<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 32 </h2>
<p>I'd settled in my mind that it couldn't be any one else, when he sat up,
yawned, and looked round as if he had not been away from the old place a
week.</p>
<p>'Ha! Richard, here we are again! "Feeds the boar in the old frank?" The
governor told me you and Jim had made back. Dreadful bore, isn't it? Just
when we'd all rubbed off the rust of our bush life and were getting
civilised. I feel very seriously ill-treated, I assure you. I have a great
mind to apply to the Government for compensation. That's the worst of
these new inspectors, they are so infernally zealous.'</p>
<p>'You were too many for them, it seems. I half thought you might have been
nailed. How the deuce did you get the office in time?'</p>
<p>'The faithful Warrigal, as usual, gave me timely warning, and brought a
horse, of course. He will appear on the Judgment Day leading Rainbow, I
firmly believe. Why he should be so confoundedly anxious about my welfare
I can't make out—I can't, really. It's his peculiar form of mania, I
suppose. We all suffer from some madness or other.'</p>
<p>'How the blazes did he know the police were laid on to the lot of us?' I
said.</p>
<p>'I didn't know myself that your Kate had come the double on you. I might
have known she would, though. Well, it seems Warrigal took it into his
semi-barbaric head to ride into Turon and loaf about, partly to see me,
and partly about another matter that your father laid him on about. He was
standing about near the Prospectors' Arms, late on Friday night, doing
nothing and seeing everything, as usual, when he noticed Mrs. Mullockson
run out of the house like a Bedlamite. "My word, that missis big one
coolah!" was his expression, and made straight for the camp. Now Warrigal
had seen you come out just before. He doesn't like you and Jim over much—bad
taste, I tell him, on his part—but I suppose he looks upon you as
belonging to the family. So he stalked the fair and furious Kate.'</p>
<p>'That was how it was, then?'</p>
<p>'Yes, much in that way. I must say, Dick, that if you are so extremely
fond of—well—studying the female character, you should carry
on the pursuit more discreetly. Just see what this miscalculation has cost
your friends!'</p>
<p>'Confound her! She's a heartless wretch, and I hope she'll die in a
ditch.'</p>
<p>'Exactly. Well, she knocked, and a constable opened the outer door.</p>
<p>'"I want to see Sir Ferdinand," she says.</p>
<p>'"He's in bed and can't be disturbed," says the bobby. "Any message I can
deliver?"</p>
<p>'"I have important information," says she. "Rouse him up, or you'll be
sorry for it."</p>
<p>'"Won't it do to-morrow morning?" says he.</p>
<p>'"No, it won't," says she, stamping her foot. "Do what I tell you, and
don't stand there like a fool."</p>
<p>'She waited a bit. Then, Warrigal says, out came Sir Ferdinand, very
polite. "What can I do for you," says he, "Mrs. Mullockson?"</p>
<p>'"Should you like to know where the Marstons are, Sir Ferdinand," says
she, "Dick and Jim?"</p>
<p>'"Know? Would I not?" says he. "No end of warrants out for them; since
that Ballabri Bank robbery they seem to have disappeared under ground. And
that fellow Starlight, too! Most remarkable man of his day. I'd give my
eyes to put the bracelets upon him."</p>
<p>'She whispered something into his ear.</p>
<p>'"Guard, turn out," he roars out first; then, dropping his voice, says
out, "My dear Mrs. Mullockson" (you should hear Warrigal imitate him),
"you have made my fortune—officially, I mean, of course. I shall
never forget your kindness. Thanks, a thousand times."</p>
<p>'"Don't thank me," she says, and she burst out crying, and goes slowly
back to the hotel.</p>
<p>'Warrigal had heard quite enough. He rips over to Daly's mob, borrows a
horse, saddle, and bridle, and leads him straight down to our camp. He
roused me up about one o'clock, and I could hardly make any explanation to
my mates. Such stunning good fellows they were, too! I wonder whether I
shall ever associate with gentlemen again? The chances are against it.</p>
<p>'I had all kinds of trouble to tell them I was going away with Warrigal,
and yet not to tell too much.</p>
<p>'"What the dickens," says Clifford, "can you want, going away with this
familiar of yours at this hour of the night? You're like the fellow in
Scott's novel ('Anne of Geierstein') that I was reading over again
yesterday—the mysterious stranger that's called for at midnight by
the Avenger of Blood, departs with him and is never seen more."</p>
<p>'"In case you never see me afterwards," I said, "we'd better say good-bye.
We've been good mates and true friends, haven't we?"</p>
<p>'"Never better," he said. "I don't know what we shall do without you. But,
of course, you're not going very far?"</p>
<p>'"Good-bye, in case," I said. "Anyhow, I'll write you a line," and as I
shook hands with them—two regular trumps, if ever there were any in
the world—I had a kind of notion I'd never see them again. Hardly
think I shall, either. Sir Ferdinand surrounded the hut about an hour
later, and made them come out one by one—both of them and the wages
man. I daresay they were surprised.</p>
<p>'"Where's the fourth man, Clifford?" says Sir Ferdinand. "Just ask him to
come out, will you?"</p>
<p>'"What, Frank Haughton?" says he.</p>
<p>'I heard most of this from that young devil, Billy the Boy. He saw Sir
Ferdinand ride up, so he hid close by, just for the fun of hearing how he
got on. He'd seen Warrigal and me ride away.</p>
<p>'"Frank Devil!" bangs out Sir Ferdinand, who'd begun to get his monkey up.
"How should I know his infernal purser's name? No man, it seems to me, has
his right name on this confounded goldfield. I mean Starlight—Starlight
the cattle stealer, the mail robber, the bush-ranger, whose name is
notorious over the three colonies, and New Zealand to boot—your
intimate friend and partner for the last nine months!"</p>
<p>'"You perfectly amaze me," says Clifford. "But can't you be mistaken? Is
your information to be depended upon?"</p>
<p>'"Mine came from a jealous woman," says Sir Ferdinand. "They may generally
be depended upon for a straight tip. But we're losing time. When did he
leave the claim, and which way did he go?"</p>
<p>'"I have no idea which way he went," says Clifford. "He did not say, but
he left about an hour since."</p>
<p>'"On foot or on horseback?"</p>
<p>'"On horseback."</p>
<p>'"Any one with him?"</p>
<p>'"Yes, another horseman."</p>
<p>'"What was he like?"</p>
<p>'"Slight, dark man, youngish, good-looking."</p>
<p>'"Warrigal the half-caste! By George! warrants out for him also," says Sir
Ferdinand. "On a good horse, of course, with an hour's start. We may give
up the idea of catching him this time. Follow him up as a matter of form.
Good-bye, Clifford. You'll hear news of your friend before long, or I'm
much mistaken."</p>
<p>'"Stop, Sir Ferdinand, you must pardon me; but I don't exactly understand
your tone. The man that we knew by the name of Frank Haughton may be, as
you say, an escaped criminal. All I know is that he lived with us since we
came here, and that no fellow could have behaved more truly like a man and
a gentleman. As far as we are concerned, I have a material guarantee that
he has been scrupulously honest. Do you mean to hint for one moment that
we were aware of his previous history, or in any way mixed up with his
acts?"</p>
<p>'"If I do, what then?" says Sir Ferdinand, laughing.</p>
<p>'"The affair is in no way ludicrous," says Clifford, very stiff and
dignified. "I hold myself to have received an insult, and must ask you to
refer me to a friend."</p>
<p>'"Do you know that I could arrest you and Hastings now and lock you up on
suspicion of being concerned with him in the Ballabri Bank robbery?" says
Sir Ferdinand in a stern voice. "Don't look so indignant. I only say I
could. I am not going to do so, of course. As to fighting you, my dear
fellow, I am perfectly at your service at all times and seasons whenever I
resign my appointment as Inspector of Police for the colony of New South
Wales. The Civil Service regulations do not permit of duelling at present,
and I found it so deuced hard to work up to the billet that I am not going
to imperil my continuance therein. After all, I had no intention of
hurting your feelings, and apologise if I did. As for that rascal
Starlight, he would deceive the very devil himself."</p>
<p>'And so Sir Ferdinand rode off.'</p>
<p>'How did you come; by Jonathan's?'</p>
<p>'We called nowhere. Warrigal, as usual, made a short cut of his own across
the bush—scrubs, gullies, mountains, all manner of desert paths. We
made the Hollow yesterday afternoon, and went to sleep in a nook known to
us of old. We dropped in to breakfast here at daylight, and I felt sleepy
enough for another snooze.'</p>
<p>'We're all here again, it seems,' I said, sour enough. 'I suppose we'll
have to go on the old lay; they won't let us alone when we're doing fair
work and behaving ourselves like men. They must take the consequences, d—n
them!'</p>
<p>'Ha! very true,' says Starlight in his dreamy kind of way. 'Most true,
Richard. Society should make a truce occasionally, or proclaim an amnesty
with offenders of our stamp. It would pay better than driving us to
desperation. How is Jim? He's worse off than either of us, poor fellow.'</p>
<p>'Jim's very bad. He can't get over being away from Jeanie. I never saw him
so down in the mouth this years.'</p>
<p>'Poor old Jim, he's a deal too good for the place. Sad mistake this
getting married. People should either keep straight or have no relatives
to bear the brunt of their villainies. "But, soft," as they say in the
play, "where am I?" I thought I was a virtuous miner again. Here we are at
this devil-discovered, demon-haunted old Hollow again—first cousin
to the pit of Acheron. There's no help for it, Dick. We must play our
parts gallantly, as demons of this lower world, or get hissed off the
stage.'</p>
<p>. . . . .<br/></p>
<p>We didn't do much for a few days, you may be sure. There was nothing to
do, for one thing; and we hadn't made up our mind what our line was to be.
One thing was certain: there would be more row made about us than ever. We
should have all the police in the country worried and barked at by the
press, the people, the Government, and their superior officers till they
got something to show about us. Living at the diggings under the nose of
the police, without their having the least suspicion who we were, was bad
enough; but the rescue of Jim and the shooting of a policeman in charge of
him was more serious—the worst thing that had happened yet.</p>
<p>There would be the devil to pay if they couldn't find a track of us. No
doubt money would be spent like water in bribing any one who might give
information about us. Every one would be tried that we had ever been known
to be friendly with. A special body of men could be told off to make a
dart to any spot they might get wind of near where we had been last seen.</p>
<p>We had long talks and barneys over the whole thing—sometimes by
ourselves with Starlight, sometimes with father. A long time it was before
we settled upon any regular put-up bit of work to do.</p>
<p>Sooner or later we began to see the secret of the Hollow would be found
out. There was no great chance in the old times with only a few shepherds
and stock-riders wandering through the bush, once in a way straggling over
the country. But now the whole colony swarmed with miners, who were always
prospecting, as they called it—that is, looking out for fresh
patches of gold. Now, small parties of these men—bold, hardy,
experienced chaps—would take a pick and shovel, a bucket, and a tin
dish, with a few weeks' rations, and scour the whole countryside. They
would try every creek, gully, hillside, and river bed. If they found the
colour of gold, the least trace of it in a dish of wash-dirt, they would
at once settle down themselves. If it went rich the news would soon
spread, and a thousand men might be gathered in one spot—the bank of
a small creek, the side of a steep range—within a fortnight, with
ten thousand more sure to follow within a month.</p>
<p>That might happen at any time on one of the spurs of Nulla Mountain; and
the finding out of the track down to the Hollow by some one of the dozens
of rambling, shooting, fishing diggers would be as certain to happen as
the sun to rise.</p>
<p>Well, the country had changed, and we were bound to change with it. We
couldn't stop boxed up in the Hollow day after day, and month after month,
shooting and horse-breaking, doing nothing and earning nothing.</p>
<p>If we went outside there were ten times more men looking out for us than
ever, ten times more chance of our being tracked or run down than ever.
That we knew from the newspapers. How did we see them? Oh, the old way. We
sent out our scout, Warrigal, and he got our letters and papers too, from
a 'sure hand', as Starlight said the old people in the English wars used
to say.</p>
<p>The papers were something to see. First he brought us in a handbill that
was posted in Bargo, like this:—</p>
<p>FIVE HUNDRED POUNDS REWARD.<br/></p>
<p>The above reward will be paid to any one giving information as to the
whereabouts of Richard Marston, James Marston, and a man whose name is
unknown, but who can be identified chiefly by the appellation of
Starlight.</p>
<p>'Pleasing way of drawing attention to a gentleman's private residence,'
says Starlight, smiling first and looking rather grim afterwards. 'Never
mind, boys, they'll increase that reward yet, by Jove! It will have to be
a thousand a piece if they don't look a little sharper.'</p>
<p>We laughed, and dad growled out—</p>
<p>'Don't seem to have the pluck, any on ye, to tackle a big touch again. I
expect they'll send a summons for us next, and get old Bill Barkis, the
bailiff at Bargo, to serve it.'</p>
<p>'Come, come, governor,' says Starlight, 'none of that. We've got quite
enough devil in us yet, without your stirring him up. You must give us
time, you know. Let's see what this paper says. "Turon Star"! What a
godsend to it!</p>
<p>'BUSH-RANGERS!<br/>
<br/>
'STARLIGHT AND THE MARSTONS AGAIN.<br/></p>
<p>'The announcement will strike our readers, if not with the most profound
astonishment, certainly with considerable surprise, that these celebrated
desperadoes, for whose apprehension such large sums have been offered, for
whom the police in all the colonies have made such unremitting search,
should have been discovered in our midst. Yet such is the case. On this
very morning, from information received, our respected and efficient
Inspector of Police, Sir Ferdinand Morringer, proceeded soon after
midnight to the camp of Messrs. Clifford and Hastings. He had every reason
to believe that he would have had no difficulty in arresting the famous
Starlight, who, under the cognomen of the Honourable Frank Haughton, has
been for months a partner in this claim. The shareholders were popularly
known as "the three Honourables", it being rumoured that both Mr. Clifford
and Mr. Hastings were entitled to that prefix, if not to a more exalted
one.</p>
<p>'With characteristic celerity, however, the famous outlaw had shortly
before quitted the place, having received warning and been provided with a
fast horse by his singular retainer, Warrigal, a half-caste native of the
colony, who is said to be devotedly attached to him, and who has been seen
from time to time on the Turon.</p>
<p>'Of the Marston brothers, the elder one, Richard, would seem to have been
similarly apprised, but James Marston was arrested in his cottage in
Specimen Gully. Having been lately married, he was apparently unwilling to
leave his home, and lingered too long for prudence.</p>
<p>'While rejoicing, as must all good citizens, at the discovery of
evil-doers and the capture of one member of a band of notorious criminals,
we must state in fairness and candour that their conduct has been, while
on the field as miners, free from reproach in every way. For James
Marston, who was married but a short while since to a Melbourne young lady
of high personal attractions and the most winning amiability, great
sympathy has been expressed by all classes.</p>
<p>So much for the "Star". Everybody is sorry for you, old man,' he says to
Jim. 'I shouldn't wonder if they'd make you a beak if you'd stayed there
long enough. I'm afraid Dick's dropping the policeman won't add to our
popularity, though.'</p>
<p>'He's all right,' I said. 'Hurrah! look here. I'm glad I didn't finish the
poor beggar. Listen to this, from the "Turon Banner":—</p>
<p>'BUSH-RANGING REVIVED.<br/></p>
<p>'The good old days have apparently not passed away for ever, when mail
robberies and hand-to-hand conflicts with armed robbers were matters of
weekly occurrence. The comparative lull observable in such exciting
occurrences of late has been proved to be but the ominous hush of the
elements that precedes the tempest. Within the last few days the mining
community has been startled by the discovery of the notorious gang of
bush-rangers, Starlight and the Marstons, domiciled in the very heart of
the diggings, attired as ordinary miners, and—for their own purposes
possibly—leading the laborious lives proper to the avocation. They
have been fairly successful, and as miners, it is said, have shown
themselves to be manly and fair-dealing men. We are not among those who
care to judge their fellow-men harshly. It may be that they had resolved
to forsake the criminal practices which had rendered them so unhappily
celebrated. James Marston had recently married a young person of most
respectable family and prepossessing appearance. As far as may be inferred
from this step and his subsequent conduct, he had cut loose from his
former habitudes. He, with his brother, Richard Marston, worked an
adjoining claim to the Arizona Sluicing Company, with the respected
shareholders of which they were on terms of intimacy. The well-known
Starlight, as Mr. Frank Haughton, became partner and tent-mate with the
Hon. Mr. Clifford and Mr. Hastings, an aristocratic society in which the
manners and bearing of this extraordinary man permitted him to mingle
without suspicion of detection.</p>
<p>'Suddenly information was furnished to the police respecting all three
men. We are not at present aware of the source from which the clue was
obtained. Suffice it to say that Sir Ferdinand Morringer promptly arranged
for the simultaneous action of three parties of police with the hope of
capturing all three outlaws. But in two cases the birds were flown.
Starlight's "ame damnee", a half-caste named Warrigal, had been observed
on the field the day before. By him he was doubtless furnished with a
warning, and the horse upon which he left his abode shortly before the
arrival of Sir Ferdinand. The elder Marston had also eluded the police.
But James Marston, hindered possibly by domestic ties, was captured at his
cottage at Specimen Gully. For him sympathy has been universally
expressed. He is regarded rather as a victim than as an active agent in
the many criminal offences chargeable to the account of Starlight's gang.</p>
<p>'Since writing the above we have been informed that trooper Walsh, who
with another constable was escorting James Marston to Bargo Gaol, has been
brought in badly wounded. The other trooper reports that he was shot down
and the party attacked by persons concealed in the thick timber near Wild
Horse Creek, at the edge of Bargo Brush. In the confusion that ensued the
prisoner escaped. It was at first thought that Walsh was fatally injured,
but our latest report gives good hope of his recovery.</p>
<p>'We shall be agreeably surprised if this be the end and not the
commencement of a series of darker tragedies.'</p>
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