summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/old/60444-0.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'old/60444-0.txt')
-rw-r--r--old/60444-0.txt10370
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 10370 deletions
diff --git a/old/60444-0.txt b/old/60444-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index a304c7e..0000000
--- a/old/60444-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,10370 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of From Billabong to London, by Mary Grant
-Bruce
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: From Billabong to London
-
-Author: Mary Grant Bruce
-
-Release Date: October 7, 2019 [EBook #60444]
-Last Updated: February 22, 2023
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Al Haines, Cindy Beyer & the online Distributed
-Proofreaders Canada team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FROM BILLABONG TO LONDON ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Cover Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “‘Why!—it’s some one signalling!’” (Page 145.)]
-
- _From Billabong to London_] [_Frontispiece_
-
-
-
-
- F R O M
- B I L L A B O N G
- T O L O N D O N
-
-
-
-
- BY
- MARY GRANT BRUCE
- _Author of “Mates at Billabong,” “Glen Eyre,”_
- _“Timothy in Bushland,” etc._
-
- W A R D , L O C K & C O . , L I M I T E D
- LONDON, MELBOURNE AND TORONTO
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. — HOLIDAYS AT BILLABONG................... 9
- II. — UPHEAVALS............................... 24
- III. — OF A CHESTNUT BABY...................... 42
- IV. — A BILLABONG DAY......................... 66
- V. — GOOD-BYE................................ 91
- VI. — SETTLING DOWN........................... 105
- VII. — OF FISHES AND THE SEA................... 120
- VIII. — WHAT NORAH SAW.......................... 140
- IX. — DETECTIVE WORK.......................... 152
- X. — THE EMPTY CABIN......................... 166
- XI. — DURBAN.................................. 178
- XII. — EXPLORING............................... 199
- XIII. — WHAT CAME OF EXPLORING.................. 210
- XIV. — GOOD-BYE TO DURBAN...................... 223
- XV. — MIST AND MOONLIGHT...................... 237
- XVI. — WAR!.................................... 253
- XVII. — WHAT THE MORNING BROUGHT................ 271
- XVIII. — LAS PALMAS.............................. 285
- XIX. — THE END OF THE VOYAGE................... 297
- XX. — THE THING THAT COUNTS................... 307
-
-
-
-
- FROM BILLABONG
- TO LONDON.
-
- ―•―
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
-
- HOLIDAYS AT BILLABONG.
-
-IF you came to the homestead of Billabong by the front entrance, you
-approached a great double gate of wrought iron, which opened stiffly,
-with protesting creaks, and creaked almost as much at being closed. Then
-you found yourself in a long, winding avenue, lined with tall
-pine-trees, beyond which you could catch glimpses, between the trunks,
-of a kind of wilderness-garden, where climbing roses and flowering
-shrubs and gum-trees and bush plants, and a host of pleasant, friendly,
-common flowers grew all together in a very delightful fashion. Seeing,
-however, that you were a visitor by the front entrance, you could not
-answer the beckonings of the wilderness-garden, but must follow the
-windings of the avenue, on and on, until the wild growth on either side
-gave place to spreading lawns and trim flower-beds, the pine-trees
-ended, and you came round a kind of corner formed by an immense bush of
-scarlet bougainvillea, and so found the house smiling a welcome.
-
-Very rarely were any doors or windows shut at Billabong. The kindly
-Australian climate makes the sunlit winter air a delight; and if in
-summer it is sometimes necessary to shut out heat, and possibly
-intrusive snakes, as soon as the sun goes down everything is flung wide
-open to admit the cool evening breeze that comes blowing across the
-paddocks. Billabong always looked as if it were open to welcome the
-newcomer.
-
-It was a red house of two storeys, looking lower than it was because of
-its width and the great trees that grew all round it, as well as because
-of its broad balconies and verandahs. From either side the garden
-stretched away until hedges of roses blocked the entrance to orchard and
-vegetable patches. The house stood on a gentle rise, and in front the
-trees had been thinned so that across the smooth lawn you looked over
-stretching paddocks, dotted with gum-trees, and broken by the silver
-gleam of a reed-fringed lagoon. There was no other house visible—only
-the wide, peaceful paddocks. The nearest road was two miles away, and it
-was seventeen miles to the nearest town. Perhaps, seen from the front,
-Billabong might have seemed a little lonely.
-
-But, in fact, no one ever dreamed of coming to Billabong by the front.
-There had, of course, been a few exceptions to the rule; as in the case
-of a new Governor-General, who had been brought in state to see it as a
-typical Australian station, and had greatly annoyed the inmates by
-bringing his dogs in to luncheon and feeding them with bones on the
-dining-room carpet, which happened to be a Persian rug of value. The
-Billabong folk looked back to that visit with considerable disgust.
-Sometimes other strangers found their way to the great iron gates, and
-up the avenue; but not often. Occasional callers did not come to
-Billabong, since the owner and his motherless children were not
-ceremonious people, and in any case, no one drives seventeen miles in
-the Australian bush to pay a call of ceremony. Those who came were
-prepared to stay, and were more immediately concerned with the disposal
-of their horses than with any other consideration; so that it followed
-that the chief entrance to Billabong was known as “the back way.”
-
-The tracks alone would have told you that. As you came up from the outer
-paddocks, the gravel of the drive was smooth and untouched save for the
-gardener’s rake; but the other tracks, deep and well trodden, swept
-round beside the garden and turned in to the courtyard of the
-stables—big, red-brick buildings, looking almost as large as the house
-itself. It was always cheerful and exciting at the stables, for all the
-dogs took charge of you directly you arrived, and made vigorous remarks
-about you, until they were quite sure whether you were a person to be
-trusted. “Swagmen”—the bush tramps of Australia—loathed the Billabong
-dogs very exceedingly; and the dogs returned the feeling in a lively
-fashion, so that the progress of a swagman from the outer gate to the
-security of the back yard was apt to be fraught with incident and marked
-by haste. But if your respectability were evident, the dogs became
-merely enthusiastic, inspecting visitor and horses with well-bred
-curiosity, and finally accompanying you to the gate with demonstrations
-of friendliness, and parting from you with regret.
-
-Within the gate you had, as Murty O’Toole, the head stockman, put it,
-“your choice thing of tracks.” One led across the gravelled yard to the
-kitchen and its long row of out-buildings; another took you in the shade
-of a row of pepper-trees to Mr. Linton’s office, where interviews with
-the men were held, and all the business of a big station went forward.
-Another—Jim and Norah Linton liked this one—went directly to the
-orchard, where, on hot days, might be found cherries and apricots,
-peaches, nectarines, great red Japanese plums, guavas, and long beds of
-strawberries and raspberries. But the most worn track of all led through
-a porch that opened in a creeper-hung fence, on the other side of which
-you found yourself in the garden, and presently on the side verandah, a
-pleasant place, half closed in by passion fruit vines and clematis, and
-made very homely and comfortable with long basket-chairs and tables
-where books and magazines lay. There were rugs on the tiled floor, and,
-here and there, tall palms in oaken tubs. Nearly all the year round, the
-Billabong folk were to be found on the side verandah.
-
-It was vacant just now, save for one inmate, a big man in riding dress,
-asleep on a rush lounge. His whip and broad felt hat were tossed on the
-table beside him, and a collie, also asleep, lay in a patch of sunlight
-near. It was mid-winter, yet the sun shone warmly across the sheltered
-space; a good corner to bask in, after the keen wind sweeping across the
-paddocks. Everything was very quiet. The glass doors leading into a room
-close by were open, but no sound came from the house, and the big man
-slept like a child. Presently, however, a chorus of barking came from
-the stables, and the sleeper stirred and opened his eyes.
-
-“Billy, I expect,” he said, yawning. “Believe I’ve been asleep.” He
-glanced at his watch. “Half-past three!—it’s high time that black
-rascal was here.”
-
-He got up, stretching himself, and went to the edge of the verandah—a
-mighty figure of a man, well over six feet, with broad shoulders and a
-loosely hung frame indicative of great strength. His hair and
-close-cropped beard were turning grey; but the whole face held an
-indefinable boyishness, due perhaps to the twinkle that was never far
-from the deep-set eyes. As he watched, the chorus of barking drew
-nearer, the gate in the porch swung open, and a native boy came through,
-his black face a startling contrast to his white shirt and spotless
-moleskin breeches. He grinned broadly as he neared the verandah.
-
-“You’re late, Billy,” David Linton said.
-
-“Plenty that pfeller mare lazy,” said the dusky one, cheerfully. “That
-one gettin’ old, boss. Better me ride one of this year’s lot—eh?” He
-handed over a leather mailbag and a bundle of papers, remaining poised
-on one foot, in evident anxiety as to his answer.
-
-“One of the new young horses?—what, to carry out mails and parcels? No,
-thanks, Billy, I’m not keen on experiments that lead to broken legs,”
-replied the squatter, laughing. “Old Bung-Eye is good for the job for a
-long time yet.” Then, in answer to the downcast face as the black boy
-turned away, “I’ll see what Mr. Jim says about your taking one of the
-new lot out mustering—if you behave yourself and take him gently.”
-
-“Plenty!” said Billy, rejoicing. “That black colt, boss—him going to
-make a mighty good horse——”
-
-“We’ll see what Mr. Jim says. Be off—it’s high time you had the cows in
-the milking-yard.” The gate slammed behind the ecstatic Billy as his
-master went back to his chair and unlocked the mailbag.
-
-He lifted a rather furrowed brow half an hour later at a step beside
-him—the housekeeper, round, fat and cheery, her twinkling eyes almost
-lost in her wide, jolly face.
-
-“Will you have tea now, sir?”
-
-“The children are not in, are they, Brownie?”
-
-“Not yet,” Mrs. Brown answered, smoothing her spotless apron. “Mr. Jim
-said they’d be back at four-ish; but when it comes to gettin’ back it’s
-generally—as a rule more ‘ish’ than ‘four.’ Would you rather wait a
-little, sir?”
-
-“I think so,” said the squatter, absent-mindedly, his glance wandering
-back to the letter in his hand. “Yes—there’s no hurry, Brownie—and
-Miss Norah seems to like to pour out my tea.”
-
-“She do, bless her,” said Mrs. Brown. “I always say meals aren’t the
-same to Miss Norah if you’re not there, sir. Poor lamb—and so soon
-goin’ back to that there school. Mighty little she gets for tea there,
-I’ll be bound.”
-
-“Well, she doesn’t strike one as ill-fed, Brownie—and you know she
-likes school.”
-
-“I know she likes home better,” said Brownie, darkly. “Me, I don’t hold
-with schools. I was glad when Master Jim came home for good an’ I’ll be
-gladder when it’s Miss Norah’s last term. Edication’s all very well in
-its way, like castor-oil; but you can get too much of it. Why, Miss
-Norah’s grandma never even heard of half them fancy things she knows,
-and where’d you find a better manager of a house than she was? What she
-didn’t know about curing bacon——!” Brownie sighed in inability to
-express fitly the superhuman attainments of her nursling’s ancestress.
-
-“Well, you know, Brownie, I look to you for all that side of Norah’s
-education,” said Mr. Linton pacifically. “And you say yourself that the
-child is no bad housekeeper.”
-
-“I should think she isn’t,” retorted Mrs. Brown. “Mighty few girls,
-though I say it as shouldn’t, cook better than Miss Norah, or can be
-handier about a house. But where’s the use of all them other things?
-Physics, which ain’t anything to do with medicine, an’ brushwork that’s
-not even first-cousin to a broom an’ physi—something—or—other, which
-is learnin’ more about your inside than any young lady has any call for.
-No, I don’t hold with it at all. But it doesn’t seem to hurt her, bless
-her!”
-
-“No, I don’t think it hurts her,” David Linton said. “Learning does not
-seem to make her any less healthy, either in mind or body; and that’s
-the main thing, Brownie. You mustn’t grumble at the bit of extra
-polish—they all have it nowadays, and it’s no bad thing.” His eyes lit
-up suddenly. “There they come,” he said. “Is your kettle boiling?”
-
-There were sounds of hoof-beats on the track, faint at first and then
-more distinct. The dogs burst into a wild chorus of welcome. Brownie
-disappeared hurriedly in the direction of the kitchen, and Mr. Linton
-lay back in his long chair and gave his letter a half-hearted attention,
-his eyes wandering to the door in the porch. Presently came quick feet
-and merry voices, the door swung open, and three people entered in a
-pell-mell fashion and descended upon the verandah like a miniature
-cyclone.
-
-“I know we’re late, but we couldn’t help it,” Norah said breathlessly.
-“There was such a heap to do in the Far Plain, Dad—you ask the
-manager!” She shot a laughing glance at her brother, an immensely tall
-individual, who responded by lazily pitching his hat at her. “Oh, the
-wind is cold, Dad—we raced home against it, and it cut like a knife.
-But it was lovely. Have you had tea? I do hope you haven’t.”
-
-“I waited for the mistress of the house; and Brownie gave me her views
-on the Higher Education of Women,” said her father. “She seems to think
-you’re learning too much, Norah. Are you worried about it?”
-
-“Not so much as my teachers,” said Norah, laughing. “And their anxieties
-seem all the other way. Oh, don’t let us think of school, Daddy—it will
-be bad enough when the time really comes.”
-
-The third of the newcomers uttered a hollow groan. Like Jim Linton, he
-was a tall, lean boy; but while Jim gave promise of as mighty a pair of
-shoulders as his father’s, Wally Meadows exemplified at the moment
-length without breadth. Everything about him was lean and quick and
-active; his brown hands were never still, and his merry brown face was
-always alight with interest, except in those deep moments when those who
-knew him had reason to suspect some amazing outbreak of mischief in his
-plotting brain. Finding that no one observed him, he groaned again, yet
-more hollowly.
-
-“What’s the matter, old man?” Jim asked. “Toothache? Or lack of tea?”
-
-“I don’t have toothache; and Billabong doesn’t have any lack of tea. If
-you haven’t just had tea here, it’s because you’re just going to have
-it,” said Wally severely, and with truth; for in an Australian bush home
-tea begins to occur at an early hour in the morning, and continues to
-occur with great frequency all day. “No, it’s only the idea of school.
-You’re so hideously old and important now that I suppose you forget all
-about it, but it’s only two Christmases ago that Norah and I used to dry
-your tears at going back. Didn’t we, Norah?
-
-“What about your own tears?” Mr. Linton asked, laughing.
-
-“Why, I shed them still,” said Wally. “I could begin now, quite easily.
-Didn’t you hear me groan?—I’ll do it again, if you’d care for it. It
-isn’t any trouble.”
-
-“Don’t think of me,” begged his host. “I wouldn’t put you to the
-exertion for any consideration. And really I don’t believe that any of
-you mind school half as much as you make out. You have an uncommonly
-good time when you’re there.”
-
-“Yes, of course we do,” Wally said. “School truly isn’t a bad old place,
-once you’ve got to it. But a fellow gets a bit restless as age creeps
-upon him, you know, sir—and especially since this old reprobate left
-and took to station-managing, I’ve been feeling it was about time I got
-busy at something beside cricket and footer and lessons. And now, of
-course, it’s worse than ever.”
-
-“Now?”
-
-“Well, you see, so many of the fellows one knew are in camp. Lots of the
-seniors left almost as soon as war broke out and the Australian
-Contingent was started. Wouldn’t I give my ears to go!” said Wally
-hotly. “And they say I’m too young. Well, Mills and Fisher and
-Ballantyne were under me in the footer team, and they’re taken; they may
-be a bit older, but I can handle any of them with one hand. It doesn’t
-seem fair. However, I expect there will still be war when I get to the
-age limit, and then I’m off!”
-
-A slow flush had crept over Jim Linton’s grave face. He rose and went to
-the edge of the verandah, staring across the garden, and kicking with
-his heel at a grass-tuft trying to grow up in the gravel. There was a
-moment’s uncomfortable silence; and Wally, seeing his chum’s hand clench
-tighter on the stockwhip he still held, bit his lip and mentally
-informed himself that he was an idiot. Then came footsteps, and Mrs.
-Brown appeared, panting behind a loaded tea-tray.
-
-“I was getting quite worried about your pa having no tea, Miss Norah,”
-she said, cheerfully. “But he wouldn’t let me bring it till you was all
-home.”
-
-“And we were late, of course,” Norah said, penitently, jumping up and
-making swift clearance of the hats and whips encumbering the rush-work
-tea-table. “But there was such a heap to do. We found one poor old sheep
-down; and when we were close to it we discovered that it was in a sort
-of barbed-wire entanglement. It had picked up a loose piece of wire
-somewhere, and managed to wind it round and round its body, buried deep
-in the wool. And its poor cut legs!”
-
-“Could you save it, Jim?” Mr. Linton asked.
-
-“Oh, yes, it’s all right,” Jim answered, turning. “Beastly job, of
-course; the poor brute was even more stupid than the average sheep, and
-kicked itself into a worse mess when we came near it. We had to get
-Norah to hold down its head while Wally and I got the wire away—and
-that meant cutting it out of the wool. It looked as if a very amateur
-shearer had been at it with blunt nail scissors, by the time we had
-finished; I never saw anything like the way twisted old barbed-wire can
-imbed itself in wool. However, the patient was able to walk away
-afterwards; he had two battle-scarred legs, but they didn’t seem to
-worry him much.”
-
-“How are the cattle looking in the Far Plain?” his father asked.
-
-“Bad enough,” said Jim, stirring his tea. “The grass, such as it was,
-has gone off very much since I was out there last, a fortnight ago. The
-Queensland bullocks haven’t put on a bit of condition since we turned
-them in. And the creek is awfully low. Take it all round, Dad, I don’t
-think we’ve ever had such a bad season.”
-
-“No; Billabong never was as dry—in my time, at all events,” said David
-Linton. “It’s the worst year in these parts that any one remembers.
-Australia is certainly having its full allowance just now—war,
-increased taxation, political troubles; and on top of all, the drought.
-I suppose we’ll worry through them all in time, but the process is
-slow.”
-
-“Where were you to-day, Dad?” Norah asked.
-
-“I’ve been through the lower paddocks; they always stand dry weather
-better than the Far Plain, but they’re not encouraging, for all that,”
-answered her father. “The cattle are holding their own, so far, but
-nothing more. Did you see any dead ones, Jim?”
-
-“No—but two that were sick look weak enough to be thinking of dying. We
-got one poor brute bogged in the creek—not badly, thank goodness; we
-were able to get him out, but it took time. Some one will have to go out
-there every day until the boggy places are dry enough to be safe, or
-we’ll certainly lose some stock. Drought years,” said Jim, solemnly,
-“seem to mean plenty of extra work, extra expense, extra worry, and
-extra everything except money.”
-
-“They do—but we’ll pull through all right,” said David Linton,
-cheerfully. “I know it’s disheartening to see the old place looking like
-a dust-heap; still, we’ve had a lot of good years, and we mustn’t
-grumble. And even if it does look dry, there’s plenty of feed and water
-yet on Billabong. Neither is the bank likely to worry me—if the worst
-came to the worst, and we had to shift the stock, or to buy feed, it can
-be managed.”
-
-“Things might be a heap worse,” said Norah. “Why, we might be in
-Belgium.”
-
-“You’re like Mrs. Wiggs, who consoled herself in her darkest hours by
-reflecting that she might have had a hare-lip,” said Wally, laughing,
-though his eyes were grave. The great war was in its very early stages,
-and only cable messages of its progress had yet reached Australia; but
-the heroism and the sufferings of Belgium and her people were ringing
-round the world, and from the farthest corners of the Empire men were
-flocking to fight under the Allies’ standard and to thrust back the
-German invaders. Half a dozen of the Billabong stockmen had gone; it was
-a sore point with the son of the house that he had not been permitted to
-join the Expeditionary Force with the men with whom he had so often
-ridden at work.
-
-“I hear there’s no fresh news,” he said. “We met Mr. Harrison, and he
-said there was nothing.”
-
-“No; I telephoned at lunch-time,” said his father. “But there’s an
-English mail in, and the papers should make interesting reading. We will
-have them to-night.”
-
-“Well, it’s getting dusk, and I have one sick wallaby to look after,
-eggs to gather, and chicks to shut up,” said Norah. “Come on, Wally, and
-I will let you crawl in under the haystack to the old Wyandotte’s nest.”
-
-“Your kindness, ma’am, would electrify me if I were not used to it,”
-said Wally, ruefully, getting his long form by degrees out of the low
-chair in which he was coiled. “Why you don’t put a chain on that old
-Wyandotte’s horny leg is more than I can imagine—I believe it’s because
-you like to see me worming my way under that beastly stack. Man was not
-made to emulate the goanna and the serpent, young Norah, and it’s time
-you realised the fact.”
-
-“I don’t see how it affects you, at any rate,” said Norah, cruelly.
-“Boys of seventeen!” She tilted a naturally tilted nose, and patted
-Wally kindly on the head as she passed him. “In a few years you will
-probably be too fat to crawl under anything at all, and meanwhile it’s
-excellent exercise.”
-
-“It’s a good thing for you that you’re a mere girl,” said the maligned
-one, following her. “When the meek inherit the earth I’ll come in for
-all Billabong, I should think, for certainly you and Jim won’t deserve
-it. Don’t you think so, Jimmy?”
-
-“All the real estate your meekness is likely to bring you won’t
-embarrass you much,” said his chum, grinning. “One’s recollections of
-you at school don’t seem to include anything so meek as to be startling.
-In fact, now that I come to consider the matter, Dad and Norah are about
-the only people who ever have a chance of observing your submissive
-side. And not always Norah.”
-
-“I should think not always Norah!” said that lady. “Meek, indeed!”
-
-“As a matter of fact, there’s no one who makes me feel my own meekness
-so much as Brownie,” said Wally. “There’s a dignity about her that you
-would do well to cultivate, Norah, my child. I think it comes with
-weight. Still, as there seems no chance of your attaining it, how about
-looking after the wallaby?”
-
-“It’s high time,” said Norah. “I told Billy to feed him whenever he
-thought of it, knowing that would not be more than once, and probably
-not at all. Coming, Jim?”
-
-“No, thanks,” said Jim, from behind an outspread _Times_. “Not with the
-English papers in, old girl—and war flourishing.”
-
-“You can tell us about it when we come in,” Norah said. “I’ll race you
-to the paddock, Wally!” The sound of their flying feet died away,
-leaving two silent figures on the verandah.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “The progress of a swagman . . . was apt to
- be fraught with incident and marked by haste.”]
-
- _From Billabong to London_] [_Page 11_
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
-
- UPHEAVALS.
-
-DUSK falls early in an Australian mid-winter, and as evening draws in,
-the frost in the air nips sharply after the brilliant sunshine of the
-day. It was half an hour later that David Linton put down his paper and
-glanced across at his son.
-
-“Too dark to read—and too cold,” he said. “Come into the smoking-room.”
-
-“I suppose it’s time to make a move,” Jim answered, rising, hat and
-stockwhip in one hand and a bundle of papers in the other. “It’s going
-to be a cold night. I wish this frosty weather would break, and there
-might be a chance of rain; we want it badly enough.”
-
-“You’re getting worried about the place,” his father said, leading the
-way into the smoking-room, where the leaping light from a great fire of
-red-gum logs flung dancing shadows on deep leather chairs drawn
-invitingly near its warmth. The squatter sat down and glanced
-affectionately at his tall son. “Switch on the light, Jim. Drought is
-bad, but there’s no need to make yourself an old man over it; we won’t
-let the stock starve, and if we have a bad year—well, the old place is
-sound, and we’ve had many good ones. I’m not exactly a poor man, Jim,
-and one drought won’t make me so.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t worry about being poor,” Jim answered. “After all, one
-doesn’t want to do much with money up here; and one can keep away from
-Sydney and Melbourne, if cash is short. It’s certainly disheartening to
-see the place looking its worst, and the stock getting poorer each
-week—there’s nothing jollier than riding over it when the grass is
-knee-deep and the creeks and the river high, and all the stock rolling
-fat, and the horses kicking up their heels with sheer joy at being
-alive. One doesn’t think then of the actual money it means; it’s only
-the feeling that it’s a good thing to be alive oneself. This sort of
-year does not come often, thank goodness, and one knows it can’t last
-for ever.”
-
-“It is just a little rough on you that it should come in the first year
-you have helped me to manage the place,” said his father. “But then,
-from a selfish point of view, it’s better for me to have your help and
-companionship through a tough time. And it has been a help, Jim.”
-
-Jim shot a grateful look at him. David Linton was a man of few words;
-the brief sentence meant much on his lips, and the boy’s eyes softened.
-
-“I’m awfully glad if it has,” he said, awkwardly. “I haven’t had enough
-experience to be really useful, but I’m as interested as I can be—and
-there’s no life like it. I don’t want anything better than Billabong,
-and to work with you. But——”
-
-He broke off, irresolutely. That which he had to say had never seemed
-easy; it was harder than ever, now, with his father’s kind words warm at
-his heart. All day, riding through the bare, bleak paddocks, he had
-tried to frame words that would be firm, and yet not hurt. Now, looking
-into the steady grey eyes that were like his own, he could not find
-speech at all. He rose, and taking a pipe from the mantel-shelf, began
-to fill it slowly.
-
-“But you’re worried still,” said David Linton, watching him. “Well, so
-am I. And as open confession is good for the soul, and we’re all mates
-on Billabong, let’s have the worries out, old son. Tell me yours first.”
-
-Jim stood up, straight and tall, on the hearthrug, forgetting his pipe.
-The light was full on his brown face, showing it older than his years
-warranted. He met his father’s eyes steadily.
-
-“I can’t stand it, Dad,” he said. “I’ve tried, honestly, since we talked
-about it, and done my best to put it out of my head. But it’s no good.
-I’ve got to go.”
-
-“You mean—to the war?”
-
-“Yes. I know jolly well it’s rough on you—because I’m the only son. I
-suppose it doesn’t seem quite fair to you, my even wanting to go. But if
-you were my age it would. And all the fellows I knew best have enlisted;
-some of them are younger than I am; and I’m standing out. They used to
-look up to me in a sort of way when I was captain of the school. They
-can’t do it now. They’re doing their share, and I’m just a shirker.”
-
-“That’s rubbish,” his father said, hastily. “You wanted to go from the
-first day, only you gave in to my wish. It’s my doing.”
-
-“That doesn’t seem to matter,” Jim answered. “The only fact that matters
-is that I’m taking it easy, and they are getting ready. I know you had
-lots of good reasons, and I have tried not to care; and it was hard,
-when the men went, and I felt they were wondering why I didn’t go, too.
-You know it isn’t because I want to leave you and Billabong, don’t you,
-Dad?”
-
-“Oh, I know that,” said David Linton.
-
-“There are some things that get too big for a fellow,” Jim said, slowly.
-“Of course I’m only a youngster; but I’m tough, and I can shoot and
-ride, and I had four years as a cadet, so I know the drill. It seems to
-me that any fellow who can be as useful as that, and who isn’t really
-tied, has no right to stay behind. Lots of fellows younger than I am are
-joining in England—boys of sixteen are getting commissions. I don’t
-care about a commission, but I want to do my bit. I’ve got to do the
-square thing.”
-
-“It is always a little difficult, I suppose, for a man to realise that
-his children are growing up,” David Linton said, heavily. “You were such
-babies when your mother died—and that seems only yesterday. I know that
-you’ll do a man’s work wherever you are. But to me you’re still in many
-ways the small boy your mother left me.”
-
-“Well, except for this I don’t want to be any different,” Jim answered.
-“You’ve never made me feel it, except in being jolly good to me—look
-how you’ve treated me as a sort of equal in managing the place, ever
-since I left school. I’ve never said anything, but I’ve noticed it every
-day.”
-
-“Well, you have common sense—and you don’t do wild things with your
-authority,” his father answered. “You’ve made it possible for yourself.
-And you know, Jim, I didn’t actually forbid you to enlist. I don’t give
-you orders.”
-
-“That’s just it,” Jim burst out. “You never do—you’re so jolly decent
-to me. You asked me not to go; and I’d do anything rather than hurt you.
-But this is such a big thing, Dad—and it’s getting bigger. I want you
-to believe that it isn’t just the excitement and all that part of it.
-But——”
-
-There was silence for a moment. Jim rammed tobacco into his pipe
-furiously, and then laid it aside again with a gesture of impatience.
-
-“There are things a fellow can’t talk about,” he said. “I’m an awful
-fool at talking, anyhow. But one can’t open a paper without reading
-about Belgium and the things the Germans have done there; and it makes
-one feel one has simply got to go. Fighting men is all very well, and in
-the way of business. But—women and kids!”
-
-“I know,” said David Linton.
-
-From the drawing-room came the cheerful sound of a piano, and Norah’s
-fresh young voice in a verse of a song, with Wally joining in. The
-father gripped the arms of his chair and stared in front of him; seeing,
-perhaps, blackened Northern cornfields, and children who fled, crying,
-before an army.
-
-No one spoke for a long time. The silence in the room was only broken by
-the tick of the clock and the sputter and crackle of the wood fire. From
-his post on the hearthrug Jim watched his father, trying vaguely to read
-his answer in the grave face. But David Linton, staring into the fire,
-gave no sign. His thoughts were wandering back over the long years since
-his wife’s death had fallen upon him suddenly, tearing the fabric of his
-life to pieces. Then it had seemed to him that nothing could ever mend
-it or make it again worth living; but as time crept on, baby fingers
-unconsciously had taken up the broken threads and woven them into
-something new—not the old, perfect happiness, but a life full of
-interest and contentment.
-
-Such mates they had been, he and his children. All through the years,
-they had shared things: worked, and played, and laughed together until
-their relationship had grown into a companionship and a mutual
-comprehension that held little of authority on one side, but all of love
-on both. For that short, terrible season after the little mother had
-gone away, the house had been home no longer, but a place of desolation;
-and then the father had realised that his babies needed more from him,
-and that through them alone lay his way of peace. There is nearly always
-something bigger than one’s personal grief, no matter how great it
-seems; and it is that one thing bigger that spells comfort. David Linton
-had never put aside his grief altogether, for it was part of himself.
-But he had put his children first, since to do so was part of his
-doctrine of doing “the square thing.” Little and helpless, their
-happiness must not suffer. Somewhere, he knew, the little mother was
-watching them. Heaven could not keep her from watching her babies—from
-straining hungry eyes to see how he was managing the task she had left
-him. When the time came to go to her he must be able to give a good
-account.
-
-He knew, looking back, that they had been happy. Life had held no cares
-beyond the necessary trial of leaving home for school—a trial always
-compensated by the joy of getting back. They had known no loneliness;
-Billabong and its wild acres, its free, simple life, had filled each day
-with work that was pleasure and with the thousand cheerful recreations
-of the Bush. He had tried to make them healthy, wholesome, and useful,
-holding as he did that no life was complete without all three
-attributes. They had repaid him by coming up to his standard in other
-things as well; by being sound in mind and body, honest as the day, and
-of a clean, straight courage. Throughout all they had been his mates.
-The little watching mother would be satisfied.
-
-Now, for the first time in sixteen years, the parting of the ways must
-come. Authority had never been one of his methods; and if it had been,
-this was not the time to use it. He had taught the tall lad who stood
-before him his version of “the decent thing,” and his teaching had come
-home; even in his pain he welcomed it. Jim would not have been Jim had
-he been willing to sit contentedly at home.
-
-He looked up, and smiled suddenly at the boy’s unhappy face. “Don’t look
-like that, old son,” he said. “It’s all right.”
-
-A great load rolled off Jim’s heart.
-
-“Dad! You don’t mind——”
-
-“Well, a fellow doesn’t cheerfully give up his only son,” David Linton
-said. “But I’ve seen it coming, Jim, and, as you say, this thing is
-bigger than we are. I wouldn’t have you not want to go.”
-
-“Oh, thank goodness!” said Jim, and sat down and lit his pipe.
-
-“I couldn’t make up my mind to it at first,” his father went on. “One
-didn’t know how far things were going; and it’s hard to realise you
-grown up. After all, you’re only nineteen, Jim, lad, and for all that I
-know, you are capable of doing a man’s work, to my mind soldiering
-demands an extra degree of toughness, if a fellow is to be of real use.
-Still, as you say, much younger boys are going; I won’t ask you again to
-stay. Perhaps it wasn’t fair to ask you in the beginning. I was doubtful
-in my own mind; but I had to be sure there was real need.”
-
-“And are you satisfied now?”
-
-“Oh, yes. There isn’t any room for further doubt. Every day brings
-evidence of what the job is going to be—the biggest the Empire ever had
-to tackle. And the cry from Belgium comes home to every decent man. I’d
-rather go myself than send you; but as I said, I’m glad you don’t want
-to stay.”
-
-“Then that’s all right,” Jim said, with a mighty sigh of relief. “You
-don’t know what a weight it is off my mind, Dad. I’ve hated to seem a
-beast over it, and you know I always go by your judgment. But somehow I
-knew you’d have to think differently yourself. Why, great Scott! I
-couldn’t face you and Norah, in ten years, if I had stayed at home!”
-
-“No; and I couldn’t face you if I had been the one to keep you,” said
-his father. “So that is settled. But there are other things to settle as
-well.”
-
-“Rather!” said Jim. “I wonder, can I get into the first contingent, or
-if I’ll have to wait for the second.”
-
-His father paused before replying.
-
-“There is something else, altogether,” he said at length. “My own plans
-seem on the verge of an upheaval, just now.”
-
-“Yours? Nothing wrong, is there, Dad?”
-
-“Nothing in the main. But you know I’ve been bothered for some weeks
-over that business of the English property your uncle Andrew left me.
-There is a lot of complicated detail that would take me a week to
-explain—it’s all in the lawyer’s letters over there, if you’d care to
-go through them. (“Not me!” from Jim, hurriedly.) Some of it ought to be
-sold, and some apparently can’t be sold just now, and there are
-decisions to be made, at which it’s almost impossible for me to arrive,
-with letters alone to go upon. Last week’s English mail left me in a
-state of complete uncertainty as to what I ought to do about it.”
-
-“And has to-day’s mail straightened out matters at all?”
-
-“Well—it has,” said Mr. Linton, with a wry smile. “I can’t say it has
-exactly eased my mind, but at least the letters have made one thing
-abundantly clear, which is that the business cannot be settled from
-Australia. I’m needed on the spot. As far as I can see, there is no way
-out of it; I’ll have to go home.”
-
-“Go to England!”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“But,” Jim was on his feet, his face radiant. “Why, you’ll be there when
-I’m in France—we might come home together! How ripping, Dad! When would
-you go?”
-
-“Very soon, I think.”
-
-Jim sat down, the flash of joy suddenly dying away.
-
-“Dad—what about Norah?”
-
-“I wish I knew,” said his father, uneasily. “I could leave her at
-school, of course; and she has always invitations enough for twice as
-many holidays as are in the year. But she won’t like it, poor little
-girl. It would be bad enough if only one of us were going; as it is, she
-will feel that the bottom has dropped out of the universe.”
-
-“I can’t see us leaving her,” Jim said. “Why not take her with you?”
-
-“Why, I don’t even know if it’s safe,” said his father, his brow
-knitted. “The voyage is a certain risk; and who knows what will be the
-conditions in England? I can’t run the child into danger.”
-
-“If Germany wins you may not be able to keep her out of it,” Jim
-answered. “One thing is certain—Norah would rather be in danger with
-you than feel that you were running risks and leaving her in safety. I
-think it would break her heart to be left here alone.”
-
-“I’ve been turning it backwards and forwards in my mind for a
-fortnight,” said the father. “I felt that the time was coming to give
-you a free hand: and then, on top of that, came this complication.” He
-laughed a little. “Life has been too easy for me, Jim: I’m not used to
-big decisions.”
-
-“Well, I am a beast,” said Jim, frankly. “I’ve been chewing over my own
-disappointment; and about the worst part of it was that I got hold of
-the idea that you had put it right out of your mind, and that you didn’t
-care. I wish I had known you were up to your eyes in worry. But you
-never let us suspect a thing.”
-
-“Well, I kept hoping against hope that each mail would straighten things
-out,” his father answered. “Until I was certain I did not want to cast
-any shadows on Norah’s holidays. Poor little lass; she’ll have trouble
-in earnest now.”
-
-“Well, Nor will face it,” Jim said, confidently. “She isn’t made of the
-stuff that caves in—and as far as I’m concerned, Dad, she wants me to
-go. She knew I’d only eat my heart out if I didn’t. But to have you go
-away is another matter. Don’t you think you can take her?”
-
-“If I were sure England would be safe . . .” mused Mr. Linton. “You can
-be very certain I don’t want to leave her.”
-
-“Well, I don’t think there’s much risk for England,” said Jim, with the
-cheerful optimism of youth. “And anyhow, there’s always America—you and
-she could slip across there if there were any real fear of invasion. My
-word, Dad, it would be grand to think you and Nor were so near. Just
-think if I got wounded, how jolly it would be to come over to you!”
-
-“I’ve thought,” said his father, drily. The jollity of the idea seemed
-to him slightly exaggerated.
-
-“Well, it would be heaps better than hospital. And then we’d all be
-together after the finish, and do London. It would be such a lark. Fancy
-old Norah in Piccadilly!”
-
-“Me?” asked a startled voice.
-
-Norah stood in the doorway, with Wally behind her. She had exchanged her
-riding-habit for a soft white frock, and her brown curls, released from
-their tight plait, fell softly round her face. No one would have dreamed
-of calling her pretty; but there was an indefinable charm in the merry
-face, lit by straight grey eyes. She was tall for her age; people found
-it difficult to believe that she was not yet sixteen, for she had left
-the awkward age behind her, and there was unstudied grace in the
-slender, alert form, with its well-shaped hands and feet.
-Occasionally—when she was not too busy—Norah had fleeting moments of
-regret, mainly on account of her men-folk, that she was not pretty. But
-it is doubtful if her father and brother would have cared to change a
-feature of the vivid face.
-
-“Did you say Piccadilly? And me?” she asked, advancing into a startled
-silence. “I’ve always imagined Piccadilly must be rather worse than
-Collins Street, and I don’t fit in there a bit. Stella Harrison says
-there are rather jolly motor-busses there, and you can get on top. That
-wouldn’t be so bad.” She perched on the arm of her father’s chair. “Why
-are you talking about streets, Daddy? You know you don’t like them any
-more than I do.”
-
-“No,” said David Linton, finding that some answer was expected of him.
-Something in his tone brought Norah’s eyes upon him quickly.
-
-“There’s something wrong, isn’t there?” she asked.
-
-No one spoke for a moment. Then Wally got up quietly and moved towards
-the door.
-
-“Don’t go, Wally, my boy,” Mr. Linton said. “You’re so much one of the
-family that you may as well join the family councils. No, there’s
-nothing exactly wrong, Norah. But there are happenings.”
-
-“Jim’s going?” said Norah, quickly. Her keen eyes saw that the new and
-unfamiliar shadow had lifted from her brother’s face. Jim nodded,
-smiling at her.
-
-“Yes, I’m going. Dad says it’s all right.”
-
-Norah drew a long breath, and Wally gave an irrepressible whistle of
-delight.
-
-“Lucky dog—I’m so glad!” he cried. “Oh, why can’t I be eighteen!”
-
-“There will be plenty of fighting after you are eighteen,” Mr. Linton
-said. “This isn’t going to be any lightning business. But that’s not
-all, Norah. Your old father has to pack up, too. I must go to England.”
-
-“Daddy! You!”
-
-The voice was a cry. Then Norah shut her lips tightly, and said nothing
-more, looking at her father.
-
-“It’s business,” he said hurriedly. “I don’t want to go, my girl. It may
-not take me long.”
-
-There was a long pause.
-
-“I can’t ask to go,” said Norah at last, rather breathlessly. “It’s too
-big a thing—not like a trip to Melbourne or Sydney. I know it would
-cost a fearful lot of money—and there are other things. It’s—it’s all
-right, Daddy, if you say so—only I want to know. Have I got to stay
-behind?”
-
-There was no answer. Jim was watching the set, childish face pitifully,
-longing to help, and powerless. Norah got up from the arm of her
-father’s chair at length, and turned her face away.
-
-“It’s—it’s quite all right, Daddy,” she said, unsteadily. “I
-understand. Don’t go worrying.”
-
-“Worrying!” said David Linton, explosively. “No, I’m not going to
-worry—if I can help it: and I’m not going to leave you, either. We’ll
-stick together, little mate.”
-
-“Daddy!” said Norah, very low. She went to him like a little child, and
-he put her on his knee, one arm round her, while Jim beamed on them
-both.
-
-“I knew you couldn’t do it,” he said laughing. “It was so altogether
-ridiculous to think of old Nor here alone, and you and me at the other
-side of the world. Things like that simply can’t occur!”
-
-“Well—there may be danger” began his father.
-
-“There would be strong danger of my losing my few wits if you did it,”
-Norah said. “I thought I was going to lose them a minute ago, as it was.
-Oh, Daddy won’t it be lovely! Think of the ship—and the queer
-ports—and England! It’s the most wonderful thing that ever happened.
-And we’ll be near Jim, and he’ll get leave and come over to see us!”
-
-“That’s another thing,” Mr. Linton said. “It’s settled that you’re to
-enlist, Jim; that matter is decided. But is there any particular reason
-why you should enlist in Australia?”
-
-“In Australia?” repeated Jim, blankly. “Why—where else?”
-
-“Well, if Norah and I are going home, why should we not all go together?
-You would have no difficulty in joining the Army in England, if boys of
-sixteen are getting commissions there.”
-
-“_What?_” burst from Wally.
-
-“Oh, yes—you’d be quite a veteran, judging by to-day’s news, Wally,”
-said Mr. Linton, laughing. “There would be no difficulty at all, I
-should think, Jim; I know enough people in London to pull a few strings,
-though even that would hardly be necessary. But if you wanted a
-commission I should think it could be managed. It would leave us all
-together a bit longer.”
-
-“That would be ripping,” Jim said, doubtfully. “I don’t know, though;
-I’m an Australian, and I rather think Australians ought to stick
-together. And I would know such a lot of the fellows in our own
-contingent.”
-
-“That counts, of course,” said his father. “But there’s another point;
-there are rumours that our men may not be sent direct to the Front. You
-might get hung up in Egypt, or the Persian Gulf, or Malta; I’ve heard
-suggestions that the Australians should even be used for garrison duty
-in India.”
-
-“By Jove!” said Jim. “I wouldn’t like that.”
-
-“No; and it would mean that you might never get to England at all, to
-join Norah and me after the show. If you’re going, I don’t want you to
-be shelved in some out-of-the-way corner of the earth; I’d like you to
-have your chance.”
-
-“Oh, Jimmy, come with us!” said Norah. “Just think how jolly it would
-be—not like the voyage in a horrid old troopship, where you mightn’t be
-allowed to see a single port. And perhaps we’d be together quite a lot
-in England, before you were sent to the Front.”
-
-Wally jumped up with such emphasis that his chair fell over backwards.
-He did not notice it.
-
-“Let’s all go!” he cried.
-
-Three pairs of eyes turned upon him for information.
-
-“If it’s really true that boys younger than I am are being taken in
-England, I’d have a chance, wouldn’t I, Mr. Linton?”
-
-“I suppose you would—yes, of course, my boy. You’re only a year younger
-than Jim, aren’t you?”
-
-“Yes—and he knows as much drill as I do, to say nothing of shooting and
-riding,” Jim exclaimed. “Would you come, Wal?”
-
-“I should just think I would!” Wally uttered. “But you’d have to join in
-England, Jim—not here.”
-
-“But your guardian—and your brothers, Wally. Would they be willing?”
-Mr. Linton asked. “It’s rather an undertaking to arrange off-hand. And
-it would mean your leaving school.”
-
-“I know it would be all right, sir,” Wally answered. “My brothers were
-only sorry I couldn’t get into the first contingent; and old Mr.
-Dimsdale never worries his head about me, except to look after the
-property and send me my allowance. He knows I’m to join as soon as I
-can. The money part of it would be all right; I don’t know much about
-it, but the money that’s to come to me has been accumulating since I was
-a kid, and there must be plenty. If you’d let me go under your wing,
-nobody would think of objecting.” He stopped, his brown, eager face
-flushing. “By Jove, you must think me awfully cool, sir. I sort of took
-it for granted I could go with you!”
-
-“Well, you old goat!” said Jim, disgustedly. David Linton laughed.
-
-“My dear boy, I think you’re pretty well established as one of the
-family,” he said. “You have been Jim’s chum for five years, and somehow
-we’ve come to regard Billabong as your home. I have liked to think you
-felt that way about it, yourself.”
-
-“It’s the only real home I ever remember,” said Wally, still greatly
-confused. “And you’ve all been such bricks to me. I’ve quite forgotten
-I’m really a sort of lost dog.”
-
-“It’s rude to say you’re a lost dog, when you belong to Billabong,” said
-Norah solemnly, though her eyes were dancing. “Isn’t he talking a lot of
-nonsense, Dad?—and this is much too exciting an evening to waste any
-time. I wish someone would sort me out, for I’m all mixed-up in my mind.
-We’re going to England, you and I, Dad.”
-
-“And me,” said Wally, cheerfully disregarding grammar.
-
-“And me, I suppose,” Jim followed. “If you think I’ve as good a chance
-there, Dad?”
-
-“Better, I should think—judging from the rush of men here,” said his
-father.
-
-“Then we’re all going,” finished Norah blissfully. “In a ’normously
-large ship, Dad?”
-
-“Most certainly,” said David Linton, hastily. “I came out forty years
-ago in a five-hundred tonner, and I’ve no desire to repeat the
-experience. We’re built on lines that demand space, we Lintons.”
-
-“And when we get to London?”
-
-“We’ll settle down somewhere—where we can be near the boys until they
-are sent out to the Front, and I can attend to business.”
-
-“And then——?”
-
-“We’ll wander about a bit until they come back to us. If it’s likely to
-be long, you’ll have to resume your neglected education, young woman,”
-said her father severely.
-
-“M’f!” said Norah, wrinkling her nose. “How unpleasant!—that’s the
-first dismal thing you’ve said, Daddy. But I suppose one has to take the
-powder with the jam. And after the war——?”
-
-“Oh, after the war——” said David Linton; and fell silent, looking at
-his son.
-
-“After the war,” said Wally, happily, “we’ll all meet in London, and see
-the Kaiser led in triumph down Piccadilly. My own preference leads me to
-hope that it will be on a donkey with his face towards the tail of the
-ass, but I’m sadly afraid the world has grown too civilised.”
-
-“Well, you can’t call him and his crowd civilised, anyhow,” Jim said.
-
-“No. But we’ll have to be, I suppose, to show how nicely we were brought
-up. Anyhow, after that we’ll explore all the things we’ve always wanted
-to see—London, and Stonehenge, and the Dublin Horse Show, and
-Killarney, and David Balfour’s country, and heathery moors, and the
-Derby, and punts on the Thames, and the Dartmoor ponies, and——”
-Wally’s extraordinary mixture left him breathless, but the others took
-up the tale.
-
-“And English lanes——”
-
-“And ruins—truly ruins——!”
-
-“And old castles——”
-
-“And woods and hedges——”
-
-“And real hunting country——”
-
-“And real hunts——!”
-
-“And trout-streams——”
-
-“And Irish loughs——”
-
-“And then,” said Norah, as the dinner-gong clashed out its
-summons,—“then——”
-
-“If we’ve any money left!” put in her father.
-
-“Or even if we haven’t,” said Norah, and smiled at him—“we’ll go back
-to Billabong!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
-
- OF A CHESTNUT BABY.
-
-“DO you know where Mr. Jim is, Murty?”
-
-David Linton had just ridden into the stable-yard. It was midday, and
-though the night had been frosty, the sun was so warm that the master of
-Billabong was in his shirt-sleeves, his coat laid across the saddle
-before him. He swung himself to the ground as the head stockman came
-across to take his horse.
-
-“At the stockyard, he is,” said Murty O’Toole. “Miss Norah and Mr. Wally
-too, sir; they’re handling the new chestnut colt, and it’s the fun of
-the world he’s been giving them. Mr. Jim had to lasso him before he
-could so much as lay a hand on him, but he’s goin’ nice and aisy now.
-Still in all, Mr. Jim’ll have his own troubles when he comes to ride
-that one; sure, he’d kick the eye out of a mosquito.”
-
-“Has he saddled him yet?”
-
-“Oh, yes; he’s been under the saddle these three hours,” Murty answered.
-“Mr. Jim hasn’t been on him, of course; he believes in walkin’ a young
-one round quiet and pleasant, to let him get used to the feel of the
-leather. ’Twas as good as a circus to see him when they girthed him up;
-he went to market good and plenty, and did his level best to buck
-himself clean out of the saddle. He’s the cheerfullest colt ever I
-seen.” Mr. O’Toole grinned at the recollection. “But he’s got his aiqual
-in Mr. Jim.”
-
-“I’ll go down and have a look at them,” the squatter said. “Put Monarch
-in a loose-box and give him a feed, Murty; I may want him again.” He
-slipped on his coat and strode out of the yard as the stockman led the
-great black horse into the cool dimness of the stables.
-
-The stockyards of an Australian station form a very important part of
-its working establishment. A big “run” may have several sets of yards to
-save the trouble of driving stock far on any direction; but the main
-yards are always near the homestead—sometimes, indeed, a great deal too
-near. The yards at Billabong, however, did not err in this respect,
-being planned in a secluded corner whence they opened upon two paddocks.
-A belt of dwarfed gum-trees surrounded and shaded them; and beyond this
-shelter a little lucerne-field led to the kitchen-garden and orchard, so
-that the house itself was screened completely, and no dust could drift
-to it, even when, on a big mustering day, the bullocks had trodden every
-inch of the earth of the yards into fine powder.
-
-To an unaccustomed eye they presented a somewhat bewildering array of
-fencing. They were completely surrounded by a very high fence of red-gum
-slabs, laid horizontally and very close together, and finished at the
-top by a heavy, rounded cap of wood, bolted to the top of the massive
-posts, and forming an unbroken ring. This fence was calculated to
-withstand the rush of the maddest bullock, infuriated by the indignities
-of mustering; and at the same time, being easily climbed, formed a
-refuge in case of an animal charging a man on foot. The cap, broad and
-smooth, formed a pleasant place from which to watch the exciting
-manœuvres below; Norah had spent many a cheerful hour perched upon it.
-
-Within the great ring-fence the space was divided into many enclosures,
-large and small; from the big general yard, capable of holding a mob of
-bullocks, to small calf-yards, where newly-branded babies were wont to
-bleat distressfully for their anxious mothers—little dreaming that
-within a very few days they would have forgotten all about them, in the
-joy of a wide run, new grass and youthful light-heartedness. A long
-race, just wide enough for a single bullock, led from the main enclosure
-to the drafting-yards. A gate at its further end worked on a pivot;
-Norah loved to watch her father stand at it as the big-horned cattle
-came down the narrow lane in single file, turning the gate with a
-movement of his supple wrist so that some bullocks were ushered into one
-yard and some into another, according to their class. A man needed a
-quick eye and hand, and keen judgment, to be able to work the
-drafting-gate when the bullocks were stringing quickly down the race,
-the nose of one beast almost touching the tail of the one in front of
-him. Sometimes two or three of a kind came down in succession, all bound
-for the same yard, and then the task seemed easy; but often they
-alternated, and the gate had to go backwards and forwards so quickly
-that either the tail of the yarded bullock or the nose of his successor
-was apt to suffer. Branding was done through the rails fencing the race;
-a brick oven was built beside it, for heating the irons. But this was
-one of the details at which Norah did not preside. On branding days she
-preferred to mount her special pony, Bosun, and go for long solitary
-rides along the bends of the river, or across plains where an occasional
-hare gave excuse for a gallop.
-
-Altogether, the Billabong yards were the pride of its stockmen, and the
-cause of deep envy in men from neighbouring stations. Too often, yards
-are make-shift erections, hastily run up out of any timber that may be
-handiest, and generally awaiting a day of re-planning and re-building
-that never comes. But David Linton believed in perfecting the working
-details of his run; and his yards were well and solidly built, planned
-on a generous scale that gave accommodation for every class of cattle,
-and equipped with gates which, despite their massive strength, were so
-excellently hung that a touch closed them, and only another touch was
-needed to send home a solid catch. Once the owner of Billabong had seen
-a man killed, through a gate too stiff to shut quickly before a maddened
-bullock’s charge; and as he helped to rescue the poor, broken body he
-had vowed that no man of his own should ever run a needless risk through
-neglect on his part.
-
-Black Billy was cutting lucerne for fodder as the squatter passed
-through the little paddock. He turned on him a dusky face full of
-ludicrous unhappiness. The black fellow of Australia takes kindly to no
-work that does not include horses; it was gall and wormwood to Billy to
-be chained to an uncongenial task almost within a stone’s throw of the
-breaking-yard, through the high fence of which he could catch glimpses
-of a chestnut coat and hear voices raised in quick interest. He hewed
-viciously at the tough lucerne stems.
-
-“That pfeller him buck plenty, mine thinkit,” he vouchsafed to his
-employer.
-
-“Master Jim bin ride him, Billy?”
-
-“Baal—not yet. Lucerne plenty enough cut, eh, boss?”
-
-David Linton laughed outright at the wistful face.
-
-“If I say it’s enough, what’s the next job, Billy.”
-
-“Mine thinkit Master Jim him pretty likely want a hand with that pfeller
-chestnut,” said Billy eagerly.
-
-“Oh, do you?—I thought so,” said his master. “All right, Billy—cut
-along; but don’t get in Master Jim’s way. He’ll call you if he wants
-you.”
-
-“Plenty!” said Billy, thankfully, and fled towards the yards like a
-black comet. He was already perched on the cap, a grinning vision of
-joy, when Mr. Linton arrived on the scene, and swung himself up beside
-Norah.
-
-The big mustering yard was empty save for Jim and his pupil—a beautiful
-chestnut colt, rather dark in colour, and with no mark save a white
-star. He was fully saddled and bridled, with the stirrups removed from
-the saddle and the reins tied loosely back, while in addition to the
-bit, bore a pair of long driving reins by which Jim was guiding him
-round and round the yard. It was evident that the colt was not happy.
-His rough coat was streaked with dark sweat and flecked with foam, and,
-though he went quietly enough his eye was wild, and showed more than a
-glimpse of white.
-
-“Hallo, Dad!” sang out Jim cheerfully. The colt executed a nervous bound
-and broke jerkily into a canter.
-
-“Steady there, you old stupid,” said Jim, affectionately, bringing his
-pupil back to a walk with a gentle strain on the bit. “He has a curious
-dislike to the human voice if it’s raised, Dad; and as we can’t expect
-everyone to whisper for his benefit, the sooner he gets over it, the
-better. What do you think of him?”
-
-“He’ll make a good horse,” said his father, surveying the colt
-critically. “A bit leggy now, but he’ll mend of that. How is he going,
-Jim?”
-
-“Oh, he’s quiet enough; a bit nervous, but I don’t think there’s any
-vice in him,” Jim answered. “At present he is exactly like a frightened
-kid, but he’s calming down. I drove him, without a saddle on, most of
-yesterday, and he graduated to the saddle this morning—and at first I
-think he thought it was the end of the world. He’ll make a topping good
-hack, Dad.”
-
-“Better than Garryowen?” came from Norah.
-
-“Better than your grandmother!” retorted Jim, to whom his own steed
-represented all that was perfection in horseflesh. “Better than your old
-crock, Bosun, if you like!” Which insult, Norah, who knew his private
-opinion of her pony, received with a tilted nose and otherwise unruffled
-calm.
-
-“When do you think of riding him?” asked Mr. Linton.
-
-“Oh, I’ll get on him this afternoon,” Jim answered. “It’s getting near
-lunch-time; and it won’t do him any harm to have another hour or so
-getting used to the feel of the leather, and the creak thereof—which is
-the part he dislikes. I’m not anxious to scare him by mounting him too
-soon. At present he is gradually realising that I’m a friendly beast;
-for a good while he was certain I meant to kill him.”
-
-Mr. Linton nodded.
-
-“Quite right—I don’t believe in hurrying a nervous young horse,” he
-said. “Scare him at first and he is apt to remain scared. I’m glad
-you’re taking him quietly. He will be up to my weight when he fills out,
-Jim, don’t you think?”
-
-“Oh, easily,” Jim answered. “When we get back from England you’ll find
-him just about right; we’ll get Murty to keep him for his own use while
-we’re away. I don’t want him hacked about by any man who chooses; he is
-quite the best of this year’s lot.” He shook the reins very gently, and
-addressed the colt in friendly fashion. “Get on, old man.”
-
-The chestnut broke into an uneasy jog, which his driver had some little
-difficulty in reducing to a sober walk. He went with sidling steps,
-hugging the fence as much as possible, as if longing for the space and
-freedom of the paddocks outside. The corners of the yard had been
-rounded off, so that he could not indulge his evident inclination to put
-himself as far as possible into one and dream of his lost youth. It was
-just a little hard on him—last week all he had known of life was the
-wild bush paddocks on the outer fringe of Billabong run, where there was
-good galloping ground for him and his mates on the rough plains, and
-deep belts of timber to shelter them from the hot noonday sun or the
-frosty nights of winter. Then had come a time of mad excitement. Men and
-dogs had invaded their peaceful solitudes, and the hills had echoed all
-day to shouts and barking and the clear cracks of stockwhips, that ran
-round the hills like a fusillade of rifle shots. It was all very
-alarming and disturbing. At first the young horses had been inclined to
-treat it as a joke, but they soon found that for them it had a more
-serious meaning, that gradually they were being surrounded and edged out
-of the timber to the open plain, that they had not even time to eat, and
-that the deepest recesses of the hills and creeks formed no secure
-hiding-place from their pursuers.
-
-Then they grew afraid for the first time. They galloped hither and
-thither wildly, to the great annoyance of the men, who had no wish to
-see valuable young horses hurt or blemished by running into a tree or
-under a low-growing limb, in these wild rushes through the scrub. They
-tried to drive them as quietly as possible; but the horses thought they
-knew far too much for that, and before they were finally mustered there
-had been racing and chasing that had brought much secret and unlawful
-joy to Jim and Norah and Wally, but no little anxiety to the owner of
-the run. No great damage, however, had been done; gradually all the wild
-youngsters had been driven out of the timbered country, hustled through
-the gate that effectually barred them from such shelter in the future,
-and brought to the homestead through a succession of peaceful paddocks,
-peopled with sleek cattle almost too lazy to move aside for the drove of
-uneasy horses. The home paddock had received them at last; and then
-every day saw them driven up to the yards, where they were left for a
-few hours so that they might grow accustomed to being close to
-civilisation, and to the sound of the human voice. One by one they
-dropped out; a youngster would be edged away from his mates into a
-little yard, presently to find himself alone when the main mob was let
-out to go galloping down the hill to freedom. Then real education began;
-education that meant bit and bridle and saddle, and the knowledge that
-the strange new creature called Man was master and meant to remain so.
-
-Jim had kept the chestnut colt for his own tuition. Mick Shanahan, chief
-horsebreaker of Billabong for many a year, had gone to the war; and
-though every man on the station had a settled conviction of his own
-ability to break horses, Jim and his father did not, in every instance,
-share the belief. The chestnut was too good to be given to any
-chance-comer to handle. Most of the youngsters were destined for use as
-stock-horses, and might as well be handed over to the men who were to
-ride them in their work; but not this well-bred baby “with the spirit of
-fire and of dew,” and with all his nerves jangling from the indignity of
-being made a prisoner. Jim had been carefully trained in Mick Shanahan’s
-methods; besides which, he had a natural comprehension of horses, and a
-rooted dislike of rough-and-ready ways of breaking-in. There was
-something in the strong gentleness of the big fellow that soothed a
-young horse unconsciously.
-
-He pulled up the chestnut after a few turns round the yard, and
-proceeded, as he said, to talk to him, speaking in a low voice while he
-handled him quietly, stroking him all over. The colt, nervous for a
-moment, soon settled down under the gentle voice and hand; and so found
-the bit which he had champed indignantly all the morning, slipped out of
-his mouth, and an easy-fitting halter on his head. Then came Norah, at
-whom he was inclined to start back, until he remembered that he had met
-her twice before, that she also was a person who moved quietly and had
-an understanding touch, and that she always carried a milk-thistle—an
-article delicious at all times, but especially soothing to a tired
-mouth, hot and sore after even the broad, easy bit Jim always used.
-Norah said pleasant things to him and stroked his nose while he munched
-the cool, juicy thistle; and then he was led to a bucket, in itself a
-very alarming object, until he found that it held water which tasted
-just as good as creek water. After that he was tied up to the fence and
-left to his own reflections, while the humans who were causing him so
-much uneasiness of mind went away, apparently that they might seek
-milk-thistles on their own account.
-
-It was nearly a week since the momentous decision to go to England; and
-while the life of the station had apparently pursued its ordinary
-course, in reality preparations had gone forward swiftly. To Brownie the
-news had been broken gently, with the result that for twenty-four hours
-the poor old woman had been thrown into a condition of stupefied dismay;
-then, rallying herself, with caustic remarks directed inwardly on “women
-who hadn’t no more sense than a black-beetle,” she set herself to
-overhaul the various wardrobes of the family with a view to the
-exigencies of foreign travel. Brownie’s ideas as to what was necessary
-for a long voyage were remarkably vast, and included detailed
-preparations for every phase of climate, from Antarctic to Equatorial.
-Mr. Linton had finally interfered at a stage when it appeared probable
-that it would be needful to charter a whole ship to convey the family
-baggage, and had referred the question of Norah’s outfit to an aunt in
-Melbourne who was well skilled in providing for damsels of fifteen.
-
-Wally had written slightly delirious letters to his guardian and his
-brothers in far-off Queensland, and was impatiently awaiting replies, in
-much agony of mind lest these should not come in time to prevent his
-going back to school. The end of the holidays was fast approaching;
-unless within a very few days permission came for him to accompany Mr.
-Linton’s party to England he must pack up and return meekly to
-class-room and playground—a hard prospect for a boy whose head fairly
-seethed with war, while his pockets bulged with drill-books. His
-ordinary sunny temperament had almost vanished as he wavered from day to
-day between hope and despair. To go back would be bad enough in any
-case; but to go back when his one chum was about to gain their hearts’
-desire, taking away with him all that meant real home to the orphan lad,
-was a sentence worse than banishment. Jim and Norah, themselves torn
-with anxiety as to his fate, endeavoured to cheer him by every means in
-their power; but Wally watched for the mails anxiously, and refused
-comfort.
-
-The question of a suitable ship was causing Mr. Linton no small
-perplexity. He disliked the heat of the Suez Canal route, and wished to
-go by South Africa; but although it was possible to decide upon a ship,
-and even to engage cabins, embarking was quite another matter, since any
-vessel was liable to Government seizure as a transport for troops. No
-firm of agents could guarantee the sailing of a ship. The Government was
-hard-pressed to find transports for the thousands of men and horses that
-Australia was hastily preparing to despatch to the mother-country’s aid;
-and many a big “floating hotel” was commandeered within a very short
-time of her sailing and transformed by a horde of carpenters into a
-troopship—losing her name and identity and becoming a mere number. No
-one grumbled; it was war, and war meant business. But undoubtedly it
-increased the difficulty of going to England, and daily Mr. Linton
-knitted his brows over worried letters from shipping agents extremely
-anxious to have the conveyance of so large a party to England, but quite
-unable to offer a sailing date.
-
-Jim, meanwhile, was preparing methodically for a long absence. Under
-Murty O’Toole the work of the station could be trusted to go steadily
-forward, agents being entrusted with the buying and selling of stock.
-But there were a hundred threads that Jim kept ordinarily in his own
-hands and which, it was necessary to adjust carefully before he gave up
-his work. It had been the boy’s ambition to be indispensable to his
-father. From the day he had left school he had worked for that end,
-succeeding so far that David Linton, understanding and appreciating his
-efforts, had gradually put more and more responsibility into his hands,
-discussing the management of the run with him, and treating him in all
-ways more as a man of his own age than as a boy newly released from
-school. Jim was not new to the work, and he loved it; instinctively he
-fell into step with his father, profiting by his experience, and
-learning every day. “Mr. Jim’s put his mark on Billabong,” Murty said,
-ruefully to Mrs. Brown. “’Twill not be an aisy matter to rub out that
-same.”
-
-For Norah the days went by like a dream. The even current of her life,
-that had known no break but school, was suddenly rudely disturbed. A
-prospect was opening before her, so vast that she was almost afraid of
-it. To every Australian whose parents are British-born, the old land
-overseas is always “home.” From childhood the desire grows to see it—to
-go back over the old tracks our parents trod, to visit the spots they
-knew, and to enjoy the share that belongs to us, as atoms of Empire, of
-its beauty and its tradition. It is ours, even though we be born at the
-other side of the world; “home”—and one day we shall go to see it. But
-when the day comes, even if we are older than Norah, we are very often a
-little afraid.
-
-Norah was torn in more than one way. To go to England! that was
-beautiful, and wonderful, and mysterious; to go with Dad and Jim, and
-possibly Wally, who was almost as good as Jim, made the prospect in some
-way an unmixed delight. There would be the voyage, itself a storehouse
-of marvels to the little girl from the Bush; strange ports, queer people
-such as she had never seen, famous sights of which she had heard all her
-life, scarcely realising that she would ever see them. A voyage, too,
-with a spice of danger; there were German cruisers in the way, only too
-anxious to sink a fat Australian liner. It was easier to realise the
-excitement than the risk, at all events for people under twenty; and
-Norah and Jim were not quite certain that the appearance of a hostile
-warship might not add the last pleasing touch of exhilaration.
-
-There was, however, another side to the picture. There was War, grim and
-terrible, and scarcely to be comprehended; it threatened to grip Jim and
-take him away, to unknown and dreadful dangers. But War was very far
-off, and that Jim should not come through it safely was simply not a
-thing to be imagined; besides which, many people thought it would be all
-over in a very few months—an idea which caused Jim and Wally acute
-uneasiness. They had no desire for “the show” to be finished before they
-arrived to take a hand.
-
-Then there was Billabong; and at the thought of leaving that dearest
-place in the world, Norah’s heart used to sink within her. Each time she
-caught sight of Brownie’s face unawares a fresh pang smote her. Brownie
-was playing the game manfully, and wore in public an air of laboured
-cheerfulness that would not have deceived a baby; but when she fancied
-no eye was upon her, the mask slipped off, and her old face grew haggard
-with the knowledge of all that the coming parting meant to her. Norah
-had never known her mother. Brownie had taken her, a helpless mite, from
-the arms that were too weak to hold her any more; and since that day she
-had striven that the baby the little mistress had left to her care
-should never realise all she had lost.
-
-Norah did not realise it at all. Her life had not led her much among
-girls with mothers, though she knew instinctively that they were lucky
-girls, it was beyond her power to think herself unlucky. For she had
-always had Billabong, and Jim, and Dad: Dad, who was splendid above all
-people, being father, and mother, and mate in one. She did not miss
-anything, because she did not fully understand. Brownie had been always
-at hand to supply a kind of mothering that had seemed to Norah very
-effective; and Norah paid her back with a wealth of hearty young
-affection that made the old woman’s chief joy on earth. Now her nursling
-was going out of her life, so far that her imagination could not follow
-her, and unknown dangers would be in her path. They were hard days for
-Brownie; and Norah, knowing just how hard they were, was heavy-hearted
-herself at the sight of the brave old face.
-
-Nor was it easy to leave Billabong itself, seeing that no place could
-possibly be so good in Norah’s eyes. Home had always spelt perfection to
-her; and its simple, free life—the outdoor life of the Bush, with dogs
-and horses a part of one’s daily existence, the work of the station
-better than any game ever invented, and always the sense that one was
-helping—surely there could be nothing better. If there were, it was
-beyond the imagination of the daughter of the Bush. So, notwithstanding
-the fascination of their future plans, Norah clung to each day that was
-left to her of Billabong, and tried to act as though England were as dim
-and misty a prospect as it had always been.
-
-Wally ate his lunch with a sober air that sat queerly on his usually
-merry face. The mail, to which he had been eagerly looking forward, had
-not arrived; but there was a telephone message from the newspaper office
-in Cunjee, the nearest township, giving more particulars of the fierce
-fighting of the early days of the war, and of Great Britain’s insistent
-call for recruits. The first Australian contingent of twenty thousand
-men was reported ready to go; there were rumours more or less vague, of
-warships, British, Japanese, and French, waiting at various ports in
-each state, to convoy the troopships; but these were only rumours, for
-the newspapers were not allowed to publish any information that might
-possibly be utilised by German spies—one of whom was said to have been
-caught at his pretty seaside home, near Port Phillip Heads, with an
-excellently equipped wireless in action. Every one was on the watch, and
-suspicious characters found themselves of unpleasant interest to the
-police. Small boys in the cities constituted themselves detectives and
-“shadowed” unfortunate and inoffensive people whose names chanced to
-sound “foreign,” on the principle that anything foreign might be German,
-and anything German was to be severely dealt with. Altogether, there was
-much excitement; and the station book-keeper, who had taken the
-telephone message, declared his intention of enlisting.
-
-“Another item to be replaced before I can go,” said Mr. Linton, a trifle
-ruefully. “And Green knows his work, which is more than one can say for
-most book-keepers. Still, I’m glad he’s going. He’s young and strong,
-and has no ties; and no man with those qualifications has any right to
-be rounding his shoulders over station ledgers nowadays.”
-
-“He can’t ride for nuts,” said Wally, despondently, “and as for
-shooting—well, did you ever see him try? It’s awfully risky for anyone
-who goes out with him, but very safe for the game.”
-
-“Oh, he’ll learn,” Mr. Linton said. “He needn’t ride—and shooting can
-be taught. Why this sudden outburst against poor Green, Wally?”
-
-Wally looked abashed.
-
-“I didn’t mean to run Green down,” he explained. “He’ll be all right,
-sir, of course. I only meant it was hard luck to think they’ll take him,
-and they won’t take me—and I’m partly trained, at any rate. Silly
-asses! I’ve been wondering if I got a false moustache—a very little
-one, of course—would I pass for twenty, do you think?”
-
-The Linton family shouted with joy.
-
-“Oh, do, Wally!” Norah begged. “It would drop off in the riding tests,
-and everyone would be so interested.”
-
-“Great idea,” Jim said. “But why a little one, old man? You might as
-well have one with a good curl—and a pair of side whiskers of the
-drooping variety. They’d lend a heap of dignity to your expression.”
-
-“Get out!” said the victim, sheepishly. “All very well for you to
-jibe—you’re certain of going just because you’re older. And goodness
-knows you haven’t half as much sense!”—modestly. “Wait till you get
-into a regiment at home and they give you a platoon to handle, and see
-you tie it into knots!”
-
-“Well, you’ll be somewhere handy to take some of the colonel’s wrath,”
-said Jim, comfortably.
-
-“Wish I were sure of it,” Wally answered, his face falling. “I can’t
-make out why they don’t write; Edward may be up country, but there’s
-been quite time to get an answer from that blessed old slowcoach, Mr.
-Dimsdale. He said he was sorry I couldn’t get into the contingent, but
-he’s quite likely to change his mind now that I’ve really a chance.
-Guardians are like that!” And Wally, whose chief experience of his
-guardian had been occasional glimpses of a benevolent old gentleman who
-paid his bills promptly and tipped him twice a year, sighed as though
-his youth had been one long persecution.
-
-“Oh, he’ll be quite meek, you’ll see,” said Jim. “Give them
-time—Queensland is a long way from Billabong. We’re not going without
-you, if we have to kidnap you, old man.” He rose from the table. “I must
-get back to my patient; I expect he thinks he’s had enough
-post-and-rails by now.”
-
-The chestnut colt was looking sleepy, as though a post-and-rail diet had
-a sedative effect. He backed and snorted as Jim came up to him, and Jim
-stopped and talked to him soothingly until he was quiet enough not to
-resent a caressing hand on his neck, and presently the bridle slipped on
-so gently that he scarcely noticed it.
-
-“Good lad,” said Jim. “Come and hold his head, Wally, while I tighten up
-the girths.”
-
-Wally came, and the broad, soft leather girth was adjusted deftly, the
-colt making no further protest than to walk round several times. Jim ran
-his eye over him.
-
-“That’s all right,” he said. “Take care, old man, in case he goes to
-market.”
-
-Suddenly, quickly, but quietly, he was in the saddle, and his feet home
-in the stirrups. The colt stood stock-still, apparently petrified with
-astonishment. Wally took himself unobtrusively out of the way, joining
-Mr. Linton and Norah on the cap of the fence.
-
-Jim leaned forward, patting the colt.
-
-“Go on, stupid.” He touched the chestnut neck gently with the rein, and
-the colt took a few uncertain steps forward, coming to a standstill in
-bewilderment. The watchers on the fence were very quiet. Behind Jim two
-new faces appeared, as Murty O’Toole and Black Billy climbed to good
-positions.
-
-“Baal that pfeller him goin’ to buck, mine thinkit,” said Billy, in low
-tones of disappointment. “Him get walk about too much.”
-
-“You let Mr. Jim alone, you black image of a haythen,” said Mr. O’Toole,
-affably. “Think you can teach him how to break in a horse?”
-
-“Not much,” said Billy, accepting the epithet and the criticism
-cheerfully. “But mine like ’em buck—plenty! Wish Master Jim him wear
-spurs.”
-
-“Spurs—on that chestnut baby!” ejaculated Murty, in subdued accents of
-horror. “Is it to butcher him ye’d like, then? Sure ye think every horse
-needs as much encouragement as y’r old Bung-Eye. Sorra the horse I’d
-give you to break, barring it was a camel; I’m told them needs
-persuasion.”
-
-“That pfeller mare Bung-Eye no good,” said Billy, scornfully—the
-ancient piebald mare on which many of his duties were carried out, was
-the chief bitterness of his life. “Mine thinkit she bin fall down—die,
-plenty soon.”
-
-“Not she!” chuckled Murty. “Don’t you hope it, me lad. Boss bin tell me
-’tis Bung-Eye for you until you learn to ride a bit—if you ever do, an’
-that’s no certainty, I’m thinking.” Then, as the outraged aborigine
-turned his eyes upon him in speechless wrath, Murty grinned in friendly
-fashion. “Never mind—there’s a quiet old pony mare running down in the
-Far Plain, and we’ll see if you can’t have a thrifle of a turn on her,
-if you’re good.”
-
-Billy spluttered.
-
-“Boss him bin say I could ride one of the young ones,” he protested.
-Whatever Billy could or could not do, he could sit any horse that had
-ever been handled. He had a wild, primeval desire to smite the broad,
-good-humoured face grinning at him.
-
-“The Boss said that, do ye say? Me poor lad, ye’ve misunderstood
-him—‘twas to lead one about he meant!” Murty’s tone changed suddenly
-and his smile faded. “Yerra now—look at that one!” he uttered.
-
-The chestnut colt had made several unquiet attempts at progressing round
-the yard. The weight on his back troubled him; there was a feeling
-pervading him that he was being mastered, although he could no longer
-see his conqueror. When he tried to break into a jog-trot there came on
-his mouth a steady strain, gentle but quite determined, bringing him
-instantly to a puzzled standstill. Then came a hint that more movement
-was required of him—that he was expected to walk. But his mind was far
-too excited for him to think of walking; he wanted to jog, to trot—to
-break into a wild gallop that would rid him for ever of this strange,
-perplexing Presence on his back. He came to a halt again, snorting.
-
-“Go on, old chap!” Jim’s unspurred heel touched his side gently.
-
-A sudden wild impulse came upon the colt. He flung himself forward,
-plunging violently—snatched at the restraining bit, felt the strain on
-his mouth and the pressure on his sides as Jim stiffened a little in his
-seat; and then, quivering with one mad desire to be free, his head went
-down and he bucked furiously. To the onlookers he seemed like a
-ball—his head and tail tucked between his legs, his back humped until
-the rider seemed perched upon the very apex. To and fro he went in one
-paroxysm after another; writhing, twisting, pounding across yard until
-brought up by the fence; coming to a standstill with a jerk after a wild
-fit of bucking and then flinging himself into another yet more wild. Jim
-sat him easily, his supple body giving a little to each furious bound,
-but never shifting in the saddle. The five on the fence-cap watched him
-breathlessly; however secure the rider may be there is a never-failing
-excitement in watching a determined buck-jumper. And the chestnut was
-bucking with a determination worthy of his good breeding.
-
-He stopped suddenly, all four feet planted wide apart, panting heavily,
-with nostrils dilated. For a moment it seemed as though he had enough.
-Then his head went down again, he sprang into the air, bounding forward
-with a sudden twist—the hardest buck of all to sit. It was too much for
-the chestnut himself. As he landed he crossed his fore-feet, tripped,
-and went headlong to the ground. A little cry broke from Norah, and
-Wally drew in his breath sharply.
-
-David Linton was off the fence almost before his son touched the earth.
-Jim kicked his feet out of the stirrups as the colt tripped, and was
-flung clear, not relinquishing his hold on the bridle. He landed easily,
-and was up again as quickly as he had gone down, dusty but uninjured.
-The chestnut lay on his side, panting, for a moment; then, with a
-scramble, he came awkwardly to his feet. As he rose, Jim slipped into
-the saddle. The whole incident was over so speedily that it seemed like
-a trick of the imagination. David Linton gave an inaudible sigh of
-relief, climbing back to his place on the cap of the rail.
-
-The chestnut was beaten. He had done his worst, culminating in a display
-that had shaken and alarmed him a good deal and had made his shoulder
-ache badly; and the Presence on his back had not seemed disturbed at
-all. It was evident that nothing could be done to annoy him; at the end
-of a period which had been exceedingly trying for the colt himself, the
-Presence was quite unruffled; not angry, not in any way moved, but
-saying soothing things in his quiet voice, and patting his neck in the
-same friendly way. The colt gave it up. Evidently it was prudent and
-simpler to do as the Presence desired since in the long run it came to
-the same thing, after much personal inconvenience if he resisted. The
-fire died out of his wild eye, and the stiffness of his muscles relaxed.
-In a moment he answered the rein meekly, and walked round the yard; and
-when he found that he was expected to increase the pace to a trot, did
-so awkwardly enough, but without any resistance.
-
-Jim trotted him for a few minutes, pulled him up, and slipped to the
-ground, talking to him, and patting the wet neck. Then he grinned up at
-the trio on the fence.
-
-“He’ll do now, I think,” he said. “That last outburst took all the
-inquiring spirit out of him. You know, he hasn’t one little bit of vice;
-he only wanted to know who was boss.”
-
-“Did he hurt you, Jimmy?” Norah asked.
-
-“Not a scrap, thanks. I’m awfully sorry the poor little chap came
-down—it scared him. But he had to find out; and now we’ll be first-rate
-friends—won’t we, old man?” This to the chestnut, who hung his head
-meekly and looked comically like a naughty little boy released from the
-corner. “Hope we didn’t give you a fright?”
-
-“You were too quickly down and up for us to have much time for that,”
-said his father, disguising the fact that in a moment of paternal
-weakness he had moved with equal rapidity.
-
-“There’s a lot of the tennis-ball in our Jimmy,” said Wally, bringing
-his long legs over the fence and descending to earth. “Can’t keep him
-down—what a nasty bit he’ll be for a solid, earnest German to tackle!
-Going to rub him down, Jim?”
-
-“Yes—bring me the things, Billy, and take this saddle,” Jim said,
-addressing the dusky retainer, who hovered near, armed with cloths and
-brushes. “No, I’ll do it myself, thanks; I want him to get thoroughly
-used to me. Got a thistle for him, Norah?” And for the next quarter of
-an hour the colt’s toilet proceeded with a thoroughness bent on
-impressing the pupil with the knowledge that the human touch was really
-a comforting thing and led to a tired chestnut baby ultimately feeling
-good all over.
-
-“There you are,” said Jim, giving him a final pat as he slipped off the
-halter and watched him trot off into the freedom of the paddock. “When
-you find out what to do with your legs and arrive at something
-resembling a mouth, you’ll be worth riding. And now I’m going to give
-myself a treat by getting on Garryowen and going to see how the fencers
-are working in the new subdivision; they want a cheque on account, and I
-want to see if they have earned it, before they get it. Who’s coming?”
-
-“Me,” said Norah, with great and ungrammatical fervour.
-
-“And me,” said Wally.
-
-Jim looked at his father.
-
-“Oh, well, we haven’t much more Billabong time left,” said David Linton,
-smiling. “Me, too, I suppose.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “Jim stiffened a little in his seat.”]
-
- _From Billabong to London_] [_Page 62_
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
-
- A BILLABONG DAY.
-
-ONE of the men had found an injured wallaby in an outlying paddock. It
-had caught in a sagging fence-wire, and broken its leg; the man, engaged
-in restoring the fence to tautness, had found it lying helpless and
-starving in a hollow. He was Murty O’Toole, and so he did not knock the
-soft-eyed little beast on the head, as most stockmen would have done.
-Murty had an Irishman’s tender heart. Besides, he knew Norah.
-
-“Poor little baste!” he said, picking up the wallaby gently. It made no
-resistance, but its great eyes were terrified, and he could feel the
-thumping of its heart. He whistled over it. “Well, well—the treachery
-of that barbed-wire! Broken, is it then; and me with never a thing to
-mend ye! Well, Miss Norah ’ll be glad of the chance; she an’ Mr. Jim ’ll
-make a job of ye, an’ they afther learnin’ first-aid, near as good as
-doctors. Come along home now, an’ get fixed up.”
-
-Norah had welcomed the invalid with enthusiasm. She had always kept tame
-wallaby, which make one of the best Bush pets; and this one was a very
-pretty specimen, the more attractive because of its helplessness and
-pain. Jim set the broken leg deftly, and Norah took over the care of the
-patient, which soon grew quite fearless and healed with the clean
-thoroughness characteristic of wild animals. Before long it could hop
-about the sheltered enclosure where it lived, never failing to limp to
-meet her when she came to feed it.
-
-The wallaby’s midday dinner was late to-day, since a job of mustering in
-an outlying paddock had kept everyone out far beyond the usual luncheon
-hour. Norah had hurried through the meal, excusing herself before the
-others had finished, so that she might go to her patient. She was coming
-back through the sunny garden, swinging her empty milk-tin, when a
-curious sight met her gaze.
-
-On the first verandah were two revolving figures; one immensely fat, the
-other so thin that he seemed lost in the capacious embrace of the first.
-As she came nearer, looking with puzzled eyes, it was evident that they
-were Mrs. Brown and Wally; and that Mrs. Brown was not, indeed, the
-embracer, but the most unwillingly embraced. From the open window of the
-smoking-room came the voice of the gramophone, playing a waltz in time
-more suited to an Irish jig; to which melody Wally was endeavouring to
-tune his laggard partner’s footsteps. The unfortunate Brownie, purple of
-face, did her best; but, for a lady weighing seventeen stone, the task
-of emulating Wally would not have been easy at any time—and just now
-Wally appeared to be compounded of quicksilver and electricity. His long
-legs fairly twinkled; he gambolled and caracoled rather than danced.
-Glimpses of his countenance, seen over Brownie’s shoulder as he twirled,
-showed a vision of delirious joy. At the window behind him was Jim’s
-face, scarcely less joyous. Mr. Linton, grinning broadly, was in a
-doorway.
-
-“Oh, Wally, aren’t you an ass?” Norah ejaculated, helpless with
-laughter. “Brownie, dear, don’t let him kill you!”
-
-“If she dies, it will be in a good cause,” Wally returned.
-“Nevertheless, a substitute will do, and you’re a light-weight, Norah.
-Thank you, ma’am”—to Mrs. Brown, whom he deposited in a chair, where
-she subsided gaspingly. “Come along, Norah—let her go, Jim!” He seized
-his hostess, and they spun up the verandah in a mad waltz, the wallaby’s
-milk-can, which she had not had time to drop, banging cheerful time.
-
-The gramophone having come to the end of its tether, ended in a
-scratching howl, and Jim disappeared precipitately from the window.
-Wally came to a standstill regretfully.
-
-“I could have gone on for quite a while,” he uttered. “Bother you,
-Jimmy—why couldn’t you keep her wound? Before we begin again, Norah, do
-you mind laying aside that tin? It’s full of corners.”
-
-“I’m not going to begin again,” said Norah, firmly, “so don’t delude
-yourself. Now will you tell me why you’ve suddenly gone mad?” Then her
-eye caught a leather bag lying open on the floor, and her face suddenly
-flushed with delight. “Oh, Wally, it’s the mail—and you can go!”
-
-“Of course it is,” Wally said, almost indignantly. “Do you think any
-other cause could have induced me to waltz with Brownie at this hour of
-day, no matter how much she wanted it?” There came a protesting gurgle
-from Brownie, to which no one lent hearing.
-
-“Oh, I’m so glad!” Norah caught Wally’s hand, and they pumped each other
-enthusiastically. “I knew it must be all right, all the time, of
-course—but it’s lovely to be sure. Were they nice, Wally?”
-
-“Sweet as old pie,” said Wally, happily. “Mr. Dimsdale had waited to
-communicate with Edward—and Edward was infesting a sugar mill somewhere
-in the cane districts, and appeared to have taken special precautions to
-dodge letters. However, he telegraphed to Mr. Dimsdale as soon as he did
-hear—and he’s sent me an awfully jolly letter, and one to your father.
-And old Dimmy’s written in his best style, giving me his blessing. And
-they’ve sent word to school—won’t the Head kick! And they’ve fixed up
-money. And everything’s glorious. Have another waltz, Brownie?”
-
-“No, indeed, thank you kindly,” said Brownie, hastily, grasping the arms
-of her chair in the manner affected by those about to have a tooth
-pulled. “Me figure’s against it, Mr. Wally, my dear, and it isn’t hardly
-fair. If the day ever comes when you’re seventeen stone, you’ll
-know—not as it seems likely, but you can’t be sure, and I was thin once
-meself. Came on me like a blush—and me that active! Ah, well, I’ll be
-thin enough with worry by the time you’re all safe home again.”
-
-“Rubbish, Brownie,” said Jim, and smiled at her affectionately. “You and
-Murty will be so busy managing the place that you won’t have time to
-think of worry.”
-
-“And there’ll be letters every week,” Norah added. “We’ll have such
-heaps to tell you. And you’ll have to write to us.”
-
-“Me!” said Brownie, visibly shuddering at the prospect. “Gettin’
-letters’ll be all we’ll have to look forward to, Miss Norah, my
-dear—but when it comes to writing them, it’s another thing. I never was
-’andy at the pen, as you know. In my day our mothers thought a sight
-more of making us ’andy about the house and with a cooking-stove. Girls
-is very different nowadays. Even Mary and Sarah, though goodness knows
-I’ve done me best with them.”
-
-“Oh, they’re quite good girls,” said Mr. Linton. “They should be, too,
-after the years you’ve trained them.”
-
-“And they’ll write and say all you want if you’re tired, Brownie
-darling,” Norah put in.
-
-“I dunno,” said Brownie, despondently, “I’m stupid enough writing
-myself, but I’d be stupider yet dealing with a—what is it, Mr. Jim
-dear, when it’s someone as writes for you? Something about ham.”
-
-“Amanuensis?” hazarded Jim.
-
-“Yes, that’s it. No, I’ll have to do my own letters, an’ they’ll be bad
-enough. You’ll have to excuse them, dearie.”
-
-“The only thing I wouldn’t excuse would be not getting them,” Norah
-answered. “I’ve had them whenever I was away at school, and you know I
-can’t do without them, Brownie. Why, you tell me things no one else even
-thinks of. And I’ll want home letters more than ever when I’m really
-away from Australia. It was bad enough when I was at school; but to be
-as far away from Billabong as England——” Norah stopped expressively.
-
-“You’ll have all I can send you, my precious,” said Brownie tearfully.
-“I s’pose it’s no good for me to make up a hamper now and then? Me
-plum-cakes’ll keep a year!”
-
-“I only wish it were,” said Jim. “Your hampers have brightened my life
-from my youth up, Brownie—not that I ever gave one of your cakes a
-chance to keep three days! But I expect we’ll have to wait until we come
-home again. One thing’s quite certain, we’ll all be ready for your
-cooking when we come back.”
-
-“Bless his heart!” said Brownie. It was plain that comforting visions of
-a culinary orgie of welcome were already materialising in her mind.
-“It’ll be a great day for the station when we get you all again—and be
-sure you bring Mr. Wally too. I’ll have pikelets ready for you, Mr.
-Wally!”
-
-“I’ll think of them, Brownie,” said Wally, his voice very kindly. “And
-anyhow, one of the best things about getting back will be to see your
-old face again. There now, I’ve made a sentimental speech. Take me away
-Jim, and give me some work.”
-
-“Haven’t any,” Jim answered, lazily. “You forget I’ve been out since
-daylight, old man—at an hour when I believe you were snoring musically,
-I was giving the chestnut an early morning lesson. He went jolly well
-too; easy as a rocking-chair. Now it’s three o’clock and I’m thinking of
-claiming the eight-hours-day of the honest Australian working-man.”
-
-“Well, it’s not often you limit yourself to it,” his father said.
-
-“Don’t encourage him, sir,” Wally remarked. “Family affection doubtless
-blinds you to the idleness which has so long grieved me in your son’s
-character——”
-
-“Losh!” said Jim, in astonishment. He rose, and fell upon the hapless
-Mr. Meadows, conveying him to the lawn, where they rolled over together
-like a pair of St. Bernard puppies. Finally Jim, somewhat dishevelled,
-sat up on the prostrate form of his friend.
-
-“I don’t mind your maligning me at all,” he said. “But when you take to
-talking like a copy-book, it’s time someone dealt with you, young
-Wally.” He shifted his position, thereby eliciting a smothered howl from
-the victim. “You needn’t think that because you’re going to the war you
-can make orations. Not here, anyhow.”
-
-“Take him off, somebody—Norah!” came from the earth, in a voice much
-impeded by grass.
-
-“Indeed, I won’t—you have me pained, as Murty says,” replied Norah
-callously. “He never did anything to you that you should talk in that
-awful way. You might be your own grandmother!”
-
-“You’re not a nice family!” said Wally, gaspingly. He achieved a violent
-convulsion, and Jim, taken off his guard, lost his balance and fell
-over—of which his adversary was not slow to take advantage. The battle
-that followed was interrupted by the hasty arrival of Billy, his ebony
-countenance showing unusual signs of excitement. The tangled mass of
-arms and legs on the lawn resolved itself into its original parts, and
-Jim endeavoured to appear the manager of Billabong, even with much grass
-in his hair.
-
-“What is it, Billy?”
-
-“Murty him send me,” Billy explained. “Big pfeller shorthorn bullock him
-bogged in swamp—baal us get him out. Want rope an’ horses.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“Far Plain. That pfeller silly-fool bullock—him just walk in boggy
-place. Big one—nearly fat.”
-
-Jim whistled.
-
-“Nice game getting him out will be. Well, you’ve got your job, Wally,
-old man, and if you take my advice, you’ll borrow some of my dungarees
-to tackle it. There’ll be much mud. Billy, you run up old Nugget and put
-a collar and trace chains on him, and lead him out. Take some
-bags—we’ll bring ropes. Tell one of the boys to saddle our
-horses—they’re in the stable.”
-
-“Can I come, Jim?” Norah asked.
-
-“Yes, of course; but you can’t very well help, so your habit will be all
-right; good thing you hadn’t got out of it,” said Jim casting a glance
-at his sister’s neat divided skirt and blue serge coat. “You might cut
-along, if you’re ready, and hurry up the horses; Wally and I must go and
-change.” The boys clattered into the hall and up the stairs.
-
-Mr. Linton, who had retreated to his office, came out at the noise.
-
-“Anything the matter, Norah?”
-
-Norah explained briefly, securing her felt hat the while.
-
-“H’m,” said her father. “No, I won’t come out, I think Jim and Murty can
-manage without me; and Green and I are up to our eyes in the books. Take
-care of yourself, my daughter.” He returned to the society of the
-warlike Green, while Norah raced across to the stables.
-
-A rather small lad of sixteen, a newcomer whom Murty was endeavouring to
-train in the place of one of the enlisted stockmen, was trying to saddle
-Jim’s big bay, Garryowen—an attempt easily defeated by Garryowen by the
-simple process of walking round and round him. Norah came to his
-assistance, and the horses were ready by the time Jim and Wally, clad in
-suits of blue dungaree, ran over from the house.
-
-“Good girl,” said Jim, well understanding that the new boy would not
-have finished the task unaided. He dashed into the harness-room,
-returning with two coils of strong rope, which he tied firmly to his
-saddle. Norah and Wally were already mounted and out of the stable-yard.
-
-There was a keen westerly wind in their faces as they cantered steadily
-across the paddocks. Billabong was looking its worst; the drought had
-laid heavy hands upon it, and its beauty had vanished. On every side the
-plains stretched away, broken here and there by belts of timber or by
-the long, grey, snake-like lines of fencing. The trees were the only
-green thing visible, since Australian forest trees do not shed their
-leaves; but they looked old and faded, and here and there a dead one
-stood grey and lonely, like a gaunt sentinel. Grey too were the plains;
-their withered grass merged into the one dull colour. It was sparse and
-dry; even though the season was winter, a little cloud of dust followed
-the riders’ track.
-
-They crossed the river by a rough log bridge, built by Mr. Linton and
-his men from trees felled by the stream. The dry logs clattered under
-the horses’ feet. Looking up and down stream the water showed only a
-shrunken remnant of its usual width, with boggy patches of half-dried
-mud between the thin trickle and the dusty banks, where withered docks
-reared gaunt brown stems. Even the riverside was dull and lifeless. But
-the wattle-trees, bravely defying the drought, already showed among
-their dark-green masses of foliage the buds that hinted at the
-spring-time shower of gold.
-
-“This time last year,” said Jim, “the river came down in flood, and all
-but washed this bridge away.”
-
-“It doesn’t look much like a flood now,” Wally remarked, surveying the
-apology for a river with disfavour.
-
-“No—it’s hard to imagine that it was over the banks and half across
-these paddocks. By Jove, we had a busy time!” Jim said, reminiscently.
-“It came down quite suddenly; it was pretty high to begin with, and then
-a big storm brought a lot of snow off the mountains, and whish! down
-came the old river. We had sheep in these paddocks, and saving them
-wasn’t an easy job. Sheep are such fools.”
-
-“Sheep and turkey-hens,” said Norah, “have between them an extraordinary
-amount of idiocy.”
-
-“They have,” agreed her brother. “Our blessed old Shrops. decided that
-they would like to die—so, instead of clearing out on the rises at the
-far side of the paddocks, they camped on little hills near the river;
-and, of course, the water came all round them, and there they were,
-stranded on chilly little islands, surrounded by a healthy brown flood.
-Some slipped in and were drowned; the rest huddled together, and bleated
-in an injured way, as if they hadn’t had a thing to do with getting
-themselves into the fix.”
-
-“Could you get them off?” Wally asked.
-
-“Oh, most of them. Where the flood wasn’t very deep we just drove the
-big cart in and loaded them into it. It was too deep in a lot of places,
-and we had to get the old flat-bottomed boat from the lagoon near the
-house and go paddling over the paddocks. That was all right, but the
-stupid brutes wouldn’t let themselves be saved, if they could help it;
-whether it was cart or boat they disliked it equally, and we had to swim
-after half of them—they simply hurled themselves into the water rather
-than be rescued. And when it comes to life-saving in pretty turbulent
-flood-water, you can’t find anything much more unpleasantly awkward than
-a big woolly Shropshire, very indignant at not being allowed to drown.”
-
-“Jolly sort of job,” commented Wally. “Water cold?”
-
-Jim gave a shiver of remembrance.
-
-“Well, it was chiefly snow-water,” he answered “I don’t want to strike
-anything much colder. We were in and out of it all day for three days
-and the wonder was that some of us didn’t die—poor old Murty finished
-up with a shocking bad cold. My share was earache, and that was bad
-enough. But we had a job the week after that was nearly as exciting.”
-
-“What was that?”
-
-“Well, the flood-water went back, leaving a line of débris right across
-the paddock—a solid belt of rubbish about six feet wide, made of reeds,
-and sticks and leaves, and all the small stuff the water could gather up
-as it came over the grass. Dry reeds were the basis of it—there must
-have been tons of them. Then we had a few days of early spring
-weather—you know those queer little bursts of almost hot days we get
-sometimes. I was standing still on this layer of rubbish one morning,
-looking at a bullock across the paddock when I felt something on my
-leg—looked down, and it was a tiger-snake!”
-
-“Whew-w!” whistled Wally.
-
-“Only a little chap—but any tiger-snake is big enough to be nasty,” Jim
-said. “It seemed puzzled by my leather gaiter; I kicked it off and
-picked up a stick to kill it. And I nearly picked up another snake!”
-
-“Some people are never satisfied,” Wally said, severely. “Were you
-trying to qualify for a snake-charmer?”
-
-“Not much—I can’t stand the brutes,” Jim answered. “I killed those two
-and then went hunting among the rubbish—and do you know, it was simply
-alive with snakes! The flood had brought them, I suppose, and the warm
-sun had encouraged them to come out; anyhow, there they were, and a nice
-job we had getting rid of them. I killed eight or ten more, and then it
-struck me that the occupation was likely to last some time, so I went
-home to lunch, and brought the men out afterwards. We had to turn over
-every bit of that rubbish with forks—it was too damp to burn—and I
-forget how many snakes we got altogether, but it was enough to stock a
-menagerie a good many times over. Beastly game—we all saw snakes for a
-week after it was finished, and I dreamed of them every night.”
-
-“I should think you did,” Wally said, with sympathy. “Did any one get
-bitten?”
-
-“No—they were all pretty small and very sleepy. I daresay they thought
-it was a little rough on them; after all, they hadn’t asked to be
-brought from their happy homes and dumped out on the plain. But a
-snake’s a snake,” finished Jim, emphatically. “It doesn’t pay you to
-show mercy to one because he’s small.”
-
-“It does not; he grows up, and bites you,” said Wally, grimly, referring
-to a painful episode in his own career.
-
-“Indeed, he doesn’t always wait until he grows up,” Norah put in. “Even
-a baby tiger-snake can be venomous enough to be unpleasant. I don’t know
-why snakes exist at all; they say everything has its uses, but I never
-can see what use there is in the snake tribe.”
-
-“Neither can I—unpleasant brutes!” Wally agreed. “You get used to them,
-but you never learn to love them—unless you’re a freak. I knew an old
-swagman in Queensland who made pets of them, though. He had a collection
-of about a dozen, which he said were poisonous, but I believe, myself,
-he’d taken out their fangs.”
-
-“If he hadn’t, it’s the sort of thing nobody waits to prove,” Jim said.
-“You have to investigate a snake pretty closely before you find out if
-he has fangs or not; and if he has, the enquiry is apt to be unhealthy
-for you.”
-
-“That’s so,” agreed Wally. “No one ever waited to investigate old
-Moriarty’s serpents. He made them pay very well; he would run up a good
-big bill at a hotel, and borrow as much money as he could from men who
-were there, drinking; and then he would pull out his snakes in a casual
-way in a crowded bar-room. Well, it used to work like a charm—most men
-can tackle a snake or two in a room, but when it comes to seeing a dozen
-squirming in different ways, people are likely to get rattled. Old
-Moriarty could clear out a room in quicker time than any fire-alarm. The
-bar-lady, if she didn’t escape with the first rush, would faint, or have
-a ladylike fit of hysterics; and by the time anyone collected enough
-presence of mind to return, Moriarty would be far away, generally
-helping himself to a couple of bottles of whisky as he went.”
-
-“Horrid old pig!” was Norah’s comment.
-
-“He wasn’t a nice man,” Wally agreed. “Still I suppose you might call
-him a genius in his own particular line. Anyway, he travelled all over
-Southern Queensland, leaving behind him a trail of memories of serpents
-and missing cash.”
-
-“What became of him?” Jim asked.
-
-“What I believe becomes of every crank who goes in for
-snake-catching—he got bitten at last. He lost his snakes one by one;
-you see, quite often one or two would get killed when he let them loose
-in a bar, if they happened to wriggle up against a man who was sober and
-had his stockwhip handy. Then he tried the trick once too often; he came
-to a place where there was a drover who had seen him play his game in
-another township, and this fellow warned everyone else, and told them he
-was sure the snakes were really harmless. So when Moriarty let them go,
-everyone was ready, and nobody fled—but in about two minutes there
-wasn’t a live wriggler left of all his stock-in-trade.”
-
-“That was awkward for Moriarty,” Jim remarked “What did he do? Was he
-wild?”
-
-“I guess he was pretty wild. But from all we could hear, he hadn’t a
-chance to do anything, because things became so actively unpleasant for
-him. The drover was one from whom he’d borrowed money previously; and he
-knew there was no chance of getting it back, so he was annoyed. He told
-the story of Moriarty’s misdeeds until everyone else felt annoyed too,
-and they ducked the old sinner in a horse-trough outside, and then
-escorted him gently but firmly from the township, riding him on a
-fence-rail. It was summer, so it really didn’t hurt him, but it
-discouraged him.”
-
-“Still, he went catching snakes again?” Norah asked.
-
-“Oh, yes. I suppose he felt they were his only friends; they must have
-twin-souls to a certain extent. If a snake wasn’t your natural affinity
-you couldn’t go about with it in your pocket, could you?”
-
-“I don’t expect you could,” said Jim, laughing. “I can’t imagine doing
-it under any circumstances whatever; but there’s no accounting for
-tastes, and your Moriarty seems to have been an unusual gentleman. I
-suppose he felt lonely without his pets. One would.”
-
-“One certainly would,” Wally assented. “Fancy a dozen of ’em wriggling
-about you! Anyhow, Moriarty went off into the bush after more, and had
-pretty good hunting; he turned up on our station with five or six. Of
-course, he behaved all right there, and didn’t attempt to show them
-unless he was asked—and, of course, we youngsters were as keen as
-mustard to see them. We always enjoyed a visit from Moriarty, and he
-used to be very careful with the snakes, not to run any risks for us. He
-was really quite a decent old chap, except for whisky; when he couldn’t
-get any you might have easily mistaken him for a respectable citizen.”
-
-“Is that the kind you keep in Queensland?” enquired Jim, grinning.
-
-“Don’t know,” returned Wally, evenly—“they wouldn’t let me mix in
-respectable circles since I took to associating with you. However,
-Moriarty stayed with us a few days, and then went off into the bush
-again, saying he wanted more snakes. We never saw him again, poor old
-chap; but one of the boundary-riders came upon his body a few days
-later.”
-
-“Dead?”
-
-“Oh, yes, quite dead. He had evidently been bitten by a snake. He had a
-theory that if one did bite him, it wouldn’t hurt him, and he’d always
-said that he wouldn’t do anything to cure himself—that he was too tough
-for poison to hurt him. All these snake-charming idiots say that sort of
-thing. Well, old Moriarty found out his mistake, as they all do—too
-late.”
-
-“Poor old chap!” said Norah.
-
-“Yes—we were all jolly sorry for old Moriarty. Of course, he was really
-an absolute reprobate; but he always behaved decently on our station,
-and he used to be jolly kind to us boys. We were lonely kids, and the
-place was at the back of beyond—hardly a soul ever came there, and we
-welcomed Moriarty’s visits tremendously. He was such an unusual animal.
-Ah, well, rest his sowl, as Murty would say. I don’t suppose he’d have
-done any good with himself, so perhaps it was as well he went out.”
-
-They had been riding through a belt of sparse growing timber, the track
-marked by the wheels of the bullock-drays that were sent to bring
-firewood to the homestead. Now they emerged upon an open plain, where
-quicker going was possible. Just ahead was Billy, jogging along upon the
-hated Bung-Eye, whose piebald sides bore many marks of his spurs. He was
-leading a heavy black horse; one of the generally useful “slaves” to be
-found on any station, capable of being used as hack or stock-horse, in
-buggy, cart, or plough, and equally handy in any capacity. It was said
-of Nugget that in an emergency he was quite agreeable to pulling a load
-with his tail; and it was known that by means of a halter fastened to
-that useful appendage he had once “skull-dragged” a jibbing horse home.
-Nothing came amiss to him. If he had a temper, it was never shown. In
-good seasons or bad, he throve, and under no circumstances was he sick
-or sorry. His breeding was extremely doubtful, but in all that matters
-he was a perfect gentleman.
-
-Billy looked enviously at the unhampered riders as they swept past him.
-He hated slow progress; to him, as to most natives, a horse was a thing
-which should be kept at a high speed, and it was the sorrow of his life
-that the work demanded of him very often meant quiet going. It was bad
-enough to have to jog over the paddocks on lazy old Bung-Eye, leading
-Nugget, heavy-footed and with trace-chains clanking dismally, without
-being forced to watch these cheerful people tear by him on horses that
-he would have bartered most of his small worldly possessions to ride. He
-jerked Nugget’s leading-rein angrily, whereof the old black horse took
-not the slightest notice. Nugget was certainly not a cheerful
-proposition to lead; he went at his own pace or none, and at any attempt
-to hustle him he simply leaned heavily on the bit, becoming in Murty’s
-phrase, “as aisy as a stone wall.” At the moment. Billy was blind to all
-his undoubted moral excellences.
-
-Half a mile across the paddock was a swampy lagoon. Ordinarily it was
-fringed with a thick belt of green rushes, which made splendid cover for
-black duck, and always gave good shooting in the season. Now, however,
-it was half dried up, and the rushes, withered and yellow, rattled
-cheerlessly in the keen wind. There was a wide expanse of dried mud near
-the bank; then another expanse, deep chocolate in colour, not yet quite
-dry. Beyond was the water, dotted with clumps of rushes, and looking
-rather like pea-soup. The mud was deeply indented with hoof-marks. A
-loud croaking of innumerable frogs filled the air.
-
-A dozen yards from the edge stood a big shorthorn bullock, girth deep in
-water. He was hopelessly bogged. From time to time he made a violent
-struggle to free his legs from the mud that held them; but each attempt
-only left him sunk more deeply. It was quite evident that he fully
-understood the seriousness of his plight. His sides heaved with his
-panting breath; his great eyes were wild with fear. Now and then he gave
-a low bellow, full of anxiety.
-
-“I’ll bet he’s cold!” said Jim, with emphasis. “The great stupid ass!
-Why couldn’t he have the sense to keep out of a bog-hole like that?” He
-jumped off, and proceeded to tie Garryowen’s bridle to a tree. “Been at
-him long, Murty?”
-
-“Sure I kem upon him two hours ago, an’ I’ve been doin’ me endeavours to
-shift him ever since,” replied Mr. O’Toole, picking his way across the
-hoof-marked mud to meet the riders. His usually cheery countenance wore
-a doleful expression, and was obscured by many muddy streaks. Mud, in
-fact, clothed him from head to foot; in addition to which he was
-extremely wet. He cast a look at his hands, plastered and dripping.
-“Sorry I can’t take the pony for ye, Miss Norah.”
-
-“It’s all right, thank you, Murty,” Norah answered, securing Bosun. “I
-wish I had known you’d been at this horrible job so long. I could have
-brought you out some tea. You must be frozen.”
-
-“Don’t you worry; I’ve something better,” said Jim, producing a flask,
-at the sight of which Murty’s eyes brightened.
-
-“Well, I’ll not be sorry for a drink,” he said, gratefully. “Cold! It’d
-freeze a poley bear to be standin’ in that water; and that’s what I’ve
-been doin’ these two hours, coaxin’ of that onnatural baste. Thanks, Mr.
-Jim.” His teeth chattered against the silver cup as he drank.
-
-“I knew you’d need it,” Jim said. “This isn’t a winter job. Mud deep,
-Murty?”
-
-“Och, deep as you like!” said Murty lucidly. He handed back the cup.
-“’Tis good to feel that sendin’ a taste of a glow through a frozen man!
-The mud’s deeper than the water, Mr. Jim—there’s mighty little of that.
-Good sticky mud too; it takes a powerful grip of the boot.”
-
-“Have you moved him at all?”
-
-“I have not. He’s precisely where he was when I found him, barrin’ he’s
-sunk deeper. I tried driving and I tried pulling; Billy an’ I got our
-stirrup-leathers joined and did our divilmost to haul him out; and I’ve
-beaten the poor baste most unfeeling. There’s no stirring him. So I sent
-Billy in f’r ye, and I’ve been employing me time laying down logs an’
-slabs all round him, the way he’ll get a howlt for his feet when we do
-move him—an’ have something f’r ourselves to stand on while we’re
-getting the tackling on to him. That same is needed.” Mr. O’Toole looked
-down ruefully at his mud-plastered feet and legs. “Near bogged I was
-meself, an’ I beltin’ him; a good thing f’r me I got a howlt on his
-tail, though I expect he thought it was a misfortunit thing for him. But
-it was him or me.”
-
-“You certainly must have had a cheerful time,” Jim observed. “I’d sooner
-have lots of jobs than laying down a wood pavement under water in this
-weather.”
-
-“Well, it passes the time away, an’ that’s about all you can say f’r
-it,” said Murty, grimly. “Here’s that black image. ’Twas all I wished
-wan of us had been on old Nugget—we’d have skull-dragged the baste out
-somehow, before he sank as deep as he is now. But we’ll manage it nice
-an’ pleasant, with all that tackling.”
-
-“I hope so,” Jim said, surveying the muddy water a little doubtfully.
-“We’ll have a good try, anyhow. Better stay out of the water now, Murty;
-you’ve had quite enough. We can rope him.”
-
-“Is it me?” queried Mr. O’Toole, indignantly. “’Tis only used to it I
-am—there’s no need f’r you to wet y’r feet at all. Billy an’ I can fix
-it.”
-
-Jim laughed.
-
-“I might have known you wouldn’t be sensible,” he said. “Come on, then,
-you obstinate old Irishman!” He picked up a coil of rope and some
-sacking and marched off into the water, followed by his henchmen.
-
-The big shorthorn seemed to understand that the new arrivals were bent
-on helping him, for he showed no sign of fear as they waded across,
-stumbling in the boggy mud and tripping over Murty’s unseen and uneven
-pavement of logs. To stand on logs hidden under water is never the
-easiest of pursuits—the log possessing an almost venomous power of
-tipping up; and when such action on the part of the log renders its
-victim exceedingly likely to be dogged by plumping him violently into
-mud, the excitement becomes a trifle wearing. Norah, left alone on dry
-land beside Nugget, who slumbered peacefully, was divided between mirth
-and anxiety. To the looker-on there was much that was undoubtedly
-comical.
-
-“Scissors!” ejaculated Wally, making a mis-step and losing his balance
-altogether. A violent splash resounded as he struck the water,
-disappearing momentarily in a cloud of spray that half drenched his
-companions. Mr. Meadows arose like a drowned rat, amidst unfeeling
-laughter.
-
-“Can’t you stand up, you old duffer?” queried Jim—and promptly lost the
-use of one leg, which sank so far into the yielding mud that it was all
-its owner could do to avoid sitting down in the water. Prompt action
-rescued him, amidst jeers from Wally.
-
-“Of all the evil places for a stroll!” ejaculated Jim. “What on earth
-possessed you to come in here at all, you owl?” This to the bullock, who
-very naturally made no reply.
-
-“Contrary they do be, by nature,” said Murty, picking his way from log
-to log. “You’d wonder, now, what he’d expect to be finding; and any fool
-could have towld it’d be boggy. Well, he has his own troubles coming,
-an’ serve him right.”
-
-The bullock snorted uneasily when he found himself the centre of
-attraction: a matter brought home to him sharply by the fact that Jim
-slipped on a log near him, and fell against him with a violence that
-would have disturbed anything less firmly bogged.
-
-“No good trying to move him by ourselves, I suppose, Murty?” queried
-Jim, recovering himself.
-
-“Not a bit—we’ll help the ould horse, but ’tis Nugget that’ll pull him
-out,” rejoined the stockman. “I doubt if we’d shift him in a month of
-Sundays. Let ye be catching that rope, Mr. Jim, when I pass it under
-him.”
-
-To adjust the tackling was a matter requiring care, in order to avoid
-injury to the bullock. They padded him with sacking wherever a rope was
-likely to cut when the strain came upon it, with due regard that no
-knots should press unduly. It took time—standing as the workers were on
-slippery hidden logs that moved and squelched under them like living
-things, and in icy water that chilled them through and through, and
-numbed their fingers as they wrestled with the hard rope. When it was
-done Norah led Nugget in to the edge of the boggy mud, and the
-trace-chains attached to his collar were joined to the tackling on the
-bullock.
-
-“Lead him on, and we’ll see if he can shift him, Nor,” Jim called.
-
-“Come up, Nugget,” responded Norah. She took the black horse by the
-head; and Nugget, suddenly realising that great things were demanded of
-him, woke up and went forward with a steady strain. The bullock, finding
-himself more uncomfortable than he had ever dreamed of being, bellowed
-indignantly. But nothing happened. The prisoner did not budge an inch.
-
-“No good,” Jim sang out. “Back, Nugget,” and Nugget stopped and backed
-with thankful promptness. “We’ll have to rig up some more tackling.”
-
-The broad leather saddle-girths made an excellent foundation for
-side-ropes. Jim and Billy took one, Murty and Wally the other. They
-waded out until they were on firm ground. The bullock stood glaring at
-them, wild-eyed.
-
-“Now, Nor—and all together!”
-
-The tackling tightened. On either side, the rope-holders threw their
-weight on the stiffening cords, like men in a tug of war. Norah,
-stumbling on the hoof-printed mud, urged Nugget by voice and hand. There
-was a minute’s hard pulling.
-
-“Slack off,” Jim commanded. “Back him, Norah.” Men and horse panted in
-unison, getting their breath anew.
-
-“I believe he came a little,” Wally said.
-
-“Something came,” Jim agreed. “Let’s hope it wasn’t the tackling giving.
-We’ll know this time, anyhow. Ready, boys?”
-
-Once more the strain came. The four rope-holders struggled together,
-their muscles standing out like knotted cords. Nugget, knowing his
-business just as well as they, put his head down and leaned against the
-strain, gaining foot by foot. An anguished bellow broke from the
-bullock. There came a sucking, squelching sound.
-
-“He’s coming!” Norah gasped. “Pull, boys!”
-
-A final struggle, and the strain eased suddenly. The mud gave—the
-bullock, feeling himself freed from the horror that had gripped his
-legs, plunged stiffly forward, tripped, and fell bodily into the water.
-They dragged him out on his side, a pitiful, mud-plastered object. It
-required considerable coaxing to get him upon his feet, and then he
-stood still, too numbed and confused to move, while the tackling was
-removed.
-
-“There you are,” Jim said at last, dealing him a hearty blow with a
-girth. “Move on—you can’t stand there all night, you know.” But it was
-only after repeated blows that the rescued one obeyed, stumbling across
-the mud to the safety of the bank, where he stood, trembling with cold.
-
-“We can’t leave him here,” Jim said. “He’s too cold altogether—he’ll
-have to be housed to-night. Billy, you bring him in slowly—hitch old
-Nugget to him if he won’t travel.”
-
-“Plenty,” said Billy, lugubriously. He also was cold, and the prospect
-of tailing in behind the numbed bullock was anything but pleasant. He
-began his slow journey as the other four cantered off across the
-paddock.
-
-Mr. Linton came out to the stable yard to greet them. He had been
-watching for some time before he heard the beat of far-off hoofs, and
-the echo of young voices, singing in the dusk.
-
-“Well, you seem cheerful enough,” he said. “Job tough?” The light from
-the stables fell on his mud-covered son, and he laughed a little. “It
-was as well you put on dungarees, Jim.”
-
-“Just as well,” said Jim, laughing. “Got him out, anyhow.”
-
-“You’ve had a long day,” said his father.
-
-“Have I?” Jim asked. “Oh, I suppose I have! Nothing to growl at, at any
-rate.” He straightened his broad shoulders as they walked across to the
-house. “Billabong days never do seem long, somehow. I wonder if——”
-Whatever the conjecture was, it went no further. His hand fell on
-Norah’s shoulder as they went in together.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “‘He’s coming!’ Norah gasped. ‘Pull, boys!’”]
-
- _From Billabong to London_] [_Page 89_
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
-
- GOOD-BYE.
-
-PORT Melbourne pier was a scene of hurry and bustle.
-
-Along every yard of its great length lay mighty ocean-going steamers:
-mail-boats, Orient and P. & O., big White Star cargo-ships, French
-liners, and all the miscellaneous collection of ships that ply from up
-and down the world to Australia. Trains were coming and going along the
-railway lines running down the centre of the pier, piercing the air with
-their shrieks of warning, while people moved hastily out of their way,
-stumbling over the intricate network of rails. A motley crowd they were:
-passengers from the steamers; officers—sunburned men in blue uniforms;
-wharf labourers; sailors in blue jerseys, bearing the name of their ship
-across their breasts; dark-skinned Lascars from the P. & O. ships;
-Chinese; well-dressed city people tempted out by bright sunshine and
-blue sea; and the never-failing throng of children to be found on every
-great wharf, drawn to “the beauty and mystery of the ships.” Amidst the
-crowd dock hands worked at loading and unloading cargoes; the shrieks of
-steam-cranes sounded as great wooden cases were lifted from the trucks,
-to be poised perilously in mid air over the pier before being swung
-in-board and lowered into the gaping holds. Each ship bore on its
-mooring-ropes wide discs of tin, to discourage the rats which would
-otherwise have found the rope an easy track into the steamer.
-
-It was the usual Australian wharf scene; but there was another factor in
-it, by no means so familiar. Among the crowded ships were several
-painted in neutral colours, bearing no name, but only the letter A and a
-number. They were alongside the wharf, and on their decks men in uniform
-were working with a feverish activity quite unlike the ordinary
-movements of the dock-hand in Australia. At each gangway stood a sentry;
-and other men in khaki went up and down swiftly, some of them receiving
-salutes from the men who worked—not always, because the new Australian
-soldier was a free-and-easy person, and, having much to learn, did not
-easily see that saluting is a mark of respect to the King’s uniform,
-more than to the man who wears it. The privates did not mean any
-disrespect to the uniform—they only knew they were busy, and that it
-seemed to them foolish to stop and salute a man whom they had perhaps
-known for years as “Bill” or “Dick,” who might have been the fag of one
-of them at school, or perhaps worked for another for wages on a farm.
-There are all sorts of queer ups and downs in the composition of a
-Colonial volunteer force, and social distinctions are apt to collapse
-altogether before military ability; so that the man with a big property
-and more money than he knows what to do with may find himself a mere
-private working under a martinet of a captain who possibly delivered his
-meat in the piping times of peace. Moreover, he will do it cheerfully.
-But he will find the saluting hard.
-
-There was a steady hum of preparation on all the grey troopships with
-the white numbers. Stores and kit were being loaded into them rapidly,
-each item checked by an officer; on some, the decks of which were
-boarded up, soldiers, stripped to shirt and breeches, were working with
-great bundles of compressed hay and straw, emptying truck after truck in
-readiness for the horses that were to be the chief passengers. From
-within these could be heard the sound of hammering; they had been
-stripped of all their inside fittings, and every available inch of space
-was being turned into stalls and loose-boxes, made with due regard to
-the comfort of the puzzled four-footed occupants whose homes they would
-be for so many weary weeks.
-
-All the quay-room was taken up; and besides, out in Port Phillip Bay,
-the ships lay thick: troopships; cargo-boats waiting their chance to
-unload, or busy discharging their goods into lighters; sailing vessels,
-tramps from every harbour in the world, with towering masts and rusty
-sides; and a host of smaller craft that nosed in and out among the big
-ships. Near some steps leading to the water a motor-launch tossed in the
-wash of a paddle-steamer leaving for some Bay port.
-
-A large party, variously laden with hand-baggage, came rapidly along the
-wharf from the railway-station, and down the steps. At sight of their
-leader one of the men in the launch steadied her, while the other busied
-himself with the engine.
-
-“We’ve sent all our heavy things on board, and this is quite the most
-comfortable way to get over to Williamstown,” David Linton was saying.
-“No, it’s quite unusual, of course, to be sailing from there; but war
-has upset everything, and there’s simply no room for any more big ships
-at this pier. Williamstown is a fearsome place to embark from; it’s bad
-enough to get there, to begin with, and when you have done so, the pier
-is miles from anywhere, and you traverse appalling tracks in finding
-your ship. Much simpler to run across the Bay from Port Melbourne by
-launch.”
-
-Edward Meadows, a tall, lean man, very like Wally, nodded assent.
-
-“I’ve never seen the fascination of travel,” he said lazily. “To me it’s
-only bearable with the maximum of comfort—especially when you go to
-sea.”
-
-“Well, there’s not much maximum of comfort about your back-country trips
-in Queensland,” said Wally, rather amazed. “And you have plenty of
-those, Edward.”
-
-“Oh, yes, but that’s different! You don’t expect comfort, and you’d be
-rather surprised if you got it. And the Bush is different, too,” replied
-his brother, a trifle vaguely, yet conscious that his hearers
-understood. “You can live on corned-beef, damper and milkless tea for
-weeks in the Bush, and sleep in the open, with your saddle for a pillow,
-and on the whole you quite enjoy it; but you’d feel quite injured if you
-had to do it on board ship. Possibly it’s the clothes you wear—I don’t
-know.” He looked round, as if expecting to find enlightenment. “Let me
-help you in, Miss Norah.”
-
-The launch held them all comfortably, though they were a large party:
-the travellers themselves, various relatives who had come to see them
-off, and a sprinkling of school friends who were openly envying Norah
-and the boys. They included a couple of lads in khaki, fresh from the
-camp of the Expeditionary Force at Broadmeadows.
-
-“Well, you’re lucky to be getting straight to the middle of things,”
-said one of these. “Here we are, tied up week after week, waiting to get
-away, and nobody quite knows why we don’t start—they talk about German
-cruisers, of course, and there are stories of warships not being ready
-to convoy us, and a dozen other yarns. Every now and then comes a rumour
-that we’re just off, and we say good-bye wildly—and then we don’t go.
-I’ve made all my fond farewells four times, and I believe my people are
-beginning to feel a little less enthusiastic about it than they did. It
-must be jolly hard to keep on regarding one as a departing hero!”
-
-“And when we do start, it’s going to be slow enough,” put in his
-companion. “There will be such a crowd of us—and we’ve got to make the
-pace by the slowest ship.” He jerked his hand towards a troopship round
-the stern of which the motor-launch was chug-chugging slowly. “That’s
-one of them. She was a German tramp steamer that strolled in here after
-war broke out and was collared; she didn’t know a thing about the war,
-and her captain said most unseemly things to the pilot who had gone out
-to bring them through the Heads and held his tongue about war until he
-had the ship covered by our guns at Queenscliff.” The soldier grinned
-with huge enjoyment. “I wish I’d seen him! But she’s not much of a tub,
-anyhow; I expect the Orient boat that has been turned into the Staff
-troopship has just about twice her pace, but she will have to
-accommodate herself to the slowest.”
-
-“Yes, it will be a deliberate sort of voyage,” said the other. “No
-ports; no news; just dawdling along for weeks, packed like herrings.
-Hope they’ll keep us busy with drill; it will be something to pass the
-time away.”
-
-“And you don’t know when you are to sail? Edward Meadows asked.
-
-“For all we know it may be a case of strike camp to-night. There are too
-many German warships in the way—it wouldn’t be healthy to let the news
-leak out. Wouldn’t the _Emden_ like a chance of meeting a crowd like
-ours!—a lot of transports like helpless old sheep, with a few
-men-o’-war to protect the whole mob. The _Emden_ would not mind going
-down herself if she sank some of us.”
-
-“Well, at least you’ll have the men-o’-war” Norah put in. “We won’t have
-anything at all to protect us.”
-
-“You don’t seem very troubled about it, either,” grinned the soldier
-lad.
-
-“Why, it would be an experience. I don’t suppose they would hurt us,
-even if they sank the ship. And our luggage is insured,” said Norah,
-practically.
-
-“The danger of a hostile cruiser does not seem to weigh heavily on the
-minds of the insurance companies,” remarked her father. “It cost me a
-good deal more to insure against pilfering than against war risks!”
-
-“You don’t say so!” said Edward Meadows, staring.
-
-“I do, though. It’s a queer state of affairs, but I suppose they know
-their business. There’s the old ship.”
-
-They had nearly crossed the narrow portion of the Bay that lies between
-Port Melbourne and Williamstown, and the docks were coming into view.
-Everywhere the wharves were crowded with shipping, mostly of a smaller
-character than the vessels they had seen; but towering above everything
-else, larger than even the Orient liner, lay a great ship. She had but
-one funnel, painted a vivid blue; it loomed vast above them, a mighty
-cylinder—large enough, if it lay on its side, to drive a coach-and-four
-through it.
-
-“Whew-w! She’s a big one!” ejaculated the young soldier.
-
-“Yes; there’s only one larger ship in the Australian trade,” Jim
-answered.
-
-“Many passengers?”
-
-“Hardly any, I believe. But she’s enormously valuable; she’s carrying a
-huge cargo—the richest, with the exception of gold, that ever left
-Australia. And it’s just what they want in England—frozen meat, wool,
-tallow, and things like that, and a huge consignment of food the
-Queensland people are sending to the troops at the Front. They say she’s
-worth a million and a half!”
-
-“By Jove, what a prize she’d make!” said the soldier. “I should think
-the German cruisers will be keeping a pretty sharp look-out for her.”
-
-“Yes—and I believe the _Emden_ is particularly anxious to get a Blue
-Funnel ship before she goes under. The _Perseus_ would make a pretty
-good scalp, wouldn’t she?”
-
-The engineer shut off the motor, and the little launch came to rest
-beside a gangway under the lee of the _Perseus_—whose bulk, seen close
-above them, seemed like that of a mountain. A sailor ran down the steps
-to steady the launch and offer a helping hand as its passengers climbed
-out. In a moment Norah stood for the first time upon the deck of a ship.
-
-It gave her a queer little thrill of exultation. Everything about her
-was new and unfamiliar: the long lines of the deck, the hurrying
-officers and sailors, the creak of machinery, punctuated with crisp
-commands; and over all, the smell of the ship and the salt air blowing
-up from the wider spaces of the Bay. It seemed to mount to her head.
-Instinctively she put out her hand to her father.
-
-“Well, my girl,” he said. “It’s a bit different to the old wind-jammer
-that I came out in.”
-
-“It’s—it’s lovely, Daddy!”
-
-He laughed. “I hope you’ll continue to think so,” he said. “Come and
-we’ll find our cabins.”
-
-A passing steward, to whom they gave their numbers, took them in charge
-and piloted them below. They went down a winding oak staircase with
-rubber treads that were soft to the feet, and passed through an open
-space invitingly furnished with lounge-chairs. Thence a passage led a
-little way until their guide turned sharply to the right.
-
-“This is yours, sir,” said the steward. “The young lady’s is opposite.”
-
-The cabins were alike—roomy ones, each containing three berths, and lit
-by wide port-holes. The _Perseus_ had accommodation for over three
-hundred passengers, and at an ordinary time went out with every berth
-taken; but war had made people disinclined to travel, and on this voyage
-her passenger-list held only about thirty names. Therefore there was
-room and to spare, and each passenger could have had two or three cabins
-had he been so disposed.
-
-Already Norah’s luggage was placed in readiness; and scattered on one of
-the berths were a number of parcels and letters, to which so many were
-immediately added that the bunk looked like a jumble-stall, but very
-interesting.
-
-“No, you mustn’t open them now,” said her special school-chum, Jean
-Yorke; “they will keep, and you’ll have loads of time going down the
-Bay. Come and explore the ship.”
-
-At the entrance to their alley-way they met Jim and Wally, returning
-from inspecting their cabin, which was near-by and “very jolly,” said
-its owners; and then they all trooped off to find their way about the
-steamer, discovering big drawing-rooms and lounges, a splendid
-smoking-room panelled in oak, with a frieze of quaint carvings running
-round it, and the dining-saloon—a roomy place, furnished with
-swing-chairs and small round tables, on which ferns and tall palms
-nodded a friendly greeting. Everything was big and spacious and airy.
-Smart stewards, white-jacketed, darted hither and thither. They passed
-the galley, catching a glimpse of rows of bright cooking-ranges,
-gleaming copper saucepans, and busy cooks, with snowy aprons and flat
-caps—all so spotlessly clean that Norah wished audibly that Brownie
-could see it—Brownie having expressed dark doubts as to whether her
-belongings would be decently fed on board, coupled with unpleasant
-allusions to cockroaches. Then they came out on the decks, of which
-there were three—roomy enough for a regiment to drill, and with
-pleasant nooks sheltered from the wind, no matter from what quarter it
-might come. In one of these the deck steward had already set up their
-long chairs—made of Australian blackwood and dark green canvas, with
-“Linton” painted on each of the four.
-
-“I ran you in as one of the family, Wally,” said the squatter.
-
-“Thanks awfully, sir,” said Wally, gratefully.
-
-People were coming aboard quickly; though there were so few passengers,
-the _Perseus_ was a popular ship, and many came to see her off. The
-first of the three warning bells clanged out sharply above the din.
-
-“Come and have tea,” said David Linton. “I told them to have it ready at
-first bell.”
-
-They crowded round the biggest table in the saloon, while the stewards
-brought tea. Every one was becoming a little silent; there seemed
-suddenly a great many things to say, but no one could remember any of
-them. No one wanted tea at all, except the soldier boys, who drank
-immense quantities, and did their best to keep the conversation going.
-Aunts and cousins heaped on Norah good advice about the journey. Edward
-Meadows stared at his young brother’s bright face—a sudden fear at his
-heart lest he should be looking at it for the last time.
-
-“He’s such a kid,” he said inwardly. “I wonder if we ought to be letting
-him go.”
-
-On the deck, after the second bell had brought them up from the saloon,
-he drew David Linton aside.
-
-“You’ll take care of him, if you get a chance, won’t you, sir? He’s only
-a kid.”
-
-“To the utmost of my ability,” said Mr. Linton, gravely. “He is like my
-own son to me.”
-
-Then came the final bell, and with it a sudden gust of good-byes.
-Telegraph-boys came racing up the gangway with belated messages. Every
-one was trying to say twenty farewells at once.
-
-“Good-bye, you chaps,” said the soldier lads. “Expect you’ll be in
-Flanders before we are—but we’ll meet you there. Keep Australia going!”
-
-“Hope we’ll get a chance,” Jim said, “and not mess it up if we get it.
-We’ll try, anyhow. Good voyage. Don’t be sea-sick!”
-
-“Same to you. Write to us if you can.”
-
-“You too. Say good-bye to all the chaps we knew at school.”
-
-“Good-bye, Norah, dear,” from an aunt. “Remember you’re growing up—you
-can’t be a Bush girl in England.”
-
-“I’ll try,” said Norah meekly. “I expect every one will be too busy with
-the war to notice me.”
-
-“I’m sure you’ll be a credit to us,” cried the aunt, inflicting a damp
-embrace. “If only you have a safe voyage!” She kissed Jim with fervour,
-and showed such signs of beginning on Wally that that timid youth
-retired precipitately into the crowd.
-
-“All visitors ashore!” sang out a stentorian voice. People flocked down
-the gangway.
-
-“You’ll write, won’t you, Norah?” asked Jean Yorke, a little shakily.
-Jean was a silent person, but Norah was very dear to her.
-
-“Of course I will,” said Norah, hugging her. “And you—lots! Oh, won’t
-we want letters when we’re right away over there!”
-
-“It’s awful at school without you,” said Jean. “Oh, and everybody sent
-you their love—even Miss Winter! And they say, ‘Come back soon.’ So do
-I.”
-
-“Just as soon as ever we can. Oh, I don’t want to go a bit!” said poor
-Norah. “There can’t be any place as good as Australia.”
-
-“Of course there isn’t. But you’ll come back.”
-
-“Any more for the shore?”
-
-“Oh, I must go!” cried Jean, and fled, after a final hug. Edward Meadows
-wrung Wally’s hand hard, and went slowly down the gangway—in his mind a
-helpless feeling that perhaps they had not done as much as they might
-for the little brother who had known neither mother nor father. On the
-last step he hesitated, turned, and went back.
-
-“Remember you needn’t ever go short of money,” he said. It seemed such a
-foolish thing; and yet it was all he could find to say.
-
-“Thanks, ever so much, Edward. I’m sure I’ll have plenty.”
-
-“And—come back safe,” said his brother. He gripped his hand again, and
-went down. Already sailors were busy with the gangway ropes.
-
-At the last moment, just as the cumbrous ladder began to be drawn up, a
-figure came racing down the wharf, uttering shouts that were incoherent
-through breathlessness. Behind him puffed a couple of porters,
-staggering under a leather suit-case and a Gladstone bag. The sailors
-above the gangway hesitated, and the newcomer sprang upon it.
-
-“What are you up to, sir?” came the sharp voice of an officer. “Are you
-a passenger?”
-
-“Certainly I am,” responded the breathless one—a short, stout
-individual by no means fitted for violent exercise. “Kindly send some
-one for my baggage.”
-
-A couple of sailors ran down the gangway and took the burdens from the
-panting porters. The late arrival puffed up the steps.
-
-“You cut it pretty fine,” was the comment of the officer.
-
-“Who ever heard of a ship being punctual before?” was the reply.
-“Extraordinary—almost ridiculous!”
-
-The officer laughed in spite of himself.
-
-“It’s never safe to bank on the _Perseus_ being unpunctual,” he
-remarked. “Lucky you caught us. Haul away!”
-
-The gangway came up slowly. Three piercing whistles shrilled from the
-siren. Down on the wharf, the people who had seemed so many on the ship
-now appeared dwindled to a little huddled crowd, with faces upturned; it
-was hard to pick out individuals.
-
-Norah leaned on the rail, looking down—suddenly realising that it was
-indeed “good-bye.” The ship was drawing out slowly—foot by foot the
-water appeared between her side and the pier—unpleasant, dirty water,
-full of floating rubbish. A little way out it sparkled to meet them, a
-dancing mass of foam-flecked blue. But Norah could not see that side
-now—only the little widening strip of brown water, and the wharf with
-its wistful faces. Her own, as she looked, was very wistful. Beyond, sea
-and sky might be blue, calling to her—but on this side lay Australia.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “At each gangway stood a sentry.”]
-
- _From Billabong to London_] [_Page 92_
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
-
- SETTLING DOWN.
-
-“NOW then, kiddie.”
-
-Jim’s hand touched her arm, and Norah looked round. They had passed the
-Gellibrand light and were heading towards the wider spaces of Port
-Phillip Bay. Across the water the sunlight lay golden on the beaches and
-the wooded shores. To the right a little steamer was coming lazily in
-from Geelong.
-
-“Do you want me, Jim?” Norah tried to make her voice steady.
-
-“Well, I think you might as well come and get your cabin ship-shape,”
-Jim said. “You’ve got two or three hours of daylight and smooth water;
-and once you get outside the Heads there may be any sort of weather, and
-you may be any sort of sailor. Not that I believe any of us will be
-sea-sick—this huge old ship can’t toss about much, unless she meets a
-hurricane.”
-
-“Well, you never know,” said Norah, prudently. “And if I’m going to be
-ill I won’t feel like getting ship-shape then, I suppose. All right,
-Jimmy, I’ll go down. How do I get there?”
-
-“Haven’t an idea,” said her brother, laughing. “We’ll ask a steward if
-we get bushed—meanwhile, I know it’s down a flight of stairs, and not
-up; and that’s something. Come along, and we’ll find our way, in time.”
-
-They plunged down the nearest companion, and by dint of studying the
-numbers of the cabins, finally arrived at Norah’s, which looked much
-larger than it had appeared when full of people an hour earlier. Jim
-surveyed the berths with a twinkle.
-
-“Apparently every one who knows you has sent you small tokens of
-regard,” he said. “Better get them unpacked while I unstrap your boxes.
-Got your keys?”
-
-Norah handed over her keys and began the work of investigation, suddenly
-immensely cheered by the friendly packages. Flowers first, in boxes and
-dainty green tissue-paper packages: boronia, sweet peas, carnations, and
-early wattle. Their fragrance filled the cabin, and even Jim exclaimed
-at their beauty.
-
-“You can’t possibly keep them all here,” he said. “I’ll ring for the
-steward and tell him to put some on our table in the saloon, don’t you
-think? Vases not supplied in cabins—lucky for you this is a
-three-berther and you’ve got three tooth-tumblers!”
-
-The flowers disposed of, the work of unwrapping the other parcels went
-on swiftly. Chocolate boxes of every shape and size; books; warm
-slippers; three cushions; bags to hold everything, from shoes to
-sponges; a work-board, fitted with pincushion, thread, scissors, and
-other feminine necessities; an electric torch; and a fascinating
-wall-pocket of green linen, embroidered in shamrocks, with compartments
-for every toilet requisite.
-
-“Now, that’s an uncommonly jolly thing,” said Jim, surveying it. “Keeps
-things all handy-by, and saves ’em rolling about in rough weather.
-Whoever sent you that had sense. Come, and we’ll fix it up.” He dashed
-away to his cabin, returning with a pocket hammer and some brass tacks.
-“Where will you have it?”
-
-“Oh, here, I suppose!” said Norah, indicating a favourable site. “But
-are you allowed to put in tacks, Jim?”
-
-“Can’t tell till I’ve tried,” said Jim, hammering swiftly. “I’m not
-going to ask, anyhow—they’re very decent tacks. There, that’s up, and
-it looks topping. Now for shoe-bags.” He fixed them in a neat row on the
-wall, while Norah arranged her other small belongings.
-
-“Gorgeous clearance!” Jim remarked, surveying the cabin with pride. “How
-about unpacking now? If I haul these trunks out for you, can you
-manage?”
-
-“Rather!” said Norah, gratefully. “You’ve been a brick, Jimmy, and I
-feel much better. I’ll stow away my things in the wardrobe and drawers,
-and then I won’t have to haul my trunks often from under the berths.”
-
-“Don’t you do it at all,” commanded Jim, sternly. “Wal or I will always
-be somewhere about, and anyhow, what’s a steward for? Well, I’ll leave
-you to fix up your fripperies, and go and fix my own. Call me if you
-want me.”
-
-It was not altogether easy to remain cheerful over the boxes Brownie had
-packed so lovingly. The memory of the parting at Billabong was still too
-sore; in everything Norah touched she found reminders of the kind old
-face, struggling against tears, on that last morning when she had said
-good-bye to her. To say good-bye to Murty and the men—even to Black
-Billy; to the horses and dogs; to Billabong itself, peaceful and dear in
-its fringe of green trees; it had all been hard enough, and she ached
-yet at the thought. But Brownie was somehow different, and loved her
-better than any one on earth; and she was old, with no one to comfort
-her. Norah’s heart was heavy for the dear old nurse as she took out one
-neat layer of clothes after another, packed with sprigs of fragrant
-lavender that brought the very breath of the Billabong garden.
-
-Then came a tap at the door, and a neat stewardess looked in.
-
-“Your father sent me to see if I could help you, miss.”
-
-“I don’t think so, thank you,” Norah answered, sitting on the floor of
-the cabin and looking up at her. “I’ve unpacked nearly everything.
-However do people manage when there are three in a cabin this size?”
-
-“Why, I’ve known four,” said the stewardess, laughing. “Four—and grown
-up. Oh, they fit in somehow; the worst of it is if they all happen to be
-sick. That is rather hard on them—and on me. You’re very lucky, miss,
-to have so much room to yourself.”
-
-“I suppose I am,” Norah assented, meekly. “It’s a little hard to
-realise. Do you ever get sick yourself?”
-
-“Stewardesses aren’t supposed to—and they haven’t time,” said the
-other. “We wouldn’t be much good if we weren’t hardened sailors.
-Dinner’s at half-past seven, miss, and the dressing-bugle goes half an
-hour before. Shall I come in to fasten your frock?”
-
-“Yes, please,” Norah answered. “I suppose we’ll be outside the Heads by
-then?”
-
-“Oh, a long way! We’ll be through the Heads at half-past five, and will
-have dropped the pilot. The steward will come in at dusk, miss, to shut
-your port-hole.”
-
-Norah looked up in swift alarm.
-
-“My port-hole? But need I have it shut? I always have my windows open at
-night.”
-
-The stewardess shook her head.
-
-“You could always have it open, in ordinary circumstances, so long as
-the weather wasn’t rough; but not now. It’s the war, you see, miss.
-We’re under the strictest regulations not to show any lights at all; so
-as soon as it is dusk every window on the ship has to be fastened and
-shuttered. We don’t have any deck lights either—not even the port and
-starboard lanterns and the mast-head. Coming out, there was a German
-warship looking for us, and we got past her in the dark and gave her the
-slip; she wasn’t more than ten miles away. She’d have had us, to a
-certainty, if we had been lit up.”
-
-“Good gracious!” said Norah, weakly.
-
-“You see, miss, when the _Perseus_ has all her lights showing she’s like
-an illumination display—any one could see her glow miles away. Our only
-chance may lie in slipping by in the dark. And just now the Germans are
-keeping a very close look-out on the Australian tracks, because they
-hope to cut off the troopships. It makes the voyage very dull, but it
-can’t be helped.”
-
-Cheerful voices came along the alley-way as the stewardess, with a
-friendly smile, disappeared.
-
-“Well, are you fixed up?” Jim asked. “Can Wal come in? Here, we’ll put
-these trunks out of your way.”
-
-“I’m just finished,” Norah said. “How do you think it looks?”
-
-“Jolly!” said Wally, emphatically, casting glances of approval round the
-bright cabin, already homelike with photographs, cushions, flowers and
-other dainty belongings. “Why, it might be a scrap of old Billabong,
-Nor. Here’s Jimmy with the final touch.”
-
-Jim had a grey, furry bundle in his arms.
-
-“It’s only a little ’possum rug,” he said. “Your travelling rug may
-often get damp with spray, and it’s rather jolly to have a spare one for
-your bunk. Dad and I got it for you.” He spread it out on the berth.
-“Will it do, kiddie?”
-
-“Do!” said Norah, and put her cheek down into the grey softness. “It’s
-just a beauty, Jim—you and Dad do think of the loveliest things!
-They’re splendid skins; and I’m so glad you had the tails left on.
-Doesn’t it make my bed look nice?”
-
-“You mustn’t say a bed, on board ship,” Jim said, severely. “Beds are
-shore luxuries, and this is merely a bunk.”
-
-“It’s good enough for me,” said his sister happily. “It looks a jolly
-place to sleep. I’m ready, Jim; can’t we go on deck? I want to see the
-Heads.”
-
-“We came to bring you,” Jim said, “though there’s half an hour yet. Has
-the stewardess been saddening your young mind about your port-hole?”
-
-“Yes—isn’t it awful! How on earth is one to sleep with one’s window
-shut?”
-
-“Well, it isn’t quite so bad as it seems—though it’s bad enough,” Jim
-answered. “As long as there’s a light in your cabin the shutter must be
-up; but as soon as you switch it off, it can be opened, only of course
-you’re on your honour not to light up again. So I can come in after
-you’re in bed and open it for you.”
-
-“Oh, thank goodness!” Norah said, fervently. “Will it bother you much,
-Jim?”
-
-“It will not. And if you want a light in the night, your little electric
-torch won’t matter, if you pull the curtain across the port. We’ve been
-asking the purser about it, and he says it will be all right; only they
-have to make the regulations very strict, because so many people are
-fools about it, and disobey rules altogether if they get half a chance.
-A man always has to be on duty, keeping a watch over the side to make
-sure that no window is showing an unlawful beam.”
-
-“Funny, what idiots people can be!” Wally commented. “You wouldn’t think
-any one would want to be caught by the Germans.”
-
-“Oh, there are always people who think they know more than the
-authorities,” Jim said, “and who like to show how brave they are. As the
-purser says, the owners wouldn’t a bit mind their being exceedingly
-courageous with themselves, but they object to their taking chances with
-a ship worth a million and a half. Anyhow, there will be trouble for
-transgressors on this voyage. Come up on deck.”
-
-There was a fresh breeze blowing as they reached the head of the
-companion; and Wally dived back again for Norah’s coat. The _Perseus_
-was nearing the twin Heads, Point Lonsdale and Point Nepean, that form
-the entrance to Port Phillip Bay. On the right lay the little town of
-Queenscliff; on the left, barren heights, sparsely covered with scrub,
-where, through the glasses, they could see soldiers moving about,
-keeping a close watch. A detachment of the Light Horse could be descried
-on a rocky point.
-
-“A ship tried to slip out without her proper clearance papers the other
-day,” Wally said.
-
-“Did she get out?”
-
-“Not much. The fort at Queenscliff fired a blank shot first, by way of
-friendly warning; then, as she didn’t take any notice, they put a shell
-just across her bows. Then she paused to ruminate, and came back. She
-really wasn’t up to any mischief—it was only a disinclination on the
-part of her captain to regard war restrictions. I hear they made him pay
-the cost of his own bombardment.”
-
-“Serve him right,” said Norah, laughing. “Wally, is that the Rip?”
-
-Outside the Heads could be seen a flurry of broken water—great green
-waves that came charging hither and thither, without any of the
-regularity of breakers dashing upon a shore. Now and then one broke in a
-wild “white horse” that was hastily engulfed in the mass of swirling
-green. Sometimes the mass would pile itself up and up in broken hills of
-water; then, as though sucked under by some mighty, unseen power, it
-subsided, tumbling into fragments and dashing away furiously. A little
-steamer was coming through it, rolling so terribly that momentarily it
-seemed that she could not recover herself, but must go under. As they
-watched, a great wave reared itself up and hit her squarely, burying her
-in a cloud of foam.
-
-“Yes, that’s the Rip,” Wally answered. “My aunt, isn’t that boat having
-a lively time!”
-
-The little steamer emerged—her bluff black bows coming out of the spray
-much as a dogged mastiff might emerge from a ducking. She rolled, in the
-same whole-hearted fashion, as the next wave slid from under
-her—plunging down into a wild gulf of tumbling sea, to struggle up
-again on the further side, white foam dashing from her bows. The dense
-smoke from her funnels trailed behind her in a solid cloud of black.
-
-“But she’ll sink!” Norah gasped.
-
-“Not she!”
-
-“But—why, she was nearly over then!”
-
-“She’s used to it,” said Wally, laughing.
-
-“I never saw such a thing,” ejaculated Norah. “Do you mean to tell me
-we’ll be doing that in a few minutes?”
-
-Some one behind them laughed cheerfully.
-
-“We’re much too big to dance such jigs as that,” said a friendly
-voice—and they turned to see a man in blue uniform smiling at them.
-“Don’t you worry—we’ll go through the Rip as though it wasn’t there.”
-
-“I’m glad to hear it,” said Norah, relieved.
-
-“I’ve been talking to your father,” said the newcomer; “but as he isn’t
-here, I’ll have to introduce myself. My name is Merriton, Miss Linton,
-and I’m a highly formidable person, being the ship’s doctor. I’ve heard
-all about you from my old friend, Dr. Anderson, in Cunjee; he has sent
-me special instructions to look after you. I hope you’re not going to
-give me any trouble!”
-
-“Well, I’m never ill,” said Norah, smiling at the cheery face. “I’m sure
-Dr. Anderson didn’t tell you I needed looking after in that way, because
-he always says he has never had the satisfaction of giving me medicine!”
-
-“That’s precisely the sort of person I like to look after,” said the
-doctor. “Patients on land are all very well, but a patient in a cabin is
-a sad and sorry thing. Thank goodness, the _Perseus_ doesn’t have many
-of them; every one seems to come on board in rude health, and to leave,
-when the voyage is over, rather ruder. No, I look after the passengers
-on the principle of prevention rather than cure; keep ’em moving, keep
-’em playing games, keep ’em doing anything that will have a salutary
-effect upon their livers and prevent them developing anything resembling
-a symptom!”
-
-“Don’t you get disliked, sir?” Jim asked, laughing.
-
-“Oh, intensely! But it’s all in the day’s work. They abuse me, and they
-never know how much they owe to me. Now we’re nearly through the Heads,
-Miss Linton—say good-bye to old Victoria!”
-
-The ship was just passing the long pier that runs out from Point
-Lonsdale, and seems to divide the open ocean from the Bay. They could
-plainly distinguish the faces of people standing on the end, watching
-them. Beyond lay brown rocks, and the yellow curve of the ocean beach,
-with great waves beating upon it; to the left the jagged coast-line
-where more than one good ship had met her doom. Straight ahead lay the
-Rip. The little steamer had come through the roughest part and was
-running towards them.
-
-Norah looked back. The greater part of the Bay was hidden since the turn
-by Queenscliff; she could only see the flat shore-line beyond the town.
-A haze had sprung up, obscuring everything. Melbourne was long ago
-blotted out. It was as though a veil had fallen between the old life and
-the new.
-
-“Now you’ll see how she takes it, Miss Linton,” said the doctor
-cheerily.
-
-They were through the Heads, and racing outwards; already the swell of
-the Rip was under them, and the great steamer rose and fell to it—so
-gently that Norah forgot to wonder if she were to be sea-sick or not.
-On, swiftly until the broken water was foaming round them, the _Perseus_
-rolling a little as she cut her way through. Then they were out in the
-smoother water beyond, with the long ocean swell heaving. A little grey
-steamer rocked just beyond.
-
-“That’s the pilot-boat,” said Wally. “Watch him go.”
-
-They leaned over the side and watched the grizzled pilot go quickly down
-a swinging rope-ladder to a waiting dinghy that had put off from the
-grey steamer. It was a kind of acrobatic feat, and Norah breathed more
-freely when the old man had landed safely in the tossing little boat. He
-took the tiller, and the oarsmen pulled swiftly across to the steamer,
-from the deck of which some one shouted last messages to the _Perseus_.
-
-“So that’s done with,” said the doctor; “and now it’s heigh for
-home!—for us, that is. When you’re feeling blue, for want of Australia,
-Miss Linton, you can remember that we poor seafaring folk are going to
-have the luxury of getting home for Christmas—and that’s a thing that
-doesn’t often come our way.”
-
-“I’m glad you are,” said Norah, soberly. It was easy to feel friendly
-with the doctor, even though she was a rather shy person. He was not
-very young, but for all that his face was like a boy’s; he had a merry
-voice, and his eyes were quick and kindly. When he smiled at her she
-felt that she had known him for quite a long time.
-
-Mr. Linton appeared round a corner of the deck-house.
-
-“Oh! there you are—I’ve been looking for you,” he said. “People on a
-ship of this size take plenty of hunting; I put a deck-steward on the
-trail at last, and he’s probably hunting still. Feel all right, Norah?”
-
-“Yes, thank you,” said Norah, in such evident amazement that every one
-laughed.
-
-“Well, you’ve been through the Rip—and that is an experience that leads
-many to take prompt refuge in their cabins,” said the doctor. “Not that
-there’s the least excuse for any one being ill on this ship—she’s as
-steady as old Time.”
-
-“Why, I never thought about it,” Norah said. “The girls told me I’d be
-ill in the Rip, and I was feeling worried—I was thinking last night how
-horrid it would be. But I forgot all about it when it came—it was so
-interesting!”
-
-“You’re not going to be ill at all—put it out of your head,” said the
-doctor. Which Norah promptly did, and had no occasion ever to revive
-unpleasant memories, since none of the party manifested signs of illness
-at any period of the voyage.
-
-On their way to dress for dinner some one called Mr. Linton back, while
-the others waited for him on a wide landing. Close by was the purser’s
-office, where a heated altercation was going on between the chief
-assistant and the stout individual who had so narrowly caught the ship
-at the last moment.
-
-“Sorry, Mr. Smith,” the assistant was saying. “The purser is
-engaged—he’s with the captain.”
-
-“I have asked for him at least four times, and he has always been
-engaged,” said Mr. Smith, angrily.
-
-“Well, he generally is, on a sailing day. Can’t I do anything? Is your
-cabin uncomfortable?”
-
-“The cabin is well enough. It is about a telegram I must send.”
-
-The assistant shook his head.
-
-“No wireless to be used,” he said. “War regulation. You can telegraph
-from Adelaide, of course.”
-
-“That is ridiculous,” said the stout man angrily. “In Australian
-waters——”
-
-“Well, it isn’t my regulation,” the assistant said. “You’d better
-complain to the military authorities. No, the purser can’t help you;
-why, the captain couldn’t. It’s war precaution, I tell you.”
-
-Mr. Linton then came up, and the rest of the conversation was lost. They
-could hear the stout man’s angry voice as they went down the staircase.
-
-“Seems in a bad temper,” Wally observed.
-
-“He’s a hasty person altogether,” said Mr. Linton. “The captain tells me
-that he decided only at the last moment to come on this voyage. He
-certainly arrived at the last moment!”
-
-“Hadn’t he a ticket?” asked Jim.
-
-“Not a ticket—not that that matters, of course, with so empty a ship.
-No trouble for them to fix him up. But he seems to expect a good deal,
-for an eleventh-hour passenger.” Mr. Linton yawned. “The sea is making
-me sleepy already,” he declared, disappearing into his cabin.
-
-It made Norah sleepy very early that night. After the lengthy dinner was
-over, they went on deck, where strolling was difficult because of the
-absence of lights; and the rushing water overside was a mysterious mass,
-dark and formless. All the best of Norah’s world was with her—and yet
-she was homesick. Somewhere beyond the rail over which they leaned was
-home; they were lonely at Billabong, and here it was lonely, too.
-
-She gave herself a little mental shake. After all they were
-together—and that was really all that mattered.
-
-“I’m sleepy,” she declared.
-
-“Then turn in,” Jim counselled. “I’ll come and open your port when I go
-down. Can you find your way?”
-
-“It’s time I learned, at any rate,” said Norah, sturdily.
-
-She found it, after a few wrong turns, and made short work of preparing
-for bed. The stewardess looked in to find out if she could be of any
-use, and went off, with a brisk “good-night.” The cabin was cheery and
-homelike—full of the scent of Bush flowers, and pleasant with
-photographs, that seemed to smile to her. She was not nearly so lonely
-when at last she slipped into bed, under the grey ’possum fur—and the
-little bunk was comfortable and quaint, and made her feel that she was
-really on board ship.
-
-Jim looked in presently.
-
-“Comfy, little chap? And how do you like it?”
-
-“Yes, very comfy. Jim, I think it’s rather jolly.”
-
-“Of course it is,” said Jim. “You look snug enough. Sure you’re warm?
-And you know where the bell is, in case you want the stewardess?”
-
-“Oh, I’m not going to want anything!” Norah answered. “I’m too sleepy.
-She creaks a lot, doesn’t she, Jim?”
-
-“Who—the stewardess?” said Jim, puzzled.
-
-“No, stupid—the ship. If she didn’t creak, and I wasn’t in a bunk, she
-would be just like a hotel.”
-
-“Not much difference,” Jim answered. He switched off the light and
-unscrewed the port-hole, going out with a last cheery word. And then
-Norah found that there was another difference—through the open port
-came the sound of the sea. It rushed and boiled past, splashing on the
-side of the ship near her; somehow there was an impression of great
-speed, far greater than in daylight. Norah liked the sound. She went to
-sleep, with the sea talking to her.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
-
- OF FISHES AND THE SEA.
-
-“BEING at sea,” said Wally, thoughtfully, “is very queer.”
-
-“In what way?” demanded Norah.
-
-“Well, you forget all about everything else. At least, I do. Don’t you?
-It’s only a week since we saw land, but I feel as if I’d never been
-anywhere but on this old ship. You wake up in the same creaky old cabin,
-and you have the same tub, at the command of the same steward; and you
-come up on deck and see the same old sea, and the same faces; nothing
-else. Then you walk the same deck, and—oh, do the same old things all
-day! Nothing different.”
-
-“Yes—but it’s all rather jolly,” said Norah. “You like it, don’t you?”
-
-“Oh, awfully! I don’t care how long it goes on. But I’ve got a queer
-feeling that I’ve never done anything else, and never will again.”
-
-“Well, that’s just stupid!” said Norah, practically. “And if you really
-felt like it, I think you’d begin to be dull at once.”
-
-“Well, there’s something in that,” said Wally. “Of course, one knows
-it’s going to end, and that something altogether different is going to
-happen. Only one can’t picture it. It’s like being told you’ll die some
-day; you know it’s perfectly true, but you don’t believe it.”
-
-“Wally!” ejaculated Norah, amazed. “What on earth is the matter? Are you
-sick?”
-
-“Sick?” said Wally, staring. “Not me. I was merely reflecting. Can’t a
-fellow think?”
-
-“It’s so unusual, in your case,” put in Jim, who had been silently
-smoking. “You might give us a little warning when you go in for these
-unaccustomed exercises. All the same, I know what you’re driving at; one
-gets into a kind of rut on board ship, without being able to see the end
-of it. If one could imagine how things will be in England, it would be
-different—but it’s hard to imagine a place you’ve never seen, and under
-extraordinary conditions!”
-
-“So it is,” Norah said. “The end of this voyage is like a dark curtain
-across everything. I wish we could see to the other side of it.”
-
-“So do I,” agreed Wally. “But as we can’t, the best thing is not to
-think of it. What are you going to do to-day, Norah?”
-
-“Oh—just worry through another old day!” said Norah, laughing. “There
-isn’t any special plan, I believe.”
-
-It was a week since they had seen land. They had said a final good-bye
-to Australia after a brief stay at Adelaide, spent in scampering round
-the bright little city lying at the foot of the Mount Lofty Ranges, and
-in a motor-car run through the hills themselves, seeing exquisite
-panoramas of plain and sea far below. The almond-orchards were in
-blossom; over the plains their wide expanse was like a mist of
-shimmering opal. Above, on the foothills, golden wattle blazed for
-miles. But South Australia was in the grip of the worst drought in its
-history, and the hills were dry and bare, and scarred with the marks of
-great bush-fires; it hurt to see the happy country so worn and tired.
-They were not sorry when the time came to rejoin the ship, and to steam
-down the Gulf and out to sea.
-
-Somewhere ahead, rumour said, were the Australian transports; the first
-contingent of troops had slipped away from Melbourne silently, under
-cover of darkness, and no one seemed to know definitely the day of their
-going. Rumour went further, saying that they were to coal at an
-unfrequented southern port of West Australia; so that the _Perseus_
-would probably draw ahead, without catching sight of the fleet—which
-was disappointing. After that, rumour became speculative and varied. One
-report stated that the troops were to go to South Africa, to help the
-Government there, hard-pressed between rebellion and the enemy; another
-gave India as their destination, and another, Egypt; while the majority
-still held to the belief that they would be sent direct to France. And
-as no one knew any more than any one else, and nothing definite was
-known in any quarter, the _Perseus_ buzzed with conjectures and
-arguments, the natural result of which was that no one got any
-“forrarder.”
-
-Australia was now far behind them. They had not touched any western
-port, but had headed straight for the Indian Ocean, and now were
-swinging across it towards South Africa, apparently the only ship afloat
-upon its wide expanse. The outward and homeward routes vary, according
-to ocean currents, so that ships going and coming rarely meet; and, in
-addition, the _Perseus_ was running many miles off her course, in the
-hope of eluding German cruisers, of which several were known to be
-prowling about, any one of their number ready to pounce upon the
-_Perseus_ like a hungry dingo upon a large and very fat lamb. It was,
-however, unlikely that any would be so far south as their present
-position, and the passengers had been quite unable to stir themselves to
-any degree of nervousness. War precautions were observed in obedience to
-Admiralty instructions rather than from inward convictions.
-
-Meanwhile, the voyage was not exciting. To put thirty passengers on
-board a ship capable of carrying three hundred and fifty is to produce
-an effect similar to that of a few small peas in a large pod. And these
-passengers on the _Perseus_ were mostly anxious and pre-occupied people:
-full of anxieties connected with the war, and longing so keenly for the
-voyage to be over, that the ship and its population held but little
-interest for them. A sprinkling of South African settlers were hurrying
-homewards; some to fight, and all concerned for the safety of their
-properties. There were wives whose husbands were already fighting in
-France; grave-faced women, who did not talk much, but counted each slow
-day that must elapse before they could obtain news of their dear ones.
-Half a dozen young men were on their way to England to enlist
-there—ready for any job, so that it only meant business; hoping for a
-commission, but quite willing to join as rankers if necessary. One had
-his motor-car on board; another had left a vast property in New South
-Wales; a third had been pearl-fishing off Port Darwin, and had made his
-way right across the desert in the centre of Australia to join the
-Expeditionary Force at Adelaide—and finding himself just too late for
-the first contingent, had been too impatient to await the formation of
-the second, and so had caught the _Perseus_ at the last moment. Two or
-three retired British officers, recalled from Australia to the colours,
-were on board—with stories, half-comical, half-tragic, of homes broken
-up at a moment’s notice on receipt of a curt cable from the War Office.
-The cloud that lay upon the whole world rested also on this one atom of
-Empire, lonely in a wide sea; there was no topic but War.
-
-“It’s maddening to be so long without news,” Jim said, leaning over the
-rail to watch the white curl of foam breaking away from the bow. “It
-seemed long enough to wait for one’s morning paper in Melbourne, even
-after you’d seen every ‘special extra’ the day before; and then suddenly
-to drop into silence!”
-
-“You’ve only had a week of silence—and there are eleven days yet to
-Durban,” Wally remarked. “No good in worrying yet. I wish they’d let us
-use the wireless.”
-
-“They won’t,” Jim said. “Orders are awfully strict; no wireless except
-in case of absolute emergency. Oh, it wouldn’t be good enough; a German
-could locate a ship by her wireless to within a few miles. You might as
-well put a bell on your neck.”
-
-“Inventions are going too far nowadays,” said Wally, with deep
-disfavour. “Old Marconi had done very well without a further refinement
-like that—it’s only lately that they have been able to harness
-sound-waves so completely, and I don’t see any real use in it. It’s a
-jolly nuisance, anyhow.”
-
-“Did you ever see any one look so miserable as the sentry?” asked Norah,
-laughing.
-
-A young sailor was on duty at the door of the Marconi-room, standing
-sentinel, with rifle and fixed bayonet. It was evident that he had not
-been prepared for warlike uses, and his expression also was a fixed one,
-full of woe. His mates, passing, grinned at him openly; small cabin-boys
-and junior stewards peeped round corners and jeered at him, beseeching
-him not to let his bayonet go off. Like Casabianca, he stood at his
-post, but without enthusiasm.
-
-“It would be interesting to see him if any one tried to get in to the
-wireless,” said Jim. “I’m sure he wouldn’t run away, but he’d be much
-more likely to damage himself than the intruder with that toothpick of
-his; I don’t believe he ever handled one before.”
-
-“Who would want to get in, anyhow?” Wally inquired, lazily.
-
-“No one, that I know of,” Jim answered. “It would bore most people stiff
-to be kept in the Marconi-room for ten minutes. Still, they can’t make
-rules for one ship alone, and there may be Germans on board any ship,
-able to use the instrument. I suppose if we were on a crowded boat, with
-a few suspects with foreign accents scattered among the passengers, we’d
-think all the precautions highly desirable; it’s only because we’re on
-this peaceful old tub that they seem unnecessary.”
-
-“I wouldn’t mind their having sentries all over the ship, if they wanted
-to—but I’m beginning to feel I would chance any number of Germans for
-the sake of fresh air!” said Norah, ruefully. “It’s bad enough to have
-your cabin shut up from dusk until you’re in bed—but at least you don’t
-stay in it. The rest of the ship just gets stifling.”
-
-“You see,” said Wally, “if you shut up a ship, you shut so many assorted
-smells into her—engine-rooms, cooks’ galley, saloon, cabins, and
-people, with a sort of top-dressing of new paint, hot oil, and wash-up
-water. Then the gentle aroma of tallow, from the holds, works up through
-the lot. Then you don’t breathe any more.”
-
-“You wish you didn’t, at any rate,” responded Norah, laughing.
-
-“It beats me, how some of the passengers seem to thrive on it,” Jim
-remarked. “Look how they sit in the lounge at night, half of ’em
-smoking, and every chink shut up, and play bridge. I’ve come to the
-conclusion that they’re made of sterner stuff than we are.”
-
-“Well, we can’t help it—it’s because we live in the open all the year
-round. A stuffy house is bad enough, but a stuffy ship—ugh!” Norah
-grimaced, with expression, if not with elegance. “Let’s be thankful we
-can live on deck most of the time; it’s always lovely there.”
-
-“This is where you hail me as your benefactor, by the way,” Jim
-observed. “The little cabin next yours is empty; I’ve arranged with your
-steward for you to use it as a dressing-room in the evenings, and then
-you needn’t have a light in your own cabin at all—and the port needn’t
-be shut.”
-
-“Jimmy, you are an angel!” said his sister, solemnly. “When did you
-think of it?”
-
-Jim had the grace to look sheepish.
-
-“When it struck me this morning to manage the same thing for myself and
-Wal!” he admitted. “I don’t know why I didn’t think of these empty
-cabins before. At least it means that we’ll have fresh air to sleep in,
-and that’s something.” He broke into a suppressed laugh, hiding it by
-renewed attention to the waves.
-
-“What is it?” asked Norah.
-
-“That seafaring person,” said Jim, indicating an old quartermaster, who
-had passed them with a slightly aloof air, “had an adventure with Wal
-and me after you had gone below last night. We were stretched out on our
-deck-chairs—the deck as dark as usual, of course, only you know how you
-get used to the dim light after a while?”
-
-Norah nodded.
-
-“Well, he came suddenly out of the light of a doorway, shutting it
-quickly after him, and approached us. We thought he saw us, so we never
-thought of speaking; and we only realised that he couldn’t see us at all
-when he fell violently on top of us. He hit Wal’s chair first, and
-tripped; then he fell across us both and lay face downwards on us for a
-moment, with a loud groan—and then he rolled off our knees, and sat up
-on the deck, looking the biggest idiot you can imagine. And we hadn’t
-any manners—we just howled!”
-
-“How lovely!” said Norah, twinkling. “What happened?”
-
-“He fled,” said Jim. “And we went on howling. It was a very cheerful
-happening.”
-
-“No wonder he went past you with his nose in the air,” Norah said. “Poor
-old fellow!—it must have been a shock to him.”
-
-“Not half such a shock as it was to us,” said Wally. “We never asked him
-to fall on us—and he’s bonier than you’d think. Next time I would like
-to choose a fat, soft quartermaster; this one is simply one of the
-horrors of war, when he falls on you. He’s all bony outcrops. Look,
-Norah, there’s a porpoise!”
-
-“One!—why, there’s a school!” Jim said.
-
-The big creatures were gambolling about a ship’s length away, having
-mysteriously appeared from the west. More and more appeared, until the
-sea seemed full of them—great, dark forms, shooting into the air in a
-curve that was extraordinarily graceful, considering their bulk, and
-piercing the waves again with hardly a splash. They came nearer and
-nearer, evidently interested in the ship; looking down, Norah could see
-them under water, dim shadows shooting through the green depths. For a
-while they kept pace with the steamer; then they gradually drew off, as
-if in obedience to some invisible signal from their leader, and headed
-westward again, until at length the leaping, sleek forms were lost in
-the distance.
-
-“They must be immensely strong beasts,” Wally said. “I remember once
-being in the bow of a big steamer going to Queensland, and three
-porpoises had quite a game with us—they kept springing into the air and
-shooting backwards and forwards in front of the bow—so close to it that
-it looked as if they’d be cut in two as they sprang. But they must know
-exactly how to judge distance; the bow seemed right on them every time,
-but it never touched them. They played with that old ship like three
-great puppies—and she was going along at a good rate, too. I must say
-I’d like to see a porpoise in a real hurry—he’d be something like a
-torpedo!”
-
-“Nice people,” said Norah, watching the last dark speck in the west. “I
-hope they’ll come often. Are we likely to see any whales?”
-
-“It’s not the season, but you never can tell. Durban is a great place
-for them, I believe,” Jim answered. “Mr. Smith saw a great many there
-last time he came out.”
-
-“Mr. Smith seems to be developing an affection for you, Jimmy,” Wally
-said. “I saw him deep in soulful intercourse with you before breakfast.”
-
-“I don’t know about either the soul or the affection,” said Jim—“but
-he’s a lonely sort of beggar. No one seems to want him. And he’s really
-rather interesting when he gets talking. I can’t quite make out who he
-is, or where he comes from; he’s been in Australia for a good bit, and
-he says he’s a Canadian, but he doesn’t look like one.”
-
-“He’s such a bad-tempered animal,” Wally said. “He fell foul of the
-purser on his first day on board, and seems to have been fairly uncivil
-to the captain; and my steward says he’s a ‘holy terror’ in his cabin.
-One of those people who are never satisfied. And he can’t play games or
-do anything.”
-
-“Oh, well, he doesn’t worry us much!” said Jim, easily. “He doesn’t
-often want to talk, and when he does, one can’t be rude to him. He’s
-very interested in the troopships—has a nephew in the New South Wales
-contingent. That’s what we were talking about this morning; he heard me
-say I knew a lot of fellows in the crowd, and he wanted to know if I
-knew where they were going. His nephew can’t stand heat, he says, and he
-doesn’t want him to be in Egypt. I guess he’ll get enough cold in
-Flanders before the show is over.”
-
-“Where’s Mr. Smith going?” inquired Wally.
-
-“Oh, to London, I think! He isn’t communicative about himself, and I
-don’t know what his business is; he has travelled a lot, and knows
-Europe pretty well. Quite an interesting animal to talk to. But I
-haven’t run across any one with so little interest in the war—he says
-he’s lost heavily by it, and that seems to have soured him—he won’t
-talk war, except for his beloved nephew. Must be a pretty decent sort of
-uncle, I should think.”
-
-“That sort of person might be all right as an uncle, but I don’t seem to
-hanker after him as anything at all, myself,” said Wally. “But you
-always used to find some decency in the most hopeless little beggars at
-school, Jim.”
-
-“Oh, well, most people are pretty decent when you come to know ’em a
-bit!” said Jim, carelessly. “Anyhow, I believe in thinking they are;
-life wouldn’t be worth living if one went round expecting to find the
-other fellow a beast. And old Smith isn’t really half bad. Here’s Dad.”
-
-“Where have you been hiding yourself, Dad?” Norah asked, turning to meet
-her father. “We hunted everywhere for you a while ago.”
-
-“I’ve been up in the captain’s quarters,” explained her father. “He has
-very comfortable rooms; we have been smoking and talking. It’s an
-anxious position to hold; I wouldn’t care to be captain of a big liner
-in the present state of affairs, but it seems to sit lightly enough on
-him. At any rate, he doesn’t wear his heart upon his sleeve, and if he’s
-worried, his passengers are the last people likely to find it out.”
-
-“The voyage out must have been exciting,” Wally remarked. “They had a
-huge passenger-list, and German cruisers were very plentiful—one only
-missed them by a few miles in the dark.”
-
-“We’re to have boat-drill every week,” said Mr. Linton. “After the drill
-for the crew, a double whistle is to summon the passengers; every one
-has been allotted a boat-station, under the command of an officer, and
-we’re supposed to tumble up pretty sharply and answer to our names. Not
-much in it, but it will teach us where to go in case of emergency, and
-to know under which officer we should be. Otherwise we should be like a
-mob of sheep.”
-
-The captain, cheery-faced and alert, bore down upon the little group.
-
-“Has your father been telling you my plans for disturbing your leisure,
-Miss Norah?” he asked. At home the captain had small girls of his own;
-Norah and he were already great friends. “I hope you won’t find it a
-bore; some passengers on the way out considered it beneath their dignity
-to turn up to boat-drill, but on the whole they are very good about it.”
-
-“I think it will be rather fun,” said Norah. “Whose boat are we in?”
-
-“You’re in the second boat, under the doctor,” replied the captain. “I
-shall look to you to aid him, as first mate—with full authority from me
-to keep Wally in order, and put him in irons if necessary.”
-
-“What have I done?” asked Wally plaintively.
-
-“That’s very satisfactory,” said Norah, laughing, and not heeding the
-victim. “Captain, if we had to take to the boats in earnest, what
-luggage could we have with us?”
-
-“H’m,” said the captain, reflectively. “Luggage is a wide term, and it
-would entirely depend upon the Germans—they might let people take a
-good deal or nothing at all. I wouldn’t have any say in the matter.
-There is plenty of room, of course, with so few passengers. I should
-recommend you to have a small suit-case with valuables and necessaries,
-and as many rugs and coats as you could carry, separately.”
-
-“Would it be wise to have a suit-case ready packed?”
-
-The captain laughed.
-
-“Well, I don’t suppose for a moment that the Germans are going to get
-us, Miss Norah,” he said. “Don’t you worry your little head about them.
-We take precautions, of course, because that’s common-sense, but they
-need not make any one nervous. A lot of passengers on the way out kept
-their valuables packed in readiness, and it may have acted as a kind of
-insurance against trouble, for the enemy didn’t get us—and they were
-near enough. Just please yourself, and don’t get anxious.”
-
-“Why, I don’t suppose they would hurt the passengers, in any case,” said
-Mr. Linton. “War isn’t piracy, captain.”
-
-“No; not with decent people. And so far the Germans at sea have been
-exceedingly decent,” the captain answered. “The _Emden_ has done plenty
-of damage, but not to people; her captain must be a very good sort,
-judging by the way he has acted towards British who fell into his hands.
-No; there might be a certain amount of discomfort, of course, but no
-danger. Do you like queer experiences, Miss Norah?”
-
-“I do,” said Norah, promptly.
-
-“Then I hope you won’t get this one!” said the captain, as promptly.
-“Not on my ship, anyhow. And I don’t think you will, either—the route
-will be well guarded, and we don’t run risks. You must look on
-boat-drill as just one of the games the doctor advocates—designed to
-keep you all from getting fat and lazy. And there’s a whale blowing over
-there—can you see?”
-
-Norah turned in excitement, and could just see the faint spout of water
-on the horizon.
-
-“Is that all?” she said, disgustedly. “Won’t he come any nearer?”
-
-“I’m afraid that one won’t,” said the captain; “he’s a long way off, and
-we’re going fast. But don’t say I didn’t provide you with diversions,
-Miss Norah—porpoises and leviathans of the deep, and boat-drill!” He
-laughed at the disappointed face. “A whale is really a dull, old thing,
-until you get to close quarters, but you needn’t say I said so—they’re
-one of our stock attractions. I must go”—and he went, swiftly, with
-quick greetings for passengers on the way. The captain possessed in full
-that valuable attribute of captains of liners—at the day’s end each
-passenger used to feel that he or she had been the special object of
-“the skipper’s” attention and interest. It is this quality which helps
-to lead to the command of big ships.
-
-Some one came up and carried off the boys and Norah to a game of
-deck-tennis—which is played with a rope quoit across a net, and
-provides as much strenuous exercise and as many bruised knuckles as the
-most exacting could demand. Mr. Linton found his deck-chair and a book,
-and the long, lazy morning went by imperceptibly, as do all mornings on
-board ship. At luncheon, there were rumours of news—some one had heard
-that the wireless operator was in communication with a ship, and there
-ensued a buzz of speculation. The captain, entering, was appealed to by
-a dozen voices.
-
-“No news at all,” said he, sitting down. “The operator heard a British
-warship speaking somewhere, a long way off; she speaks in code, but they
-know the preliminary signals.”
-
-Mr. Smith, looking slightly anxious, shot out a question.
-
-“That does not mean danger to the troopships, I hope, captain?”
-
-“I shouldn’t think so,” said the captain. “There’s no reason that it
-should; with a big convoy like that the warships will be spread out, and
-they must exchange messages. It’s probably of the simplest nature—only
-we don’t know anything about it, so I can’t enlighten any one.” He gave
-a little laugh. “I suppose there is no use in my mentioning that the
-best advice I can give you all is to forget that there is a war?”
-
-Mr. Smith, returning to his soup, was heard to murmur something
-unintelligibly about his nephew. He looked worried and pre-occupied; and
-when his neighbour, who happened to be the pearl-fishing man from Port
-Darwin, asked him a question, he hesitated, stammered, and finally gave
-an answer so incoherent that the other stared.
-
-“He’s a rum chap, that,” the Port Darwin man, John West, confided to
-Jim, later. “You’d almost think he had something on his mind. Anybody
-after him, do you think?”
-
-“Well—he joined the ship in a hurry at the last moment,” Jim said.
-“Naturally, he didn’t mention if any one were on his track.”
-
-“If you come to that, I did the same thing myself,” said West, laughing.
-“Going down to Port Adelaide, I was thinking I should have to chase the
-old ship down the Gulf in a motor-boat! So I can’t very well afford to
-talk about Smith. And I daresay he’s all right—he’s only worried about
-his precious nephew. I told him at lunch that there were heaps of other
-people’s nephews in the contingent, so his wouldn’t be lonesome; but it
-did not seem to comfort him to any noticeable extent. There isn’t much
-emotion left for a wife or mother when a mere uncle takes on like
-Smith!”
-
-“He’s a man of feeling—and there aren’t many among you hard-headed
-young Australians!” said the doctor, laughing in his turn. “You can’t
-understand a man showing any emotion at all. Smith, being fat and soft,
-is different—that’s all. Look at him now.”
-
-They were sitting in the deck-lounge, smoking. A few yards away Mr.
-Smith came into view, an unlit cigar in his mouth. His broad face was
-almost comically lined and perplexed, and he passed them without any
-sign of observing them. Immediately behind him came Norah, encumbered
-with a large, restless baby.
-
-“Wherever did you get that thing, Norah?” Jim called to her.
-
-“He isn’t a thing,” said Norah, indignantly. “He’s a very nice
-person—only his mother is apt to get a bit tired.”
-
-“I don’t wonder,” said the doctor, as the baby executed a leap that
-would have been a somersault but for his bearer’s firm grip. “Is he
-training for a porpoise, do you think? Come and sit down, Miss
-Norah—he’s too heavy to be carried for long at a stretch.”
-
-Norah sat down thankfully, and the baby graciously accepted the doctor’s
-silver tobacco-box, and proceeded to concentrate all his energies on
-opening it.
-
-“What have you done with his mother?”
-
-“Oh, she has gone to lie down—she has a headache, and the baby doesn’t
-give her much peace,” Norah answered. “He’s really quite good if you
-show him things. We’ve been looking for whales—but whales are so
-uninteresting in the distance.”
-
-“I wish I could show you some giant rays I saw once,” the doctor said.
-“We were going up the coast from Bombay to Karachi in a British-India
-turbine boat, and after breakfast one morning on a calm day there were a
-lot of them jumping about two miles off. They’re worth seeing when they
-jump. You know their shape—enormous flat things—and they came out of
-the water with a sort of gradual upward rush, like a hydroplane lifting,
-rise about ten feet from the water, and then come down flat—whop! It’s
-like a billiard-table falling on the water.”
-
-“Whew!” said Wally. “I’d like to see them. What size do they run to?”
-
-“I could tell you of one that measured thirty feet from nose-tip to
-tail-tip, and sixteen feet from side to side—only people don’t always
-believe the yarn, and it discourages me,” said the doctor, with a
-twinkle in his eye.
-
-“Go on, doctor—we promise to believe anything!” Jim assured him.
-
-“As a matter of fact, the story is sober truth—but it was a queer
-coincidence,” the doctor said. “We were talking about these big rays to
-the first officer of the ship, that morning, and he told us that about
-two years before, a ship in which he was second mate had run into one of
-them in those same latitudes. It got across the bow, simply wrapped
-round it, and was drowned by being dragged through the water. They got a
-rope on to it and lifted it aboard by a windlass. It was the one of
-which I told you—measured thirty by sixteen.”
-
-“What would he weigh?”
-
-“Oh—tons. I caught a ray once in the Andaman Islands; it was a small
-one, four feet from side to side, and ten feet long—six or seven feet
-of that was tail. It weighed a hundred and forty pounds. So you can
-calculate the big one, Miss Norah.”
-
-“No, thank you,” said Norah, hastily. “We’ll call it tons.”
-
-“Well, the first officer of our ship had photographs of that brute
-hanging up in Karachi, where he said they had taken it, for exhibition.
-Of course, it might have been any big ray, hanging anywhere; I’m afraid
-most of us put it down as a sailor’s yarn, rather more circumstantial
-than usual. But this is where the queer part of my story comes in.”
-
-The baby drummed happily on the table with the tobacco-box, and gurgled.
-
-“The kiddie likes it, anyhow,” said Jim, laughing. “Go on, doctor.”
-
-“That was about ten o’clock in the morning. We watched the rays as long
-as they remained in sight, and then forgot all about them. After lunch
-the skipper noticed that our speed was wrong; he had been suspicious for
-some time, and on testing it by the patent log he found we were doing
-only eleven knots instead of fifteen. That sort of thing annoys a
-skipper, especially when there is no reason for it. So he rang up the
-engine-room and asked what revolutions she was making, and was told that
-she was doing her fifteen knots. The captain argued the point with some
-warmth; the chief engineer defended his engines with equal vigour, and
-finally they came to the conclusion that something was wrong.”
-
-“Not a leak?”
-
-“Oh, no! I happened to stroll up to the bow about that time; it’s the
-quietest place on the ship, and I like it—and looking over, I saw
-something half in and half out of the sea, for all the world like a
-thick white sheet wrapped round the cutwater. It beat me for a few
-minutes—the foam from the waves partly concealed it—and then I saw
-that it was one of these huge rays. The ship had run into it and broken
-its back, just as the chief officer had described—and it had revenged
-itself by reducing our speed by four knots!”
-
-“Well!” said Norah. “Did you all go and apologise to the chief officer?”
-
-“It might have pained him to know we’d even doubted him,” said the
-doctor, laughing. “We made our apologies—mentally. The thing was
-exactly as he had described. We wanted the skipper to stop and get it
-aboard, but he was sufficiently disgusted with the delay it had already
-caused; and it would have taken a good while to rig up a derrick. So he
-had the engines reversed, and we backed slowly astern, and as soon as
-the pressure of the water against it was released, Mr. Ray dropped off.
-I think he was even bigger than the one the chief officer had measured.”
-
-“Well, it would be a good deal of fish that you would need to wrap round
-the stern, to bring down the speed of a big ship,” said Jim. “I wish
-you’d got him on board, doctor.”
-
-“So do I—there were batteries of cameras waiting for him; and the
-skipper was unpopular for fully twelve hours,” said the doctor.
-“Skippers, however, have to be stern men, and indifferent to questions
-of popularity—where the coal bill is concerned. Owners and coal bills
-remain long after passengers are a misty memory; and you can’t appease
-owners—not even with a fish story!” He patted the baby’s head, rescued
-his tobacco-box, and was gone.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
- WHAT NORAH SAW.
-
-“BOTHER!” said Norah, with vexation.
-
-She sat up in bed in the dark. From the skylight over her door a very
-faint light filtered in from the shaded lamp in the alley-way; but the
-cabin was very gloomy.
-
-“Toothache is bad enough in the day,” murmured Norah, indignantly. “But
-when it wakes one up at night——!” She put her hand to her face, trying
-to still the throbbing of the offending tooth; obtaining no relief, as
-was natural, seeing that for half an hour she had been trying such
-simple means, aided by the warmth of her pillow. The tooth had refused
-to be soothed; it was evident that sterner measures were demanded.
-
-“Now, if I could remember where I put that bottle of toothache
-stuff——!” she pondered. “Brownie packed it, I know, and I’m sure I
-unpacked it; but where did I put it? And I can’t switch on my light to
-look. Bother the old Germans!”
-
-She slipped out of bed. The breeze blew in sharply through the open
-port-hole, and shivering a little, she groped for her dressing-gown and
-slippers, and, having donned them, drew the curtain across the
-port-hole. Then she found her little electric torch, and blinked as its
-ray illuminated the cabin.
-
-“That’s better,” she reflected. “Now for that horrid little bottle.”
-
-It is not very easy to hunt for a small object in drawers and boxes when
-one hand is occupied in pressing the button of an electric torch; and
-the search was somewhat prolonged. Finally, the missing toothache cure
-turned up in the retirement of a work-bag, and Norah thankfully applied
-it to the troublesome tooth. By this time she was cold and tired—glad
-to get back to the warm comfort of bed.
-
-Peace, however, did not last long. In a very few minutes a heavy step
-sounded in the alley-way, and an authoritative tap at her half-open
-door.
-
-“Who’s there?” said Norah, quaking.
-
-“Quartermaster, ma’am,” said a deep voice. “Officer of the watch wants
-to know if your port is uncovered. Light showing on this side.”
-
-Norah explained briefly.
-
-“My curtain was drawn,” she finished; “and my little torch doesn’t give
-much light. The purser said I might use it.”
-
-“The purser doesn’t have to stand watch at night,” said the
-quartermaster, acidly. “That there torch of yours must give more light
-than you think, ma’am. Orders are to close your port if found open and
-light showing. Can I come in, ma’am?”
-
-He came in; a sternly official figure in oilskins, bearing a shaded
-lantern. At the sight of the dismayed little figure with the mass of
-disordered curls, he relented somewhat.
-
-“Oh, it’s you, miss! Now, didn’t you know you was disobeying orders?”
-
-“No, I didn’t,” said Norah, sturdily. “I had leave. And that is all the
-light my little torch gives.” She pressed the button.
-
-“Well, it don’t look exactly powerful and that’s a fact,” remarked the
-quartermaster. “Still, orders is orders—and you’d be surprised to see
-how a light shines out through a winder, miss, when you’re lookin’ down
-from the bridge.”
-
-“Well, I won’t light it again—not at all—if only you’ll leave the port
-open,” Norah pleaded. “The ship is stuffy enough without having one’s
-cabin stuffy too.”
-
-“Lor, you should put your nose into our quarters, miss!” remarked the
-quartermaster. “No draughts up there, I promise you! We wouldn’t sleep
-easy with all this cold air a-blowin’ in.” He looked at Norah’s
-distressed face. “Well, if you give me your word there won’t be any more
-light, miss, I might chance it.”
-
-“Not if I have fifty teeth aching—I promise!” said Norah gratefully.
-“Thank you ever so much, quartermaster.”
-
-“Don’t mention it,” said the sailor, affably. “Good-night miss—or
-rather good-morning! It ain’t far off dawn.” He tramped out, leaving the
-cabin redolent of oilskins and hot lantern.
-
-Jim, a few hours later, was indignant.
-
-“I never heard such bosh,” he said, warmly. “Light—why, that little
-torch couldn’t be seen a dozen yards away! I wonder who was the officer
-of the watch. I’d like to speak to him.”
-
-“Oh, don’t bother, Jimmy!” said Norah. “It must show more than we
-thought, or they couldn’t have seen it, that’s clear. And for all we
-know, I may never want to use it again. If I do, I’ll rig up a dark
-serge skirt over the port-hole, and I’m sure no one could see a chink of
-light then.
-
-“Well, it’s rather a bore to have to do that in the dark, but I suppose
-there’s no help for it,” said Jim. “And there is really nothing to be
-gained by speaking to headquarters, I suppose; if the light shows, it
-mustn’t be permitted, and that’s all about it. I’m glad the
-quartermaster was decent over it, anyhow.”
-
-“Oh, he was a dear! he might have shut the port-hole, and he didn’t. But
-I’m sorry the officer should think I disobeyed orders,” added Norah.
-
-“I’ll fix that up with him, if I get a chance,” said her brother. “And
-don’t you go making a habit of getting toothache and lying awake at
-night; it isn’t good for you.” He gave her hair a friendly tweak. “Come
-up on deck; Wally will be looking for us.”
-
-It occurred to Norah two nights later, that she was in a fair way to
-disobeying at least part of Jim’s injunction. Toothache had not visited
-her, certainly; but she had a most unusual fit of wakefulness. It was a
-still night, mild and close; scarcely any breeze came through her
-port-hole. Early in the night she had found the grey ’possum rug too hot
-and had cast it off; then a blanket followed suit; and still she was hot
-and restless, and the little bunk seemed suddenly narrow and
-uncomfortable.
-
-She got up at last, put on her dressing-gown and leaned out of the
-port-hole. Without, the night was very dark; somewhere, a storm was
-brewing, and all the stars had disappeared. A faint, occasional glow of
-phosphorescence shone from the water racing past. There was refreshment
-in the cool touch of the night air upon her hot face. Norah liked the
-sea at night; even though now she could scarcely see it, it was there,
-great, and quiet, and companionable, with something soothing in the
-gentle touch of the water on the side of the ship. She liked it best
-when it came in waves that dashed cheerily beneath her port, breaking in
-a scatter of star-lit foam; but to-night it was dark and mysterious, and
-if you were wakeful it was easy to weave stories about it, and to
-picture tropic islands where just such seas lapped lazily on white coral
-beaches. In the daytime, Norah was a very practical person, and rarely
-thought of weaving stories. At night everything seemed different and
-strange; and the sea took possession of her imagination and whispered to
-her all sorts of queer things that she could never have told to any
-one—not even to Dad and Jim. They would have been kind and sympathetic,
-of course, and would never laugh at her; but they would probably have
-questioned themselves as to whether she were quite well.
-
-As she leaned out, watching, the little phosphorescent gleams on the
-water came and went fitfully; sometimes barely a glimmer, and then a
-stronger gleam that rested for a moment on the crest of a lazy swell. So
-black was the night that every tiny fragment of light seemed twice its
-real size—and when dark water rolled over the faint sparkles, the gloom
-seemed a hundred-fold deeper. Presently, however, the little
-intermittent flashes grew stronger, and the periods of complete darkness
-less frequent.
-
-“I do believe it’s getting into the air,” Norah murmured. “I never heard
-of phosphorescence in the air, but that doesn’t say it may not be
-there!” She leaned further. “There!—that flash wasn’t in the water, I’m
-sure.”
-
-It had not seemed so—still it was a little difficult to tell where the
-water ended and the dark bulk of the ship began. She watched, keenly
-interested; this was a new natural phenomenon—something to tell dad and
-the boys in the morning. The little flashes in the air came again; and
-at the same moment, far below, a curl of phosphorescence on a long wave.
-
-“Why!” said Norah, in amazement—“why, it’s quite different. It’s not
-the same light at all!”
-
-It was not the same. The glimmer on the water was a pure white
-radiance—almost the ghost of light; but this flash in the air was quite
-another thing. It came more regularly now; and Norah, searching the side
-of the ship with wide eyes of curiosity, saw that its origin seemed to
-be in one place alone; she could not tell how it came.
-Flash—flash—flash. Then comprehension swooped upon her, and she gasped
-in amazed horror.
-
-“Why!—it’s some one signalling!”
-
-The flashes came and went, intermittently, yet with a certain
-regularity. It was puzzling; she could not see their beginning, or what
-caused them, and yet they were there—in the air, more than coming from
-the ship; ghostly, mysterious rays. Still, the longer Norah watched, the
-more certain she felt that this was something wrong—something coming
-stealthily from the steamer—sending a hidden message over the water.
-
-She slipped down, and stood inside her cabin, breathing quickly. Her
-first impulse, to ring for the night-steward, she put aside; she must be
-more certain first. The night-steward was an unintelligent person, and
-might raise a wild alarm, or simply laugh at her; and neither
-alternative seemed to meet the case. She must be quite certain before
-taking any one into her confidence.
-
-Her little electric torch came into her mind. She found it, and managed
-to wriggle one small shoulder and arm as well as her head, through the
-port-hole; then, twisting to obtain a clear view along the side of the
-ship, she pressed the button. The little beam shot out and for an
-instant she could see the dark hull and the long line of ports like
-black eye-holes. The second from her own was obscured by what Norah
-recognised as a wind-scoop—the long tin funnel, like a grocer’s mammoth
-scoop, with which each cabin was fitted. They used them in the tropics,
-her steward had told her, screwed into each port to project outwards and
-catch more air and so suck it into the cabin. This wind-scoop was fitted
-in the wrong way; its wide part uppermost, so that the port-hole was
-completely screened from the deck above. It was only a second that Norah
-looked, but that glance was enough. She released the button of the
-torch, and wriggled back into the cabin.
-
-“I think I’ll get Jim,” she said, shivering a little in her excitement.
-“This job is too big for me!”
-
-She found her dressing-gown and a pair of noiseless slippers, and
-hurried down the dim alley, wondering how she should explain her
-presence if she met a steward or any of the watch. But it was three
-o’clock in the morning, when even night-stewards grow sleepy; there was
-no one visible. Faint snores came from sundry cabins as she passed. She
-came to Jim’s door; it was wide open, the curtain drawn across it. Norah
-tapped on it gently.
-
-“Jim! Jim!” she said, very softly.
-
-“Who’s there?” came a voice, prompt, but sleepy.
-
-“It’s me—Norah.”
-
-“What’s wrong?—is Dad ill?” Jim was out of bed, wide awake in an
-instant.
-
-“No, he’s asleep. But there’s some one signalling, Jim!”
-
-“Well, that’s the ship’s business,” said Jim, in natural bewilderment.
-“There are plenty of people on deck to receive signals. What are you
-worrying for, kiddie? Go back to bed.”
-
-“Oh, it isn’t any one signalling to us!” Norah answered, impatiently. “I
-wouldn’t have waked you for that, Jimmy. But there’s some one in a cabin
-near mine sending out signals.”
-
-“Are you certain?” Jim asked, incredulously.
-
-“I’ve been watching for a long time. He’s got a wind-scoop fixed over
-his port-hole, so as to screen it from the deck. It’s on this side; look
-out of your own port, and you’ll see the flashes. Go on—I’ll wait.”
-
-Jim sprang to his port-hole. A sleepy voice came from Wally’s berth,
-demanding what was up?
-
-“Look out here, Wal,” said Jim’s voice, from the darkness, in a quick
-whisper. “Can’t you see flashes? There’s some queer game on. Norah saw
-it first, and woke me.”
-
-There was never any hesitation on the part of Wally between being
-profoundly asleep and broad awake. He was at Jim’s side in a bound,
-craning his neck through the narrow opening. Then the two boys faced
-each other in the dark.
-
-“This is a nice little find,” Jim ejaculated. “There are no officers’
-quarters down here, are there?”
-
-“No; nothing but passengers. Do you know who have cabins on this side?”
-
-“There’s West,” Jim said, considering—“and Grantham, that New South
-Wales fellow, and I think Mrs. Andrews. I don’t know who else.”
-
-“I’m coming in—I’m lonely!” said Norah, from the door. She groped her
-way in, suddenly relieved to find Jim’s hand on her shoulder.
-
-“Poor little kiddie!” he said. “A jolly good thing you saw it. Is it
-next cabin to yours?”
-
-“No—the one after the next—that’s vacant,” Norah said. “It’s the
-little one where I dress. The light comes from the one next to that. I
-don’t know who sleeps in it—it opens on a different alley-way. You
-don’t think we’re making a mistake, Jim? I was so afraid you’d think I
-was a duffer to come to you.”
-
-“Indeed I don’t,” Jim answered. “It’s no right thing, whatever it is.
-We’ll go along to your cabin and look out—it’s closer to the enemy.”
-
-They filed along the gloomy alleys, silently, with hurried steps.
-Further inspection from Norah’s port-hole only confirmed the boys’
-previous opinion. They held a council of war, whispering in the
-darkness.
-
-“Let’s make a dash for him, whoever he may be,” said Wally. “If we
-spring in and surprise him he can’t get away, and the wind-scoop will be
-evidence; no other cabin has one sticking out.”
-
-Jim hesitated.
-
-“That won’t do,” he said at length. “He isn’t such a fool as not to have
-his door bolted—and a wind-scoop is evidence to a certain extent, but
-it won’t convict a passenger of signalling. He might simply deny any
-light, and say he had a passion for more air.”
-
-“Much air he’d get with the scoop in that way!” objected Wally. “The
-broad part has to be against the wind.”
-
-“Yes, but lots of passengers don’t know how to fix them. I don’t see
-that we can run this by ourselves, Wal—we’ll have to get an officer and
-let him see the flashes. We don’t want to make fools of ourselves; and
-there is a chance that it may be something we don’t understand, and
-quite all right.”
-
-“Oh, all serene!” Wally agreed. “If you’ll watch I’ll go and report it
-on the bridge. I expect they’ll have to come in here, Norah—do you
-mind?”
-
-“Of course she doesn’t—and it wouldn’t matter to them if she did!” said
-Jim in an impatient whisper, cutting across Norah’s quick disclaimer.
-“Hurry, Wal—it would be awful if he knocked off and went to bed!”
-
-Wally sped for the door, a dim vision of haste, lean and long in his
-pyjamas. Disaster awaited him—his foot caught in the fur rug trailing
-from Norah’s berth, unseen in the gloom, and he fell violently against
-the half-open door. It crashed into a wardrobe behind it, with a clatter
-of timber and falling bottles within. The noise echoed through the
-silent ship.
-
-“Oh, Lord!” said Jim, disgustedly, his head through the port-hole.
-“That’s finished him, I guess.”
-
-The flashes of light ceased abruptly. Silence fell again—and then Mr.
-Linton’s voice.
-
-“What’s that? Are you all right, Norah?”
-
-“Yes, she’s all right,” answered Wally, ruefully—his bruises nothing in
-comparison with his deep abasement. “Jim’s here, sir—come in. We’re
-spy-hunting, and I’ve spoilt the show. Oh, I am a blithering ass!”
-
-“But what on earth——?” began Mr. Linton, justifiably bewildered. Norah
-whispered a hasty explanation.
-
-“You couldn’t help it,” she finished, consolingly to Wally. “I ought to
-have remembered about the rug.”
-
-“I ought to have been careful where I was going,” said the disconsolate
-Wally. “Trust me to mess up a good thing!—why ever did you wake me? He
-might have been in irons now, but for me! I ought to be put in ’em
-myself.” He sat down on the edge of the berth and groaned in a whisper.
-
-“Cheer up,” said Jim, coming softly from the port-hole. “The show’s over
-for to-night, I expect, but I really think he’s given himself away—the
-flashes stopped the instant the noise came, and after a few minutes the
-wind-scoop was very gently taken in. We’ll get him yet. Come on back to
-bed.”
-
-“Aren’t you going to report it?”
-
-“What have we got to report? There is no evidence now—not even a
-wind-scoop. Whoever is in that cabin has probably unbolted his door by
-this time, and if any one came to investigate, he would be sleeping
-peacefully. And it’s getting towards morning—he can’t do much more
-to-night, in any case.”
-
-“I think you’re right,” Mr. Linton said. “Go back to your cabin now,
-boys, and let Norah get to bed. We’ll hold a council in the morning.”
-The boys tip-toed away, and Norah crept into her berth, perfectly
-certain that she was far too excited ever to sleep again.
-
-Then she suddenly found that she was very tired; and in five minutes she
-was sound asleep. The ship had not been disturbed by the sudden clamour
-of a moment; it was perfectly silent, in the sleepy hush before the
-dawn. Without, the second port-hole from her own loomed round and black.
-No further flashes came from it to mingle with the phosphorescent
-glimmer on the water below.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
-
- DETECTIVE WORK.
-
-A deputation of three paused at the foot of the ladder leading to the
-captain’s quarters.
-
-“You can’t keep it to yourselves,” Mr. Linton had said. “If there’s
-nothing in it, you might get yourselves into a good deal of trouble by
-interfering; and if your suspicions are correct, you want authority
-behind you. In either case the captain might resent your not reporting
-the matter to him. No, I won’t come; it’s your own party. I didn’t get
-out of my excellent bed in the small hours of the morning and wander
-round the ship acting Sherlock Holmes!”
-
-“Norah, The Human Sleuth!” murmured Wally, admiringly.
-
-Norah reddened. In the commonplace light of day she felt a little shaken
-about her discovery. It had seemed very certain in the night; now she
-wondered if it were indeed quite so sure a thing. Uncomfortable visions
-of bursting into the cabin of perhaps an innocent old lady, filled her
-mind.
-
-“Be quiet!” said Jim, patting his chum on the head with more vigour than
-consideration. “Who upset himself?”
-
-“That isn’t decent of you,” said Wally, rubbing his pate. “I’m still
-bruised, in mind and body. It’s evident that there’s nothing of the
-sleuth about this child. Well, you and Norah can go to the skipper.”
-
-“Indeed, you’re coming too,” said Jim. “You saw the light as well as we
-did.”
-
-“And messed up the show, without any assistance,” Wally added, sadly.
-
-“Don’t be an old stupid,” said Norah. “If this show is a show at all, it
-isn’t a matter of one night only. We’ll get him, if he’s there to be
-got.”
-
-“Of course we shall,” Jim said. “Well, we might as well go and hunt up
-the captain.”
-
-“Wait until eleven o’clock,” counselled his father. “Most of the
-passengers are pretty well taken up then, between beef-tea and games,
-and you’re likely to find the boat-deck empty; it’s just as well not to
-court observation when you attack him in force.” So the deputation
-possessed its soul in what patience it might until the coast was fairly
-clear, and then made a rapid ascent to the upper deck.
-
-“Shall we send him a message?” Norah asked, stopping at the foot of the
-ladder.
-
-“No, I don’t think so,” Jim answered. “This is a private call, and we
-don’t want attention drawn to it. Come on.” They plunged up the steep
-steps and knocked discreetly.
-
-“Come in,” said the captain’s voice; and they entered, to find not only
-Captain Garth, but the chief officer, comfortably ensconced in easy
-chairs; at sight of whom the deputation stopped, in some confusion.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” Jim said; “we ought to have found out if you were
-engaged.”
-
-“By no means—it’s all right,” said the captain, cheerfully. “Mr. Dixon
-and I were merely discussing affairs of state—the weight of brown
-trout, I think it was, eh, Dixon? Sit down, Miss Norah. Is it very
-private, or can Mr. Dixon stay?”
-
-“It’s certainly private,” Jim said, laughing; “but I should think Mr.
-Dixon had better stay, or you might have the trouble of getting him
-back, captain.”
-
-“It sounds alarming,” said the skipper. “May I smoke, Miss Norah?—thank
-you. I’ll feel better able to bear it, with a pipe, whatever it is. Not
-mutiny, I hope, Jim?”
-
-“You may think it’s nothing at all,” Jim answered “But we thought we’d
-better tell you.” He made his story as brief as possible, watching the
-captain’s face—which darkened as he heard, while Mr. Dixon’s remained
-frankly incredulous.
-
-“If this is so, what’s the watch doing, Dixon?” was the captain’s first
-question.
-
-“The watch is generally pretty well on the look-out,” the chief officer
-said. “Only a night or two before, Miss Norah, here, was telling me they
-raided her cabin because a light was coming from it.” He stopped, for
-Norah had given a hasty jump. A sudden flash of comprehension
-illuminated a puzzle that had remained in a corner of her mind.
-
-“I don’t believe it was my light they saw at all!” she exclaimed. “I
-never could make out how it could be. Jim, don’t you think it must have
-been the same flashes that we saw?”
-
-“By Jove!” said Jim. “That explains it—I couldn’t understand why they
-went for you and your little torch.”
-
-“You might tell me what it means,” said the captain, patiently. “I’d
-know more if you did!”
-
-“My port was open—but the curtain was drawn across it,” Norah
-explained. “I wanted some toothache stuff, so I was using my little
-electric torch—it’s only a wee one, and I’m just certain it couldn’t
-throw any light through the curtain and outside. But the quartermaster
-came down and complained. I don’t believe it was my cabin at all that
-they saw—it was the one we were watching last night.”
-
-“Yes,” exclaimed Wally, “and, ten to one, whoever it was heard the
-quartermaster raiding you, and profited by the warning. And then he
-thought of fitting in his wind-scoop so that it would shut out his light
-from the deck above.”
-
-“That’s possible, of course,” Mr. Dixon said. “Those wind-scoops jut out
-a good way; I don’t believe any one looking down would see a light
-shielded by one. The watch is well kept—but all that the men think of
-looking for is a decided ray of light from a cabin window.”
-
-“H’m!” said the captain. “You didn’t find out who occupies the suspected
-cabin?”
-
-“No,” Jim answered. “We thought of doing so, but Dad reckoned it might
-excite suspicion if we took any steps. So we haven’t done anything.”
-
-“Quite right. The purser can tell me easily enough.” The captain paused,
-and knitted his brow in thought.
-
-“Well,” he said, at length, “it may be innocent enough—but it doesn’t
-sound so. I’m giving you three credit for being fairly acute observers;
-I don’t think you’d jump to wild conclusions.”
-
-“We were awfully scared of making fools of ourselves!” Jim said,
-laughing.
-
-“Very wholesome feeling. Anyhow, I’ll speak to the purser, and make a
-few inquiries. And as it’s your case, so to speak, perhaps you would all
-come up here this afternoon and have tea with me, and I’ll tell you
-anything I’ve found out. Bring your father.”
-
-“Thanks, awfully,” said the deputation, greatly relieved at being taken
-so seriously.
-
-“I don’t think I need mention that ‘a still tongue makes a wise head,’
-or any sage proverb of that description?” said the captain, with a
-smile.
-
-“I don’t think so,” Jim answered. “If you have a raid, Captain, may we
-be in it?”
-
-“I’ll see,” said the captain. “Too soon to make rash promises—and your
-father might have a word to say in the matter. We’ll have a talk about
-it this afternoon. You can tell any one that you’re going to hear my
-gramophone.” He smiled at them encouragingly, and the deputation,
-understanding that it was dismissed, withdrew. On the boat-deck, it
-broke up into three, each unit rejoining the main body of the passengers
-separately, with an elaborate air of unconcern.
-
-“We were wondering what had become of you,” remarked John West, whom
-they found, with two or three of the younger men, talking to Mr. Linton.
-“Some one was hunting for you two fellows to play cricket.”
-
-“Sorry,” Jim said. “Are they playing?”
-
-“I don’t think so—it fell through. There are really not enough
-passengers to get up games. Some of the more energetic are talking of a
-sports committee—but I’m dead against it this side of Durban. We shall
-probably pick up more people there.”
-
-“You’re coming on to London?” Jim asked.
-
-“Oh, yes—Grantham and Barry and I mean to stick together if we can, and
-try to get into the same crowd; we don’t care what it is, but we’d
-prefer a mounted one. You two had better come along with us. We’d be a
-pretty useful lot.”
-
-“Thanks,” said the boys, flattered at the invitation from older men. “It
-would be jolly.”
-
-“I’m a bit doubtful as to its being jolly at all,” said Grantham,
-laughing. “From all I can read it’s going to be a particularly beastly
-business, and I rather think a good deal of the ‘romance of war’ will
-disappear over it. The only thing is that it would be less jolly to stay
-out of it.”
-
-“Yes; you’d feel a bit of a waster, to stand out, wouldn’t you?” West
-said. “Everybody’s going to be in it before long, I’ll bet—it will be a
-sort of International Donnybrook Fair.” He raised his voice to include
-Mr. Smith, who was standing by the rail, looking out to sea. “Going to
-join when you get home, Smith?”
-
-“To join?” said the stout one, turning. “To join what?”
-
-“Oh, just the little old Army! You’re not going to be out of the fun,
-are you?”
-
-Mr. Smith shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“I’m too old,” he said. “Men of my age aren’t wanted—it’s youngsters
-like you and those boys. Very useful you’ll be, if you get there. But
-for me—well, there is the Rifle Club of which I’m a member; and they
-may make me a special constable. That requires heroism, if you like—to
-march up and down a sloppy London street in the pouring rain for four
-hours each night, knowing just how much use you would be if anything
-went wrong.”
-
-“But why wouldn’t you be of use?” Norah asked.
-
-“Why?—because I am not young. Nobody is much use who is elderly—and
-fat. One gets flabby and one’s muscles become soft and limp. Only one’s
-head remains. Therefore, I cultivate my head.”
-
-“For the sake of your country?” Grantham asked, laughing.
-
-Mr. Smith nodded.
-
-“Just so—for the sake of my country. We cannot all serve in the same
-way. Somewhere or other there will be a job of work for me, and I shall
-try to hold down my job, as the Americans say. No one can do more than
-that.” He laughed good-humouredly. “So when you are marching by in
-khaki, you can spare a thought for the poor, chilly special constable
-who keeps the streets clear for you to pass, or performs some equally
-dull and ordinary duty—and gets no fun out of it; not even a medal.”
-
-“You under-rate your capabilities, Mr. Smith,” said Mr. Linton,
-laughing. “No one who saw you racing down the pier at Melbourne could
-regard you as either elderly or decrepit.”
-
-“Well—perhaps not yet. But fat—yes!” Mr. Smith smiled deprecatingly,
-casting a downward glance at his ample figure. “I fear I am no longer a
-stayer; and in a trench I would certainly take up too much room. So I
-curb my ambitions. But there will be a job for me somewhere, though it
-may not be a showy one.” His smile widened, including all the little
-group; then the chief engineer passed, and Mr. Smith fell into step with
-him and strolled off along the deck.
-
-“Jolly decent of the old chap,” said Grantham. “I like a man who doesn’t
-talk much, but is ready to take his share; and somehow, you don’t expect
-it from a lazy-looking, comfortable business man of his type.”
-
-“No,” said Barry. “People like us go in as much for the fun of it—the
-adventure—as anything; but he can’t anticipate experiences like that.
-Just shows you can’t judge any one; I’d have put old Smith down as an
-arm-chair patriot, if ever there was one, but he seems anxious to be
-thoroughly uncomfortable, if necessary.”
-
-“Oh, he’s not half a bad fellow!” Jim said. “He’s so interested about
-things; it’s quite jolly to talk to him. And he’s keen about his nephew
-and the boys on the transports. There are lots of people worse than old
-Smith.” Thus dismissing the claims to respect of his fellow-passengers,
-Jim demanded volunteers for deck-quoits, and the party, having
-volunteered in a body, withdrew.
-
-The captain’s gramophone was something of an institution on the ship. It
-was an excellent machine, and the captain loved it. Occasionally he was
-induced to bring it to the saloon at night, or, in the tropics, out on
-the deck; but his more usual form of entertainment was to invite a
-select few to his cabin for tea, an invitation understood to include
-music. It was not therefore, regarded as anything unusual when the
-Linton group declined the general tea-summons, and moved away in the
-direction of the upper deck. In the comfortable rooms under the bridge,
-tea was made the chief business of the gathering, and nothing was said
-of any other matter until every one was served and the stewards had
-withdrawn. Then the captain looked round the expectant faces.
-
-“Well, I have not much to report,” he said. He produced a plan of the
-ship, showing the outer view of the port-holes. “That is your cabin
-window, Miss Norah. Now where did you see those flashes emerging?”
-
-“From this one,” said Norah, unhesitatingly, indicating a port-hole.
-“Wasn’t it, boys?” Jim and Wally, looking over her shoulder, nodded
-confirmation.
-
-“Ah, so I thought! Well, that cabin has no occupant—it’s a small vacant
-one.”
-
-Disappointment showed plainly written on the faces of his three younger
-hearers.
-
-“That, of course, proves nothing,” went on the captain; and the faces
-cleared immediately. “Any one could get in to use it; it is not locked.
-There are no signs of its having been occupied in any way, but then, no
-one using it surreptitiously would leave signs. We have one piece of
-evidence, however; the wind-scoop is a new one, but there are scratches
-on it that show it has been applied, possibly by a person who did not
-thoroughly understand how to insert it in the port-hole. Why, you
-blood-thirsty young people!—you look pleased!”
-
-The three detectives had beamed, quite involuntarily. They laughed, a
-little shame-faced.
-
-“We’re anxious not to have taken up your time for nothing, sir,”
-explained Wally, suavely.
-
-“H’m,” said Captain Garth, looking from one guest to another. “Mr.
-Linton, you look as pleased as any of them!”
-
-“The family reputation for common sense is at stake,” said Mr. Linton,
-smiling. “I admit I don’t want to find they’ve led you on a wild-goose
-chase, captain. Besides, they woke me up; I want some compensation for a
-disturbed night.”
-
-“A peaceful man, anxious to command a blameless ship, has a poor time
-nowadays!” said the captain. “Well, that’s how the matter stands. The
-cabins near the empty one are occupied by ladies, who, I think, are
-guiltless of anything desperate; they’re all addicted to wool-work and
-playing Patience. Further inquiry leads me to feel very doubtful about
-two men; one is employed in the galley, the other is a foremast hand.
-Both are Swedes.”
-
-“But could they get into the cabin?”
-
-“Oh, easily! Every one knows the plan of the ship, and there would be no
-difficulty in dodging into an empty cabin. Frankly,” said the captain,
-“it is a relief to me to find suspicion directed away from the
-passengers; it’s a much easier matter to tackle a foremast hand with
-alien tendencies. The sailor was seen last night under somewhat queer
-circumstances; he was in a part of the ship where he had no business. He
-gave a fairly lame excuse.”
-
-“What time was that, Captain?” Jim asked.
-
-“A little after three. It might mean nothing—but putting everything
-together, the matter is suspicious. We’ll set a watch to-night, in two
-places?”
-
-“Can we be in it?” came from Jim and Wally, simultaneously.
-
-The captain looked questioningly at Mr. Linton.
-
-“Oh, I leave it to you, Captain!” said that gentleman; “I can’t keep
-them in cotton-wool.”
-
-“And after all, it’s their find—if it be a find,” said the captain. “At
-least, it’s Miss Norah’s—but I can’t very well let you watch!” He
-smiled at Norah.
-
-“It’s awful to be a girl!” said she, lugubriously. “But I suppose it
-can’t be helped. You’ll tell me all about it, won’t you?”
-
-“You shall know all!” said the captain, dramatically. “Well, one watch
-must be kept in the empty cabin you are using for a dressing-room—cheer
-up, Miss Norah, we’ll give you another. You boys can watch there, if you
-like. Then I will have men posted further aft, also in an empty cabin;
-and a special watch kept on deck.”
-
-“And if we see the flashes?”
-
-“Report to Mr. Dixon. Both watches will close up on the alley-way
-leading to the cabin, and we’ll burst the door in. I’m having the hinges
-specially fixed, so that the screws will give, if necessary. If any one
-is there, he must be caught red-handed, or not at all. It’s a mercy that
-the cabin is unoccupied and that no one has any right to be there—to
-break violently in upon a feminine passenger doing nothing more deadly
-than using a spirit-lamp to heat curling-tongs, would lead to
-unpleasantness with the powers that be, at home!”
-
-“I guess it was more than that,” Wally remarked.
-
-“Oh, of course it was! Still, it may be capable of some very simple
-explanation; don’t run away with the idea that we have really an alien
-on board.” The captain smiled. “I know you want a scalp—but I don’t
-know that I do. And, in any case, I want to keep the matter from the
-other passengers. That sort of thing only leads to nervousness and
-excitement and I’m especially pleased in the present state of affairs,
-that my passengers show no signs of getting ‘jumpy’ over war risks.
-Coming out, there was a lady who used to consult the officers several
-times a day on the probability of being sunk, and she got on our
-nerves.”
-
-“She would,” said Jim. “We shan’t speak of it, Captain. But can you keep
-it dark, if we make a capture?”
-
-“Oh, I think so. Everything leads me to suspect one of the two Swedes;
-and the temporary disappearance of a hand may be easily explained to the
-rest of the crew, while the passengers need never hear about it. Lots of
-things occur on a voyage about which it isn’t necessary to inform the
-passengers,” said the captain, with a twinkle. “They’re all very good,
-of course—but they have such a way of asking questions!”
-
-“There’s so little else to do,” said Norah, laughing—“and such heaps of
-questions to ask!”
-
-“Quite so,” agreed the captain. “Well, lest you should ask me any more
-just now, let’s have the music-box.” He opened the gramophone, and gave
-himself to melody.
-
-Later, on their way to dress for dinner, they passed a tall, fair-haired
-sailor, busily cleaning paint. He looked up at the merry group, with a
-surly face.
-
-“That’s a Swede, I know,” Wally said, when they were safely out of
-hearing. “I wonder if he’s one of the suspects.”
-
-“If he is, he’ll be an awkward man to tackle,” Mr. Linton said. “You
-will have to be careful, boys; don’t run unnecessary risks in the way of
-going for him single-handed. That fellow is as strong as a bull.”
-
-Jim and Wally passed over this sage advice in the airy way of boyhood.
-
-“It really looks very likely,” said the former. “He’s probably
-pro-German; and it’s quite a reasonable thing to suppose that he may be
-in the pay of Germans in Australia, and has simply joined the ship in
-the hope of signalling our whereabouts to an enemy cruiser.”
-
-“Yes—wouldn’t he get a nice bonus for us!” Wally added. “And a free
-trip for himself to Germany—to say nothing of the fact that he may be
-carrying information about the transports. Scissors!—don’t I hope we’ll
-get him!”
-
-But the watch that night proved fruitless. Jim and his chum spent long
-comfortless hours in the little cabin near Norah’s, taking turns at the
-port-hole; further up, Mr. Dixon, very bored and cold, shared a similar
-vigil with an elderly quartermaster. But no queer flashes of light came
-from the port-hole between them; nor had the watch on deck anything to
-report. It was a disconsolate trio that met on deck next morning.
-
-“Never mind,” Norah said, comforting. “He may have been too sleepy.
-He’ll be there to-night.”
-
-He was not there, however. Again the weary night brought no
-satisfaction. Jim and Wally, heavy-eyed and yawning, gave up the watch
-towards daybreak, and sought their bunks thankfully, unable to keep
-awake any longer.
-
-Mr. Dixon was sarcastic at the expense of the amateur detectives.
-
-“Too much reading of penny-dreadfuls, and visiting picture-shows,” said
-he, acidly. “I’ve heard that it makes people think in melodrama, and it
-also appears to make them see weird flashes that aren’t there!”
-
-“They were there!” said Wally, hotly. “We all three saw them.”
-
-“I’m sure you thought you did,” said the chief officer, with a soothing
-note that was more irritating than acidity. “Now you must keep a good
-look-out for the sea-serpent; that’s a daylight affair, and doesn’t
-necessitate extra night-watches.” He yawned cavernously. “No more
-sitting up for me, thank goodness!—the old man reckons this business is
-a frost.”
-
-The captain bore out this statement, in terms less calculated to hurt.
-
-“We have to consider the possibility of a mistake,” he told them. “And I
-can’t keep men out of bed indefinitely. The officer of the watch will
-have special instructions for vigilance! I think that some underhand
-business was going on, but that the interruption on the first night
-scared the offender permanently.” Whereat Wally groaned with extreme
-bitterness.
-
-“Cheer up!” Jim said, smiting him on the back in the privacy of their
-cabin. “I’m not going to give in; if he’s there, we’ll get him yet.” But
-though they watched as much as youth and sleepiness would let them, the
-nights went by, and there was no further appearance of the mysterious
-signals.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
-
- THE EMPTY CABIN.
-
-“JIM! Wake up, you old sinner!”
-
-Jim, in his sleep, was riding after a bullock on the Billabong plains.
-The bullock was speedy, and he and Garryowen were doing their utmost to
-catch and turn him. They drew near—he swung up his arm with the
-stockwhip, and met a soft obstacle that surprised him effectually from
-his dream.
-
-“By Jove, you can hit, old man!” said Wally, in a sepulchral whisper,
-rubbing his side. “Call yourself a pal? Wake up?”
-
-“I’m sorry,” Jim said, struggling to consciousness. “Did I hit you?
-What’s the matter, Wal?”
-
-“Be quiet, fathead, can’t you?” whispered Wally, impatiently. “I’ve been
-trying to wake you silently, and you’ll raise the ship. Get up—the
-signaller’s at work!”
-
-Jim was out of his berth in a moment, and at the port-hole. Far down the
-side of the ship they could see fitful gleams of light.
-
-“By Jove!” he said, bringing in his head. “We’ll get him this time, Wal.
-Awfully sorry I was so hard to wake.”
-
-“Well, you’ve had about six hours’ sleep in the last three nights, so
-it’s not much wonder,” Wally answered. “Generally you wake if a fly
-looks at you.” They were struggling into coats and slippers in the dark.
-“Come along!”
-
-They hurried noiselessly down the passage, and turned into the narrow
-alley-way leading to the little empty cabin near Norah’s. The port-hole
-had been left open, and they peered out in turn.
-
-“There’s no doubt this time,” said Jim, excitedly; “he’s signalling for
-all he’s worth. No lady with curling-tongs and a spirit-lamp about that
-chap! he means business.”
-
-“What’s the plan of action?”
-
-Jim considered.
-
-“I don’t believe the captain would like us to tackle him alone,” he
-said. “I don’t think he’d get away from us—but he might, if he’s that
-big, powerful Swede. We want witnesses and authority, anyhow. I’ll mount
-guard at the entrance to that alley-way, Wal, and you go and rouse Mr.
-Dixon.”
-
-“H’m,” said Wally. “And if the beast rushes you?”
-
-“Well, he must rush,” said Jim, philosophically. “We can’t both stay,
-and I’d better be the one, being the stronger. Clear out, old man—look
-sharp! I wouldn’t let old Dixon miss seeing those flashes for a fiver!”
-
-The entrance to the alley-way leading to the suspected cabin was dark
-and silent, and no faintest glimmer of light came from the skylight over
-the shut door. Jim took his stand in the narrow passage, bracing his
-muscles in case of a rush in the dark. No one could get past him, in so
-small a space; but a strong and determined man would, he knew, make
-short work of him in a wild dash for safety. Jim was grimly certain that
-the Swede might go over him, but not without a struggle. He clenched his
-fists, watching the door—imagining each instant that he heard a
-stealthy movement, or the slow creaking as the handle turned.
-
-Mr. Dixon, roused from health-giving slumber, was incredulous and
-wrathful.
-
-“You kids are a first-class nuisance!” he said, sleepily, getting into
-his coat. “If this is another false alarm, Wally, I’ll have you
-keel-hauled!”
-
-Wally possessed his soul in patience while his body shivered—the wind
-on the officer’s deck blew keen and shrill, and Mr. Dixon was far too
-annoyed to offer him the shelter of the cabin. The boy’s teeth were
-chattering when the chief officer emerged and ran up the steps to the
-bridge. He returned in a moment, followed by two of the watch.
-
-“Now, where’s this precious spy-hole of yours?” demanded he.
-
-They hurried below; past the empty drawing-room and along silent
-corridors, where the stillness was broken only by an occasional snore.
-Wally turned down Norah’s alley-way and led the way to the empty cabin,
-running ahead to glance out first through the port-hole, in sudden fear
-lest the flashes should have ceased. He made way for Mr. Dixon with a
-relieved little sigh.
-
-“You can see for yourself,” he said, shortly.
-
-The chief officer’s face was invisible, after he had peered out—but the
-change in his voice was laughable.
-
-“Well, I back down,” he whispered, “I guess you kids knew more about it
-than I did. There’s certainly some little game going on there.” He
-leaned out for another long look. “I believe it’s Morse code,” he said,
-finally; “it’s hard to tell at this angle. But it’s signalling, safe
-enough.”
-
-“Well, hurry!” Wally said. “Jim is mounting guard alone, and if it’s
-that big sailor, he’ll simply wipe him out.”
-
-“Sure thing,” Mr. Dixon agreed. “Larsen is a holy terror when he gets
-going.” He gave hasty directions as they tip-toed up the alley-way.
-
-“All right, Jim?” Wally whispered.
-
-“All serene,” Jim answered. “Haven’t heard a thing, and there’s no light
-coming from over the door.”
-
-“Oh, he’d be quite cute enough to block up the skylight!” Mr. Dixon
-agreed. “Well, you boys had better keep back and guard the mouth of the
-alley-way, and leave this thing to the men and me.”
-
-“Us!” said Wally and Jim together, in a sepulchral duet of woe. “Not
-much—it’s our game! We’ve got to see it out, sir!”
-
-“Well, duck if he begins shooting,” said the chief officer, resignedly.
-“Stay where you are, Hayward—you follow up, Bob.” He went noiselessly
-as a cat down the narrow alley-way to the cabin door.
-
-“I don’t think I’ll try it,” he mused under his breath. “Better to go in
-unannounced.” He looked back over his shoulder. “Wally, you get the
-light switched on as soon as you’re in the cabin.”
-
-In his day Mr. Dixon had played Rugby football; in later years he had
-been mate of a sailing ship, and had learned in that rough school how to
-use his weight effectively. He drew back a pace or two now, and then
-flung his shoulder against the door. The carefully-weakened hinges gave,
-and the attacking party crashed into the cabin.
-
-They had a momentary vision of a flash of light; a guttural exclamation
-came from the port-hole. Then there was black darkness and the sound of
-men struggling. Jim was close at Mr. Dixon’s shoulder; Wally, groping
-round the ruined door, was endeavouring to find the electric-light
-button. Then came another flash of light, and a report that sounded
-deafening, in the tiny cabin.
-
-“You brute, you’ve got me!” said Mr. Dixon, between his teeth.
-
-Light flashed out as Wally found the button. The cabin was dim with
-smoke, and acrid with the smell of gunpowder. Jim saw a levelled
-revolver-barrel gleam in the blue haze; then he sprang past the chief
-officer, and hit wildly at a face above it. The revolver clattered to
-the floor. There was a thud, as the man who held it went down in a
-corner.
-
-“Hold him, Wally!”
-
-The boys were both on the struggling form; the sailor, behind them,
-gripping the man’s legs. The unequal fight was only momentary.
-
-“I give in,” said the man. He was suddenly limp and powerless in their
-hands, panting heavily. His face was turned from them as he huddled in
-the corner.
-
-“Got any more revolvers?” Jim asked.
-
-“Nein—no. You can search me.”
-
-Jim kept his grip on his wrists, as he glanced up at the chief officer.
-
-“Are you much hurt, Mr. Dixon?”
-
-“I don’t think so,” said Dixon, a little doubtfully. “Only grazed my
-arm—it’s bleeding a bit—and deafened me. Oh, Lord, there’s the old
-lady in the next cabin—I knew we’d have the ship about our ears!” He
-went out into the alley-way, and they heard his voice patiently. “No,
-it’s all right, madam—nothing to be alarmed about. No, it’s not a
-German warship. You’re quite safe. Go to sleep.”
-
-He came back.
-
-“Shut the door, Bob. Prop it with your shoulder. Now we’ll have a look
-at this gentleman. Stand up there, will you?”
-
-The huddled figure twisted round and struggled to his feet, facing them
-defiantly.
-
-“Great Scott!” said Dixon weakly. “Why, I thought it was a decent
-Swede!”
-
-The boys gaped in silence. The short figure, dusty and bedraggled, was
-Mr. Smith. He stood looking at them, pale, with a black streak across
-his face; in spite of it—in spite of his stout, panting, dishevelled
-form—there was something not ignoble about him. He was not at all
-afraid.
-
-“On the whole, it was foolish of me to fire,” he said. “I am glad you
-are not hurt.”
-
-Dixon broke into a laugh.
-
-“Awfully decent of you!” he said. “Why do you carry a revolver if you
-think it foolish to use it?”
-
-“I do not think it foolish to use it,” Mr. Smith answered deliberately.
-“But I had meant it for myself—if I failed. Then, in my excitement, I
-fought with it. That was foolish. One cannot always think quickly
-enough.”
-
-“I’m glad you aimed too quickly!” said Dixon grimly. “It might have been
-awkward for some of us if you hadn’t——” He broke off, with a shout.
-“Watch him!”
-
-Mr. Smith had sprung towards the port-hole, a dark object in his hand.
-Jim was just too quick for him. He caught the up-raised arm. The little
-man fought fiercely and silently for a moment; then he gave in, yielding
-what he held with a little sigh.
-
-“Pocket-book,” said Jim, examining it.
-
-“I’ll take it, for the captain’s perusal,” said Dixon, holding out his
-hand. He had twisted a towel round his arm, and his face, streaked with
-blood, looked sufficiently grotesque. “Before we go any further, I think
-we’ll search you, Mr. Smith.”
-
-Beyond the bulky pocket-book which had so narrowly escaped a watery
-grave, there was little of an incriminating nature to be found on the
-prisoner. Dixon took charge of any papers in his pockets, and of his
-keys; and in a corner of the cabin Wally picked up an electric torch—a
-powerful one, of new and elaborate design.
-
-“Signalling apparatus,” said Dixon, glancing at it. His anger suddenly
-blazed out.
-
-“What do you mean by it, you cowardly hound? Who paid you to sell your
-own people to the enemy?”
-
-“The enemy?” said Mr. Smith. “My own people?” He glanced round with
-sudden pride. “My people are your enemies, and I am one of them. I am a
-German!”
-
-“Oh, are you?” said Dixon, weakly.
-
-“But you don’t talk like one,” Jim blurted.
-
-“No—why should I, when I do not wish? I have lived much in England;
-English is as familiar to me as German. But I have but one country, and
-that is the Fatherland.”
-
-“Then it’s a pity you didn’t keep off a decent British ship,” said
-Dixon, wrathfully. “It makes me sick to think of you on board, making
-friends with every one—and doing your best to get us sunk. Women and
-kids, too.”
-
-“Our ships do not send people down with the ships they sink,” said the
-German, proudly. “For the rest—it is war. If you were on a German ship
-you would be glad of a chance to do as I have tried to do. War cannot be
-made with kid gloves. If I sink you—then I have done a service to
-Germany. There is not any more to be said.”
-
-“Glad you think so,” Dixon answered; “but I fancy you’ll find there’s
-rather more. However, it’s the captain’s business now.” He called the
-sailors. “There’s an empty cabin in the next alley-way; put this man in
-there and watch him. He’s not to go out under any pretext whatever.”
-
-Mr. Smith disappeared, marching proudly between his captors, his head
-held high. Dixon looked after him.
-
-“Rum little beggar,” he said. “Wonderful what a lot they think of their
-precious Fatherland. I travelled through it once, and I certainly didn’t
-want to stay—their beastly language gives a man toothache! Well, that’s
-a good job done, and thanks be to Morpheus, the ship is quiet. A single
-revolver shot doesn’t make much noise, and we weren’t noisy, except for
-that.”
-
-In answer to this cheering reflection, two heads appeared in the
-doorway.
-
-“We’re bursting with curiosity,” said Grantham and West. “Can’t we be
-told anything?”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” groaned the chief officer. “Any more of you?”
-
-“No, I think not,” West said. “I happened to be awake, and heard your
-sounds of revelry; so, apparently, did Grantham. We thought of butting
-in, but when we heard your voice in explaining to the old lady, we came
-to the conclusion that we weren’t exactly wanted. But there is a limit
-to one’s forbearance. Can’t we be told?”
-
-“Yes, I suppose so,” Dixon answered. “Only keep it quiet. Also, these
-boys can tell you, for I’m off to the captain.”
-
-“I guess you’d better let us see to that arm of yours first,” Jim put
-in. “I’m a first-aid man; let me tie it up, unless you’d rather go
-straight to the doctor.”
-
-“Well, we’ll have a look at it,” said Dixon. “Come along to my
-cabin—there’s room there and we can speak out—I’m sick of whispering!”
-
-The arm was found to be bruised and grazed only, and the patient
-declined to disturb the doctor’s slumbers. Jim tied it up in his best
-style, while West and Grantham, sitting on the victim’s bunk, heard with
-unconcealed envy the story of the night.
-
-“Some chaps have all the luck,” West said, sadly. “Why shouldn’t we be
-in it?—and we sleeping next door! And who’d have thought it of meek
-little Smith!”
-
-“I expect his name’s Schmidt if every one had his due,” said the chief
-officer, rising. “Thanks, Jim. Now I guess you youngsters had better
-turn in—there’s nothing more for you to do. I’ve got to see that that
-battered cabin door is fixed before curious passengers get asking
-questions in the morning.”
-
-Mr. Smith was officially reported as ill next day, and his absence
-caused no comment; a hint that his ailment might be infectious kept any
-benevolent people from offering to visit him. The nervous old lady was
-inclined to be garrulous about the midnight disturbance, but as she was
-known to be a person of hysterical tendencies, curiosity was not
-excited. Mr. Dixon, appealed to, spoke vaguely of a wave dashing in at
-the port-hole and making “no end of a row.”
-
-“But I heard voices!” protested the old lady.
-
-“Yes, ma’am—you would, if the stewards were cleaning up a wave. It
-makes ’em fluent!” said the chief officer.
-
-To the Linton tribe, assembled in his cabin, the captain was more
-communicative.
-
-“Schmidt is his name—Hans Schmidt. There’s any amount of evidence
-against him in the papers; the pocket-book he tried to throw out of the
-port contains much full and true information about our transports, a
-complete cipher code of signals, and translations of various other
-codes. It’s evident that the police were on his heels in
-Melbourne—that’s why he joined so hurriedly. He covered his tracks
-well, too; made them think he had gone to Brisbane. Otherwise, they
-would have caught him on the _Perseus_ at Adelaide.”
-
-“What did he hope to do?” Mr. Linton asked.
-
-“Well, there was always a chance of his attracting a German cruiser. I
-don’t think it was a strong one—but of course you can’t tell. It would
-have simplified matters for him greatly; put him safely among his own
-people, and he would have done his beloved Fatherland a mighty big
-service in betraying a prize like this ship into its hands. He says he
-knew he was taking big risks for small chances, but apparently that
-didn’t trouble him. I don’t consider he’s to be blamed from his point of
-view, except in using his revolver; and that seems to distress him more
-than anything else. He asked for Dixon this morning, and apologised!”
-
-“If he could have used it sufficiently, I don’t suppose it would have
-troubled him,” observed Mr. Linton.
-
-“Oh, if he could have taken the ship, of course it wouldn’t!” the
-captain said, laughing. “Patriotism would have risen beyond any claims
-of mercy then. No—it’s because it was so futile to use it, and he
-risked damaging Dixon and the others for nothing. That consideration is
-really weighing on his mind. He’s one of those careful beggars who can’t
-bear making an error of judgment, I fancy.”
-
-“I think I’m a little sorry for him,” Norah said. “After all, it was his
-own country he was battling for.”
-
-“That’s so,” said the captain. “Put one of our fellows to play a lone
-game on a big German liner, and I fancy we’d be quite proud of him if he
-managed to signal a British cruiser. The shooting’s inexcusable, of
-course. Well, I’ve got to take him to England—I can’t have the ship
-delayed at Durban over a trial. And as the mouthpiece of the owners, I
-say, ‘Thank you very much!’ to Miss Norah and you two boys.”
-
-The three thus marked for fame looked down their noses and felt
-uncomfortable.
-
-“Glad we got him,” Jim said, awkwardly. “I wonder what about his nephew
-in our contingent, by the way?”
-
-The captain laughed.
-
-“I rather fancy you wouldn’t find that nephew,” he said. “If he
-exists—well, he’s probably in a trench, fighting in France, with a name
-like Johann and an unpleasant propensity for beer!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
-
- DURBAN.
-
-THE _Perseus_ was coming gently in to Durban Harbour, past a long
-breakwater and a high green bluff that towered sheer from the water.
-Some one had just told Norah that it swarmed with monkeys, and she was
-straining curious eyes upwards, trying vainly to pierce the dense growth
-that covered it.
-
-“Well, it may,” she said aloud, in accents of disappointment. “But I
-can’t see a sign.”
-
-“A sign of what?” asked Wally’s cheerful voice.
-
-“Monkeys. Mr. West says they are there, and I did want to see them. To
-see them . . .
-
- “‘Walk together.
- Holding each other’s tails,’”
-
-quoted Wally, dreamily. “It would be lovely; only they’re not supposed
-to do it in the middle of the day. Personally, I don’t like monkeys.”
-
-“Well, neither do I,” Norah said. “But it’s all so wonderful—to think
-I’m actually coming to a place where there can be such things walking
-about, and not in a zoo. Wally, doesn’t it make you feel queer?”
-
-“Yes, rather,” admitted Wally. “I’ve been pinching myself, to try and
-realise that I was really coming to Africa. Africa has always seemed so
-awfully far off—a sort of confused dream of Scipio, and Moors, and
-dervishes, and lions, and King Solomon’s Mines, and the Mountains of the
-Moon. The Boer War brought it nearer, of course, but even so, it was
-still pretty mysterious. You know, I was in Tasmania last year, and
-Edward’s car broke down near a saw-mill on the Huon. I was poking about
-while they fixed her up, and I sat down on a pile of sleepers.”
-
-“Yes?” said Norah, as he paused. “Why wouldn’t you?”
-
-“No reason—only I got talking to one of the men, and he told me those
-sleepers were being cut for the Cape to Cairo railway. That made me feel
-awfully queer—to think I’d been sitting on a sleeper that was going to
-lie out in the middle of Africa, and have fiery, untamed lions and
-giraffes and elephants strolling across it.”
-
-“For all you know it never got further than a Cape Town suburb,” said
-Jim, unfeelingly.
-
-“Oh, get out!” Wally uttered, in disgust. “If I like to think of the zoo
-walking over it, why shouldn’t I?”
-
-“Why not, indeed—when it began with a donkey sitting on it?” grinned
-Jim. “Anyhow, here’s old Africa; and I don’t see that this part of it is
-unlike any other old wharf I’ve seen.”
-
-They were slowly coming in towards the pier. On the left lay a grey
-warship, workmanlike and trim, with smoke coming lazily from her four
-funnels; they could catch glimpses of white-clad sailors on her deck.
-There were many ships lying at the long wharves. Ashore, the streets
-were bare and brown and dusty. It was Saturday afternoon, and there were
-few people about.
-
-“It doesn’t look exciting,” Wally admitted. “Not much of King Solomon’s
-Mines about this outlook, anyhow. But you can’t judge any place by its
-wharves. These seem much like the Melbourne ones, only dirtier. You
-would think Melbourne was awful enough if you judged it by its ports.”
-
-“It looks lovely back there,” Norah said, indicating a long semicircle
-of green hills that rose behind the dusty town.
-
-“That’s the Berea, where all the lucky people of Durban live,” said the
-doctor, coming up. “You must take a trip round there. Going to stay
-ashore, Miss Norah?”
-
-“Yes—Dad says so,” Norah answered. “The captain advised him—he says
-that it would be horrid to be on the ship here for two days.”
-
-“And she coaling!” said the doctor, feelingly. “It’s horrible—dirty,
-noisy, and hot, and your cabin has to be always locked, because the
-Kaffir boys are everywhere, and they’d steal the clothes off your back
-or the pipe out of your mouth.”
-
-“That’s what the captain said. So we’re going to a hotel.” Norah gave
-vent suddenly to a little jig of delight, principally executed on one
-foot.
-
-“Why, what’s the matter?” the doctor asked.
-
-“Look!” said Norah. “They’re Kaffirs, aren’t they? I haven’t seen any
-before.” She pointed to a group of men coming across the wharf
-yard—muscular, brown fellows, bare-footed, many of them stripped to the
-waist, and all chattering and laughing among themselves.
-
-The doctor stared.
-
-“Yes, they’re Kaffirs,” he admitted, without any enthusiasm. “And a low
-set of animals they are, too.”
-
-“They don’t look exactly lovely,” Norah said. “Only you see, it’s so
-queer to me to be in a country where there are coloured people
-everywhere. I can’t help feeling excited.”
-
-“And it’s within my memory,” said the doctor, “that an Australian boy
-came to my school—and we English boys were all quite indignant because
-he could speak our language, and because he wasn’t black! We had a kind
-of idea that every one in Australia was black!”
-
-“But how queer!” said Norah, laughing.
-
-“That’s what we said when we discovered that he was white. But you have
-seen your aborigines, haven’t you, Miss Norah?”
-
-“Oh, I’ve seen them, of course!” Norah answered, “some of them, that is.
-There are not so very many left now, you know, especially in Victoria;
-they are dying out fast, and the remaining ones are principally kept in
-their special settlements. And I never remember enough of them to make
-it seem that they were really the people of the country.”
-
-“Poor wretches!” said the doctor. “It makes one feel a bit sorry for
-them.”
-
-“It wouldn’t if you knew them,” Jim put in. “They’re a most unpleasant
-crowd—the lowest, I believe, in the scale of civilisation. Useless,
-shifty, lazy, thieving—you can’t trust many of them. They will steal,
-and they won’t work.”
-
-“But I’ve heard you speak of one that you employ,” said the doctor.
-
-“Oh, Billy! But I always tell Dad that Billy is the only decent black
-fellow left. And he, like the curate’s egg, is only good in patches.
-He’s very fond of us, and rather afraid of us, and so he works well—on
-a horse. But if you take him off a horse he’s a most hopeless person.
-Now those fellows”—Jim indicated the gang of chattering Kaffirs—“may
-not be perfection, but at least they can be made to work.”
-
-“Oh, they’ll work well enough!” admitted the doctor. “But they’re rather
-like animals. Watch them, now.”
-
-He took out a penny, holding it aloft for a moment. The ship was nearly
-alongside the wharf, and his action was instantly noticed by the noisy
-black throng below, who broke into imploring shouts. The penny, flung
-among them, fell on the wharf, burying itself in coal-dust; but almost
-before it had fallen the Kaffirs had hurled themselves upon it,
-shouting, fighting, scrambling, packed somewhat like a football “scrum,”
-with bare, brown backs heaving and struggling. Those unable to get into
-the mêlée hovered on the outskirts, relieving their feelings by beating
-the backs of their friends wildly. For a few moments complete
-pandemonium reigned. Then a big fellow heaved himself out of the press
-and sprang aside, brandishing the penny aloft, and grinning from ear to
-ear. The others took his victory in perfect good part, grinning as
-widely themselves, and making no attempt to interfere with the victor as
-he tucked away his booty in some obscure corner of his ragged and scanty
-clothing.
-
-“Losh!” ejaculated Jim. “Never did I see such exertion over one small
-penny!”
-
-“It would be just the same over a halfpenny,” the doctor said. He threw
-one—and the scene was reenacted, with equal vigour. The successful
-combatant was a mere boy, who executed a dance of triumph as he
-concealed the spoils of war.
-
-The other passengers on the _Perseus_ had taken up the game by this, and
-coppers fell freely on the wharf; some caught in the air, others made
-the centres of more wild struggles.
-
-“Big animals—that’s all they are,” the doctor said, looking at the
-heaving mass of brown backs. “It’s all very well when they scramble for
-coppers; but they will fight in precisely the same way for the most
-disgusting-looking refuse from the cook’s galley, flung into the
-coal-dust as those pence are flung. The winners gather up their prizes
-and proceed to eat them, coal-dust and all. It isn’t an edifying sight.
-You wouldn’t think it pretty if they were pariah dogs—but considered as
-human beings, well——!” The doctor left his sentence eloquently
-unfinished.
-
-Along the deck came Mr. Linton, hurriedly, his face full of joy.
-
-“Dad’s got news,” Jim said, quickly.
-
-“News!—I should think so!” said his father. “We’ve got the _Emden_!”
-
-“No!”
-
-“Yes—and it’s the Australian ship that finished her—the _Sydney_.
-Caught her off Cocos Island.”
-
-“Our ship!” came in a delighted chorus. “Oh, that’s too good to be
-true!”
-
-“It is true, all the same—and more power to our baby Navy!” said the
-squatter, beaming. “Of course, there was no real fight in it; the
-_Emden_ was hopelessly outclassed. Still, the _Sydney_ was all there
-when she was wanted. It’s worth being without news for so long, to get
-anything as good as this.”
-
-“Rather!” said Jim. “Thank goodness that blessed little wasp is out of
-the way of the transports!”
-
-“She was near enough to be dangerous,” said his father. “And she ran up
-a big enough butcher’s bill for us before we got her.” His face
-darkened; the exploits of the predatory German cruiser had not made
-pleasant British reading. “She has a mighty big bundle of scalps to her
-credit.”
-
-“Well, she played the game,” Jim said. “As far as I can see, she’ll go
-down to history as almost the only chivalrous fighter the Germans had. I
-reckon her captain must be an uncommonly decent sort—he had to be a
-pirate, but he was such a good fellow with it. You can’t help respecting
-him.”
-
-“No—nor being glad he’s out of business,” Wally said. “I’m not keen on
-being sunk by any pirate, no matter how gentlemanly. But, of course,
-though the _Emden_’s captain did treat people awfully well, not even a
-German would sink ships regardless of human life”—wherein Wally spoke
-without foreknowledge of later German tactics. “Any other news, Mr.
-Linton?”
-
-“I haven’t seen any papers yet, but I believe there is nothing
-special—a sort of deadlock everywhere,” the squatter answered. His eyes
-widened suddenly. “There’s an ornamental person! What do you think of
-him, Norah?”
-
-Norah turned, following the direction of his gaze. A man drawing a
-rickshaw had just trotted gently to the wharf, and, putting down his
-shafts, stood erect. Without doubt, he was an ornamental person. He was
-a Zulu, considerably over six feet in height, and of powerful build,
-with well-cut features, and a bearing proud enough to be something more
-than a mere human horse. His dress was striking. A close-fitting tunic
-of scarlet and white stripes, over short scarlet knickerbockers, only
-served to outline his mighty frame. Across his back and chest were
-criss-crossed strips of bright-coloured embroidery. There were bangles
-on his arms, from wrist to shoulder, and bangles above his knees. He was
-bare-footed—but his legs were painted in white from the knees downwards
-in an elaborate design to represent boots and gaiters.
-
-But his glory was in his head-dress. A tight-fitting skull-cap was
-crowned with the most amazing erection that ever bewildered a newcomer.
-Above his brow curved away two enormous bullock-horns, dyed scarlet.
-Between them, a straight aigrette of porcupine quills quivered with
-every movement; and behind, a long plume of pampas grass, of vivid
-yellow, streamed downwards, until it touched a monkey-skin, which,
-fastened to his shoulders, trailed down his back. From different angles
-long scarlet feathers stuck out; and above each ear was fastened a
-native snuff-box—a gourd the size of a tennis-ball, profusely
-ornamented with brass. He was a heartsome sight.
-
-“Good gracious!” Norah gasped. “Are there many like him?”
-
-As if in answer a second rickshaw came round the corner of a wharf
-building. The Zulu who drew it might have been the twin brother of the
-first man in size and features; but his dress was blue and white, and
-one of his bullock-horns curved up, and the other down, which gave him a
-curiously rakish appearance. They were dyed scarlet and black, and his
-feathers were of every colour of the rainbow. The first man broke into a
-rapid torrent of guttural, clicking speech, and for a moment they
-chattered like monkeys. Then they looked up, catching sight of the
-watching passengers on the _Perseus_, and each broad, black face widened
-into a smile from ear to ear, while they beckoned invitingly towards
-their waiting chariots.
-
-“Many!” said the doctor, laughing. “Oh, any number, Miss Norah—that is
-the cab of Durban!”
-
-“Daddy!—do we go in them?”
-
-“Would you like to?” said her father, regarding the peculiar equipage
-with some distrust.
-
-“Rather!” said Norah, breathlessly.
-
-“I don’t think I’d look well in one,” said Mr. Linton, doubtfully.
-“Surely they’re meant for the young and frivolous, doctor?”
-
-“Not a bit,” said the doctor, laughing. “Every one uses them—they’re
-awfully handy things. You can’t possibly keep out of them!”
-
-“That settles it!” said Norah, thankfully. “We’ll go, Daddy. Can we go
-soon?”
-
-“That red and white chap has put the evil eye on Norah,” said Wally,
-laughing. “She’s bewitched, and small blame to her—did you ever see
-such an insinuating smile? Don’t let us keep her waiting, Mr. Linton, or
-she’ll turn into a black cat and disappear for ever—in a phantom
-rickshaw!”
-
-“We may as well go,” said Mr. Linton, laughing. The gangway was down;
-already a swarm of Kaffir boys were coming on deck, unsavoury enough at
-close quarters to cure even Norah of undue hankerings after this
-particular brand of noble savage. Their bare feet left tracks of
-coal-dust on the spotless decks, at which the doctor shrugged
-disgustedly.
-
-“Poor old ship—she’ll be coal from end to end soon,” he observed. “Are
-all your cabins locked, by the way?”
-
-“Yes—we handed them over to the steward’s care,” Mr. Linton answered.
-“Suit-cases all on deck, boys?”
-
-Everything was ready, and in a few moments was delivered to the hotel
-agent, a busy half-caste who came on board suffused with his own
-importance. Then, with no heavier impedimenta than cameras, the
-Billabong party went ashore—to be received with a delighted air of
-welcome by the rickshaw “boys.” Mr. Linton and Norah boarded one
-rickshaw, Jim and Wally the other; the steeds gripped the shafts, said
-authoritatively, “Sit ba-a-a-ck!” and started on the long jog to the
-city, the little brass bells on their wrists jingling at each stride.
-
-The rickshaw of Durban is an enticing vehicle. It holds two people
-comfortably: it is well-cushioned, with an adjustable hood, and has
-rubber tyres; and both it and its “boy” are as clean as polishing can
-make them. The “boy’s” bare feet are almost soundless on the well-paved
-roads; the rickshaw runs smoothly, with no apparent effort on the part
-of the big Zulu. He is a cheerful soul, with a keen eye to the main
-chance; his smile is always ready, and he passes other “boys” with a
-quick volley of chaff that appears to give equal delight to both. Very
-certainly he will demand double or treble fare if he thinks there is the
-slightest chance of obtaining more than his due. He loves to appear
-quite ignorant of English, once he has caught his passenger, and will
-jog on serenely into space, oblivious of any command to stop, knowing
-that he is piling up the sum to be paid him eventually. For these
-reasons, it is as well to learn from the steward a few elementary native
-words of command, which are apt to imbue the “boy” with a painful regard
-for his fare’s might and learning. Failing this, a stick or umbrella
-long enough to prod him is of much value.
-
-With all these small drawbacks, the rickshaw “boy” is a delightful
-person, combining the heart of a child with the business instincts of a
-financier. Even when there is strong reason to suspect that he has
-grossly overcharged you, it is quite impossible to be angry with him,
-his smile is so friendly and his manner so insinuating. The effect might
-be less marked if he were not so extremely ornamental. But a
-chocolate-coloured, highly-polished Hercules, clad in shining raiment,
-jingling with brazen ornaments, and crowned by a head-dress calculated
-to excite envy in the Queen of Sheba, claims affection in a fashion
-denied to lesser mortals.
-
-Norah found her red and white-clad steed wholly delightful. She gave to
-his great back, with its flowing monkey-skin, more attention than to the
-dusty streets through which they were passing, though they, too, were
-not without their special interests—groups of natives, Kaffir women
-with their brown babies tucked into the corner of their bright shawls,
-little native boys with the splendid uprightness that comes from many
-generations who have carried loads on their heads, Indians in gaudy,
-flowing draperies, and slouching half-castes, with evil, crafty faces.
-Other rickshaws passed them, taking passengers back to ships at the
-Point, or jogging down, empty, in the hope of picking up a fare. There
-were long teams of mules, in Government ammunition carts; and in a
-railway yard they caught sight of a train painted with the Red Cross,
-and suddenly remembered that South Africa, too, was at war. Women were
-sitting in the dust by the roadside, with great baskets of fruit—the
-travellers from the land of fruit sniffed disdainfully at its quality;
-and there were hawkers of cool drinks and ice-cream, which appeared to
-be of a peculiarly poisonous nature. Then the unsavoury streets widened
-to a fine road on the sea-front—and they ran past imposing hotels and
-clubs, which looked out on a fleet of small yachts, lying at anchor or
-lazily sailing before the light breeze; and then came a sharp turn into
-a broad street, past a square where statues were surrounded by beds of
-flowers that blazed in the afternoon sun, and a great building, the
-beautiful Town Hall, shone on the further side; and the “boys” dropped
-the shafts in front of the Post Office and grinned by way of explaining
-that this was the heart of Durban town.
-
-“I’d give half my kingdom,” said Wally, as they met on the footpath, “if
-I could import that turn-out to Melbourne and drive down Collins Street
-on a Saturday morning. Just fancy that gorgeous black chap—and the look
-on the Melbourne policeman’s face as he caught sight of him!”
-
-“Just fancy the horses!” said Jim, laughing. “Wouldn’t there be an
-interesting stampede!”
-
-“Look at them now!” said Norah delightedly. A long row of rickshaws
-stood on the other side of the street, waiting to be hired, their “boys”
-chattering in little groups or brushing their miniature carriages with
-feather dusters. A man approached them, bearing the unmistakable tourist
-stamp, and immediately every “boy” sprang to attention—patting the
-rickshaw seat, whistling softly, yet urgently, waving their bright
-dusters, while some, between the shafts, pranced wildly, apparently
-overcome by the sheer joy of being alive. There was a storm of guttural
-pleading. “Take me, sar!” “No, me—he no good!” “Me is fast boy, sar!”
-“Me is faster!” The great bronze faces were vivid with excited
-impatience; white teeth flashed, and rainbow plumes nodded.
-
-“And it’s all for a sixpenny fare—and they’re cab-horses!” ejaculated
-Mr. Linton. “By Jove, just fancy an impi of those fellows under Cetewayo
-going out to battle—with broad spears instead of feather dusters!”
-
-Jim whistled under his breath, watching the row of child-like giants.
-Then he burst into a laugh. On the far side of the row was a Zulu who
-had been unable to get round in time to join in the general effort to
-attract the tourist. He was contenting himself by stooping and peering
-between the wheel-spokes, grinning from ear to ear as he beat upon them
-in the hope of catching the passenger’s eye. The effect was
-indescribably ludicrous.
-
-“Isn’t he lovely!” laughed Norah. “Oh, Jimmy, can you imagine a stolid
-Melbourne cabby playing ‘Bo-peep’ behind his wheels like that!”
-
-“I’d give a lot to see it,” Jim said, “especially if I could dress him
-in that kit first. I wonder what’s the duty on one rickshaw complete
-with Zulu—it would be rather a lark to import one to Australia after
-the war!”
-
-“You couldn’t do it—the cabmen would rise up and slay you,” Wally said.
-“Well, I want to go inland, and see those chaps on their native heath.
-Great Scott, what fighting-men they’d make!”
-
-“Once,” said Mr. Linton. “Not now—since they learned the ways of
-civilisation. But what they must have been! Did you ever hear of the
-impi that failed in battle, under Chaka? He mustered them afterwards and
-told them their punishment. There was a cliff half a mile away, with a
-sheer drop of hundreds of feet into a rocky gorge; at a signal their
-officers gave them the word to march, and took them straight forward,
-over the edge!”
-
-“And they went over?” Norah was wide-eyed with horror.
-
-“Every man. The king stood near the edge to watch; and as they passed
-him they tossed their shields aloft and gave him the royal
-salute—‘Bayété!’ Then they went down, like warriors. They knew it was
-the only thing left to them; it was not possible to fail the king and to
-continue to live.”
-
-“He gave one impi a chance, though,” Wally said. “They were a very
-famous fighting regiment, and in some way or other they disobeyed him.
-Chaka didn’t want to kill them—possibly he was short of recruits, like
-Great Britain! But he paraded them and told them that because of their
-previous good record he would spare their lives, under one
-condition—that they left their assegais in the kraal, went out into the
-bush, and brought him a living lion, full-grown, with teeth and claws
-perfect!”
-
-“What—with their bare hands?” Jim asked, incredulously.
-
-“There wasn’t a weapon among the whole crowd; all they were allowed was
-rope to bind him. They did it, too; marched out into the bush and caught
-their lion and brought him in to the king. It must have been something
-of a job. Forty were killed, and over two hundred clawed. You’d call
-those chaps warriors, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“And now they haul one round in rickshaws! Doesn’t it make one feel
-small!” Jim ejaculated. “Well, Chaka was a cruel brute, but he must have
-been a good deal of a man himself to be able to handle such men as those
-fellows, and send them marching to death, saluting him. Leaders like
-that don’t seem to get born nowadays.”
-
-“Let me commend to your notice, Norah, that method of doing your hair!”
-said Mr. Linton, indicating two Kaffir girls who were passing. Their
-hair was drawn tightly back from their faces and dressed in a kind of
-hard club, about a foot long, that stuck out stiffly from the backs of
-their heads, slanting upwards.
-
-“Good gracious!” said Norah, weakly.
-
-“Do you suppose they take that erection down every night?” Jim asked.
-
-“No, indeed—it looks calculated to last for years,” Norah answered. “I
-wonder how on earth they build it, and why.”
-
-“It’s a handle,” Wally said, solemnly. “Their husbands pick them up by
-it when they’re tired. Also it might be used as a flag-staff, or a
-hat-peg: you could find ever so many uses about a house for it. And then
-it saves them for ever from buying hats. They might possibly make a
-forage-cap sitting on one eyebrow work in with that hair, but no other
-kind of head-dress would fit on. Think of the economy!”
-
-“Think of trying to sleep in it!” said Norah, gazing sympathetically
-after the retreating brown ladies. “It could only be comfortable if they
-lay on their noses.”
-
-“Well, their noses would rather give you the impression that they did,”
-Jim said. “Most of them are as flat as a pancake. I say, do we stand on
-the steps of this post office all day? Because I saw a shop with a
-touching legend about strawberries across the street; and I haven’t seen
-a strawberry for nearly a year. Let’s explore.”
-
-They explored, and found the Durban strawberries so good that the
-exploration was indefinitely prolonged; then they sought curio-shops,
-and rummaged among assegais and knob-kerries, rhinoceros-hide shields,
-Zulu trinkets, Kaffir wire-work, ostrich feathers, and queer carved
-figures; and Norah found herself the delighted possessor of a little
-silver box with top and bottom of beautiful dark-blue agate, veined with
-white. It was very hot, and the city streets, crowded and dusty, were
-not inviting; so they hailed rickshaws, and soon were running smoothly
-along a wide road that led away from the town and towards the ocean
-beach. There was a steep pull up a long hill, which made the passengers
-strongly inclined to get out and walk, except that no one else in
-rickshaws seemed to think of doing so. The “boys” went up it at a good
-pace, though panting audibly. At the top they came in sight of the sea;
-a long strip of beach, on which big rollers pounded incessantly. On the
-left the steep slope down to it was terraced in lawn and garden, with
-seats here and there, summer-houses overgrown with gay creepers, and
-fountains, throwing aloft sparkling jets of water. The clean salt air
-blew strongly towards them.
-
-“Sit ba-a-a-ck!” said the “boys” suddenly.
-
-The Australians obeyed, not too soon. The rickshaws tilted back
-alarmingly as they shot down the hill. The Zulus rested their elbows on
-the shafts and balanced themselves in the air, their legs taking strides
-that were apparently gigantic, but never touching the ground with their
-feet. It was a spectacular performance—by no means comfortable, and
-distinctly nerve-shaking. Faster and faster went the rickshaws, and
-further and further back they tilted.
-
-“If I get out of this alive,” said Jim, “I guess I’m born to be hanged!”
-
-They came to the foot of the hill, and swung round a corner so abruptly
-that to find themselves still intact seemed almost a miracle. The Zulu
-came down to earth and the rickshaw to a horizontal position; the
-occupants righted themselves with sighs of relief. Still under the
-impetus of that wild descent, the “boys” raced along a level strip of
-roadway, and drew up at a big hotel that fronted the beach. They let
-down the shafts gently, and turned to their passengers, each chocolate
-countenance bearing a grin from ear to ear.
-
-“My is a nice boy!” said Norah’s steed, modestly.
-
-“You are,” said Mr. Linton, getting out. “You’re also closely related to
-an assassin, I think. How many people do you kill in the year?”
-
-The Zulu grinned yet more widely, apparently under the impression that
-his acrobatic efforts were receiving the praise they merited.
-
-“Two shillin’,” said he, blandly, and accepted the coin with an air of
-condescension, while his companion did the same. They trotted off
-smartly, lest their passengers should discover that they had paid double
-fare and take steps of vengeance.
-
-The hotel was cool and spacious, with big rooms and wide verandahs.
-Norah’s window looked out upon the sea, stretching to the misty horizon
-over which they had come. Beneath her, the life of the beach surged.
-War, people said, had made Durban quiet; few of the up-country settlers
-had followed their usual custom of coming down for the bathing, since
-most of the men were fighting, and every one else was busy guarding
-property. But Norah thought she had never seen such a busy beach.
-Motors, carriages, and rickshaws passed and repassed on the wide road
-beneath her, with clanging, noisy electric trams; further down, the
-terraces were thronged with people, and the cafes showed a stream of
-customers going in and out. Children were paddling and digging in the
-sand; in a rotunda a military band was playing softly.
-
-In the sea itself, a semicircular pier curved right out into the water,
-surrounding a stretch of surf. Men were fishing from the far side of the
-pier; Norah could see immensely long rods, and once a gleam in the air
-as a big fish was landed over the rail. But her interest centred on the
-enclosed water, where hundreds of people were bathing in the breakers
-that came rolling in from the sea. Durban bathing was famous, the doctor
-had told her, since it combined the excitement and delight of surfing
-with perfect safety. Norah watched them, fascinated. Some would wait,
-waist-deep, for the breaker to come in behind them and carry them on its
-crest ashore; others would face it, and as it came, dive right through
-it, to swim in the more tranquil heave of water behind the crest. There
-were old and young men and women; boys and girls, and tiny children,
-most of them daring the deepest water, while a few paddled cheerfully
-near the edge, sat down and shrieked when a wave came tumbling in, and,
-if they did not swim, at any rate became extremely wet and happy.
-
-“Why do women always yell when they bathe?” asked Jim, coming in. “I
-knocked three times, by the way, but you didn’t hear me.”
-
-“They don’t,” Norah said indignantly, ignoring his apology. “At least
-sensible ones don’t.”
-
-“Then it’s the insensible ones that bathe,” Jim said, sticking to his
-point. “At least nine-tenths of the women there scream when a wave hits
-them—and it’s the same in any place you go to. I often
-wonder”—reflectively—“how they break themselves of the habit
-sufficiently to avoid screaming in the bathroom at home!”
-
-“Jimmy, you are an ass,” said his sister, politely. She looked up at him
-with pleading. “It’s hot, and the sea looks lovely; I won’t yell, if
-you’ll take me to bathe.”
-
-“That’s what I came for,” Jim answered. “Dad is deep in the last three
-weeks’ papers, and Wally and I are pining for a swim. Come on!” They
-plunged downstairs, found Wally awaiting them on the verandah, and
-hurried down the terrace to the sea; and in five minutes Norah was
-having her first taste of surfing, getting knocked flat by waves and
-buried temporarily beneath what seemed thousands of tons of water,
-coming up to the surface, breathless, but happy, and swimming wildly
-until another breaker came over her; and learning in a very short time
-to meet them and make use of them, diving through their green curves and
-coming gloriously ashore upon their hollow backs. They stayed until the
-sun left the sky, and the water grew chilly; then, damp and hilarious,
-and exceedingly hungry, climbed up to the hotel.
-
-Mr. Linton was standing on the verandah, looking out.
-
-“I’m glad to see you,” he said; “you were so long that I’ve been
-mentally recalling the treatment of the apparently drowned. Had a good
-bathe?”
-
-“Oh, glorious!” said the bathers. “Is it time for dinner?”
-
-Ten minutes later they were enjoying it in a big dining-room that was
-open on one side to the verandah, and to the darkening sea. Lights began
-to flash out all round the semicircle of the pier, and along the
-terraces—though the waiter, a bare-footed Indian in white clothes, told
-them regretfully that since the war the fountains no longer were red and
-green at night, but were turned off when dusk fell!
-
-“It seems a rum tribute to war,” Wally said. “But I suppose it’s all
-right.”
-
-“Yes, sar—certainly, sar,” said the waiter.
-
-The hum of traffic did not cease, and the shouts of the bathers came up
-plainly from the surf. The Billabong party strolled along the beach in
-the hot dusk, and watched the heads bobbing in and out of the breakers,
-mysteriously seen in the streaks of light cast by the lamps on the
-encircling pier. Gradually the heat lessened and a pale moon climbed
-into the sky. They turned homeward when Norah was discovered yawning.
-
-“Well, the sea is lovely, and all that,” Jim said, stretching his long
-frame as he rose. “But I think it’s loveliest when you’re off it. It’s
-good to feel tired again—I’m getting flabby with doing nothing on that
-old ship. Three weeks of solid sea certainly makes you enjoy land!”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “They hailed rickshaws, and soon were running smoothly
-along a wide road.”]
-
- _From Billabong to London_] [_Page_ 194
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
-
- EXPLORING.
-
-WALLY awoke in the early dawn, under the stimulus of a damp sponge
-pressed firmly against his face.
-
-“Beast!” he said sleepily, and hit out in a wild fashion which had, very
-naturally, no effect. He opened his eyes, to see Jim, in his pyjamas,
-grinning at him over the end of the bed.
-
-“Of all the restless animals!” said the injured Mr. Meadows. “Why ever
-can’t you stay peaceably in bed on the rare occasion that you’ve got one
-to stay in—instead of a creaking shelf? There can’t be anything wrong,
-or you wouldn’t have a grin like a Cheshire cat!”
-
-“There is not,” said his chum, affably. “Only I couldn’t sleep, and it
-seemed such a pity for you to be slumbering. Let’s get up.”
-
-“Get up! Whatever for?”
-
-“Oh, just to be up! It’s too hot to be in bed—and everything out of
-doors looks so jolly. I’ve been out on the balcony for ever so long.”
-
-“Go to Jericho!” said Mr. Meadows, with finality, and turned over to
-slumber anew. This laudable desire was frustrated by the gradual
-withdrawal of all bedclothes; then, as the victim seemed resigned to
-sleeping on the bare mattress, Jim rolled him up in it and deposited him
-head-first on the floor. At this point slumber left the scene finally,
-and the outraged Wally gave himself up to vengeance.
-
-Calmness was restored a little later, and the dishevelled combatants
-regarded each other.
-
-“You hit like the kick of a pony,” said Jim, with respect, rubbing his
-shoulder. “Isn’t it ripping to have space to move again? People of our
-size aren’t meant for ship’s cabins.”
-
-“I was meant for bed,” said Wally, bestowing an affectionate glance on
-that once placid retreat. “And you are meant for the gallows—and some
-day you’ll get there! Now, what do you want to do? I’m awake.”
-
-“I’d noticed it,” said Jim, still handling his shoulder carefully.
-“Wonderful how well you wake up when you make up your mind to it! Oh, I
-don’t quite know what to do! But come out, anyhow.”
-
-“Well, we haven’t got very much shore time, so we may as well make the
-best of it,” Wally assented, searching among the débris of the room for
-his socks. “Land certainly does feel good under one’s feet once more. Do
-we go for a walk along the beach, or what?”
-
-“No, I don’t want any more sea-views for a bit,” Jim answered. “We’ll
-have plenty for the next month. I vote we go into the town and explore a
-bit. There may be nothing to see, but it’s full of such queer people
-that you never know what you may run into if you go off the beaten
-track—and of course we can’t do that when Norah is with us.”
-
-“No. It sounds as if it might be interesting,” Wally said. “Jim, you
-great camel, one of my socks is in the basin!—I hope to goodness I
-packed up another pair.” He dived for his suit-case, and sighed with
-relief on finding a further supply. “That saves your skin, old man. By
-the way, what about the native market?”
-
-“I was wondering,” said Jim. “Of course, it’s Sunday—but one doesn’t
-know how our Sunday affects these brown and black gentry. The doctor
-said it began at some unearthly hour, and I think he said it was always
-open, so it might be available on a Sunday.”
-
-“We might try,” Wally said. “Markets are generally best if you catch ’em
-in the very early morning. Do you know where it is?”
-
-“Only that it’s the other side of the town from here,” Jim answered. “We
-may pick up a stray rickshaw; or if not, we’ll find some one to ask.
-Anyhow, it will be an exploration.”
-
-“Right-oh!” Wally agreed. “Durban seems to me much like any other place
-if you omit the people—those queer coloured mixtures are the most
-interesting part, by a long way. I’d like to find that market.”
-
-“Same here. It will be a walk, anyhow—and then we’ll get back in time
-for a swim before breakfast. No need to leave a note on the pincushion,
-like the eloping young ladies in novels, I suppose?”
-
-“Oh, we’ll be back before they’re awake!” Wally said. “Anyhow, your
-father would understand that we had gone off on a voyage of discovery.”
-
-They dressed hurriedly and went downstairs through the quiet house. A
-sleepy Indian boy let them out. The streets were empty save for a few
-native sweepers; already there was promise of a hot day, but the morning
-was cool and fresh. The sea a sheet of rippling blue that creamed at the
-edge in long, slow rollers. The boys turned off the main thoroughfares,
-and struck downwards to the city.
-
-Everything seemed asleep. There was no movement in any of the houses
-they passed, and no traffic in the streets. Occasionally a sleepy dog
-barked from a verandah, but without energy. There were many sleepers on
-these verandahs; often they caught glimpses of stretcher-beds behind
-bamboo blinds, where open-air enthusiasts had slumbered in outdoor
-freshness through the hot night. “Quite like Australia,” said Wally,
-approvingly. “This place isn’t so much unlike Brisbane, in many ways.”
-
-“So I was thinking,” Jim observed. “Brisbane is a bit grubbier, and has
-more smells, and not such a mixture of races; but the Kanakas you see
-there are not unlike the Kaffirs here, and the place itself has a good
-many points of resemblance. It’s a kind of half-way house to the Old
-World Cities, I suppose.” He took out his pipe, and looked half
-regretfully at his friend. “I wish you smoked.”
-
-“Not me!” said Wally, sturdily. “You waited until you were nineteen, and
-I’m jolly well going to. Don’t you bother.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t want you to start!” Jim said. “I think it’s a fool game to
-begin too young. But I just wish you could, that’s all—it would be
-sociable, and I feel rather a pig; you must be hungry. It was feeling
-hungry that made me want a pipe.”
-
-“I daresay we’ll pick up some grub somewhere,” Wally said, cheerfully.
-“I’m not hungry enough to worry about.” He looked at Jim keenly. “I
-believe there are ever so many times that you don’t smoke just because
-I’m there, and you don’t think it is sociable. Go on, you old donkey.”
-
-“Donkey yourself,” returned Jim, somewhat shamefacedly, but fishing in
-his pocket for his tobacco-pouch. “I never did anything so stupid.” He
-changed the subject with thankfulness, having in common with his chum a
-great horror of any conversation that approached what they called
-“softness.” “Look at that jolly little kid!”
-
-A small, brown person sat on a doorstep and looked at them with grave
-eyes. He might possibly have been two years old, but his gaze had the
-solemnity of extreme old age. He was clad in a very brief pink
-nightgown, and his mop of curly hair was standing erect, just as he had
-tousled it in sleep.
-
-“Good morning,” said Wally, stopping and addressing the baby with a
-gravity equal to its own. “I hope you’re well. Will you shake hands?”
-
-The baby contemplated the outstretched hand for a moment, and glanced
-again at the boyish face. Then he put his hand into Wally’s and
-permitted himself the ghost of a grave smile.
-
-“I’ve seldom seen a better-mannered gentleman,” said Wally, stepping
-back. “See if he’ll be as civil to you, Jim.”
-
-He was, and the smile broadened, though apparently he had no speech—as
-Wally said, his grin made him independent of words. Jim produced a penny
-and put it into the tiny paw that matched it in colour. Then the door
-behind opened suddenly, and a Kaffir lady, evidently the baby’s mother,
-and clad in a nightgown strongly resembling his, appeared in search of
-her family—and at sight of the two boys, uttered a refined shriek and
-disappeared as quickly as she had come. The baby, regarding this
-performance as a circus, laughed very heartily; and Jim and Wally fled.
-
-In the business part of Durban itself there was even less sign of life
-than among the cottages they had left. The shop-fronts were closely
-shuttered, and everywhere there was silence. Once, down a side-street,
-they caught sight of a native policeman, trim and smart in his dark
-blue, close-fitting uniform, his shapely brown legs bare from his
-knickerbockers, and a jaunty blue cap on one side of his close-cropped
-curly head; but he did not see them, and they went on. Jim paused for a
-moment.
-
-“We might ask that fellow where the market is,” he said. “What do you
-think?”
-
-“Oh, he’s rather out of our way, isn’t he?” Wally answered, easily. “And
-policemen have such a knack of moving off when you go after them; and
-you have to chase them for blocks. We’re sure to come across somebody
-soon.” To which Jim acquiesced; and thereby lost a chance of saving a
-good deal of trouble.
-
-It was not an interesting city. The streets were dusty and untidy, and
-in the gutters was a litter of rubbish that spoke eloquently of Saturday
-night shopping. As they drew further and further away from the business
-centre there were signs of more foreign occupation—queer inscriptions
-in divers languages over the doorways of shuttered shops, and occasional
-glimpses of Oriental wares in dingy windows belonging to shops that did
-not rise to the dignity of shutters. Sometimes they had a brief vision
-of curious eyes regarding them from behind half-drawn curtains. They met
-an old Kaffir slinking along the gutter in search of some unsavoury
-booty, and questioned him about the market; but either he knew no
-English, or did not wish to understand them, for he only blinked and
-uttered guttural and unintelligible words, holding out a knotted old
-hand for money. The boys gave him some coppers and strolled on.
-
-“Well, Durban takes some beating, for laziness, if not for religious
-fervour,” Jim said, at length. “I never saw a place more painfully
-quiet—there may be a mixture of races, but they all observe the Sabbath
-so far as sleeping goes. We’ll have to give it up and turn back, pretty
-soon, since apparently we shall have to walk all the way home; trams and
-rickshaws are as sound asleep as the inhabitants.”
-
-“There’s a chap who may know something,” said Wally, quickly.
-
-They had turned into a narrow street, and a rickshaw was coming slowly
-along towards them, drawn by a big Zulu. It was a shabby rickshaw, and
-the Zulu himself bore none of the adornments of his brethren in more
-fashionable regions; he wore ordinary knickerbockers and a blue jumper,
-and a single black feather was stuck through his tight curls.
-
-“What a dingy-looking beggar!” Jim said. “He looks as if he’s been up
-all night.”
-
-“Probably he has, and he’s tired,” Wally answered. “Anyhow, he’s safe to
-know about the market.”
-
-They hailed the Zulu, who did not, at first, seem inclined to stop. He
-regarded them with sleepy, unfriendly eyes, but without
-curiosity—though the tall, fresh-faced boys, in their light flannels
-and Panama hats, were sufficiently unfamiliar figures in that mean
-street in the early morning, before folk were awake. They repeated their
-question—in answer he grunted ill-temperedly and resumed his slow walk.
-
-“Oh, bother!” said Jim. “I’d better give him something, and loosen his
-tongue.”
-
-He drew out a loose handful of change and selected a small silver coin,
-holding it out to the Zulu. The man’s eyes lit up, and he stopped and
-backed to the footpath.
-
-“We may as well take him, if he wants a fare,” Wally said. “It isn’t a
-luxurious-looking chariot, but it will do.”
-
-“Market?” queried Jim. “You know the market?”
-
-The Zulu looked vacantly at them for a moment.
-
-“Gen’lemen want go to market?”
-
-“Yes—native market; not white man’s,” Jim explained. “You know it?”
-
-The man still hesitated.
-
-“Yes,” he said at length. “You been there?”
-
-“No,” said Jim, impatiently. “We want to go. Is it open on Sundays?”
-
-“Yes,” said the Zulu, after a pause. “Take you?” He looked at them
-keenly.
-
-“Yes—go ahead,” Jim said. They climbed into the rickshaw, and the Zulu
-jogged off.
-
-He seemed to know his way readily enough. Up one poor street after
-another he trotted, his slow strides covering a great deal of ground.
-The locality grew more and more depressing: mean houses gave place to
-ramshackle cottages, many of them mere huts, separated by tumble-down
-fences, occasionally interspersed with grimy shops that were little more
-than stalls. Depressed-looking fowls scratched in the gutters, and mangy
-curs lay about every doorstep.
-
-“Well, this is about as unpromising an approach to a market as one could
-imagine,” Jim remarked. “I’m glad we didn’t try to bring Norah—that kid
-hates smells.”
-
-“Probably he’s taking us by short cuts,” Wally said; “he’s evidently
-tired, and this unsavoury rabbit-warren may lead out into the
-market-place. It can’t possibly be the usual approach; it’s too narrow,
-and there is no sign of much traffic.”
-
-“I expect you’re right,” Jim answered. “Or else his happy home is in the
-locality, and he doesn’t mean to go past it. I’ll have a word to say to
-him, if he leaves us here.”
-
-“You may, but it’s doubtful if he’ll understand you,” Wally grinned.
-“The conversation of these gentlemen is limited—though I fancy they
-understand a good deal more than one would think. Now, what’s his game?”
-
-The rickshaw had swung round a corner, and into a yard, through an open
-gate. A closed house gave no sign of life; across the yard was a stable,
-and over the half-door a mule poked out a sleepy head. The Zulu put down
-the shafts and turned to the boys, saying something that was only half
-intelligible.
-
-“Not can do?” Jim said angrily, catching his drift. “What do you bring
-us here for, then?” He got out, followed by Wally.
-
-“Short cut,” said the man, apologetically. “Can show market—through
-there.” He pointed to a door in the high board fence. “Me bad feet—gone
-too many trips.”
-
-“He looks footsore enough,” Wally said, scanning the slouching form. “No
-good bothering about him, Jim—let’s pay him and clear out.”
-
-Another Zulu had come out of the stable, in which he appeared to have
-slept with the mule. The first man shot a short, clicking sentence at
-him, pointing to his feet.
-
-“Well, I don’t know what he expects, but that’s all he’s going to get,”
-Jim said, handing the sullen Zulu some money. “Now, where’s your
-market?” he added, sharply. “Hurry up!”
-
-“Market close through here, sir,” the man answered, more respectfully
-than he had yet spoken. He led the way to the door in the fence, the
-boys at his heels, and stood aside for them to pass through.
-
-“Why, it’s another yard——” Jim began, turning.
-
-He had no time for more. The Zulu’s fist shot out and took him between
-the eyes, and he staggered through the doorway. At the same instant a
-violent blow on the back of the head sent Wally headlong on top of his
-friend. They went down in a heap together, unable to defend themselves.
-A shower of blows with heavy sticks beat them back as they struggled to
-rise. Jim tried to shout, but his voice died away helplessly; he flung
-out his hand, finding only Wally’s face, strangely wet. Then he lost
-consciousness.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
-
- WHAT CAME OF EXPLORING.
-
-“GOOD morning, Dad.” Norah came out upon the wide portico of the hotel;
-a cool, fresh vision in a white linen frock.
-
-“Good morning, my girl,” said her father. There was a line between his
-brows. “Have you seen the boys?”
-
-“No—aren’t they down yet?”
-
-“I don’t know where they are,” David Linton said. “They don’t seem to be
-in the hotel.”
-
-“Oh, they’re bathing!” said Norah, with comfortable certainty. “It’s
-such a hot morning—I wanted ever so much to go myself, only I woke so
-disgracefully late.”
-
-“No, they’re not bathing. I’ve been down, and there was no sign of them.
-I suppose they have gone out somewhere. They might at least get back in
-time for breakfast.”
-
-“They won’t be long, you may be sure,” Norah answered. “I never saw such
-hungry boys! Let’s go in, Daddy; it’s late, and you ought to have your
-breakfast. The boys will turn up before we are half done.”
-
-“Oh, I suppose they’re all right!” her father said, leading the way to
-their table. “They are quite big enough to look after themselves at any
-rate; if they miss breakfast it’s their own look-out.”
-
-“Jim won’t miss breakfast,” said Jim’s sister. “What he has may be
-queer, but he’ll have something. I expect they’ve gone for a tram ride
-or a rickshaw trip, Daddy, and it has taken longer than they expected;
-if they find themselves too far from home when they get hungry, they’ll
-buy something.”
-
-“I suppose so.” Mr. Linton beckoned to a waiter. “Tell the young
-gentlemen, if you see them, that we’re at breakfast.”
-
-“Yes, sar,” said the waiter, a tall and immaculate Indian, in white
-clothes and a scarlet sash. He departed, to return presently.
-
-“Young gen’lemen gone out, sar. Very early—before light. Not yet
-returned.”
-
-“It’s very annoying,” Mr. Linton said, as the waiter withdrew. He
-laughed a little. “Jim has spoiled me, I suppose; he so rarely does
-anything eccentric that when he does, I feel injured.”
-
-Norah answered his smile.
-
-“Jim’s awfully dependable,” she said, with the quaint gravity which was
-wont to make Wally declare that she mistook herself for Jim’s aunt.
-“He’ll stroll in presently, Daddy, looking nice and calm, just as usual.
-They must have gone out exploring; the time here is so short, and it’s
-their first foreign land, so they want to see all they can.”
-
-“Well, we don’t waste much time,” said Mr. Linton, still unappeased.
-
-“No. But I expect they want to run free a bit. You know boys can’t want
-a girl with them all the time,” said Norah, sagely.
-
-“I have not observed,” said her father, “that having you with them has
-made much difference to Jim and Wally’s fun in the past.”
-
-“They’re awfully good about it,” Norah answered. “But I know other
-girls’ brothers object; most of them say they can’t be bothered with
-girls. Of course, Jim and I grew up mates, and that makes all the
-difference; I don’t really think he minds. But in a strange place they
-may want to go exploring, and a girl might be in the way.”
-
-“Oh, possibly! All the same, I don’t know that I’m very keen on their
-getting too far off the beaten track, in a place like this—full of all
-sorts of natives. However, worrying does no good, and I suppose they’ll
-stroll in presently.” Mr. Linton applied himself to his breakfast. “This
-South African fish has a queer name, but it’s good, Norah; I’ll have
-some more.”
-
-They looked up eagerly as each newcomer entered the dining-room.
-Breakfast was going on in the lazy, haphazard manner common to all
-hotels on Sunday. People strolled in at long intervals; mostly
-brown-faced people from up country, in summer raiment—linen and silk
-suits, and muslin frocks. Even in November Durban was very hot. But,
-though they spun out the meal to the greatest possible length, breakfast
-ended without any sign of the absentees. Mr. Linton went out on the
-verandah at last, and lit his pipe, while Norah cast fruitless glances
-up and down the white road, and across the terraces to the beach.
-
-“Well, you say I mustn’t worry, but I should like to have your
-permission to be annoyed!” Mr. Linton said, when the pipe was
-satisfactorily working. “I want to go out, not to hang round the hotel.
-And what are we to do about those young rascals?”
-
-“I don’t know,” Norah answered, doubtfully. “It is funny, isn’t it, Dad?
-I’m perfectly certain they are all right—but it’s so unlike Jim.” She
-hesitated. “We can’t go and find them—that’s certain; and Jim would be
-wild if we waited for him, and missed anything. I think we’d better go
-by ourselves.”
-
-“So do I,” returned her father. “We’ll leave word that we’ll be in to
-luncheon, and if they come while we’re out they can amuse themselves;
-they are sure to want a bathe. Run and get your hat, lassie.” They went
-off presently, a rather forlorn looking pair.
-
-It was about that time that Jim, in the darkness of the shed where he
-had been flung, stirred, and opened his eyes. His head throbbed
-furiously, and when he tried to sit up he found himself suddenly glad to
-lie back again. For a little while he remained still, trying to remember
-what had happened to him—with vague recollections that seemed to wander
-between a savage black face and an earthquake. He was not very sure
-about either.
-
-A rustle in the straw close by startled him—and in a flash he
-remembered Wally, and forgot his aching bones. An instinct of prudence
-kept him from speaking. Slowly he raised himself on one arm, and felt in
-the darkness until he found a face, half-buried in straw. Wally stirred
-again.
-
-“That you, old man?” he whispered weakly.
-
-“Ss-h,” Jim cautioned. “Are you hurt?”
-
-“I—don’t know,” Wally said, feebly. “I ache a heap—and my head’s
-queer.”
-
-Jim set his teeth and managed to sit up. His head swam violently, and
-for a moment he wrestled with nausea; then he managed to steady himself,
-and began to feel Wally gently.
-
-“Wish I dared strike a match,” he muttered, “but my hand is too
-shaky—and in this straw. Wal, you’ve no bones broken, old man, I
-think.”
-
-“I don’t think so,” Wally answered. “Let’s wriggle.” He did so, and it
-evidently hurt him, for Jim heard the swift intake of his breath. “No,
-I’m all right,” he said. “How about you?”
-
-“Oh—battered a bit!” said Jim, to whom memory was returning slowly.
-“Can I help you up, do you think? Great Cæsar, how this place smells!”
-
-He worked an arm under Wally, and helped him to a sitting position—an
-effort which nearly lost consciousness for them both. They found the
-wall near, and leaned back against it thankfully, until giddiness
-subsided. Jim made further discoveries.
-
-“My watch has gone,” he announced. “Nice people! Likewise my
-money—likewise my coat. How about you?”
-
-“A clean sweep, I think,” Wally said, faintly. “I don’t seem to have
-anything but my shirt and trousers.”
-
-“That was their game, I expect,” Jim said. “Steady, old man, you’re
-slipping—slip this way, and lean against my shoulder. They’ve taken all
-they could get, and I expect they’ve cleared out.”
-
-“You don’t think they’ll have ideas about ransom?” Wally hazarded.
-
-“Not vermin like those—and in a city. No, I’ll bet they’re making for
-Zululand or wherever they belong, by this time. Eh, but I was a fool!”
-said Jim, bitterly. “And I thought I knew how to look after myself!”
-
-Wally groaned in sympathy.
-
-“Well, they fell on us like a cyclone,” he said. “I don’t seem to
-remember anything beyond an appalling bang on my head and falling on top
-of you. The beggars got me from behind.”
-
-“Mine began in front—but it was so sudden,” Jim said. “He looked such a
-sleepy, tired lout—one never dreamed of suspecting danger. Well, it
-will teach us a bit of sense. The question is, what are we going to do?”
-
-“Do you think we’re locked in?”
-
-“Very probably, but before I see, I’m going to get my muscles in
-something like working order,” Jim said. “Try moving a bit and rubbing
-your arms and legs—don’t stand up yet, or your head will swim.”
-
-“It’s got a lump on it the size of a golf-ball,” said Wally, feeling his
-pate respectfully. “By Jove, I am stiff!”
-
-“My face is as stiff as the rest of me,” Jim answered. “Feels like much
-dried gore. Well, thank goodness they didn’t break any bones.”
-
-The boys rubbed energetically for a while, a process involving severe
-pain, since they encountered bruises at every touch. It did them good,
-however, and after a little time Jim was able to stagger to his feet,
-and to help Wally up.
-
-“I don’t suppose we could put up much of a fight,” he said. “But we may
-not have to fight at all—they can’t get any more from us. Let’s see if
-we’re locked in.”
-
-They felt carefully round the walls of the malodorous building,
-stumbling in the filthy straw which covered the floor. Jim’s fingers,
-groping in the darkness, at length discovered a latch; but the door
-refused to yield. They experimented noiselessly at first and then, made
-bold by indignation, shook it violently—without result.
-
-“It’s a stable, evidently,” Jim said. “This door’s in two halves, and
-the top one is the one that is jammed—the lower half is pretty rickety.
-Well, if any one is about, we’ll get visited—and if we don’t get the
-door open we’ll certainly smother. Let’s try kicking it together, Wal.”
-
-They kicked, with what strength was left them; and at the third
-onslaught a panel of the shaky door started outwards, letting in a gush
-of fresh air and light:
-
-“Hurrah!” said Jim. “We’ll probably have the neighbourhood here in a
-minute, so we may as well go on kicking. Can you manage it?”
-
-“Rather!” Wally panted. They attacked the next panel with fury. It fell
-out in a moment, leaving a hole wide enough to crawl through.
-
-“No one in sight,” said Jim, putting out his head. “My word, the air is
-good. Come on, old man, I’m going to chance it.”
-
-“Take care you don’t get another bang on the head,” Wally warned,
-watching his chum squeeze through the narrow space, and realising how
-helpless he would be in case of an attack. It was with immense relief
-that he saw Jim safely through, and, stooping, watched him scramble to
-his feet.
-
-“No one in sight,” Jim said. “Everything silent. Can you get through,
-Wal?”
-
-“Oh, yes!” said Wally, trying to steady his swimming head. He crawled
-through the hole, finding Jim’s arm waiting to aid him to his feet. For
-a moment they blinked at each other in the strong sunlight. Then, weak
-and aching as they were, they burst out laughing.
-
-“Great Scott, Jimmy, you do look lovely!” Wally gasped. “Am I like
-that?”
-
-“I don’t know how I look, but I’m ready to swear that you’re worse!” Jim
-answered. “They were certainly thorough, those Zulu gentlemen!”
-
-They had been thorough. The immaculate lads who had strolled out of the
-hotel in the morning were tattered scarecrows, clad in shirt and
-trousers only—and those garments torn, and filthy from the straw on
-which they had been thrown. Nothing whatever of personal property
-remained to them. They were ghastly pale, their faces streaked with
-blood which had flowed freely from cuts and wounds, and had mingled with
-dirt into a remarkable colour scheme. Jim, in addition, possessed a pair
-of black eyes that could scarcely have been surpassed in richness of
-hue; while any German duelling student would have envied the cut which
-seamed Wally’s cheek.
-
-“Even a native policeman would arrest us at sight as rogues and
-vagabonds,” Wally said. “Can’t we clean up a bit?”
-
-“Don’t know,” Jim answered. “Let’s see.”
-
-There was no sign of any occupant in the dingy hovel across the yard.
-The boys peeped fruitlessly through a shuttered window, tried the door,
-and found it locked, and could find no trace of either the rickshaw
-which had brought them there or the mule they had seen in the first
-stable. It was evident that the Zulus, after securing their booty, had
-hastily decamped. Further search, however, revealed a tap, dripping in a
-corner. They drank from it thirstily, and bathed their heads and faces
-for some time, with the aid of fragments torn from their tattered silk
-shirts.
-
-“You look as if you had once been respectable,” Wally remarked. “At
-least you would, but for your black eyes. I know I’m hopeless, so you
-needn’t bother to say anything!” He dabbed at his cheek, which washing
-had induced to bleed again.
-
-“You’ve improved tremendously,” Jim said. “Cold water is certainly not
-much good for dirt of this degree of grubbiness, but we don’t look quite
-such banditti as we did. How do you feel?”
-
-“Better—only top-heavy and stiff. How about you?”
-
-“Oh, I’m much the same—with a champion head ache; about the first I
-ever had, I think!” Jim answered. “Do you feel up to walking?”
-
-“I wouldn’t choose it for pleasure,” said Wally, his old smile sitting
-oddly on his white face. “But I can manage it all right. What shall we
-do?”
-
-“I think the only thing is to get back to the hotel,” Jim answered. “I
-thought of going to the ship for fresh clothes, but all our keys are at
-the hotel. No policeman would listen to us for a moment, looking like
-this; we’ll be lucky if we don’t get run in by the first we meet. It’s
-an abominably long way for you, old man—sure you can manage it?”
-
-“Rather!” Wally said, cheerily. “We’ll prop each other up. Come along.”
-
-They went out into the street. A few brown children were playing in the
-dust, and looked at them curiously, and some loutish Kaffir boys of
-fifteen or sixteen jeered at them from a verandah; but the houses were
-all shut, to keep out the heat, and they encountered very few
-passers-by—all natives, who showed little curiosity. The sun blazed
-fiercely on their bare heads; there was no shade in the street, and
-already they were again painfully thirsty. Wally staggered frequently
-from weakness, and was glad of Jim’s arm—though he put so little weight
-upon it that Jim abused him roundly. They made their painful way back
-towards the city.
-
-“I’d be almost glad to meet a policeman,” Jim said, at last. “We’ll
-never walk all that way; you’re done now, old chap.”
-
-“Not me!” Wally gasped. “Come on.”
-
-They turned into a wider thoroughfare. It was nearing noon; Durban was
-waking up. Along the street, on his way to the principal square of the
-city, came trotting a very smart rickshaw boy—a vision of scarlet and
-white, and nodding plumes and towering bullock-horns. Jim looked at him
-hungrily.
-
-“There’s the very fellow we had yesterday,” he said. “I suppose he’d
-howl if we tried to stop him.”
-
-He gave an involuntary hail, and the Zulu, amazed at the crisp tone of
-command, stopped dead, looking at them doubtfully.
-
-“What you want?” he said.
-
-“Your rickshaw,” Jim answered. “Hotel King George.” He dragged Wally
-forward.
-
-The Zulu grinned widely.
-
-“Not much!” he said. “Got money?”
-
-“At the hotel—not here.”
-
-Something was puzzling the rickshaw “boy.” He looked questioningly from
-one to another of the white-faced lads. They were scarecrows—but he
-knew enough of the tourists he dragged round Durban to be certain that
-these belonged to the race that employed him. Jim’s disfigured face was
-full of authority. Wally, beyond any mere speech, leaned against the
-rickshaw, gripping the rail.
-
-“You been hurt?” the “boy” ventured.
-
-Jim explained curtly. There had been a fight, they had been robbed. They
-must get to the Hotel King George for clothes and money; moreover, this
-rickshaw must take them. “We had you yesterday,” Jim finished. “From the
-Point.”
-
-Light suddenly flashed into the Zulu’s eyes.
-
-“Blue Funnel ship?” he exclaimed.
-
-Jim nodded. “Four of us. Will you take us? We’ll give you five
-shillings.”
-
-The Zulu nodded so alarmingly that it seemed certain that his head-dress
-would fall off.
-
-“Me take you,” he said. “Get in.” He came to help to get Wally into the
-seat. Jim climbed in thankfully.
-
-“Go by back streets,” he commanded.
-
-So it was that Norah, standing disconsolately on the hotel verandah, saw
-a strange rickshaw-load approaching—and after a hurried glance, fled to
-meet it.
-
-“Jim—are you much hurt?”
-
-“I’m all right—Wally’s about done,” Jim said. “Pay this chap, Norah;
-we’re going in by the back way. You’d better come too, to lend an air of
-respectability.”
-
-Norah ran beside the rickshaw, choking back further questions. In the
-back yard of the hotel she encountered the manager, and a brief word of
-explanation brought help from half a dozen quarters.
-
-“That chap has done us a mighty good turn,” Jim said, indicating the
-Zulu. “Give him ten shillings—I promised him five. You tell dad—we’ve
-been in a scrimmage, but there’s no need to worry—none whatever.” A
-sudden giddiness came over him, and two waiters caught him swiftly and
-bore him off in Wally’s wake. Norah, half-sobbing, heard him feebly
-informing them that he was never better able to walk.
-
-An hour later the boys held a reception in their room. Hot baths and
-strong soap had done wonders for them, and the doctor Mr. Linton had
-insisted on summoning had declared that they had sustained no serious
-damage. A few strips of sticking-plaster adorned them, and Jim’s
-blackened eyes lent him a curiously sinister aspect.
-
-“I never thought bed could feel so good,” Wally declared.
-
-“Bed is good,” said Jim, from across the room—“but bath was better.
-What did that Zulu who brought us home say to you, Norah?”
-
-“He was too overcome by his half-sovereign to say much at all,” Norah
-answered. “And as it was mainly Zulu-talk, I didn’t gather a great deal
-of what he did say.” She twinkled. “I think he meant to assure me that
-you were a great chief—no matter how grubby you looked. And as he has
-done nothing ever since but parade up and down the road in front of the
-hotel, I believe he means to attach himself to us permanently.”
-
-“Tell him, if you see him, that we’ll have him again to-morrow,” Jim
-said. “He’s a good chap.”
-
-“I don’t think you will do much rickshaw driving to-morrow,” Mr. Linton
-said.
-
-“Won’t we!” said the patients, in chorus; and Jim laughed.
-
-“I’m awfully sorry we made such asses of ourselves, and worried you,
-Dad,” he said. “But it’s bad enough to waste one shore day; we’ll be fit
-as fiddles to-morrow, and ready for anything—if you don’t mind going
-about with two battle-scarred objects.”
-
-David Linton smiled a little grimly.
-
-“There’s only one thing I should really mind,” he said—“and that would
-be to let you out again alone!”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “Jim set his teeth and managed to sit up.”]
-
- _From Billabong to London_] [_Page_ 214
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
-
- GOOD-BYE TO DURBAN.
-
-NORAH and her father left their patients sound asleep, after luncheon,
-and went out to Umgeni on the top of an electric tram—seeing Kaffirs
-innumerable, in gala Sunday dress, and, at the end of the long run, the
-shallow, winding river that seems to be always cutting for itself new
-channels among its mud-flats. A long bridge crosses it; they stood
-there, watching the bare-footed native boys who strolled through the
-river rather than trouble to climb up to the bridge.
-
-“So much more sensible!” said Norah, envying them openly.
-
-They found a hotel with a big garden sloping down to the river, and
-little tables with basket-chairs scattered about it. Two were in the
-shade of a big clump of bamboo; and there they had tea, and watched the
-queer, cosmopolitan crowd that filled the place—travellers, passengers
-from all the ships lying at the Point, soldiers and sailors, and the
-youth and beauty of Durban itself, out for the afternoon. The Indian
-waiters flitted about, busy and noiseless. There were long-legged birds
-in the garden, walking with ridiculous solemnity near the river-bank;
-and a big wire-netted house that held innumerable pigeons—exquisitely
-marked birds, whose cooing filled the air. Plants and flowers grew there
-which they had never seen; and there was a tree with tiny red-and-black
-seeds like jewels.
-
-They strolled further up the winding road, and came to Umgeni village
-itself, where almost every coloured race seemed to nourish together. The
-deep bush grew on both sides of it, right up to the straggling street.
-All the people were out in front of their houses.
-
-“Aren’t they the nicest children!” Norah uttered.
-
-They were everywhere—cheery babies just able to crawl; mites of two or
-three in bright scraps of clothing; and bigger children who played their
-own solemn games without paying much attention to the strangers. One
-ridiculous person of perhaps four years came strutting down the middle
-of the street after his mother, his small form framed in a gigantic
-yellow umbrella, which he held open behind him. The best of all, they
-found in a patch of grass under a tree—half a dozen mothers with tiny
-babies, who tumbled about in every direction.
-
-“Could I photograph them, do you think?” Norah asked.
-
-“I don’t suppose they would mind,” her father replied. “We’ll ask them.”
-
-To ask was one thing, but to get an answer, another. The Kaffir ladies
-were rather alarmed, and plainly regarded the small black box Norah held
-as a very bad kind of magic. They caught up their babies, and jabbered
-together, while Norah stood, half-laughing, making no attempt to
-photograph them without their permission. Help came in the person of a
-brisk rickshaw “boy,” who took in the situation at a glance, and
-explained to the anxious mothers that the white young lady merely wished
-to pay them and their children a high compliment in making a picture of
-them—whereupon the mothers subsided immediately, and held up the fat,
-brown scraps of humanity, who struggled wildly, like babies all the
-world over before a camera, while their anxious parents addressed to
-them the Kaffir equivalent of “Look pleasant, please.” The rickshaw
-“boy” stood by, beaming like a full moon, and uttering words of
-encouragement. Afterwards the travellers engaged him and his rickshaw—a
-contingency which he had probably foreseen; and they jogged lazily back
-to Durban, arriving at the hotel towards evening. Two tall figures,
-rather sheepish and pale-faced, rose from verandah lounges and came to
-meet them.
-
-“You bad boys!” Norah exclaimed.
-
-“Do you think you two should be out of bed?” Mr. Linton asked.
-
-“Rather!” Jim answered firmly. “We stayed there until they brought us
-tea—but they didn’t bring half enough food, so we got up and went to
-find more. We’re all right.”
-
-“It sounds as though you were!” Norah said, laughing. “How are the
-bruises?”
-
-“Oh—a bit stiff. Exercise is the best thing for them.” The subject was
-evidently sorer than the bruises, and Jim changed it, demanding an
-account of their day.
-
-“I’ve a letter from the captain,” Mr. Linton announced, when they all
-met at breakfast next morning. “The ship is leaving earlier than we
-thought—we have to be on board at noon.”
-
-“Bother!” said his hearers, as one man.
-
-“It’s a bore, but there are compensations. The warship we saw at the
-Point is going ahead of us to Cape Town—and that means no war
-precautions for a few days.”
-
-“Open port-holes!” said Norah, blissfully. “Deck lights—no more stuffy
-saloon! Lights in one’s cabin——!”
-
-“Which you’re sure not to need, since you can have it,” Wally
-interpolated.
-
-“I’ll have it, anyhow,” said Norah, laughing. “It would be almost worth
-toothache!”
-
-“I thought you would be pleased,” her father said. “There is also a
-letter from the police department, Jim, stating that their inquiries
-about your friends of yesterday have been fruitless. They have hunted up
-the house, but, as you suspected, the birds had flown.”
-
-“Oh, they’re up-country by this time!” Jim said.
-
-“So the police think. They say they may be able to track them by means
-of the list of stolen property we gave them, but it’s hardly likely.”
-
-“Well, it doesn’t matter much,” Jim answered. “I shouldn’t be here to
-identify anything, and unless I could get my hands on the man who hit me
-I don’t know that I’m thirsting to hear of his being caught.”
-
-“Only gore would satisfy us!” murmured Wally.
-
-“Just so; failing gore, there’s not much satisfaction in hearing that
-they’ve put the poor brute in prison—except to teach him to let
-unsuspecting white people alone in future. I suppose that ought to be
-done,” Jim said, reflectively.
-
-“Decidedly it ought—but the police don’t see much chance,” said Mr.
-Linton, folding up the letter. “Has any one any wishes as to occupying
-the morning?”
-
-“I don’t know if you’ll think us a little insane,” Jim said—“but Wally
-and I consider that our honour, or what’s left of it, is, to a certain
-extent, at stake. We want to find that native market!”
-
-“My dear boy, haven’t you had enough of that particular hunt?” asked his
-father, looking at his bruised face.
-
-“It’s really harmless,” Jim explained. “We’ve been asking the manager;
-he says the place is quite near the city, and any rickshaw fellow knows
-it—we can choose one sufficiently ornamental to be respectable this
-time. And it’s an interesting place—he says Norah ought to see it.”
-
-“Oh—can I go? Joyful!” said Norah, delightedly.
-
-“Well, if it’s really all right, we’ll tackle it,” said Mr. Linton. “The
-doctor said it was a place to visit, I remember. We’ll send off our
-luggage to the ship at once, and then we’ll have a free hand.”
-
-A spectacular figure awaited them in the road when they came out a
-little later, ready for exploration.
-
-“I told you that gentleman had attached himself to the family,” said
-Norah, laughing. “Look—he’s just beaming at you, Jim!”
-
-The Zulu “boy” who had befriended them the day before stood at
-attention, his broad, black face lit from ear to ear by a smile of
-welcome. His scarlet and white adornments were spic-and-span, and his
-headgear even more glorious than before.
-
-“Gen’lemen allright?” he queried, as the boys approached. He cast a keen
-eye on their still visible signs of battle.
-
-Jim nodded.
-
-“Thanks to you for bringing us home, my friend, we are,” he said. “You
-know the native market?”
-
-The Zulu grinned. “Oh, yes, sar!”
-
-Jim hailed another rickshaw, and the four travellers boarded them and
-trotted off. Never was there to be seen anything so proud as the boys’
-Zulu. He had evidently made up his mind that he belonged to them, and
-had betrayed some anxiety until certain that they were to be his
-passengers; but when this point was satisfactorily decided, he gave vent
-to the pride that was in him, and pranced off like a high-stepping
-circus horse—throwing out his feet, resplendent in a new coat of white
-paint, with his head well back, his feathers streaming, and his whole
-bearing full of vainglory.
-
-“He looks as if he wanted to say ‘Bayété!’—whatever that means. And he
-certainly thinks he owns the road,” Wally said, watching the magnificent
-figure.
-
-“I wish he’d moderate his transports,” Jim said, laughing. “He’s making
-every one look at us—and I prefer not to attract undue attention with a
-pair of black eyes like these—to say nothing of much sticking-plaster.
-However, I suppose it’s no good talking to him in English, and I don’t
-want to hurt the poor chap’s feelings—but this sort of thing makes one
-feel like a circus procession. One only needs a band and an elephant, to
-be complete!”
-
-The “boy,” however, calmed down presently, and merely showed the depth
-of his emotion by going at such a pace that the other rickshaw steed
-fell far in the rear, and was justly indignant at his compatriot’s
-unreasonable energy. They raced through the town, and for a time
-followed the streets through which the boys had strolled the day before;
-but instead of turning into the poorer quarter, a turn brought them to a
-wide road where many mule-carts and shabby rickshaws blocked the way.
-Before a big building was a collection of smarter rickshaws—but their
-Zulu attendants were nowhere to be seen.
-
-“That the market?” Jim called to his “boy.”
-
-The Zulu paused.
-
-“No sar—that eating-house. Gen’lemen like to see it? Market next door.”
-
-“We might as well,” Jim said. “Wait for us.” Mr. Linton and Norah
-appeared, and they dismounted.
-
-Within the big building Kaffirs squatted on the ground, working with
-wire at the native bangles that every South African traveller knows.
-Some were plaiting the wire into sjambok handles, in intricate patterns,
-laying the bands of wire among strands of raw-hide, or capping the
-finished handle with an elaborate “Turk’s head”; others had piles of
-bangles on the ground beside them, in all sizes, from those fitted for
-babies’ wrists to the big circlets worn above the knee. The work was
-wonderfully fine.
-
-“I’m really glad to see those fellows,” Mr. Linton observed. “So much
-‘native’ work is really made in Birmingham or Germany nowadays that one
-never knows what is genuine.”
-
-“No,” said Wally. “One of my girl cousins was out with a camping-party
-in the wilds when she was staying in British East Africa, and they came
-across a few natives who offered curios for sale—rough carvings, bits
-of ivory, and things like that. Enid was awfully keen on genuine things,
-and jumped at the chance—as she said, you don’t often find the really
-untutored savage in these times. One of the things she bought was a big
-ivory bangle. I think she got it from a woman who was wearing it. Enid
-was very proud of it. She said it was so real.”
-
-“It certainly should be, bought in those circumstances,” said Mr.
-Linton.
-
-“It should. She was very annoyed on the voyage home when one of the
-officers rather doubted it. So they had a bet—he was to put a match to
-it, and pay up if nothing occurred. But when he applied the match poor
-Enid’s ‘ivory’ sputtered and went up in flame—and behold, there was no
-more bangle!”
-
-“Celluloid!” Jim grinned.
-
-Wally nodded. “Made in Birmingham or some such place, and shipped out by
-the gross to the untutored savage. Hollow world, isn’t it?”
-
-Norah had bought bangles—fresh from the maker’s hand—and they turned
-away. A long table ran down the centre of the building, with rough
-benches drawn up to it; and here sat numbers of Kaffirs and Zulus,
-breakfasting. Many were of the rough coolie type, dressed in ordinary
-clothes; but here and there a blaze of colour marked the smart rickshaw
-steed—and in one corner where half a dozen were eating together their
-rainbow head-dresses were like a flower-bed, the brighter because of the
-dinginess all round them. On a separate table were immense bowls, heaped
-with steaming masses of curry and rice and weird-appearing stews. A man
-would come in and sit down, calling impatiently; and in an instant a
-native waitress would bring him a gigantic helping, supply him with an
-iron spoon, take his payment—a small copper coin—and rush off to a
-newcomer.
-
-“You’d live cheaply here,” Wally remarked, watching a native boy attack
-a heap of curry like a miniature mountain.
-
-“Yes, but you wouldn’t live long,” Norah answered. “Did you ever see
-such poisonous-looking food? I don’t think I want to watch this—it’s
-rather like the zoo at meal times. Let’s find the market.”
-
-A stream of people going in and out guided them to the bazaar. It was
-almost entirely Indian, so far as the stalls were concerned, though the
-people who thronged it were of many nationalities. There was an
-impression of light and colour and cheerfulness. Indian women in bright
-draperies went up and down, many carrying tiny wise-eyed babies. There
-were stalls for the sale of native jewellery—gaudy, tinselled stuff
-that looked appalling as it hung to tempt the passer-by, but somehow
-became exactly the right thing when worn by the dark-eyed coloured
-women. It was mingled, however, with cheap jewellery of the kind that
-England and Germany turn out by the ton—and this did not fit in
-anywhere, but stood out among the native wares, blatantly vulgar. Then
-there were stalls for post-cards, and for strange religious
-pictures—gaudy representations of temples and gods and sacred animals;
-others covered with weird cooked foods, in bowls and dishes, and with
-cakes and high-coloured sweetmeats—all appearing, to Australian eyes,
-extremely unpleasant and indigestible, but apparently devoured with
-amazing appetite by the children who thronged the bazaar. Almost more
-interesting were the vegetable stalls, since here were piled such
-growths as the Australians had never heard of; curious green, twisted
-things like French beans run mad, masses of salad materials, equally
-novel, and oddly-shaped gourds of different colours.
-
-Nobody took much notice of the Billabong party. Tourists were nothing
-new, and every one was too busy to trouble over them. Chattering, buying
-and selling, gossiping and eating, went on incessantly, with no time to
-spare from the business of the moment; it was evident that the market
-was the great occasion of the day to most of these cheery, chattering
-people. It was too crowded to keep together. Wally and Norah strolled on
-ahead, while Jim and his father paused to look at a stall devoted to the
-sale of different kinds of dried grain, not one of which they had ever
-seen before.
-
-“Steady, old lad,” said Wally, stooping to pick up a fat black baby
-whose mother had placed it by the side of the path, giving it a
-horrible-looking cake to keep it occupied. A stray dog had annexed the
-cake, and the baby, staggering after it in helpless wrath, had fallen in
-the midst of the path, and lay there among the hurrying feet, uttering
-shrill cries.
-
-“I’ll get it another,” said Norah, swiftly departing. She came back,
-gingerly carrying the delicacy, which the baby accepted gravely. The
-mother bore down on them, evidently anxious, but relieved by her
-offspring’s contented face.
-
-“He’s all right,” Norah told her, smiling—the mother understanding the
-smile more than the words. Norah put a penny into the little hand not
-occupied by cake, and they strolled on, turning out of the crowded part
-towards a less frequented corner where they could see Mr. Linton and
-Jim.
-
-“What rum beasts babies are!” said Wally, meaning no disrespect. “Some
-of ’em—the brand one knows—have to be brought up in prams by nurses,
-all sterilised and disinfected and germ-proof; and others tumble round
-in the dust among dogs, like that jolly little black imp, and grow up
-just as strong. I don’t understand it; I suppose I’m not meant to.”
-
-“It is queer,” Norah admitted. “I suppose it’s what they’re used to.”
-
-“But a baby can’t be awfully used to anything—except howling!”
-dissented Wally. “And these kids——”
-
-“Block that man! Block him, Wally!”
-
-Jim’s voice rang out over the din of the market as Wally had heard it
-many a time on the football field at school—and he swung to answer it
-just as he had learned to obey it there. A big Zulu was charging down
-the path; he saw Wally’s tense face, realised how thick was the crowd
-beyond him, and turned up a side alley. Jim put his hand on a long table
-and vaulted across to cut him off. He braced himself as he landed; then
-his left hand shot out and took the Zulu neatly on the point of the jaw.
-The big black crumpled up into a heap, and in a moment Jim and Wally
-were on top of him.
-
-The market boiled as an ant-heap boils, stirred up by a careless kick.
-People came running and shouting, blocking every passage; many with
-threatening faces, looking angrily at the white lads and the struggling
-Zulu. Then two soldiers in khaki forced a way through the crowd.
-
-“Guess this is where we lend a hand,” said one, securing the wrists of
-the prisoner in a workmanlike grip. “That was just about as neat a hit
-as ever I seen. I’d like to know who taught you, young feller. Lie still
-now, will you?” and the Zulu subsided, muttering unpleasant things.
-
-“Get hold of a policeman, will you?” said Jim. “Wally, you go.”
-
-“Oh, he’s wanted, is he?” said the second soldier, sitting comfortably
-on the Zulu’s legs. “I thought you seemed to know him.”
-
-“I ought to,” Jim answered. “He gave me this pair of black eyes
-yesterday.”
-
-The soldier whistled.
-
-“No wonder you was anxious for him,” he said. “Well, I guess you’ve paid
-him back—he won’t eat comfortable for a week.” Then Wally and two
-native policemen came back through the chattering throng, and Jim handed
-the prisoner over to the care of the law.
-
-They made a procession to the police-station, the Zulu maintaining a
-sullen silence, while a crowd gathered and followed them. Jim’s rickshaw
-“boy,” who had evidently learned the whole story from the hotel, was a
-centre of attraction—he dragged his empty chariot behind Jim, loudly
-explaining the matter to those about him, and proclaiming his undoubted
-belief in Jim’s chieftainship. The hero of the moment nursed
-badly-bruised knuckles and looked as unhappy as his prisoner.
-
-At the station matters were swiftly dealt with—law in Durban did not
-believe in detaining a party of white tourists over a native case. A
-white-haired old Scotchman, authoritative and kindly, put swift
-questions.
-
-“Ye canna identify any of y’re property, I suppose?”
-
-Jim grinned.
-
-“If you take off his tie you’ll find ‘Jones & Dawson, Melbourne,’
-branded on it,” he said.
-
-“Eh, but it’s so,” said the inspector, examining the adornment in
-question, which the native policemen had swiftly removed from the
-prisoner’s collarless neck. “Wull ye be wantin’ it back?”
-
-“I will not,” said Jim, hastily. “Give it to him, with my blessing when
-he comes out—and I hope you won’t be hard on him, sir.”
-
-“H’m. Ye’re a fulish young man,” said the inspector, severely. “Just
-because ye’ve got in a bonny wee hit on the jaw, ye’re satisfied—but
-there’s law an’ order to be kept, an’ me to see it’s done. D’ye think I
-want the next pair of eejiotic young Australians laid out in a stable?”
-Whereat Jim and Wally blushed, and interceded for the prisoner no more.
-
-They signed various legal documents, and at length escaped.
-
-“I don’t want him punished, poor wretch,” said Jim; “that smite on the
-jaw made me feel like a Christian lamb. But I suppose it’s got to be
-done.”
-
-“Well, I didn’t get in at all, so I don’t feel half so godly,” returned
-Wally. “I think he’s well out of the way, and I only wish we’d caught
-his mate—the gentleman who attended to my head in the rear.”
-
-“My sentiments, entirely,” Mr. Linton remarked. “And now we’ll get back
-to the ship. I trust every port isn’t going to supply us with as many
-sensations as Durban!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
-
- MIST AND MOONLIGHT.
-
-“AS you know, Miss Norah,” the captain said gravely, “I discourage early
-rising. It’s a bad thing—leads to chronic attacks of superfluous
-energy, and embroils passengers with the deck-hands.”
-
-“Especially the last!” said Norah, laughing.
-
-“Well—possibly. Deck hands are busy people and passengers are not;
-therefore passengers should remain peaceably in bed until they won’t be
-in the way. Which remarks are not intended to apply to you, Miss Norah.”
-
-“How would they?” Jim laughed. “There’s nothing of the Spartan early
-riser about Norah.”
-
-“I’m delighted to hear it,” the captain said. “All the same, I’m about
-to advise you to turn out early to-morrow. We’ll be in Cape Town about
-six in the morning, and you mustn’t miss the sunrise over the mountain.
-It’s one of the finest things in the world.”
-
-“Oh, I’m glad you told me, captain,” Norah said. “I’ll tell my steward
-to call me.”
-
-“Yes—don’t forget. The harbour is an interesting one altogether; but
-the mountains are grand, and coming in, the view changes each moment. We
-shall probably be going out in the dusk, so you must be sure of seeing
-the entrance.”
-
-They had had a quick and uneventful run round the Cape of Good Hope from
-Durban, missing altogether the dreaded “Agulhas roll” which is the
-bugbear of the sea-sick. Every one had revelled in the luxury of lit
-decks and open port-holes, in the security lent by the knowledge that a
-British cruiser was just ahead of the _Perseus_. To-morrow night the old
-restrictions would be in full force again—but first there would be Cape
-Town, and twelve hours ashore. Norah had always had vague longings to
-see Cape Town; no port on the homeward route interested her half so much
-as the city nestling at the foot of Table Mountain. She went to bed
-early, leaving everything in readiness for the morning start—determined
-to waste nothing of that precious twelve hours.
-
-It was still dark when she awoke, with a start, from a confused dream,
-in which she had been chased by an apparently infuriated motor,
-shrieking defiance at her. As she tried to collect her scattered
-faculties the sound she had heard in her dream came again—a long,
-hoarse shriek.
-
-“What on earth——?” she queried, sitting up. She switched on her
-light—it was two o’clock. Voices were heard along the corridor, to be
-drowned by another evil howl.
-
-“Something’s wrong,” Norah decided. “It can’t be boat-drill for us,
-’cause that’s two short, sharp whistles. Everything’s funny and dim—I
-believe something has gone wrong with the electric light supply.” She
-jumped, as the long scream came again.
-
-Then she heard her father’s voice, quiet and steadying.
-
-“Awake, Norah? Not scared, are you?”
-
-“N-no, I don’t think so, Daddy,” Norah answered, not quite certain if
-she were speaking the truth. “Is it the Germans?”
-
-“It’s fog, I think,” Mr. Linton said, coming in. “My cabin is full of
-it—and so is yours.”
-
-Voices were breaking out everywhere, drowned at regular intervals by the
-long howl.
-
-“What’s the matter?”
-
-“Is it the Germans?”
-
-“We’re wrecked, I suppose.” This was an elderly lady’s voice, in
-lugubrious certainty.
-
-“It’s boat-drill—hurry up!”
-
-“We’re signalling for help!”
-
-“Henry—where are my slippers?” And Henry’s voice—“I haven’t got ’em
-on, my dear!”
-
-Jim was in Norah’s cabin, suddenly.
-
-“Thought you might be scared, kiddie,” he said. “But it’s only fog, I
-think. Great Scott! doesn’t that siren make a row!”
-
-Then came the voice of the third officer, very bored and patient; and a
-dozen voices assailing him.
-
-“No—fog only, I assure you. No danger at all. No—there isn’t a German
-within a hundred miles. Merely fog-horn, madam. Yes, it’s quite thick.
-Certainly you can come on deck, if you really like fog; you won’t see
-anything. No, we don’t expect to run on any rocks. I should advise you
-to get back to bed. The fog-horn blows every half-minute.”
-
-“But it’s waked the baby!” came on a high note of grievance.
-
-“Sorry,” said the third officer’s bored voice, still polite. “I should
-recommend the baby to get used to it.” They heard his quick footsteps
-retreating up the corridor.
-
-“Well, there’s nothing to stay up for—and isn’t it cold!” Jim
-ejaculated. “I hope to goodness this will have gone before morning; it
-will be a nuisance if it spoilt the entrance to the harbour, so far as
-view is concerned.”
-
-“Don’t speak of such a horrid thing!” said Norah, sleepily, snuggling
-down among the pillows. “Go back to bed, Daddy dear—you’ll get so cold.
-Thank you both for coming.” For a while she stayed awake, while the
-clamour in the ship died down gradually, and only the slow hooting of
-the siren was heard. It was not exactly a soothing lullaby, but
-nevertheless Norah fell asleep.
-
-Her steward’s face peered at her some hours later. He had switched on
-the light, but the cabin was eerie and dim.
-
-“I didn’t like not to call you, miss, as you said,” he remarked. “But as
-far as gettin’ up to see the view’s concerned, there ain’t none. There’s
-nothin’ but fog anywhere.”
-
-Norah uttered a disgusted exclamation.
-
-“Oh, I did want to see the entrance!”
-
-“Well, there ain’t no entrance neither, miss. Captain, he won’t risk
-tryin’ to get in—why, you can’t see your ’and in front of you. We’ve
-just got to lie about until the fog lifts—an’ goodness knows when
-that’ll be. If I was you, miss, I’d just go to sleep again till the
-usual time to get up—an’ if the fog clears before, I’ll come an’ tell
-you at once.”
-
-“Well, if there’s nothing to see, I suppose I had better do that,” said
-Norah, yawning.
-
-“There’s much worse than nothin’, miss,” the steward said, his voice as
-gloomy as the cabin. He went away, after turning out the light.
-
-“It’s absolutely disgusting!” Wally declared when breakfast was over. It
-had been a queer meal, eaten in a kind of dim half-light; and now they
-were on deck, wrapped in heavy coats, yet shivering a little. All about
-them was a dense white wall of mist. It was impossible to see more than
-a few yards in any direction; people who passed them loomed dimly first,
-then came out of the wall more clearly, until quite visible, and in a
-moment were swallowed up again as their footsteps died away. The fog
-swung in wreaths between them as they talked, whenever a breath of light
-wind came; but for the most part there was no wind at all, and a heavy
-stillness seemed to weigh upon everything. At half-minute intervals the
-hoarse scream of the fog-horn roared out above their heads, in a
-hideous, discordant howl; and from all around them came similar shrieks,
-some far off, some so near that at any moment it seemed that the fog
-might part and show a ship drifting down upon them.
-
-The _Perseus_ herself was drifting. Part of the uncanny stillness was
-due to the absence of the familiar throb of the screw. Inch by inch she
-slid through the oily water, of which no trace could be seen even by
-peering over the side. There was nothing but mist. The wet decks were
-slippery with it; there was no dry corner anywhere. Through it the
-gigantic blue shape of the funnel loomed dimly, but its top was quite
-lost; they could not even see the bridge, where a double watch was being
-kept. The captain had not left it since the first fog-cloud had rolled
-up out of the sea.
-
-“It isn’t safe to speak to an officer,” Jim declared. “Poor beggars,
-they’re all on duty; it must be cheery to have responsibility in this
-sort of weather. I found MacTavish right up in the bow, straining his
-eyes into the fog, and put a timid question to him—I wouldn’t have
-wondered if he had snapped my head off, but he was pretty civil. He says
-there’s not the slightest prospect yet of its lifting, unless a wind
-gets up—and there’s no sign of a wind!”
-
-“Well, that is pretty cheery,” uttered Wally. “However, it’s all
-experience.”
-
-“Confirmed optimists like you ought to be sat on three times a day!” Jim
-said. “A little of this sort of experience goes a long way—and doesn’t
-make up for missing the sunrise on Table Mountain.”
-
-“Never mind—it will give you something to talk of for ever so long,”
-Wally answered. “You can’t possibly talk about sunrises to a girl you’re
-dancing with, but you can make awfully good yarns out of a fog like
-this. Cheer up, Jimmy; you’ll be ever so much more interesting in the
-future!”
-
-“I’m not proposing to do much dancing, or talking either,” said Jim,
-laughing. “So the prospect doesn’t console me. At the moment, it would
-console me more to batter someone—preferably you. Norah, you’re cold!”
-
-“I know I am,” said Norah, shivering. “This old fog gets into one’s very
-bones. Doesn’t it make you homesick now to think of old Billabong, and
-the sunlight out on the Far Plain!”
-
-“And a bogged bullock, with a note like that fog-horn!” retorted Wally.
-“It’s too cold to stand still, I think—let’s walk.”
-
-They walked, arm in arm, with Norah between them, finding it necessary
-to talk loudly to avoid collisions in the fog, as their rubber-soled
-shoes made no sound on the deck. In the fore part of the ship a few
-bedraggled sea-birds had floundered into the rigging, and now sat there,
-crouched and miserable, afraid to set off again into the white horror
-all round them. A magpie, brought from Australia, which ordinarily lived
-in the bow and made cheerful remarks to the whole ship, was crouched in
-a corner of its cage, dismally squawking, while its deadly enemy, a
-sulphur-crested cockatoo with which it was on most disrespectful terms,
-had no spirit left to insult it, but drooped on its perch. The ship
-seemed dead; none of the usual cheery bustle was going on, since all
-possible tasks were discontinued to leave the crew free to watch. Weary
-watching it was, straining overside in dread of seeing a dark hull loom
-out of the fog, knowing that it would then, in all probability, be too
-late to avert disaster.
-
-A monotonous voice led them to the side of the ship. A sailor was
-standing on a tiny platform over the rail, secured by a leather band
-round his body. He leaned well out, heaving the lead with a practised
-hand, his voice chanting the depth tonelessly—“By the deep—by the
-mark!” Seen in the mist that clung in beads to his blue guernsey and
-tarry trousers he seemed unnaturally large—and the dreary call was more
-depressing than the ceaseless hoot of the fog-horn.
-
-They gave up the deck at last, and went below, where the passengers were
-gathered in the lounges and smoking-rooms, trying to make the best of
-the weary day. The fog was everywhere; it crept through every open
-doorway and port-hole, and filled cabins and alleyways, so that jocund
-humourists went along hooting, for fear of being run down. Every
-electric light was on, as though it were midnight; they gleamed through
-the hanging mist, globes of dingy yellow. Babies howled dismally—sleepy
-and heavy, but kept awake by the incessant fog-horn; their mothers, pale
-and anxious, tried vainly to soothe them. Norah secured her own especial
-baby, bore him off to her cabin, and tucked him under her grey ’possum
-rug; and then, to her own immense surprise, fell asleep beside him, and
-slumbered peacefully until the luncheon gong came into competition with
-the siren, and the baby woke and demanded nourishment.
-
-There was no sign of the fog lifting. They lunched in silence;
-conversation was impossible, and the stewards, flitting about in the
-misty gloom, spoke in sepulchral whispers. No officers were visible; the
-empty chairs at each table bore mute witness to the urgency of their
-watch. The doctor made a valiant effort to maintain cheerfulness, and
-succeeded in dispelling a fraction of the depression in his particular
-corner. But even the doctor was incapable of spreading himself over an
-entire saloon, and his efforts to be, as he pathetically said, a
-sunbeam, were local and not general. Nobody seemed happy, and the meal
-was finished in half the usual time.
-
-Afterwards, the doctor bore down upon the Billabong party, his face full
-of determination.
-
-“This won’t do,” he said. “I shall have all the ladies on board
-developing nerves. You youngsters must come and help me—get Grantham
-and West and that long New South Wales fellow, and we’ll start some sort
-of a game in the lounge. The fog is thicker than ever, and the only
-thing we can do is to make people forget it.”
-
-“Right-oh, doctor!” Wally answered. “It would be easier to forget it, if
-we weren’t eating it all the time—but we’ll do our best.” So they
-organised an uproarious game that gathered in every one, even to the
-mothers and the babies; and by working the piano to its utmost,
-succeeded in supplanting for a time the incessant shriek of fog-horns.
-Tea found a ship’s company considerably cheered, and with more appetite.
-
-“It’s wearing, but it pays,” said the doctor, cheerfully. “You’ve all
-helped me nobly, and next time I have to organise a band of sunbeams,
-may you all be shining lights in it! There’s a vein of pure idiocy in
-Wally that I appreciate most highly.”
-
-“I’m overcome,” said Wally, bowing.
-
-“Don’t mention it,” said the doctor, affably. “True merit ought always
-to be acknowledged. No, I think you’re all dismissed from duty now; the
-mothers will be thinking of bathing the babies, and most of the others
-are exhausted—and small wonder. I’m thinking of going to sleep myself;
-the noise kept me awake last night.”
-
-“Let’s go up on deck,” Norah said. “I’m tired of being shut up,
-below—and it’s almost as foggy here as anywhere. The ship is full of
-fog.”
-
-On deck the white curtain seemed more impenetrable than ever. Everything
-was dripping wet, with an unclean clamminess far worse than honest rain.
-All round them came the wailing of fog-horns from invisible ships;
-sometimes the sound came from far off, approached gradually, and then
-went by them in the mist—unseen. Most of the ships were drifting, no
-faster than the _Perseus_; but evidently some captains had kept the
-engines going, in the hope of steaming slowly out of the fog.
-
-“Beastly dangerous,” John West said. “It would be the easiest thing in
-the world to pile up a ship on this coast—apart from the chance of
-collision. It is far too near the shore to take chances. We are not five
-miles out.”
-
-A siren sounded directly ahead: a long, half-heard note at first, and
-then a quickly-increasing sound; and suddenly the fog-horn of the
-_Perseus_ broke out in a wild, continual clamour, incessant and urgent.
-Passengers rushed up on deck. The other ship was drawing nearer and
-nearer; so far as sound could testify, she was directly in a line with
-the _Perseus_. They heard quick voices on the bridge. From the bow came
-long shouts of warning.
-
-Norah gripped the rail, feeling her father’s arm come round her in the
-gloom. Jim came up on the other side, watching keenly, his face lined
-and anxious. Ordinary danger was one thing; this creeping horror, coming
-relentlessly out of the unseen, was another matter.
-
-Then the white wall of mist wavered and parted slowly, a dark shape
-loomed high, and almost upon them they saw a great ship. She was so near
-that they could see the strained faces on her decks. Her fog-horn was
-answering the _Perseus_ in a very frenzy of alarm—and suddenly the
-_Perseus_ was silent, as if realising the uselessness of warning now. On
-she came, slowly, slowly; it seemed that by no possibility could she
-avoid crashing into the huge, helpless liner. They were almost touching;
-people on both ships held their breath, waiting dumbly for the end.
-
-Then the great black bow edged off as if by magic, and the ship slid
-past them, only a few yards away. Slowly as she had come, her passing
-was slower yet; it seemed hours that she was beside them, almost
-touching, with the risk of her stern swinging to crash into the
-_Perseus_. But no crash came. The fog took her and swallowed her up as
-mysteriously as she had come.
-
-“Phew-w!” whistled Grantham. “I don’t want anything nearer than that!”
-
-Norah was shaking a little. A lady passenger further up the deck was
-indulging in mild hysterics, to the indignation of the doctor and her
-husband’s deep shame. The fog-horn broke out again in the long
-monotonous wail, at half-minute intervals, that had gone on all day.
-
-They sat on deck, wrapped in rugs, watching. No one wanted to go
-down—bad enough in the open, it was better to be there, and to see as
-much as could be seen. Now and then a little breeze came, and the wall
-of mist parted ever so little, blowing away in trails like white
-chiffon; and once, in one of these moments, they caught a glimpse of a
-sailing ship, drifting by, with bare, gaunt masts. The fog closed round
-her again, blotting her out utterly.
-
-Then, towards evening, there came a quick succession of sharp hoots,
-unlike anything they had heard; and a motor-launch came into view and
-darted alongside, under the bridge. A man in blue uniform shouted swift
-questions.
-
-“I’ll bring you a tug!” he cried, at last.
-
-They disappeared again, and the delay that followed seemed intolerably
-long. Then the launch hooted its way back, followed by a bluff shape
-that resolved itself into a steam-tug. She hung about just ahead. The
-_Perseus_ came slowly to life; the screw throbbed slowly. They began to
-crawl through the water after the tug. Once she disappeared, running on
-a little too quickly—and the great liner began to hoot anxiously, like
-a frightened child crying for its nurse, until the tug came back. So
-they crawled together through the clinging mist-curtain until dun lights
-showed ahead, and voices from the shore came to their ears.
-
-“That’s the wharf at Cape Town,” said the doctor. “You have to take it
-on trust. Why, the fog is thicker here than out at sea!”
-
-They crept in slowly. Passing a ship already docked, they had a weird
-impression of her, apparently hanging in the air—a grotesque ghost of a
-ship, the surrounding mist like the vague halo that sometimes shows
-round the moon. She was only a dim wraith, her powerful electric lights
-glimmering like smoky lamps, although they were within biscuit-throw of
-her. Even when alongside the wharf they could not see the people waiting
-ashore; voices came up to them clearly, but it was impossible to see to
-whom they belonged. So, like an exceedingly helpless invalid, the
-_Perseus_ came into port.
-
-“Eight o’clock,” said Mr. Linton, consulting his watch. “H’m; we’ve sat
-in that old fog for eighteen solid hours.”
-
-“Isn’t it a relief not to hear the fog-horns?” Norah said. “Daddy, are
-we going ashore?”
-
-“I don’t know,” hesitated her father. “It hardly seems worth while
-to-night.”
-
-Jim, who had been away, returned quickly.
-
-“I’ve seen the second officer,” he said. “It’s awfully unsatisfactory.
-Orders are to leave here at daylight, or as near it as can be managed,
-and they’re going to work cargo all night. Poor beggars! they’ve all
-been on duty for eighteen hours at least—and the captain has never been
-off the bridge during the time.”
-
-“Poor fellows!” Norah said. “I think, too, it’s poor us! Then we won’t
-see Cape Town at all?”
-
-“MacTavish advises us to go ashore,” Jim answered. “He says that the fog
-may not be so bad in the city itself—it’s some distance away—and that
-if we take the mountain tram ride we’ll probably get right above it. In
-any case, the ship will be unbearably noisy, as they have to handle
-cargo.”
-
-“Then we may as well go,” declared Mr. Linton; and Norah fled
-delightedly to get ready.
-
-They stumbled through the fog across confused yards and round dim
-buildings, and presently found a train waiting in a casual fashion by a
-platform which appeared to be part of the street. They climbed in, and
-the train woke up hastily and decided to go, as if encouraged by their
-arrival. Its progress, however, was less hasty than its departure. The
-fog impeded it, and it crept towards the city with a shrieking of the
-engine, a grinding of brakes, and a rattling of the carriages, which
-made the _Perseus_ seem luxuriously peaceful by comparison.
-
-“We’ll drive back,” said Mr. Linton tersely.
-
-The fog was much lighter in the town itself. Passers-by in the street
-were heard grumbling at it—but to the mist-sodden seafarers who had
-wallowed in its heart for eighteen hours, it seemed only an echo of a
-fog. The streets were bright, well-lit, and crowded. Natives were not so
-frequent as in Durban, and there was a general air of prosperity. Wally
-exhibited signs of alarm at the spectacle of more than one top-hat.
-
-“I suppose we’ll have to get used to them in England,” he said,
-dismally. “I feel in my bones, Jim, that I’ll see you in one yet!”
-
-“Me!” said Jim. “I’ll have to turn undertaker first!”
-
-A friendly policeman directed them to their tram, and soon they were
-rattling along quiet suburban streets, where the fog was thicker than in
-the city—or where there were fewer electric lights to dispel its gloom.
-The suburbs, however, did not last long; they emerged from brick and
-mortar regions into open bush country, and began to climb into what
-seemed the heart of the mountains.
-
-They climbed from mist into light. As the tram wormed its way higher and
-higher, they left the fog below them—looking back, they could see it
-lying in a dense bank, blotting out the city. But the travellers came
-out above it, and into the pure radiance of a perfect moon, that sailed
-in a clear sky of deep blue, dotted with innumerable stars. The moon was
-full, and her light, in the clear mountain air, was almost dazzling. It
-showed them the sinuous tramway track, curving away into the heart of
-the bush, which stretched on either side, dark and fragrant; it lit up
-deep glens and clefts, and high peaks that towered overhead—the “Twelve
-Apostles,” Signal Hill, the Lion’s Head—all black and rugged against
-the perfect blue of the sky.
-
-Sometimes a wind blew up strongly as they climbed, bringing with it
-masses of fog from below, which surged lovingly round the tall peaks,
-rested upon them, and often drew a soft veil over them, hiding them
-altogether; and then it surged again, and was tossed up in masses like
-breaking waves, until it fled altogether, dropping back into the
-valleys, and leaving the peaks clear. The bush on either side grew more
-and more dense, and mingled with the rugged crags into a scene of
-extraordinary wildness. It was impossible to imagine that they were near
-a great city—not in the heart of the Africa that held “King Solomon’s
-Mines.” Were not these, indeed, the “Mountains of the Moon”?
-
-Nobody spoke much, for, indeed, the wonder of the journey took away
-speech, even from the boys. But just as they were turning back towards
-civilisation a thick veil of mist hovered over the edge of Table
-Mountain, standing clear-cut against the blue and silver sky—and then
-settled upon it and draped it, hanging in uneven folds of purest white.
-
-“There!” said David Linton. “You’ve seen the famous ‘Table-cloth’ come
-down on Table Mountain!”
-
-Norah leaned against him, putting her hand in his.
-
-They ran down to the city—found a restaurant where coffee was still
-obtainable, and then a motor that hurried them smoothly back to the
-ship. The fog was still heavy at the wharf. The _Perseus_ was noisy with
-the clamour of cargo-machinery and shouting men, and the decks hummed
-with hawkers, chaffering over ostrich feathers and native karosses and
-curios. There was little sleep for anyone on board.
-
-Very early next morning they were off. The fog hung densely over the
-city. The tug took them out through the dim harbour, and beyond to the
-open sea—and about twenty miles out they suddenly ran out of the
-fog-belt into sunlight, and blue sea and sky, all sparkling to greet
-them.
-
-The captain, heavy-eyed after his long vigil, paused beside Norah’s
-deck-chair.
-
-“Well, Miss Norah—you evidently weren’t meant to see the beauties of
-Cape Town!”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Norah, soberly. “I think I had the best view of
-all. And it was worth the fog!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
-
- WAR!
-
-THE passengers of the good ship _Perseus_ were holding what they bravely
-called a gymkhana. Their numbers had been slightly reinforced in South
-Africa; some people had left the ship, but those who had joined had
-brought the total to nearly forty. The newcomers included two or three
-cheerful girls, and some energetic young Englishmen, who declared
-frankly that they found the ship far too quiet, and entered with vigour
-in the process of waking things up. They organised dances in the
-moonlight, to the strains of the captain’s gramophone; concerts, at
-which most people performed extremely badly, amidst the enthusiastic
-plaudits of the audience; and finally a sports committee, which drew up
-an ambitious programme of deck-game competitions, to culminate in a
-“special-event” day. No one was allowed to stand out. The quiet ones
-grumbled and fled to the sanctity of the boat-deck—where no games were
-permitted—in the intervals of making themselves look more or less
-foolish at deck billiards or bull-board. The younger members grew
-enthusiastic by force of example, and things went merrily enough until
-the day of the final display.
-
-The officers—especially the captain and the doctor—looked with
-approval on the new activity. At all times the journey up the West Coast
-of Africa is dull and long. No ports are touched at between Cape Town
-and Las Palmas; and it was quite possible that even the latter would be
-forbidden the _Perseus_ by wireless orders by the time she arrived at
-the Canary Islands, since German ships were known to be active in the
-neighbourhood. The long and dreary stretch included the crossing of the
-Equator, and a spell of tropical heat which, if not so bad as the Red
-Sea, was apt to be sufficiently trying under ordinary circumstances, but
-ten times more so when complicated by the lack of fresh air entailed by
-war precautions. Therefore the Captain, keeping a silent watch on his
-passengers’ nerves, and the doctor, directing his guardianship more
-particularly to their livers, smiled on the games, and incited them to
-antics yet more enlivening.
-
-War seemed very far away. The first few days out from Cape Town had been
-hard to bear in their complete isolation from news—especially as Cape
-Town had provided an assortment of rumours, principally unconfirmed,
-which gave unlimited food for tantalising speculation. But gradually war
-talk slackened for lack of any food, and people agreed that it was
-really more practical to be as busy as possible, and wait as patiently
-as might be for definite news at Las Palmas. What risk there was, was
-accepted as part of the general routine; to speculate on it was useless,
-to worry about it as practical as worrying over a possible earthquake or
-cyclone. Any smoke on the horizon might be a German man-of-war; it might
-also be a peaceful British tramp steamer, jogging down to Australia. But
-they were far off their course, and scarcely a sign of a ship had been
-seen since leaving Africa—two or three dark smoke smudges many miles
-off, a timber ship which went close by them, and once a collier, with a
-couple of lighters in tow: useful black slaves, the captain said,
-waiting to coal British cruisers. All the coast was well patrolled by
-the Allies’ ships; they kept out of sight, but sometimes the wireless
-operator, listening at his own silent instrument, heard their code
-signals, comfortably close at hand.
-
-The gymkhana was more remarkable for energy than for any special skill.
-It drew a crowded house, most of the audience being required from time
-to time as performers—a circumstance that is apt to restrain criticism,
-since critics can be really untrammelled only when pleasantly certain of
-not having to face the limelight themselves. There had been potato-races
-and obstacle-races; they had chalked the pig’s eye—a competition won
-gloriously by Mr. Linton, who had at least succeeded in placing the eye
-in the porker’s snout, whereas no other blindfolded competitor had gone
-nearer than his hind leg. Gentlemen in sacks had run, and tripped, and
-fallen, and writhed helplessly, amid unfeeling laughter; ladies had
-driven blindfolded gentlemen between zig-zag rows of bottles, with the
-customary results to the bottles; other gentlemen, greatly daring, had
-raced for parcels of feminine attire, and, donning it in a manner highly
-unscientific and interesting, had held it about them miserably, and fled
-for home. There had been races in pairs, wherein ladies had to tie their
-partners’ neckties and light their cigarettes; blindfolded fighting;
-egg-and-spoon scurries—in short, all the paraphernalia of what the
-natives of India call a “pagal” gymkhana—pronouncing the adjective
-“poggle” and signifying by it a revel of much buffoonery.
-
-It was nearing tea-time when the competitors took their places for the
-last event, which the doctor, much overheated by his exertions as
-umpire, called a concession to the fine arts. Music was its basis, and
-it was run in pairs—the lady sitting meekly on a camp-stool while her
-partner raced to her, and whistled in her ear a tune which it was her
-part to recognise. This done, she wrote down the name and handed the
-document to the whistler, who turned and raced back with it. It was a
-competition in which musical ability was less likely to score than an
-ample supply of breath and fleetness of foot.
-
-Norah and Wally were paired together, their most dangerous opponents
-being Mr. Grantham and a cheery Cape Town damsel whose acquaintance with
-rag-time airs was little short of the black art. Jim and his partner had
-survived one heat, but had gone down in the second—owing to the lady’s
-insisting that “Pop Goes the Weasel” was “God Save the King.” Jim had
-liked his partner, and his faith in human nature was shaken. He exhorted
-Norah to “show more sense,” and took his place by the rail to cheer her
-and Wally on to great deeds.
-
-There were three couples, their male halves being somewhat equally
-matched in speed. Norah braced herself to her task as they tore down the
-deck to the waiting ladies on the camp-stools—feeling in her heart that
-she would much rather race than wait. There was too much responsibility
-about the feminine part of the business—since no man would ever admit
-that he had failed to whistle correctly. The flying figures arrived,
-pell-mell—she lent an anxious ear to Wally’s musical efforts,
-thankfully recognised “Tit Willow,” and saw him turn to race away, at
-the same moment that Grantham received his document and started home.
-
-“What tune did you hear?” she asked Edith Agnew, the Cape Town girl.
-
-“Oh, an easy one—‘Tipperary.’ But isn’t it hard to hear!—they puff and
-pant, and every one laughs, and the sea is noisy—and altogether it’s
-enough to make Wagner sound like a musical comedy! And they look so
-funny I can only laugh, instead of writing. Look—it’s a dead heat, I
-believe!”
-
-It was—Grantham and Wally breasted the tape together, and returned
-presently, somewhat crestfallen.
-
-“We’re awfully puffed, but it’s the last thing on the programme—we
-might as well run it off,” Grantham declared. “You don’t mind, Wally?”
-
-“Not a bit—my cheerful lay is naturally so unintelligible that a little
-puffing can’t hurt it much,” Wally laughed. “Come on—ready, Norah?”
-
-They went back to the starting-point and received the umpire’s
-instructions; then came flying down the deck. Norah struggled hard to
-recognise a tune that sounded like no melody she had ever heard, partly
-because it would persist in mingling with the one which Grantham was
-whistling desperately to Miss Agnew. Wally came to the end of the verse,
-and began again, breathlessly. Light dawned on Norah in a flash.
-
-“Oh—I am stupid!” she uttered, grasping her pencil and scribbling
-“Bonnie Dundee” wildly. A half-second earlier Miss Agnew gave vent to a
-shriek of intelligence, and wielded a distraught pencil. It was almost a
-neck-and-neck race—but Grantham was a nose ahead.
-
-“You’ve won!” said Norah, laughing. “Well done!” They shook hands
-cheerfully; to stare in surprise, a moment later, when the doctor picked
-up his megaphone and announced in stentorian tones that the winners were
-Miss Linton and Mr. Meadows.
-
-“But how?” queried Norah. All the spectators had left their places—they
-were the centre of a laughing group. Wally arrived, triumphant, and
-pumped her hand anew.
-
-“That was my telegraphic partner!” laughed Grantham, in mock wrath. “I
-whistled ‘Rule Britannia’ like a nightingale, and all she wrote was
-this.” He held out a crumpled scrap of paper with “Brit” inscribed on it
-in hieroglyphic letters. “Naturally, the umpire wouldn’t accept it—so
-they disqualified me.”
-
-“I’m awfully sorry!” Miss Agnew laughed. “I was overcome—and you
-whistled so very badly—and I was sure Wally meant to start.” She tilted
-a pretty nose. “I’m sure ‘Brit’ is good enough for that old tune,
-anyway.”
-
-Jim Linton swung round suddenly.
-
-“Is that the wireless?”
-
-From overhead, as every merry voice hushed to silence, broke out the
-crisp, familiar crackle—the wireless, spitting its message over the
-sea. No one moved for a moment. Then came another sound—a long, heavy
-“Boom-m!” that ran echoing round the horizon. Women screamed, and ran
-for their babies. Men looked at each other dumbly. The quick spitting of
-the wireless went on—a tiny sound, following the crashing “Boom,” but
-even more full of meaning.
-
-“Boom-m-m!” Another heavy crash; and the spell that had fallen on the
-laughing group of passengers broke suddenly, and there was a stampede
-round to the starboard side of the ship. Norah, running, found Jim’s
-hand on her shoulder.
-
-“Steady, kiddie—keep back till we know what it is.”
-
-“I can’t, Jim!”
-
-“Yes, you can—keep Dad back. Wally and I will find out.”
-
-“Boom-m-m! Boom-m-m! Boom-m-m!”
-
-Ahead of the _Perseus_ something struck the water heavily, and almost
-simultaneously great splashes like waterspouts shot up a ship’s length
-away. Turning the corner of the deck, carried along by the crowd, Norah
-saw a grey ship lying not far off, so close that she could see the evil
-mouths of the guns that looked out from her side. Flame and smoke sprang
-from them as she stopped, breathless. Again the long crash echoed, and
-water shot into the air from three great splashes near the big liner.
-
-“Good heavens—they’re shelling us!” a man exclaimed.
-
-The passengers huddled together like frightened sheep, uncertain what to
-do. There had been no signal for boat-drill, and no officer was visible,
-except upon the bridge. The crackling of the wireless had stopped—and
-suddenly they saw the Marconi operator spring up the bridge-ladder.
-
-The doctor took swift command.
-
-“Every one muster on the port side!” he shouted. “No need to risk flying
-splinters here!”
-
-He hustled the women before him, back to the side from which they had
-come. A few children were crying pitifully; but there was no disorder,
-and the women obeyed quietly, those who had no children turning to help
-the mothers. Stewards appeared, and the doctor sent them through the
-ship to collect stragglers; the stewardesses came up and took their
-places quietly.
-
-From the bridge, the second officer came hurrying down. He joined the
-doctor.
-
-“There’s no danger,” he said, so that every one could hear. “They put
-those shells across our bows to stop us using the wireless—but Grey got
-a certain amount away first. Then they signalled that they’d sink us if
-we sent any more; so naturally, we didn’t.”
-
-“What happens now?”
-
-“Their orders are, to follow them at full speed. I don’t know what they
-mean to do—but the Captain says that every one is to prepare to leave
-the ship. It may or may not be a case of taking to the boats; they are
-being got ready now. Not much luggage can be taken, but every one must
-bring all available rugs and wraps; the nights are cold. Be ready to
-obey the boat-drill signal.”
-
-Mr. Linton’s party had prepared for such emergency early in the voyage;
-it was only a few minutes before they were ready, suit-cases locked and
-wraps rolled up. Jim came to carry up Norah’s belongings to the deck.
-She cast a wistful look round the cabin. It had grown very homelike, and
-the familiar photographs of Billabong and Bosun and her school chums
-looked curiously out of place and forlorn amidst this sudden realisation
-of war. She shut the door upon them with a little sigh.
-
-On deck everything was as usual, save that sailors were working busily
-at the boats, provisioning them, and getting them in readiness to swing
-out from the davits. The horizon was empty of ships; only ahead of them
-steamed the grey German warship, her smoke making dark plumes across the
-sky. The _Perseus_ followed meekly. Norah could see the captain on the
-bridge—and a great throb of pity for him surged up within her.
-
-“He’s so responsible!” she said. “And he has such a lovely ship. It must
-be dreadful to think of losing her.”
-
-She looked up and down the long lines of the deck; at the towering mass
-of the funnel overhead. It seemed incredible that so great a ship was
-presently to be sunk; as easily might one believe that any splendid
-cathedral could disappear suddenly into the ground. For weeks they had
-lived on the _Perseus_, until she had grown like a second home to them,
-as fixed and stable a thing as any hotel. Now she was doomed; they would
-fire shells or torpedoes at her, and she would suddenly vanish, never to
-be heard of again. The blue sea would ripple gaily over the place where
-she lay—the sea on which she had ridden in splendour. It was too
-horrible to believe.
-
-Norah looked up at the bridge again, and saw Captain Garth’s set face.
-He was gazing downwards at his ship. When his eyes met hers he smiled
-and waved his hand slightly, and though Norah greatly despised tears,
-she felt a hot lump in her throat and turned away to the rail, blinking
-very hard. If it were dreadful for her to think of the great “crack”
-liner going down, what must it be for the man whose pride and
-responsibility she was?
-
-They stood in a little knot on the deck, watching. Both ships were going
-at full speed; but presently a line of flags fluttered out on the German
-ship, they heard the sound of the engine-room telegraph ringing from the
-bridge, and the throbbing of the machinery of the _Perseus_ stopped
-suddenly. The German turned, steaming down upon them. A little way off,
-the warship hove to and lowered a boat, containing two officers as well
-as the crew. The _Perseus_ swung out a gangway to meet it.
-
-The boat shot across the narrow strip of sea intervening between the two
-vessels. The crew were stolid men, with heavy faces; they paid no
-attention to the jeers or the questions of the crew of the _Perseus_ as
-they rocked on the lazy swell beside her. Their officers sprang quickly
-up the gangway, keen-looking men, very trim and alert. They cast a quick
-glance over the passengers, and disappeared up the bridge ladder.
-
-“Overhauling the ship’s papers,” the doctor said.
-
-“Well, they can’t sink us while these men are on board!” remarked an old
-lady, comfortably. She took out her knitting—a khaki muffler—and began
-to work. “I do so like the German method of knitting—and now I feel it
-my duty to use the English fashion. It’s so annoying!” she confided to
-Norah. Her needles clicked busily.
-
-Presently the two German officers came down the ladder, followed by
-Captain Garth. They went to the Marconi-room, where the young sentry
-stood his ground for a moment, ludicrously undecided, changing to
-immense relief as the captain waved him aside with a curt nod. There
-came sounds of altercation in the Marconi-room—and the young operator,
-Grey, came out with a thunderous face and joined the passengers.
-
-“Brutes!” he said, explosively. “They’ve dismantled the apparatus and
-kicked me out—one of the great beasts threatened me with a revolver.
-Wish I’d had one myself!”
-
-“A jolly good thing you hadn’t, young man, if that’s how you feel about
-it!” remarked the doctor.
-
-There was a wretched feeling of helplessness over every one. To make
-short work of the two strange men would have been so easy; to think of
-doing it so futile, with the grey warship lying near, her guns trained
-on the _Perseus_. They waited as patiently as they might until the
-officers reappeared; and presently a message came to them to muster on
-the boat deck.
-
-They faced the Germans somewhat defiantly, the most placid of the
-company being the old lady with the muffler, who knitted serenely, after
-casting one glance of withering comprehensiveness at their captors. The
-Germans held the passenger-list, and ran over it quickly. They spoke
-English without difficulty, and with scarcely any accent.
-
-“There is one name not present,” the senior said; “Henry Smith, booked
-for London. Where is he?”
-
-“In his cabin,” Captain Garth answered curtly,
-
-“Is he ill?”
-
-“No. He is a prisoner.”
-
-“So?” said the German, his eye lighting with interest. “You will have
-him brought here.” He talked to his companion in their own language
-while the captain gave the necessary orders.
-
-There was a little buzz among the passengers. Many of them had not heard
-of Mr. Smith; those who had done so had acquired a vague idea that he
-had left the ship at Durban. Now, as he came up the deck between two
-stewards, every one craned forward to see him. He was pale and rather
-thin, and the glance he cast upon Jim and Wally was scarcely one of
-affection. Then he broke into a wide smile at the sight of the familiar
-uniform, and uttered a quick German greeting.
-
-The two officers showed some astonishment, which was merged in
-sympathetic interest as Mr. Smith uttered floods of Teutonic eloquence.
-Once they glanced keenly at the two boys—and Jim felt a thrill of
-thankfulness that Norah’s part in the discovery of the spy had not been
-revealed to Mr. Smith, who had evidently devoted his leisure in his
-cabin to the solace of bearing malice. Finally the senior officer turned
-to Captain Garth.
-
-“Herr Schmidt will return with us,” he said. “Later, we shall require as
-prisoners these two lads, the officer Dixon, and those of the passengers
-who are military officers. Meanwhile you will have boats and passengers
-ready, and prepare to leave the ship at daylight, on receipt of further
-signals. Until then you will follow us. You will show no lights
-whatever, and should you attempt to signal, we will sink you without
-further notice. We will now inspect the crew—the passengers are
-dismissed.”
-
-David Linton stepped forward.
-
-“You cannot mean to take my son and his friend prisoners, sir,” he said.
-“They are only boys.”
-
-“Only boys!” said the German, curtly. “Boys of their age and physique
-are with the colours in our army to-day. But for their attack on Herr
-Schmidt——”
-
-Mr. Smith shot a rapid sentence at his countrymen. The officer laughed
-unpleasantly.
-
-“So?—going home to the army, are they? They will certainly be better
-out of the way, then. That will do, sir—you will only earn them
-increased severity.” And Mr. Linton, certain in his angry bewilderment
-of only one thing—that he had made matters worse—found himself
-dismissed, with a finality that forbade another word.
-
-On the lower deck the Billabong quartet faced each other, at first
-dumbly.
-
-“Cheer up,” Jim said, at last, with an effort. “It’s hard luck, of
-course, but they aren’t likely to do anything beyond imprisoning us.
-Bother old Smith!”
-
-“I wish to goodness we’d left him alone!” said Norah, miserably.
-
-“No, you don’t—and we don’t,” was Jim’s sturdy answer. “I’ll always be
-glad we stopped his little game—at any rate we’ll have had that little
-scrap of the war! And we may escape—you never can tell—and come
-careering over to London to find you. It will be all experience, as you
-used to say!”
-
-Norah shivered. She had never thought that the “experience” of which
-they used to talk so light-heartedly would mean this.
-
-“I wouldn’t mind so much, to know you were really in Germany,” Mr.
-Linton said. “But to be on that abominable ship——!” He shot an angry,
-anxious glance at the grey cruiser. Too well he knew her destiny—to
-prowl the sea, a pirate in all but name, harassing British shipping
-until she herself was sunk. There would be no getting back to Germany
-for her—and no consideration for British prisoners on board of her when
-the inevitable end came. He looked at the two boyish faces, his heart
-full of blank despair.
-
-Wally glanced over the rail. The German boat was returning to the
-warship. Mr. Smith sat in the stern with the two officers—a podgy
-embodiment of triumph.
-
-“Well, the laugh may be on our side,” he said, cheerfully. “Anyhow, we
-needn’t pull long faces over it; I’m hoping for another chance to get
-even with old Smithy. Don’t you worry, sir—I’ll look after little Jimmy
-for you!”
-
-Jim grinned down on him affectionately. But to David Linton came
-memories of Edward Meadows’ anxious face—of his last request, to look
-after the little brother who was “such a kid.”
-
-“I’ll work every means in my power to get you both back,” he said,
-huskily. “Meanwhile, I can give you plenty of money; and I know you will
-both try to keep on good terms with them; you’ll be better treated if
-you do. The German sailors do seem disposed to behave as decently as
-possible.”
-
-“There are other people a long way worse off than we are,” Jim said.
-“Dixon’s married, I know; he has a wife and kiddie in Glasgow. And Major
-Edwards and Captain Field have got to leave their wives on the
-_Perseus_—my aunt, isn’t it rough on poor little Mrs. Field, with that
-troublesome baby!”
-
-Norah jumped.
-
-“That’s my pet baby!” she said. “I’ll go and see if I can take him for a
-while.”
-
-She fled to the Fields’ cabin. Captain Field, a tall, delicate man with
-quiet ways that Norah liked, was sitting on the couch, his arm round his
-wife. The baby was howling dismally, as if he understood. Mrs. Field,
-white and tearless, was trying vainly to rock him to sleep.
-
-“I’ll take him, Mrs. Field,” Norah said breathlessly. “He’ll be quite
-all right—don’t you worry.”
-
-Mrs. Field protested feebly.
-
-“You want to be with your boys yourself,” she said. “He will go to sleep
-presently.”
-
-“He’ll be much happier on deck,” Norah said. She grasped the baby’s
-outdoor attire in one hand, tucked him under the other arm, and fled.
-The boys and her father had established themselves in a corner of the
-deck-lounge; and there the baby sat on a table and played with Jim’s
-keys, and became extraordinarily cheerful and contented. Somehow, he
-helped them all.
-
-“The nicest yearling I ever saw!” said Jim, when at last it grew dusk.
-He rose, giving the baby one finger, on which he fastened with interest,
-evidently regarding it as edible. “No, you don’t, young man; I’ve got to
-go and put my things together; it’s time we did it, Wal. You’ll come,
-too, dad?”
-
-David Linton nodded.
-
-“I’ll go and tub the baby,” Norah said.
-
-She bathed him in one of the big bathrooms, to his great amazement and
-delight; and then, wrapping him in a big, soft bath-towel until he
-looked like a hilarious chrysalis, she took him back to his mother. Mrs.
-Field looked better when she opened the door to receive the
-sweet-smelling bundle.
-
-“You’ve bathed him?—oh, Norah, you dear!”
-
-“He was so good,” said Norah. “Of course, he hasn’t his nightie on, Mrs.
-Field.”
-
-“I must dress him altogether,” the poor little wife said. “You know we
-have to take to the boats at daylight.”
-
-“Yes, of course,” Norah said. “Oh, and Dad said I was to tell you,
-Captain Field, that he has made arrangements for Mrs. Field and Tommy to
-come in our boat, in—in the boys’ place; and they will be in his
-special charge—and Tommy is mine. So you mustn’t worry.”
-
-“Thanks,” said Captain Field; and could say no more. He put out his,
-hand and shook Norah’s very hard.
-
-Dinner was served as usual, and people tried to eat. The captain came in
-late, and made a little speech between the courses. He was immensely
-sorry for them all, he told them; it was the fortune of war, and there
-was nothing to be said. Everything possible would be done for their care
-and safety, and he told them that he did not doubt that they would aid
-him in any measures he could take. Breakfast would be served half an
-hour before daylight; they would be called in time. He urged them all to
-go to bed early and try to get a good night’s rest. The German ship had
-just signalled renewed warnings against any lights showing—he wished
-them to remember that they were completely in the power of an enemy who
-would sink them without hesitation if orders were disobeyed. He thanked
-them for their calm behaviour in the afternoon and, in advance, for the
-equal calmness he knew he might expect in the morning. “We’re not a
-fighting crowd, but we don’t show the white feather!” finished the
-captain, abruptly. He gave a jerky little bow and left the saloon.
-
-“Poor dear young man!” said the old lady who knitted, wiping her eyes.
-
-There was very little sleep on board the _Perseus_ that night. People
-talked together in little groups. All luggage was already stowed in the
-boats, and nothing remained to be done. In a corner of the deck the
-Billabong family stayed, not talking very much, since there seemed so
-little to say, but finding some comfort in nearness to each other. Wally
-had written letters to his brothers and given them into Mr. Linton’s
-keeping.
-
-“Norah ought to turn in,” Jim said, at length. “It’s all very well for
-us, for we’ll be in some sort of comfort on the German ship. But it
-makes me sick to think of you two—in an open boat. You ought to get all
-the sleep you can.”
-
-“Oh, we shall be all right,” his father said. “It’s such calm
-weather—and we are no great distance from Teneriffe. We can soon get
-into the track of ships, and the chances are that we shall not have to
-spend a night in the open.”
-
-“And if we do, it won’t hurt us,” Norah said. “Don’t you bother about
-us, Jimmy.”
-
-“Well, go to bed, anyhow,” the boy said. “You’re tired as it is. You may
-as well feel fit when you leave in the morning.” So Norah went off
-obediently; and soon Wally followed her example, leaving Mr. Linton and
-his son to pace the deck together for hours—in silence, most of the
-time. The ship’s bells had been forbidden, and there was nothing to mark
-the passing of the night. The _Perseus_ cut through the dark water,
-following her captor, whose grey shape loomed near. Their heavy thoughts
-went ahead, picturing the parting that must come with the dawn.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
-
- WHAT THE MORNING BROUGHT.
-
-DARKNESS still hung over the sea when the little company on the
-_Perseus_ met at breakfast. Most of them were heavy-eyed and pale; but
-they made a brave effort at cheerfulness and tried to eat—never had a
-meal seemed so unreal and horrible. It was quickly over, and they
-trooped on deck.
-
-Dawn was breaking. The German ship, no longer ahead, but a little to the
-starboard, seemed like a grim watch-dog. No signals had come from her as
-yet, and the _Perseus_ was still under orders to go at full speed. No
-one knew where they were heading—their course had been peremptorily
-changed, and the passengers could form no idea of direction. They were
-like sheep driven in unfamiliar ways; over them all the sense of utter
-helplessness.
-
-The grey light, creeping over the sea, showed them watching in
-groups—with all available wraps on, and rugs in readiness. In a corner
-Mrs. Field sat, one hand in her husband’s. He was holding their baby,
-his cheek resting against the soft little face. Major Edwards and his
-wife walked up and down a lonely deck-space, not speaking.
-
-An officer made a tour of the ship presently, to see that no passengers
-were absent, and that all possible preparations had been made. He knew
-nothing, he said; they had kept by the German ship all night. Now they
-merely awaited the order to take to the boats; the enemy’s boat would,
-of course, come over to secure the prisoners, and probably to sink the
-ship by means of explosives placed in her hold, and setting her on fire.
-“Cheaper than torpedoes,” said the officer, “and less noisy. They’re
-shocking bad shots, too, on those armed merchantmen; and it would take a
-heap of shells to sink the old ship, because of her water-tight
-compartments. Much easier to blow her up from within.”
-
-“Wretches!” said the old lady who knitted. She was still busy at her
-khaki muffler.
-
-“It’s war,” said the young officer, hurrying off. On the lower deck the
-stewards and crew were mustered, awaiting inspection. After answering to
-their names they took their usual boat-stations, without the ordinary
-signal. The chief cook was cheery.
-
-“No luncheon to cook!” quoth he, pleasantly. “And no need to abuse any
-one for not having cleared up properly after breakfast! Well, I’ve
-always heard that every dog gets a holiday one day in his life; it’s an
-ill wind that blows nowhere!” He rallied the butcher on his downcast
-mien.
-
-“Think of all the good meat that’s going to the bottom!” said the
-butcher, gloomily.
-
-“Wot I think is, that I won’t have to ’andle any of it,” said the gay
-cook. “Don’t you never get fed-up with the very thought of meat,
-butcher? Sometimes I dreams of it all night!”
-
-“Ijjit!” said the butcher. He withdrew himself, and sat on the edge of a
-boat, wrapped in melancholy.
-
-Slowly, faint streaks of pink showed in the eastern sky, and a pale
-flush crept upwards. The sun came out of the sea, as if reluctantly,
-unwilling to bring such a bitter morning.
-
-“They’ll stop us soon, now,” Jim said. “Sure you’ve got all your wraps,
-Norah?” He had asked the question three times already, but Norah smiled
-up at him.
-
-“Yes—and my nice old ’possum-rug,” she said. “Won’t it be a comfort in
-the boat, Jim?”
-
-“It ought to help you to get a sleep,” Jim said. “Air-cushions packed?
-You’ll have to get Grantham to blow them up for you, since I won’t be
-there; he’s in your boat.”
-
-“I can do them, thanks, Jim,” said Norah quickly. No one else should
-touch the cushions he had given her.
-
-“Old duffer!” said Jim, very low—understanding well. They smiled at
-each other.
-
-“I wish they’d end it,” Major Edwards was saying to his wife. “This
-waiting is worse than the actual saying good-bye!”
-
-“I wonder why they don’t come,” she answered. “They only wanted
-daylight, didn’t they?
-
-“Yes—and the sooner the boats get away, the better, I should imagine,”
-he said. They resumed their hard walk, up and down—up and down.
-
-Overhead, on the bridge, there seemed a mild stir. The captain could be
-seen, watching the German ship through his glasses. Then he directed
-them to another point of the horizon, astern. Presently he disappeared,
-returning almost immediately with a telescope.
-
-John West came round a corner at full speed.
-
-“Smoke astern!”
-
-“What is it?”
-
-“I don’t know—another catch for the enemy, very likely. What luck for
-her if she gets two liners in one day!”
-
-Everybody rushed to see; and made but little of the smudge of smoke, far
-on the horizon. They came back to watch the enemy. Only the Fields had
-not moved; Tommy was asleep, his face against his father’s.
-
-On the German ship things were stirring. They could see hasty movements
-of men. Smoke began to pour from her funnels.
-
-“They’re coming, I expect,” Jim said. He tightened his grip on Norah’s
-arm.
-
-Mr. Dixon left the bridge, and came hurriedly aft. The passengers
-flocked round him.
-
-“There’s a ship in sight,” he said, “and we think she’s a British
-cruiser. The enemy evidently think it, and they’re getting up steam.”
-
-“Not going to stop?” a girl cried wildly.
-
-“It doesn’t seem like it.” He hesitated. “We trust you to show no panic.
-It is quite possible that they may try to sink us without taking off the
-passengers—will you all get to your boat-stations quickly and put on
-the life-belts the stewards will serve out?”
-
-There were white faces, but no panic. Men and women trooped to their
-stations, the former stooping to pick up children, and taking babies
-from their mother’s arms—arms that took them back hungrily as soon as
-the life-belts were adjusted. The boats were swung outward from the
-davits, their crews in their places; and for a few minutes a very agony
-of suspense held the ship silent. Every eye was glued to the German
-ship. People held their breath, watching the guns—each moment expecting
-a flash and an explosion.
-
-A line of flags fluttered into place on the enemy’s rigging, and
-simultaneously the passengers glanced up at the bridge of the _Perseus_,
-where alone the message could be understood. They saw Captain Garth put
-his glasses down hurriedly and grip Mr. Dixon’s hand. Then he caught up
-a megaphone and turned to them, speaking through it.
-
-“The enemy is leaving us,” came the shout. “They signal, ‘We will not
-destroy your ship on account of the women and children on board. You are
-dismissed. Good-bye.’”
-
-A burst of cheering broke from the passengers. One girl fainted; men
-turned and wrung each other’s hands. Captain and Mrs. Field did not stir
-for a moment; then they rose, moved by the same instinct, and
-disappeared within the ship. Mrs. Field staggered as they went and her
-husband’s free arm caught her to him. Tommy had never stirred—his
-little face lay against his father’s cheek.
-
-David Linton put his hand on his boy’s shoulder, speechless. Norah had
-laid her head on the rail, and her shoulders were shaking. Wally patted
-them hard.
-
-“Buck up, old girl!” he said.
-
-Flags had shot up on the _Perseus_, in courteous answer to the Germans.
-Mr. Dixon, appearing, was overwhelmed with congratulations and
-questions.
-
-“It’s a British cruiser, right enough, and our friend the enemy has got
-to show a clean pair of heels,” he said. “We’re only keeping her
-back—her speed is knots ahead of ours. We’ll know more when we get the
-wireless going again—Grey is hard at work on the spare outfit already.
-We’ll hold on as we are for the present, to give the British ship any
-information we can.”
-
-“There is no further danger?” queried the old lady with the khaki
-muffler.
-
-“No, ma’am—none at all, that I know of.”
-
-“What a good thing!” said she, placidly. She knitted on, without any
-pause.
-
-“The captain sends you all his thanks,” Dixon continued, gazing at her
-in bewilderment and awe. “He says you can shed life-belts and, as the
-Germans put it, dismiss—it’s ‘as you were,’ in fact. There will be
-another breakfast in an hour’s time—I don’t fancy any one ate much of
-the first one. We’ll let you know any news we can,” and he hurried back
-to the bridge.
-
-Already the German ship had forged far ahead of the _Perseus_.
-
-“Aren’t her stokers having a time!” uttered Wally, as the smoke poured
-from her. “It’s going to take her all she knows to get away from that
-cruiser of ours.” He was unfastening Norah’s life-belt as he spoke,
-while Jim removed Mr. Linton’s. “Are you all right, Nor?”
-
-“Oh, yes,” said Norah, turning a strained, white face. She looked up at
-Jim, and met his eyes, smiling at her. “It’s—it’s a bit of relief,
-isn’t it?”
-
-Every one was trying to speak calmly, although, now that the long
-tension had been so suddenly relaxed, there was more appearance of
-emotion than in the moment of greatest danger. Two or three women had
-become hysterical, and the stewardesses and doctor were busy reducing
-them to common-sense. Mrs. Edwards had not spoken at all since the
-megaphone had cried their reprieve from the bridge. She rose after
-awhile and slipped away.
-
-The British cruiser was coming up astern, at full speed. Already they
-could see the grey hull, business-like and determined.
-
-“I expect we’ll signal to her as soon as the enemy is a bit further
-away,” Jim said. “I hope to goodness we’re going to see the fight!”
-
-“Will there be a fight?” Norah asked, excitedly.
-
-“Why I should think so. She isn’t out for her health,” Jim answered. “It
-will be a heartsome sight if she sinks the German, won’t it—and great
-Scott, how annoying it will be for Mr. Smith!”
-
-“Whew-w!” Wally whistled. “I clean forgot our friend Smithy!”
-
-“I doubt if he’s as happy now as he was on the _Perseus_,” said Jim,
-laughing. “That British ship is a flyer and no mistake. Nor, old girl,
-why don’t you go and get out of six or eight of those coats before the
-fun begins? You can’t wear them all day.”
-
-“No, nor this hat,” said Norah, who was dressed for emergencies. “I’ll
-hurry back.”
-
-Her way to her cabin led her past the Edwards’ and she glanced in, at
-the sound of sobbing. Mrs. Edwards, who had no children, had borrowed
-little Tommy Field. She was kneeling before the couch on which she had
-placed him, her face buried in his frock, her whole frame shaking with
-sobs. Tommy regarded her doubtfully—and then, finding her hair soft
-under his little hands, began gleefully to pull it down, gurgling with
-joy. Mrs. Edwards did not seem to notice—even though they hurt her; it
-may be that she found a comfort in the touch of the little hands. At the
-sight, Norah suddenly found that she, too, was sobbing. She ran on into
-her cabin.
-
-When she passed, a little later, on her way back, she heard the murmur
-of voices, and saw Major Edwards bending over his wife. Somehow Norah
-knew that she was better, though she went by quickly, averting her eyes.
-Dimly within her, though she had not learned to put the thought into
-words, Norah knew that the world holds few women whom a baby cannot
-help—even a borrowed baby.
-
-“Norah! Norah! Hurry up!”
-
-Jim’s voice came ringing down the alleyways.
-
-“I’m coming!” Norah shouted, beginning to run. “What’s the matter?
-Anything wrong?”
-
-“No—only the British ship is coming up hand over fist, and signalling
-like mad. And the German is just tearing away, but I don’t believe she
-can do it.” Jim’s face was flushed and his eyes dancing. “Losh, but I
-wish I was on that cruiser! Isn’t it the mischief that our wireless
-isn’t ready! Come along—I was afraid you’d miss her.” He raced up the
-companion-ladder, Norah at his heels.
-
-At the top Wally was prancing with excitement.
-
-“Oh, hurry up, you two!” Each boy grasped one of Norah’s hands, and they
-tore along the deck. Every one was hanging over the rail, watching the
-British ship approaching. Beside the great bulk of the _Perseus_, or of
-the German ship, she seemed small. But she was built for speed and armed
-to the teeth.
-
-Mr. Linton offered Norah his glasses—but she found that her hands were
-shaking too much to use them. The change from despair to relief had,
-indeed, affected every one; ordinarily grave people laughed and talked
-excitedly, and the younger passengers were like children released from
-school. No one would go down to the second breakfast. Stewards wandered
-round with trays of beef-tea, and people took cups absent-mindedly, and
-forgot to drink them. The decks, generally so spic-and-span, were
-littered untidily, since rugs and wraps had been flung down wherever
-their owners happened to be standing—and the stewards were themselves
-far too disorganised to perform ordinary duties. For one morning at
-least, the sober _Perseus_ was “fey.”
-
-“I’d give something to understand what she’s talking about,” John West
-exclaimed, watching the cruiser, which was exchanging rapid signals with
-the _Perseus_.
-
-“Easy enough to guess,” Jim said. “They want to know anything we can
-tell them, that’s all. Look at us”—he glanced aloft—“flag-wagging our
-hardest. This is beginning to make up for last night!”
-
-“Yes—you chaps must have had a pretty bad time,” West said. “I’m jolly
-glad rescue came—it wasn’t any too soon.”
-
-“Oh, a miss is as good as a mile,” said Wally. “I’m too cheerful to
-think of last night. By Jove, I believe they’re coming near enough to
-talk! Isn’t it gorgeous!” He seized Norah, and they executed a wild
-polka down the deck—a proceeding which would ordinarily have attracted
-some attention, but just now drew not a single glance, except from the
-knitting old lady, who beamed over her muffler, and said, “Bless them,
-pretty dears!”—which remark filled Wally with wrath beyond anything he
-had manifested for the German ship. They came back to the others,
-outwardly sober, but still bubbling within.
-
-“She’s the _Sealark_,” the second officer told them. “Light
-cruiser—about 6,000 tons; and her armament is a dream. I saw her in
-Portsmouth Harbour last July. I guess she’ll make things warm for the
-beggar.”
-
-“How did she come—was it just luck?” Wally asked.
-
-“Luck?—not it! She caught our ‘S.O.S.’ signals yesterday; a jolly good
-thing for us young Grey stuck to his wireless as long as he did. Watch
-her—she means hailing us, I think.”
-
-From the bridge, a voice through a megaphone demanded perfect silence on
-the decks—and every voice was hushed as the cruiser came rapidly
-alongside, so close that greetings could easily be exchanged. Rapid
-questions and answers flashed from bridge to bridge. The _Sealark_ was
-ready for action; they could see the cleared decks, and the guns trained
-in readiness. Bluejackets swarmed everywhere, cheery-faced and alert,
-and waved jovial greetings to the big liner. Norah found her heart
-thumping. War! this was war, indeed!
-
-The cruiser drew away, exerting her utmost speed. Mr. Dixon came down to
-the passengers.
-
-“She wants us to stand by to help with the wounded,” he said. “She’ll be
-engaging the German soon. No, I don’t think it will be much of a fight;
-the German is more than twice her size, but she’s only an armed
-merchantman, and the _Sealark’s_ guns outclass hers hopelessly. We’re
-not going to run risks of shells, of course, but you’ll get some sort of
-a view.” He favoured Norah with a special grin. “I shouldn’t wonder if
-you got your friend Smith back, Miss Norah!”
-
-It was half an hour later that the first dull roar of a gun echoed
-across the sea. The _Perseus_ had altered her course, so that she should
-not be in the line of fire, and the three ships formed an irregular
-triangle. They saw the puff of smoke from the _Sealark_ and then
-another, and another; but the German held on her way, unchecked,
-although the _Sealark_ was rapidly overhauling her. Then she began to
-return the shots, and the watchers on the _Perseus_ could mark by how
-much they fell short by the splashes as they fell. The British cruiser
-answered, her superior range giving her an immense advantage.
-
-“Ah—she’s got home!”
-
-Mr. Linton’s quick exclamation came just before a shout from the bridge.
-One of the funnels of the German ship had tilted suddenly, and remained
-looking curiously helpless, like a child’s damaged toy. The _Sealark_
-had found her range. Shot after shot crashed; another funnel fell
-sideways, and a great black stain showed near the stern where a shell
-had hit its mark. The ships grew nearer together.
-
-“The German’s having engine-trouble, I believe,” Grantham hazarded. “Her
-speed is falling off.”
-
-“By Jove, she’s hit the _Sealark_!”
-
-Almost simultaneously with two vicious puffs of smoke from the German
-guns there came a commotion on the deck of the British cruiser. Through
-the glasses could be seen marks of damage, and one gun spoke no more.
-But, as if in swift retaliation, a series of crashing shots from the
-_Sealark_ shook the air—and the enemy ship seemed to shiver and pause.
-A gaping hole showed in her side. Again the British guns roared across
-the water.
-
-“She’s done,” Mr. Linton said.
-
-The German ship was quite done. She listed slowly, more and more of her
-hull becoming visible as the deck, with its litter of wreckage and
-broken funnels, sloped away from them. Gushes of vapour that might have
-been either smoke or steam poured from her; and then, as the watchers
-held their breath in suspense, blue wreaths of smoke curled lazily
-upwards. She was on fire and sinking.
-
-“The _Sealark_ is signalling to us,” the second officer said. “We’re
-wanted—it’s full steam ahead. But she won’t last until we get there.”
-
-The guns of the British cruiser had ceased. A moment before she had been
-nothing but a death-dealing machine; now she suddenly became an
-instrument of mercy, dashing forward to save life. The _Perseus_ was no
-less ready. The water foamed from her bows, as she bore down upon the
-sinking German.
-
-“She’s going!” A score of voices raised the cry.
-
-The German warship tilted still further. Then she gave a long, lazy
-roll, like a sea-monster seeking rest; her stern lifted, and she dived
-down, head-first. So quickly was it done that it seemed a dream; one
-moment the great ship held every eye—the next, and she was gone, and
-scarcely a ripple marked the place of her sinking.
-
-As she went, black forms dropped from her, looking, at that distance,
-like a swarm of flies. They could be seen faintly in the smooth water,
-tiny dots upon the surface of the slow swell.
-
-“Oh—hurry! hurry!”
-
-Norah did not know that she had spoken. Her eyes were glued to those
-helpless black specks.
-
-The boats were already swung out. As the _Sealark_ and the _Perseus_
-came near the broken wreckage and bobbing heads, both ships slackened,
-and the boats shot down to the water. There was a moment’s delay as the
-ready oars came out and they drew away from the side; then they leaped
-forward, every man bending in real earnest to his work. Once among the
-wreckage, all but two oars were withdrawn, and the rowers leaned over,
-intent on their work of mercy. They lifted out one dripping form after
-another. Their cries of encouragement drifted back to the ships.
-
-“I don’t think one other head is showing,” said Jim at last. “Poor
-beggars—what a crowd have gone down!”
-
-They scanned the sea with keen eyes. There was nothing to be seen but
-spars and littered wreckage.
-
-“The boats are coming back,” Norah said, her voice shaking. Not to look
-had been impossible; but it would be as impossible ever to forget what
-she had seen.
-
-They came back with their burden of flotsam and jetsam; it was pitifully
-small, compared to the number who had been on the ship. Some were
-wounded, many exhausted from shock and immersion. These were busy times
-for the doctor and his assistants on the _Perseus_. The _Sealark_ had
-but little room for prisoners and the sick, and was glad to turn them
-over to the great empty liner.
-
-“We’re practically a floating war prison,” said Mr. Dixon. They had
-exchanged final greetings with the British man-of-war, and the _Perseus_
-had resumed her course to the Canaries. “The two officers who called
-yesterday are with us, bless their jovial hearts! They aren’t
-wounded—and they’re not so supercilious either. An exceedingly wet and
-cold man can’t very well be supercilious, even if he’s a German—and
-those chaps were half-drowned rats when we pulled ’em in.”
-
-“What about Mr. Smith?” Wally asked.
-
-Mr. Dixon shook his head.
-
-“No sign of him—gone down, poor little man. It’s just as well, I
-suppose; he’d have hated not getting back to his Fatherland. And I, at
-least, am devoutly glad that I haven’t to give up some of my leave to a
-trial in England.” Mr. Dixon gave a cavernous yawn. “I haven’t had any
-sleep since the night before last, and I’m going to turn in; and people
-who look as tired as you, Miss Norah, should do the same.”
-
-“I don’t think I’m tired,” said Norah vaguely. The chief officer
-laughed.
-
-“Put her to bed, Jim,” he said, nodding his head. “We’ve enough German
-patients without a good Australian as well. And you might turn in
-yourself, by way of experiment—you look as if you could do with a
-sleep. I’m going to dream that I’m a prisoner on that beastly German
-boat, for the pleasure of waking up and finding I’m not—I advise you to
-do the same!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-
- LAS PALMAS.
-
-“IT’S the heartsomest sight ever I seen!” said the quartermaster.
-
-They were steaming slowly in to the big harbour of Las Palmas. Jim and
-Wally were great friends with the quartermaster, although he had once
-fallen over them bodily, an awkward occurrence that had produced a
-temporary coolness. He had forgiven them since discovering that their
-knowledge of knots was beyond that of the ordinary land-lubber
-passenger, and that Jim carried good tobacco, and frequently had some to
-spare.
-
-The harbour was gradually opening up ahead—and they were looking at a
-sight of which the _Sealark_ had warned them. Dotted all over the
-land-locked stretch of dancing blue were ships, great and small; idle
-ships, with no smoke coming from them except the little trail from the
-cook’s galley. Many bore names well known in the big cities of the world
-where passenger steamers go. The _Perseus_ went so close to some that
-they could scan their decks, where idle sailors lay about, playing cards
-and smoking—or leaned over the rail to watch the great British ship
-come slowly into port. Never had the Australian boys seen such sleepy
-ships.
-
-“That one looks queer,” Jim said, indicating a vessel close in-shore;
-and the quartermaster grinned.
-
-“She’s strolled ashore, an’ broke her back,” he said, cheerfully. “Good
-enough for her, too—and for the lot of ’em. Don’t it do your heart good
-to see ’em, miss?”—to Norah, who came up at the moment. “Lyin’ there
-with their dinky little black an’ white an’ red flags trailin’ out over
-their sterns, afraid to move; an’ the barnacles a-growin’ on ’em. They
-grow quick, too, in this nice warm water!”
-
-“Are they the German ships?” Norah asked.
-
-Jim nodded assent.
-
-“Thirty-one of them,” he said, an unusual note of pride in his quiet
-voice. “Most of them have been there since the first fortnight of the
-war, when all the German merchant-shipping scurried for cover.”
-
-“And there they sit,” said Wally, happily, “afraid to show their noses
-out, because they know they’ll be caught—and a little British cruiser
-comes and counts them now and then, like an old dog rounding up a mob of
-sheep.”
-
-“They’ve sold all their cargoes for food,” said the quartermaster. “Ate
-’em up, like—an’ much them Spaniards ashore gave ’em for the lot! Them
-Las Palmas dagoes must be pretty wealthy these times. An’ the beggars
-can’t get away, nor do nothink. Must make ’em feel pretty savage, seein’
-ships like us come strollin’ in an’ out.”
-
-“By Jove, it must!” Jim uttered. “Here are we, worth a million and a
-half of money—and just the cargo England wants—meat and wool and
-foodstuffs; and they’ve got to watch us go out safely! Wouldn’t it make
-you permanently sour!”
-
-“Well, it brings home what sea-power means,” Mr. Linton said. “Not a bad
-thing to remember, this harbour, when things go wrong at the Front—and
-to realise that the same state of affairs is going on in many harbours.
-I’d like to know how many German ships are bottled up, all over the
-world; she can’t have much trade left.”
-
-“Why, you won’t find the German merchant flag afloat, sir,” said the
-quartermaster, “unless it’s sittin’ tight in a neutral port like this.
-As for her trade——!” He snapped his fingers. “Well, she’s a long way
-off beat yet; but she ain’t doin’ any business!”
-
-They had been running for some hours in sight of the Grand Canary, the
-chief island of the group—its rugged hills and headlands had been a
-welcome sight after the long stretch of unbroken sea. Since their escape
-from the German warship there had been a feeling of unrest all over the
-_Perseus_: the time seemed interminable, and the old sense of security
-in which they had lived contentedly had altogether gone. People were apt
-to jump at unusual sounds; books and games languished, for there was a
-painful fascination in scanning the sea for a smoke-trail that might or
-might not be another enemy cruiser. Above all, the hunger for news of
-the war became more and more intense, blotting out all lesser interests.
-
-The _Perseus_ dropped anchor in the outer harbour—so crowded with
-shipping were the inner waters, that the huge vessel would have had
-difficulty in finding room to turn. Almost immediately the agents’
-launch was seen hurrying out from the shore. In its wake came a huge
-flotilla of dinghies, containing every saleable article known to the
-bumboat-men of the Islands—lace, alleged to be Spanish, fine linen
-embroideries and drawn-thread work, silks, “sandalwood” boxes—made of
-any wood that came handy, and soaked in sandal oil to tickle tourist
-nostrils—roughly carved ivory, Canary knives and ebony
-elephants—probably of Birmingham manufacture—and a host of other
-“curios,” equally reliable and valuable. In addition, there were boats
-loaded to the gunwale with oranges and others with vegetables; and some
-that were top-heavy with an unwieldy cargo of basket-chairs. Until the
-medical officer of the port had granted pratique to the ship, no one was
-allowed on board; so the boats clustered thickly on each side, and the
-men held up their wares, shrieking their prices, and managed to conduct
-quite a number of sales by the simple expedient of passing the goods up
-in a bucket lowered from the deck.
-
-Spanish medical officers are generally full of their own importance, but
-devoid of any inclination to hurry. It was some time before the
-impatient passengers saw the official boat coming leisurely across the
-harbour; and a further delay ensued before the pompous Spaniard had
-satisfied himself that the _Perseus_ was sufficiently free from any
-disease.
-
-“They had small-pox brought to them by a ship once,” Mr. MacTavish told
-Norah; “and ever since they’ve been so scared that they’d refuse to let
-any one ashore if we had as much as a case of nettle-rash on board!
-Judging by the smells of the place when you get there, I should think
-they bred for themselves all the diseases they’d need.”
-
-“He’s going back to his boat,” Norah said, looking over the rail at the
-gorgeous, gold-laced official.
-
-“Then I expect it’s all right,” said the officer. “Just watch those
-bumboat-men.”
-
-Some one had communicated to the boatmen the fact that the _Perseus_ was
-free ground, and the boats were crowding to the gangway in a struggling
-mass, each striving for first place at the steps. There seemed no rules
-of the game; they shoved each other aside furiously, edged boats out of
-the way with complete disregard of the safety of their crews or cargoes,
-and kept up a continuous babel of shouts and objurgations, coupled with
-wild appeals to the passengers to wait for the bargains they were
-bringing.
-
-“Look at that chap!” Wally said, chuckling at a man whose boat had just
-reached the steps when a well-directed shove from the stern sent it
-flying lengths ahead. The man subsided in a heap on his wares, which
-were of a knobbly character and not adapted for reclining. He protested,
-in floods of fluent Spanish, while his wily ejector, who had promptly
-taken his place, proceeded to get his own goods on board with much
-calmness.
-
-“They’re awful sharks,” said Mr. MacTavish. “Generally they bring on
-board about three decent things, in case of striking any one who really
-knows good stuff; the rest is just the scrapings of the Las Palmas
-shops—all the things they know they’ll never sell ashore. You want to
-be up to their tricks—and, whatever you do, don’t give them more than a
-quarter of the money they ask.”
-
-The Spaniards were pouring on board in a steady stream. Some, without
-wasting time, dashed to vacant spaces on the deck and began to lay out
-their wares; others rushed up and down, thrusting goods, fruit, and
-post-cards almost into the faces of the passengers and asking fabulous
-prices for them. Norah, who had no wish at all to buy a fan for which
-the vendor demanded five shillings, said, “I’ll give you ninepence,” and
-expected to see him disappear in wrath. But the Spaniard smiled widely
-and said, “Thank you, miss!”—and Norah found herself the embarrassed
-possessor of the fan, while the seller as urgently begged her to buy an
-elephant.
-
-“Oh, take me away, Wally!” she said, laughing. “Can’t we go ashore?”
-
-“There’s a launch coming off now,” Mr. MacTavish said. “They’ll take
-you, and bring you back. But don’t go unless you’re a good sailor, Miss
-Norah—there’s a cheery little lap on in this harbour.”
-
-“I’ll risk it,” Norah declared, laughing.
-
-“Well, it upsets quite a few,” said the junior officer. “However, you’re
-ashore in a quarter of an hour, so the agony isn’t prolonged.”
-
-The launch bobbed cheerily across the harbour, and the “lop” of which
-Mr. MacTavish had spoken proved quite sufficient for several of the
-passengers, who were both green and glad when the little boat arrived at
-the stone steps of the wharf. At the head of the steps enthusiastic
-drivers proffered their services. The Billabong party, by the Captain’s
-advice, had engaged a guide—a bustling gentleman, speaking very
-imperfect English, who hurried them to the quaint little carriages of
-the town—two-wheeled, hooded erections, capable, when rattling over
-their native cobblestones, of inflicting innumerable contusions on the
-human frame. They dashed wildly up a long, ascending road, the drivers
-urging their raw-boned steeds with whip and voice.
-
-Las Palmas, to the hurried tourist, offers but little in the way of
-sight-seeing. To the leisured, with time to drive away from the white
-town, up the mountain, to Monte and Santa Brigida, there is opportunity
-for seeing the best of the island—rolling country with deep little
-cleft glens running to the sea, banana gardens, and the vineyards among
-which Santa Brigida nestles—vineyards where the Canary wine of old days
-was made. Motor-buses run there to-day—unromantic successors to the gay
-old adventurers who sailed the Spanish Main and drank Canary sack.
-
-The majority of ships, however, stay in the port but a few hours, making
-the call only for mails and vegetables and a shipment of fruit for
-London; so that the average tourist can but put himself in the hands of
-a guide and make a meteoric dash through the city, seeing what the guide
-chooses to show him, and no more.
-
-“Did you ever see such unfortunate, raw-boned horses!” gasped Norah. “I
-do wish our man wouldn’t beat him so continually.”
-
-The guide smiled widely. “De horse she not mind de beat,” he said.
-
-“I expect they’re used to it,” Jim remarked; “it really seems part of
-the show. Anyway, they all do it.”
-
-They hurried through the great Cathedral, seeing vestments three hundred
-years old; through the fruit and fish markets; and then to the place
-which the guide plainly regarded as the champion attraction of the
-town—the prison. It was a gloomy building, entered through a big
-courtyard where snowy-white geraniums bloomed in startling contrast to
-the grim stone walls. Within, they glanced at the room where trials were
-held; and then were conducted along dim corridors and into a cell where
-an unpleasant iron framework was fixed above a bare iron chair.
-
-“De garotte!” announced the guide, proudly. “Where dey put to death de
-murderers!” He sat down in the iron chair, and obligingly put his neck
-in the clutch of the grisly collar, to show how it worked—whereat Mr.
-Linton uttered an ejaculation of wrath, and hastily removed his
-daughter.
-
-“Do they really kill people there?” Norah asked, wide-eyed. It did not
-seem easy to realise.
-
-“They do—but there’s no need for you to look at the beastly place!”
-said her father, indignantly.
-
-“Well, it looked awfully tame,” said Norah. “I suppose I haven’t enough
-imagination, daddy. It was rather like the arrangement they put to keep
-your head steady in a photographer’s!”
-
-Jim and Wally came out, followed by the guide, who looked rather
-crestfallen.
-
-“Unpleasant beast!” remarked Jim. “He’s been showing us a collection of
-knives and scythes and other grisly weapons, with dark and deadly
-stains—says various ladies and gentlemen used them to slay other ladies
-and gentlemen! First you see the garotte, and then what brings you to
-it. It puts you off murdering any one, at all events in Las Palmas!”
-
-“It makes me feel like murdering the guide!” said Wally. “I never saw
-any one gloat so unpleasantly!”
-
-They left the prison and rattled back into the main streets of the town.
-Spanish girls in graceful mantillas looked down upon them from upper
-windows; and once Norah declared that she saw a Spanish cavalier
-serenading one, with guitar all complete—which seemed unlikely, even in
-Las Palmas, in broad daylight. The streets were narrow and dirty, the
-cobblestones unbelievably rough. At top speed the little carriages
-bumped over them, their occupants bouncing hither and thither, and
-suffering many things. They rejoiced unaffectedly when at length they
-halted, and set out on foot to explore the business part of the town.
-
-The shops were full of fascinating things, to unaccustomed eyes, and
-their owners did not wait for people to enter, but came to the doorways,
-or even out into the streets, begging them to buy; each pointing out how
-much more excellent was his shop than that of his neighbour. Whether
-they succeeded or failed in making a sale, they were always exquisitely
-polite.
-
-“You feel,” said Wally, “that even if they don’t manage to sell you a
-pennyworth, they’re amply rewarded for their trouble, by the pleasure of
-having seen you!”
-
-In a restaurant overlooking the sea they procured very bad coffee with
-cakes of startling colours and quite poisonous taste; after which
-refection every one felt rather ill, and formed a high opinion of
-Spanish digestive powers. There were German sailors in the restaurant
-evidently from the ships in the harbour; they looked sourly at the
-cheery little party of English-speaking people, and muttered guttural
-remarks that clearly were not pleasant.
-
-“It’s hardly to be expected that they should feel good-humoured at the
-sight of us,” said Jim. “Poor beggars—here since war broke out, with
-nothing to do, and practically no money; and their ships rotting in the
-harbour. And they have to watch us go in and out just as we please. It
-wouldn’t excite one’s finer feelings, if one were a German.”
-
-“Have Germans got any?” queried Wally.
-
-“They’re not overstocked, I believe,” Jim said, grinning. “But one
-wouldn’t develop many in Las Palmas, anyhow. I’ve seen more villainous
-faces here than in the whole course of my previous existence. Our Zulu
-friend in Durban was a beauty, compared to some of them.”
-
-“Yes, one wouldn’t care to wander about here alone on a dark night,”
-said his father. “Half of the populace look as though they would quite
-cheerfully and politely assassinate any one for sixpence. Come on,
-children; the guide seems to be getting excited—it’s time we went back
-to the ship.”
-
-The _Perseus_ steamed away in the twilight—the crowd of boatmen
-chattering and shouting round her until the last moment, and attempting
-to sell for a few pence articles for which, earlier in the day, they had
-demanded many shillings. Past the imprisoned German ships they went,
-seeing the sullen crews watching them, envying them the freedom of the
-seas. The captain came along the deck as they watched the sunset and the
-slowly fading white town under the mountain.
-
-“Well, we didn’t get much news out of Las Palmas,” he said. “One never
-does. It’s all deadlock, anyhow, at the Front; winter has shut down on a
-lot of activities.”
-
-“Judging by my papers, most of the battle area seems water-logged,” said
-Mr. Linton. “It wouldn’t give much scope for movements.”
-
-“No,” the captain agreed. “Personally, the agents have left me
-completely undecided; we’re scheduled to go to London, but they say we
-may be sent to Liverpool—or anywhere else.” He laughed. “Time was when
-a man was master on his ship—but in war he’s not much more than a
-cabin-boy. There’s a hint that the Government want our cargo of meat to
-go straight to France.”
-
-“What—would we go there?” Norah queried, much excited.
-
-“Not much!” said the captain, with emphasis. “Too many mines and
-submarines about, Miss Norah, to take passengers on cross-Channel
-excursions. No, I guess I’d have to land you all at some Channel port.
-They say we’ll hear by wireless—meanwhile, I wouldn’t advise you to
-label your luggage.”
-
-Mr. Linton looked anxious.
-
-“I’ll be just as glad if we don’t have the trip up the Channel,” he
-said. “There would be no further danger of cruisers, I suppose; but one
-does not feel encouraged by the idea of floating mines—not with
-daughters about.”
-
-“Indeed, you catch me letting you meet a mine alone!” said Norah
-hastily. “Me, that can hardly trust you to change your coat when it’s
-wet!” Whereat the Captain chuckled and departed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
-
- THE END OF THE VOYAGE.
-
-PERHAPS the last week of the voyage was the longest of all.
-
-From Las Palmas the _Perseus_ ran into bad weather, and the Australians
-were sharply reminded that instead of their own hot December they were
-coming to English winter. Ice-cold gales blew day and night; the decks
-were constantly swept by drifting showers of sleety rain. It was often
-impossible to keep cabin port-holes open, even in the day-time, since
-the waves were high; and at night they were definitely closed. Wally,
-who had opened his on a night that was deceptively calm, was found by
-Jim “awash,” a wave having entered and deluged everything. Wally was
-equally apologetic and wrathful; he paddled in the chilly flood,
-rescuing damp boxes from under the berths.
-
-“I’m awfully sorry, old man,” he said penitently. “The cabin was so
-horrid stuffy—and the waves seemed quiet. I think”—hopefully—“that my
-things have got the worst of the mess, anyhow.”
-
-“I wish you’d come out of that and get dry socks on,” said Jim,
-laughing. “You look like an old pelican, wading round there! Here’s
-Scott—he’ll fix it up.” They fled, leaving the flood to the
-much-enduring steward, who had probably grappled with such emergencies
-before.
-
-The evenings were the worst time. By nightfall the closed-up ship was
-unbearably airless; rather than remain below, it was better to face the
-dripping decks, to find a comparatively sheltered corner in the inky
-gloom, and there to sit, wrapped in mackintoshes and rugs, until
-bedtime—when the keen salt wind would have effectually made every one
-sleepy. They woke up heavy-headed, and fled back to the deck as soon as
-dressing could be hurried through. No one could possibly call the deck
-comfortable, but at least it was airy—though, perhaps, too airy.
-
-News came now each morning by wireless; unsatisfactory news, for the
-most part, since it told but little and spoke only of the long winter
-deadlock just commencing. Still, it was something, and the passengers
-clustered round the notice-board after breakfast, reading the scrawled
-items hungrily. Daily the feeling of tension increased, as the ship
-ploughed her way to the end of her long journey. It was harder than ever
-to be cooped up in idleness when so much was happening just ahead; so
-much waiting to be done.
-
-They saw no warships, yet they knew that the watch was all round them,
-vigilant and sleepless. Daily the wireless operator heard the echo of
-their signals, telling nothing except that the grey watchdogs of the
-seas were somewhere near, hidden in the veil of mist through which they
-went. It was hard to realise, so lonely did the _Perseus_ seem, that her
-position was known—that, somewhere, preparations and plans were being
-made, of which she was the centre, although even her captain knew
-nothing. Three days off the English coast the invisible Powers-That-Be
-spoke to her.
-
-“Orders!” said Jim, dashing into his father’s cabin, where Mr. Linton
-and Norah were endeavouring to pack his belongings. “No London or
-Liverpool for us, thank goodness! We’re all to be landed at Falmouth. It
-means a day less at sea.”
-
-“That’s the best news I’ve heard for a good while,” said Mr. Linton.
-“Six weeks at sea during war-time is enough for any man. Wireless
-orders, I suppose?”
-
-“Yes—the captain won’t disclose whether they’re from Government or from
-the agents—but the officers believe it’s Government, and that the ship
-is going straight to Brest or Cherbourg with her foodstuffs, as soon as
-she gets rid of us. We get in at daylight on Monday.” He rushed off to
-find Wally.
-
-They could, indeed, have got in on Sunday night, but for the war
-regulations—that no ships should enter an English port between sunset
-and sunrise; so, from evening on Sunday, the _Perseus_ dawdled along,
-knowing that she must kill time, and preferring to do it in the safety
-of open ocean rather than off a rock-bound coast. Then, as if the sea
-wanted a final diversion with them, a fog came up, and the officers
-spent an anxious night, “dodging about” in the mist and looking for the
-unfamiliar entrance to Falmouth Harbour—all the time in dread of
-hearing breakers on a near shore. Two days before, they found later, a
-ship had gone on the rocks during the night. The Cornish coast stretches
-harsh hands to trap the unwary.
-
-Fortune, however, befriended the _Perseus_. Towards morning the fog
-lifted, and the harbour entrance showed clearly. Norah, lying awake in
-her berth, saw through her port-hole a rugged headland—and almost
-immediately a blinding flash filled her cabin with so bright a light
-that for a moment it seemed on fire. It passed away as quickly as it had
-come; and Norah, springing to the port-hole, saw a dim coast and
-powerful searchlight that went to and fro across the entrance. Not even
-a fishing-dinghy could have slipped in unperceived by its white ray.
-Then a black funnel came so close to her face that she jumped back in
-astonishment. Looking down, she could see, below, the deck of a little
-gunboat, where were men in blue uniforms. A curt voice was hailing in
-tones of crisp authority.
-
-“What ship are you, and where from?”
-
-“The _Perseus_—from Australia.”
-
-“Last port?”
-
-“Las Palmas.”
-
-“What are you doing in here?”
-
-“Wireless orders.” Norah smiled a little at the evident note of
-grievance in Captain Garth’s voice—as who should say, “I never asked to
-come!”
-
-The gunboat moved on, until it was directly under the bridge. Norah
-could hear curt instructions as to anchoring. Then the fierce little
-grey boat darted away across the harbour.
-
-She dressed hastily. Everything had been left ready overnight, and her
-little cabin wore a strangely cheerless aspect, denuded of all its
-homelike touches and with labelled and corded luggage lying about. Jim
-and Wally found her ready when they looked in on their way to the deck.
-
-“Put on your biggest coat,” Jim said. “It’s colder than anything you
-ever dreamed of. To think they’re probably having bush-fires on
-Billabong!”
-
-“I wish we had one here!” said Wally, shivering.
-
-There were yellow lights still showing in the houses round the harbour,
-but daylight had come, and soon they began to twinkle out. It was a bare
-coast, with a grey castle on one headland—behind it, on a long rise, a
-dense cluster of huts that spoke of military encampment. The harbour
-itself was full of ships; among them, the _Perseus_, largest of them
-all, was going dead slow. The crew could be heard exchanging greetings
-with deck-hands engaged in morning tasks on vessels lying at
-anchor—question and answer ran back and forth; war news, curiosity
-about the long voyage, and often, “Goin’ to enlist, now you’re home?”
-Every one was excited and happy; the crew were beaming over their work;
-the stewards—most of whom had declared their intention of
-enlisting—wild with joy at the thought of home after their long months
-of absence.
-
-The Australians drew together a little; there was something in the bleak
-grey December morning, in the cheery bustle and excitement, that made
-them suddenly alone and homesick—homesick for great trees and bare
-plains, for scorching sunlight and the green and gold splendour of the
-Bush.
-
-“Doesn’t it seem a long way away?” Norah said, very low; and Jim and
-Wally, knowing quite well what she meant, nodded silently. To them, too,
-home was a great way off.
-
-They hurried through an early breakfast, and came again on deck to find
-the anchor down for the last time, and the _Perseus_ lying at rest. An
-official launch was alongside; and presently all the passengers were
-mustered in the saloon, to answer to their names and declare their
-nationality and business. It was a war precaution, but a perfunctory
-one; as Wally remarked, the late Mr. Smith would have had no difficulty
-whatever in passing with full marks.
-
-Then came good-byes, beginning with the captain, somewhat haggard after
-his final vigil, and ending with little Tommy Field, who insisted on
-attaching himself to Norah, and was with difficulty removed by his
-parents. A tender was alongside; great piles of luggage were being shot
-down to it. There were many delays before the passengers, blue and
-shivering, were ushered down the gangway to the tossing deck below.
-
-Norah looked back as the tender steamed off slowly. Far above them
-towered the mighty bulk of the _Perseus_, as it had towered at Melbourne
-so many weeks before. Then it had seemed strange and unfriendly; now it
-had changed; it was all the home she knew, in this cold, grey land. She
-had a moment’s wild desire to go back to it.
-
-“Well, I am an idiot,” Wally said, beside her. “For weeks I’ve been
-aching to get off that old ship—and now that I’m off, I feel suddenly
-like a lost foal, and I want to go back and hide my head in my cabin! Do
-you feel like that?”
-
-“’M,” said Norah, nodding very hard. “England feels very queer and
-terrifying, all of a sudden, doesn’t it?”
-
-“Don’t you bother your little head,” said Jim. “We’ll worry through all
-right.”
-
-Ashore there came a long Customs delay, since enthusiastic officials
-insisted on having a lengthy hunt through luggage for revolvers, which
-were liable to confiscation. They waited in a huge shed, which smelt of
-many things, none of them pleasant. Finally they were released, and made
-their way through a bewildering maze of rough buildings and railway
-lines, until they found themselves at the station at Falmouth, where a
-special train awaited them.
-
-It was all strange to the Lintons. The very accent of the Cornish folk
-around them was unintelligible; the houses, packed closely together, as
-unfamiliar as the bleak landscape and the leafless trees—trees that
-Norah considered dead until she suddenly realised that she was no longer
-in Australia, where a leafless tree is a dead tree, and where there is
-no long winter sleep for Nature. These trees were bare, but dense with
-growth of interlaced boughs and twigs; not beaten to gaunt skeletons,
-like the Australian dead forest giants. Norah found that in their beauty
-of form and tracery there was something more exquisite than in their
-spring leafage.
-
-“Don’t the houses look queer!” Jim said. “We’ve been travelling for ever
-so long, and I haven’t seen a single verandah!”
-
-Gradually, as the day wore on, the rain drifted up in a grey cloud,
-blotting out all the cold landscape. It blew aside now and then, and
-showed empty fields, divided by bare hedges; an emptiness that puzzled
-the Australians, until they realised that they were in a country where
-all cattle must be housed in winter. The fields, too, were astonishing:
-quaint, irregularly shaped little patches, tiny beside their memories of
-the wide paddocks of their own big land. The whole country looked like a
-chessboard to their unaccustomed eyes; the great houses, among their
-leafless trees, inexpressibly gaunt and bleak.
-
-Then, so soon after luncheon that they exclaimed in astonishment,
-darkness came down and electric lights flashed on throughout the train.
-The conductor came in to pull all blinds down carefully.
-
-“War regulations, sir,” he said in answer to Mr. Linton. “No trains
-allowed to travel showin’ lights now, for fear of an attack by
-aircraft—and goin’ over bridges they turns the lights off altogether.
-Makes travellin’ dull, sir.”
-
-“It sounds as though it should make it exciting,” said Mr. Linton.
-
-“Might, if the aeroplanes came, sir,” said the conductor, laconically.
-“They do say them Zeppelins is goin’ to shake things up in England. But
-they ain’t come yet, an’ England ain’t shook up. Might be as well if she
-wur.” He went on his mission of darkness.
-
-The slow day drew to a close. The train made few stoppages, and
-travelled swiftly; but it was late before the long journey across
-England was over, and they began to slacken down. Peering out, Norah and
-the boys saw a dimly-lit mass of houses, so solid a mass, so
-far-reaching, that they were almost terrifying. They were gaunt houses,
-tall and grey, crowned with grimy chimney-pots; for miles they ran
-through them, finding never a break in their close-packed squares. Then
-came more lights and a grinding of brakes as they drew up; outside the
-train, raucous voices of porters.
-
-“Paddington! Paddington!”
-
-“London at last!” said Mr. Linton.
-
-Presently they were packed into a taxi, whizzing along through dim
-streets. The taxi-lights were darkened; there were few electric lights,
-and all the upper parts of their glass globes had been blackened, so
-that hostile aircraft, flying overhead, should find no guiding beams.
-Lamps in shop windows were carefully shaded.
-
-It was a weird city, in its semi-darkness of war. The streets were full
-of clamour—rattling of traffic, sharp ringing of tram-bells and the
-hooting of motors, and, above every other sound the piercing cries of
-newsboys—“Speshul! War Speshul!” Motor-buses, great red structures that
-towered like cars of Juggernaut, rattled by them, their drivers darting
-in and out among the traffic with amazing skill. Taxi-cabs went by in a
-solid stream. The pavements were a dense mass of jostling, hurrying
-people. And in whatever direction they looked were soldiers—men in
-khaki, with quiet, purposeful faces.
-
-“Heaps and heaps of them aren’t a day older than I am!” Wally declared,
-gleefully, bringing his head in. “Look at that little officer over
-there! Why, I might be his uncle! If they are taking kids like that,
-Jim, they can’t refuse you and me!”
-
-“They won’t refuse you,” David Linton said, gravely, looking at the
-brown faces—Jim’s, quiet, but full of determination; Wally’s vivid with
-excitement. There was no doubt that they were excellent war
-material—quite too good to refuse.
-
-Norah’s hand closed on his in the darkness. The same thought had come to
-them both. The long voyage, with its comparative peace, was behind them:
-ahead was only war, and all that it might mean to the boys. The whole
-world suddenly centred round the boys. London was nothing; England,
-nothing, except for what it stood for; the heart of Empire. And the
-Empire had called the boys.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
-
- THE THING THAT COUNTS.
-
-“LITTLE chap!—you mustn’t mind like that.”
-
-Norah kept her face from the room, looking out into the hurrying London
-street. Something quite unfamiliar was in her throat—a hard, hot lump.
-She felt Jim’s hand on her shoulder, but she would not look at him until
-she had mastered the lump’s determination to choke her.
-
-She turned to him in a moment.
-
-“I’m sorry, Jimmy,” she said penitently. “I didn’t mean to be such an
-idiot—truly.”
-
-“You’re weak,” said Jim, with concern. “You can’t get influenza and be
-in bed in this beastly hotel for three weeks without feeling it. Never
-mind, kiddie—you’ll be better as soon as you can get out into the
-country.”
-
-“I expect it’s the influenza,” Norah answered, seizing upon so excellent
-an excuse, but still despising herself very heartily. “I never was in
-bed so long before; and it doesn’t buck one up. And I wasn’t expecting
-to see you in your uniform, and—and——” She turned back to the window
-hurriedly.
-
-Jim talked on, as if he had not noticed.
-
-“We’ll be able to see quite a lot of you,” he said. “It’s great luck
-going into camp at Aldershot—if you’re in London we’ll be able to run
-up often; and of course, if you’re not, it will be because you’ve come
-to live even nearer. We were jolly lucky to have had so much Australian
-training—it has saved us a heap of fagging here.”
-
-“Yes, it was great luck,” said Norah, to the window.
-
-“You’ve got to get fat, by the way;” said Jim. “This little influenza
-game of yours, has pulled you down—you’ll have your shoulder through
-your dress, if you don’t watch it. I was talking to a fellow from
-Aldershot this morning, at the tailor’s: he says it may be months before
-we go out to the front. Or we may be put on garrison duty somewhere in
-England. They want us to be as fit as possible before we go.” He
-laughed, shortly. “Fit! and he says that ordinarily a regular regiment
-reckons that it’s two years after a subaltern joins—even after
-Sandhurst training—before they consider him worth his salt! Well, I
-hope we won’t make a mess of it, that’s all.”
-
-“You won’t make any mess of anything,” Norah cried, indignantly,
-swinging round to face him. “You know ever so much already—drill and
-shooting and riding—”
-
-“What I don’t know would fill a barn,” said Jim sagely. “Drill isn’t
-everything—there’s knowing men, and handling them, and finding out what
-you can do and what you can’t. It makes you nearly scared to be an
-officer, sometimes.” He squared his shoulders resolutely. “But I’m going
-to have a mighty hard try at my job. I believe it’s something of a start
-in the right direction to know that one doesn’t know much!”
-
-Norah fingered the star on his cuff.
-
-“Well—there are ever so many more ignorant than you.”
-
-“That’s the awful part of it,” Jim said soberly. “I believe there
-are—and that says a heap! I know just enough to be sure I’ve got to
-start learning and work at it like fun. But one hears that half the
-fellows think that they can mug up the whole game in a month, and go
-cheerily out to the Front. Well, it’s all very well if you’re a private.
-But if you’ve even one star you may be responsible for other men’s
-lives.” He shrugged. “It’s a queer country. Why on earth can’t they
-catch them young and train them, as they do in Australia? It never hurts
-any of us!”
-
-“Dad says they will have to do it some time.”
-
-“So they will. But if they had done it before, there mightn’t have been
-a war at all.”
-
-Down the corridor they heard the clash of the lift-door shutting, and
-then quick steps.
-
-“Here’s Wally,” Jim said, smiling. “He’s been struggling into his Sam
-Browne belt. You just see if he doesn’t look topping!”
-
-Wally burst into the sitting-room like an avalanche.
-
-“Hallo, Norah, I’m so glad you’re up! Better?—truly—honest? You look a
-bit sorry on it—poor old girl. We’re going to get you out this
-afternoon—the sun is actually shining, and goodness knows, it may never
-occur again!” He brought his heels together with a click, standing
-before her, tall, and straight, and merry. “How does the kit look, Nor?”
-
-Behind him, David Linton came in quietly. Like Norah, he looked from one
-to the other; boys only, big and brave in their new khaki with its
-touches of brass and leather—manhood very close before them.
-
-“You both look beautiful—that is, your uniforms do!” said Norah. “We’ll
-be exceedingly proud to go out with you, won’t we, Dad?”
-
-“I’ll be exceedingly glad when I get some of the newness off,” Jim said.
-“When one sees people back from the front, a bit stained and worn, it
-makes one feel cheap to be creaking along, just turned out like a
-tailor’s block.”
-
-“From all I hear of Aldershot mud, we won’t have long to wait for the
-stains,” said Wally, comfortably. “And London mud is an excellent
-breaking in—you wait till a merry motor-’bus passes you at full tilt,
-and you’ll get all the marking you want! This city for wet grubbiness in
-January comes up to Melbourne in the same month for dry
-grubbiness—think of old Melbourne on a hot north wind day, with the
-dust in good going order!”
-
-“But to-day isn’t bad,” Jim said; “there’s really sunshine, and it’s not
-so cold. Don’t you think, Dad, we might take the patient out?”
-
-“I’m not a patient any more,” Norah disclaimed. “It was bad enough to be
-one for three weeks—I’m quite well now. Do let us go out.”
-
-“I’ve ordered some sort of a carriage,” said Mr. Linton—“having
-foreseen mutiny on the part of the invalid. It should be ready; get your
-things on, Norah, and make sure there are plenty of them. The sun here
-isn’t what you would call a really warm specimen of its kind.”
-
-It was a watery sun, but it shone brightly enough on Piccadilly as they
-drove along the splendid street. On either side great smoke-grimed
-buildings towered high: but above them the sky was blue, and in
-Piccadilly Circus there was a brave show of flowers, though the
-“flower-girls”—who are rather weird old women—shivered under their
-shawls among their baskets of violets and tulips. One had a basket that
-made Norah suddenly cry out.
-
-“Why, it’s gum-leaves!”
-
-They stopped the carriage, and Wally jumped out and ran back, returning
-presently with a little cluster of eucalyptus boughs, with yet unopened
-capsules among the grey-green foliage.
-
-“She says it came from the South of France,” he said. “But it’s good
-enough to be Australian!”
-
-To Norah it was quite good enough. She held the fragrant leaves
-throughout their drive—seeing, beyond the roar and grime of London
-streets, open plains with clumps of gum-trees—seeing their leaves stir
-and rustle as the sweet wind blew through.
-
-From Piccadilly they turned into Hyde Park. Above the great gateway was
-a queer erection—the searchlight that every night scanned the sky above
-London for aeroplanes. Everywhere in the Park were soldiers; companies
-marching and drilling, some in khaki, and others in any scraps of
-uniform that could be found for them temporarily—including even the
-scarlet tunic of other days. Officers were riding their chargers in the
-Row; and carriages drove up and down with wounded soldiers out for an
-airing in charge of nurses; men with arms or legs in splints, or with
-bandages showing under their caps. The Park looked shabby and worn, its
-brilliant grass trodden almost out of existence by the thousands of men
-who drilled there daily. Its sacred precincts were even invaded by rough
-buildings and tents—war stores, outside which stood sentries with fixed
-bayonets. No longer was it London’s most cherished pleasure-ground, but
-a part of the machinery of War.
-
-Everything about them spoke of War: the marching soldiers, the wounded
-men, the newsboys who shouted the latest tidings in the streets. The
-shops were full of soldiers’ comforts and of Service kit: the darkened
-lamps gave mute testimony to its nearness. There was no topic in all
-their world but War. Men and women alike were preparing and helping;
-even children had taken on a new gravity since they had learned how many
-of the fathers and brothers who marched away came back no more. Boys
-fresh from school had been swallowed up by its hungry mouth; boys still
-in the playground were drilling, impatient for the day that saw them old
-enough to follow their companions.
-
-And they themselves were part of its machinery. War had brought them
-across the world; and the more nearly they approached the thunder of the
-guns, the less important became their own concerns, except so far as
-they touched War. Home—Australia—Billabong; all their little story
-faded into insignificance, even to themselves. Things which had been
-important no longer counted: personal grief and happiness, personal
-success and failure, a wave of great happenings had swept them all
-away—of all their concerns nothing mattered now except the two cheery
-lads in khaki who looked with curious eyes at London, and thought no
-high-souled thoughts at all, but simply of doing the “decent thing.”
-
-To Norah the realisation came home suddenly. Dimly she had been seeing
-and feeling these things during the weeks that she had lain ill while
-her father and the boys were busied about commissions and uniforms: and
-now the knowledge came to her that where great matters of duty and
-honour are concerned, individual matters drop out. The nation’s honour
-was the individual’s honour: therefore the individual became as never
-before, a part of the nation, and forgot his or her own concerns in the
-greater responsibility. Suffering and trouble might come: but there
-would always be the help of pride in the knowledge that honour was the
-only thing that really lasted.
-
-The boys were merry enough as they drove round the Park, and, leaving
-the carriage, strolled through Kensington Gardens. Peter Pan’s statue
-looked at them from its green background; and Norah found a quaint hint
-of Wally in the carved face of the boy “who wouldn’t grow up.” Children
-in woollen coats and long gaiters were sailing boats on the Round Pond;
-Jim rescued an adventurous cutter which had gone too far, to the loudly
-expressed despair of its owner, an intrepid navigator of four. But the
-ordinary Park games of the children were almost deserted, for there was
-a daily game of absorbing interest now—soldiers to watch, who manœuvred
-and drilled and marched, until there were few Park children who did not
-know half the drill themselves. Small boys drew themselves up and
-saluted Jim and Wally smartly—to the embarrassment of those yet
-unfledged warriors: even babies in perambulators crowed at the sight of
-the uniforms and the cheery sound of bands playing the men back to
-barracks.
-
-They came upon one ridiculous knot of street urchins—ragged youngsters
-who had manufactured caps and belts and putties out of yellow paper, and
-were marching in excellent order under their leader, a proud lad with a
-wooden sword. They halted, and engaged an imaginary enemy vigorously;
-some falling gloriously on the field of battle, the others routing the
-foe with great slaughter, and finally carrying off the wounded. Jim gave
-them sixpence, which the captain accepted with the gravity with which a
-soldier may receive the V.C.
-
-There were other people in the Gardens—women in mourning, and some who
-wore only an armlet of black or purple. They were sad-faced women; and
-yet they bore themselves proudly, and their look was high as it dwelt
-upon the uniformed lads who passed them. It was not possible to see
-them, and not to know what their proud thoughts were, and what their
-grief. Men looked at them reverently—women who had given up their dear
-ones to Empire and were steadfast and brave in the memories that were
-all they had left.
-
-The afternoon darkened, and a chilly wind began to ruffle the surface of
-the Round Pond and to fill the sails of the tiny yachts. Mr. Linton
-hurried Norah to the shelter of the carriage, and they drove back to the
-hotel, through the roaring traffic of Oxford Street.
-
-“Did you ever see such a jam?” Wally ejaculated. They were halted in a
-block near Oxford Circus; ahead of them dozens of motor-’buses, around
-them taxi-cabs, carriages, and huge carts; and all fitted into the
-smallest available spaces, like the pieces of a jig-saw puzzle. In front
-of all a policeman held a mighty, white-gloved hand, huge and
-compelling. Presently he lowered it, and the packed vehicles began to
-move across the open space of the Circus, while the released body of
-foot-passengers streamed over like a swarm of ants.
-
-“You know,” said Jim, looking with admiring reverence at the policeman,
-“a few of those chaps would be very useful at the Front, in case of a
-rout among our fellows. They would only have to hold up that immense
-white hand and the flight would stop like a shot!”
-
-“Yes, and in the interval between those duties they could be directing
-the forward movement to Berlin!” said Wally eagerly. “Let’s suggest it
-to the War Office!”
-
-“I would, if we hadn’t got our commissions,” said Jim. “As it is, I want
-to stay in the Army. Reformers always have a poor time at the hands of
-officials.”
-
-The carriage stopped, and they hurried into the hotel, glad to get away
-from the keen January wind. Jim came last, after paying the coachman;
-Norah paused in the warm, carpeted lounge to wait for him. As he entered
-quickly, tall and good to look at, in his khaki, an old lady with a
-black armlet passed out. Jim held the swing door for her. She looked at
-him and stopped involuntarily: in her face such a mingling of longing
-and sorrow that the boy’s glance dropped, unable to meet those hungry
-mother-eyes. For a moment her lip quivered; then, she forced a smile.
-
-“You are going out?” she asked.
-
-“I hope so,” Jim answered gravely.
-
-“May I wish you luck, and shake hands with you?” She put out her hand,
-and Jim took it in his brown paw, gently.
-
-“Thank you,” he said. They looked at each other for a moment, and then
-the mother who had no son passed on.
-
-Norah and Jim went up the staircase in silence. Tea was waiting, and
-Norah poured it out; the boys waiting on her. She was still weak after
-her illness: glad, presently to go to lie down, at Mr. Linton’s
-injunction. She wanted to get herself in hand before the parting came:
-it was bad enough to have even once gone near to breaking down. English
-influenza, Norah thought, had a depressing effect upon one’s backbone.
-
-Jim came in soon, and sat down on the bed, tucking her up warmly. They
-talked in low voices of the time that was coming.
-
-“So you’ll just be the plucky little mate you’ve always been,” Jim said
-to her, at last. “Remember, it’s your job. This thing is so big that
-there’s more or less of a job for every one. Only I think a man’s is
-simpler—at least it’s ready waiting for him, but a woman has got to go
-and hunt hers up. You aren’t a woman, kiddie, but you’re going to look
-after your job.”
-
-“I’m going to try,” Norah said.
-
-“It’s hard on Dad,” said Jim. “He’s getting old, and sometimes I think
-he isn’t as strong as he was. I’ll be worried about him all the time I’m
-away: but I’d be much more worried if you hadn’t come. It’s a tremendous
-weight off my mind that I’m leaving you to look after him.”
-
-Norah flushed with pleasure.
-
-“Is it, Jim? I’m so glad.”
-
-“Why, you’re almost everything to him,” Jim said. “I’m not going to
-think of morbid things, because the chances are that Wally and I will
-come back: but if I don’t, I know Dad won’t have lost the best thing he
-has.”
-
-“Please, Jimmy,” said Norah, very low.
-
-“I won’t, old chap,” said Jim. “Just don’t worry, and try not to let Dad
-worry: and both of you get busy. There are heaps of relief jobs for
-people who really want to work. And afterwards you’ll be satisfied
-because you really did your bit in the war. If every one did just their
-little bit the whole job would be done in no time. It’s the slackers
-that keep it going—and you never were a slacker, Nor. You’ve always
-done your share.”
-
-“Mine is such a tiny little share,” Norah said. “It hardly seems to
-count.”
-
-“Don’t you believe it!” Jim answered. “We can’t all do a big thing, like
-Kitchener and Jellicoe; and lots of men never get a chance for
-distinction—they say half the V.C’s and D.S.O’s are pure luck. But
-every one has got some sort of a little row to hoe, and everyone’s row
-counts. Your job is partly to look after Dad, and I believe you’ll do it
-best by getting busy—both of you. Dad will go to pieces if he’s idle,
-and worrying about Wally and me.”
-
-“I won’t let him,” said Norah, nodding. “I promise, Jim. We’ll work.”
-
-“Then that’s all right,” Jim said. “And you’ll keep fit yourself; and
-we’ll see you ever so often.”
-
-“Oh—do come often!” Norah whispered. They wrung each other’s hands.
-Then Mr. Linton came in, and also sat down on the bed, and they managed
-to be quite cheerful, and made great plans for excursions when Norah
-should be quite strong and the boys came up from Aldershot. It might be
-three months, or three days, before they were sent out to the
-fighting-line: there was nothing to be gained by speaking of it.
-
-Jim looked at his watch, at length.
-
-“Nearly time we went,” he said.
-
-Norah jumped up and made a valiant attempt to tidy her curly hair—on
-the state of which Wally made severe comments when they rejoined him,
-declaring that she might have been crawling under the haystack at home.
-
-“I know I’ve got to remember I’m in London,” said Norah penitently,
-“Wally, why will you be like Aunt Eva!”
-
-“Never mind—we’ll bring you a large bunch of assorted German scalps
-when we come back from the Front,” said Wally. “They’ll look lovely in
-the hall at Billabong, among the native weapons!”
-
-“If you bring your own scalps in good order, we’ll excuse you the
-Germans,” said Mr. Linton.
-
-“If you leave untidy German oddments about Billabong, Brownie will be
-annoyed!” said Norah, laughing. “Oh, won’t it be lovely when we all go
-back!”
-
-“It will be just the best spree we ever had—and that is saying a lot!”
-Wally answered. He looked down at Norah. “There’s something a bit unfair
-about this, you know,” he declared. “Norah has been in all our plans
-ever since she was a bit of a youngster; and now we’ve got to go and
-leave her out, for the first time. We’ll have to work up something very
-special when we come back, old Nor, to make up for it.”
-
-“The very most special thing will be to go back—all together,” Norah
-said. “And don’t you trouble about me—I’ll find a job. You’ll be a
-bit—just a little bit—careful about dry socks, won’t you, boys? And
-send me them to darn every week. Aldershot will be terribly hard on
-socks.” She looked at the clock, following the direction of Jim’s eyes.
-“I know it’s time you were off,” she said, straightening her shoulders
-and looking at them with a little smile.
-
-David Linton watched the tall young forms dive into the throbbing taxi.
-It darted off among the traffic, and he went back to their sitting-room.
-There was a hint of age in his face.
-
-“Well, little mate?” he said.
-
-Norah sat on the hearthrug, and leaned her head against his knee. They
-fought their loneliness together. And since the fight was for each
-other, they succeeded.
-
-“It’s a big thing,” the father said, presently. “I’m glad they’re not
-out of it, Norah, whatever comes. Please God we’ll get them back—but if
-we don’t, we’ll know they did their best. It’s not a bad cause for
-pride—to do their best, in a big thing.”
-
-He was silent, his hand on Norah’s hair.
-
-“We’ll always have that,” she said.
-
-“Yes—always. Only it’s a bit hard on you, Norah. You have always been
-such mates.”
-
-Norah found his hand and put her cheek against it.
-
-“We’re all mates—always—no matter what happens,” she said. “Don’t you
-worry about me, Daddy—I’ve got my job.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “He brought his heels together with a click.”]
-
- _From Billabong to London_] [_Page_ 310
-
- THE END.
-
- London: Ward, Lock & Co., Limited.
-
-
-
-
- The Wonder Book
-
- A PICTURE ANNUAL
- FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
-
- Crown 4to, Picture Boards, 3s. net. In handsome Cloth Gilt
- Binding, 4s. net. Twelve Coloured Plates. 264 Pages.
- Hundreds of Illustrations.
-
-From the first issue of this favourite Annual the constant aim has been
-to present for the delight and entertainment of the little ones THE
-BEST, AND ONLY THE BEST, in picture, verse, and story. THE COLOURED
-PLATES are all dainty works of art. The full-page and other tinted
-drawings in the text number several hundreds, making the volume the most
-sumptuous gift book for children issued at a moderate price.
-
- THE CHILDREN _WILL_ HAVE IT!
-
-The stories and verses—all by favourite writers—include fairy tales,
-incidents of home and school life, stories of birds and animals,
-adventures by land and sea, and quaint rhymes and jingles, and they have
-the rare merit of appealing to children of all ages and conditions.
-
-All young folk agree that there is =No Present for Christmas or the
-Birthday to equal the Wonder Book=.
-
- WARD, LOCK & CO., LIMITED, LONDON, E.C.
-
-
-
-
- The Wonder Book
- Series
-
- (Uniform with
- the Wonder Book)
-
-
- Each Crown 4to, Picture Boards, 3s. net. In handsome Cloth
- Gilt Binding, 4s. net. Twelve to Sixteen Coloured Plates.
- 264 Pages. Over 300 Illustrations.
-
-These are _not_ annuals, but gift books appropriate to every season of
-the year and to every occasion—birthdays, prize-givings, Christmas,
-etc.
-
- The
- Wonder
- Book of Soldiers
-
-Now that the Army is practically the Nation, and there is scarcely a
-family some members of which are not serving with the Colours, this
-popular volume should be in greater demand than ever. By general consent
-it gives a better idea of life in the Army, both in Peace and War, than
-any other book of its kind. Nearly all its numerous articles have been
-written by officers and soldiers and corrected by high military
-authorities, and there are hundreds of pictures representing every phase
-of Army life and all branches of the Service. The Defence Forces of the
-Empire and their part in the great struggle for freedom are also
-described, and there are interesting accounts of the great Continental
-Armies. The book is a veritable mine of entertainment and instruction,
-both for young people and their seniors.
-
- The
- Wonder
- Book of Ships
-
-is intended first of all for young people. No more fascinating volume
-could be placed in the hands of boy or girl.
-
-But it appeals equally to an older public, for it is The Story of our
-National Heritage, and presents as no other volume has attempted to do a
-faithful picture of the BRITISH NAVY and the BRITISH MERCANTILE MARINE
-as they exist to-day. Hence in these stirring times it is of the
-greatest interest to every English-speaking man and woman, whether at
-home or abroad.
-
- The
- Wonder
- Book of Railways
-
-is a great favourite with all boys and girls who are “keen” on railways,
-and even the more elderly “season” holder will find in it much that will
-amuse and interest. Scores of chatty articles about engines, signals,
-tunnels, and so on are mingled with merry rhymes and anecdotes and
-thrilling stories of railway adventure. In addition to over 300
-illustrations there are TWELVE COLOURED PLATES, beautifully reproduced,
-representing some of the most famous of the world’s trains. The interest
-is not confined to Great Britain, for there are also pictures and
-articles concerning railways in Australia, Canada, the United States,
-and elsewhere.
-
- The
- Wonder
- Book of Animals
-
-All children who love animals—are there any who do not?—hail this
-handsome volume with delight.
-
-At a time when Nature-study in all its branches is so wisely encouraged
-in our schools, such a book forms the surest means of promoting lifelong
-interest in the subject. The services of some of the leading naturalists
-of the day have been enlisted, and amusement and instruction are so
-interwoven that, while it can be truthfully said there is not a dull
-page in the book, it is equally true that there is not a useless one.
-THE BOOK OF ANIMALS is suited to children of all ages.
-
- The
- Wonder
- Book of Children
- OF ALL NATIONS.
-
-Just the book that the times demand. The War has taught us all the
-importance of knowing more of the ways of life and modes of thought of
-other peoples, especially of those gallant Allies who have stood by us
-in the fight for freedom. The articles, though brimful of information,
-are brightly written and as thrilling as any story, while the
-ILLUSTRATIONS are absolutely unique in their variety and interest,
-having been garnered from every quarter of the globe. There are 12
-beautiful COLOURED PLATES by eminent artists.
-
- The
- Wonder
- Book of Empire
-
-Recent events and pending developments alike render it of the utmost
-importance that we should know more of the lands under the Union Jack,
-of their peoples and resources, their wonders and attractions.
-Especially is it important that the children of all parts of the Empire
-should realise how glorious is their heritage. In addition to over 300
-illustrations, the book has 16 pages of COLOURED PLATES, including the
-Arms and Badges of the principal Dominions, and a specially-drawn Map of
-the Empire.
-
- A
- Charming Colour Book
- FOR CHILDREN.
-
- ALICE’S ADVENTURES
- IN WONDERLAND
-
- Large Crown 8vo. Cloth Gilt. 340 Pages.
- Handsome Binding Design with Pictorial Wrapper
- and Endpapers. 3_s._ 6_d._ _net._
-
- 48 COLOURED PLATES
- By MARGARET W. TARRANT.
-
-=THE= edition of Lewis Carroll’s immortal masterpiece. Alice and the
-whimsical company she meets in the course of her adventures have been
-presented in many guises, but never has an artist so successfully
-conceived the characters from a child’s point of view, or given more
-happy expression to the sly humour and mock seriousness of the story.
-With no fewer than 48 pages of Coloured Plates, this daintily produced
-volume is easily superior to editions published at three or four times
-the price.
-
- OTHER
- Charming Colour
-
- WARD, LOCK & CO.’S BOOK OF
- Nursery Rhymes
-
- Large Crown 8vo. Cloth Gilt, 340 Pages.
- Handsome Binding Design with Pictorial Wrapper
- and Endpapers. 3_s._ 6_d._ _net._
-
- 48 COLOURED PLATES
- By MARGARET W. TARRANT
-
-Not since the days of Kate Greenaway have the old Nursery favourites
-been so daintily presented. Indeed, many will prefer Miss Tarrant’s
-renderings for their more playful fancy, greater delicacy of colouring,
-and richer variety of costume.
-
-Little Jack Homer, Jack Sprat, Tom Tucker, Old King Cole, and their
-illustrious company are all here, and in addition are many less-known
-pieces and a few modern rhymes of proved popularity.
-
-The type is large and well arranged, and by means of the full Index of
-First Lines any rhyme can be found in a moment.
-
- Books for Children
-
- WARD, LOCK & CO.’S BOOK OF
- FAIRY TALES
-
- Large Crown 8vo. Cloth Gilt. 360 Pages.
- Handsome Binding Design with Pictorial Wrapper
- and Endpapers. 3_s._ 6_d._ _net._
-
- 48 COLOURED PLATES
- By MARGARET W. TARRANT
-
-A companion volume to the Book of Nursery Rhymes, which has already
-achieved such popularity. Here again are all the immortals—old and yet
-ever new—Red Riding Hood, Cinderella, The Sleeping Beauty, Puss in
-Boots, Jack the Giant-Killer, the redoubtable Bluebeard, and a host of
-others. The text has been carefully edited in such a way that the
-youngest child can understand and enjoy the stories.
-
-With these volumes, or either of them, at hand neither Mother nor Nurse
-need fear a dull day in the playroom.
-
-As Birthday or Christmas Gifts for little people they are certain of
-warm appreciation.
-
- A
- Beautiful Gift Book.
-
- BIBLE STEPS FOR
- CHILDREN
-
- With 8 Coloured Plates and 16 Reproductions
- of some of the most Beautiful Pictures in
- Sacred Art.
-
-
- Large Crown 8vo. =2/6= NET.
-
-The sacred stories are here re-told in simple and reverent language
-easily intelligible to young people. Sunday School teachers and others
-will find this a most useful Gift Book.
-
-In the rush of modern life, and with minds blunted by much scanning of
-books and newspapers, we are apt to forget that a little child comes
-fresh to the Bible, and that the old, old stories make their appeal to
-him in all their majestic simplicity. If left to himself, uninfluenced
-by companions and older friends, he will frequently express a preference
-for such a story as that of Joseph and his brethren, or David and
-Goliath, to the most attractive of modern efforts. All that is necessary
-is to disentangle the stories from extraneous wrappings and to let them
-tell themselves. As an introduction to the Greatest of Story Books this
-volume will be found invaluable.
-
- Stories by
-
- ETHEL TURNER
-
-
- Large Crown 8vo, Fully Illustrated, Cloth Gilt, 2s. 6d.
-
-“MISS ETHEL TURNER is Miss Alcott’s true successor. The same healthy,
-spirited tone is visible, which boys and girls recognised and were
-grateful for in ‘Little Women’ and ‘Little Men,’ the same absence of
-primness, and the same love of adventure.”—_The Bookman._
-
- _NEW VOLUME_
-
- JOHN OF DAUNT
-
- With 6 Illustrations by
-
- HAROLD COPPING.
-
-Child characters when realistically portrayed in fiction, as Miss Turner
-alone can picture them, have always the same attraction as their living
-counterparts would have, did they exist. Everyone knows Miss Turner
-always writes well, but the publishers have no hesitation in claiming
-that in “John of Daunt,” she is seen at her best. Her titular character
-is as charming, original, and lovable as any the author has ever
-conceived, and the book should add much to her reputation.
-
- Stories by
-
- ETHEL TURNER
-
-
- Large Crown 8vo, Fully Illustrated, Cloth Gilt, 2_s._ 6_d._
-
- SEVEN LITTLE AUSTRALIANS.
- THE FAMILY AT MISRULE.
- THE LITTLE LARRIKIN.
- MISS BOBBIE.
- THE CAMP AT WANDINONG.
- THREE LITTLE MAIDS.
- STORY OF A BABY.
- LITTLE MOTHER MEG.
- BETTY AND CO.
- MOTHER’S LITTLE GIRL.
- THE WHITE ROOF-TREE.
- IN THE MIST OF THE MOUNTAINS.
- THE STOLEN VOYAGE.
- FUGITIVES FROM FORTUNE.
- THE RAFT IN THE BUSH.
- AN OGRE UP-TO-DATE.
- THAT GIRL.
- THE SECRET OF THE SEA.
- THE APPLE OF HAPPINESS.
- FAIR INES.
- THE FLOWER O’ THE PINE.
- THE CUB.
- PORTS AND HAPPY HAVENS. (3_s._ 6_d._)
-
- STORIES BY
-
- Mary Grant Bruce
-
- Large Crown 8vo, Fully Illustrated, Cloth Gilt, =2=s. =6=d.
-
-
- JIM AND WALLY.
-
-Mrs. Bruce writes with a freedom and grace which must win hosts of
-readers, and there is a loveableness about her Australian youths and
-maidens which makes one never tired of their healthy and sociable views
-of life.
-
- A LITTLE BUSH MAID.
-
-“It is a real pleasure to recommend this story to Australian
-readers.”—_Perth Western Mail._
-
- MATES AT BILLABONG.
-
-“The incidents of station life, its humours, festivities, and mishaps,
-are admirably sketched in this vivid narrative.”—_Adelaide Register._
-
- TIMOTHY IN BUSHLAND.
-
-“The writer understands all about the wonders of the Australian bush,
-its wild horses, kangaroos, wombats, and infinitely various natural
-life.”—_Daily Telegraph._
-
- GLEN EYRE.
-
-“‘Glen Eyre’ is a great advance upon anything we have read of Mrs.
-Bruce’s earlier work. An admirable story exquisitely told, full of
-gentle pathos, and ringing true all through.”—_The Sportsman._
-
- NORAH OF BILLABONG.
-
-“The story is written in a refreshing and lovable manner, which makes
-instant appeal, and we are quite sure the authoress will be asked for
-still ‘more Norah’.”—_Manchester Courier._
-
- GRAY’S HOLLOW.
-
-“A story always healthy and enjoyable in its sympathetic delineation of
-unsophisticated nature in both scenery and human beings.”—_The
-Scotsman._
-
- FROM BILLABONG TO LONDON.
-
-“The story has many more incidents than Mrs. Bruce’s earlier books, and
-though her style is quiet and matter-of-fact, she does succeed in
-infusing reality into her exciting episodes.”—_The Melbourne Argus._
-
- CHARMING STORIES BY
-
- Isabel M. Peacocke
-
- Fully Illustrated, Crown 8vo, =3=s. =6=d.
-
-
- MY FRIEND PHIL
-
- With Six Illustrations in Colour by MARGARET W. TARRANT.
-
-“QUEENSLAND TIMES.”—“A really delicious book . . . without doubt it is
-far and away the best book since Ethel Turner took the reading world by
-storm with her ‘Seven Little Australians.’ Phil is an eternal
-questioner, quizzer and actor. He is no white-haired Willie, but a
-natural, frank, unconventional young imp, who carries a golden heart and
-withal is a perfect gentleman. There is no laying down this book when
-opened until the end is reached, be the reader young or old.”
-
- DICKY, KNIGHT-ERRANT
-
- With Six Illustrations by HAROLD COPPING.
-
-MISS PEACOCKE is a new writer, who attracted attention last year by the
-publication of a phenomenally successful story entitled “My Friend
-Phil,” which has been recently dramatised, and also produced as a cinema
-play. It is far and away the best book since Ethel Turner took the
-reading world by storm with “Seven Little Australians.” The tale was
-droll, sympathetic, bright and full of literary charm. All the author’s
-fine qualities are reproduced in “Dicky, Knight-Errant,” the story of a
-delightful scamp of a Boy-Scout, who flits through a love romance like
-Cupid, and will cheer the hearts of young and old alike. The story is
-brim full of excitement and jollity, and is altogether sweet.
-
- The Little Wonder
- Books
-
- Medium 16mo, Picture Boards. =1=s. =0=d.
-
-The many children in all parts of the world who have grown accustomed
-year by year to look for THE WONDER BOOK as the most welcome feature of
-Christmas or the birthday will learn with interest that the big WONDER
-BOOK has now some little brothers and sisters. THE LITTLE WONDER BOOKS
-are not for big boys and girls at all; they are the little ones’ very
-own. Each booklet contains about Thirty Illustrations in Colour, printed
-on the very best art paper, and the type is so large and clear that it
-will not baffle even the tiniest toddler. Best of all, the stories are
-real stories, such as little people love and learn by heart almost
-without knowing they do so.
-
- 1. BOBBY BUN AND BUNTY.
- 2. THE BROWNIES’ BIRTHDAY.
- 3. APPLE TREE VILLA.
- 4. TIM TUBBY TOES.
- 5. MOTHER GOOSE: Nursery Rhymes.
- 6. TICK, TACK AND TOCK.
- 7. BULLY BOY.
- 8. ROBBIE AND DOBBIE.
- 9. THE ANIMAL A.B.C.
- 10. BEN BO’SUN.
- 11. THE TOY SOLDIERS.
- 12. BUBBLE AND SQUEAK.
- 13. OLD NOT-TOO-BRIGHT AND LILYWHITE.
- 14. THE GOBLIN SCOUTS.
-
- C. G. D. Roberts’
-
- NATURE BOOKS
-
-
- Large Crown 8vo. Cloth Gilt. Fully Illustrated.
- Pictorial Endpapers. =2=s. =6=d.
-
-A Beautifully produced series of Animal Stories by a writer who has
-succeeded in depicting the many thrilling incidents connected with
-Animal Life with a reality unapproached by any other living Author.
-
- HOOF AND CLAW
- THE HOUSE IN THE WATER
- THE BACKWOODSMEN
- KINGS IN EXILE
- NEIGHBOURS UNKNOWN
- MORE KINDRED OF THE WILD
- THE FEET OF THE FURTIVE
-
-“Under the guidance of Mr. Roberts we have often adventured among the
-wild beasts of the land and sea, and we hope to do so many times in the
-future. It is an education not to be missed by those who have the
-chance, and the chance is everyone’s. Mr. Roberts loves his wild nature,
-and his readers, both old and young, should love it with
-him.”—_Athenæum._
-
- WARD, LOCK & CO.’S
-
- Favourite Gift Books
-
- OF AUSTRALIAN CHILD LIFE.
-
- By LILIAN TURNER.
-
- =2=s. =6=d.
-
- AN AUSTRALIAN LASSIE.
- BETTY, THE SCRIBE.
- PARADISE AND THE PERRYS.
- THE PERRY GIRLS.
- THREE NEW CHUM GIRLS.
- APRIL GIRLS.
- STAIRWAYS TO THE STARS.
- A GIRL FROM THE BACK BLOCKS.
- WAR’S HEART THROBS.
-
- By VERA G. DWYER.
-
- =2=s. =6=d.
-
- WITH BEATING WINGS.
- A WAR OF GIRLS.
- MONA’S MYSTERY MAN.
- CONQUERING HAL.
-
- By OTHER AUTHORS.
-
- =2=s. =6=d.
-
- MAORILAND FAIRY TALES.
- EDITH HOWES.
-
- MAX THE SPORT.
- LILIAN M. PYKE.
-
- DAYS THAT SPEAK.
- EVELYN GOODE.
-
- THE CHILDHOOD OF HELEN.
- EVELYN GOODE.
-
- The Story of a Great Soldier
-
- LORD ROBERTS
-
- (K.G., V.C.),
-
- By CAPTAIN OWEN WHEELER
-
- Author of
- “The Story of Our Army,” “The War Office, Past and
- Present,” etc.
-
- Large Crown 8vo. Fully Illustrated, =3=s. =6=d. net.
-
-It has been felt that a life so adventurous and romantic as that of the
-great Field-Marshal should be enshrined in a volume which, while
-moderate in price, should also be authoritative, carefully and
-accurately written, and suitable especially for presentation to boys,
-both of this and future generations.
-
-The task of producing such a life has been very successfully
-accomplished by Captain Owen Wheeler, whose reputation as a writer on
-military men and military matters is too widely spread to need further
-reference.
-
-As a
-
- GIFT BOOK FOR BOYS
-
-of all ages this story of a dauntless hero could scarcely be surpassed,
-for long after his deeds as a soldier have lost all but historical
-significance his character will remain as an example to the manhood of
-Great Britain and the Empire, and indeed of all English-speaking races.
-
-The book is
-
- LAVISHLY ILLUSTRATED
-
-with portraits and drawings which practically depict the battle-history
-of the British Empire during a period of sixty years.
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER NOTES
-
-Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected. Where multiple
-spellings occur, majority use has been employed.
-
-Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious printer errors
-occur.
-
-Some illustrations were moved to facilitate page layout.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FROM BILLABONG TO LONDON ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg™ electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG™
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg™ mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase “Project
-Gutenberg”), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg™ License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg™ electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg™
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg™ electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. “Project Gutenberg” is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg™ electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg™ electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg™
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (“the
-Foundation” or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg™ mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg™
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg™ name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg™ License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg™ work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg™ License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg™ work (any work
-on which the phrase “Project Gutenberg” appears, or with which the
-phrase “Project Gutenberg” is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
- you are located before using this eBook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg™ electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase “Project
-Gutenberg” associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg™
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg™ electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg™ License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg™
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg™.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg™ License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg™ work in a format
-other than “Plain Vanilla ASCII” or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg™ website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original “Plain
-Vanilla ASCII” or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg™ License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg™ works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg™ electronic works
-provided that:
-
-• You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg™ works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg™ trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, “Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.”
-
-• You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg™
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg™
- works.
-
-• You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-• You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg™ works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg™ electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg™ trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg™ collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg™
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain “Defects,” such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the “Right
-of Replacement or Refund” described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg™ trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg™ electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you “AS-IS”, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg™ electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg™
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg™ work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg™ work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg™
-
-Project Gutenberg™ is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg™'s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg™ collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg™ and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg™ depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg™ electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg™ concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg™ eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg™ eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg™,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.