<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0048" id="link2HCH0048"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter 48 </h2>
<p>We rode along the old track very quiet, talking about old times—or
mostly saying nothing, thinking our own thoughts. Something seemed to put
it into my head to watch every turn in the track—every tree and bush
by the roadside—every sound in the air—every star in the sky.
Aileen rode along at last with her head drooped down as if she hadn't the
heart to hold it up. How hard it must have seemed to her to think she
didn't dare even to ride with her own brother in the light of day without
starting at every bush that stirred—at every footstep, horse or man,
that fell on her ear!</p>
<p>There wasn't a breath of air that night. Not a leaf stirred—not a
bough moved of all the trees in the forest that we rode through. A 'possum
might chatter or a night-owl cry out, but there wasn't any other sound,
except the ripple of the creek over the stones, that got louder and
clearer as we got nearer Rocky Flat. There was nothing like a cloud in the
sky even. It wasn't an over light night, but the stars shone out like so
many fireballs, and it was that silent any one could almost have fancied
they heard the people talking in the house we left, though it was miles
away.</p>
<p>'I sometimes wonder,' Aileen says, at last, raising up her head, 'if I had
been a man whether I should have done the same things you and Jim have, or
whether I should have lived honestly and worked steadily like George over
there. I think I should have done so, I really do; that nothing would have
tempted me to take what was not my own—or to—to—do other
things. I don't think it is in my nature somehow.'</p>
<p>'I don't say as you would, Ailie,' I put in; 'but there's many things to
be thought of when you come to reckon what a boy sees, and how he's
brought up in the bush. It's different with girls—though I've known
some of them that were no great shakes either, and middling handy among
the clearskins too.'</p>
<p>'It's hard to say,' she went on, more as if she was talking to herself
than to me; 'I feel that. Bad example—love of pleasure—strong
temptation—evil company—all these are heavy weights to drag
down men's souls to hell. Who knows whether I should have been better than
the thousands, the millions, that have fallen, that have taken the broad
road that leads to destruction. Oh! how dreadful it seems to think that
when once a man has sinned in some ways in this world there's no turning
back—no hope—no mercy—only long bitter years of prison
life—worse than death; or, if anything can be worse, a felon's
death; a doom dark and terrible, dishonouring to those that die and to
those that live. Oh that my prayers may avail—not my prayers only,
but my life's service—my life's service.'</p>
<p>Next morning I was about at daybreak and had my horse fed and saddled up
with the bridle on his neck, ready all but slipping the bit into his
mouth, in case of a quick start. I went and helped Aileen to milk her
cows, nine or ten of them there were, a fairish morning's work for one
girl; mothering the calves, bailing up, leg-roping, and all the rest of
it. We could milk well, all three of us, and mother too, when she was
younger. Women are used to cattle in Ireland, and England too. The men
don't milk there, I hear tell. That wouldn't work here. Women are scarce
in the regular bush, and though they'll milk for their own good and on
their own farms, you'll not get a girl to milk, when she's at service, for
anybody else.</p>
<p>One of the young cows was a bit strange with me, so I had to shake a stick
at her and sing out 'Bail up' pretty rough before she'd put her head in.
Aileen smiled something like her old self for a minute, and said—</p>
<p>'That comes natural to you now, Dick, doesn't it?'</p>
<p>I stared for a bit, and then burst out laughing. It was a rum go, wasn't
it? The same talk for cows and Christians. That's how things get stuck
into the talk in a new country. Some old hand like father, as had been
assigned to a dairy settler, and spent all his mornings in the cowyard,
had taken to the bush and tried his hand at sticking up people. When they
came near enough of course he'd pop out from behind a tree in a rock, with
his old musket or a pair of pistols, and when he wanted 'em to stop 'Bail
up, d——yer,' would come a deal quicker and more natural-like
to his tongue than 'Stand.' So 'bail up' it was from that day to this, and
there'll have to be a deal of change in the ways of the colonies and them
as come from 'em before anything else takes its place, between the man
that's got the arms and the man that's got the money.</p>
<p>After we'd turned out the cows we put the milk into the little dairy. How
proud Jim and I used to be because we dug out the cellar part, and built
the sod wall round the slabs! Father put on the thatch; then it was as
cool and clean as ever. Many a good drink of cold milk we had there in the
summers that had passed away. Well, well, it's no use thinking of those
sort of things. They're dead and gone, like a lot of other things and
people—like I shall be before long, if it comes to that.</p>
<p>We had breakfast pretty comfortable and cheerful. Mother looked pleased
and glad to see me once more, and Aileen had got on her old face again,
and was partly come round to her old ways.</p>
<p>After breakfast Aileen and I went into the garden and had a long talk over
the plan we had chalked out for getting away to Queensland. I got out a
map Starlight had made and showed her the way we were going to head, and
why he thought it more likely to work than he had done before. I was to
make my way down the Macquarie and across by Duck Creek, George's station,
Willaroon; start from there with a mob of cattle to Queensland as drover
or anything that would suit my book.</p>
<p>Jim was to get on to one of the Murray River boats at Swan Hill, and stick
to her till he got a chance to go up the Darling with an Adelaide boat to
Bourke. He could get across from there by Cunnamulla towards Rockhampton,
and from there we were safe to find plenty of vessels bound for the
islands or San Francisco. We had hardly cared where, as far as that goes,
as long as we got clear away from our own country.</p>
<p>As soon as Jeanie got a word from Jim that he'd sailed and was clear of
Australia, she'd write up to Aileen, who was to go down to Melbourne, and
take mother with her. They could stop with Jeanie until they got a message
from San Francisco to say he'd safely arrived there. After that they could
start by the first steamer. They'd have money enough to take their
passages and something handsome in cash when they got to land.</p>
<p>Aileen agreed to it all, but in a curious sort of way. 'It looked well,'
she said, 'and might be carried out, particularly as we were all going to
work cautiously and with such a lot of preparation.' Everything that she
could do would be done, we might be sure; but though she had prayed and
sought aid from the Blessed Virgin and the saints—fasting and on her
bare knees, night after night—she had not been able to get one gleam
of consolation. Everything looked very dark, and she had a terrible
feeling of anxiety and dread about the carrying it out. But she didn't
want to shake my courage, I could see; so she listened and smiled and
cheered me up a bit at the end, and I rode away, thinking there was a good
show for us after all.</p>
<p>I got back to the Hollow right enough, and for once in a way it seemed as
if the luck was on our side. Maybe it was going to turn—who was to
know? There had been men who had been as deep in it as any of us that had
got clean away to other countries and lived safe and comfortable to the
day of their death—didn't die so soon either—lived to a good
round age, and had wives and children round them that never knew but what
they'd been as good as the best. That wouldn't be our case; but still if
we once were able to put the sea between us and our old life the odds
would be all in our favour instead of being a hundred to one that we
weren't placed and no takers.</p>
<p>Starlight was glad enough to see me back, and like everything he tackled,
had been squaring it all for our getting away with head and hand. We
wanted to take everything with us that could do us any good, naturally.
Father and he had made it right with some one they knew at Turon to take
the gold and give them a price for it—not all it was worth, but
something over three-fourths value. The rest he was to keep for his share,
for trouble and risk. There was some risk, no doubt, in dealing with us,
but all the gold that was bought in them days wasn't square, not by a lot.
But there was no way of swearing to it. Gold was gold, and once it was in
the banks it was lumped up with the rest. There was a lot of things to be
thought of before we regularly made a move for good and all; but when you
make up your mind for a dart, it's wonderful how things shape. We hadn't
much trouble dividing the gold, and what cash there was we could whack
easy enough. There was the live stock that was running in the Hollow, of
course. We couldn't well take them with us, except a few of the horses. We
made a deal at last with father for them. He took my share and
Starlight's, and paid us in cash out of his share of the notes. All we
wanted was a couple of horses each, one to carry a pack, one to ride.</p>
<p>As for dad, he told us out, plump and plain, that he wasn't going to
shift. The Hollow was good enough for him, and there he was going to stop.
If Jim and I and Starlight chose to try and make blank emigrants of
ourselves, well and good. He didn't see as they'd have such a rosy time
getting over to these new townships on the other side. We might get took
in, and wish we was back again before all was said and done. But some
people could never let well alone. Here we had everything that any man in
his senses could wish for, and we wasn't contented. Every one was going to
cut away and leave him; he'd be all by himself, with no one but the dog
for company, and be as miserable as a bandicoot; but no one cared a blank
brass farden about that.</p>
<p>'Come with us, governor,' says Starlight, 'have a cruise round the world,
and smell salt water again. You've not been boxed up in the bush all your
life, though you've been a goodish while there. Make a start, and bring
old Crib too.'</p>
<p>'I'm too old and getting stiff in the j'ints,' says dad, brightening up a
bit, 'or I don't say as I wouldn't. Don't mind my growling. But I'm bound
to be a bit lonely like when you are all drawed off the camp. No! take
your own way and I'll take mine.'</p>
<p>'Next Monday ought to see us off,' says Starlight. 'We have got the gold
and cash part all right. I've had that money paid to Knightley's credit in
the Australian Bank I promised him, and got a receipt for it.'</p>
<p>'That's just like yer,' says father, 'and a rank soft thing for a man as
has seen the world to drop into. Losin' yer share of the five hundred
quid, and then dropping a couple of hundred notes at one gamble, besides
buying a horse yer could have took for nothing. He'll never bring twenty
pound again, neither.'</p>
<p>'Always pay my play debts,' says Starlight. 'Always did, and always will.
As for the horse—a bargain, a bargain.'</p>
<p>'And a dashed bad bargain too. Why didn't ye turn parson instead of taking
to the bush?' says father, with a grin. 'Dashed if I ain't seen some
parsons that could give you odds and walk round ye at horse-dealin'.'</p>
<p>'You take your own way, Ben, and I'll take mine,' says Starlight rather
fierce, and then father left off and went to do something or other, while
us two took our horses and rode out. We hadn't a long time to be in the
old Hollow now. It had been a good friend to us in time of need, and we
was sorry in a kind of way to leave it. We were going to play for a big
stake, and if we lost we shouldn't have another throw in.</p>
<p>Our horses were in great buckle now; they hadn't been doing much lately. I
had the one I'd brought with me, and a thoroughbred brown horse that had
been broken in the first season we came there.</p>
<p>Starlight was to ride Rainbow, of course, and he had great picking before
he made up his mind what to choose for second horse. At last he pitched
upon a thoroughbred bay mare named Locket that had been stolen from a
mining township the other side of the country. She was the fastest mare
they'd ever bred—sound, and a weight-carrier too.</p>
<p>'I think I'll take Locket after all,' says he, after thinking about it
best part of an hour. 'She's very fast and a stayer. Good-tempered too,
and the old horse has taken up with her. It will be company for him.'</p>
<p>'Take your own way,' I said, 'but I wouldn't chance her. She's known to a
lot of jockey-boys and hangers-on. They could swear to that white patch on
her neck among a thousand.'</p>
<p>'If you come to that, Rainbow is not an every-day horse, and I can't leave
him behind, can I? I'll ship him, if I can, that's more. But it won't
matter much, for we'll have to take back tracks all the way. You didn't
suppose we were to ride along the mail road, did you?'</p>
<p>'I didn't suppose anything,' says I, 'but that we were going to clear out
the safest way we could. If we're to do the swell business we'd better do
it apart, or else put an advertisement into the "Turon Star" that
Starlight, Marston, and Co. are giving up business and going to leave the
district, all accounts owing to be sent in by a certain date.'</p>
<p>'A first-rate idea,' says he. 'I'm dashed if I don't do it. There's
nothing like making one's exit in good form. How savage Morringer will be!
Thank you for the hint, Dick.'</p>
<p>There was no use talking to him when he got into this sort of humour. He
was the most mad, reckless character I ever came across, and any kind of
checking only seemed to make him worse. So I left him alone, for fear he
should want to do something more venturesome still, and went on with my
packing and getting ready for the road.</p>
<p>We fixed up to start on the Monday, and get as far away the first couple
of days as we could manage. We expected to get a good start by making a
great push the first day or two, and, as the police would be thrown off
the scent in a way we settled—and a good dodge it was—we
should have all the more time to be clear of New South Wales before they
regularly dropped that we were giving them leg bail for it.</p>
<p>The Sunday before Starlight started away by himself, taking a couple of
good horses with him—one he led, and a spare saddle too. He took
nothing but his revolver, and didn't say where he was going, but I pretty
well guessed to say good-bye to Aileen. Just as he started he looked back
and says—</p>
<p>'I'm going for a longish ride to-day, Dick, but I shall be here late if
I'm back at all. If anything happens to me my share of what there is I
give to her, if she will take it. If not, do the best you can with it for
her benefit.'</p>
<p>He didn't take Warrigal with him, which I was sorry for, as the half-caste
and I didn't hit it well together, and when we were by ourselves he
generally managed to do or say something he knew I didn't like. I kept my
hands off him on account of Starlight, but there was many a time my
fingers itched to be at him, and I could hardly keep from knocking some of
the sulkiness out of him. This day, somehow, I was not in the best of
tempers myself. I had a good lot on my mind. Starting away seems always a
troublesome, bothering sort of thing, and if a man's at all inclined to be
cranky it'll come out then.</p>
<p>Next day we were going to start on a long voyage, in a manner of speaking,
and whether we should have a fair wind or the vessel of our fortune would
be wrecked and we go down with it no one could say. This is how it
happened. One of the horses was bad to catch, and took a little trouble in
the yard. Most times Warrigal was quiet enough with 'em, but when he got
regular into a rage he'd skin a horse alive, I really believe. Anyhow, he
began to hammer the colt with a roping-pole, and as the yard was that high
that no beast could jump it he had him at his mercy. I wouldn't have
minded a lick or two, but he went on and on, nearly knocking the poor
brute down every time, till I could stand it no longer, and told him to
drop it.</p>
<p>He gave me some saucy answer, until at last I told him I'd make him. He
dared me, and I rushed at him. I believe he'd have killed me that minute
if he'd had the chance, and he made a deuced good offer at it.</p>
<p>He stuck to his roping-stick—a good, heavy-ended gum sapling, six or
seven feet long—and as I came at him he struck at my head with such
vengeance that, if it had caught me fair, I should never have kicked. I
made a spring to one side, and it hit me a crack on the shoulder that
wasn't a good thing in itself. I was in at him before he could raise his
hands, and let him have it right and left.</p>
<p>Down he went and the stick atop of him. He was up again like a wild cat,
and at me hammer and tongs—but he hadn't the weight, though he was
quick and smart with his hands. I drew off and knocked him clean off his
pins. Then he saw it wasn't good enough, and gave it best.</p>
<p>'Never mind, Dick Marston,' says he, as he walked off; and he fixed his
eyes on me that savage and deadly-looking, with the blood running down his
face, that I couldn't help shivering a bit, 'you'll pay for this. I owe it
you and Jim, one a piece.'</p>
<p>'Confound you,' I said, 'it's all your own fault. Why couldn't you stop
ill-using the horse? You don't like being hit yourself. How do you think
he likes it?'</p>
<p>'What business that of yours?' he said. 'You mind your work and I'll mind
mine. This is the worst day's work you've done this year, and so I tell
you.'</p>
<p>He went away to his gunyah then, and except doing one or two things for
Starlight would not lift his hand for any one that day.</p>
<p>I was sorry for it when I came to think. I daresay I might have got him
round with a little patience and humbugging. It's always a mistake to lose
your temper and make enemies; there's no knowing what harm they may do ye.
People like us oughtn't to throw away a chance, even with a chap like
Warrigal. Besides, I knew it would vex Starlight, and for his sake I would
have given a trifle it hadn't happened. However, I didn't see how Warrigal
could do me or Jim any harm without hurting him, and I knew he'd have cut
off his hand rather than any harm should come to Starlight that he could
help.</p>
<p>So I got ready. Dad and I had our tea together pretty comfortable, and had
a longish talk. The old man was rather down in the mouth for him. He said
he somehow didn't expect the fakement to turn out well. 'You're going
away,' he said, 'from where you're safe, and there's a many things goes
against a man in our line, once he's away from his own beat. You never
know how you may be given away. The Captain's all right here, when he's me
to look after him, though he does swear at me sometimes; but he was took
last time. He was out on his own hook, and it's my belief he'll be took
this time if he isn't very careful. He's a good man to fight through
things when once he's in the thick of 'em, but he ain't careful enough to
keep dark and close when the play isn't good. You draw along steady by
yourself till you meet Jim—that's my advice to ye.'</p>
<p>'I mean to do that. I shall work my way down to old George's place, and
get on with stock or something till we all meet at Cunnamulla. After that
there ain't much chance of these police here grabbing us.'</p>
<p>'Unless you're followed up,' says the old man. 'I've known chaps to go a
deuce of a way, once they got on the track, and there's getting some smart
fellows among 'em now—native-born chaps as'll be as good at picking
up the tracks as you and Jim.'</p>
<p>'Well, we must take our chance. I'm sorry, for one thing, that I had that
barney with Warrigal. It was all his fault. But I had to give him a
hardish crack or two. He'd turn dog on me and Jim, and in a minute, if he
saw his way without hurting Starlight.'</p>
<p>'He can't do it,' says dad; 'it's sink or swim with the lot of you. And he
dursn't either, not he,' says father, beginning to growl out his words.
'If I ever heard he'd given away any one in the lot I'd have his life, if
I had to poleaxe him in George Street. He knows me too.'</p>
<p>We sat yarning away pretty late. The old man didn't say it, but I made out
that he was sorry enough for that part of his life which had turned out so
bad for us boys, and for mother and Aileen. Bad enough he was in a kind of
way, old dad, but he wasn't all bad, and I believe if he could have begun
again and thought of what misery he was going to bring on the lot of us he
would never have gone on the cross. It was too late, too late now, though,
to think of that.</p>
<p>Towards morning I heard the old dog growl, and then the tramp of a horse's
feet. Starlight rode up to the fire and let his horse go, then walked
straight into his corner and threw himself down without speaking. He had
had a precious long ride, and a fast one by the look of his horse. The
other one he had let go as soon as he came into the Hollow; but none of
the three would be a bit the worse after a few hours' rest. The horses, of
course, were spare ones, and not wanted again for a bit.</p>
<p>Next morning it was 'sharp's the word', and no mistake. I felt a deal
smarter on it than yesterday. When you've fairly started for the road half
the journey's done. It's the thinking of this and forgetting that, and
wondering whether you haven't left behind the t'other thing, that's the
miserablest part of going a journey; when you're once away, no matter
what's left behind, you can get on some way or other.</p>
<p>We didn't start so over and above early, though Starlight was up as fresh
as paint at sunrise, you'd thought he hadn't ridden a yard the day before.
Even at the very last there's a lot of things to do and to get. But we all
looked slippy and didn't talk much, so that we got through what we had to
do, and had all the horses saddled and packed by about eight o'clock. Even
Warrigal had partly got over his temper. Of course I told Starlight about
it. He gave him a good rowing, and told him he deserved another hammering,
which he had a good mind to give him, if we hadn't been starting for a
journey. Warrigal didn't say a word to him. He never did. Starlight told
me on the quiet, though, he was sorry it happened, 'though it's the
rascal's own fault, and served him right. But he's a revengeful beggar,'
he says, 'and that he would play you some dog's trick if he wasn't afraid
of me, you may depend your life on.'</p>
<p>'Now,' says he, 'we must make our little arrangements. I shall be
somewhere about Cunnamulla by the end of this month' (it was only the
first week). 'Jim knows that we are to meet there, and if we manage that
all right I think the greatest part of the danger will be over. I shall
get right across by Dandaloo to the back blocks of the West Bogan country,
between it and the Lachlan. There are tracks through the endless mallee
scrub, only known to the tribes in the neighbourhood, and a few
half-castes like Warrigal, that have been stock-riding about them. Sir
Ferdinand and his troopers might just as well hunt for a stray Arab in the
deserts of the Euphrates. If I'm alive—mind you, alive—I'll be
at Cunnamulla on the day I mean. And now, good-bye, old fellow. Whatever
my sins have been, I've been true to you and your people in the past, and
if Aileen and I meet across the seas, as I hope, the new life may partly
atone for the old one.'</p>
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