stood awe-struck for a moment, but a sense of justice
prevailed upon the wife to speak. “That may be all true,” she
said. “Perhaps it is as you say about that man. But you would not
therefore think that Mr. Medlicot knows any thing about it?”</p>
<p>“It would be impossible,” said Kate.</p>
<p>“I have not accused him,” said Harry; “but he knows that
the man was dismissed, and yet keeps him about the place. Of course he is
responsible.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER IV. — HARRY HEATHCOTE’S APPEAL. </h2>
<p>For the first mile between the wool-shed and the house Heathcote and the
two ladies rode without saying a word. There was something so terrible in
the reality of the danger which encompassed them that they hardly felt
inclined to discuss it. Harry’s dislike to Medlicot was quite a
thing apart. That some one had intended to burn down the wool-shed, and
had made preparation for doing so, was as apparent to the women as to him.
And the man who had been balked by a shower of rain in his first attempt
might soon find an opportunity for a second. Harry was well aware that
even Jacko’s assertion could not be taken as evidence against the
man whom he suspected. In all probability no further attempt would be made
upon the wool-shed; but a fire on some distant part of the run would be
much more injurious to him than the mere burning of a building. The fire
that might ruin him would be one which should get ahead before it was
seen, and scour across the ground, consuming the grass down to the very
roots over thousands of acres, and destroying fencing over many miles.
Such fires pass on, leaving the standing trees unscathed, avoiding even
the scrub, which is too moist with the sap of life for consumption, but
licking up with fearful rapidity every thing that the sun has dried. He
could watch the wool-shed and house, but with no possible care could he so
watch the whole run as to justify him in feeling security. There need be
no preparation of leaves. A match thrown loosely on the ground would do
it. And in regard to a match so thrown, it would be impossible to prove a
guilty intention.</p>
<p>“Ought we not to have dispersed the heap?” said Mrs. Heathcote
at last. The minds of all of them were full of the matter, but these were
the first words spoken.</p>
<p>“I’ll leave it as it is,” said Harry, giving no reason
for his decision. He was too full of thought, too heavily laden with
anxiety, to speak much. “Come, let’s get on; you’ll want
your dinner, and it’s getting dark.” So they cantered on, and
got off their horses at the gate, without another word. And not another
word was spoken on the subject that night. Harry was very silent, walking
up and down the veranda with his pipe in his mouth—not lying on the
ground in idle enjoyment—and there was no reading. The two sisters
looked at him from time to time with wistful, anxious-eyes, half afraid to
disturb him by speech.</p>
<p>As for him, he felt that the weight was all on his own shoulders. He had
worked hard, and was on the way to be rich. I do not know that he thought
much about money, but he thought very much of success. And he was by
nature anxious, sanguine, and impulsive. There might be before him, within
the next week, such desolation as would break his heart. He knew men who
had been ruined, and had borne their ruin almost without a wail—who
had seemed contented to descend to security and mere absence from want.
There was his own superintendent, Old Bates, who, though he grumbled at
every thing else, never bewailed his own fate. But he knew of himself that
any such blow would nearly kill him—such a blow, that is, as might
drive him from Gangoil, and force him to be the servant instead of the
master of men. Not to be master of all around him seemed to him to be
misery. The merchants at Brisbane who took his wool and supplied him with
stores had advanced money when he first bought his run, and he still owed
them some thousands of pounds. The injury which a great fire would do him
would bring him to such a condition that the merchants would demand to
have their money repaid. He understood it all, and knew well that it was
after this fashion that many a squatter before him had been ruined.</p>
<p>“Speak a word to me about it,” his wife said to him,
imploringly, when they were alone together that night.</p>
<p>“My darling, if there were a word to say, I would say it. I must be
on the watch, and do the best I can. At present the earth is too damp for
mischief.”</p>
<p>“Oh that it would rain again!”</p>
<p>“There will be heat enough before the summer is over; we need not
doubt that. But I will tell you of every thing as we go on. I will
endeavor to have the man watched. God bless you! Go to sleep, and try to
get it out of your thoughts.”</p>
<p>On the following morning he breakfasted early, and mounted his horse
without saying a word as to the purport of his journey. This was in
accordance with the habit of his life, and would not excite observation;
but there was something in his manner which made both the ladies feel that
he was intent on some special object. When he intended simply to ride
round his fences or to visit the hut of some distant servant, a few
minutes signified nothing. He would stand under the veranda and talk, and
the women would endeavor to keep him from the saddle. But now there was no
loitering, and but little talking. He said a word to Jacko, who brought
the horse for him, and then started at a gallop toward the wool-shed.</p>
<p>He did not stop a moment at the shed, not even entering it to see whether
the heap of leaves had been displaced during the night, but went on
straight to Medlicot’s Mill. He rode the nine miles in an hour, and
at once entered the building in which the canes were crushed. The first
man he met was Nokes, who acted as overseer, having a gang of Polynesian
laborers under him—sleek, swarthy fellows from the South Sea
Islands, with linen trowsers on and nothing else—who crept silently
among the vats and machinery, shifting the sugar as it was made.</p>
<p>“Well, Nokes,” said Harry, “how are you getting on? Is
Mr. Medlicot here?”</p>
<p>Nokes was a big fellow, with a broad, solid face, which would not have
condemned him among physiognomists but for a bad eye, which could not look
you in the face. He had been a boundary rider for Heathcote, and on an
occasion had been impertinent, refusing to leave the yard behind the house
unless something was done which those about the place refused to do for
him. During the discussion Harry had come in. The man had been drinking,
and was still insolent, and Harry had ejected him violently, thrusting him
over a gate. The man had returned the next morning, and had then been sent
about his business. He had been employed at Medlicot’s Mill, but
from the day of his dismissal to this he and Harry had never met each
other face to face.</p>
<p>“I’m pretty well, thank ye, Mr. Heathcote. I hope you’re
the same, and the ladies. The master’s about somewhere, I take it.—Picky,
go and find the master.” Picky was one of the Polynesians, who at
once started on his errand.</p>
<p>“Have you been over to Gangoil since you left it?” said Harry,
looking the man full in the face.</p>
<p>“Not I, Mr. Heathcote. I never go where I’ve had words. And,
to tell you the truth, sugar is better than sheep. I’m very
comfortable here, and I never liked your work.”</p>
<p>“You haven’t been at the wool-shed?”</p>
<p>“What, the Gangoil shed! What the blazes ‘d I go there for? It’s
a matter of ten miles from here.”</p>
<p>“Seven, Nokes.”</p>
<p>“Seven, is it? It is a longish seven miles, Mr. Heathcote. How could
I get that distance? I ain’t so good at walking as I was before I
was hurt. You should have remembered that, Mr. Heathcote, when you laid
hands on me the other day.”</p>
<p>“You’re not much the worse for what I did; nor yet for the
accident, I take it. At any rate, you’ve not been at Gangoil
wool-shed?”</p>
<p>“No, I’ve not,” said the man, roughly. “What the
mischief should I be doing at your shed at night-time?”</p>
<p>“I said nothing about night-time.”</p>
<p>“I’m here all day, ain’t I? If you’re going to
palm off any story against me, Mr. Heathcote, you’ll find yourself
in the wrong box. What I does I does on the square.”</p>
<p>Heathcote was now quite sure that Jacko had been right. He had not doubted
much before, but now he did not doubt at all but that the man with whom he
was speaking was the wretch who was endeavoring to ruin him. And he felt
certain, also, that Jacko was true to him. He knew, too, that he had
plainly declared his suspicion to the man himself. But he had resolved
upon doing this. He could in no way assist himself in circumventing the
man’s villainy by keeping his suspense to himself. The man might be
frightened, and in spite of all that had passed between him and Medlicot,
he still thought it possible that he might induce the sugar grower to
co-operate with him in driving Nokes from the neighborhood. He had spent
the night in thinking over it all, and this was the resolution to which he
had come.</p>
<p>“There’s the master,” said Nokes. “If you’ve
got any thing to say about any thing, you’d better say it to him.”</p>
<p>Harry had never before set his foot upon Medlicot’s land since it
had been bought away from his own run, and had felt that he would almost
demean himself by doing so. He had often looked at the canes from over his
own fence, as he had done on the night of the rain; but he had stood
always on his own land. Now he was in the sugar-mill, never before having
seen such a building. “You’ve a deal of machinery here, Mr.
Medlicot,” he said.</p>
<p>“It’s a small affair, after all,” said the other.
“I hope to get a good plant before I’ve done.”</p>
<p>“Can I speak a word with you?”</p>
<p>“Certainly. Will you come into the office, or will you go across to
the house?”</p>
<p>Harry said that the office would do, and followed Medlicot into a little
box-like inclosure which contained a desk and two stools.</p>
<p>“Not much of an office, is it? What can I do for you, Mr. Heathcote?”</p>
<p>Then Harry began his story, which he told at considerable length. He
apologized for troubling his neighbor at all on the subject, and
endeavored to explain, somewhat awkwardly, that as Mr. Medlicot was a
new-comer, he probably might not understand the kind of treatment to which
employers in the bush were occasionally subject from their men. On this
matter he said much, which, had he been a better tactician, he might
probably have left unspoken. He then went on to the story of his own
quarrel with Nokes, who had, in truth, been grossly impudent to the women
about the house, but who had been punished by instant and violent
dismissal from his employment. It was evidently Harry’s idea that a
man who had so sinned against his master should be allowed to find no
other master—at any rate in that district; an idea with which the
other man, who had lately come out from the old country, did not at all
sympathize.</p>
<p>“Do you want me to dismiss him?” said Medlicot, in a tone
which implied that that would be the last thing he would think of doing.</p>
<p>“You haven’t heard me yet.” Then Harry went on and told
of the fires in the heat of summer, and of their terrible effects—of
the easy manner of revenge which they supplied to angry, unscrupulous men,
and of his own fears at the present moment.</p>
<p>“I can believe it all,” said Medlicot, “and am very
sorry that it should be so. But I can not see the justice of punishing a
man on the merest, vaguest suspicion. Your only ground for imputing this
crime to him is that your own conduct to him may have given him a motive.”</p>
<p>Harry had schooled himself vigorously during the ride as to his own
demeanor, and had resolved that he would be cool. “I was going on to
tell you,” he said, “what occurred that night after I saw you
up by the fence.” Then he described how he and his boy had entered
the shed, and had both seen and heard a man as he escaped from it; how the
boy had at once declared that the man was Nokes; how the following day he
had discovered the leaves, which Nokes no doubt had deposited there just
before the rain, intending to burn the place at once; and how Nokes’s
manner to him within the last half hour had corroborated his suspicions.</p>
<p>“Is he the boy you call Jacko?”</p>
<p>“That’s the name he goes by.”</p>
<p>“You don’t know his real name?”</p>
<p>“I have never heard any other name.”</p>
<p>“Nor any thing about him?” Harry owned, in answer to half a
dozen such questions, that Jacko had come to Gangoil about six months ago—he
did not know whence—had been kept for a week’s job, and had
then been allowed to remain about the place without any regular wages.
“You admit it was quite dark,” continued Medlicot.</p>
<p>Harry did not at all like the cross-examination, and his resolution to be
cool was quickly fading. “I told you that I saw myself the figure of
a man.”</p>
<p>“But that you barely saw a figure. You did not form any opinion of
your own as to the man’s identity.”</p>
<p>Harry Heathcote was as honest as the sun. Much as he disliked being
cross-examined, he found himself compelled not only to say the exact
truth, but the whole truth. “Certainly not. I barely saw a glimpse
of a figure, and, till I spoke to Nokes just now, I almost doubted whether
the lad could have distinguished him. I am sure he was right now.”</p>
<p>“Really, Mr. Heathcote, I can’t go along with you. You are
accusing a man of committing an offense, which I believe is capital, on
the evidence of a boy of whom you know nothing, who may have his own
reasons for spiting the man, and whom you yourself did not believe till
you had looked this man in the face. I think you allow yourself to be
guided too much by your own power of intuition.”</p>
<p>“No, I don’t,” said Harry, who hated his neighbor’s
methodical argument.</p>
<p>“At any rate, I can’t consent to take a man’s bread out
of his mouth, and to send him away tainted as he would be with this
suspicion, either because Jacko thought that he saw him in the dark, or
because—”</p>
<p>“I have never asked you to send him away.”</p>
<p>“What is it you want, then?”</p>
<p>“I want to have him watched, so that he may feel that if he attempts
to destroy my property his guilt will be detected.”</p>
<p>“Who is to watch him?”</p>
<p>“He is in your employment.”</p>
<p>“He lives in the hut down beyond the gate. Am I to keep a sentry
there all night, and every night?”</p>
<p>“I will pay for it.”</p>
<p>“No, Mr. Heathcote. I don’t pretend to know this country yet,
but I’ll encourage no such espionage as that. At any rate, it is not
English. I dare say the man misbehaved himself in your employment. You say
he was drunk. I do not doubt it. But he is not a drunkard, for he never
drinks here. A man is not to starve forever because he once got drunk and
was impertinent. Nor is he to have a spy at his heels because a boy whom
nobody knows chooses to denounce him. I am sorry that you should be in
trouble, but I do not know that I can help you.”</p>
<p>Harry’s passion was now very high, and his resolution to be cool was
almost thrown to the winds. Medlicot had said many things which were
odious to him. In the first place, there had been a tone of insufferable
superiority, so Harry thought, and that, too, when he himself had divested
himself of all the superiority naturally attached to his position, and had
frankly appealed to Medlicot as a neighbor. And then this new-fangled
sugar grower had told him that he was not English, and had said grand
words, and had altogether made himself objectionable. What did this man
know of the Australian bush, that he should dare to talk of this or that
as being wrong because it was un-English! In England there were police to
guard men’s property. Here, out in the Australian forests, a man
must guard his own, or lose it. But perhaps it was the indifference to the
ruin of the women belonging to him that Harry Heathcote felt the
strongest. The stranger cared nothing for the utter desolation which one
unscrupulous ruffian might produce, felt no horror at the idea of a vast
devastating fire, but could be indignant in his mock philanthropy because
it was proposed to watch the doings of a scoundrel!</p>
<p>“Good-morning,” said Harry, turning round and leaving the
office brusquely. Medlicot followed him, but Harry went so quickly that
not another word was spoken. To him the idea of a neighbor in the bush
refusing such assistance as he had asked was as terrible as to us is the
thought of a ship at sea leaving another ship in distress. He unhitched
his horse from the fence, and galloped home as fast as the animal would
carry him.</p>
<p>Medlicot, when he was left alone, took two or three turns about the mill,
as though inspecting the work, but at every turn fixed his eyes for a few
moments on Noke’s face. The man was standing under a huge caldron
regulating the escape of the boiling juice into the different vats by
raising and lowering a trap, and giving directions to the Polynesians as
he did so. He was evidently conscious that he was being regarded, and, as
is usual in such a condition, manifestly failed in his struggle to appear
unconscious. Medlicot acknowledged to himself that the man could not look
even him in the face. Was it possible that he had been wrong, and that
Heathcote, though he had expressed himself badly, was entitled to some
sympathy in his fear of what might be done to him by an enemy? Medlicot
also desired to be just, being more rational, more logical, and less
impulsive than the other, being also somewhat too conscious of his own
superior intelligence. He knew that Heathcote had gone away in great
dudgeon, and he almost feared that he had been harsh and unneighborly.
After a while he stood opposite Nokes and addressed him.</p>
<p>“Do the squatters suffer much from fires?” he said.</p>
<p>“Heathcote has been talking to you about that,” said the man.</p>
<p>“Can’t you say Mr. Heathcote when you speak of a gentleman
whose bread you have eaten?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Heathcote, if you like it. We ain’t particular to a shade
out here as you are at home. He has been telling you about fires, has he?”</p>
<p>“Well, he has.”</p>
<p>“And talking of me, I suppose?”</p>
<p>“You were talking of having a turn at mining some day. How would it
be with you if you were to be off to Gympie?”</p>
<p>“You mean to say I’m to go, Mr. Medlicot?”</p>
<p>“I don’t say that at all.”</p>
<p>“Look here, Mr. Medlicot. My going or staying won’t make any
difference to Heathcote. There’s a lot of ’em about here hates
him that much that he is never to be allowed to rest in peace. I tell you
that fairly. It ain’t any thing as I shall do. Them’s not my
ways, Mr. Medlicot. But he has enemies here as’ll never let him
rest.”</p>
<p>“Who are they?”</p>
<p>“Pretty nigh every body round. He has carried himself that high they
won’t stand him. Who’s Heathcote?”</p>
<p>“Name some who are his enemies.”</p>
<p>“There’s the Brownbies.”</p>
<p>“Oh, the Brownbies. Well, it’s a bad thing to have enemies.”
After that he left the sugar-house and went across to the cottage.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER V. — BOSCOBEL. </h2>
<p>Two days and two nights passed without fear of fire, and then Harry
Heathcote was again on the alert. The earth was parched as though no drop
of rain had fallen. The fences were dry as tinder, and the ground was
strewed with broken atoms of timber from the trees, each of which a spark
would ignite. Two nights Harry slept in his bed, but on the third he was
on horseback about the run, watching, thinking, endeavoring to make
provision, directing others, and hoping to make it believed that his eyes
were every where. In this way an entire week was passed, and now it wanted
but four days to Christmas. He would come home to breakfast about seven in
the morning, very tired, but never owning that he was tired, and then
sleep heavily for an hour or two in a chair. After that he would go out
again on the run, would sleep perhaps for another hour after dinner, and
then would start for his night’s patrol. During this week he saw
nothing of Medlicot, and never mentioned his name but once. On that
occasion his wife told him that during his absence Medlicot had been at
the station.</p>
<p>“What brought him here?” Harry asked, fiercely.</p>
<p>Mrs. Heathcote explained that he had called in a friendly way, and had
said that if there were any fear of fire he would be happy himself to lend
assistance.</p>
<p>Then the young squatter forgot himself in his wrath. “Confound his
hypocrisy!” said Harry, aloud. “I don’t think he’s
a hypocrite,” said the wife.</p>
<p>“I’m sure he’s not,” said Kate Daly.</p>
<p>Not a word more was spoken, and Harry immediately left the house. The two
women did not as usual go to the gate to see him mount his horse, not
refraining from doing so in any anger, or as wishing to exhibit
displeasure at Harry’s violence, but because they were afraid of
him. They had found themselves compelled to differ from him, but were
oppressed at finding themselves in opposition to him.</p>
<p>The feeling that his wife should in any way take part against him added
greatly to Heathcote’s trouble. It produced in his mind a terrible
feeling of loneliness in his sorrow. He bore a brave outside to all his
men, and to any stranger whom in these days he met about the run—to
his wife and sister also, and to the old woman at home. He forced upon
them all an idea that he was not only autocratic, but self-sufficient also—that
he wanted neither help nor sympathy. He never cried out in his pain, being
heartily ashamed even of the appeal which he had made to Medlicot. He
spoke aloud and laughed with the men, and never acknowledged that his
trials were almost too much for him. But he was painfully conscious of his
own weakness. He sometimes felt, when alone in the bush, that he would
fain get off his horse, and lie upon the ground and weep till he slept. It
was not that he trusted no one. He suspected no one with a positive
suspicion, except Nokes, and Medlicot as the supporter of Nokes. But he
had no one with whom he could converse freely—none whom he had not
been accustomed to treat as the mere ministers of his will—except
his wife and his wife’s sister; and now he was disjoined from them
by their sympathy with Medlicot! He had chosen to manage every thing
himself without contradiction and almost without counsel; but, like other
such imperious masters, he now found that when trouble came the privilege
of dictatorship brought with it an almost unsupportable burden.</p>
<p>Old Bates was an excellent man, of whose fidelity the young squatter was
quite assured. No one understood foot-rot better than Old Bates, or was
less sparing of himself in curing it. He was a second mother to all the
lambs, and when shearing came watched with the eyes of Argus to see that
the sheep were not wounded by the shearers, or the wool left on their
backs. But he had no conversation, none of that imagination which in such
a time as this might have assisted in devising safeguards, and but little
enthusiasm. Shepherds, so called, Harry kept none upon the run; and would
have felt himself insulted had any one suggested that he was so backward
in his ways as to employ men of that denomination. He had fenced his run,
and dispensed with shepherds and shepherding as old-fashioned and
unprofitable. He had two mounted men, whom he called boundary riders, one
an Irishman and the other a German—and them he trusted fully, the
German altogether, and the Irishman equally as regarded his honesty. But
he could not explain to them the thoughts that loaded his brain. He could
instigate them to eagerness; but he could not condescend to tell Karl
Bender, the German, that if his fences were destroyed neither his means
nor his credit would be sufficient to put them up again, and that if the
scanty herbage were burned off any large proportion of his run, he must
sell his flocks at a great sacrifice. Nor could he explain to Mickey O’Dowd,
the Irishman, that his peace of mind was destroyed by his fear of one man.
He had to bear it all alone. And there was heavy on him also the great
misery of feeling that every thing might depend on own exertions, and that
yet he did not know how or where to exert himself. When he had ridden
about all night and discovered nothing, he might just as well have been in
bed. And he was continually riding about all night and discovering
nothing.</p>
<p>After leaving the station on the evening of the day on which he had
expressed himself to the women so vehemently respecting Medlicot, he met
Bates coming home from his day’s work. It was then past eight o’clock,
and the old man was sitting wearily on his horse, with his head low down
between his shoulders, and the reins hardly held within his grasp.</p>
<p>“You’re late, Mr. Bates,” said Harry; “you take
too much out of yourself this hot weather.”</p>
<p>“I’ve got to move slower, Mr. Heathcote, as I grow older. That’s
about it. And the beast I’m on is not much good.” Now Mr.
Bates was always complaining of his horse, and yet was allowed to choose
any on the run for his own use.</p>
<p>“If you don’t like him, why don’t you take another?”</p>
<p>“There ain’t much difference in ’em, Mr. Heathcote.
Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t. It’s
getting uncommon close shaving for them wethers in the new paddock. They’re
down upon the roots pretty well already.”</p>
<p>“There’s grass along the bush on the north side.”</p>
<p>“They won’t go there; it’s rank and sour. They won’t
feed up there as long as they can live lower down and nearer the water.
Weather like this, they’d sooner die near the water than travel to
fill their bellies. It’s about the hottest day we’ve had, and
the nights a’most hotter. Are you going to be out, Mr. Heathcote?”</p>
<p>“I think so.”</p>
<p>“What’s the good of it, Mr. Heathcote? There is no use in it.
Lord love you, what can yon do? You can’t be every side at once.”</p>
<p>“Fire can only travel with the wind, Mr. Bates.”</p>
<p>“And there isn’t any wind, and so there can’t be any
fire. I never did think, and I don’t think now, there ever was any
use in a man fashing himself as you fash yourself. You can’t alter
things, Mr. Heathcote.”</p>
<p>“But that’s just what I can do—what a man has to do. If
a match were thrown there at your feet, and the grass was aflame, couldn’t
you alter that by putting your foot on it? If you find a ewe on her back,
can’t you alter that by putting her on her legs?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I can do that, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“What does a man live for except to alter things? When a man clears
the forest and sows corn, does he not alter things?”</p>
<p>“That’s not your line, Mr. Heathcote,” said the cunning
old man.</p>
<p>“If I send wool to market, I alter things.”</p>
<p>“You’ll excuse me, Mr. Heathcote. Of course I’m old, but
I just give you my experience.”</p>
<p>“I’m much obliged to you; though we can’t always agree,
you know. Good-night. Go in and say a word to my wife, and tell them you
saw me all right.”</p>
<p>“I’ll have a crack with ’em, Mr. Heathcote, before I
turn in.”</p>
<p>“And tell Mary I sent my love.”</p>
<p>“I will, Mr. Heathcote; I will.”</p>
<p>He was thinking always of his wife during his solitary rides, and of her
fear and deep anxiety. It was for her sake and for the children that he
was so care-worn, not for his own. Had he been alone in the world he would
not have fretted himself in this fashion because of the malice of any man.
But how would it be with her should he be forced to move her from Gangoil?
And yet, with all his love, they had parted almost in anger. Surely she
would understand the tenderness of the message he had just sent her.</p>
<p>Of a sudden, as he was riding, he stopped his horse and listened
attentively. From a great distance there fell upon his accustomed ear a
sound which he recognized, though he was aware that the place from whence
it came was at least two miles distant. It was the thud of an axe against
a tree. He listened still, and was sure that it was so, and turned at once
toward the sound, though in doing so he left his course at a right angle.
He had been going directly away from the river, with his back to the
wool-shed; but now he changed his course, riding in the direction of the
spot at which Jacko had nearly fallen in jumping over the fence. As he
continued on, the sounds became plainer, till at last, reining in his
horse, he could see the form of the woodman, who was still at work ringing
the trees. This was a job which the man did by contract, receiving so much
an acre for the depopulation of the timber. It was now bright moonlight,
almost as clear as day—a very different night, indeed, from that on
which the rain had come—and Harry could see at a glance that it was
the man called Boscobel still at work. Now there were, as he thought, very
good reasons why Boscobel at the present moment should not be so employed.
Boscobel was receiving wages for work of another kind.</p>
<p>“Bos,” said the squatter, riding up, and addressing the man by
the customary abbreviation of his nickname, “I thought you were
watching at Brownbie’s boundary?” Boscobel lowered his axe,
and stood for a while contemplating the proposition made to him. “You
are drawing three shillings a night for watching; isn’t that so?”</p>
<p>“Yes, that’s so. Anyways, I shall draw it.”</p>
<p>“Then why ain’t you watching?”</p>
<p>“There’s nothing to watch that I knows on—not just now.”</p>
<p>“Then why should I pay you for it? I’m to pay you for ringing
these trees, ain’t I?”</p>
<p>“Certainly, Mr. Heathcote.”</p>
<p>“Then you’re to make double use of your time, and sell it
twice over, are you? Don’t try to look like a fool, as though you
didn’t understand. You know that what you’re doing isn’t
honest.”</p>
<p>“Nobody ever said as I wasn’t honest before.”</p>
<p>“I tell you so now. You’re robbing me of the time you’ve
sold to me, and for which I’m to pay you.”</p>
<p>“There ain’t nothing to watch while the wind’s as it is
now, and that chap ain’t any where about to-night.”</p>
<p>“What chap?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I know. I’m all right. What’s the use of dawdling
about up there in the broad moonlight, and the wind like this?”</p>
<p>“That’s for me to judge. If you engage to do my work and take
my money, you’re swindling me when you go about another job as you
are now. You needn’t scratch your head. You understand it all as
well as I do.”</p>
<p>“I never was told I swindled before, and I ain’t a-going to
put up with it. You may ring your own trees, and watch your own fences,
and the whole place may be burned for me. I ain’t a-going to do
another turn in Gangoil. Swindle, indeed!” So Boscobel shouldered
his axe, and marched off through the forest, visible in the moonlight till
the trees hid him.</p>
<p>There was another enemy made! He had never felt quite sure of this man,
but had been glad to have him about the place as being thoroughly
efficient in his own business. It was only during the last ten days that
he had agreed to pay him for night-watching, leaving the man to do as much
additional day-work as he pleased—for which, of course, he would be
paid at the regular contract price. There was a double purpose intended in
this watching—as was well understood by all the hands employed:
first, that of preventing incendiary fire by the mere presence of the
watchers; and secondly, that of being at hand to extinguish fire in case
of need. Now a man ringing trees five or six miles away from the beat on
which he was stationed could not serve either of these purposes. Boscobel
therefore had been fraudulently at work for his own dishonest purposes,
and knew well that his employment was of that nature. All this was quite
clear to Heathcote; and it was clear to him, also, that when he detected
fraud he was bound to expose it. Had the man acknowledged his fault and
been submissive, there would have been an end of the matter. Heathcote
would have said no word about it to any one, and would not have stopped a
farthing from the week’s unearned wages. That he had to encounter a
certain amount of ill usage from the rough men about him, and to forgive
it, he could understand; but it could not be his duty, either as a man or
a master, to pass over dishonesty without noticing it. No; that he would
not do, though Gangoil should burn from end to end. He did not much mind
being robbed. He knew that to a certain extent he must endure to be
cheated. He would endure it. But he would never teach his men to think
that he passed over such matters because he was afraid of them, or that
dishonesty on their part was indifferent to him.</p>
<p>But now he had made another enemy—an enemy of a man who had declared
to him that he knew the movements of “that chap,” meaning
Nokes! How hard the world was! It seemed that all around were trouble to
him. He turned his horse back, and made again for the spot which was his
original destination. As he cantered on among the trees, twisting here and
there, and regulating his way by the stars, he asked himself whether it
would not be better for him to go home and lay himself down by his wife
and sleep, and await the worst that these men could do to him. This idea
was so strong upon him that at one spot he made his horse stop till he had
thought it all out. No one encouraged him in his work. Every one about the
place, friend or foe, Bates, his wife, Medlicot, and this Boscobel, spoke
to him as though he were fussy and fidgety in his anxiety. “If fires
must come, they will come; and if they are not to come, you are simply
losing your labor.” This was the upshot of all they said to him. Why
should he be wiser than they? If the ruin came, let it come. Old Bates had
been ruined, but still had enough to eat and drink, and clothes to wear,
and did not work half as hard as his employer. He thought that if he could
only find some one person who would sympathize with him and support him,
he would not mind. But the mental loneliness of his position almost broke
his heart.</p>
<p>Then there came across his mind the dim remembrance of certain old school
words, and he touched his horse with his spur and hurried onward: “Let
there be no steps backward.” A thought as to the manliness of
persevering, of the want of manliness in yielding to depression, came to
his rescue. Let him, at any rate, have the comfort of thinking that he had
done his best according to his lights. After some dim fashion, he did come
to recognize it as a fact that nothing could really support him but
self-approbation. Though he fell from his horse in utter weariness, he
would persevere.</p>
<p>As the night wore on he came to the German’s hut, and finding it
empty, as he expected, rode on to the outside fence of his run. When he
reached this he got off his horse, and taking a key out of his pocket,
whistled upon it loudly. A few minutes afterward the German came up to
him.</p>
<p>“There’s been no one about, I suppose?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Not a one,” said the man.</p>
<p>“You’ve been across on Brownbie’s run?”</p>
<p>“We’re on it now, Mr. ‘Eathcote.” They were both
on the side of the fence away from Gangoil station.</p>
<p>“I don’t know how that is, Karl. I think Gangoil goes a
quarter of a mile beyond this. But we did not quite strike the boundary
when we put up the fence.”</p>
<p>“Brownbie’s cattle is allays here, Mr. ‘Eathcote, and is
knocking down the fence every day. Brownbie is a rascal, and ‘is
cattle as bad as ‘isself.”</p>
<p>“Never mind that, Karl, now. When we’ve got through the heats,
we’ll put a mile or two of better fencing along here. You know
Boscobel?”</p>
<p>“In course I know Bos.”</p>
<p>“What sort of a fellow is he?” Then Harry told his German
dependent exactly what had taken place between him and the other man.</p>
<p>“He’s in and in wid all them young Brownbies,” said
Karl.</p>
<p>“The Brownbies are a bad lot, but I don’t think they’d
do any thing of this kind,” said Harry, whose mind was still
dwelling on the dangers of fire.</p>
<p>“They likes muttons, Mr. ‘Eathcote.”</p>
<p>“I suppose they do take a sheep or two now and then. They wouldn’t
do worse than that, would they?”</p>
<p>“Not’ing too ‘ot for ’em; not’ing too
‘eavy,” said Karl, smoking his pipe. “The vind, vat
there is, comes just here, Mr. ‘Eathcote.” And the man lifted
up his arm, and pointed across in the direction of Brownbie’s run.</p>
<p>“And you don’t think much of Boscobel?”</p>
<p>Karl Bender shook his head.</p>
<p>“He was always well treated here,” said Harry, “and has
had plenty of work, and earned large wages. The man will be a fool to
quarrel with me.”</p>
<p>Karl again shook his head. With Karl Bender, Harry was quite sure of his
man, but not on that account need he be quite sure of the correctness of
the man’s opinion.</p>
<p>Thence he went on till he met his other lieutenant, O’Dowd, and so,
having completed his work, he made his way home, reaching the station at
sunrise.</p>
<p>“Did Bates tell you he’d met me?” he asked his wife.</p>
<p>“Yes, Harry; kiss me, Harry. I was so glad you sent a word. Promise
me, Harry, not to think that I don’t agree with you in every thing.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VI. — THE BROWNBIES OF BOOLABONG. </h2>
<p>Old Brownbie, as he was usually called, was a squatter also, but a
squatter of a class very different from that to which Heathcote belonged.
He had begun his life in the colonies a little under a cloud, having been
sent out from home after the perpetration of some peccadillo of which the
law had disapproved.</p>
<p>In colonial phrase, he was a “lag”—having been
transported; but this was many years ago, when he was quite young; and he
had now been a free man for more than thirty years. It must be owned on
his behalf that he had worked hard, had endeavored to rise, and had risen.
But there still stuck to him the savor of his old life. Every one knew
that he had been a convict; and even had he become a man of high principle—a
condition which he certainly never achieved—he could hardly have
escaped altogether from the thralldom of his degradation. He had been a
butcher, a drover, part owner of stock, and had at last become possessed
of a share of a cattle-run, and then of the entire property, such as it
was. He had four or five sons, uneducated, ill-conditioned, drunken
fellows, who had all their father’s faults without his energy, some
of whom had been in prison, and all of whom were known as pests to the
colony. Their place was called Boolabong, and was a cattle-run, as
distinguished from a sheep-run; but it was a poor place, was sometimes
altogether unstocked, and was supposed to be not unfrequently used as a
receptable for stolen cattle.</p>
<p>The tricks which the Brownbies played with cattle were notorious
throughout Queensland and New South Wales, and by a certain class of men
were much admired. They would drive a few head of cattle, perhaps forty or
fifty, for miles around the country, across one station and another,
traveling many hundreds of miles, and here and there, as they passed
along, they would sweep into their own herd the bullocks of the victims
whose lands they passed. If detected on the spot, they gave up their prey.
They were in the right in moving their own cattle, and were not
responsible for the erratic tendencies of other animals. If successful,
they either sold their stolen beasts to butchers on the road, or got them
home to Boolabong. There were dangers, of course, and occasional
penalties. But there was much success. It was supposed, also, that though
they did not own sheep, they preferred mutton for their daily uses, and
that they supplied themselves at a very cheap rate.</p>
<p>It may be imagined how such a family would be hated by the respectable
squatters on whom they preyed. Still there were men, old stagers, who had
know Moreton Bay before it was a colony—in the old days when
convicts were common—who almost regarded the Brownbies as a part of
the common order of things, and who were indisposed to persecute them. Men
must live; and what were a few sheep? Of some such it might be said, that
though they were above the arts by which the Brownbies lived, they were
not very scrupulous themselves; and it perhaps served them to have within
their ken neighbours whose morality was lower even than their own. But to
such a one as Harry Heathcote the Brownbies were utterly abominable. He
was for the law and justice at any cost. To his thinking, the Colonial
Government was grossly at fault, because it did not weed out and extirpate
not only the identical Brownbies, but all Brownbieism wherever it might be
found. A dishonest workman was a great evil, but, to his thinking, a
dishonest man in the position of master was the incarnation of evil. As to
the difficulties of evidence, and obstacles of that nature, Harry
Heathcote knew nothing. The Brownbies were rascals, and should therefore
be exterminated.</p>
<p>And the Brownbies knew well the estimation in which their neighbour held
them. Harry had made himself altogether disagreeable to them. They were
squatters as well as he—or at least so they termed themselves; and
though they would not have expected to be admitted to home intimacies,
they thought that when they were met out-of-doors or in public places,
they should be treated with some respect. On such occasions Harry treated
them as though they were dirt beneath his feet. The Brownbies would be
found, whenever a little money came among them, at the public
billiard-rooms and race-courses within one hundred and fifty miles of
Boolabong. At such places Harry Heathcote was never seen. It would have
been as easy to seduce the Bishop of Brisbane into a bet as Harry
Heathcote. He had never even drank a nobbler with one of the Brownbies. To
their thinking, he was a proud, stuck-up, unsocial young cub, whom to rob
was a pleasure, and to ruin would be a delight.</p>
<p>The old man at Boolabong was now almost obsolete. Property, that he could
keep in his grasp, there was in truth none. He was the tenant of the run
under the Crown, and his sons would not turn him out of the house. The
cattle, when there were cattle, belonged to them. They were in no respect
subject to his orders, and he would have had a bad life among them were it
not that they quarreled among themselves, and that in such quarrels he
could belong to one party or to the other. The house itself was a wretched
place—out of order, with doors and windows and floors shattered,
broken, and decayed. There were none of womankind belonging to the family,
and in such a house a decent woman-servant would have been out of her
place. Sometimes there was one hag there and sometimes another, and
sometimes feminine aid less respectable than that of the hags. There had
been six sons. One had disappeared utterly, so that nothing was known of
him. One had been absolutely expelled by the brethren, and was now a
vagabond in the country, turning up now and then at Boolabong and
demanding food. Of the whole lot Georgie Brownbie, the vagabond, was the
worst. The eldest son was at this time in prison at Brisbane, having on
some late occasion been less successful than usual in regard to some
acquired bullocks. The three youngest were at home—Jerry, Jack, and
Joe. Tom, who was in prison, was the only stanch friend to the father, who
consequently at this time was in a more than usually depressed condition.</p>
<p>Christmas-day would fall on a Tuesday, and on the Monday before it Jerry
Brownbie, the eldest of those now at home, was sitting, with a pipe in his
mouth, on a broken-down stool on the broken-down veranda of the house, and
the old man was seated on a stuffy, worn-out sofa with three legs, which
was propped against the wall of the house, and had not been moved for
years. Old Brownbie was a man of gigantic frame, and had possessed immense
personal power—a man, too, of will and energy; but he was now worn
out and dropsical, and could not move beyond the confines of the home
station. The veranda was attached to a big room which ran nearly the whole
length of the house, and which was now used for all purposes. There was an
exterior kitchen, in which certain processes were carried on—such as
salting stolen mutton and boiling huge masses of meat, when such work was
needed. But the cookery was generally done in the big room. And here also
two or three of the sons slept on beds made upon stretchers along the
wall. They were not probably very particular as to which owned each bed,
enjoying a fraternal communism in that respect. At the end of this chamber
the old man had a room of his own. Boolabong was certainly a miserable
place; and yet, such as it was, it was frequented by many guests. The
vagabondism of the colonies is proverbial. Vagabonds are taken in almost
every where throughout the bush. But the welcome given to them varies.
Sometimes they are made to work before they are fed—to their
infinite disgust. But no such cruelty was exercised at Boolabong.
Boolabong was a very Paradise for vagabonds. There was always flour and
meat to be had, generally tobacco, and sometimes even the luxury of a
nobbler. The Brownbies were wise enough to have learned that it was
necessary for their very existence that they should have friends in the
land. On the Sunday the father and Jerry Brownbie were sitting out in the
veranda at about noon, and the other two sons, Jack and Joe, were lying
asleep on the beds within.</p>
<p>The heat of the day was intense. There was a wind blowing, but it was that
which is called there the hot wind, which comes dry, scorching, sometimes
almost intolerable, over the burning central plain of the country. No one
can understand without feeling it how much a wind can add to the
sufferings inflicted by heat. The old man had on a dirty, wretched remnant
of a dressing-gown, but Jerry was clothed simply in trowsers and an old
shirt. Only that the mosquitoes would have flayed him, he would have
dispensed probably with these. He had been quarreling with his father
respecting a certain horse which he had sold, of the price of which the
father demanded a share. Jerry had unblushingly declared that he himself
had “shaken” the horse—Anglice, had stolen him—twelve
months since on Darnley Downs, and was therefore clearly entitled to the
entire plunder. The father had rejoined with animation that unless “half
a quid”—or ten shillings—were given him as his
contribution to the keep of the animal, he would inform against his son to
the squatter on the Darnley Downs, and had shown him that he knew the very
run from which the horse had been taken. Then the sons within had
interfered from their beds, swearing that their father was the noisiest
old “cuss” unhung, they having had their necessary slumbers
disturbed.</p>
<p>At this moment the debate was interrupted by the appearance of a man
outside the veranda. “Well, Mr. Jerry, how goes it?” asked the
stranger. “What, Bos, is that you? What brings you up to Boolabong?
I thought you was ringing trees for that young scut at Gangoil? I’ll
be even with him some of these days! He had the impudence to send a man of
his up here last week looking for sheep-skins.”</p>
<p>“He wasn’t that soft, Mr. Jerry, was he? Well, I’ve
dropped working for him.—How are you, Mr. Brownbie? I hope I see you
finely, Sir. It’s stiffish sort of weather, Mr. Brownbie, ain’t
it, Sir?”</p>
<p>The old man grunted out some reply, and then asked Boscobel what he
wanted.</p>
<p>“I’ll just hang about for the day, Mr. Brownbie, and get a
little grub. You never begrudged a working-man that yet.”</p>
<p>Old Brownbie again grunted, but said no word of welcome. That, however,
was to be taken for granted, without much expression of opinion.</p>
<p>“No, Mr. Jerry,” continued Boscobel, “I’ve done
with that fellow.”</p>
<p>“And so has Nokes done with him.”</p>
<p>“Nokes is at work on Medlicot’s Mill. That sugar business
wouldn’t suit me.”</p>
<p>“An axe in your hand is what you’re fit for, Bos.”</p>
<p>“There’s a many things I can turn my hand to, Mr. Jerry. You
couldn’t give a fellow such a thing as a nobbler, Mr. Jerry, could
you? I’d offer money for it, only I know it would be taken amiss. It’s
that hot that a fellow’s very in’ards get parched up.”</p>
<p>Upon this Jerry slowly rose, and going to a cupboard, brought forth a
modicum of spirits, which he called Battle-Axe, but which was supposed to
be brandy. This Boscobel swallowed at a gulp, and then washed it down with
a little water.</p>
<p>“Come, Jerry,” said the old man, somewhat relenting in his
wrath, “you might as well give us a drop, as it’s going about.”
The two brothers, who had now been thoroughly aroused from their sleep,
and who had heard the enticing sound of the spirit bottle, joined the
party, and so they drank all round.</p>
<p>“Heathcote’s in an awful state about them fires, ain’t
he?” asked Jerry.</p>
<p>Boscobel, who had squatted down on the veranda, and was now lighting his
pipe, bobbed his head.</p>
<p>“I wish he was clean burned out—over head and ears,”
said Jerry.</p>
<p>Boscobel bobbed his head again, sucking with great energy at the closely
staffed pipe.</p>
<p>“If he treated me like he does you fellows,” continued Jerry,
“he shouldn’t have a yard of fencing or a blade of grass left—nor
a ewe, nor a lamb, nor a hogget. I do hate fellows who come here and want
to be better than any one about ’em—young chaps especially.
Sending up here to look for sheep-skins, cuss his impudence! I sent that
German fellow of his away with a flea in his ear.”</p>
<p>“Karl Bender?”</p>
<p>“It’s some such name as that.”</p>
<p>“He’s all in all with the young squire,” said Boscobel.
“And there’s a chap there called Jacko—he’s
another. He gets ’em down there to Gangoil, and the ladies talks to
’em, and then they’d go through fire and water for him. There’s
Mickey—he’s another, jist the same way. I don’t like
them ways, myself.”</p>
<p>“Too much of master and man about it, ain’t there, Bos?”</p>
<p>“Just that, Mr. Jerry. That ain’t my idea of a free country. I
can work as well as another, but I ain’t going to be told that I’m
a swindler because I’m making the most of my time.”</p>
<p>“He turned Nokes out by the scruff of his neck?” said Jerry.
Boscobel again bobbed his head. “I didn’t think Nokes was the
sort of fellow to stand that.”</p>
<p>“No more he ain’t,” said Boscobel.</p>
<p>“Heathcote’s a good plucked un all the same,” said Joe.</p>
<p>“It’s like you to speak up for such a fellow is that,”
said Jerry.</p>
<p>“I say he’s a good plucked un. I’m not standing up for
him. Nokes is half a stone heavier than him, and ought to have knocked him
over. That’s what you’d’ve done, wouldn’t you,
Bos? I know I would.”</p>
<p>“He’d ‘ve had my axe at his head,” said Boscobel.</p>
<p>“We all know Joe’s game to the backbone,” said Jerry.</p>
<p>“I’m game enough for you, anyway,” said the brother.
“And you can try it out any time you like.”</p>
<p>“That’s right; fight like dogs, do,” said the old man.</p>
<p>The quarrel at this point was interrupted by the arrival of another man,
who crept up round the corner on to the veranda exactly as Boscobel had
done. This was Nokes, of whom they had that moment been speaking. There
was silence for a few moments among them, as though they feared that he
might have heard them, and Nokes stood hanging his head as though half
ashamed of himself. Then they gave him the same kind of greeting as the
other men had received. Nobody told him that he was welcome, but the
spirit jar was again brought into use, Jerry measuring out the liquor, and
it was understood that Nokes was to stay there and get his food. He too
gave some account of himself, which was supposed to suffice, but which
they all knew to be false. It was Sunday, and they were off work at the
sugar-mill. He had come across Gangoil run, intending to take back with
him things of his own which he had left as Bender’s hut, and having
come so far, had thought that he would come on and get his dinner at
Boolabong. As this was being told, a good deal was said of Harry
Heathcote. Nokes declared that he had come right across Gangoil, and
explained that he would not have been at all sorry to meet Master
Heathcote in the bush. Master Heathcote had had his own way up at the
station when he was backed by a lot of his own hands; but a good time was
coming, perhaps. Then Nokes gave it to be understood very plainly that it
was the settled practice of his life to give Harry Heathcote a thrashing.
During all this there was an immense amount of bad language, and a large
portion of the art which in the colony is called “blowing.”
Jerry, Boscobel, and Nokes all boasted, each that on the first occasion he
would give Harry Heathcote such a beating that a whole bone should hardly
be left in the man’s skin.</p>
<p>“There isn’t one of you man enough to touch him,” said
Joe, who was known as the freest fighter of the Brownbie family.</p>
<p>“And you’d eat him, I suppose,” said Jerry.</p>
<p>“He’s not likely to come in my way,” said Joe; “but
if he does, he’ll get as good as he brings. That’s all.”</p>
<p>This was unpleasant to the visitors, who, of course, felt themselves to be
snubbed. Boscobel affected to hear the slight put upon his courage with
good humor, but Nokes laid himself down in a corner and sulked. They were
soon all asleep, and remained dozing, snoring, changing their
uncomfortable positions, and cursing the mosquitoes, till about four in
the afternoon, when Boscobel got up, shook himself, and made some
observation about “grub.” The meal of the day was then
prepared. A certain quantity of flour and raw meat, ample for their
immediate wants, was given to the two strangers, with which they retired
into the outer kitchen, prepared it for themselves, and there ate their
dinner, and each of the brothers did the same for himself in the big room—Joe,
the fighting brother, providing for his father’s wants as well as
his own. One of them had half a leg of cold mutton, so that he was saved
the trouble of cooking, but he did not offer to share this comfort with
the others. An enormous kettle of tea was made, and that was common among
them. While this was being consumed, Boscobel put his head into the room,
and suggested that he and his mate wanted a drink. Whereupon Jerry,
without a word, pointed to the kettle, and Boscobel was allowed to fill
two pannikins. Such was the welcome which was always accorded to strangers
in Boolabong.</p>
<p>After their meal the men came back on to the veranda, and there were more
smoking and sleeping, more boasting and snarling. Different allusions were
made to the spirit jar, especially by the old man; but they were made in
vain. The “Battle-Axe” was Jerry’s own property, and he
felt that he had already been almost foolishly liberal. But he had an
object in view. He was quite sure that Boscobel and Nokes had not come to
Boolabong on the same Sunday by any chance coincidence. The men had
something to propose, and in their own way they would make the proposition
before they left, and would make it probably to him. Boscobel intended to
sleep at Boolabong, but Nokes had explained that it was his purpose to
return that night to Medlicot’s Mill. The proposition no doubt would
be made soon—a little after seven, when the day was preparing to
give way suddenly to night. Nokes first walked off, sloping out from the
veranda in a half-shy, half-cunning manner, looking nowhither, and saying
a word to no one. Quickly after him Boscobel jumped up suddenly, hitched
up his trowsers, and followed the first man. At about a similar interval
Jerry passed out through the big room to the yard at the back, and from
the yard to a shed that was used as a shambles. Here he found the other
two men, and no doubt the proposition was made.</p>
<p>“There’s something up,” said the old man, as soon as
Jerry was gone.</p>
<p>“Of course there’s something up,” said Joe. “Those
fellows didn’t come all the way to Boolabong for nothing.”</p>
<p>“It’s something about young Heathcote,” suggested the
father.</p>
<p>“If it is,” said Jack, “what’s that to you?”</p>
<p>“They’ll get themselves hanged, that’s all about it.”</p>
<p>“That be blowed,” said Jack; “you go easy and hold your
tongue. If you know nothing, nobody can hurt you.”</p>
<p>“I know nothing,” said Joe, “and don’t mean. If I
had scores to quit with a fellow like Harry Heathcote, I should do it
after my own fashion. I shouldn’t get Boscobel to help me, nor yet
such a fellow as Nokes. But it’s no business of mine. Heathcote’s
made the place too hot to hold him. That’s all about it.”
There was no more said, and in an hour’s time Jerry returned, to the
family. Neither the father nor brother asked him any questions, nor did he
volunteer any information.</p>
<p>Boolabong was about fourteen miles from Medlicot’s Mill. Nokes had
walked this distance in the morning, and now retraced it at night—not
going right across Gangoil, as he had falsely boasted of doing early in
the day, but skirting it, and keeping on the outside of the fence nearly
the whole distance. At about two in the morning he reached his cottage
outside the mill on the river-bank; but he was unable to skulk in unheard.
Some dogs made a noise, and presently he heard a voice calling him from
the house. “Is that you, Nokes, at this time of night?” asked
Mr. Medlicot. Nokes grunted out some reply, intending to avoid any further
question. But his master came up to the hut door and asked him where he
had been.</p>
<p>“Just amusing myself,” said Nokes.</p>
<p>“It’s very late.”</p>
<p>“It’s not later for me than for you, Mr. Medlicot.”</p>
<p>“That’s true. I’ve just ridden home from</p>
<p>“From Gangoil? I didn’t know you were so friendly there, Mr.
Medlicot.”</p>
<p>“And where have you been?”</p>
<p>“Not to Gangoil, anyway. Good-night, Mr. Medlicot.” Then the
man took himself into his hut, and was safe from further questioning that
night.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VII. — “I WISH YOU’D LIKE ME.” </h2>
<p>All the Saturday night Heathcote had been on the run, and he did not
return home to bed till nearly dawn on the Sunday morning. At about noon
prayers were read out on the veranda, the congregation consisting of Mrs.
Heathcote and her sister, Mrs. Growler, and Jacko. Harry himself was
rather averse to this performance, intimating that Mrs. Growler, if she
were so minded, could read the prayers for herself in the kitchen, and
that, as regarded Jacko, they would be altogether thrown away. But his
wife had made a point of maintaining the practice, and he had of course
yielded. The service was not long, and when it was over Harry got into a
chair and was soon asleep. He had been in the saddle during sixteen hours
of the previous day and night, and was entitled to be fatigued. His wife
sat beside him, every now and again protecting him from the flies, while
Kate Daly sat by with her Bible in her hand. But she, too, from time to
time, was watching her brother-in-law. The trouble of his spirits and the
work that he felt himself bound to do touched them with a strong feeling,
and taught them to regard him for the time as a young hero.</p>
<p>“How quietly he sleeps!” Kate said. “The fatigue of the
last week must have been terrible.”</p>
<p>“He is quite, quite knocked up,” said the wife.</p>
<p>“I ain’t knocked up a bit,” said Harry, jumping up from
his chair. “What should knock me up? I wasn’t asleep, was I?”</p>
<p>“Just dozing, dear.”</p>
<p>“Ah, well; there isn’t any thing to do, and it’s too hot
to get out. I wonder Old Bates didn’t come in for prayers.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think he cares much for prayers,” said Mrs.
Heathcote.</p>
<p>“But he likes an excuse for a nobbler as well as any one. Did I tell
you that they had fires over at Jackson’s yesterday—at
Goolaroo?”</p>
<p>“Was there any harm done?”</p>
<p>“A deal of grass burned, and they had to drive the sheep, which won’t
serve them this kind of weather. I don’t know which I fear most—the
grass, the fences, or the sheep. As for the buildings, I don’t think
they’ll try that again.”</p>
<p>“Why not, Harry?”</p>
<p>“The risk of being seen is too great. I can hardly understand that a
man like Nokes should have been such a fool as he was.”</p>
<p>“You think it was Nokes?”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, certainly. In the first place, Jacko is as true as steel. I
don’t mean to swear by the boy, though I think he is a good boy. But
I’m sure he’s true in this. And then the man’s manner to
myself was conclusive. I can not understand a man in Medlicot’s
position supporting a fellow like that. By Heavens! it nearly drives me
mad to think of it. Thousands and thousands of pounds are at stake. All
that a man has in the world is exposed to the malice of a scoundrel like
Nokes! And then a man who calls himself a gentleman will talk about it
being un-English to look after him. He’s a ‘new chum;’ I
suppose that’s his excuse.”</p>
<p>“If it’s a sufficient excuse, you should excuse him,”
said Kate, with good feminine logic.</p>
<p>“That’s just like you all over. He’s good-looking, and
therefore it’s all right. He ought to have learned better. He ought,
at any rate, to believe that men who have been here much longer than he
has must know the ways of the country a great deal better.”</p>
<p>“It’s Christmas-time, Harry,” said his wife, “and
you should endeavor to forgive your neighbors.”</p>
<p>“What sort of a Christmas will it be if you and I, and these young
fellows here, and Kate, are all burned out of Gangoil? Here’s Bates.—Well,
Mr. Bates, how goes it?”</p>
<p>“Tremendous hot, Sir.”</p>
<p>“We’ve found that out already. You haven’t heard where
that fellow Boscobel has gone?”</p>
<p>“No; I haven’t heard. But he’ll be over with some of
those Brownbie lads. They say Georgie Brownbie’s about the country
somewhere. If so, there’ll be a row among ’em.”</p>
<p>“When thieves fall out, Mr. Bates, honest men come by their own.”</p>
<p>“So they say, Mr. Heathcote. All the same, I shouldn’t care
how far Georgie was away from any place I had to do with.” Then the
young master and his old superintendent sauntered out to his back premises
to talk about sheep and fires, and plans for putting out fires. And no
doubt Mr. Bates had the glass of brandy-and-water which he had come to
regard as one of his Sunday luxuries. From the back premises they went
down to the creek to gauge the water. Then they sauntered on, keeping
always in the shade, sitting down here to smoke, and standing up there to
discuss the pedigree of some particular ram, till it was past six.</p>
<p>“You may as well come in and dine with us, Mr. Bates,” Harry
suggested, as they returned toward the station.</p>
<p>Mr. Bates said that he thought that he would. As the same invitation was
given on almost every Sunday throughout the year, and was invariably
answered in the same way, there was not much excitement in this. But Mr.
Bates would not have dreamed of going in to dinner without being asked.</p>
<p>“That’s Medlicot’s trap,” said Mr. Bates, as they
entered the yard. “I heard wheels when they were in the horse
paddock.”</p>
<p>Harry looked at the trap, and then went quickly into the house.</p>
<p>He walked with a rapid step onto the veranda, and there he found the sugar
grower and his mother. Mrs. Heathcote looked at her husband almost
timidly. She knew from the very sound of his feet that he was perturbed in
spirit. Under his own roof-tree he would certainly be courteous; but there
is a constrained courtesy very hard to be borne, of which she knew him to
be capable. He first went up to the old lady, and to her his greeting was
pleasant enough. Harry Heathcote, though he had assumed the bush mode of
dressing, still retained the manners of a high-bred gentleman in his
intercourse with women. Then, turning sharply round, he gave his hand to
Mr. Medlicot.</p>
<p>“I am glad to see you at Gangoil,” he said; “I was not
fortunate enough to be at home when you called the other day. Mrs.
Medlicot must have found the drive very hot, I fear.”</p>
<p>His wife was still looking into his face, and was reading there, as in a
book, the mingled pride and disdain with which her husband exercising
civility to his enemy. Harry’s countenance wore a look not difficult
of perusal, and Medlicot could read the lines almost as distinctly as
Harry’s wife.</p>
<p>“I have asked Mrs. Medlicot to stay and dine with us,” she
said, “so that she may have it cool for the drive back.”</p>
<p>“I am almost afraid of the bush at night,” said the old woman.</p>
<p>“You’ll have a full moon,” said Harry; “it will be
as light as day.” So that was settled. Heathcote thought it odd that
the man whom he regarded as his enemy, whom he had left at their last
meeting in positive hostility, should consent to accept a dinner under his
roof; but that was Medlicot’s affair, not his.</p>
<p>They dined at seven, and after dinner strolled out into the horse paddock,
and down to the creek. As they started, the three men went first, and the
ladies followed them; but Bates soon dropped behind. It was his rest day,
and he had already moved quite as much as was usual with him on a Sunday.</p>
<p>“I think I was a little hard with you the other day,” said
Medlicot, when they were alone together.</p>
<p>“I suppose we hardly understand each other’s ideas,”
said Harry. He spoke with a constrained voice, and with an almost savage
manner, engendered by a determination to hold his own. He would forgive
any offense for which an apology was made, but no apology had been made as
yet; and, to tell the truth, he was a little afraid that if they got into
an argument on the matter Medlicot would have the best of it. And there
was, too, almost a claim to superiority in Medlicot’s use of the
word “hard.” When one man says that he has been hard to
another, he almost boasts that, on that occasion, he got the better of
him.</p>
<p>“That’s just it,” said Medlicot; “we do not quite
understand each other. But we might believe in each other all the same,
and then the understanding would come. But it isn’t just that which
I want to say; such talking rarely does any good.”</p>
<p>“What is it, then?”</p>
<p>“You may perhaps be right about that man Nokes.”</p>
<p>“No doubt I may. I know I’m right. When I asked him whether he’d
been at my shed, what made him say that he hadn’t been there at
night-time? I said nothing about night-time. But the man was there at
night-time, or he wouldn’t have used the word.”</p>
<p>“I’m not sure that that is evidence.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps not in England, Mr. Medlicot, but it’s good enough
evidence for the bush. And what made him pretend he didn’t know the
distances? And why can’t he look a man in the face? And why should
the boy have said it was he if it wasn’t? Of course, if you think
well of him you’re right to keep him. But you may take it as a rule
out here that when a man has been dismissed it hasn’t been done for
nothing. Men treated that way should travel out of the country. It’s
better for all parties. It isn’t here as it is at home, where people
live so thick together that nothing is thought of a man being dismissed. I
was obliged to discharge him, and now he’s my enemy.”</p>
<p>“A man may be your enemy without being a felon.”</p>
<p>“Of course he may. I’m his enemy in a way, but I wouldn’t
hurt a hair of his head unjustly. When I see the attempts made to burn me
out, of course I know that an enemy has been at work.”</p>
<p>“Is there no one else has got a grudge against you?”</p>
<p>Harry was silent for a moment. What right had this man to cross-examine
him about his enmities—the man whose own position in the place had
been one of hostility to him, whom he had almost suspected of harboring
Nokes at the mill simply because Nokes had been dismissed from Gangoil?
That suspicion was, indeed, fading away. There was something in Medlicot’s
voice and manner which made it impossible to attribute such motives to
him. Nevertheless the man was a free-selector, and had taken a bit of the
Gangoil run after a fashion which to Heathcote was objectionable
politically, morally, and socially. Let Medlicot in regard to character be
what he might, he was a free-selector, and a squatter’s enemy, and
had clinched his hostility by employing a servant dismissed from the very
run out of which he had bought his land. “It is hard to say,”
he replied at length, “who have grudges, as against whom, or why. I
suppose I have a great grudge against you, if the truth is to be known;
but I sha’n’t burn down your mill.”</p>
<p>“I’m sure you won’t.”</p>
<p>“Nor yet say worse of you behind your back than I will to your face.”</p>
<p>“I don’t want you to think that you have occasion to speak ill
of me, either one way or the other. What I mean is this—I don’t
quite think that the evidence against Nokes is strong enough to justify me
in sending him away; but I’ll keep an eye on him as well as I can.
It seems that he left our place early this morning; but the men are not
supposed to be there on Sundays, and of course he does as he pleases with
himself.”</p>
<p>The conversation then dropped, and in a little time Harry made some excuse
for leaving them, and returned to the house alone, promising, however,
that he would not start for his night’s ride till after the party
had come back to the station. “There is no hurry at all,” he
said; “I shan’t stir for two hours yet, but Mickey will be
waiting there for stores for himself and the German.”</p>
<p>“That means a nobbler for Mickey,” said Kate. “Either of
those men would think it a treat to ride ten miles in and ten miles back,
with a horse-load of sugar and tea and flour, for the sake of a glass of
brandy-and-water.”</p>
<p>“And so would you,” said Harry, “if you lived in a hut
by yourself for a fortnight, with nothing to drink but tea without milk.”</p>
<p>The old lady and Mrs. Heathcote were soon seated on the grass, while
Medlicot and Kate Daly roamed on together. Kate was a pretty, modest girl,
timid withal and shy, unused to society, and therefore awkward, but with
the natural instincts and aptitudes of her sex. What the glass of
brandy-and-water was to Mickey O’Dowd after a fortnight’s
solitude in a bush hut, with tea, dampers, and lumps of mutton, a young
man in the guise of a gentleman was to poor Kate Daly. A brother-in-law,
let him be ever so good, is after all no better than tea without milk. No
doubt Mickey O’Dowd often thought about a nobbler in his thirsty
solitude, and so did Kate speculate on what might possibly be the
attractions of a lover. Medlicot probably indulged in no such
speculations; but the nobbler, when brought close to his lips, was
grateful to him as to others. That Kate Daly was very pretty no man could
doubt.</p>
<p>“Isn’t it sad that he should have to ride about all night like
that?” said Kate, to whom, as was proper, Harry Heathcote at the
present moment was of more importance than any other human being.</p>
<p>“I suppose he likes it.”</p>
<p>“Oh no, Mr. Medlicot; how can he like it? It is not the hard work he
minds, but the constant dread of coming evil.”</p>
<p>“The excitement keeps him alive.”</p>
<p>“There’s plenty on a station to keep a man alive in that way
at all times.”</p>
<p>“And plenty to keep ladies alive too?”</p>
<p>“Oh, ladies! I don’t know that ladies have any business in the
bush. Harry’s trouble is all about my sister and the children and
me. He wouldn’t care a straw for himself.”</p>
<p>“Do you think he’d be better without a wife?”</p>
<p>Kate hesitated for a moment. “Well, no. I suppose it would be very
rough without Mary; and he’d be so lonely when he came in.”</p>
<p>“And nobody to make his tea.”</p>
<p>“Or to look after his things,” said Kate, earnestly. “I
know it was very rough before we came here. He says that himself. There
were no regular meals, but just food in a cupboard when he chose to get
it.”</p>
<p>“That is not comfortable, certainly.”</p>
<p>“Horrid, I should think. I suppose it is better for him to be
married. You’ve got your mother, Mr. Medlicot.”</p>
<p>“Yes: I’ve got my mother.”</p>
<p>“That makes a difference, does it not?”</p>
<p>“A very great difference. She’ll save me from having to go to
a cupboard for my bread and meat.”</p>
<p>“I suppose having a woman about is better for a man. They haven’t
got any thing else to do, and therefore they can look to things.”</p>
<p>“Do you help to look to things?”</p>
<p>“I suppose I do something. I often feel ashamed to think how very
little it is. As for that, I’m not wanted at all.”</p>
<p>“So that you’re free to go elsewhere?”</p>
<p>“I didn’t mean that, Mr. Medlicot; only I know I’m not
of much use.”</p>
<p>“But if you had a house of your own?”</p>
<p>“Gangoil is my home just as much as it is Mary’s; and I
sometimes feel that Harry is just as good to me as he is to Mary.”</p>
<p>“Your sister will never leave Gangoil.”</p>
<p>“Not unless Harry gets another station.”</p>
<p>“But you will have to be transplanted some day.”</p>
<p>Kate merely chucked up her head and pouted her lips, as though to show
that the proposition was one which did not deserve an answer.</p>
<p>“You’ll marry a squatter, of course, Miss Daly?”</p>
<p>“I don’t suppose I shall ever marry any body, Mr. Medlicot.”</p>
<p>“You wouldn’t marry any one but a squatter? I can quite
understand that. The squatters here are what the lords and the country
gentlemen are at home.”</p>
<p>“I can’t even picture to myself what sort of life people live
at home.” Both Medlicot and Kate Daly meant England when they spoke
of home.</p>
<p>“There isn’t so much difference as people think. Classes hang
together just in the same way; only I think there’s a little more
exclusiveness here than there was there.”</p>
<p>In answer to this, Kate asserted with innocent eagerness that she was not
at all exclusive, and that if ever she married any one she’d marry
the man she liked.</p>
<p>“I wish you’d like me,” said Medlicot.</p>
<p>“That’s nonsense,” said Kate, in a low, timid whisper,
hurrying away to rejoin the other ladies. She could speculate on the
delights of the beverage as would Mickey O’Dowd in his hut; but when
it was first brought to her lips she could only fly away from it. In this
respect Mickey O’Dowd was the more sensible of the two. No other
word was spoken that night between them, but Kate lay awake till morning
thinking of the one word that had been spoken. But the secret was kept
sacredly within her own bosom.</p>
<p>Before the Medlicots started that night the old lady made a proposition
that the Heathcotes and Miss Daly should eat the Christmas dinner at
Medlicot’s Mill. Mrs. Heathcote, thinking perhaps of her sister,
thoroughly liking what she herself had seen of the Medlicots, looked
anxiously into Harry’s face. If he would consent to this, an
intimacy would follow, and probably a real friendship be made.</p>
<p>“It’s out of the question,” he said. The very firmness,
however, with which he spoke gave a certain cordiality even to his
refusal. “I must be at home, so that the men may know where to find
me till I go out for the night.” Then, after a pause, he continued,
“As we can’t go to you, why should you not come to us?”</p>
<p>So it was at last decided, much to Harry’s own astonishment, much to
his wife’s delight. Kate, therefore, when she lay awake, thinking of
the one word that had been spoken, knew that there would be an opportunity
for another word.</p>
<p>Medlicot drove his mother home safely, and, after he had taken her into
the house, encountered Nokes on his return from Boolabong, as has been
told at the close of the last chapter.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VIII. — “I DO WISH HE WOULD COME!” </h2>
<p>On the Monday morning Harry came home as usual, and, as usual, went to bed
after his breakfast. “I wouldn’t care about the heat if it
were not for the wind,” he said to his wife, as he threw himself
down.</p>
<p>“The wind carries it so, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“Yes; and it comes from just the wrong side—from the
northwest. There have been half a dozen fires about to-day.”</p>
<p>“During the night, you mean.”</p>
<p>“No; yesterday—Sunday. I can not make out whether they come by
themselves. They certainly are not all made by incendiaries.”</p>
<p>“Accidents, perhaps.”</p>
<p>“Well, yes. Somebody drops a match, and the sun ignites it. But the
chances are much against a fire like that spreading. Care is wanted to
make it spread. As far as I can learn, the worst fires have not been just
after midday, when, of course, the heat is greater, but in the early
night, before the dews have come. All the same, I feel that I know nothing
about it—nothing at all. Don’t let me sleep long.”</p>
<p>In spite of this injunction, Mrs. Heathcote determined that he should
sleep all day if he would. Even the nights were fearfully hot and sultry,
and on this Monday morning he had come home much fatigued. He would be out
again at sunset, and now he should have what rest nature would allow him.
But in this resolve she was opposed by Jacko, who came in at eleven, and
requested to see the master. Jacko had been over with the German; and, as
he explained to Mrs. Heathcote, they two had been in and out, sometimes
sleeping and sometimes watching. But now he wanted to see the master, and
under no persuasion would impart his information to the mistress. The poor
wife, anxious as she was that her husband should sleep, did not dare in
these perilous times to ignore Jacko and his information, and therefore
gently woke the sleeper. In a few minutes Jacko was standing by the young
squatter’s bedside, and Harry Heathcote, quite awake, was sitting up
and listening. “George Brownbie’s at Boolabong.” That at
first was the gravamen of Jacko’s news.</p>
<p>“I know that already, Jacko.”</p>
<p>“My word!” exclaimed Jacko. In those parts Georgie Brownbie
was regarded almost as the Evil One himself, and Jacko, knowing what
mischief was, as it were, in the word, thought that he was entitled to
bread and jam, if not to a nobbler itself, in bringing such tidings to
Gangoil.</p>
<p>“Is that all?” asked Heathcote.</p>
<p>“And Bos is at Boolabong, and Bill Nokes was there all Sunday, and
Jerry Brownbie’s been out with Bos and Georgie.”</p>
<p>“The old man wouldn’t say any thing of that kind, Jacko.”</p>
<p>“The old man! He knows nothing about it. My word! they don’t
tell him about nothing.”</p>
<p>“Or Tom?”</p>
<p>“Tom’s away in prison. They always cotches the best when they
want to send ’em to prison. If they’d lock up Jerry and
Georgie and Jack! My word! yes.”</p>
<p>“You think they’re arranging it all at Boolabong?”</p>
<p>“In course they are.”</p>
<p>“I don’t see why Boscobel shouldn’t be at Boolabong
without intending me any harm. Of course he’d go there when he left
Gangoil. That’s where they all go.”</p>
<p>“And Bill Nokes, Mr. Harry?”</p>
<p>“And Bill Nokes too. Though why he should travel so far from his
work this weather I can’t say.”</p>
<p>“My word! no, Mr. Harry.”</p>
<p>“Did you see any fires about your way last night?”</p>
<p>Jacko shook his head.</p>
<p>“You go into the kitchen and get something to eat, and wait for me.
I shall be out before long now.”</p>
<p>Though Heathcote had made light of the assemblage of evil spirits at
Boolabong which had seemed so important to Jacko, he by no means did
regard the news as unessential. Of Nokes’s villany he was convinced.
Of Boscobel he had imprudently made a second enemy at a most inauspicious
time. Georgie Brownbie had long been his bitter foe. He had prosecuted
and, perhaps, persecuted Georgie for various offenses; but as Georgie was
supposed to be as much at war with his own brethren as with the rest of
the world at large, Heathcote had not thought much of that miscreant in
the present emergency. But if the miscreant were in truth at Boolabong,
and if evil things were being plotted against Gangoil, Georgie would
certainly be among the conspirators.</p>
<p>Soon after noon Harry was on horseback and Jacko was at his heels. The
heat was more intense than ever. Mrs. Heathcote had twisted round Harry’s
hat a long white scarf, called a puggeree, though we are by no means sure
of our spelling. Jacko had spread a very dirty fragment of an old white
handkerchief on his head, and wore his hat over it. Mrs. Heathcote had
begged Harry to take a large cotton parasol, and he had nearly consented,
being unable at last to reconcile himself to the idea of riding with such
an accoutrement even in the bush. “The heat’s a bore,”
he said, “but I’m not a bit afraid of it as long as I keep
moving. Yes, I’ll be back to dinner, though I won’t say when,
and I won’t say for how long. It will be the same thing all day
to-morrow. I wish with all my heart those people were not coming.”</p>
<p>He rode straight away to the German’s hut, which was on the
northwestern extremity of his further paddock in that direction. From
thence the western fence ran in a southerly direction, nearly straight to
the river. Beyond the fence was a strip of land, in some parts over a mile
broad, in others not much over a quarter of a mile, which he claimed as
belonging to Gangoil, but over which the Brownbies had driven their cattle
since the fence had been made, under the pretense that the fence marked
the boundary of two runs. Against this assumption Heathcote had
remonstrated frequently, had driven the cattle back, and had exercised the
ownership of a Crown tenant in such fashion as the nature of his
occupation allowed. Beyond this strip was Boolabong; the house at
Boolabong being not above three miles distant from the fence, and not
above four miles from the German’s hut. So that the Brownbies were
in truth much nearer neighbors to the German than was Heathcote and his
family. But between the German and the Brownbies there raged an
internecine feud. No doubt Harry Heathcote, in his heart, liked the German
all the better on this account; but it behooved him both as a master and a
magistrate to regard reports against Boolabong coming from the German with
something of suspicion. Now Jacko had been introduced to Gangoil under
German auspices, and had soon come to a decision that it would be a good
thing and a just to lock up all the Brownbies in the great jail of the
colony at Brisbane. He probably knew nothing of law or justice in the
abstract, but he greatly valued law when exercised against those he hated.
The western fence of which mention has been made ran down to the Mary
River, hitting it about four miles west of Medlicot’s Mill; so that
there was a considerable portion of the Gangoil run having a frontage to
the water. As has been before said, Medlicot’s plantation was about
fourteen miles distant from the house at Boolabong, and the distance from
the Gangoil house to that of the Brownbies was about the same.</p>
<p>The oppressiveness of the day was owing more to the hot wind than to the
sun itself. This wind, coming from the arid plains of the interior,
brought with it a dry, suffocating heat. On this occasion it was odious to
Harry Heathcote, not so much on account of its own intrinsic abominations,
as because it might cause a fire to sweep across his run from its western
boundary. Just beyond the boundary there lay Boolabong, and there were
collected his enemies. A fire that should have passed for a mile or so
across the pastures outside and beyond his own farm would be altogether
unextinguishable by the time that it had reached his paddock. The
Brownbies, as he knew well, would care nothing for burning a patch of
their own grass. Their stock, if they had any at the present moment, were
much too few in number to be affected by such a loss. The Brownbies had
not a yard of fencing to be burned; and a fire, if once it got a hold on
the edge of their run, would pass on away from them, right across Harry’s
pastures and Harry’s fences. If such were the case, he would have
quite enough to do to drive his sheep from the fire, and it might be that
many of them also would perish in the flames. The catastrophe might even
be so bad, so frightful, that the shed and station and all should go;
though, in thinking of all the fires of which he had heard, he could
remember none that had spread with fatality such as that.</p>
<p>He found Karl Bender in his hut asleep. The man was soon up, apologizing
for his somnolence, and preparing tea for his master’s
entertainment. “It is not Christmas like at home at all; is it, Mr.
‘Eathcote? Dear, no! Them red divils is there ready to give us a Christmas
roasting.” Then he told how he had boldly ridden up to Boolabong
that morning, and had seen Georgie and Boscobel with his own eyes. When
asked what they had said to him, he replied that he did not wait till any
thing had been said, but had hurried away as fast as his horse could carry
him.</p>
<p>“I’ll go up to Boolabong myself,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“My word! They’ll just about knock your head off,”
suggested Jacko.</p>
<p>Karl Bender also thought that the making of such a visit would be a source
of danger. But Heathcote explained that any personal attack was not to be
apprehended from these men. “That’s not their game,” he
said, arguing that men who premeditated a secret outrage would not
probably be tempted into personal violence. The horror of the position lay
in this—that though a fire should rise up almost under the feet of
men who were known to be hostile to him, and whose characters were
acknowledged to be bad, still would there be no evidence against them. It
was known to all men that, at periods of heat such as that which was now
raging, fires were common. Every day the pastures were in flames, here,
there, and every where. It was said, indeed, that there existed no
evidence of fires in the bush till men had come with their flocks. But
then there had been no smoking, no boiling of pots, no camping out, till
men had come, and no matches. Every one around might be sure that some
particular fire had been the work of an incendiary, might be able to name
the culprit who had done the deed; and yet no jury could convict the
miscreant. Watchfulness was the best security, watchfulness day and night
till rain should come; and Heathcote calculated that it would be better
for him that his enemies should know that he was watchful. He would go up
among them and show them that he was not ashamed to speak to them of his
anxiety. They could hear nothing by his coming which they did not already
know. They were well aware that he was on the watch, and it might be well
that they should know also how close his watch was kept. He took the
German and Jacko with him, but left them with their horses about a mile on
the Boolabong side of his own fence, nigh to the extreme boundary of the
Debatable Land. They knew his whistle, and were to ride to him at once
should he call them.</p>
<p>He had left the house about noon, saying that he would be home to dinner—which,
however, on such occasions, was held to be a feast movable over a wide
space of time. But on this occasion the women expected him to come early,
as it was his intention to be out again as soon as it should be dark. Mrs.
Growler was asked to have the dinner ready at six. During the day Mrs.
Heathcote was backward and forward in the kitchen. Then was something
wrong she knew, but could not quite discern the evil. Sing Sing, the cook,
was more than ordinarily alert; but Sing Sing, the cook, was not much
trusted. Mrs. Growler was “as good as the Bank,” as far as
that went, having lived with old Mr. Daly when he was prosperous; but she
was apt to be downhearted, and on the present occasion was more than
usually low in spirits. Whenever Mrs. Heathcote spoke, she wept. At six o’clock
she came into the parlor with a budget of news. Sing Sing, the cook, had
been gone for the last half hour, leaving the leg of mutton at the fire.
It soon became clear to them that he had altogether absconded.</p>
<p>“Them rats always does leave a falling house,” said Mrs.
Growler.</p>
<p>At seven o’clock the sun was down, though the gloom of the tropical
evening had not yet come. The two ladies went out to the gate, which was
but a few yards from the veranda, and there stood listening for the sound
of Harry’s horse. The low moaning of the wind through the trees
could be heard, but it was so gentle, continuous, and unaltered that it
seemed to be no more than a vehicle for other sounds, and was as
death-like as silence itself. The gate of the horse paddock through which
Heathcote must pass on his way home was nearly a mile distant; but the
road there was hard, and they knew that they could hear from there the
fall of his horse’s feet. There they stood from seven to nearly
eight, whispering a word now and then to each other, listening always, but
in vain. Looking away to the west every now and then, they fancied that
they could see the sky glow with flames, and then they would tell each
other that it was fancy. The evening grew darker and still darker, but no
sound was heard through the moaning wind. From time to time Mrs. Growler
came out to them, declaring her fears in no measured terms. “Well,
marm, I do declare I think we’d better go away out of this.”</p>
<p>“Go away, Mrs. Growler! What nonsense! Where can we go to?”</p>
<p>“The mill would be nearest, ma’am, and we should be safe
there. I’m sure Mrs. Medlicot would take us in.”</p>
<p>“Why should you not be safe here?” said Kate.</p>
<p>“That wretched Chinese hasn’t gone and left us for nothing,
miss, and what would we three lone women do here if all them Brownbies
came down upon us? Why don’t master come back? He ought to come
back; oughtn’t he, ma’am? He never do think what lone women
are.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Heathcote took her husband’s part very strongly, and gave Mrs.
Growler as hard a scolding as she knew how to pronounce. But her own
courage was giving way much as Mrs. Growler’s had done. “We
are bound to stay here,” she said; “and if the worst comes, we
must bear it as others have done before us.” Then Mrs. Growler was
very sulky, and, retreating to the kitchen, sobbed there in solitude.
“Oh, Kate, I do wish he would come,” said the elder sister.</p>
<p>“Are you afraid?”</p>
<p>“It is so desolate, and he may be so far off, and we couldn’t
get to him if any thing happened, and we shouldn’t know.”</p>
<p>Then they were again silent, and remained without exchanging more than a
word or two for nearly half an hour. They took hold of each other, and
every now and then went to the kitchen door that the old woman might be
comforted by their presence, but they had no consolation to offer each
other. The silence of the bush, and the feeling of great distances, and
the dread of calamity almost crushed them. At last there was a distant
sound of horse’s feet. “I hear him,” said Mrs.
Heathcote, rushing forward toward the outer gate of the horse paddock,
followed by her sister.</p>
<p>Her ears were true, but she was doomed to disappointment. The horseman was
only a messenger from her husband—Mickey O’Dowd, the Irish
boundary rider.</p>
<p>He had great tidings to tell, and was so long telling them that we will
not attempt to give them in his own words. The purport of his story was as
follows: Harry had been to Boolabong House, but had found there no one but
the old man. Returning home thence toward his own fence, he had smelled
the smoke of fire, and had found within a furlong of his path a long ridge
of burning grass. According to Mickey’s account, it could not have
been lighted above a few minutes before Heathcote’s presence on the
spot. As it was, it had got too much ahead for him to put it out
single-handed; a few yards he might have managed, but—so Mickey
said, probably exaggerating the matter—there was half a quarter of a
mile of flame. He had therefore ridden on before the fire, had called his
own two men to him, and had at once lighted the grass himself some two
hundred yards in front, making a second fire, but so keeping it down that
it should be always under control. Before the hinder flames had caught
him, Bender and Jacko had been with him, and they had thus managed to
consume the fuel which, had it remained there, would have fed the fire
which was too strong to be mastered. By watching the extremities of the
line of fire, they overpowered it, and so the damage was for the moment at
an end.</p>
<p>The method of dealing with the enemy was so well known in the bush, and
had been so often canvassed in the hearing of the two sisters, that it was
clearly intelligible to them. The evil had been met in the proper way, and
the remedy had been effective. But why did not Harry come home?</p>
<p>Mickey O’Dowd, after his fashion, explained that too. The ladies
were not to wait dinner. The master felt himself obliged to remain out at
night, and had gotten food at the German’s hut. He, Mickey, was
commissioned to return with a flask full of brandy, as it would be
necessary that Harry, with all the men whom he could trust, should be
“on the rampage” all night. This small body was to consist of
Harry himself, of the German, of Jacko, and, according to the story as at
present told, especially of Mickey O’Dowd. Much as she would have
wished to have kept the man at the station for protection, she did not
think of disobeying her husband’s orders. So Mickey was fed, and
then sent back with the flask—with tidings also as to the desertion
of that wretched cook, Sing Sing.</p>
<p>“I shall sit here all night,” said Mrs. Heathcote to her
sister. “As things are, I shall not think of going to bed.”</p>
<p>Kate declared that she would also sit in the veranda all night; and, as a
matter of course, they were joined by Mrs. Growler. They had been so
seated about an hour when Kate Daly declared that the heavens were on
fire. The two young women jumped up, flew to the gate, and found that the
whole western horizon was lurid with a dark red light.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER IX. — THE BUSH FIGHT. </h2>
<p>Harry Heathcote had on this occasion entertained no doubt whatever that
the fire had been intentional and premeditated. A lighted torch must have
been dragged along the grass, so as to ignite a line many yards long all
at the same time. He had been luckily near enough to the spot to see
almost the commencement of the burning, and was therefore aware of its
form and circumstances. He almost wondered that he had not seen the figure
of the man who had drawn the torch, or at any rate heard his steps.
Pursuit would have been out of the question, as his work was wanted at the
moment to extinguish the flames. The miscreant probably had remembered
this, and had known that he might escape stealthily without the noise of a
rapid retreat.</p>
<p>When the work was over, when he had put out the fire he had himself
lighted, and had exterminated the lingering remnants of that which had
been intended to destroy him, he stood still a while almost in despair.
His condition seemed to be hopeless. What could he do against such a band
of enemies, knowing as he did that, had he been backed even by a score of
trusty followers, one foe might still suffice to ruin him? At the present
moment he was very hot with the work he had done, as were also Jacko and
the German. O’Dowd had also come up as they were completing their
work. Their mode of extinguishing the flames had been to beat them down
with branches of gum-tree loaded with leaves. By sweeping these along the
burning ground the low flames would be scattered and expelled. But the
work was very hard and hot. The boughs they used were heavy, and the air
around them, sultry enough from its own properties, was made almost
unbearable by the added heat of the fires.</p>
<p>The work had been so far done, but it might be begun again at any moment,
either near or at a distance. No doubt the attempt would be made elsewhere
along the boundary between Gangoil and Boolabong—was very probably
being made at this moment. The two men whom he could trust and Jacko were
now with him. They were wiping their brows with their arms and panting
with their work.</p>
<p>He first resolved on sending Mickey O’Dowd to the house. The
distance was great, and the man’s assistance might be essential. But
he could not bear to leave his wife without news from him. Then, after
considering a while, he made up his mind to go back toward his own fence,
making his way as he went southerly down toward the river. They who were
determined to injure him would, he thought, repeat their attempt in that
direction. He hardly said a word to his two followers, but rode at a
foot-pace to the spot at his fence which he had selected as the site of
his bivouac for the night.</p>
<p>“It won’t be very cheery, Bender,” he said to the
German; “but we shall have to make a night of it till they disturb
us again.”</p>
<p>The German made a motion with his arms intended to signify his utter
indifference. One place was the same as another to him. Jacko uttered his
usual ejaculation, and then, having hitched his horse to the fence, threw
himself on his back upon the grass.</p>
<p>No doubt they all slept, but they slept as watchers sleep, with one eye
open. It was Harry who first saw the light which a few minutes later made
itself visible to the ladies at the home station. “Karl,” he
exclaimed, jumping up, “they’re at it again—look there.”</p>
<p>In less than half a minute, and without speaking another word, they were
all on their horses and riding in the direction of the light. It came from
a part of the Boolabong run somewhat nearer to the river than the place at
which they had stationed themselves, where the strip of ground between
Harry’s fence and the acknowledged boundary of Brownbie’s run
was the narrowest. As they approached the fire, they became aware that it
had been lighted on Boolabong. On this occasion Harry did not ride on up
to the flames, knowing that the use or loss of a few minutes might save or
destroy his property. He hardly spoke a word as he proceeded on his
business, feeling that they upon whom he had to depend were sufficiently
instructed, if only they would be sufficiently energetic.</p>
<p>“Keep it well under, but let it run,” was all he said, as,
lighting a dried bush with a match, he ran the fire along the ground in
front of the coming flames.</p>
<p>A stranger seeing it all would have felt sure that the remedy would have
been as bad as the disease, for the fire which Harry himself made every
now and again seemed to get the better of those who were endeavoring to
control it. There might perhaps be a quarter of a mile between the front
of the advancing fire and the line at which Harry had commenced to destroy
the food which would have fed the coming flames. He himself, as quickly as
he lighted the grass, which in itself was the work but of a moment, would
strain himself to the utmost at the much harder task of controlling his
own fire, so that it should not run away from him, and get, as it were,
out of his hands, and be as bad to him as that which he was thus seeking
to circumvent. The German and Jacko worked like heroes, probably with
intense enjoyment of the excitement, and, after a while, found a fourth
figure among the flames, for Mickey had now returned.</p>
<p>“You saw them,” Harry said, panting with his work.</p>
<p>“They’s all right,” said Mickey, flopping away with a
great bough; “but that tarnation Chinese has gone off.”</p>
<p>“My word! Sing Sing. Find him at Boolabong,” said Jacko.</p>
<p>The German, whose gum-tree bough was a very big one, and whose every
thought was intent on letting the fire run while he still held it in hand,
had not breath for a syllable.</p>
<p>But the back fire was extending itself, so as to get round them. Every now
and then Harry extended his own line, moving always forward toward Gangoil
as he did so, though he and his men were always on Brownbie’s
territory. He had no doubt but that where he could succeed in destroying
the grass for a breadth of forty or fifty yards he would starve out the
inimical flames. The trees and bushes without the herbage would not enable
it to travel a yard. Wherever the grass was burned down black to the soil,
the fire would stop. But should they, who were at work, once allow
themselves to be outflanked, their exertions would be all in vain. And
then those wretches might light a dozen fires. The work was so hard, so
hot, and often so hopeless, that the unhappy young squatter was more than
once tempted to bid his men desist and to return to his homestead. The
flames would not follow him there. He could, at any rate, make that safe.
And then, when he had repudiated this feeling as unworthy of him, he began
to consider within himself whether he would not do better for his property
by taking his men with him on to his run, and endeavoring to drive his
sheep out of danger. But as he thought of all this, he still worked, still
fired the grass, and still controlled the flames. Presently he became
aware of what seemed to him at first to be a third fire. Through the
trees, in the direction of the river, he could see the glimmering of low
flames and the figures of men. But it was soon apparent to him that these
men were working in his cause, and that they, too, were burning the grass
that would have fed the advancing flames. At first he could not spare the
minute which would be necessary to find out who was his friend, but, as
they drew nearer, he knew the man. It was the sugar planter from the mill
and with him his foreman.</p>
<p>“We’ve been doing our best,” said Medlicot, “but
we’ve been terribly afraid that the fire would slip away from us.”</p>
<p>“It’s the only thing,” said Harry, too much excited at
the moment to ask questions as to the cause of Medlicot’s presence
so far from his home at that time of the evening. “It’s
getting round us, I’m afraid, all the same.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know but it is. It’s almost impossible to
distinguish. How hot the fire makes it!”</p>
<p>“Hot, indeed!” said Harry. “It’s killing work for
men, and then all for no good! To think that men, creatures that call
themselves men, should do such a thing as this! It breaks one’s
heart.” He had paused as he spoke, leaning on the great battered
bough which he held, but in an instant was at work with it again. “Do
you stay here, Mr. Medlicot, with the men, and I’ll go on beyond
where you began. If I find the fire growing down, I’ll shout, and
they can come to me.” So saying, he rushed on with a lighted bush
torch in his band.</p>
<p>Suddenly he found himself confronted in the bush by a man on horseback,
whom he at once recognized as Georgie Brownbie. He forgot for a moment
where he was and began to question the reprobate as to his presence at
that spot.</p>
<p>“That’s like your impudence,” said Georgie. “You’re
not only trespassing, but you’re destroying our property willfully,
and you ask me what business I have here. You’re a nice sort of
young man.”</p>
<p>Harry, checked for a moment by the remembrance that he was in truth upon
Boolabong run, did not at once answer.</p>
<p>“Put that bush down, and don’t burn our grass,”
continued Georgie, “or you shall have to answer for it. What right
have you to fire our grass?”</p>
<p>“Who fired it first?”</p>
<p>“It lighted itself. That’s no rule why you should light it
more. You give over, or I punch your head for you.”</p>
<p>Harry’s men and Medlicot were advancing toward him, trampling out
their own embers as they came; and Georgie Brownbie, who was alone, when
he saw that there were four or five men against him, turned round and rode
back.</p>
<p>“Did you ever see impudence like that?” said Harry. “He’s
probably the very man who set the match, and yet he comes and brazens it
out with me.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think he’s the man who set the match,”
said Medlicot, quietly; “at any rate there was another.”</p>
<p>“Who was it?”</p>
<p>“My man, Nokes. I saw him with the torch in his hand.”</p>
<p>“Heaven and earth!”</p>
<p>“Yes, Mr. Heathcote. I saw him put it down. You were about right,
you see, and I was about wrong.”</p>
<p>Harry had not a word to say, unless it were tell the man that he loved him
for the frankness of his confession. But the moment was hardly auspicious
for such a declaration. There was no excuse for them to pause in their
work, for the fire was still crackling at their back, and they did no more
than pause.</p>
<p>“Ah!” said Harry, “there it goes; we shall be done at
last.” For he saw that he was being outflanked by the advancing
flames. But still they worked, drawing lines of fire here and there, and
still they hoped that there might be ground for hope. Nokes had been seen;
but, pregnant as the theme might be with words, it was almost impossible
to talk. Questions could not be asked and answered without stopping in
their toil. There were questions which Harry longed to ask. Could Medlicot
swear to the man? Did the man know that he had been seen? If he knew that
he had been watched while he lit the grass, he would soon be far away from
Medlicot’s Mill and Gangoil. Harry felt that it would be a
consolation to him in his trouble if he could get hold of this man, and
keep him, and prosecute him—and have him hung. Even in the tumult of
the moment he was able to reflect about it, and to think that he
remembered that the crime of arson was capital in the colony of
Queensland. He had endeavored to be good to the men with whom he had
dealings. He had not stinted their food, or cut them short in their wages,
or been hard in exacting work from them. And this was his return! Ideas as
to the excellence of absolute dominion and power flitted across his brain—such
power as Abraham, no doubt, exercised. In Abraham’s time the people
were submissive, and the world was happy. Harry Heathcote, at least, had
never heard that it was not happy. But as he thought of all this he worked
away with his bush and his matches, extinguishing the flames here and
lighting them there, striving to make a cordon of black bare ground
between Boolabong and Gangoil. Surely Abraham had never been called on to
work like this!</p>
<p>He and his men were in a line covering something above a quarter of a mile
of ground, of which line he was himself the nearest to the river, and
Medlicot and his foreman the farthest from it. The German and O’Dowd
were in the middle, and Jacko was working with his master. If Harry had
just cause for anger and sorrow in regard to Nokes and Boscobel, he
certainly had equal cause to be proud of the stanchness of his remaining
satellites. The men worked with a will, as though the whole run had been
the personal property of each of them. Nokes and Boscobel would probably
have done the same had the fires come before they had quarreled with their
master. It is a small and narrow point that turns the rushing train to the
right or to the left. The rushing man is often turned off by a point as
small and narrow.</p>
<p>“My word!” said Jacko, on a sudden, “here they are, all
o’ horseback!” And as he spoke, there was the sound of half a
dozen horsemen galloping up to them through the bush. “Why, there’s
Bos, his own self,” said Jacko.</p>
<p>The two leading men were Joe and Jerry Brownbie, who, for this night only,
had composed their quarrels, and close to them was Boscobel. There were
others behind, also mounted—Jack Brownbie and Georgie, and Nokes
himself; but they, though their figures were seen, could not be
distinguished in the gloom of the night. Nor, indeed, did Harry at first
discern of how many the party consisted. It seemed that there was a whole
troop of horsemen, whose purpose it was to interrupt him in his work, so
that the flames should certainly go ahead. And it was evident that the men
thought that they could do so without subjecting themselves to legal
penalties. As far as Harry Heathcote could see, they were correct in their
view. He could have no right to burn the grass on Boolabong. He had no
claim even to be there. It was true that he could plead that he was
stopping the fire which they had purposely made; but they could prove his
handiwork, whereas it would be almost impossible that he should prove
theirs.</p>
<p>The whole forest was not red, but lurid, with the fires, and the air was
laden with both the smell and the heat of the conflagration. The horsemen
were dressed, as was Harry himself, in trowsers and shirts, with old
slouch hats, and each of them had a cudgel in his hand. As they came
galloping up through the trees they were as uncanny and unwelcome a set of
visitors as any man was ever called on to receive. Harry necessarily
stayed his work, and stood still to bear the brunt of the coming attack;
but Jacko went on with his employment faster than ever, as though a troop
of men in the dark were nothing to him.</p>
<p>Jerry Brownbie was the first to speak. “What’s this you’re
up to, Heathcote? Firing our grass? It’s arson. You shall swing for
this.”</p>
<p>“I’ll take my chance of that,” said Harry, turning to
his work again.</p>
<p>“No, I’m blessed if you do. Ride over him, Bos, while I stop
these other fellows.”</p>
<p>The Brownbies had been aware that Harry’s two boundary riders were
with him, but had not heard of the arrival of Medlicot and the other man.
Nokes was aware that some one on horseback had been near him when he was
firing the grass, but had thought that it was one of the party from
Gangoil. By the time that Jerry Brownbie had reached the German, Medlicot
was there also.</p>
<p>“Who the deuce are you?” asked Jerry.</p>
<p>“What business is that of yours?” said Medlicot.</p>
<p>“No business of mine, and you firing our grass! I’ll let you
know my business pretty quickly.”</p>
<p>“It’s that fellow, Medlicot, from the sugar-mill,” said
Joe; “the man that Nokes is with.”</p>
<p>“I thought you was a horse of another color,” continued Jerry,
who had been given to understand that Medlicot was Heathcote’s
enemy. “Anyway, I won’t have my grass fired. If God A’mighty
chooses to send fires, we can’t help it. But I’m not going to
have incendiaries here as well. You’re a new chum, and don’t
understand what you’re about, but you must stop this.”</p>
<p>As Medlicot still went on putting out the fire, Jerry attempted to ride
him down. Medlicot caught the horse by the rein, and violently backed the
brute in among the embers. The animal plunged and reared, getting his head
loose, and at last came down, he and his rider together. In the mean time
Joe Brownbie, seeing this, rode up behind the sugar planter, and struck
him violently with his cudgel over the shoulder. Medlicot sank nearly to
the ground, but at once recovered himself. He knew that some bone on the
left side of his body was broken; but he could still fight with his right
hand, and he did fight.</p>
<p>Boscobel and Georgie Brownbie both attempted to ride over Harry together,
and might have succeeded had not Jacko ingeniously inserted the burning
branch of gum-tree with which he had been working under the belly of the
horse on which Boscobel was riding. The animal jumped immediately from the
ground, bucking into the air, and Boscobel was thrown far over his head.
Georgie Brownbie then turned upon Jacko, but Jacko was far too nimble to
be caught, and escaped among the trees.</p>
<p>For a few minutes the fight was general, but the footmen had the best of
it, in spite of the injury done to Medlicot. Jerry was bruised and burned
about the face by his fall among the ashes, and did not much relish the
work afterward. Boscobel was stunned for a few moments, and was quite
ready to retreat when he came to himself. Nokes during the whole time did
not show himself, alleging as a reason afterward the presence of his
employer Medlicot.</p>
<p>“I’m blessed if your cowardice sha’n’t hang you,”
said Joe Brownbie to him on their way home. “Do you think we’re
going to fight the battles of a fellow like you, who hasn’t pluck to
come forward himself?”</p>
<p>“I’ve as much pluck as you,” answered Nokes, “and
am ready to fight you any day. But I know when a man is to come forward
and when he’s not. Hang me! I’m not so near hanging as some
folks at Boolabong.” We may imagine, therefore, that the night was
not spent pleasantly among the Brownbies after these adventures.</p>
<p>There were, of course, very much cursing and swearing, and very many
threats, before the party from Boolabong did retreat. Their great point
was, of coarse, this—that Heathcote was willfully firing the grass,
and was, therefore, no better than an incendiary. Of course they stoutly
denied that the original fire had been intentional, and denied as stoutly
that the original fire could be stopped by fires. But at last they went,
leaving Heathcote and his party masters of the battle-field. Jerry was
taken away in a sad condition; and, in subsequent accounts of the
transaction given from Boolabong, his fall was put forward as the reason
of their flight, he having been the general on the occasion. And Boscobel
had certainly lost all stomach for immediate fighting. Immediately behind
the battle-field they come across Nokes, and Sing Sing, the runaway cook
from Gangoil. The poor Chinaman had made the mistake of joining the party
which was not successful.</p>
<p>But Harry, though the victory was with him, was hardly in a mood for
triumph. He soon found that Medlicot’s collar-bone was broken, and
it would be necessary, therefore, that he should return with the wounded
man to the station. And the flames, as he feared, had altogether got ahead
of him during the fight. As far as they had gone, they had stopped the
fire, having made a black wilderness a mile and a half in length, which,
during the whole distance, ceased suddenly at the line at which the
subsidiary fire had been extinguished. But while the attack was being made
upon them the flames had crept on to the southward, and had now got beyond
their reach. It had seemed, however, that the mass of fire which had got
away from them was small, and already the damp of the night was on the
grass; and Harry felt himself justified in hoping not that there might be
no loss, but that the loss might not be ruinous.</p>
<p>Medlicot consented to be taken back to Gangoil instead of to the mill.
Perhaps he thought that Kate Daly might be a better nurse than his mother,
or that the quiet of the sheep station might be better for him than the
clatter of his own mill-wheels. It was midnight, and they had a ride of
fourteen miles, which was hard enough upon a man with a broken collarbone.
The whole party also was thoroughly fatigued. The work they had been doing
was about as hard as could fall to a man’s lot, and they had now
been many hours without food. Before they started Mickey produced his
flask, the contents of which were divided equally among them all,
including Jacko.</p>
<p>As they were preparing to start home Medlicot explained that it had struck
him by degrees that Heathcote might be right in regard to Nokes, and that
he had determined to watch the man himself whenever he should leave the
mill. On that Monday he had given up work somewhat earlier than usual,
saying that, as the following day was Christmas, he should not come to the
mill. From that time Medlicot and his foreman had watched him.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said he, in answer to a question from Heathcote,
“I can swear that I saw him with the lighted torch in his hand, and
that he placed it among the grass. There were two others from Boolabong
with him, and they must have seen him too.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER X. — HARRY HEATHCOTE RETURNS IN TRIUMPH. </h2>
<p>When the fight was quite over, and Heathcote’s party had returned to
their horses, Medlicot for a few minutes was faint and sick, but he
revived after a while, and declared himself able to sit on his horse.
There was a difficulty in getting him up, but when there he made no
further complaint. “This,” said he, as he settled himself in
his saddle, “is my first Christmas-day in Australia. I landed early
in January, and last year I was on my way home to fetch my mother.”</p>
<p>“It’s not much like an English Christmas,” said Harry.</p>
<p>“Nor yet as in Hanover,” said the German.</p>
<p>“It’s Cork you should go to, or Galway, bedad, if you want to
see Christmas kep’ after the ould fashion,” said Mickey.</p>
<p>“I think we used to do it pretty well in Cumberland,” said
Medlicot. “There are things which can’t be transplanted. They
may have roast beef, and all that, but you should have cold weather to
make you feel that it is Christmas indeed.”</p>
<p>“We do it as well as we can,” Harry pleaded. “I’ve
seen a great pudding come into the room all afire—just to remind one
of the old country—when it has been so hot that one could hardly
bear a shirt on one’s shoulders. But yet there’s something in
it. One likes to think of the old place, though one is so far away. How do
you feel now? Does the jolting hurt you much? If your horse is rough,
change with me. This fellow goes as smooth as a lady.” Medlicot
declared that the pain did not trouble him much. “They’d have
ridden over us, only for you,” continued Harry.</p>
<p>“My word! wouldn’t they?” said Jacko, who was very proud
of his own part in the battle. “I say, Mr. Medlicot, did you see Bos
and his horse part company? You did, Mr. Harry. Didn’t he fly like a
bird, all in among the bushes! I owed Bos one; I did, my word! And now I’ve
paid him.”</p>
<p>“I saw it,” said Harry. “He was riding at me as hard as
he could come. I can’t understand Boscobel. Nokes is a sly, bad,
slinking follow, whom I never liked. But I was always good to Bos; and
when he cheated me, as he did, about his time, I never even threatened to
stop his money.”</p>
<p>“You told him of it too plain,” said the German.</p>
<p>“I did tell him—of course—as I should you. It has come
to that now, that if a man robs you—your own man—you are not
to dare to tell him of it! What would you think of me, Karl, if I were to
find you out, and was to be afraid of speaking to you, lest you should
turn against me and burn my fences?” Karl Bender shrugged his
shoulders, holding his reins up to his eyes. “I know what you ought
to think! And I wish that every man about Gangoil should be sure that I
will always say what I think right. I don’t know that I ever was
hard upon any man. I try not to be.”</p>
<p>“Thrue for you, Mr. Harry,” said the Irishman.</p>
<p>“I’m not going to pick my words because men like Nokes and
Boscobel have the power of injuring me. I’m not going to truckle to
rascals because I’m afraid of them. I’d sooner be burned out
of house and home, and go and work on the wharves in Brisbane, than that.”</p>
<p>“My word! yes,” said Jacko, “and I too.”</p>
<p>“If the devil is to get ahead, he must, but I won’t hold a
candle to him. You fellows may tell every man about the place what I say.
As long as I’m master of Gangoil I’ll be master; and when I
come across a swindle I’ll tell the man who does it he’s a
swindler. I told Bos to his face; but I didn’t tell any body else,
and I shouldn’t if he’d taken it right and mended his ways.”</p>
<p>They all understood him very well—the German, the Irishman, Medlicot’s
foreman, Medlicot himself, and even Jacko; and though, no doubt, there was
a feeling within the hearts of the men that Harry Heathcote was imperious,
still they respected him, and they believed him.</p>
<p>“The masther should be the masther, no doubt,” said the
Irishman.</p>
<p>“A man that is a man vill not sell hisself body and soul,”
said the German, slowly.</p>
<p>“Do I want dominion over your soul, Karl Bender?” asked the
squatter, with energy. “You know I don’t, nor over your body,
except so far as it suits you to sell your services. What you sell you
part with readily—like a man; and it’s not likely that you and
I shall quarrel. But all this row about nothing can’t be very
pleasant to a man with a broken shoulder.”</p>
<p>“I like to hear you,” said Medlicot. “I’m always a
good listener when men have something really to say.”</p>
<p>“Well, then, I’ve something to say,” cried Harry.
“There never was a man came to my house whom I’d sooner see as
a Christmas guest than yourself.”</p>
<p>“Thankee, Sir.”</p>
<p>“It’s more than I could have said yesterday with truth.”</p>
<p>“It’s more than you did say.”</p>
<p>“Yes, by George! But you’ve beat me now. When you’re
hard pressed for hands down yonder, you send for me, and see if I won’t
turn the mill for you, or hoe canes either.”</p>
<p>“So ‘ll I; my word! yes. Just for my rations.”</p>
<p>They had by this time reacted the Gangoil fence, having taken the
directest route for the house. But Harry, in doing this, had not been
unmindful of the fire. Had Medlicot not been wounded, he would have taken
the party somewhat out of the way, down southward, following the flames;
but Medlicot’s condition had made him feel that he would not be
justified in doing so. Now, however, it occurred to him that he might as
well ride a mile or two down the fence, and see what injury had been done.
The escort of the men would be sufficient to take Medlicot to the station,
and he would reach the place as soon as they. If the flames were still
running ahead, he knew that he could not now stop then, but he could at
least learn how the matter stood with him. If the worst came to the worst,
he would not now lose more than three or four miles of fencing, and the
grass off a corner of his run. Nevertheless, tired as he was, he could not
bear the idea of going home without knowing the whole story. So he made
his proposal. Medlicot, of course, made no objection. Each of the men
offered to go with him, but he declined their services. “There is
nothing to do,” said he, “and nobody to catch; and if the fire
is burning, it must burn.” So he went alone.</p>
<p>The words that he had uttered among his men had not been lightly spoken.
He had begun to perceive that life would be very hard to him in his
present position, or perhaps altogether impossible, as long as he was at
enmity with all those around him. Old squatters whom he knew, respectable
men who had been in the colony before he was born, had advised him to be
on good terms with the Brownbies. “You needn’t ask them to
your house, or go to them, but just soft-sawder them when yon meet,”
an old gentleman had said to him. He certainly hadn’t taken the old
gentleman’s advice, thinking that to “soft-sawder” so
great a reprobate as Jerry Brownbie would be holding a candle to the
devil. But his own plan had hardly answered. Well, he was sure, at any
rate, of this—that he could do no good now by endeavoring to be
civil to the Brownbies. He soon came to the place where the fire had
reached his fence, and found that it had burned its way through, and that
the flames were still continuing their onward course. The fence to the
north, or rather to the northwestward—the point whence the wind was
coming—stood firm at the spot at which the fire had struck it. Dry
as the wood was, the flames had not traveled upward against the wind. But
to the south the fire was traveling down the fence. To stop this he rode
half a mile along the burning barrier till he had headed the flames, and
then he pulled the bushes down and rolled away the logs, so as to stop the
destruction. As regarded his fence, there was less than a mile of it
destroyed, and that he could now leave in security, as the wind was
blowing away from it. As for his grass, that must now take its chance. He
could see the dark light of the low running fire; but there was no longer
a mighty blaze, and he knew that the dew of the night was acting as his
protector. The harm that had been as yet done was trifling, if only he
could protect himself from further harm. After leaving the fire, he had
still a ride of seven or eight miles through the gloom of the forest—all
alone. Not only was he weary, but his horse was so tired that he could
hardly get him to canter for a furlong. He regretted that he had not
brought the boy with him, knowing well the service of companionship to a
tired beast. He was used to such troubles, and could always tell himself
that his back was broad enough to bear them; but his desolation among
enemies oppressed him. Medlicot, however, was no longer an enemy. Then
there came across his mind for the first time an idea that Medlicot might
marry his sister-in-law, and become his fast friend. If he could have but
one true friend, he thought that he could bear the enmity of all the
Brownbies. Hitherto he had been entirely alone in his anxiety. It was
between three and four when he reached Gangoil, and he found that the
party of horsemen had just entered the yard before him. The sugar planter
was so weak that he could hardly get off his horse.</p>
<p>The two ladies were still watching when the cavalcade arrived, though it
was then between three and four in the morning. It was Harry’s
custom on such occasions to ride up to the little gate close to the
veranda, and there to hang his bridle till some one should take his horse
away; but on this occasion he and the others rode into the yard. Seeing
this, Mrs. Heathcote and her sister went through the house, and soon
learned how things were. Mr. Medlicot, from the mill, had come with a bone
broken, and it was their duty to nurse him till a doctor could be procured
from Maryborough. Now Maryborough was thirty miles distant. Some one must
be dispatched at once. Jacko volunteered, but in such a service Jacko was
hardly to be trusted. He might fall asleep on his horse, and continue his
slumbers on the ground. Mickey and the German both offered; but the men
were so beaten by their work that Heathcote did not dare to take their
offer.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what it is, Mary,” he said to his wife,
“there is nothing for it but for me to go for Jackson.”
Jackson was the doctor. “And I can see the police at the same time.”</p>
<p>“You sha’n’t go, Harry. Yon are so tired already you can
hardly stand this moment.”</p>
<p>“Get me some strong coffee—at once. You don’t know what
that man has done for us. I’ll tell you all another time. I owe him
more than a ride into Maryborough. I’ll make the men get Yorkie up”—Yorkie
was a favorite horse he had—“while you make the coffee; and I’ll
lead Colonel”—Colonel was another horse, well esteemed at
Gangoil. “Jackson will come quicker on him than on any animal he can
get at Maryborough.” And so it was arranged, in spite of the wife’s
tears and entreaties. Harry had his coffee and some food, and started,
with his two horses, for the doctor.</p>
<p>Nature is so good to us that we are sometimes disposed to think we might
have dispensed with art. In the bush, where doctors can not be had, bones
will set themselves; and when doctors do come, but come slowly, the broken
bones suit themselves to such tardiness. Medlicot was brought in and put
to bed. Let the reader not be shocked to hear that Kate Daly’s room
was given up to him, as being best suited for a sick man’s comfort,
and the two ladies took it in turn to watch him. Mrs. Heathcote was, of
course, the first, and remained with him till dawn. Then Kate crept to the
door and asked whether she should relieve her sister. Medlicot was asleep,
and it was agreed that Kate should remain in the veranda, and look in from
time to time to see whether the wounded man required aught at her hands.
She looked in very often, and then, at last, he was awake.</p>
<p>“Miss Daly,” he said, “I feel so ashamed of the trouble
I’m giving.”</p>
<p>“Don’t speak of it. It is nothing. In the bush every body, of
course, does any thing for every body.” When the words were spoken
she felt that they were not as complimentary as she would have wished.
“You were to have come to-day, you know, but we did not think you’d
come like this, did we?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know why I didn’t go home instead of coming
here.”</p>
<p>“The doctor will reach Gangoil sooner than he could the mill. You
are better here, and we will send for Mrs. Medlicot as soon as the men
have had a rest. How was it all, Mr. Medlicot? Harry says that there was a
fight, and that you came in just at the nick of time, and that but for you
all the run would have been burned.”</p>
<p>“Not that at all.”</p>
<p>“He said so; only he went off so quickly, and was so busy with
things, that we hardly understood him. Is it not dreadful that there
should be such fighting? And then these horrid fires! You were in the
middle of the fire, were you not?” It suited Kate’s feelings
that Medlicot should be the hero of this occasion.</p>
<p>“We were lighting them in front to put them out behind.”</p>
<p>“And then, while you were at work, these men from Boolabong came
upon you. Oh, Mr. Medlicot, we shall be so very, very wretched if you are
much hurt. My sister is so unhappy about it.”</p>
<p>“It’s only my collar-bone, Miss Daly.”</p>
<p>“But that is so dreadful.” She was still thinking of the one
word he had spoken when he had—well, not asked her for her love, but
said that which between a young man and a young woman ought to mean the
same thing. Perhaps it had meant nothing! She had heard that young men do
say things which mean nothing. But to her, living in the solitude of
Gangoil, the one word had been so much! Her heart had melted with absolute
acknowledged love when the man had been brought through into the house
with all the added attraction of a broken bone. While her sister had
watched, she had retired—to rest, as Mary had said, but in truth to
think of the chance which had brought her in this guise into familiar
contact with the man she loved. And then, when she had crept up to take
her place in watching him, she had almost felt that shame should restrain
her. But was her duty; and, of course, a man with a collar-bone broken
would not speak of love.</p>
<p>“It will make your Christmas so sad for you,” he said.</p>
<p>“Oh, as for that, we mind nothing about it—for ourselves. We
are never very gay here.”</p>
<p>“But you are happy?”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, quite happy, except when Harry is disturbed by these
troubles. I don’t think any body has so many troubles as a squatter.
It sometimes seems that all the world is against him.”</p>
<p>“We shall be allies now, at any rate.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I do so hope we shall,” said Kate, putting her hands
together in her energy, and then retreating from her energy with sad
awkwardness when she remembered the personal application of her wish.
“That is, I mean you and Harry,” she added, in a whisper.</p>
<p>“Why not I and others besides Harry?”</p>
<p>“It is so much to him to have a real friend. Things concern us, of
course, only just as they concern him. Women are never of very much
account, I think. Harry has to do every thing, and every thing ought to be
done for him.”</p>
<p>“I think you spoil Harry among you.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you say so to Mary, or she will be fierce.”</p>
<p>“I wonder whether I shall ever have a wife to stand up for me in
that way?”</p>
<p>Kate had no answer to make, but she thought that it would be his own fault
if he did not have a wife to stand up for him thoroughly.</p>
<p>“He has been very lucky in his wife.”</p>
<p>“I think he has, Mr. Medlicot; but you are moving about, and you
ought to lie still. There! I hear the horses; that’s the doctor. I
do so hope he won’t say that any thing very bad is the matter.”</p>
<p>She jumped up from her chair, which was close to his bed, and as she did
so just touched his hand with hers. It was involuntary on her part, having
come of instinct rather than will, and she withdrew herself instantly. The
hand she had touched belonged to the arm that was not hurt, and he put it
out after her, and caught her by the sleeve as she was retreating. “Oh,
Mr. Medlicot, you must not do that; you will hurt yourself if you move in
that way.”</p>
<p>And so she escaped, and left the room, and did not see him again till the
doctor had gone from Gangoil.</p>
<p>The bone had been broken simply as other bones are broken; it was now set,
and the sufferer was, of course, told that he must rest. He had suggested
that he should be taken home, and the Heathcotes had concurred with the
doctor in asserting that no proposition could be more absurd. He had
intended to eat his Christmas dinner at Gangoil, and he must now pass his
entire Christmas there.</p>
<p>“The sugar can go on very well for ten days,” Harry had said.
“I’ll go over myself and see about the men, and I’ll
fetch your mother over.”</p>
<p>To this, however, Mrs. Heathcote had demurred successfully. “You’ll
kill yourself, Harry, if you go on like this,” she said.</p>
<p>Bender, therefore, was sent in the buggy for the old lady, and at last
Harry Heathcote consented to go to bed.</p>
<p>“My belief is, I shall sleep for a week,” he said, as he
turned in. But he didn’t begin his sleep quite at once. “I am
very glad I went into Maryborough,” he said to his wife, rising up
from his pillow. “I’ve sworn an information against Nokes and
two of the Brownbies, and the police will be after them this afternoon.
They won’t catch Nokes, and they can’t convict the other
fellows. But it will be something to clear the country of such a fellow,
and something also to let them know that detection is possible.”</p>
<p>“Do sleep now, dear.” she said.</p>
<p>“Yes, I will; I mean to. But look here, Mary; if any of the police
should come here, mind you wake me at once. And, Mary, look here; do you
know I shouldn’t be a bit surprised if that fellow was to be making
up to Kate.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Heathcote, with some little inward chuckle at her husband’s
assumed quickness of apprehension, reminded herself that the same idea had
occurred to her some time ago. Mrs. Heathcote gave her husband full credit
for more than ordinary intelligence in reference to affairs appertaining
to the breeding of sheep and the growing of wool, but she did not think
highly of his discernment in such an affair as this. She herself had been
much quicker. When she first saw Mr. Medlicot, she had felt it a godsend
that such a man, with the look of a gentleman, and unmarried, should come
into the neighborhood; and, in so feeling, her heart had been entirely
with her sister. For herself it mattered nothing who came or did not come,
or whether a man were a bachelor, or possessed of a wife and a dozen
children. All that a girl had a right to want was a good husband. She was
quite satisfied with her own lot in that respect, but she was anxious
enough on behalf of Kate. And when a young man did come, who might make
matters so pleasant for them, Harry quarreled with him because he was a
free-selector. “A free fiddle-stick!” she had once said to
Kate—not, however, communicating to her innocent sister the ambition
which was already filling her own bosom. “Harry does take things up
so—as though people weren’t to live, some in one way and some
in another! As far as I can see, Mr. Medlicot is a very nice fellow.”
Kate had remarked that he was “all very well,” and nothing
more had been said.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Heathcote, in spite of Harry’s aversion, had formed her
little project—a project which, if then declared, would have filled
Harry with dismay. And now the young aristocrat, as he turned himself in
his bed, made the suggestion to his wife as though it were all his own!</p>
<p>“I never like to think much of these things beforehand,” she
said, innocently.</p>
<p>“I don’t know about thinking,” said Harry; “but a
girl might do worse. If it should come up, don’t set yourself
against it.”</p>
<p>“Kate, of course, will please herself,” said Mrs. Heathcote.
“Now do lie down and rest yourself.”</p>
<p>His rest, however, was not of long duration. As he had himself suggested,
two policemen reached Gangoil at about three in the afternoon, on their
way from Maryborough to Boolabong, in order that they might take Mr.
Medlicot’s deposition. After Heathcote’s departure it had
occurred to Sergeant Forrest of the police—and the suggestion,
having been transferred from the sergeant to the stipendiary magistrate,
was now produced with magisterial sanction—that, after all, there
was no evidence against the Brownbies. They had simply interfered to
prevent the burning of the grass on their own run, and who could say that
they had committed any crime by doing so? If Medlicot had seen Nokes with
a lighted branch in his hand, the matter might be different with him; and
therefore Medlicot’s deposition was taken. He had sworn that he had
seen Nokes drag his lighted torch along the ground; he had also seen other
horsemen—two or three, as he thought—but could not identify
them. Jacko’s deposition was also taken as to the man who had been
heard and seen in the wool-shed at night. Jacko was ready to swear
point-blank that the man was Nokes. The policemen suggested that, as the
night was dark, Jacko might as well allow a shade of doubt to appear,
thinking that the shade of doubt would add strength to the evidence. But
Jacko was not going to be taught what sort of oath he should swear.</p>
<p>“My word!” he said. “Didn’t I see his leg move?
You go away.”</p>
<p>Armed with these depositions, the two constables went on to Boolabong in
search of Nokes, and of Nokes only, much to the chagrin of Harry, who
declared that the police would never really bestir themselves in a
squatter’s cause. “As for Nokes, he’ll be out of
Queensland by this time to-morrow.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XI. — SERGEANT FORREST. </h2>
<p>The Brownbie party returned, after their midnight raid, in great
discomfiture to Boolabong. Their leader, Jerry, was burned about his hands
and face in a disagreeable and unsightly manner. Joe had hardly made good
that character for “fighting it out to the end” for which he
was apt to claim credit. Boscobel was altogether disconcerted by his fall.
And Nokes, who had certainly shown no aptitude for the fray, was abused by
them all as having caused their retreat by his cowardice; while Sing Sing,
the runaway cook, who knew that he had forfeited his wages at Gangoil, was
forced to turn over in his heathenish mind the ill effects of joining the
losing side. “You big fool, Bos,” he said more than once to
his friend the woodsman, who had lured him away from the comforts of
Gangoil. “I’ll punch your head, John, if you don’t hold
your row,” Boscobel would reply. But Sing Sing went on with his
reproaches, and, before they had reached Boolabong, Boscobel had punched
the Chinaman’s head.</p>
<p>“You’re not coming in here,” Jerry said to Nokes, when
they reached the yard gate.</p>
<p>“Who wants to come in? I suppose you’re not going to send a
fellow on without a bit of grub after such a night’s work?”</p>
<p>“Give him some bread and meat, Jack, and let him go on. There’ll
be somebody here after him before long. He can’t hurt us; but I don’t
want people to think that we are so fond of him that we can’t do
without harboring him here. Georgie, you’ll go too, if you take my
advice. That young cur will send the police here as sure as my name is
Brownbie, and, if they once get hold of you, they’ll have a great
many things to talk to you about.”</p>
<p>Georgie grumbled when he heard this, but he knew that the advice given him
was good, and he did not attempt to enter the house. So Nokes and he
vanished, away into the bush together—as such men do vanish—wandering
forth to live as the wild beasts live. It was still a dark night when they
went, and the remainder of the party took themselves to their beds.</p>
<p>On the following afternoon they were lying about the house, sometimes
sleeping, and sometimes waking up to smoke, when the two policemen, who
had already been at Gangoil, appeared in the yard. These men were dressed
in flat caps, with short blue jackets, hunting breeches, and long black
boots—very unlike any policemen in the old country, and much more
picturesque. They leisurely tied their horses up, as though they had been
in the habit of making weekly visits to the place, and walked round to the
veranda.</p>
<p>“Well, Mr. Brownbie, and how are you?” said the sergeant to
the old man.</p>
<p>The head of the family was gracious, and declared himself to be pretty
well, considering all things. He called the sergeant by his name, and
asked the men whether they’d take a bit of something to eat. Joe
also was courteous, and, after a little delay in getting a key from his
brother, brought out the jar of spirits, which, in the bush, is regarded
as the best sign known of thorough good-breeding. The sergeant said that
he didn’t mind if he did; and the other man, of course, followed his
officer’s example.</p>
<p>So far every thing was comfortable, and the constables seemed in no hurry
to allude to disagreeable subjects. They condescended to eat a bit of cold
meat before they proceeded to business. And at last the matter to be
discussed was first introduced by one of the Brownbie family.</p>
<p>“I suppose you’ve heard that there was a scrimmage here last
night,” said Joe. The Brownbie party present consisted of the old
man, Joe and Jack Brownbie, and Boscobel, Jerry keeping himself in the
background because of his disfigurement. The sergeant, as he swallowed his
food, acknowledged that he had heard something about it. “And that’s
what brings you here,” continued Joe.</p>
<p>“There ain’t nothing wrong here,” said old Brownbie.</p>
<p>“I hope not, Mr. Brownbie,” said the sergeant. “I hope
not. We haven’t got any thing against you, at any rate.”
Sergeant Forrest was a graduate of Oxford, the son of an English
clergyman, who, having his way to make in the world, had thought that an
early fortune would be found in the colonies. He had come out, had failed,
had suffered some very hard things, and now, at the age of thirty-five,
enjoyed life thoroughly as a sergeant of the colonial police.</p>
<p>“You haven’t got any thing against anybody here, I should
think?” said Joe.</p>
<p>“If you want to get them as begun it,” said Jack, “and
them as ought to be took up, you’ll go to Gangoil.”</p>
<p>“Hold your tongue, Jack,” said his brother. “Sergeant
Forrest knows where to go better than you can tell him.”</p>
<p>Then the sergeant asked a string of questions as to the nature of the
fight; who had been hurt; and how badly had any body been hurt; and what
other harm had been done. The answers to all these questions were given
with a fair amount of truth, except that the little circumstance of the
origin of the fire was not explained. Both Boscobel and Joe had seen the
torch put down, but it could hardly have been expected that they should
have been explicit as to such a detail as that. Nor did they mention the
names of either their brother George or Nokes.</p>
<p>“And who was there in the matter?” asked the sergeant.</p>
<p>“There was young Heathcote, and a boy he has got there, and the two
chaps as he calls boundary rulers, and Medlicot, the sugar fellow from the
mill, and a chap of Medlicot’s I never set eyes on before. They must
have expected something to be up, or Heathcote would not have been going
about at night with a tribe of men like that.”</p>
<p>“And who were your party?”</p>
<p>“Well, there were just ourselves, four of us, for Georgie was here,
and this fellow Boscobel. Georgie never stays long, and he wouldn’t
be welcome if he did. He turned up just by chance like, and now he’s
off again.”</p>
<p>“That was all, eh?”</p>
<p>Of course they all knew that the sergeant knew that Nokes had been with
them. “Well, then, that wasn’t all,” said old Brownbie.
“Bill Nokes was here, whom Heathcote dismissed ever so long ago, and
that Chinese cook of his. He dismissed him too, I suppose. And he
dismissed Boscobel here.”</p>
<p>“No one can live at Gangoil any time,” said Jack. “Every
body knows that. He wants to be lord a’mighty over every thing. But
he ain’t going to be lord a’mighty at Boolabong.”</p>
<p>“And he ain’t going to burn our grass either,” said Joe.
“It’s like his impudence coming on to our ran and burning
every thing before him. He calls hisself a magistrate, but he’s not
to do just as he pleases because he’s a magistrate. I suppose we can
swear against him for lighting our grass, sergeant? There isn’t one
of us that didn’t see him do it.”</p>
<p>“And where is Nokes?” asked the sergeant, paying no attention
to the application made by Mr. Brownbie, junior, for redress to himself.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Joe, “Nokes isn’t any where about
Boolabong.”</p>
<p>“He’s away with your brother George?”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t wonder,” said Joe.</p>
<p>“It’s a serious matter lighting a fire, you know,” said
the sergeant. “A man would have to swing for it.”</p>
<p>“Then why isn’t young Heathcote to swing?” demanded
Jack.</p>
<p>“There is such a thing as intent, you know. When Heathcote lighted
the fire, where would the fire have gone if he hadn’t kept putting
it out as fast as he kept lighting it? On to his own run, not to yours.
And where would the other fire have gone which somebody lit, and which
nobody put out, if he hadn’t been there to stop it? The less you say
against Heathcote the better. So Nokes is off, is he?”</p>
<p>“He ain’t here, anyways,” said Joe. “When the row
was over, we wouldn’t let him in. We didn’t want him about
here.”</p>
<p>“I dare say not,” said the sergeant. “Now let me go and
see the spot where the fight was.” So the two policemen, with the
two young Brownbies, rode away, leaving Boscobel with the old man.</p>
<p>“He knows every thing about it,” said old Brownbie.</p>
<p>“If he do,” said Boscobel, “it ain’t no odds.”</p>
<p>“Not a ha’porth of odds,” said Jerry, coming out of his
hiding-place. “Who cares what he knows? A man may do what he pleases
on his own run, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“He mayn’t light a fire as ‘ll spread,” said the
old man.</p>
<p>“Bother! Who’s to prove what’s in a man’s mind? If
I’d been Nokes, I’d have staid and seen it out. I’d
never be driven about the colony by such a fellow as Heathcote, with all
the police in the world to back him.”</p>
<p>Sergeant Forrest inspected the ground on which the fire had raged, and the
spot on which the men had met; but nothing came of his inspection, and he
had not expected that any thing would come of it. He could see exactly
where the fire had commenced, and could trace the efforts that had been
made to stop it. He did not in the least doubt the way in which it had
been lit. But he did very much doubt whether a jury could find Nokes
guilty, even if he could catch Nokes. Jacko’s evidence was worth
nothing, and Mr. Medlicot might be easily mistaken as to what he had seen
at a distance in the middle of the night.</p>
<p>All this happened on Christmas-day. At about nine o’clock the same
evening the two constables re-appeared at Gangoil, and asked for
hospitality for the night. This was a matter of course, and also the
reproduction of the Christmas dinner. Mrs. Medlicot was now there, and her
son, with his collar-bone set, had been allowed to come out on to the
veranda. The house had already been supposed to be full, but room, as a
matter of course, was made for Sergeant Forrest and his man. “It’s
a queer sort of Christmas we’ve all been having, Mr. Heathcote,”
said the sergeant, as the remnant of a real English plum-pudding was put
between him and his man by Mrs. Growler.</p>
<p>“A little hotter than it is at home, eh?”</p>
<p>“Indeed it is. You must have had it hot last night, Sir.”</p>
<p>“Very hot, sergeant. We had to work uncommonly hard to do it as well
as we did.”</p>
<p>“It was not a nice Christmas game, Sir, was it?”</p>
<p>“Eh, me!” said Mrs. Medlicot. “There’s nae
Christmas games or ony games here at all, except just worrying and
harrying, like sae many dogs at each other’s throats.”</p>
<p>“And you think nothing more can be done?” Harry asked.</p>
<p>“I don’t think we shall catch the men. When they get out
backward, it’s very hard to trace them. He’s got a horse of
his own with him, and he’ll be beyond reach of the police by this
time to-morrow. Indeed, he’s beyond their reach now. However, you’ll
have got rid of him.”</p>
<p>“But there are others as bad as he left behind. I wouldn’t
trust that fellow Boscobel a yard.”</p>
<p>“He won’t stir, Sir. He belongs to this country, and does not
want to leave it. And when a thing has been tried like that and has
failed, the fellows don’t try it again. They are cowed like by their
own failure. I don’t think you need fear fire from the Boolabong
side again this summer.”</p>
<p>After this the sergeant and his man discreetly allowed themselves to be
put to bed in the back cottage; for in truth, when they arrived, things
had come to such a pass at Gangoil that the two additional visitors were
hardly welcome. But hospitality in the bush can be stayed by no such
considerations as that. Let their employments or enjoyments on hand be
what they may, every thing must yield to the entertainment of strangers.
The two constables were in want of their Christmas dinner, and it was
given to them with no grudging hand.</p>
<p>As to Nokes, we may say that he has never since appeared in the
neighborhood of Gangoil, and that none thereabouts ever knew what was his
fate. Men such as he wander away from one colony into the next, passing
from one station to another, or sleeping on the ground, till they become
as desolate and savage as solitary animals. And at last they die in the
bush, creeping, we may suppose, into hidden nooks, as the beasts do when
the hour of death comes on them.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER XII. — CONCLUSION. </h2>
<p>The constables had started from Gangoil, on their way to Boolabong, a
little after four, and from that time till he was made to get out of bed
for his dinner Harry Heathcote was allowed to sleep. He had richly earned
his rest by his work, and he lay motionless, without a sound, in the broad
daylight, with his arm under his head, dreaming, no doubt, of some happy
squatting land, in which there were no free-selectors, no fires, no
rebellious servants, no floods, no droughts, no wild dogs to worry the
lambs, no grass seeds to get into the fleeces, and in which the price of
wool stood steady at two shillings and sixpence a pound. His wife from
time to time came into the room, shading the light from his eyes,
protecting him from the flies, and administering in her soft way to what
she thought might be his comforts. His sleep was of the kind which no
light, nor even flies, can interrupt. Once or twice she stooped down and
kissed his brow, but he was altogether unconscious of her caress.</p>
<p>During this time old Mrs. Medlicot arrived; but her coming did not awake
the sleeper, though it was by no means made in silence. The old woman
sobbed and cried over her son, at the same time expressing her
thankfulness that he should have turned up in the forest so exactly at the
proper moment, evidently taking part in the conviction that her Giles had
saved Gangoil and all its sheep. And then there were all the necessary
arrangements to be made for the night, in accordance with which almost
every body had to give up his or her bed and sleep somewhere else. But
nothing disturbed Harry. For the present he was allowed to occupy his own
room, and he enjoyed the privilege.</p>
<p>Kate Daly during this time was much disturbed in mind. The reader may
remember—Kate, at any rate, remembered well—that, just as the
doctor had arrived to set his broken bone, Mr. Medlicot, disabled as he
was, had attempted to take her by the arm. He had certainly chosen an odd
time for a declaration of love, just the moment in which he ought to have
been preparing himself for the manipulation of his fractured limb; but,
unless he had meant a declaration of love, surely he would not have seized
her by the arm. It was a matter to her of great moment. Oh, of what vital
importance! The English girl living in a town, or even in what we call the
country, has no need to think of any special man till some special man
thinks of her. Men are fairly plentiful, and if one man does not come,
another will. And there have probably been men coming and going in some
sort since the girl left her school-room and became a young lady. But in
the bush the thing is very different. It may be that there is no young man
available within fifty miles—no possible lover or future husband,
unless Heaven should interfere almost with a miracle. To those to whom
lovers are as plentiful as blackberries it may seem indelicate to surmise
that the thought of such a want should ever enter a girl’s head. I
doubt whether the defined idea of any want had ever entered poor Kate’s
head. But now that the possible lover was there—not only possible,
but very probable—and so eligible in many respects, living so close,
with a house over his head and a good business; and then so handsome, and,
as Kate thought, so complete a gentleman! Of course she turned it much in
her mind. She was very happy with Harry Heathcote. There never was a
brother-in-law so good! But, after all, what is a brother-in-law, though
he be the very best? Kate had already begun to fancy that a house of her
own and a husband of her own would be essential to her happiness. But then
a man can not be expected to make an offer with a broken collar-bone—certainly
can not do so just when the doctor has arrived to set the bone.</p>
<p>Late on in the day, when the doctor had gone, and Medlicot was, according
to instructions, sitting out on the veranda in an armchair, and his mother
was with him, and while Harry was sleeping as though he never meant to be
awake again, Kate managed to say a few words to her sister. It will be
understood that the ladies’ hands were by no means empty. The
Christmas dinner was in course of preparation, and Sing Sing, that
villainous Chinese cook, had absconded. Mrs. Growler, no doubt, did her
best; but Mrs. Growler was old and slow, and the house was full of guests.
It was by no means an idle time; but still Kate found an opportunity to
say a word to her sister in the kitchen.</p>
<p>“What do you think of him, Mary?”</p>
<p>To the married sister “him” would naturally mean Harry
Heathcote, of whom, as he lay asleep, the young wife thought that he was
the very perfection of patriarchal pastoral manliness; but she knew enough
of human nature to be aware that the “him” of the moment to
her sister was no longer her own husband. “I think he has got his
arm broken fighting for Harry, and that we are bound to do the best we can
for him.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes; that’s of course. I’m sure Harry will feel
that. He used, you know, to—to—that is, not just to like him,
because he is a free-selector.”</p>
<p>“They’ll drop all that now. Of course they could not be
expected to know each other at the first starting. I shouldn’t
wonder if they became regular friends.”</p>
<p>“That would be nice! After all, though you may be so happy at home,
it is better to have something like a neighbor. Don’t you think so?”</p>
<p>“It depends on who the neighbors are. I don’t care much for
the Brownbies.”</p>
<p>“They are quite different, Mary.”</p>
<p>“I like the Medlicots very much.”</p>
<p>“I consider he’s quite a gentleman,” said Kate.</p>
<p>“Of course he’s a gentleman. Look here, Kate—I shall be
ready to welcome Mr. Medlicot as a brother-in-law, if things should turn
out that way.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t mean that, Mary.”</p>
<p>“Did you not? Well, you can mean it if you please, as far as I am
concerned. Has he said any thing to you, dear?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Not a word?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know what you call a word; not a word of that kind.”</p>
<p>“I thought, perhaps—”</p>
<p>“I think he meant it once—this morning.”</p>
<p>“I dare say he meant it. And if he meant it this morning, he won’t
have forgotten his meaning to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“There’s no reason why he should mean it, you know.”</p>
<p>“None in the least, Kate; is there?”</p>
<p>“Now you’re laughing at me, Mary. I never used to laugh at you
when Harry was coming. I was so glad, and I did every thing I could.”</p>
<p>“Yes, you went away and left us in the Botanical Gardens. I
remember. But, you see, there are no Botanical Gardens here; and the poor
man couldn’t walk about if there were.”</p>
<p>“I wonder what Harry would say if it were to be so.”</p>
<p>“Of course he’d be glad—for your sake.”</p>
<p>“But he does so despise free-selectors! And then he used to think
that Mr. Medlicot was quite as bad as the Brownbies. I wouldn’t
marry any one to be despised by you and Harry.”</p>
<p>“That’s all gone by, my dear,” said the wife, feeling
that she had to apologize for her husband’s prejudices. “Of
course one has to find out what people are before one takes them to one’s
bosom. Mr. Medlicot has acted in the most friendly way about these fires,
and I’m sure Harry will never despise him any more.”</p>
<p>“He couldn’t have done more for a real brother than have his
arm broken.”</p>
<p>“But you must remember one thing, Kate, Mr. Medlicot is very nice,
and like a gentleman, and all that. Bat you never can be quite certain
about any man till he speaks out plainly. Don’t set your heart upon
him till you are quite sure that he has set his upon you.”</p>
<p>“Oh no,” said Kate, giving her maidenly assurance when it was
so much too late! Just at this moment Mrs. Growler came into the kitchen,
and Kate’s promises and her sister’s cautions were for the
moment silenced.</p>
<p>“How we’re to manage to get the dinner on the table, I for one
don’t know at all,” said Mrs. Growler. “There’s
Mr. Bates’ll be here; that will be six of ’em; and that Mr.
Medlicot will want somebody to do every thing for him, because he’s
been and got hisself smashed. And there’s the old lady has just come
out from home, and is as particular as any thing. And Mr. Harry himself
never thinks of things at all. One pair of hands, and them very old, can’t
do every thing for every body.” All of which was very well
understood to mean nothing at all.</p>
<p>Household deficiencies—and, indeed, all deficiencies—are
considerable or insignificant in accordance with the aspirations of those
concerned. When a man has a regiment of servants in his dining-room, with
beautifully cut glass, a forest of flowers, and an iceberg in the middle
of his table if the weather be hot, his guests will think themselves ill
used and badly fed if aught in the banquet be astray. There must not be a
rose leaf ruffled; a failure in the attendance, a falling off in a dish,
or a fault in the wine is a crime. But the same guests shall be merry as
the evening is long with a leg of mutton and whisky toddy, and will change
their own plates, and clear their own table, and think nothing wrong, if
from the beginning such has been the intention of the giver of the feast.
In spite of Mrs. Growler’s prognostications, though the cook had
absconded, and the chief guest of the occasion could not cut up his own
meat, that Christmas dinner at Gangoil was eaten with great satisfaction.</p>
<p>Harry had been so far triumphant. He had stopped the fire that was
intended to ruin him, he had beaten off his enemies on their own ground,
and he was no longer oppressed by that sense of desolation which had
almost overpowered him.</p>
<p>“We’ll give one toast, Mrs. Medlicot,” he said, when
Mrs. Growler and Kate between them had taken away the relics of the
plum-pudding. “Our friends at home!”</p>
<p>The poor lady drank the toast with a sob. “That’s vera weel
for you, Mr. Heathcote. You’re young, and will win your way hame,
and see auld friends again, nae doubt; but I’ll never see ane of
them mair, except those I have here.” Nevertheless, the old lady ate
her dinner and drank her toddy, and made much of the occasion, going in
and out to her son upon the veranda.</p>
<p>Soon after dinner Heathcote, as was his wont, strayed out with his prime
minister Bates to consult on the dangers which might be supposed still to
threaten his kingdom, and Mrs. Heathcote, with her youngest boy in her
lap, sat talking to Mrs. Medlicot in the parlor. Such was not her custom
in weather such as this. Kate had been sent out on to the veranda, with
special commands to attend to the wants of the sufferer, and Mrs.
Heathcote would have followed her had she not remembered her sister’s
appeal, “I did every thing I could for you.”</p>
<p>In those happy days Kate had been very good, and certainly deserved
requital for her services. And therefore, when the men had gone out, Mrs.
Heathcote, with her guest, remained in the warm room, and went so far as
to suggest that at that period of the day the room was preferable to the
veranda. Poor Mrs. Medlicot was new to the ways of the bush, and fell into
the trap; thus Kate Daly was left alone with her wounded hero.</p>
<p>When told to take him out his glass of wine, and when conscious that no
one followed her, she felt herself to have been guilty of some great sin,
and was almost tempted to escape. She had asked her sister for help; and
this was the help that was forth-coming—help so palpable, so
manifest, as to be almost indelicate! Would he think that plans were being
made to catch him, now that he was a captive and impotent? The thought
that it was possible that such an idea might occur to him was terrible to
her. She would rather lose him altogether than feel the stain of such a
suggestion on her own conscience. She put the glass of wine down on the
little table by his side, and then attempted to withdraw.</p>
<p>“Stay a moment with me,” he said. “Where are they all?”</p>
<p>“Mary and your mother are inside. Harry and Mr. Bates have gone
across to look at the horses.”</p>
<p>“I almost feel as though I could walk, too.”</p>
<p>“You must not think of it yet, Mr. Medlicot. It seems almost a
wonder that you shouldn’t have to be in bed, and you with your
collar-bone broken only last night! I don’t know how you can bear it
as you do.”</p>
<p>“I shall be so glad I broke it, if one thing will come about.”</p>
<p>“What thing?” asked Kate, blushing.</p>
<p>“Kate—may I call you Kate?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” she said.</p>
<p>“You know I love you, do you not? You must know it. Dearest Kate,
can you love me and be my wife?” His left arm was bound up, and was
in a sling, but he put out his right hand to take hers, if she would give
it to him. Kate Daly had never had a lover before, and felt the occasion
to be trying. She had no doubt about the matter. If it were only proper
for her to declare herself, she could swear with a safe conscience that
she loved him better than all the world.</p>
<p>“Put your hand here, Kate,” he said.</p>
<p>As the request was not exactly for the gift of her hand, she placed it in
his.</p>
<p>“May I keep it now?”</p>
<p>She could only whisper something which was quite inaudible, even to him.</p>
<p>“I shall keep it, and think that you are all my own. Stoop down,
Kate, and kiss me, if you love me.”</p>
<p>She hesitated for a moment, trying to collect her thoughts. She did love
him, and was his own; still, to stoop and kiss a man who, if such a thing
were to be allowed at all, ought certainly to kiss her! She did not think
she could do that. But then she was bound to protect him, wounded and
broken as he was, from his own imprudence; and if she did not stoop to
him, he would rise to her. She was still in doubt, still standing with her
hand in his, half bending over him, but yet half resisting as she bent,
when, all suddenly, Harry Heathcote was on the veranda, followed by the
two policemen, who had just returned from Boolabong. She was sure that
Harry had seen her, and was by no means sure that she had been quick
enough in escaping from her lover’s hand to have been unnoticed by
the policemen also. She fled away as though guilty, and could hardly
recover herself sufficiently to assist Mrs. Growler in producing the
additional dinner which was required.</p>
<p>The two men were quickly sent to their rest, as has been told before; and
Harry, who had in truth seen how close to his friend his sister-in-law had
been standing, would, had it been possible, have restored the lovers to
their old positions; but they were all now on the veranda, and it was
impossible. Kate hung back, half in and half out of the sitting-room, and
old Mrs. Medlicot had seated herself close to her son. Harry was lying at
full length on a rug, and his wife was sitting over him. Then Giles
Medlicot, who was not quite contented with the present condition of
affairs, made a little speech.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Heathcote,” he said, “I have asked your sister to
marry me.”</p>
<p>“Dearie me, Giles,” said Mrs. Medlicot.</p>
<p>Kate remained no longer half in and half out of the parlor, but retreated
altogether and hid herself. Harry turned himself over on the rug, and
looked up at his wife, claiming infinite credit in that he had foreseen
that such a thing might happen.</p>
<p>“And what answer has she given you?” said Mrs. Heathcote.</p>
<p>“She hasn’t given me any answer yet. I wonder what you and
Heathcote would say about it?”</p>
<p>“What Kate has to say is much more important,” replied the
discreet sister.</p>
<p>“I should like it of all things,” said Harry, jumping up.
“It’s always best to be open about these things. When you
first came here, I didn’t like you. You took a bit of my river
frontage—not that it does me any great harm—and then I was
angry about that scoundrel Nokes.”</p>
<p>“I was wrong about Nokes,” said Medlicot, “and have,
therefore, had my collar-bone broken. As to the land, you’ll forgive
my having it if Kate will come and live there?”</p>
<p>“By George! I should think so.—Kate, why don’t you come
out? Come along, my girl. Medlicot has spoken out openly, and you should
answer him in the same fashion.” So saying, he dragged her forth,
and I fear that, as far as she was concerned, something of the sweetness
of her courtship was lost by the publicity with which she was forced to
confess her love. “Will you go, Kate, and make sugar down at the
mill? I have often thought how bad it would be for Mary and me when you
were taken away; but we sha’n’t mind it so much if we knew
that you are to be near us.”</p>
<p>“Speak to him, Kate,” said Mrs. Heathcote, with her arm round
her sister’s waist.</p>
<p>“I think she’s minded to have him,” said Mrs. Medlicot.</p>
<p>“Tell me, Kate—shall it be so?” pleaded the lover.</p>
<p>She came up to him and leaned over him, and whispered one word which
nobody else heard. But they all knew what the word was. And before they
separated for the night she was left alone with him, and he got the kiss
for which he was asking when the policemen interrupted them.</p>
<p>“That’s what I call a happy Christmas,” said Harry, as
the party finally parted for the night.</p>
<div style="height: 6em;">
<br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/></div>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />