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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78420 ***
+
+
+
+
+ BUSH STUDIES
+
+
+
+
+ ~BARBARA BAYNTON~
+
+
+ BUSH STUDIES
+
+ BY
+ BARBARA BAYNTON
+
+
+ LONDON
+ DUCKWORTH & CO.,
+ 3, HENRIETTA STREET, W.C.
+
+ MDCCCCII.
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED BY R. FOLKARD AND SON,
+ 22, DEVONSHIRE STREET, QUEEN SQUARE, BLOOMSBURY,
+ LONDON, W.C.
+
+
+
+
+ TO
+ HELEN McMILLEN
+ OF SYDNEY
+ NEW SOUTH WALES
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+ A Dreamer 1
+
+ Squeaker’s Mate 15
+
+ Scrammy ’And 44
+
+ Billy Skywonkie 79
+
+ Bush Church 106
+
+ The Chosen Vessel 142
+
+
+
+
+ NOTE.
+
+
+ SCRAMMY ’AND.
+ “Scrammy” indicates malformation of either hand or foot.
+
+ BILLY SKYWONKIE.
+ “Skywonkie” signifies weather-prophet.
+
+
+
+
+ A DREAMER.
+
+
+A swirl of wet leaves from the night-hidden trees decorating the
+little station, beat against the closed doors of the carriages. The
+porter hurried along holding his blear-eyed lantern to the different
+windows, and calling the name of the township in language peculiar to
+porters. There was only one ticket to collect.
+
+Passengers from far up-country towns have importance from their
+rarity. He turned his lantern full on this one, as he took her
+ticket. She looked at him too, and listened to the sound of his
+voice, as he spoke to the guard. Once she had known every hand at the
+station. The porter knew everyone in the district. This traveller was
+a stranger to him.
+
+If her letter had been received, someone would have been waiting
+with a buggy. She passed through the station. She saw nothing but an
+ownerless dog, huddled, wet and shivering, in a corner. More for
+sound she turned to look up the straggling street of the township.
+Among the sheoaks, bordering the river she knew so well, the wind
+made ghostly music, unheeded by the sleeping town. There was no other
+sound, and she turned to the dog with a feeling of kinship. But
+perhaps the porter had a message! She went back to the platform. He
+was locking the office door, but paused as though expecting her to
+speak.
+
+“Wet night!” he said at length, breaking the silence.
+
+Her question resolved itself into a request for the time, though this
+she already knew. She hastily left him.
+
+She drew her cloak tightly round her. The wind made her umbrella
+useless for shelter. Wind and rain and darkness lay before her on the
+walk of three bush miles to her mother’s home. Still it was the home
+of her girlhood, and she knew every inch of the way.
+
+As she passed along the sleeping street, she saw no sign of life
+till near the end. A light burned in a small shop, and the sound of
+swift tapping came to her. They work late to-night, she thought, and,
+remembering their gruesome task, hesitated, half-minded to ask these
+night workers, for whom they laboured. Was it someone she had known?
+The long dark walk--she could not--and hastened to lose the sound.
+
+The zigzag course of the railway brought the train again near to
+her, and this wayfarer stood and watched it tunnelling in the teeth
+of the wind. Whoof! whoof! its steaming breath hissed at her. She
+saw the rain spitting viciously at its red mouth. Its speed, as it
+passed, made her realise the tedious difficulties of her journey,
+and she quickened her pace. There was the silent tenseness, that
+precedes a storm. From the branch of a tree overhead she heard a
+watchful mother-bird’s warning call, and the twitter of the disturbed
+nestlings. The tender care of this bird-mother awoke memories of her
+childhood. What mattered the lonely darkness, when it led to mother.
+Her forebodings fled, and she faced the old track unheedingly, and
+ever and ever she smiled, as she foretasted their meeting.
+
+“Daughter!”
+
+“Mother!”
+
+She could feel loving arms around her, and a mother’s sacred kisses.
+She thrilled, and in her impatience ran, but the wind was angry and
+took her breath. Then the child near her heart stirred for the first
+time. The instincts of motherhood awakened in her. Her elated body
+quivered, she fell on her knees, lifted her hands, and turned her
+face to God. A vivid flash of lightning flamed above her head. It
+dulled her rapture. The lightning was very near.
+
+She went on, then paused. Was she on the right track? Back, near
+the bird’s nest, were two roads. One led to home, the other was the
+old bullock-dray road, that the railway had almost usurped. When
+she should have been careful in her choice, she had been absorbed.
+It was a long way back to the cross roads, and she dug in her mind
+for landmarks. Foremost she recalled the “Bendy Tree,” then the
+“Sisters,” whose entwined arms talked, when the wind was from the
+south. The apple trees on the creek--split flat, where the cows and
+calves were always to be found. The wrong track, being nearer the
+river, had clumps of she-oaks and groups of pines in places. An
+angled line of lightning illumined everything, but the violence of
+the thunder distracted her.
+
+She stood in uncertainty, near-sighted, with all the horror of the
+unknown, that this infirmity could bring. Irresolute, she waited for
+another flash. It served to convince her, she was wrong. Through the
+bush she turned.
+
+The sky seemed to crack with the lightning; the thunder’s suddenness
+shook her. Among some tall pines she stood awed, while the storm
+raged.
+
+Then again that indefinite fear struck at her. Restlessly she pushed
+on till she stumbled, and, with hands out-stretched, met some object
+that moved beneath them as she fell. The lightning showed a group of
+terrified cattle. Tripping and falling, she ran, she knew not where,
+but keeping her eyes turned towards the cattle. Aimlessly she pushed
+on, and unconsciously retraced her steps.
+
+She struck the track she was on when her first doubt came. If this
+were the right way, the wheel ruts would show. She groped, but the
+rain had levelled them. There was nothing to guide her. Suddenly she
+remembered that the little clump of pines, where the cattle were, lay
+between the two roads. She had gathered mistletoe berries there in
+the old days.
+
+She believed, she hoped, she prayed, that she was right. If so, a
+little further on, she would come to the “Bendy Tree.” There long
+ago a runaway horse had crushed its drunken rider against the bent,
+distorted trunk. She could recall how in her young years that tree
+had ever after had a weird fascination for her.
+
+She saw its crooked body in the lightning’s glare. She was on the
+right track, yet dreaded to go on. Her childhood’s fear came back. In
+a transient flash she thought she saw a horseman galloping furiously
+towards her. She placed both her hands protectingly over her heart,
+and waited. In the dark interval, above the shriek of the wind, she
+thought she heard a cry, then crash came the thunder, drowning her
+call of warning. In the next flash she saw nothing but the tree. “Oh,
+God, protect me!” she prayed, and diverging, with a shrinking heart
+passed on.
+
+The road dipped to the creek. Louder and louder came the roar of its
+flooded waters. Even little Dog-trap Gully was proudly foaming itself
+hoarse. It emptied below where she must cross. But there were others,
+that swelled it above.
+
+The noise of the rushing creek was borne to her by the wind, still
+fierce, though the rain had lessened. Perhaps there would be someone
+to meet her at the bank! Last time she had come, the night had been
+fine, and though she had been met at the station by a neighbour’s
+son, mother had come to the creek with a lantern and waited for her.
+She looked eagerly, but there was no light.
+
+The creek was a banker, but the track led to a plank, which, lashed
+to the willows on either bank, was usually above flood-level. A
+churning sound showed that the water was over the plank, and she must
+wade along it. She turned to the sullen sky. There was no gleam of
+light save in her resolute, white face.
+
+Her mouth grew tender, as she thought of the husband she loved, and
+of their child. Must she dare! She thought of the grey-haired mother,
+who was waiting on the other side. This dwarfed every tie that had
+parted them. There was atonement in these difficulties and dangers.
+
+Again her face turned heavenward! “Bless, pardon, protect and guide,
+strengthen and comfort!” Her mother’s prayer.
+
+Steadying herself by the long willow branches, ankle deep she began.
+With every step the water deepened.
+
+Malignantly the wind fought her, driving her back, or snapping the
+brittle stems from her skinned hands. The water was knee-deep now,
+and every step more hazardous.
+
+She held with her teeth to a thin limb, while she unfastened her hat
+and gave it to the greedy wind. From the cloak, a greater danger,
+she could not in her haste free herself; her numbed fingers had lost
+their cunning.
+
+Soon the water would be deeper, and the support from the branches
+less secure. Even if they did reach across, she could not hope for
+much support from their wind-driven, fragile ends.
+
+Still she would not go back. Though the roar of that rushing water
+was making her giddy, though the deafening wind fought her for every
+inch, she would not turn back.
+
+Long ago she should have come to her old mother, and her heart gave a
+bound of savage rapture in thus giving the sweat of her body for the
+sin of her soul.
+
+Midway the current strengthened. Perhaps if she, deprived of the
+willows, were swept down, her clothes would keep her afloat. She took
+firm hold and drew a deep breath to call her child-cry, “Mother!”
+
+The water was deeper and swifter, and from the sparsity of the
+branches she knew she was nearing the middle. The wind unopposed by
+the willows was more powerful. Strain as she would, she could reach
+only the tips of the opposite trees, not hold them.
+
+Despair shook her. With one hand she gripped those, that had served
+her so far, and cautiously drew as many as she could grasp with
+the other. The wind savagely snapped them, and they lashed her
+unprotected face. Round and round her bare neck they coiled their
+stripped fingers. Her mother had planted these willows, and she
+herself had watched them grow. How could they be so hostile to her!
+
+The creek deepened with every moment she waited. But more dreadful
+than the giddying water was the distracting noise of the mighty wind,
+nurtured by the hollows.
+
+The frail twigs of the opposite tree snapped again and again in her
+hands. She must release her hold of those behind her. If she could
+make two steps independently, the thicker branches would then be her
+stay.
+
+“Will you?” yelled the wind. A sudden gust caught her, and, hurling
+her backwards, swept her down the stream with her cloak for a sail.
+
+She battled instinctively, and her first thought was of the
+letter-kiss, she had left for the husband she loved. Was it to be his
+last?
+
+She clutched a floating branch, and was swept down with it. Vainly
+she fought for either bank. She opened her lips to call. The wind
+made a funnel of her mouth and throat, and a wave of muddy water
+choked her cry. She struggled desperately, but after a few mouthfuls
+she ceased. The weird cry from the “Bendy Tree” pierced and conquered
+the deep throated wind. Then a sweet dream voice whispered “Little
+Woman!”
+
+Soft, strong arms carried her on. Weakness aroused the melting idea
+that all had been a mistake, and she had been fighting with friends.
+The wind even crooned a lullaby. Above the angry waters her face rose
+untroubled.
+
+A giant tree’s fallen body said, “Thus far!” and in vain the athletic
+furious water rushed and strove to throw her over the barrier. Driven
+back, it tried to take her with it. But a jagged arm of the tree
+snagged her cloak and held her.
+
+Bruised and half conscious she was left to her deliverer, and the
+back-broken water crept tamed under its old foe. The hammer of hope
+awoke her heart. Along the friendly back of the tree she crawled, and
+among its bared roots rested. But it was only to get her breath, for
+this was mother’s side.
+
+She breasted the rise. Then every horror was of the past and
+forgotten, for there in the hollow was home.
+
+And there was the light shining its welcome to her.
+
+She quickened her pace, but did not run--motherhood is instinct in
+woman. The rain had come again, and the wind buffeted her. To breathe
+was a battle, yet she went on swiftly, for at the sight of the light
+her nameless fear had left her.
+
+She would tell mother how she had heard her call in the night, and
+mother would smile her grave smile and stroke her wet hair, call her
+“Little woman! My little woman!” and tell her she had been dreaming,
+just dreaming. Ah, but mother herself was a dreamer!
+
+The gate was swollen with rain and difficult to open. It had been
+opened by mother last time. But plainly her letter had not reached
+home. Perhaps the bad weather had delayed the mail boy.
+
+There was the light. She was not daunted when the bark of the old dog
+brought no one to the door. It might not be heard inside, for there
+was such a torrent of water falling somewhere close. Mechanically
+her mind located it. The tank near the house, fed by the spouts was
+running over, cutting channels through the flower beds, and flooding
+the paths. Why had not mother diverted the spout to the other tank!
+
+Something indefinite held her. Her mind went back to the many times
+long ago when she had kept alive the light while mother fixed the
+spout to save the water that the dry summer months made precious. It
+was not like mother, for such carelessness meant carrying from the
+creek.
+
+Suddenly she grew cold and her heart trembled. After she had seen
+mother, she would come out and fix it, but just now she could not
+wait.
+
+She tapped gently, and called “Mother!”
+
+While she waited she tried to make friends with the dog. Her heart
+smote her, in that there had been so long an interval since she saw
+her old home, that the dog had forgotten her voice.
+
+Her teeth chattered as she again tapped softly. The sudden light
+dazzled her when a stranger opened the door for her. Steadying
+herself by the wall, with wild eyes she looked around. Another
+strange woman stood by the fire, and a child slept on the couch. The
+child’s mother raised it, and the other led the now panting creature
+to the child’s bed. Not a word was spoken, and the movements of these
+women were like those who fear to awaken a sleeper.
+
+Something warm was held to her lips, for through it all she was
+conscious of everything, even that the numbing horror in her eyes met
+answering awe in theirs.
+
+In the light the dog knew her and gave her welcome. But she had none
+for him now.
+
+When she rose one of the women lighted a candle. She noticed how,
+if the blazing wood cracked, the women started nervously, how the
+disturbed child pointed to her bruised face, and whispered softly to
+its mother, how she who lighted the candle did not strike the match
+but held it to the fire, and how the light bearer led the way so
+noiselessly.
+
+She reached her mother’s room. Aloft the woman held the candle and
+turned away her head.
+
+The daughter parted the curtains, and the light fell on the face of
+the sleeper who would dream no dreams that night.
+
+
+
+
+ SQUEAKER’S MATE.
+
+
+The woman carried the bag with the axe and maul and wedges; the
+man had the billy and clean tucker bags; the cross-cut saw linked
+them. She was taller than the man, and the equability of her body
+contrasting with his indolent slouch, accentuated the difference.
+“Squeaker’s mate” the men called her, and these agreed that she
+was the best long-haired mate that ever stepped in petticoats.
+The Selectors’ wives pretended to challenge her right to womanly
+garments, but if she knew what they said, it neither turned nor
+troubled Squeaker’s mate.
+
+Nine prospective posts and maybe sixteen rails--she calculated this
+yellow gum would yield. “Come on,” she encouraged the man; “let’s
+tackle it.”
+
+From the bag she took the axe, and ring barked a preparatory circle,
+while he looked for a shady spot for the billy and tucker bags.
+
+“Come on.” She was waiting with the greased saw. He came. The saw
+rasped through a few inches, then he stopped and looked at the sun.
+
+“It’s nigh tucker time,” he said, and when she dissented, he
+exclaimed, with sudden energy, “There’s another bee! Wait, you go on
+with the axe, an’ I’ll track ’im.”
+
+As they came, they had already followed one and located the nest. She
+could not see the bee he spoke of, though her grey eyes were as keen
+as a Black’s. However she knew the man, and her tolerance was of the
+mysteries.
+
+She drew out the saw, spat on her hands, and with the axe began
+weakening the inclining side of the tree.
+
+Long and steadily and in secret the worm had been busy in the heart.
+Suddenly the axe blade sank softly, the tree’s wounded edges closed
+on it like a vice. There was a “settling” quiver on its top branches,
+which the woman heard and understood. The man, encouraged by the
+sounds of the axe, had returned with an armful of sticks for the
+billy. He shouted gleefully, “It’s fallin’, look out.”
+
+But she waited to free the axe.
+
+With a shivering groan the tree fell, and as she sprang aside, a
+thick worm-eaten branch snapped at a joint and silently she went down
+under it.
+
+“I tole yer t’ look out,” he reminded her, as with a crow-bar, and
+grunting earnestly, he forced it up. “Now get out quick.”
+
+She tried moving her arms and the upper part of her body. Do this; do
+that, he directed, but she made no movement after the first.
+
+He was impatient, because for once he had actually to use his
+strength. His share of a heavy lift usually consisted of a
+make-believe grunt, delivered at a critical moment. Yet he hardly
+cared to let it again fall on her, though he told her he would, if
+she “didn’t shift.”
+
+Near him lay a piece broken short; with his foot he drew it nearer,
+then gradually worked it into a position, till it acted as a stay to
+the lever.
+
+He laid her on her back when he drew her out, and waited expecting
+some acknowledgment of his exertions, but she was silent, and as
+she did not notice that the axe, she had tried to save, lay with
+the fallen trunk across it, he told her. She cared almost tenderly
+for all their possessions and treated them as friends. But the
+half-buried broken axe did not affect her. He wondered a little, for
+only last week she had patiently chipped out the old broken head, and
+put in a new handle.
+
+“Feel bad?” he inquired at length.
+
+“Pipe,” she replied with slack lips.
+
+Both pipes lay in the fork of a near tree. He took his, shook out
+the ashes, filled it, picked up a coal and puffed till it was
+alight--then he filled hers. Taking a small firestick he handed her
+the pipe. The hand she raised shook and closed in an uncertain hold,
+but she managed by a great effort to get it to her mouth. He lost
+patience with the swaying hand that tried to take the light.
+
+“Quick,” he said “quick, that damn dog’s at the tucker.”
+
+He thrust it into her hand that dropped helplessly across her chest.
+The lighted stick falling between her bare arm and the dress, slowly
+roasted the flesh and smouldered the clothes.
+
+He rescued their dinner, pelted his dog out of sight--hers was lying
+near her head, put on the billy, then came back to her.
+
+The pipe had fallen from her lips; there was blood on the stem.
+
+“Did yer jam yer tongue?” he asked.
+
+She always ignored trifles he knew, therefore he passed her silence.
+
+He told her that her dress was on fire. She took no heed. He put it
+out, and looked at the burnt arm, then with intentness at her.
+
+Her eyes were turned unblinkingly to the heavens, her lips were
+grimly apart, and a strange greyness was upon her face, and the
+sweat-beads were mixing.
+
+“Like a drink er tea? Asleep?”
+
+He broke a green branch from the fallen tree and swished from his
+face the multitudes of flies that had descended with it.
+
+In a heavy way he wondered why did she sweat, when she was not
+working? Why did she not keep the flies out of her mouth and eyes?
+She’d have bungy eyes, if she didn’t. If she was asleep, why did she
+not close them?
+
+But asleep or awake, as the billy began to boil, he left her, made
+the tea, and ate his dinner. His dog had disappeared, and as it did
+not come to his whistle, he threw the pieces to hers, that would not
+leave her head to reach them.
+
+He whistled tunelessly his one air, beating his own time with a
+stick on the toe of his blucher, then looked overhead at the sun and
+calculated that she must have been lying like that for “close up
+an hour.” He noticed that the axe handle was broken in two places,
+and speculated a little as to whether she would again pick out the
+back-broken handle or burn it out in his method, which was less
+trouble, if it did spoil the temper of the blade. He examined the
+worm-dust in the stump and limbs of the newly-fallen tree; mounted
+it and looked round the plain. The sheep were straggling in a manner
+that meant walking work to round them, and he supposed he would have
+to yard them to-night, if she didn’t liven up. He looked down at
+unenlivened her. This changed his “chune” to a call for his hiding
+dog.
+
+“Come on, ole feller,” he commanded her dog. “Fetch ’em back.” He
+whistled further instructions, slapping his thigh and pointing to the
+sheep.
+
+But a brace of wrinkles either side the brute’s closed mouth
+demonstrated determined disobedience. The dog would go if she told
+him, and by and bye she would.
+
+He lighted his pipe and killed half an hour smoking. With the
+frugality that hard graft begets, his mate limited both his and her
+own tobacco, so he must not smoke all afternoon. There was no work
+to shirk, so time began to drag. Then a goanner crawling up a tree
+attracted him. He gathered various missiles and tried vainly to hit
+the seemingly grinning reptile. He came back and sneaked a fill of
+her tobacco, and while he was smoking, the white tilt of a cart
+caught his eye. He jumped up. “There’s Red Bob goin’ t’ our place fur
+th’ ’oney,” he said, “I’ll go an’ weigh it an’ get the gonz” (money).
+
+He ran for the cart, and kept looking back as if fearing she would
+follow and thwart him.
+
+Red Bob the dealer was, in a business way, greatly concerned, when
+he found that Squeaker’s mate was “avin’ a sleep out there ’cos a
+tree fell on her.” She was the best honey strainer and boiler that he
+dealt with. She was straight and square too. There was no water in
+her honey whether boiled or merely strained, and in every kerosene
+tin the weight of honey was to an ounce as she said. Besides he was
+suspicious and diffident of paying the indecently eager Squeaker
+before he saw the woman. So reluctantly Squeaker led to where she
+lay. With many fierce oaths Red Bob sent her lawful protector for
+help, and compassionately poured a little from his flask down her
+throat, then swished away the flies from her till help came.
+
+Together these men stripped a sheet of bark, and laying her with
+pathetic tenderness upon it, carried her to her hut. Squeaker
+followed in the rear with the billy and tucker.
+
+Red Bob took his horse from the cart, and went to town for the
+doctor. Late that night at the back of the old hut (there were
+two) he and others who had heard that she was hurt, squatted with
+unlighted pipes in their mouths, waiting to hear the doctor’s
+verdict. After he had given it and gone, they discussed in whispers,
+and with a look seen only on bush faces, the hard luck of that woman
+who alone had hard-grafted with the best of them for every acre and
+hoof on that selection. Squeaker would go through it in no time. Why
+she had allowed it to be taken up in his name, when the money had
+been her own, was also for them among the mysteries.
+
+Him they called “a nole woman,” not because he was hanging round the
+honey tins, but after man’s fashion to eliminate all virtue. They
+beckoned him, and explaining his mate’s injury, cautioned him to keep
+from her the knowledge that she would be for ever a cripple.
+
+“Jus’ th’ same, now then fur ’im,” pointing to Red Bob, “t’ pay me,
+I’ll ’ev t’ go t’ town.”
+
+They told him in whispers what they thought of him, and with a
+cowardly look towards where she lay, but without a word of parting,
+like shadows these men made for their homes.
+
+Next day the women came. Squeaker’s mate was not a favourite with
+them--a woman with no leisure for yarning was not likely to be. After
+the first day they left her severely alone, their plea to their
+husbands, her uncompromising independence. It is in the ordering of
+things that by degrees most husbands accept their wives’ views of
+other women.
+
+The flour bespattering Squeaker’s now neglected clothes spoke
+eloquently of his clumsy efforts at damper making. The women gave him
+many a feed, agreeing that it must be miserable for him.
+
+If it were miserable and lonely for his mate, she did not complain;
+for her the long, long days would give place to longer nights--those
+nights with the pregnant bush silence suddenly cleft by a bush voice.
+However, she was not fanciful, and being a bush scholar knew ’twas a
+dingo, when a long whine came from the scrub on the skirts of which
+lay the axe under the worm-eaten tree. That quivering wail from the
+billabong lying murkily mystic towards the East was only the cry of
+the fearing curlew.
+
+Always her dog--wakeful and watchful as she--patiently waiting for
+her to be up and about again. That would be soon, she told her
+complaining mate.
+
+“Yer won’t. Yer back’s broke,” said Squeaker laconically. “That’s
+wot’s wrong er yer; injoory t’ th’ spine. Doctor says that means
+back’s broke, and yer won’t never walk no more. No good not t’ tell
+yer, cos I can’t be doin’ everythin’.”
+
+A wild look grew on her face, and she tried to sit up.
+
+“Erh,” said he, “see! yer carnt, yer jes’ ther same as a snake w’en
+ees back’s broke, on’y yer don’t bite yerself like a snake does w’en
+’e carnt crawl. Yer did bite yer tongue w’en yer fell.”
+
+She gasped, and he could hear her heart beating when she let her
+head fall back a few moments; though she wiped her wet forehead with
+the back of her hand, and still said that was the doctor’s mistake.
+But day after day she tested her strength, and whatever the result,
+was silent, though white witnesses, halo-wise, gradually circled her
+brow and temples.
+
+“’Tisn’t as if yer was agoin’ t’ get better t’morrer, the doctor says
+yer won’t never work no more, an’ I can’t be cookin’ an’ workin’ an’
+doin’ everythin’!”
+
+He muttered something about “sellin’ out,” but she firmly refused to
+think of such a monstrous proposal.
+
+He went into town one Saturday afternoon soon after, and did not
+return till Monday.
+
+Her supplies, a billy of tea and scraps of salt beef and damper (her
+dog got the beef), gave out the first day, though that was as nothing
+to her compared with the bleat of the penned sheep, for it was summer
+and droughty, and her dog could not unpen them.
+
+Of them and her dog only she spoke when he returned. He d----d him,
+and d----d her, and told her to “double up yer ole broke back an’
+bite yerself.” He threw things about, made a long-range feint of
+kicking her threatening dog, then sat outside in the shade of the old
+hut, nursing his head till he slept.
+
+She, for many reasons, had when necessary made these trips into town,
+walking both ways, leading a pack horse for supplies. She never
+failed to indulge him in a half pint--a pipe was her luxury.
+
+The sheep waited till next day, so did she.
+
+For a few days he worked a little in her sight; not much--he never
+did. It was she who always lifted the heavy end of the log, and
+carried the tools; he--the billy and tucker.
+
+She wearily watched him idling his time; reminded him that the wire
+lying near the fence would rust, one could run the wire through
+easily, and when she got up in a day or so, she would help strain and
+fasten it. At first he pretended he had done it, later said he wasn’t
+goin’ t’ go wirin’ or nothin’ else by ’imself if every other man on
+the place did.
+
+She spoke of many other things that could be done by one, reserving
+the great till she was well. Sometimes he whistled while she spoke,
+often swore, generally went out, and when this was inconvenient, dull
+as he was, he found the “Go and bite yerself like a snake,” would
+instantly silence her.
+
+At last the work worry ceased to exercise her, and for night to bring
+him home was a rare thing.
+
+Her dog rounded and yarded the sheep when the sun went down and there
+was no sign of him, and together they kept watch on their movements
+till dawn. She was mindful not to speak of this care to him, knowing
+he would have left it for them to do constantly, and she noticed that
+what little interest he seemed to share went to the sheep. Why, was
+soon demonstrated.
+
+Through the cracks her ever watchful eyes one day saw the dust rise
+out of the plain. Nearer it came till she saw him and a man on
+horseback rounding and driving the sheep into the yard, and later
+both left in charge of a little mob. Their “Baa-baas” to her were
+cries for help; many had been pets. So he was selling her sheep to
+the town butchers.
+
+In the middle of the next week he came from town with a fresh horse,
+new saddle and bridle. He wore a flash red shirt, and round his neck
+a silk handkerchief. On the next occasion she smelt scent, and
+though he did not try to display the dandy meerschaum, she saw it,
+and heard the squeak of the new boots, not bluchers. However he was
+kinder to her this time, offering a fill of his cut tobacco; he had
+long ceased to keep her supplied. Several of the men who sometimes in
+passing took a look in, would have made up her loss had they known,
+but no word of complaint passed her lips.
+
+She looked at Squeaker as he filled his pipe from his pouch, but he
+would not meet her eyes, and, seemingly dreading something, slipped
+out.
+
+She heard him hammering in the old hut at the back, which served for
+tools and other things which sunlight and rain did not hurt. Quite
+briskly he went in and out. She could see him through the cracks
+carrying a narrow strip of bark, and understood, he was making a
+bunk. When it was finished he had a smoke, then came to her and
+fidgetted about; he said this hut was too cold, and that she would
+never get well in it. She did not feel cold, but, submitting to his
+mood, allowed him to make a fire that would roast a sheep. He took
+off his hat, and fanning himself, said he was roastin’, wasn’t she?
+She was.
+
+He offered to carry her into the other; he would put a new roof on it
+in a day or two, and it would be better than this one, and she would
+be up in no time. He stood to say this where she could not see him.
+
+His eagerness had tripped him.
+
+There were months to run before all the Government conditions
+of residence, etc., in connection with the selection, would be
+fulfilled, still she thought perhaps he was trying to sell out, and
+she would not go.
+
+He was away four days that time, and when he returned slept in the
+new bunk.
+
+She compromised. Would he put a bunk there for himself, keep out of
+town, and not sell the place? He promised instantly with additions.
+
+“Try could yer crawl yerself?” he coaxed, looking at her bulk.
+
+Her nostrils quivered with her suppressed breathing, and her lips
+tightened, but she did not attempt to move.
+
+It was evident some great purpose actuated him. After attempts to
+carry and drag her, he rolled her on the sheet of bark that had
+brought her home, and laboriously drew her round.
+
+She asked for a drink, he placed her billy and tin pint besides the
+bunk, and left her gasping and dazed to her sympathetic dog.
+
+She saw him run up and yard his horse, and though she called him, he
+would not answer nor come.
+
+When he rode swiftly towards the town, her dog leaped on the bunk,
+and joined a refrain to her lamentation, but the cat took to the bush.
+
+He came back at dusk next day in a spring cart--not alone--he had
+another mate. She saw her though he came a roundabout way, trying to
+keep in front of the new hut.
+
+There were noises of moving many things from the cart to the hut.
+Finally he came to a crack near where she lay, and whispered the
+promise of many good things to her if she kept quiet, and that he
+would set her hut afire if she didn’t. She was quiet, he need not
+have feared, for that time she was past it, she was stunned.
+
+The released horse came stumbling round to the old hut, and thrust
+its head in the door in a domesticated fashion. Her dog promptly
+resented this straggler mistaking their hut for a stable. And the
+dog’s angry dissent, together with the shod clatter of the rapidly
+disappearing intruder, seemed to have a disturbing effect on the
+pair in the new hut. The settling sounds suddenly ceased, and the
+cripple heard the stranger close the door, despite Squeaker’s
+assurances that the woman in the old hut could not move from her bunk
+to save her life, and that her dog would not leave her.
+
+Food, more and better, was placed near her--but, dumb and motionless,
+she lay with her face turned to the wall, and her dog growled
+menacingly at the stranger. The new woman was uneasy, and told
+Squeaker what people might say and do if she died.
+
+He scared at the “do,” went into the bush and waited.
+
+She went to the door, not the crack, the face was turned that way,
+and said she had come to cook and take care of her.
+
+The disabled woman, turning her head slowly, looked steadily at her.
+She was not much to look at. Her red hair hung in an uncurled bang
+over her forehead, the lower part of her face had robbed the upper,
+and her figure evinced imminent motherhood, though it is doubtful if
+the barren woman, noting this, knew by calculation the paternity was
+not Squeaker’s. She was not learned in these matters, though she
+understood all about an ewe and lamb.
+
+One circumstance was apparent--ah! bitterest of all bitterness to
+women--she was younger.
+
+The thick hair that fell from the brow of the woman on the bunk was
+white now.
+
+Bread and butter the woman brought. The cripple looked at it, at her
+dog, at the woman. Bread and butter for a dog! but the stranger did
+not understand till she saw it offered to the dog. The bread and
+butter was not for the dog. She brought meat.
+
+All next day the man kept hidden. The cripple saw his dog, and knew
+he was about.
+
+But there was an end of this pretence when at dusk he came back
+with a show of haste, and a finger of his right hand bound and
+ostentatiously prominent. His entrance caused great excitement to
+his new mate. The old mate, who knew this snake-bite trick from its
+inception, maybe, realised how useless were the terrified stranger’s
+efforts to rouse the snoring man after an empty pint bottle had been
+flung on the outside heap.
+
+However, what the sick woman thought was not definite, for she kept
+silent always. Neither was it clear how much she ate, and how much
+she gave to her dog, though the new mate said to Squeaker one day
+that she believed that the dog would not take a bite more than its
+share.
+
+The cripple’s silence told on the stranger, especially when alone.
+She would rather have abuse. Eagerly she counted the days past and
+to pass. Then back to the town. She told no word of that hope to
+Squeaker, he had no place in her plans for the future. So if he spoke
+of what they would do by-and-bye when his time would be up, and he
+able to sell out, she listened in uninterested silence.
+
+She did tell him she was afraid of “her,” and after the first day
+would not go within reach, but every morning made a billy of tea,
+which with bread and beef Squeaker carried to her.
+
+The rubbish heap was adorned, for the first time, with jam and fish
+tins from the table in the new hut. It seemed to be understood that
+neither woman nor dog in the old hut required them.
+
+Squeaker’s dog sniffed and barked joyfully around them till his
+licking efforts to bottom a salmon tin sent him careering in a
+muzzled frenzy, that caused the younger woman’s thick lips to part
+grinningly till he came too close.
+
+The remaining sheep were regularly yarded. His old mate heard him
+whistle as he did it. Squeaker began to work about a little burning
+off. So that now, added to the other bush voices, was the call from
+some untimely falling giant. There is no sound so human as that from
+the riven souls of these tree people, or the trembling sighs of their
+upright neighbours whose hands in time will meet over the victim’s
+fallen body.
+
+There was no bunk on the side of the hut to which her eyes turned,
+but her dog filled that space, and the flash that passed between this
+back-broken woman and her dog might have been the spirit of these
+slain tree folk, it was so wondrous ghostly. Still, at times, the
+practical in her would be dominant, for in a mind so free of fancies,
+backed by bodily strength, hope died slowly, and forgetful of self
+she would almost call to Squeaker her fears that certain bees’ nests
+were in danger.
+
+He went into town one day and returned, as he had promised, long
+before sundown, and next day a clothes line bridged the space between
+two trees near the back of the old hut; and--an equally rare
+occurrence--Squeaker placed across his shoulders the yoke that his
+old mate had fashioned for herself, with two kerosene tins attached,
+and brought them filled with water from the distant creek; but both
+only partly filled the tub, a new purchase. With utter disregard of
+the heat and Squeaker’s sweating brow, his new mate said, even after
+another trip, two more now for the blue water. Under her commands he
+brought them, though sullenly, perhaps contrasting the old mate’s
+methods with the new.
+
+His old mate had periodically carried their washing to the creek, and
+his mole skins had been as white as snow without aid of blue.
+
+Towards noon, on the clothes line many strange garments fluttered,
+suggestive of a taunt to the barren woman. When the sun went down she
+could have seen the assiduous Squeaker lower the new prop-sticks and
+considerately stoop to gather the pegs his inconsiderate new mate had
+dropped. However, after one load of water next morning, on hearing
+her estimate that three more would put her own things through,
+Squeaker struck. Nothing he could urge would induce the stranger
+to trudge to the creek, where thirst-slaked snakes lay waiting for
+someone to bite. She sulked and pretended to pack up, till a bright
+idea struck Squeaker. He fastened a cask on a sledge and harnessing
+the new horse, hitched him to it, and, under the approving eyes of
+his new mate, led off to the creek, though, when she went inside, he
+bestrode the spiritless brute.
+
+He had various mishaps, any one of which would have served as an
+excuse to his old mate, but even babes soon know on whom to impose.
+With an energy new to him he persevered and filled the cask, but the
+old horse repudiated such a burden even under Squeaker’s unmerciful
+welts. Almost half was sorrowfully baled out, and under a rain of
+whacks the horse shifted it a few paces, but the cask tilted and the
+thirsty earth got its contents. All Squeaker’s adjectives over his
+wasted labour were as unavailing as the cure for spilt milk.
+
+It took skill and patience to rig the cask again. He partly filled
+it, and just as success seemed probable, the rusty wire fastening the
+cask to the sledge snapped with the strain, and springing free coiled
+affectionately round the terrified horse’s hocks. Despite the sledge
+(the cask had been soon disposed of) that old town horse’s pace then
+was his record. Hours after, on the plain that met the horizon,
+loomed two specks: the distance between them might be gauged, for the
+larger was Squeaker.
+
+Anticipating a plentiful supply and lacking in bush caution, the new
+mate used the half bucket of water to boil the salt mutton. Towards
+noon she laid this joint and bread on the rough table, then watched
+anxiously in the wrong direction for Squeaker.
+
+She had drained the new tea-pot earlier, but she placed the spout to
+her thirsty mouth again.
+
+She continued looking for him for hours.
+
+Had he sneaked off to town, thinking she had not used that water, or
+not caring whether or no. She did not trust him; another had left
+her. Besides she judged Squeaker by his treatment of the woman who
+was lying in there with wide-open eyes. Anyhow no use to cry with
+only that silent woman to hear her.
+
+Had she drunk all hers?
+
+She tried to see at long range through the cracks, but the hanging
+bed clothes hid the billy. She went to the door, and avoiding the
+bunk looked at the billy.
+
+It was half full.
+
+Instinctively she knew that the eyes of the woman were upon her. She
+turned away, and hoped and waited for thirsty minutes that seemed
+hours.
+
+Desperation drove her back to the door, dared she? No, she couldn’t.
+
+Getting a long forked propstick, she tried to reach it from the door,
+but the dog sprang at the stick. She dropped it and ran.
+
+A scraggy growth fringed the edge of the plain. There was the creek.
+How far? she wondered. Oh, very far, she knew, and besides there
+were only a few holes where water was, and the snakes; for Squeaker,
+with a desire to shine in her eyes, was continually telling her of
+snakes--vicious and many--that daily he did battle with.
+
+She recalled the evening he came from hiding in the scrub with a
+string round one finger, and said a snake had bitten him. He had
+drunk the pint of brandy she had brought for her sickness, and then
+slept till morning. True, although next day he had to dig for the
+string round the blue swollen finger, he was not worse than the many
+she had seen at the “Shearer’s Rest” suffering a recovery. There was
+no brandy to cure her if she were bitten.
+
+She cried a little in self pity, then withdrew her eyes, that were
+getting red, from the outlying creek, and went again to the door. She
+of the bunk lay with closed eyes.
+
+Was she asleep? The stranger’s heart leapt, yet she was hardly in
+earnest as she tip-toed billy-wards. The dog, crouching with head
+between two paws, eyed her steadily, but showed no opposition. She
+made dumb show. “I want to be friends with you, and won’t hurt her.”
+Abruptly she looked at her, then at the dog. He was motionless and
+emotionless. Beside if that dog--certainly watching her--wanted to
+bite her (her dry mouth opened), it could get her any time.
+
+She rated this dog’s intelligence almost human, from many of its
+actions in omission and commission in connection with this woman.
+
+She regretted the pole, no dog would stand that.
+
+Two more steps.
+
+Now just one more; then, by bending and stretching her arm, she
+would reach it. Could she now? She tried to encourage herself by
+remembering how close on the first day she had been to the woman, and
+how delicious a few mouthfuls would be--swallowing dry mouthfuls.
+
+She measured the space between where she had first stood and the
+billy. Could she get anything to draw it to her. No, the dog would
+not stand that, and besides the handle would rattle, and she might
+hear and open her eyes.
+
+The thought of those sunken eyes suddenly opening made her heart
+bound. Oh! she must breathe--deep, loud breaths. Her throat clicked
+noisily. Looking back fearfully, she went swiftly out.
+
+She did not look for Squeaker this time, she had given him up.
+
+While she waited for her breath to steady, to her relief and surprise
+the dog came out. She made a rush to the new hut, but he passed
+seemingly oblivious of her, and bounding across the plain began
+rounding the sheep. Then he must know Squeaker had gone to town.
+
+Stay! Her heart beat violently; was it because she on the bunk slept
+and did not want him?
+
+She waited till her heart quieted, and again crept to the door.
+
+The head of the woman on the bunk had fallen towards the wall as in
+deep sleep; it was turned from the billy, to which she must creep so
+softly.
+
+Slower, from caution and deadly earnestness, she entered.
+
+She was not so advanced as before, and felt fairly secure, for the
+woman’s eyes were still turned to the wall, and so tightly closed,
+she could not possibly see where she was.
+
+She would bend right down, and try and reach it from where she was.
+
+She bent.
+
+It was so swift and sudden, that she had not time to scream when
+those bony fingers had gripped the hand that she prematurely reached
+for the billy. She was frozen with horror for a moment, then her
+screams were piercing. Panting with victory, the prostrate one held
+her with a hold that the other did not attempt to free herself from.
+
+Down, down she drew her.
+
+Her lips had drawn back from her teeth, and her breath almost
+scorched the face that she held so close for the starting eyes to
+gloat over. Her exultation was so great, that she could only gloat
+and gasp, and hold with a tension that had stopped the victim’s
+circulation.
+
+As a wounded, robbed tigress might hold and look, she held and looked.
+
+Neither heard the swift steps of the man, and if the tigress saw
+him enter, she was not daunted. “Take me from her,” shrieked the
+terrified one. “Quick, take me from her,” she repeated it again,
+nothing else. “Take me from her.”
+
+He hastily fastened the door and said something that the shrieks
+drowned, then picked up the pole. It fell with a thud across the
+arms which the tightening sinews had turned into steel. Once, twice,
+thrice. Then the one that got the fullest force bent; that side of
+the victim was free.
+
+The pole had snapped. Another blow with a broken end freed the other
+side.
+
+Still shrieking “Take me from her, take me from her,” she beat on the
+closed door till Squeaker opened it.
+
+Then he had to face and reckon with his old mate’s maddened dog, that
+the closed door had baffled.
+
+The dog suffered the shrieking woman to pass, but though Squeaker, in
+bitten agony, broke the stick across the dog, he was forced to give
+the savage brute best.
+
+“Call ’im orf, Mary, ’e’s eatin’ me,” he implored. “Oh corl ’im orf.”
+
+But with stony face the woman lay motionless.
+
+“Sool ’im on t’ ’er.” He indicated his new mate who, as though all
+the plain led to the desired town, still ran in unreasoning terror.
+
+“It’s orl er doin’,” he pleaded, springing on the bunk beside his old
+mate. But when, to rouse her sympathy, he would have laid his hand on
+her, the dog’s teeth fastened in it and pulled him back.
+
+
+
+
+ SCRAMMY ’AND.
+
+
+Along the selvage of the scrub-girt plain the old man looked long and
+earnestly. His eyes followed an indistinct track that had been cut by
+the cart, journeying at rare intervals to the distant township. At
+dawn some weeks back it had creaked across the plain, and at a point
+where the scrub curved, the husband had stopped the horse while the
+woman parted the tilt and waved goodbye to the bent, irresponsive old
+man and his dog. It was her impending motherhood that made them seek
+the comparative civilisation of the township, and the tenderness of
+her womanhood brought the old man closer to her as they drove away.
+Every week since that morning had been carefully notched by man and
+dog, and the last mark, cut three nights past, showed that time was
+up. Twice this evening he thought he saw the dust rise as he looked,
+but longer scrutiny showed only the misty evening light.
+
+He turned to where a house stood out from a background of scrub.
+Beside the calf-pen near it, a cow gave answer and greeting to the
+penned calf. “No use pennin’ up ther calf,” he muttered, “when they
+don’t come. Won’t do it ter-morrer night.” He watched anxiously
+along the scrub. “Calf must ’ave got ’is ’ed through ther rails an’
+sucked ’er. No one else can’t ’ave done it. Scrammy’s gorn; ’twarn’t
+Scrammy.” But the gloom of fear settled on his wizened face as he
+shuffled stiffly towards the sheep yard.
+
+His body jerked; there was a suggestion of the dog in his movements;
+and in the dog, as he rounded up the sheep, more than a suggestion of
+his master. He querulously accused the dog of “rushin’ ’em, ’stead er
+allowin’ Billy (the leader) to lead ’em.”
+
+When they were yarded he found fault with the hurdles. “Some ’un ’ad
+been meddlin’ with ’em.” For two pins he would “smash ’em up with
+ther axe.”
+
+The eyes of the sheep reflected the haze-opposed glory of the setting
+sun. Loyally they stood till a grey quilt swathed them. In their eyes
+glistened luminous tears materialised from an atmosphere of sighs.
+The wide plain gauzed into a sea on which the hut floated lonely.
+Through its open door a fire gleamed like the red, steaming mouth
+of an engine. Beyond the hut a clump of myalls loomed spectral and
+wraith-like, and round them a gang of crows cawed noisily, irreverent
+of the great silence.
+
+Inside the hut, the old man, still querulous, talked to the listening
+dog. He uncovered a cabbage tree hat--his task of the past year--and
+laid upside down, on the centre of the crown, a star-shaped button
+that the woman had worked for him.
+
+“It’s orl wrong, see!” The dog said he did. “’Twon’t do!” he shouted
+with the emphasis of deafness. The dog admitted it would not. “An’
+she done it like thet, ter spile it on me ’er purpus. She done it
+outer jealersy, cos I was makin’ it for ’im. Could ’ave done it
+better meself, though I’m no ’and at fancy stitchin’. But she can’t
+make a ’at like thet. No woman could. The’re no good.” The dog did
+not dispute this condemnation.
+
+“I tole ’er ter put a anker jes’ there,” he continued. He pointed to
+the middle of the button which he still held upside down. “Thet’s no
+anker!” The dog subtly indicated that there was another side to the
+button. “There ain’t,” shouted the old man. “What do you know about
+an anker; you never see a real one on a ship in yer life!” There was
+an inaudible disparaging reference to “imperdent kerloneyals” which
+seemed to crush the dog. To mollify him the man got on his knees, and
+bending his neck, showed the dog a faded anchor on the top of the
+cabbage tree hat on his head. A little resentment would have served
+the dog, but he was too eager for peace.
+
+Noting this, the old man returned to the button for reminiscences.
+“An’ yet you thort at fust a thing like thet would do.” There was a
+sign of dissent from the dog. “Yer know yer did--Sir. An’ wot’s more
+yer don’t bark at ’er like yer used ter!”
+
+The dog was uneasy, and intimated that he would prefer to have that
+past buried.
+
+“None er thet now; yer know yer don’t.” Bending the button he
+continued, “They can’t never do anythin’ right, an’ orlways,
+continerally they gets a man inter trouble.”
+
+He had accidently turned the button, he reversed it looking swiftly
+at the dog. “Carn’t de nothin’ with it. A thing like thet! Might as
+well fling it in the fire!” He put it carefully away.
+
+“W’ere’s ’e now?” he asked abruptly. The dog indicated the route
+taken by the cart.
+
+“An’ ’ow long as ’e bin away?” The dog looked at the tally stick
+hanging on the wall. “Yes, orl thet time! What does ’e care about me
+an’ you, now ’e’s got ’er! ’e was fust rate afore ’e got er. Wish I
+’ad er gorn down thet time ’e took their sheep. I’d er seen no woman
+didn’t grab ’im. They’re stuck away down there an’ us orl alone ’ere
+by ourselves with only ther sheep. Scrammy sez ’e wouldn’t stay if ’e
+wus me. See’s there any signs er ’em comin’ back!”
+
+While the dog was out he hastily tried to fix the button, but failed.
+“On’y mist, no dust?” he asked, when his messenger returned. “No
+fear,” he growled, “’e won’t come back no more; stay down there an’
+nuss ther babby. It’ll be a gal too, sure to be! Women are orlways
+’avin’ gals. It’ll be a gal sure enough.”
+
+He looked sternly at the unagreeing dog. “Yer don’t think so! Course
+yer don’t. You on ’er side? Yer are Loo!”
+
+The dog’s name was “Warderloo” (Waterloo) and had three
+abbreviations. “Now then, War!” meant mutual understanding and
+perfect fellowship. “What’s thet, Warder?” meant serious business.
+But “Loo” was ever sorrowfully reminiscent. And accordingly “Loo” was
+now much affected and disconcerted by the steady accusing eyes of the
+old man.
+
+“An’ wot’s more,” he continued, “I believe ye’ll fool roun’, ye’ll
+fool aroun’ ’er wusser nor ever w’en she comes back with ther babby.”
+At this grave charge the dog, either from dignity or injury, was
+silent. His master, slowly and with some additions, repeated the
+prophecy, and again the dog gave him only silent attention.
+
+“’Ere she comes with ther babby,” he cried, flinging up his arms in
+clumsy feigned surprise. Loo was not deceived, and stood still.
+
+“Oh I’m a ole liar, am I? Yit’s come ter thet; ez it? Well better fer
+I ter be a liar ’n fer you ter lose yer manners,--Sir.”
+
+In vain Loo protested. His master turned round, and when poor Loo
+faced that way, he drew his feet under him on the bunk and faced
+the wall. When the distressed Loo, from outside the hut, caught his
+eye through the cracks, he closed his own, to stifle remorse at the
+eloquent dumb appeal.
+
+Usually their little differences took some time to evaporate; the
+master sulked with his silent mate till some daring feat with snake
+or dingo on the dog’s part mollified him. Loo, probably on the look
+out for such foes, moved to the end of the hut nearest the sheep.
+Two hasty squints revealed his departure, but not his whereabouts,
+to the old man, who coughed and waited, but for once expected too
+much from poor Loo. His legs grew cramped, still he did not care to
+make the first move. It was a godsend when an undemonstrative ewe and
+demonstrative lamb came in.
+
+Before that ewe he held the whole of her disgraceful past, and under
+the circumstances, “er imperdence--’er blarsted imperdence--” in
+unceremoniously intruding on his privacy with her blanky blind udder,
+and more than blanky bastard, was something he could not and would
+not stand.
+
+“None er yer sauce now!” He jumped down, and shook his fist at the
+unashamed, silent mother. “Warder,” he shouted, “Warder, put ’em out!”
+
+Warder did so, and when he came back his master explained to him that
+the thing that “continerally an’ orlways” upset him was “thet dam
+ole yeo.” It was the only sorrow he had or ever would have in life.
+“She wusn’t nat’ral, thet ole yeo.” There was something in the Bible,
+he told War, about “yeos” with barren udders. “An’ ’twarn’t as though
+she didn’t know.” For that was her third lamb he had had to poddy.
+But not another bite would he give this one. He had made up his mind
+now, though it had been “worritin’” him all day. “Jes’ look at me,”
+showing his lamb-bitten fingers. “Wantin’ ter get blood outer a
+stone!”
+
+He shambled round, covered the cabbage-tree hat and the despised
+woman-worked button carefully; then his better nature prevailed.
+“See ’ere!” and there was that in his voice that indicated a moral
+victory. He took off the cloth and placed the button right side up
+and in its proper place. “Will thet do yer?” he asked.
+
+After this surrender his excitement was so great, that the dog shared
+it. He advised War to lie down “an’ ’ave a spell,” and in strong
+agitation he went round the sheep yard twice, each time stopping to
+hammer down the hurdles noisily, and calling to War not to “worrit;
+they’s orlright now, an’ firm as a rock.”
+
+Through these proceedings the ewe and lamb followed him, the
+lamb--lamb fashion--mixing itself with his legs. He had nothing
+further to say to the ewe, but from the expression of her eyes she
+still had an open mind towards him. Both went with him inside the
+hut. Were they intruders? the dog asked. He coughed and affected not
+to hear, went to the door, looked out and said the mist was gone, but
+the dog re-asked. “I think, War, there’s some er that orker’d little
+dam fool’s grub lef’” he said, gently extricating the lamb from
+between his legs, “an’ it’ll on’y spile. ’Jes this once ’an no more,
+min’ yer, an’ then you skiddy addy,” he said to the ewe. He carried
+the lamb outside, for he would not finger-suckle it that night before
+Waterloo.
+
+From his bunk head he took an axe, cut in two a myall log, and
+brought in half. He threw it on the fire for a back-log, first
+scraping the live coals and ashes to a heap for his damper.
+
+He filled and trimmed his slush lamp, and from a series of flat
+pockets hanging on the wall he took thread, needle, and beeswax. He
+hung a white cloth in a way that defined the eye of the needle which
+he held at long range; but vary as he would from long to longest the
+thread remained in one hand, the needle in the other. Needle, thread,
+light, everything was wrong, he told War. “Es fer me, thenk a Lord
+I ken see an’ year’s well’s ever I could. Ehm War! See any change?”
+War said there had been no change observable to him. “There ain’t no
+change in you neither, War!” he said in gratitude to the grizzled
+old dog. But he felt that War had been disappointed at his failure,
+and he promised that he would rise betimes to-morrow and sew on the
+button by daylight.
+
+“Never mind, War; like ter see ’em after supper?” Comradeship was
+never by speech better demonstrated.
+
+From the middle beam the old man untied two bags. Boiled mutton was
+in one, and the heel of a damper in another.
+
+“No blowey carn’t get in there, eh?” the dog looked at the meat
+uncritically, but critically noted the resting place of two disturbed
+“bloweys.”
+
+“No bones!” He had taken great care to omit them. “Neow!” As ever,
+War took his word; he caught and swallowed instantly several pieces
+flung to him. At the finish his master’s “Eny?” referred to bones.
+War’s grateful eyes twinkled. “Not a one.” “Never is neow!” had
+reference to a trouble War had had with one long ago.
+
+It was now time for his own supper, but after a few attempts he
+shirked it. “Blest if I evven fergot t’bile th’ billy; funny ef me t’
+ferget!” He held his head for a moment, then filled the billy, and in
+a strange uncertainty went towards and from the fire with it, and in
+the end War thought there was no sense at all in putting it so far
+from the blaze when it had to boil.
+
+“Tell yer wot, War, w’ile it biles us’ll count ’em. Gimme appertite,
+ehm, War?”
+
+War thought “countin’ ’em” was the tonic. Then together they closed
+the door, spread a kangaroo skin on the floor, and put the slush lamp
+where the light fell on it. The man sat down, so did War, took off
+his belt, turned it carefully, tenderly, and opened his knife to cut
+the stitching. This was a tedious process, for it was wax thread, and
+had been crossed and re-crossed. Then came the chink of the coins
+falling. The old man counted each as it rolled out, and the dog
+tallied with a paw.
+
+“No more?” Certainly more, said War. A jerk, tenderly calculated,
+brought another among the seductive heap.
+
+“All?” no--still the upraised paw. The old man chuckled.
+
+“Ole ’en gets more b’ scratchin’.” This was the dog’s opinion, and
+a series of little undulations produced another, and after still
+further shaking, yet another.
+
+War was asked with ridiculous insincerity, “All?” and with ridiculous
+sincerity his solemn eyes and dropped paw said “all.” Then there
+was the honest count straight through, next the side show with its
+pretence of “disrememberin’,” or doubts as to the number--doubts
+never laid except by a double count. In the first, so intent was the
+man, that he forgot his mate; though his relief in being good friends
+again, had made him ignore his fear.
+
+But the dog had heard an outside sound, and, moving to the door,
+waited for certainty. At this stage the man missed his mate’s eyes.
+
+He lay face downward, covering his treasure, when he realised that
+his friend was uneasy. And as the dog kept watch, he thrust them
+back hurriedly, missing all the pleasure and excitement of a final
+recount.
+
+With dumb show he asked several questions of his sentinel, and
+took his answers from his eyes. Then, when Warder relieved began
+to walk about, the old man with forced confidence chaffed him. He
+sought refuge from his own fears by trying to banish the dog’s, and
+suggested dingoes at the sheep yard, or a “goanner” on the roof.
+“Well ’twas ’possum,” he said, making a pretence of even then hearing
+and distinguishing the sound.
+
+But round his waist the belt did not go that night. Only its bulk in
+his life of solitariness could have conceived its hiding place.
+
+He bustled around as one having many tasks, but these he did
+aimlessly. With a pretence of unconcern he attempted to hum, but
+broke off frequently to listen. He was plainly afraid of the dog’s
+keen ears missing something. But his mate’s tense body proclaimed him
+on duty.
+
+“I know who yer thort ’twas, Warder!” They were sitting side by
+side, yet he spoke very loudly. “Scrammy ’and, Ehm?” He had guessed
+correctly.
+
+“An’ yer thort yer see ’im lars’ night!” He was right again.
+
+“An’ yer thort ’twas ’im that ’ad bin ramsakin’ the place yesterday,
+when we was shepherdin’. An’ yer thort ’t must ’ave bin ’im shook
+the tommy!” The dog’s manner evinced that he had not altered this
+opinion. The old man’s heart beat loudly.
+
+“No fear, Warder! Scrammy’s gone, gone ’long ways now, Warder!” But
+Warder’s pricked ears doing double duty showed he was unconvinced.
+“’Sides, Scrammy wouldn’t ’urt er merskeeter,” he continued. “Poor
+ole Scrammy! ’Twarn’t ’im shook the tommy, Warder!” The dog seemed to
+be waiting for the suggestion of another thief having unseen crept
+into their isolated lives, but his master had none to offer. Both
+were silent, then the man piled wood on the fire, remarking that he
+was going to sit up all night. He asked the dog to go with him to the
+table to feed and trim the slush lamp.
+
+Those quavering shadows along the wall were caused by its sizzeling
+flare flickering in the darkness, the dog explained. “Thort it
+mighter bin ther blacks outside,” the man said. “They ain’t so
+fur away, I know! ’Twar them killed ther lamb down in ther creek.”
+He spoke unusually loudly. He hoped they wouldn’t catch “poor ole
+one-’anded Scrammy.” He said how sorry he was for “poor ole Scrammy,
+cos Scrammy wouldn’t ’urt no one. He on’y jes’ came ter see us cos ’e
+was a ole friend. He was gone along ways ter look fur work, cos ’e
+was stoney broke after blueing ’is cheque at ther shanty sixty miles
+away.”
+
+“I tole ’im,” he continued in an altered voice, “thet I couldn’t
+lend ’im eny cos I ’ad sent all my little bit er money (he whispered
+‘money’) to ther bank be ther boss. Didn’ I?” Emphatically his mate
+intimated that this was the case. He held his head in his shaking
+hands, and complained to the dog of having “come over dizzy.”
+
+He was silent for a few moments, then, abruptly raising his voice, he
+remarked that their master was a better tracker than “Saddle-strap
+Jimmy,” or any of the blacks. He looked at the tally stick, and
+suddenly announced that he knew for a certainty that the boss and his
+wife would return that night or early next morning, and that he must
+see about making them a damper. He got up and began laboriously to
+mix soda and salt with the flour. He looked at the muddy coloured
+water in the bucket near the wall, and altered his mind.
+
+“I’ll bile it first, War, same as ’er does, cos jus’ neow an’ then t’
+day I comes over dizzy-like. See th’ mist t’s even! Two more, then
+rain--rain, an’ them two out in it without no tilt on the cart.” He
+sat down for a moment, even before he dusted his ungoverned floury
+hands.
+
+“Pint er tea, War, jes’ t’ warm ther worms an’ lif’ me ’art, eh!”
+
+Every movement of the dog was in accord with this plan.
+
+His master looked at the billy, and said, “’twarn’t bilin’,” and
+that a watched pot never boiled. He rested a while silently with his
+floury hands covering his face. He bent his mouth to the dog’s ear
+and whispered. Warder, before replying, pointed his ears and raised
+his head. The old man’s hand rested on the dog’s neck.
+
+“Tell yer wot, War, w’ile it’s bilin’ I’ll ’ave another go at ther
+button, cos I want ter give ’im ther ’at soon as he comes. S’pose
+they’ll orl come!” He had sat down again, and seemed to whistle his
+words. “Think they’ll orl come, Loo?”
+
+Loo would not commit himself about “orl,” not being quite sure of his
+master’s mind.
+
+The old man’s mouth twitched, a violent effort jerked him. “Might be
+a boy arter orl; ain’t cocky sure!” His head wagged irresponsibly,
+and his hat fell off as he rolled into the bunk. He made no effort
+to replace it, and, for once unheeded, the fire flickered on his
+polished head. Never before had the dog seen its baldness. The change
+from night-cap to hat had always been effected out of his sight.
+
+“War, ain’t cocky sure it’ll be a gal?”
+
+The dog discreetly or modestly dropped his eyes, but his master had
+not done with concessions.
+
+“Warder!” Warder looked at him. “Tell yer wot, you can go every
+Sunday evenin’ an’ see if ’tis a boy!”
+
+He turned over on his side, with his face to the wall. Into the
+gnarled uncontrolled hand swaying over the bunk the dog laid his paw.
+
+When the old man got up, he didn’t put on his hat nor even pick it
+up. Altogether there was an unusualness about him to-night that
+distressed his mate. He sat up after a few moments, and threw back
+his head, listening strainingly for outside sounds. The silence
+soothed him, and he lay down again. A faded look was in his eyes.
+
+“Thort I ’eard bells--church bells,” he said to the dog looking up
+too, but at him. “Couldn’t ’ave. No church bells in the bush. Ain’t
+’eard ’em since I lef’ th’ ole country.” He turned his best ear to
+the fancied sound. He had left his dog and the hut, and was dreaming
+of shadowy days.
+
+He raised himself from the bunk, and followed the dog’s eyes to a
+little smoke-stained bottle on the shelf. “No, no, War!” he said.
+“Thet’s for sickness; mus’ be a lot worser’n wot I am!” Breathing
+noisily, he went through a list of diseases, among which were palsy,
+snake-bite, “dropersy,” and “suddint death,” before he would be
+justified in taking the last of his painkiller.
+
+His pipe was in his hidden belt, but he had another in one of those
+little pockets. He tried it, said “’twouldn’t draw’r,” and very
+slowly and clumsily stripped the edge of a cabbage tree frond hanging
+from the rafter, and tried to push it through the stem, but could
+not find the opening. He explained to the intent dog that the hole
+was stopped up, but it didn’t matter. He placed it under the bunk
+where he sat, because first he would “’ave a swig er tea.” His head
+kept wagging at the billy. No, until the billy boiled he was going
+to have a little snooze. The dog was to keep quiet until the billy
+boiled.
+
+Involuntarily he murmured, looking at his mate, “Funny w’ere ther
+tommy’awk’s gone ter!” Then he missed the axe. “My Gord, Warder!”
+he said, “I lef’ the axe outside; clean forgot it!” This discovery
+alarmed the dog, and he suggested they should bring it in.
+
+“No, no!” he said, and his floury face grew ghastly.
+
+He stood still; all his faculties seemed paralyzed for a time, then
+fell stiffly on his bunk. Quite suddenly he staggered to his feet,
+rubbed his eyes, and between broken breaths he complained of the bad
+light, and that the mist had come again.
+
+One thing the dog did when he saw his master’s face even by that
+indifferent light, he barked low, and terribly human.
+
+The old man motioned for silence. “Ah!” His jaw fell but only for a
+moment. Then a steely grimness took possession. He clung to the table
+and beckoned the dog with one crooked finger. “Scrammy?” cunningly,
+cautiously, indicating outside, and as subtly the dog replied. Then
+he groped for his bunk, and lay with his eyes fixed on the billy, his
+mouth open.
+
+He brought his palms together after a while. “’Cline our ’earts ter
+keep this lawr,” he whispered, and for a moment his eyes rested on
+the hiding place, then turned to the dog.
+
+And though soon after there was a sinister sound outside, which
+the watchful dog immediately challenged, the man on the bunk lay
+undisturbed.
+
+Warder growling savagely went along the back wall of the hut, and
+despite the semidarkness his eyes scintillating with menace through
+the cracks, drove from them a crouching figure who turned hastily
+to grip the axe near the myall logs. He stumbled over the lamb’s
+feeding-pan lying in the hut’s shadow. The moonlight glittering on
+the blade recalled the menace of the dog’s eyes. The man grabbed the
+weapon swiftly, but even with it he felt the chances were unequal.
+
+But he had planned to fix the dog. He would unpen the sheep, and the
+lurking dingoes, coming up from the creek to worry the lambs, would
+prove work for the dog. He crouched silently to again deceive this
+man and dog, and crept towards the sheep yard. But the hurdles of the
+yard faced the hut, and the way those thousand eyes reflected the
+rising moon was disconcerting. The whole of the night seemed pregnant
+with eyes.
+
+All the shadows were slanting the wrong way, and the moon was facing
+him, with its man calmly watching every movement. It would be dawn
+before it set. He backed from the yard to the myall’s scant screen.
+Even they had moulted with age. From under his coat the handle of the
+axe protruded. His mind worked his body. Hugging the axe, he crept
+towards some object, straightened himself to reach, then with the
+hook on his handless arm, drew back an imaginary bolt, and stooping
+entered. With the axe in readiness he crept to the bunk. Twice he
+raised it and struck.
+
+It was easy enough out there, yet even in imagination his skin was
+wet and his mouth was dry. Even if the man slept, there was the dog.
+He must risk letting out the sheep. He covered the blade of the axe
+and went in a circuit to the sheep, and got over the yard on the
+side opposite to the hut. They rushed from him and huddled together,
+leaving him, although stooping, exposed. He had calculated for this,
+but not for the effect upon himself. Could they in the hut see him,
+he would be no match for the dog even with the axe. Heedlessly,
+fear-driven, he rushed to where he could see the door, regardless of
+exposing himself. Nothing counted now, but that the dog or the old
+man should not steal upon him unawares.
+
+The door was still closed. No call for “Warder!” came from it, though
+he stood there a conspicuous object. While he watched he saw an ewe
+lamb make for the hut’s shelter. He stooped, still watching, and
+listened, but could hear nothing. He crept forward and loosened the
+hurdles. Never were they noisier, he was sure. He knew that the sheep
+would not go through while he was there. He crept away, but although
+the leader noted the freed exit, he and those he led were creatures
+of habit. None were hungry, and they were unused to feeding at night,
+though in the morning came man and dog never so early they were
+waiting.
+
+Round the yard and past the gateway he drove them again and again. He
+began to feel impotently frenzied in the fear that the extraordinary
+lightness meant that daylight must be near. Every moment he persuaded
+himself that he could see more plainly. He held out his one hand and
+was convinced.
+
+He straightened himself, rushed among them, caught one, and ran it
+kicking through the opening. It came back the moment he freed it.
+However it served his purpose, for as he crouched there, baffled,
+he unexpectedly saw them file out. Then they rushed through in an
+impatient struggling crowd, each fearing to be last with this invader.
+
+When he “barrowed” out the first, he had kept his eyes on the hut,
+and had seen an old ewe and lamb run to it and bunt the closed door.
+But if there was any movement inside, the noise of the nearer sheep
+killed it.
+
+They were all round the hut, for above it hung the moon, and they
+all made for the light. He crept after them, his ears straining for
+sound, but his head bobbing above them to watch the still closed
+door.
+
+Inside, long since, the back-log had split with an explosion that
+scattered the coals near enough to cause the billy to boil, and the
+blaze showed the old man’s eyes set on the billy. The dog looked
+into them, then laid his head between his paws, and still watching
+his master’s face, beat the ground with his tail. He whined softly
+and went back to his post at the door, his eyes snapping flintily,
+his teeth bared. Along his back the hair rose like bristles. He sent
+an assurance of help to the importunate ewe and lamb. As the sheep
+neared the hut, he ran to the bunk, raised his head to a level with
+his master’s, and barked softly. He waited, and despite the eager
+light in his intelligent face, his master and mate did not ask him
+any questions as to the cause of these calling sheep. Why did he not
+rise, and with him re-yard them, then gloatingly ask him where was
+the chinky crow by day, or sneaking dingo by night, that was any
+match for them, and then demand from his four-footed trusty mate the
+usual straightforward answer? Was there to be no discussion as to
+which heard the noise first, nor the final compromise of a dead-heat?
+
+The silence puzzled the man outside sorely; he crouched, watching
+both door and shutter. The sheep were all round the hut. Man and dog
+inside must hear them. Why, when a dingo came that night he camped
+with them, they heard it before it could reach a lamb. If only he had
+known then what he knew now! His hold on the axe tightened. No one
+had seen him come; none should see him go! Why didn’t that old fellow
+wake to-night? for now, as he crept nearer the hut, he could hear the
+whining dog, and understood, he was appealing to his master.
+
+He lay flat on the ground and tried to puzzle it out. The sheep had
+rushed back disorganised and were again near the hut and yard. Both
+inside must know. They were waiting for him. They were preparing for
+him, and that was why they were letting the dingoes play up with the
+sheep. That was the reason they did not openly show fight.
+
+Still he would have sacrificed half of the coveted wealth to be
+absolutely certain of what their silence meant. It was surely almost
+daylight. He spread out the fingers of his one hand; he could see
+the colour of the blood in the veins. He must act quickly, or he
+would have to hide about for another day. And the absent man might
+return. To encourage himself, he tried to imagine the possession
+of that glittering heap that he had seen them counting on the mat.
+Yet he had grown cold and dejected, and felt for the first time the
+weight of the axe. It would be all right if the door would open,
+the old man come out and send the dog to round up the sheep. It was
+getting daylight, and soon shelter would be impossible.
+
+He crept towards the hut, and this time he felt the edge of the axe.
+Right and left the sheep parted. There was nothing to be gained now
+in crawling, for the hostility of the dog told him that he could be
+seen. He stood, his body stiffened with determination.
+
+Mechanically he went to the door; he knew the defensive resources
+of the hut. He had the axe, and the stolen tomahawk was stuck in
+the fork of those myalls. He had no need for both. The only weapon
+that the old fellow had was the useless butcher’s knife. His eyes
+protruded, and unconsciously he felt his stiffened beard.
+
+He breathed without movement. There was no sound now from man or dog.
+In his mind he saw them waiting for him to attack the door; this he
+did not debate nor alter. He went to the shutter, ran the axe’s edge
+along the hide hinges, pushed it in, then stepped back.
+
+Immediately the dog’s head appeared. He growled no protest, but the
+flinty fire from his eyes and the heat of his suppressed breath,
+hissing between his bared fangs, revealed to Scrammy that in this
+contest, despite the axe, his one hand was a serious handicap.
+
+With the first blow his senses quickened. The slush lamp had gone out
+and there was no hint of daylight inside. This he noted between his
+blows at the dog, as he looked for his victim. It was strange the old
+fellow did not show fight! Where was he hiding? Was it possible that,
+scenting danger, he had slipped out? He recalled the dog’s warning
+when his master was counting his hoard. The memory of that chinking
+belt-hidden pile dominated greedily. Had the old man escaped? He
+would search the hut; what were fifty dogs’ teeth? In close quarters
+he would do for him with one blow.
+
+He was breathing now in deep gasps. The keen edge of the axe severed
+the hide-hinged door. He rushed it; then stood back swinging the axe
+in readiness. It did not fall for the bolt still held it. But this
+was only what a child would consider a barrier. One blow with the axe
+head smashed the bolt. The door fell across the head of the bunk, the
+end partly blocking the entrance. He struck a side blow that sent it
+along the bunk.
+
+The dog was dreadfully distressed. The bushman outside thought the
+cause the fallen door. Face to face they met--determined battle in
+the dog’s eyes met murder in the man’s. He brandished an axe circuit,
+craned his neck, and by the dull light of the fire searched the hut.
+He saw no one but the dog. Unless his master was under the bunk, he
+had escaped. The whole plot broke on him quite suddenly! The cunning
+old miser, knowing his dog would show his flight by following, had
+locked him in, and he had wasted all this time barking up the wrong
+tree. He would have done the old man to death that minute with fifty
+brutal blows. He would kill him by day or night.
+
+He ran round the brush sheep yard, kicking and thrusting the axe
+through the thickest parts. He had not hidden there, nor among the
+myall clump where he had practised his bloody plot. The dog stood at
+the doorway of the hut. He saw this as he passed through the sheep on
+his way to search the creek. He was half minded to try to invite the
+dog’s confidence and cooperation by yarding them.
+
+He looked at them, and the moonlight’s undulating white scales across
+their shorn backs brought out the fresh tar brand 8, setting him
+thinking of the links of that convict gang chain long ago. Lord, how
+light it must be for him to see that!
+
+He held out his hand again. There was no perceptible change in the
+light. There were hours yet before daylight. He moulded his mind to
+that.
+
+The creek split the plain, and along it here and there a few she-oak
+blots defined it. He traversed it with his eyes. There were no likely
+hiding places among the trees, and it would be useless to search
+them. Suddenly it struck him that the old man might be creeping
+along with the sheep--they were so used to him. He ran and headed
+them, driving them swiftly back to the yard. Before they were in he
+knew he was wrong. Again he turned and scanned the creek, but felt
+no impulse to search it. It was half a mile from the hut. It was
+impossible that the old man could have got there, or that he could
+have reached the more distant house. Besides, why did the dog stay at
+the door unless on guard? He ran back to the hut.
+
+The dog was still there, and in no way appeased by the yarding of the
+sheep. He swore at the threatening brute, and cast about for a gibber
+to throw, but stones were almost unknown there. A sapling would serve
+him! Seven or eight myall logs lay near for firewood, but all were
+too thick to be wielded. There was only the clump of myalls, and the
+few stunted she-oaks bordering the distant creek. To reach either
+would mean a dangerous delay. Oh, by God, he had it! These poles
+keeping down the bark roof. He ran to the back of the hut, cut a step
+in a slab, and putting his foot in it, hitched the axe on one of
+the desired poles and was up in a moment. He could hear the cabbage
+fronds hanging from the rafters shiver with the vibration, but there
+was no other protest from inside.
+
+He shifted a sheet of rotten bark; part of it crumbled and fell
+inside on the prostrate door, sounding like the first earth on a
+coffin, in a way that the dog particularly resented. He knelt and
+carefully eyed the interior. The dog’s glittering eyes met his. The
+door lay as it had fallen along the bunk. The fire was lightless, yet
+he could see more plainly, but the cause was not manifest, till from
+the myalls quite close the jackasses chorused. From his post the dog
+sent them a signal. Quite unaccountably the man’s muscles relaxed.
+“Oh, Christ!” he said, dropping the pole. He sprang up and faced the
+East, then turned to the traitorous faded moon. The daylight had come.
+
+The sweat stung his quivering body. Slowly, he made an eye circuit
+round the plain; no human being was in sight. All he had to face was
+a parcel of noisy jackasses and a barking dog! He would soon silence
+the dog. He took the pole and made a jab at the whelping brute. One
+thing he noticed, that if he did get one home, it was only when he
+worked near the horizontal door. His quickened senses guessed at
+the reason. He could have shifted the door easily with his pole, yet
+feared, because, if the old man were under, he would expose himself
+to two active enemies. He must get to close quarters with the dog,
+and chop him in two, or brain him with the axe.
+
+He ripped off another sheet of bark, and smashed away a batten that
+broke his swing. Encircling a rafter with his hooked arm, he lay
+flat, his feet pressing another just over the bunk, because only
+there would the dog hold his ground. One blow well directed got home.
+He planted his feet firmly, and made another with such tremendous
+force that his support snapped. He let go the axe and it fell on the
+door. He gripped with his hand the rafter nearest, but strain as he
+would he could not balance his body. He hung over the door, and the
+dog sprang at him and dragged him down. In bitten agony, he dropped
+on the door that instantly up-ended.
+
+It was daylight, and in that light the power of those open eyes set
+in that bald head, fixed on the billy beside the dead fireplace, was
+mightier than the dog. His unmaimed hand had the strength of both. He
+lifted the door and shielded himself with it as he backed out.
+
+But that was not all the dog wanted. At the doorway he waited to see
+that the fleeing man had no further designs on the sheep.
+
+It was time they were feeding. Though the hurdles were down, even
+from the doorway, the dog was their master. He waited for commands
+from his, and barked them back till noon.
+
+Several times that day the ewe and lamb came in, looked without
+speculation at the figure on the bunk, then moved to the dead
+fire-place. But though the water in the billy was cold, the dog would
+not allow either to touch it. That was for tea when his master awoke.
+
+There was another circumstance. Those blow flies were welcome to the
+uncovered mutton. Throughout that day he gave them undisputed right,
+but they had to be content with it.
+
+Next day the ewe and lamb came again. The lamb bunted several
+irresponsive objects--never its dam’s udder--baaing listlessly.
+Though the first day the ewe had looked at the bunk, and baaed,
+she was wiser now, though sheep are slow to learn. Around that
+dried dish outside the lamb sniffed, baaing faintly. Adroitly the
+ewe led the way to the creek, and the lamb followed. From the bank
+the lamb looked at her, then faced round to the hut, and baaing
+disconsolately, trotted a few paces back. From the water’s edge the
+mother ewe called. The lamb looked at her vacantly, and without
+interest descended. The ewe bent and drank sparingly, meaningly.
+The lamb sniffed the water, and unsatisfied, complained. The hut
+was hidden, but it turned that way. Again the ewe leisurely drank.
+This time the lamb’s lips touched the water, but did not drink. Into
+its mouth raised to bleat a few drops fell. Hastily the mother’s
+head went to the water. She did not drink, but the lamb did. Higher
+up, where the creek was dry, they crossed to tender grass in the
+billabong, then joined the flock for the first time.
+
+Through the thicker mist that afternoon a white tilted cart sailed
+joltingly, taking its bearings from the various land marks rather
+than from the undefined track. It rounded the scrub, and the woman,
+with her baby, kept watch for the first glimpse of her home beyond
+the creek. She told her husband that there was no smoke from the
+nearer shepherd’s hut, but despite his uneasiness, he tried to
+persuade her that the mist absorbed it.
+
+It was past sun-down, yet the straggling unguarded sheep were
+running in mobs to and from the creek. Both saw the broken roof of
+the hut, and the man, stopping the horse some distance away, gave the
+woman the reins and bade her wait. He entered the hut through the
+broken doorway, but immediately came out to assure himself that his
+wife had not moved.
+
+The sight inside of that broken-ribbed dog’s fight with those buzzing
+horrors, and the reproach in his wild eyes, was a memory that the man
+was not willing she should share.
+
+
+
+
+ BILLY SKYWONKIE.
+
+
+The line was unfenced, so with due regard to the possibility of
+the drought-dulled sheep attempting to chew it, the train crept
+cautiously along, stopping occasionally, without warning, to clear
+it from the listless starving brutes. In the carriage nearest the
+cattle-vans, some drovers and scrub-cutters were playing euchre,
+and spasmodically chorusing the shrill music from an uncertain
+concertina. When the train stopped, the player thrust his head
+from the carriage window. From one nearer the engine, a commercial
+traveller remonstrated with the guard, concerning the snail’s pace
+and the many unnecessary halts.
+
+“Take yer time, ole die-ard,” yelled the drover to the guard. “Whips
+er time,--don’t bust yerself fer no one. Wot’s orl the worl’ to a man
+w’en his wife’s a widder.” He laughed noisily and waved his hat at
+the seething bagman. “Go an’ ’ave a snooze. I’ll wake yer up ther
+day after termorrer.”
+
+He craned his neck to see into the nearest cattle-van. Four were
+down, he told his mates, who remarked, with blasphemous emphasis,
+that they would probably lose half before getting them to the scrub
+country.
+
+The listening woman passenger in a carriage between the drover and
+the bagman, heard a thud soon after in the cattle-truck, and added
+another to the list of the fallen. Before dawn that day the train had
+stopped at a siding to truck them, and she had watched with painful
+interest these drought-tamed brutes being driven into the crowded
+vans. The tireless, greedy sun had swiftly followed the grey dawn,
+and in the light that even now seemed old and worn, the desolation of
+the barren shelterless plains, that the night had hidden, appalled
+her. She realised the sufferings of the emaciated cattle. It was
+barely noon, yet she had twice emptied the water bottle, “shogging”
+in the iron bracket.
+
+The train dragged its weary length again, and she closed her eyes
+from the monotony of the dead plain. Suddenly the engine cleared its
+throat in shrill welcome to two iron tanks, hoisted twenty feet and
+blazing like evil eyes from a vanished face.
+
+Beside them it squatted on its hunkers, placed a blackened thumb on
+its pipe, and hissed through its closed teeth like a snared wild cat,
+while gulping yards of water. The green slimy odour penetrated to the
+cattle. The lustiest of these stamped feebly, clashing their horns
+and bellowing a hollow request.
+
+A long-bearded bushman was standing on the few slabs that formed a
+siding, with a stockwhip coiled like a snake on his arm. The woman
+passenger asked him the name of the place.
+
+“This is ther Never--Never,--ther lars’ place Gord made,” answered
+one of the drovers who were crowding the windows.
+
+“Better’n ther ’ell ’ole yous come from, any’ow,” defended the
+bushman. “Breakin’ ther ’earts, an’ dyin’ from suerside, cos they
+lef’ it,” he added derisively, pointing to the cattle.
+
+In patriotic anger he passed to the guard-van without answering her
+question, though she looked anxiously after him. At various intervals
+during the many halts of the train, she had heard some of the
+obscene jokes, and with it in motion, snatches of lewd songs from
+the drovers’ carriage. But the language used by this bushman to the
+guard, as he helped to remove a ton of fencing wire topping his new
+saddle, made her draw back her head. Near the siding was a spring
+cart, and she presently saw him throw his flattened saddle into it
+and drive off. There was no one else in sight, and in nervous fear
+she asked the bagman if this was Gooriabba siding. It was nine miles
+further, he told her.
+
+The engine lifted its thumb from its pipe. “Well--well--to--be--sure;
+well--well--to--be--sure,” it puffed, as if in shocked remembrance of
+its being hours late for its appointment there.
+
+She saw no one on the next siding, but a buggy waited near the
+sliprails. It must be for her. According to Sydney arrangements she
+was to be met here, and driven out twelve miles. A drover enquired as
+the train left her standing by her portmanteau, “Are yer travellin’
+on yer lonesome, or on’y goin’ somew’ere!” and another flung a twist
+of paper towards her, bawling unmusically, that it was “A flowwer
+from me angel mother’s ger-rave.”
+
+She went towards the buggy, but as she neared it the driver got in
+and made to drive off. She ran and called, for when he went she would
+be alone with the bush all round her, and only the sound of the
+hoarse croaking of the frogs from the swamp near, and the raucous
+“I’ll--’ave--’is--eye--out,” of the crows.
+
+Yes, he was from Gooriabba Station, and had come to meet a young
+“piece” from Sydney, who had not come.
+
+She was ghastly with bilious sickness,--the result of an over-fed
+brain and an under-fed liver. Her face flushed muddily. “Was it a
+housekeeper?”
+
+He was the rouseabout, wearing his best clothes with awful
+unusualness. The coat was too long in the sleeve, and wrinkled across
+the back with his bush slouch. There was that wonderful margin of
+loose shirt between waistcoat and trousers, which all swagger bushies
+affect. Subordinate to nothing decorative was the flaring silk
+handkerchief, drawn into a sailor’s knot round his neck.
+
+He got out and fixed the winkers, then put his hands as far as he
+could reach into his pockets--from the position of his trousers he
+could not possibly reach bottom. It was apparently some unknown law
+that suspended them. He thrust forward his lower jaw, elevated his
+pipe, and squirted a little tobacco juice towards his foot that was
+tracing semi-circles in the dust. “Damned if I know,” he said with a
+snort, “but there’ll be a ’ell of a row somew’ere.”
+
+She noticed that the discoloured teeth his bush grin showed so
+plainly, were worn in the centre, and met at both sides with the pipe
+between the front. Worn stepping stones her mind insisted.
+
+She looked away towards the horizon where the smoke of the hidden
+train showed faintly against a clear sky, and as he was silent, she
+seemed to herself to be intently listening to the croak of the frogs
+and the threat of the crows. She knew that, from under the brim of
+the hat he wore over his eyes, he was looking at her sideways.
+
+Suddenly he withdrew his hands and said again, “Damned if I know.
+S’pose its alright! Got any traps? Get up then an’ ’ole the Neddy
+while I get it.” They drove a mile or so in silence; his pipe was
+still in his mouth though not alight.
+
+She spoke once only. “What a lot of frogs seem to be in that lake!”
+
+He laughed. “That’s ther Nine Mile Dam!” He laughed again after a
+little--an intelligent complacent laugh.
+
+“It used ter be swarmin’ with teal in a good season, but Gord
+A’mighty knows w’en its ever goin’ ter rain any more! I dunno!” This
+was an important admission, for he was a great weather prophet.
+“Lake!” he sniggered and looked sideways at his companion. “Thet’s
+wot thet there bloke, the painter doodle, called it. An ’e goes ter
+dror it, an’ ’e sez wot ’e ’ll give me five bob if I’ll run up ther
+horses, an’ keep ’em so’s ’e ken put ’em in ther picshure. An’ ’e
+drors ther Dam an’ ther trees, puts in thet there ole dead un, an’ ’e
+puts in ther ’orses right clost against ther water w’ere the frogs
+is. ’E puts them in too, an’ damned if ’e don’t dror ther ’orses
+drinkin’ ther water with ther frogs, an’ ther frogs spit on it!
+Likely yarn ther ’orses ud drink ther water with ther blanky frogs’
+spit on it! Fat lot they know about ther bush! Blarsted nannies!”
+
+Presently he enquired as to the place where they kept pictures in
+Sydney, and she told him, the Art Gallery.
+
+“Well some of these days I’m goin’ down ter Sydney,” he continued,
+“an I’ll collar thet one ’cos its a good likerness of ther
+’orses--you’d know their ’ide on a gum tree--an’ that mean mongrel
+never paid me ther five bob.”
+
+Between his closed teeth he hissed a bush tune for some miles, but
+ceased to look at the sky and remarked, “No sign er rain! No lambin’
+this season; soon as they’re dropt we’ll ’ave ter knock ’em all on
+ther ’ead!” He shouted an oath of hatred at the crows following after
+the tottering sheep that made in a straggling line for the water.
+“Look at ’em!” he said, “Scoffin’ out ther eyes!” He pointed to where
+the crows hovered over the bogged sheep. “They putty well lives on
+eyes! ‘Blanky bush Chinkies!’ I call ’em. No one carn’t tell ’em
+apart!”
+
+There was silence again, except for a remark that he could spit all
+the blanky rain they had had in the last nine months.
+
+Away to the left along a side track his eyes travelled seachingly, as
+they came to a gate. He stood in the buggy and looked again.
+
+“Promised ther ‘Konk’ t’ leave’im ’ave furst squint at yer,” he
+muttered, “if ’e was ’ere t’ open ther gate! But I’m not goin’ t’
+blanky well wait orl day!” He reluctantly got out and opened the
+gate, and he had just taken his seat when a “Cooee” sounded from his
+right, heralded by a dusty pillar. He snorted resentfully. “’Ere ’e
+is; jes’ as I got out an’ done it!”
+
+The “Konk” cantered to them, his horse’s hoofs padded by the
+dust-cushioned earth. The driver drew back, so as not to impede the
+newcomer’s view. After a moment or two, the “Konk,” preferring closer
+quarters, brought his horse round to the left. Unsophisticated bush
+wonder in the man’s face, met the sophisticated in the girl’s.
+
+Never had she seen anything so grotesquely monkeyish. And the nose
+of this little hairy horror, as he slewed his neck to look into
+her face, blotted the landscape and dwarfed all perspective. She
+experienced a strange desire to extend her hand. When surprise
+lessened, her mettle saved her from the impulse to cover her face
+with both hands, to baffle him.
+
+At last the silence was broken by the driver drawing a match along
+his leg, and lighting his pipe. The hairy creature safely arranged a
+pair of emu eggs, slung with bush skill round his neck.
+
+“Ain’t yer goin’ to part?” enquired the driver, indicating his
+companion as the recipient.
+
+“Wot are yer givin’ us; wot do yer take me fur?” said the “Konk”
+indignantly, drawing down his knotted veil.
+
+“Well, give ’em ter me fer Lizer.”
+
+“Will yer ’ave ’em now, or wait till yer get ’em?”
+
+“Goin’ ter sit on ’em yerself?” sneered the driver.
+
+“Yes, an’ I’ll give yer ther first egg ther cock lays,” laughed the
+“Konk.”
+
+He turned his horse’s head back to the gate. “I say, Billy Skywonkie!
+Wot price Sally Ah Too, eh?” he asked, his gorilla mouth agape.
+
+Billy Skywonkie uncrossed his legs, took out the whip. He tilted his
+pipe and shook his head as he prepared to drive, to show that he
+understood to a fraction the price of Sally Ah Too. The aptness of
+the question took the sting out of his having had to open the gate.
+He gave a farewell jerk.
+
+“Goin’ ter wash yer neck?” shouted the man with the nose, from the
+gate.
+
+“Not if I know it.”
+
+The “Konk” received the intimation incredulously. “Stinkin’ Roger!”
+he yelled. In bush parlance this was equal to emphatic disbelief.
+
+This was a seemingly final parting, and both started, but suddenly
+the “Konk” wheeled round.
+
+“Oh, Billy!” he shouted.
+
+Billy stayed his horse and turned expectantly.
+
+“W’en’s it goin’ ter rain?”
+
+The driver’s face darkened. “Your blanky jealersey ’ll get yer down,
+an’ worry yer yet,” he snarled, and slashing his horse he drove
+rapidly away.
+
+“Mickey ther Konk,” he presently remarked to his companion, as he
+stroked his nose.
+
+This explained her earlier desire to extend her hand. If the “Konk”
+had been a horse she would have stroked his nose.
+
+“Mob er sheep can camp in the shadder of it,” he said.
+
+Boundless scope for shadows on that sun-smitten treeless plain!
+
+“Make a good plough-shere,” he continued “easy plough a cultivation
+paddock with it!”
+
+At the next gate he seemed in a mind and body conflict. There
+were two tracks; he drove along one for a few hundred yards. Then
+stopping, he turned, and finding the “Konk” out of sight, abruptly
+drove across to the other. He continually drew his whip along the
+horse’s back, and haste seemed the object of the movement, though he
+did not flog the beast.
+
+After a few miles on the new track, a blob glittered dazzlingly
+through the glare, like a fallen star. It was the iron roof of the
+wine shanty--the Saturday night and Sunday resort of shearers and
+rouseabouts for twenty miles around. Most of its spirits was made on
+the premises from bush recipes, of which blue-stone and tobacco were
+the chief ingredients. Every drop had the reputation of “bitin’ orl
+ther way down.”
+
+A sapling studded with broken horse-shoes seemed to connect two
+lonely crow stone trees. Under their scanty shade groups of dejected
+fowls stood with beaks agape. Though the buggy wheels almost reached
+them, they were motionless but for quivering gills. The ground both
+sides of the shanty was decorated with tightly-pegged kangaroo skins.
+A dog, apathetically blind and dumb, lay on the verandah, lifeless
+save for eyelids blinking in antagonism to the besieging flies.
+
+“Jerry can’t be far off,” said Billy Skywonkie, recognising the dog.
+He stood up in the buggy. “By cripes, there ’e is--goosed already,
+an’ ’e on’y got ’is cheque lars’ night.”
+
+On the chimney side of the shanty a man lay in agitated sleep beside
+his rifle and swag. There had been a little shade on that side in the
+morning, and he had been sober enough to select it, and lay his head
+on his swag. He had emptied the bottle lying at his feet since then.
+His swag had been thoroughly “gone through,” and also his singlet and
+trouser pockets. The fumes from the shant-grog baffled the flies.
+But the scorching sun was conquering; the man groaned, and his hands
+began to search for his burning head.
+
+Billy Skywonkie explained to his companion that it was “Thet fool,
+Jerry ther kangaroo-shooter, bluein’ ’is cheque fer skins.” He took
+the water bag under the buggy, and poured the contents into the open
+mouth and over the face of the “dosed” man, and raised him into a
+sitting posture. Jerry fought this friendliness vigorously, and,
+staggering to his feet, picked up his rifle, and took drunken aim at
+his rescuer, then at the terrified woman in the buggy.
+
+The rouseabout laughed unconcernedly. “’E thinks we’re blanky
+kangaroos,” he said to her. “Jerry, ole cock, yer couldn’t ’it a
+woolshed! Yer been taking ther sun!”
+
+He took the rifle and pushed the subdued Jerry into the chimney
+corner.
+
+He tilted his hat, till, bush fashion, it “’ung on one ’air,” and
+went inside the shanty. “Mag!” he shouted, thumping the bar (a plank
+supported by two casks).
+
+The woman in the buggy saw a slatternly girl with doughy hands come
+from the back, wiping the flour from her face with a kitchen towel.
+They made some reference to her she knew, as the girl came to the
+door and gave her close scrutiny. Then, shaking her head till her
+long brass earrings swung like pendulums, she laughed loudly.
+
+“Eh?” enquired the rouseabout.
+
+“My oath!” “Square dinkum!” she answered, going behind the bar.
+
+He took the silk handkerchief from his neck, and playfully tried
+to flick the corner into her eye. Mag was used to such delicate
+attentions and well able to defend herself. With the dirty kitchen
+towel she succeeded in knocking off his hat, and round and round the
+house she ran with it dexterously dodging the skin-pegs. He could
+neither overtake nor outwit her with any dodge. He gave in, and
+ransomed his hat with the “shouts” she demanded.
+
+From the back of the shanty, a bent old woman, almost on all fours,
+crept towards the man, again prostrate in the corner. She paused,
+with her ear turned to where the girl and the rouseabout were still
+at horse-play. With cat-like movements she stole on till within
+reach of Jerry’s empty pockets. She turned her terrible face to
+the woman in the buggy, as if in expectation of sympathy. Keeping
+wide of the front door, she came to the further side of the buggy.
+With the fascination of horror the woman looked at this creature,
+whose mouth and eyes seemed to dishonour her draggled grey hair.
+She was importuning for something, but the woman in the buggy
+could not understand till she pointed to her toothless mouth (the
+mission of which seemed to be, to fill its cavernous depths with
+the age-loosened skin above and below). A blue bag under each eye
+aggressively ticked like the gills of the fowls, and the sinews of
+the neck strained into bassi relievi. Alternately she pointed to
+her mouth, or laid her knotted fingers on the blue bags in pretence
+of wiping tears. Entrenched behind the absorbed skin-terraces, a
+stump of purple tongue made efforts at speech. When she held out her
+claw, the woman understood and felt for her purse. Wolfishly the old
+hag snatched and put into her mouth the coin, and as the now merry
+driver, followed by Mag, came, she shook a warning claw at the giver,
+and flopped whining in the dust, her hands ostentatiously open and
+wiping dry eyes.
+
+“’Ello Biddy, on ther booze again!”
+
+The bottle bulging from his coat pocket made speech with him
+intelligible, despite the impeding coin.
+
+He placed the bottle in the boot of the buggy, and turning to Mag,
+said “Give ther poor ole cow a dose!”
+
+“Yes, one in a billy; anything else might make her sick!” said Mag.
+“I caught ’er jus’ now swiggin’ away with ther tap in ’er mug!”
+
+He asked his companion would she like a wet. She asked for water, and
+so great was her need, that, making a barricade of closed lips and
+teeth to the multitude of apparently wingless mosquitoes thriving in
+its green tepidity, she moistened her mouth and throat.
+
+“Oh, I say, Billy!” called Mag as he drove off. Her tones suggested
+her having forgotten an important matter, and he turned eagerly.
+“W’en’s it goin’ ter rain?” she shrieked, convulsed with merriment.
+
+“Go an’ crawl inter a ’oller log!” he shouted angrily.
+
+“No, but truly, Billy.” Billy turned again. “Give my love to yaller
+Lizer; thet slues yer!”
+
+They had not gone far before he looked round again. “Gord!” he cried
+excitedly, “Look at Mag goin’ through ’er ole woman!”
+
+Mag had the old woman’s head between her knees, dentist-fashion, and
+seemed to concentrate upon her victim’s mouth, whose feeble impotence
+was soon demonstrated by the operator releasing her, and triumphantly
+raising her hand.
+
+What the finger and thumb held the woman knew and the other guessed.
+
+“By Gord. Eh! thet’s prime; ain’t it? No flies on Mag; not a fly!” he
+said, admiringly.
+
+“See me an’ ’er?” he asked, as he drove on.
+
+His tone suggested no need to reply, and his listener did not. A
+giddy unreality took the sting from everything, even from her desire
+to beseech him to turn back to the siding, and leave her there to
+wait for the train to take her back to civilization. She felt she had
+lost her mental balance. Little matters became distorted, and the
+greater shrivelled.
+
+He was now more communicative, and the oaths and adjectives so
+freely used were surely coined for such circumstances. “Damned” the
+wretched, starving, and starved sheep looked and were; “bloody” the
+beaks of the glutted crows; “blarsted” the whole of the plain they
+drove through!
+
+Gaping cracks suggested yawning graves, and the skeleton fingers of
+the drooping myalls seemingly pointed to them.
+
+“See me an’ Mag?” he asked again. “No flies on Mag; not a wink ’bout
+’er!” He chuckled in tribute. “Ther wus thet damned flash fool, Jimmy
+Fernatty,” he continued “--ther blanky fool; ’e never ’ad no show
+with Mag. An’ yet ’e’d go down there! It wus two mile furder this
+way, yet damned if ther blanky fool wouldn’t come this way every
+time, ’less ther boss ’e wus with ’im, ’stead er goin’ ther short
+cut,--ther way I come this mornin’. An’ every time Mag ud make ’im
+part ’arf a quid! I wus on’l there jus’ ’bout five minits meself, an’
+I stuck up nea’ly ’arf a quid! An’ there’s four gates (he flogged the
+horse and painted them crimson when he remembered them) this way,
+more ’n on ther way I come this mornin’.”
+
+Presently he gave her the reins with instructions to drive through
+one. It seemed to take a long time to close it, and he had to fix the
+back of the buggy before he opened it, and after it was closed.
+
+After getting out several times in quick succession to fix the back
+of the buggy when there was no gate, he seemed to forget the extra
+distance. He kept his hand on hers when she gave him the reins, and
+bade her “keep up ’er pecker.” “Someone would soon buck up ter ’er if
+their boss wusn’t on.” But the boss it seemed was a “terrer for young
+uns. Jimmy Fernatty ’as took up with a yaller piece an’ is livin’
+with ’er; But not me; thet’s not me! I’m like ther boss, thet’s me!
+No yeller satin for me!”
+
+He watched for the effect of this degree of taste on her.
+
+Though she had withdrawn her hand, he kept winking at her, and she
+had to move her feet to the edge of the buggy to prevent his pressing
+against them. He told her with sudden anger that any red black-gin
+was as good as a half chow any day, and it was no use gammoning for
+he knew what she was.
+
+“If Billy Skywonkie ’ad ter string onter yaller Lizer, more ’air on
+’is chest fer doin’ so,” (striking his own). “I ken get as many w’ite
+gins as I wanter, an’ I’d as soon tackle a gin as a chow anyways!”
+
+On his next visit to the back of the buggy she heard the crash of
+glass breaking against a tree. After a few snatches of song he
+lighted his pipe, and grew sorrowfully reminiscent.
+
+“Yes s’elp me, nea’ly ’arf a quid! An’ thet coloured ole ’og of a cow
+of a mother, soon’s she’s off ther booze, ’ll see thet she gets it!”
+Then he missed his silk handkerchief. “Ghost!” he said, breathing
+heavily, “Mag’s snavelled it! Lizer ’ll spot thet’s gone soon’s we
+get ’ithin cooee of ’er!”
+
+Against hope he turned and looked along the road; felt every pocket,
+lifted his feet, and looked under the mat. His companion, in reply,
+said she had not seen it since his visit to the shanty.
+
+“My Gord!” he said, “Mag’s a fair terror!” He was greatly troubled
+till the braggart in him gave an assertive flicker. “Know wot I’ll
+do ter Lizer soon’s she begins ter start naggin’ at me?” He intended
+this question as an insoluble conundrum, and waited for no surmises.
+“Fill ’er mug with this!” The shut fist he shook was more than a
+mugfull. “’Twouldn’ be ther first time I done it, not ther lars’.”
+But the anticipation seemed little comfort to him.
+
+The rest of the journey was done in silence, and without even a peep
+at the sky. When they came to the homestead gate he said his throat
+felt as though a “goanner” had crawled into it and died. He asked her
+for a pin and clumsily dropped it in his efforts to draw the collar
+up to his ears, but had better luck with a hair-pin.
+
+He appeared suddenly subdued and sober, and as he took his seat after
+closing the gate, he offered her his hand, and said, hurriedly, “No
+’arm done, an’ no ’arm meant; an’ don’t let on ter my missus--thet’s
+’er on the verander--thet we come be ther shanty.”
+
+It was dusk, but through it she saw that the woman was dusky too.
+
+“Boss in, Lizer?” There was contrition and propitiation in his voice.
+
+“You’ve bin a nice blanky time,” said his missus, “an’ lucky fer you:
+Billy Skywonkie ’e ain’t.”
+
+With bowed head, his shoulders making kindly efforts to hide his
+ears, he sat silent and listening respectfully. The woman in the
+buggy thought that the volubility of the angry half-caste’s tongue
+was the nearest thing to perpetual motion. Under her orders both got
+down, and from a seat under the open window in the little room to
+which Lizer had motioned, she gave respectful attention to the still
+rapidly flowing tirade. The offence had been some terrible injustice
+to a respectable married woman, “slavin’ an’ graftin’ an’ sweatin’
+from mornin’ ter night, for a slungin’ idlin’ lazy blaggard.” In
+an indefinable way the woman felt that both of them were guilty,
+and to hide from her part of the reproof was mean and cowardly.
+The half-caste from time to time included her, and by degrees she
+understood that the wasted time of which Lizer complained was
+supposed to have been dissipated in flirtation. Neither the shanty
+nor Mag had mention.
+
+From a kitchen facing the yard a Chinaman came at intervals, and with
+that assumption of having mastered the situation in all its bearings
+through his thorough knowledge of the English tongue, he shook his
+head in calm, shocked surprise. His sympathies were unmistakeably
+with Lizer, and he many times demonstrated his grip of the grievance
+by saying, “By Cli’ Billy, its a bloo’y shame!”
+
+Maybe it was a sense of what was in his mind that made the quivering
+woman hide her face when virtuous Ching Too came to look at her. She
+was trying to eat when a dog ran into the dining-room, and despite
+the violent beating of her heart, she heard the rouseabout tell the
+boss as he unsaddled his horse, “The on’y woman I see was a ’alf
+chow, an’ she ses she’s the one, an’ she’s in ther dinin’-room ’avin’
+a tuck in.”
+
+She was too giddy to stand when the boss entered, but she turned her
+mournful eyes on him, and supporting herself by the table, stood and
+faced him.
+
+He kept on his hat, and she, watching, saw curiosity and surprise
+change into anger as he looked at her.
+
+“What an infernal cheek _you_ had to come! Who sent you?” he asked
+stormily.
+
+She told him, and added that she had no intention of remaining.
+
+“How old?” She made no reply. His last thrust, as in disgust he
+strode out, had the effect of a galvanic battery on her dying body.
+
+Her bedroom was reeking with a green heavy scent. Empty powder boxes
+and rouge pots littered the dressing table, and various other aids
+to nature evidenced her predecessor’s frailty. From a coign in its
+fastness a black spider eyed her malignantly, and as long as the
+light lasted she watched it.
+
+The ringing of a bell slung outside in the fork of a tree awoke her
+before dawn. It was mustering--bush stocktaking--and all the station
+hands were astir. There was a noise of galloping horses being driven
+into the stockyard, and the clamour of the men as they caught and
+saddled them. Above the clatter of plates in the kitchen she could
+hear the affected drawl of the Chinaman talking to Lizer. She trod
+heavily along the passage, preparing the boss’s breakfast. This
+early meal was soon over, and with the dogs snapping playfully at
+the horses’ heels, all rode off.
+
+Spasmodic bars of “A Bicycle Built for Two” came from the kitchen,
+“Mayly, Mayly, give me answer do!” There was neither haste nor
+anxiety in the singer’s tones. Before the kitchen fire, oblivious to
+the heat, stood the Chinaman cook, inert from his morning’s opium.
+It was only nine, but this was well on in the day for Ching, whose
+morning began at four.
+
+He ceased his song as she entered. “You come Sydiney? Ah! You mally?
+Ah! Sydiney welly ni’ place. This placee welly dly--too muchee no
+lain--welly dly.”
+
+She was watching his dog. On a block lay a flitch of bacon, and
+across the freshly cut side the dog drew its tongue, then snapped at
+the flies, “That dog will eat the bacon,” she said.
+
+“No!” answered the cook. “’E no eat ’em--too saw.”
+
+It was salt; she had tried it for breakfast.
+
+He began energetically something about, “by-an’-bye me getty mally.
+By Cli’ no ’alf cas--too muchee longa jlaw.” He laughed and shook
+his head, reminiscent of “las’ a night,” and waited for applause.
+But, fascinated, she still watched the dog, who from time to time
+continued to take “saw” with his flies.
+
+“Go ou’ si’, Sir,” said the cook in a spirit of rivalry. The dog
+stood and snapped, “Go ou’ si’, I say!” No notice from the dog “Go
+ou’ si’, I tella you!” stamping his slippered feet and taking a fire
+stick. The dog leisurely sat down and looked at his master with mild
+reproof. “Go insi’ then, any bloo’y si’ you li’!” but pointing to
+their joint bed-room with the lighted stick. The dog went to the
+greasy door, saw that the hens sitting on the bed were quietly laying
+eggs to go with the bacon, and came back.
+
+She asked him where was the rouseabout who had driven her in
+yesterday.
+
+“Oh, Billy Skywonkie, ’e mally alri’! Lizer ’im missie!” He went on
+to hint that affection there was misplaced, but that he himself was
+unattached.
+
+She saw the rouseabout rattle into the yard in a spring cart. He let
+down the backboard and dumped three sheep under a light gallows.
+Their two front feet were strapped to one behind.
+
+He seemed breathless with haste. “Oh, I say!” he called out to her.
+“Ther boss ’e tole me this mornin’ thet I wus ter tell you, you wis
+ter sling yer ’ook. To do a get,” he explained. “So bundle yer duds
+tergether quick an’ lively! Lizer’s down at ther tank, washin’. Le’ss
+get away afore she sees us, or she’ll make yer swaller yer chewers.”
+Lowering his voice, he continued: “I wanter go ter ther shanty--on’y
+ter get me ’ankerchief.”
+
+He bent and strained back a sheep’s neck, drew the knife and steel
+from his belt, and skilfully danced an edge on the knife.
+
+She noticed that the sheep lay passive, with its head back, till its
+neck curved in a bow, and that the glitter of the knife was reflected
+in its eye.
+
+
+
+
+ BUSH CHURCH.
+
+
+ I.
+
+The hospitality of the bush never extends to the loan of a good horse
+to an inexperienced rider. The parson bumping along on old Rosey, who
+had smelt the water of the “Circler Dam,” was powerless to keep the
+cunning experienced brute from diverting from the track. With the bit
+in her teeth, her pace kept him fully occupied to hold his seat. At
+the edge of the Dam, old Rosey, to avoid the treacherous mud, began,
+with humped back and hoofs close together, to walk along the plank,
+that pierwise extended to the deeper water. The parson’s protests
+ended in his slipping over the arched neck of the wilful brute, on to
+the few inches of plank that she considerately left for him. The old
+mare drank leisurely, then backed off with the same precaution, and
+stood switching the flies with her stunted tail. The parson followed
+her and thankfully grabbed the reins. After several attempts to get
+up on the wrong side, he led the exacting animal to a log. He removed
+the veil he wore as a protection from the sticky eye-eating flies,
+so that Rosey might recognise him as her erstwhile rider. It was at
+this stage that “flash” Ned Stennard, always with time to kill and a
+tongue specially designed for the purpose, rode up and gave him lurid
+instructions and a leg up.
+
+He had come to their remoteness, he told Ned, as they rode along,
+to hold a service at a grazier’s homestead some miles distant.
+Under Ned’s sympathetic guidance he pulled up at the sliprails of a
+cockey’s selection to announce these tidings. It was Ned’s brother’s
+place, but Ned, who was not on speaking terms with his sister-in-law,
+rode on and waited.
+
+A group of half-naked children lay entangled among several kangaroo
+pups, in a make-believe of shade from a sickly gum tree. A canvas
+bag, with a saddle strap defining its long neck, hung from a bough,
+and the pups were yelping mildly at its contents, and licking the
+few drops of blood that fell. The parson saw the children rub the
+swarming flies from their eyes and turn to look at him. An older
+girl, bare-footed and dressed in a petticoat and old hat, was
+standing near a fire before the wide opening that served as a doorway
+to the humpy. She had a long stick, and was employed in permitting
+an aged billy-goat to bring his nose within an inch of the simmering
+water in the bucket slung over the fire.
+
+“Are your parents in?” he asked.
+
+“You aint ole Keogh?” said the girl.
+
+When he admitted that he wasn’t, he saw her interest in his
+personality was gone. “Are your mother and father in?”
+
+The thirsty billy was sneaking up again to the water, and she let him
+advance the prescribed limit before she made the jab that she enjoyed
+so thoroughly. “Mum’s gorn ter Tilly Lumber’s ter see t’ ther kid,
+and ther rester them’s gorn ter ther Circler Dam.”
+
+He made known his mission to the girl, but she didn’t divide her
+attention. The water would soon be too hot for the billy to drink,
+and there was no fun to be got out of the pups. For when she took
+the salt pork out of the canvas bag and put it in the bucket, they
+wouldn’t try to get it out of boiling water.
+
+Doubtful of his success, the parson rejoined Ned, and along the dusty
+track they jogged. The parson’s part in the dialogue was chiefly
+remonstrative as to the necessity of Ned’s variegated adjectives. And
+he had frequently to assure the bushman that it would be useless for
+him to search in his clerical pockets for tobacco, as he didn’t smoke.
+
+At the Horse Shoe Bend they overtook hairy Paddy Woods of eighteen
+withering summers. Paddy was punching and blaspheming a nine mile
+day out of his bullocks. These were straining their load along with
+heads bent close to the dust-padded track, silent, for all the whip
+weals, but for a cough to free their mouths and nostrils from dust.
+Old Rosey, an inveterate yarner, pulled up abruptly; but Paddy, who
+had his day’s work cut out to a minute, gave a voiceless side-long
+nod in recognition of the parson’s greeting, and went on driving his
+team. Probably his share of the conversation, mainly catechismal,
+would have been yea and nay nods, but for catching Ned’s eye when the
+parson asked if he were married. Paddy struck an attitude of aged
+responsibility, and, tipping Ned an intelligent wink, made a pretence
+of searching through a dusty past, and replied that he thought he
+was. The parson, giving him the benefit of the doubt, enquired if
+there were any children for baptism. Paddy, still with an eye on Ned,
+reckoned that the number of his offspring was uncertain, but promised
+that as soon as he delivered his load of wool he would have a day’s
+“musterin’ an’ draftin’ an’ countin’ an’ ear-markin’” and send him
+the returns. Ned’s loud laugh and “Good old Paddy” had not the effect
+on its young-old recipient’s well-filled tobacco pouch that he had
+hoped. The disgusted parson was trying to urge Rosey onward, but
+Rosey refused to leave her pleasant company till Ned brought his
+switch across her back.
+
+Ned stayed with Paddy long enough to tell him that, in his opinion,
+the black-coated parson was “nothin’ but a sneakin’ Inspector, pokin’
+an’ prowlin’ roun’ fur ole Keogh”--the lessee of the run, and their
+common enemy. He added that the green veil he wore over his eyes was
+a “mast” (mask), but that it didn’t deceive him. Tobaccoless Ned
+tried further to arouse practical admiration from pouch-full Paddy,
+by adding that he would ride after this disguised Inspector, “pump
+’im dry as a blow’d bladder, an’ then ’ammer ’ell outer ’im.” But
+even this serious threat against the parson’s stock-in-trade had no
+fruitful result, and putting his empty pipe back he galloped after
+his companion.
+
+As they rode along, the parson in admiration watched the wiry little
+bushman dexterously winking both eyes to the confusion of the flies,
+and listened to the substitution of words of his own coinage dropped
+red hot into the conversation in place of the sulphurous adjectives.
+Soon there was but little unknown to Ned’s listener of the inner
+history--and with such additions as contrasted unfavourably with his
+own--of every selector on this sun-sucked run. In order of infamy
+Ned placed the lessee first; a good second came the Land Agent in
+the little township whence this pilgrim parson had come. But this
+fact was made clear to him, that were the lessee ten times richer,
+the Land Agent ten times more unscrupulous, were “dummy” selectors
+occupying every acre, Ned was more than a match for them all.
+
+At a later stage of their journey, when he turned again to the
+narratives of his cockey brethren, another circumstance stood out.
+It was only when Ned had exhausted the certainty, probability, and
+possibility of increase among the mares, cows, ewes, and nannies of
+his and the other cockeys’ flocks and herds, that he would descend to
+the human statistics, and the parson found that impending probability
+and possibility entered largely into Ned’s computation of these.
+
+From time to time they sighted the cockeys’ humpies, but Ned, intent
+on making the most of his amazed listener, kept him on the track to
+his destination by promising to call at all the selections on his
+way back, and tell them that there was to be a service to-morrow
+morning. To emphasise his thoroughness, he added, with a wink of bush
+freemasonry, that he would “on’y tell two sorts--them wot arsts me,
+an’ them wot don’t.” And this clerical brother, newly initiated into
+the mysteries of bush craft, could not have found a better messenger.
+But the wonder expressed in his eyes, as he watched this new labourer
+in the vineyard cantering briskly away to bear the glad tidings,
+would have changed to awe could he have heard the varied versions Ned
+gave to the scattered families as to the need of their being at the
+grazier’s homestead the first thing next day. Moreover, most of the
+conversation related by Ned as having taken place between the parson
+and him would have been as new to the former as it was to Ned’s
+audience. For the adjectives with which he flavoured the parson’s
+share proved him to have readily and fluently mastered the lurid bush
+tongue.
+
+It was shearing time, and being also the middle of the week, most
+of the men were away. Those who were at home left their dinners,
+and came outside to talk to him. A visitor at meal times is always
+met outside the humpy, and the host, drawing a hand across a greasy
+mouth, leads the way to the nearest log. The women of the bush have
+little to share, and nursing the belief that how they live is quite
+unknown to one another, they have no inclination to entertain a
+caller. Two of the daily meals consist mainly of sliced damper dipped
+in a pan of fat, that always hangs over the fire. Mutton at shearing
+time is a rarity, as the men feed at the sheds. Wild pigs caught and
+killed by the women make the chief flesh food, but these are often
+scarce in the dry season.
+
+And in addition Ned was no favourite among the women. This was
+partly from his being “flash,” but more from his reputation for
+flogging his missus. Ned, moreover, had tried to force his example
+on the male community by impressing upon them his philosophy, that
+it was the proper thing to hit a woman every time you met her, since
+she must either be coming from mischief or going to it. As to his
+flashness, he considered he had something to be flash about. He had
+been twice to Sydney; and not only could he spell by ear, but, given
+an uncertain number of favouring circumstances, he could use a pen to
+the extent of putting his name to a cheque. Certainly before he would
+attempt this, Liz, his missus, had to pen up the goats, shut the hut,
+and, with the dogs and the kids, drive the fowls a mile from the
+house, and keep them there till Ned fired a gun. Left to himself, Ned
+would tear out a cheque, lay it on the table, place a block of wood
+on the bottom edge of the paper, to keep his hand from travelling
+off it to the table below. Then he had to tie his wrist to the left
+side of his belt--he was left-handed--in such a manner that his hand
+could not stray to the foreign region above the cheque, ink the pen
+with his right hand, and place it in the left. But even then the task
+was often unaccomplished. Sometimes he would be so intent on trying
+to keep the EDWARD on the line, that it would run to the end of the
+paper, excluding the STENNARD, and, despite Ned’s protests anent
+insufficient space, the bank did not approve of part of the signature
+being placed on the back of the cheque. When he tried to write small
+and straight, the result generally seemed satisfactory till a careful
+analysis showed a letter or so missing. Or, just as success seemed
+probable, his cheque book would give out, or his pen break. It was
+bad for Liz and her own boy Joey when either of these accidents
+occurred, for he would fire no gun, and, despite all the perspiring
+activity of Liz, the kids, and the dogs, some of the fowls would make
+their way home to roost on the hut when night came. For allowing him
+to be disturbed “jes as I wus gettin’ me ’and in” he would “take it
+outer” Liz, or, what was worse to her, “outer” Joey.
+
+But on this occasion Ned, ever resourceful and now hungry, refused to
+be led to a log. His reputation for startling discoveries was against
+him, but he knew that many of them must have seen him riding past
+with a black-coated stranger, and he trusted to that to support the
+story his ingenious imagination had ready for them. Authoritatively
+he demanded in each case to see the missus. They came ungraciously,
+but after his dark, bodeful hints as to the necessity of their
+attending service at the grazier’s homestead next day, he was invited
+inside and a place was cleared for him at the table. Quite recklessly
+they plied him with pints of tea and damper and dip, sprinkled with
+salt, and in some extravagant instances with pepper. And Ned took
+these favours as his due, though he knew he was no favourite.
+
+Flogging and flashness were lost sight of by these anxious women, as
+they listened to all he had to say. They coaxed him to wait while
+they searched among the few spare clothes in the gin cases with
+hide-hinged lids, for land receipts, marriage lines, letters from
+Government Departments, registered cattle brands, sheep ear-marks,
+and every other equipment that protects the poor cockey from a
+spiteful and revengeful Government, whose sole aim was “ter ketch
+’em winkin’” and then forfeit the selection. All of these documents
+Ned inspected upside down or otherwise, and pronounced with unlegal
+directness that “a squint et them ’ud fix ’im if thet’s wot ’e’s
+smellin’ after.” He told them to bring them next day. Those of the
+men who had swapped horses with passing drovers, without the exchange
+of receipts, were busy all afternoon trumping up witnesses.
+
+
+ II.
+
+Next morning the minister was sitting in the rocking chair on the
+verandah of the grazier’s house. He had a prayer book in one hand and
+a handkerchief in the other, with which he lazily disputed the right
+of the flies to roost on his veil. This gave an undulating motion to
+the chair which was very soothing after old Rosey’s bumping. He saw
+a pair of brown hands part the awning enclosing the verandah. Then a
+black head, held in the position of a butting animal, came in view.
+Free of the screen, the head craned upwards. He saw a flat, shrewd
+face, with black beady eyes set either side of a bridgeless nose. A
+wisp of dried grass hung from the wide mouth.
+
+“Sis wants er ride in thet ther cock ’orse yer in,” said the mouth,
+ejecting the grass with considerable force in his direction.
+
+Sis’ had worked her head in by this. She was fair, with nondescript
+hair and eyes, and she was “chawrin’”.
+
+“Wer’s ther cock ’orse, Jinny?” she asked, for the chair was not
+rocking.
+
+“Ridey it an’ let ’er see it; an’ undo this,” commanded Jinny.
+
+“Come round to the front,” said the minister mildly, and pointing to
+the opening opposite the door.
+
+They came in and walked up to him, with hoods hanging by the strings
+down their backs.
+
+“Have you come alone?”
+
+“The ether uns er comin’. Me an’ Sis giv’ ’em ther slip; we didn’
+wanter ’ump ther dash kid.”
+
+“How far have you walked?”
+
+“Yer parst our place yesserday mornin’. Didn’ yer see me an’ ther
+billy? Gosh, we nigh bust oursels at ther way yer legs stuck out.
+Fust I thort yer wus ole Keogh. Yer rides jes’ like er Chinymun.” The
+dark one did all the talking.
+
+“Our Sis wants er ride in this,” she continued. She gave the chair
+a lurch that sent the parson’s feet in the air. To avoid the
+threatened repetition he gripped both sides and planted his feet
+firmly on the boards.
+
+The younger one poked a stem of dried grass from her mouth through
+the mesh of the veil in a line with his left ear. Thoroughly routed,
+he sprang up, and the elder child leapt in.
+
+“’Ere they cum, Jinny,” warned Sis.
+
+Jinny peeped through the awning. “So they is. You gammon ter them we
+aint cum, w’en they arsts yer,” she said to the parson, “an’ we’ll
+sneak roun’ ther back. Eh, Sis?”
+
+Mammy and Daddy--commonly called “Jyne” and “Alick” even by their
+offspring--came in with four children, all younger than Jinny and
+Sis. Jyne carried the youngest “straddled” across her hip.
+
+The most pronounced feature of Jyne’s face was her mouth, and it
+seemed proud of its teeth, especially of the top row. Without any
+apparent effort, the last tooth there was always visible. She was a
+great power in the bush, being styled by the folk themselves “Rabbit
+Ketcher,” which, translated, means mid-wife. And the airs Jyne gave
+herself were justifiable, for she was the only “Rabbit Ketcher”
+this side of the township. To bring a qualified mid-wife from
+civilization would have represented a crippling expenditure to these
+cockies. Jyne’s moderate fees were usually four-legged.
+
+“D’y ter yous,” said Alick, blinking his bungy eyes, and smiling
+good-naturedly at the parson and at the grazier and his wife. He sat
+down without removing his hat. Jyne’s teeth saluted them but without
+any good nature. Jinny and Sis sneaked in behind their mother.
+
+“You young tinkers,” cried Jyne, “tyke this chile this minute.” Her
+voice, despite the size of her mouth, came through her nose. She put
+the baby on the floor, and, taking off her hood, mopped her face with
+the inside of her print dress.
+
+“We wus lookin’ fer you an’ Alick,” said Jinny to her mother, and
+winking at the parson.
+
+“Yes, you wus,--with ther ’ook,” answered Jyne.
+
+Without further introduction she slewed her head to one side, shut
+one eye knowingly, and said to the staring minister, “Ther ain’t a
+wink about Jinny.”
+
+The unblinking daughter instantly offered an illustration of her
+wakefulness. “Yer orter seen me an’ gran’dad th’ ether mornin’. ’E
+wus milkin’ ther nannies, an’ ther billy you seen ’e wus jes close
+agen ’im. I sneaks up to ther billy an’ gives ’im er jab. Lawr ter
+see ’im rush et ole Alex an’ bunt ’im! ’E’d er killed th’ ole feller
+on’y fer me. Wou’dn’ ’e, mum?”
+
+“Yer a bol’ gal,” said mum in a proud voice.
+
+The bewildered minister, to turn the conversation, took a vase of
+wild flowers.
+
+“They belong to the lily tribe, I think,” said the hostess. “They are
+bulbous.”
+
+“Wile hunyions,” sniffed Jyne, making no attempt to conceal her
+contempt for this cur of a woman, who thought so much of herself that
+she always brought a nurse from town.
+
+Then came Alick’s brother, “Flash” Ned; they were as unlike as
+brothers sometimes are. Ned greeted the parson with bush familiarity.
+He had his hat on one side, and was wearing a silk Sydney coat that
+reached to his heels. He was followed by Liz with their family of
+five. Joey stayed outside, and from time to time dexterously located
+his step-father. He was Liz’s child by an early marriage--at least,
+she always said she had been married.
+
+Perched on Liz’s head was a draggled hat that a month ago had been
+snow white. This also was one of Ned’s Sydney purchases. It was the
+first time Liz had worn it, but she and the children had overhauled
+it many times and tried it on. This privilege had been extended to
+all the women whose curiosity and envy had brought them to Liz’s
+place. Jinny had called on her way to church, and the missing end of
+the white feather, after being licked of its ticklesomeness, was now
+in her safe keeping.
+
+Jyne, catching sight of Joey, invited him inside. But the boy, at a
+warning glance from his mother, slunk further back. He had run in
+the wrong horse for his step-father that morning, and was evading a
+threatened hiding that was to remove both skin and hair. Liz would
+gladly have taken the hiding herself in place of Joey, but her
+interference, as she knew to her cost, would mean one for herself
+without saving the boy.
+
+But for all this Liz thought she was fairly happy. For it was not
+every day that Ned tried to sign a cheque or that the sheep got
+boxed, or that his horse refused to be caught. Nor did it always rain
+when he wanted it fine. Things did not go wrong every day, and he did
+not beat her or Joey unless they did. A pound of lollies for her and
+the kids from a dealer’s cart when one came round, would make her
+think him the best husband in the world.
+
+There was between Jyne and Ned the opposition that is instinctive
+between commanding spirits. Liz yielded obedience first to Ned then
+to Jyne.
+
+“Ow’s Polly?” enquired Liz, her countenance showing the gravity of
+the question.
+
+“Arst ’im,” snarled Jyne, baring her fangs and looking at uneasy
+shuffling Alick. “Makin’ ’er dror three casts er worter ten mile, an’
+er thet way. Wil’ pigs eatin’ ’er as I cum along.”
+
+“No!” said Liz, though she had known it all yesterday. News of such
+catastrophes soon spread in the bush.
+
+“Better corl me a liar at onct,” snapped Jyne.
+
+Next to arrive were Jyne’s mother and Alick’s father, both of whom
+lived with Jyne. The old woman rode on a horse astride a man’s
+saddle. The old man led it. She had Jyne’s mouth, or rather Jyne
+had hers, but the teeth were gone. The old man greeted the parson
+reverently, blew with his breath on the seat, and wiped it carefully
+with the handkerchief he had taken from his hat. Even then before
+sitting he raised the tails of the coat he had been married in
+so long ago. Until Ned’s Sydney purchase his had been the only
+decorative coat in the district.
+
+Tilly and Jim Lumber, with their ten-days-old baby, followed. Jim was
+the champion concertina player and bullock driver in the district. He
+came as the representative of the several families across the creek,
+whom energetic Ned had rounded up the day before. He had been chosen
+by them for his size and strength to do battle on their behalf. Ned’s
+effort to frighten those women whose husbands were away shearing
+into the necessity of attending service had over-reached itself, and
+they had been afraid to come. But they had entrusted their precious
+documents to Jim’s powerful keeping. He had his own registered brand
+tied up in a spotted handkerchief. This he dropped with a clank
+beside him as he sat sheepishly and gingerly on the edge of a chair.
+He was over six feet, but he sat with his head almost between his
+knees, till he resembled a quadruped. His shirt front bulged like
+a wallet with his clients’ papers. He slyly took stock of those
+assembled. Spry little Tilly got the credit of having done all the
+courting. Even after marriage she had always done his share of the
+talking.
+
+“Ow’s ther kiddy maroo?” said Alick to Jim, lisping from the size of
+the plug he had just bitten. He had a fatherly interest in all Jyne’s
+“rabbit ketchin’.”
+
+Jim, who never used his voice except to drive his bullocks, answered
+with a subterranean laugh.
+
+“Noo bit er flesh,” said Ned, nodding at the baby.
+
+“Ow’s Polly this mornin’?” gravely enquired Tilly, as she took a seat
+near Jyne.
+
+“Ah, poor Polly,” quavered Jyne’s mother, and sparing Jyne by telling
+of Polly’s untimely end.
+
+“Well, I’m blest; what a lorse!” said the sympathetic Tilly. She
+repeated a well-known story of the bu’stin’ of a poley cow last year.
+
+Jyne took the baby, and began to rate the mother mildly for “walkin’
+seven mile ser soon,” but Jyne’s mother interposed with a recital
+of “wot I dun w’en Jun (John) wur two days old.” John was present,
+fully six feet of him, grinning with a mouth bigger than Jyne’s, but
+mercifully hidden by a straggled moustache.
+
+However, Jyne was not to be outdone even by her own mother, and the
+narrative of her last, assisted in many minor details by Jinney, aged
+eleven, left little to be desired in the way of hardihood.
+
+Liz kept her teething baby respectfully silent by industriously
+rubbing its lower gum with a dirty thumb. She expressed her surprise
+at Jyne’s phenomenal endurance by little clicks of the tongue,
+shakes of the head, and other signs indicative of admiration and
+astonishment. When Jyne finished, she began eagerly on an experience
+of her own. “Well, w’en I wus took with Drary (short for Adrarian),
+think I could fin’ ther sissers?”
+
+Jyne, who knew that the recital of a daring feat was coming,
+enquired, “W’en yer wus took with Joey?”
+
+“No,” said Liz, stopping short with a nervous click in her voice, and
+looking at Ned.
+
+The next item was ventriloquising by Jyne per medium of Tilly’s
+uneasy baby. “My mammy, she sez, yer dot me all o’a hoo, she sez.
+No wunny, she sez, me can’t keep goody, she sez, ’ith me cosey all
+o’a hoo, she sez.” She had been examining the baby’s undergear,
+and at this stage her tone of baby banter suddenly changed to one
+of professional horror. “My Gawd, Tilly!” she cried, the drooping
+corners of her mouth nearly covering her upper teeth. “Look w’er
+er little belly-bands is--nearly un’er ’er arms,” she explained,
+probably to the company, but looking directly at the clergyman. And,
+with true professional acumen, she intimated that had she not been on
+the spot, an intricate part of the little one’s anatomy in another
+minute would “’a bust out a bleedin’ an’ not all ther doctors in ther
+worl’ couldn’ astoppt it.”
+
+The minister was very busy, meanwhile, blushing and getting his books
+in order, and with this congregation of ten adults and eighteen
+children he began, “Dearly beloved brethren----”
+
+Jim Lumber gripped his bullock brand, took a swift look at him and
+turned to Tilly. It had been settled between them that she was to do
+the talking. Alick, who, despite his father’s efforts to enlighten
+him as to the nature of a church service, and encouraged by Jyne’s
+remark that “they’d eat nothin’,” had also brought his valuable
+documents in his shirt front, thrust in a groping hand.
+
+For a few minutes the adults listened and watched intently, but the
+gentle voice of the parson, and his nervous manner, soon convinced
+them that they had nothing to fear from him. Ned had been ’pokin’
+borak’ at them again; they added it to the long score they owed him.
+
+The children wandered about the room. Jinny and Sis invited their
+little sister to “Cum an’ see ther pooty picters in the man’s book,”
+and they assisted the minister to turn over the leaves of his Bible.
+
+Alick’s father, who was from the North of Ireland, and, for all his
+forty years in the bush, had not lost his reverence for the cloth,
+bade his grand-daughters beseechingly to “quet,” whereupon Jinny
+showed him quite two inches of inky tongue. Ink was a commodity
+unknown in Jinny’s home, and all the unknown is edible to the bush
+child.
+
+“Woman!” he said, appealing to Jinny’s mother, “whybut you bid ’er to
+quet?”
+
+“You orter be in er glars’ ban’ box w’er ther ain’t no children;
+thet’s w’er you orter be,” answered Jyne.
+
+He beckoned to one straggler, a girl of six, with Alick’s face, who
+came to him promptly and sat on his knee.
+
+Presently her brown hand stroked his old cheek. “Gran’ dad,” she said.
+
+“Choot, darlin’,” he whispered, reverently.
+
+The child looked at him wonderingly. “I says you’s gran’ dad,” she
+repeated, “not ole Alick.”
+
+He laid his white head on hers.
+
+“Gran’ dad, ole Tommy Tolbit’s dead.”
+
+Turning his glistening face to Liz in momentary forgetfulness, he
+said solemnly, “The knowledge of this chile!”
+
+“Ole Talbert” had been dead for two years, and the knowledgable child
+had been surprising him so, at least twice a week.
+
+“We have erred and strayed from Thy ways like lost sheep,” murmured
+the minister.
+
+The smaller children wandered in and out of the bedrooms, carrying
+their spoils with them. But Jinny and Sis had drawn the now disabled
+rocking chair up to the window, and were busy poking faces at two of
+Liz’s children, who were standing on the couch inside. One of these
+made a vicious smack with a hair-brush at Jinny’s tongue, flattened
+against the glass. The ensuing crash stopped even the parson for a
+moment.
+
+Bravely he began again. He paused occasionally for a sudden
+subterranean laugh to cease or to put one book after another on the
+shelf behind him out of the children’s reach. Just as he read the
+last line of the Te Deum, “Oh Lord in Thee have I trusted, let me
+never be confounded,” one of Liz’s children tugged at his trousers,
+with a muzzled request that his teeth might be freed from a square of
+pink soap. Another offered to the baby Liz was nursing a pincushion
+she brought from the bedroom.
+
+“Jyne,” called Jinny from the verandah, “’Ere cums young Tommy Tolbit
+by ’isself. You wus right, Jyne; she ain’t cummin’!”
+
+Even Jyne’s gums gleamed; she looked triumphantly at Alick her
+husband, at Liz, then at all but Ned.
+
+In shambled Tommy, moist and panting. He had been a drover, and had
+recently taken up a selection on the run. He was a bridegroom of a
+month’s standing. His missus had been a servant at one of the hotels
+in the township.
+
+“Made a start!” he remarked. His voice gave the impression that he
+did not mind their not waiting for him.
+
+“Missus ain’t comin’?” enquired Alick, trying to atone to Jyne for
+overloading Polly.
+
+“Not ter day,” said the bridegroom, but his voice intimated that in
+all probability she would have been able to come to-morrow.
+
+“No!” said Jyne, putting him under fire, and trying to keep the crow
+out of her voice.
+
+“Ain’t very well, is she? Didn’ eat a very ’earty breakfuss this
+mornin’?” And a further remark suggested that even if the meal had
+been hearty, the usual process of assimilation had not taken place.
+
+“Ow’s Polly?” he enquired.
+
+“Cooked,” said Jyne, instantly diverted.
+
+“Go on!” said the bridegroom, with well feigned astonishment. His
+breathless and perspiring state had been caused by his “going on” to
+capture one of the wild suckers that had been eating Polly.
+
+“Let us pray,” said the minister. His host, hostess, and Alick’s
+father knelt, but the rest sat as usual.
+
+The knowledgable child, considering the grandfather’s position an
+invitation to mount, climbed on his back. Making a bridle of the
+handkerchief round the old fellow’s neck, and digging two heels into
+his sides, she talked horse to him. The protesting old man bucked
+vigorously, but it was no easy task to throw her.
+
+The clergyman gave out his text, and the sermon began.
+
+Jyne’s children commenced to complain of being “’ungery” and a
+fair-sized damper was taken from a pillow-slip. This, together with
+two tin tots and a bottle of goat’s milk, was given to Jinny and she
+was told to do “ther sharin’.”
+
+The hostess asked Jyne in a whisper to send them to the verandah, and
+for a time there was comparative quiet. Such interruptions as “Jinny
+won’t gimme nun, Arnie” (Auntie) from Liz’s children being checked by
+Jyne with “Go an’ play an’ doan’ ’ave ser much gab, like yer father.”
+
+“Thet greedy wretch uv er Jinny is guzzlin’ all ther milk inter ’er,
+Jyne,” from her own children, was appeased by her promise to “break
+ther young faggit’s back w’en I get ’ome.”
+
+There was a wail of anguished hunger from Liz’s empty children that
+aroused paternal sympathy in Ned. “Sep me Gord,” he said, “some
+wimmen is like cows. They’ll give ther own calf a suck, but if anyone
+else’s calf cums anigh ’em they lif’ their leg an’ kick it ter
+blazes.”
+
+Jyne tossed her head and, with a derisive laugh, expressed the
+opinion that “It ’ed fit sum people better if ther munny wasted in
+buyin’ flash coats an’ rediclus ’ats wus spent in flour bags.”
+
+For a short space only the voice of the preacher sounded, as, in
+studied stoicism, he pursued his thankless task. Occasionally they
+looked at him to see “’Oo ’e wus speakin’ ter,” but finding nothing
+directly personal, even this attention ceased.
+
+Liz leant across to Tilly Lumber and asked, “Fowl layin’?”
+
+“Ketch ’em er layin’ et Chrissermus.”
+
+Ned told how he had brought home a number of law books from Sydney,
+and that he and an old man he had picked up “wus readin’ ’em.” It was
+his intention to absorb such an amount of knowledge that all he would
+have to do with the lessee of the run--an ex-barrister--would be to
+put him in a bail. What would follow was graphically illustrated by
+Ned’s dropping his head, gripping an imaginary bucket between his
+knees, and opening and shutting his hands in rhythmic up and down
+movements. Some of his audience, remembering his threats and warning
+against the parson, thought this pantomime must have an ominous
+meaning for the preacher.
+
+But sceptical Jyne was not impressed. “Upon me soul,” she said, “sum
+people is the biggest lyin’ blowers that ever cockt er lip.”
+
+Alick, always for peace, stepped into the breach. “Comin’ along jes’
+now,” he said, shifting his plug of tobacco from one side to the
+other, and aiming at the flies in the fireplace with the juice, “we
+’as a yarn with Mick Byrnes. ’E ’as ther luck of er lousy calf. ’E
+sez ’e got eightpence orl roun’ fer ’ees kangaroo skins. Damned if I
+can.”
+
+“Now a good plan ’ed be,” said Ned, “ter get a good lot, sen’ ’em
+down ter them Sydney blokes. Slip down yerself, go ter ther sale,
+don’ let on ’oo yer are, an’ run ’em up like blazes. Thet’s wot I’ll
+do with my wool nex’ year.”
+
+This plan seemed commendable to Alick. “By Goey,” he said, his mild
+eyes blinking.
+
+Jyne never, on any occasion, showed the slightest interest or
+attention when Ned was speaking, unless to sniff and lay bare her
+bottom teeth, but here she remarked, “Sum people ’ud keep runnin’ ter
+Sydney till ’e ’asen’ er penny ter fly with.”
+
+“If sum people with ser much jawr, an’ ’er mouth ’es big ’es ’er torn
+pocket, belonged ter me,” said Ned, “I’d smash er ugly jawr.”
+
+Jyne slewed hers to an awful angle in his direction, “I’d like ter
+see yer try it.”
+
+A look of agony came into the eyes of the grazier’s wife as she heard
+the door of the dining-room open. The children were so quiet, that
+she knew they were up to mischief.
+
+She heard Jinny’s hoarse whisper. “Orl of yez wait an’ I’ll bring
+yer sumsin’.” On the dining-room table was the cold food prepared
+for the clergyman’s dinner. She looked across at her husband with
+dumb entreaty. He, with eyes devoutly on the carpet, was listening
+intently to Ned’s account of how he nearly made the squatter take a
+“sugar doodle” (back somersault) when he heard that he had been to
+Sydney.
+
+“’Day Keogh,” sez I.
+
+“’Oo ’ave I ther ’oner of speakin’ ter?” sez ’e.
+
+“Mr. Stennard,” I sez.
+
+“Oh indeed,” ’e sez, “very ’appy ter make yer acquaintance, Mr.
+Stennard, Esquire,” ’e sez.
+
+“Never mind no blarsted acquaintance,” I sez, “w’en are yer goin’ ter
+take yer flamin’ jumbucks orf my lan’?” I sez.
+
+“Your lan’,” ’e sez, “I didn’ know you ’ad any lan’ about ’ere,” ’e
+sez.
+
+“Oh, didn’ yer,” I sez, “you ner ther Lan’ Agent won’ frighten me
+orf,” I sez, “gammonin’ I’m on er reserve,” sez I, “I’ve paid me
+deposit, an’ I’ve been ter Sydney,” I sez, “I put me name ter a
+cheque,” sez I, “an’ ----”
+
+Jyne ceased sniffing, to laugh long and loudly. “Gawd, eh!” she said,
+with her eyes on the ceiling and apparently appealing to the flies.
+“Wot ’erbout sech game cocks plantin’ under ther dray w’en old Keogh
+kem bullyin’ w’en we fust kem out ’ere?”
+
+Ned went hastily out at the front door “ter squint at ther jumbucks,”
+three miles away. Joey, who had been peering round that door, now
+appeared at the back.
+
+“Come in, Joey,” snorted Jyne. “No one ain’t game ter ’it yer w’en
+I’m ’ere.”
+
+The minister still preached, but he had only old Alick for a listener.
+
+The hostess’ mental picture of Jinny “sharin’” her dinner for
+three among that voracious brood was distracting. Only the fear of
+suffering in the clergyman’s mind as one of “them” kept her to her
+seat. She could give the sermon no attention, but listened to Sis
+licking her fingers, and wondered if it was the vinegar or the wine
+that caused Jinny’s cough. Presently Jinny set that doubt at rest by
+coming in odorous, and with the front of her dress wine-stained.
+
+“Little ’un snoozin’!” Jinny remarked, lurching giddily towards
+her to merrily twirl her fist in the snoozer. The snoozer’s mother
+wondered if they had shut the dining-room door. Soon the noise of the
+fowls scattering the crockery told her they had not.
+
+“Thum busted fowls is eatin’ orl yer dinner,” said Jinny dreamily.
+
+“’Unt ’em out an’ shet ther door,” said sympathetic Jyne.
+
+“You go, Sis, I’m tired.” Jinny laid her giddy head on the floor, and
+went to sleep.
+
+“Liz,” said Jyne, maliciously, for she immediately grudged Sis’
+efforts to chase the fowls out of the dining-room. “Wot’s thet there
+flower?” pointing to the vase.
+
+“Wile huniyon,” said Liz, promptly.
+
+“Er, is it? Thet’s orl yer know. Thet’s a bulbers, thet is. Thet’s
+ther noo name fer it.” She looked at the grazier’s wife and laughed
+ironically.
+
+“Bulbers! yer goat,” said Liz, laughing dutifully.
+
+The sermon was over, and the worried minister began the christening.
+
+The naming of the hostess’ baby was plain sailing. He then drew
+towards him a child of about two years, and asked, “What is this
+child’s name?”
+
+“Adrarian,” said Liz. An old shepherd reading to her a love story had
+so pronounced the hero’s name. It staggered the minister, until his
+hostess spelt “Adrian.”
+
+“What is its age?”
+
+“About two year.”
+
+This was too vague for him, and he pressed for dates. But for these
+dwellers in the bush the calendar had no significance. The mother
+thought it might be in November. “Cos it wus shearin’, an’ I’d ter
+keep Teddy at ’ome ter do ther work.” Teddy was “about ten.” From
+these uncertainties the clergyman had to supply the dates for his
+official returns to the Government.
+
+“But Lawd,” as Jyne remarked to ease his perplexity, “wot did it
+matter fer a brat of er boy.” She had a family of six, and all were
+girls.
+
+There was much the same difficulty with all the others, an exception
+being Tilly Lumber’s baby of under a fortnight. A cowardly look came
+into the minister’s eyes as he turned to this grotesque atom already
+in the short coat stage. He remembered Jyne’s awful discovery of a
+little while back, and shirked the duty of holding it even for a
+moment.
+
+The christening was a matter that had some personal interest for
+the elders, and they grouped round the minister. Bridegroom Tommy,
+striking the mossy back of Alick’s old father, suggested that he and
+Jyne’s mother should get spliced, and he expressed the opinion of the
+fruitfulness of such union within record time as a set-off dig at
+Jyne.
+
+She instantly balanced matters between herself and the incautiously
+smiling Liz and the laughing unfilial Ned, “Stop scratchin’ yer
+’ed, miss; anyone ’ud think there wus anythink in it,” she said to
+Liz’s eldest girl, who was brushing the christening water from her
+hair. Ned’s stepson she invited to come nearer, and tell her who had
+blackened his poor eye. She advised the silent lad “ter get a waddy
+ther nex’ time anyone bigger’n yer goes ter ’it yer.” And she gave
+him directions by twirling an imaginary waddy swiftly, its circuit
+suddenly diverting in a line with Ned’s skull.
+
+It was long past noon when the ceremony was ended. The minister
+drained his glass of water, mopped his face, and heaved a deep sigh.
+As the whole congregation still sat on, he gave them a hint that
+“church” was out, and their presence no longer required. He spoke
+with a show of concern of how very hot they would find the walk home,
+and to further emphasise his meaning, he shook hands with all the
+adults, and walked to the verandah. Without the slightest concern
+they sat on, listening intently to the sounds the hostess made in
+trying to scrape together a meal for the clergyman. Apparently they
+all meant to stay the day.
+
+The grazier’s wife appeared for a moment to beckon him to go round
+the house into the dining-room. He sat down to the remains of the
+dinner the children had left.
+
+At that moment Jinny, who had been awakened for the christening,
+looked round the door. “Our Sis wants ter know w’en’s ’er supper’s
+goin’ ter be!” she said.
+
+This perhaps was an acknowledgment that Sis had already dined.
+
+
+
+
+ THE CHOSEN VESSEL.
+
+
+She laid the stick and her baby on the grass while she untied the
+rope that tethered the calf. The length of the rope separated them.
+The cow was near the calf, and both were lying down. Feed along the
+creek was plentiful, and every day she found a fresh place to tether
+it, since tether it she must, for if she did not, it would stray
+with the cow out on the plain. She had plenty of time to go after
+it, but then there was baby; and if the cow turned on her out on the
+plain, and she with baby,--she had been a town girl and was afraid
+of the cow, but she did not want the cow to know it. She used to run
+at first when it bellowed its protest against the penning up of its
+calf. This satisfied the cow, also the calf, but the woman’s husband
+was angry, and called her--the noun was cur. It was he who forced her
+to run and meet the advancing cow, brandishing a stick, and uttering
+threatening words till the enemy turned and ran. “That’s the way!”
+the man said, laughing at her white face. In many things he was worse
+than the cow, and she wondered if the same rule would apply to the
+man, but she was not one to provoke skirmishes even with the cow.
+
+It was early for the calf to go “to bed”--nearly an hour earlier than
+usual; but she had felt so restless all day. Partly because it was
+Monday, and the end of the week that would bring her and baby the
+companionship of its father, was so far off. He was a shearer, and
+had gone to his shed before daylight that morning. Fifteen miles as
+the crow flies separated them.
+
+There was a track in front of the house, for it had once been a wine
+shanty, and a few travellers passed along at intervals. She was not
+afraid of horsemen; but swagmen, going to, or worse, coming from the
+dismal, drunken little township, a day’s journey beyond, terrified
+her. One had called at the house to-day, and asked for tucker.
+
+Ah! that was why she had penned up the calf so early! She feared more
+from the look of his eyes, and the gleam of his teeth, as he watched
+her newly awakened baby beat its impatient fists upon her covered
+breasts, than from the knife that was sheathed in the belt at his
+waist.
+
+She had given him bread and meat. Her husband she told him was sick.
+She always said that when she was alone, and a swagman came, and she
+had gone in from the kitchen to the bedroom, and asked questions
+and replied to them in the best man’s voice she could assume. Then
+he had asked to go into the kitchen to boil his billy, but she gave
+him tea, and he drank it on the wood heap. He had walked round and
+round the house, and there were cracks in some places, and after the
+last time he had asked for tobacco. She had none to give him, and he
+had grinned, because there was a broken clay pipe near the wood heap
+where he stood, and if there were a man inside, there ought to have
+been tobacco. Then he asked for money, but women in the bush never
+have money.
+
+At last he had gone, and she, watching through the cracks, saw him
+when about a quarter of a mile away, turn and look back at the
+house. He had stood so for some moments with a pretence of fixing his
+swag, and then, apparently satisfied, moved to the left towards the
+creek. The creek made a bow round the house, and when he came to it
+she lost sight of him. Hours after, watching intently for signs of
+smoke, she saw the man’s dog chasing some sheep that had gone to the
+creek for water, and saw it slink back suddenly, as if the man had
+called it.
+
+More than once she thought of taking her baby and going to her
+husband. But in the past, when she had dared to speak of the dangers
+to which her loneliness exposed her, he had taunted and sneered at
+her. She need not flatter herself, he had coarsely told her, that any
+body would want to run away with her.
+
+Long before nightfall she placed food on the kitchen table, and
+beside it laid the big brooch that had been her mother’s. It was the
+only thing of value that she had. And she left the kitchen door wide
+open.
+
+The doors inside she securely fastened. Beside the bolt in the back
+one she drove in the steel and scissors; against it she piled the
+table and the stools. Underneath the lock of the front door she
+forced the handle of the spade, and the blade between the cracks in
+the flooring boards. Then the prop-stick, cut into lengths, held the
+top, as the spade held the middle. The windows were little more than
+portholes; she had nothing to fear through them.
+
+She ate a few mouthfuls of food and drank a cup of milk. But she
+lighted no fire, and when night came, no candle, but crept with her
+baby to bed.
+
+What woke her? The wonder was that she had slept--she had not meant
+to. But she was young, very young. Perhaps the shrinking of the
+galvanized roof--yet hardly, since that was so usual. Something had
+set her heart beating wildly; but she lay quite still, only she put
+her arm over her baby. Then she had both round it, and she prayed,
+“Little baby, little baby, don’t wake!”
+
+The moon’s rays shone on the front of the house, and she saw one
+of the open cracks, quite close to where she lay, darken with a
+shadow. Then a protesting growl reached her; and she could fancy she
+heard the man turn hastily. She plainly heard the thud of something
+striking the dog’s ribs, and the long flying strides of the animal
+as it howled and ran. Still watching, she saw the shadow darken
+every crack along the wall. She knew by the sounds that the man was
+trying every standpoint that might help him to see in; but how much
+he saw she could not tell. She thought of many things she might do to
+deceive him into the idea that she was not alone. But the sound of
+her voice would wake baby, and she dreaded that as though it were the
+only danger that threatened her. So she prayed, “Little baby, don’t
+wake, don’t cry!”
+
+Stealthily the man crept about. She knew he had his boots off,
+because of the vibration that his feet caused as he walked along the
+verandah to gauge the width of the little window in her room, and the
+resistance of the front door.
+
+Then he went to the other end, and the uncertainty of what he was
+doing became unendurable. She had felt safer, far safer, while he
+was close, and she could watch and listen. She felt she must watch,
+but the great fear of wakening baby again assailed her. She suddenly
+recalled that one of the slabs on that side of the house had shrunk
+in length as well as in width, and had once fallen out. It was held
+in position only by a wedge of wood underneath. What if he should
+discover that! The uncertainty increased her terror. She prayed as
+she gently raised herself with her little one in her arms, held
+tightly to her breast.
+
+She thought of the knife, and shielded her child’s body with her
+hands and arms. Even its little feet she covered with its white
+gown, and baby never murmured--it liked to be held so. Noiselessly
+she crossed to the other side, and stood where she could see and
+hear, but not be seen. He was trying every slab, and was very near
+to that with the wedge under it. Then she saw him find it; and heard
+the sound of the knife as bit by bit he began to cut away the wooden
+support.
+
+She waited motionless, with her baby pressed tightly to her, though
+she knew that in another few minutes this man with the cruel eyes,
+lascivious mouth, and gleaming knife, would enter. One side of the
+slab tilted; he had only to cut away the remaining little end, when
+the slab, unless he held it, would fall outside.
+
+She heard his jerked breathing as it kept time with the cuts of the
+knife, and the brush of his clothes as he rubbed the wall in his
+movements, for she was so still and quiet, that she did not even
+tremble. She knew when he ceased, and wondered why. She stood well
+concealed; she knew he could not see her, and that he would not
+fear if he did, yet she heard him move cautiously away. Perhaps he
+expected the slab to fall. Still his motive puzzled her, and she
+moved even closer, and bent her body the better to listen. Ah! what
+sound was that? “Listen! Listen!” she bade her heart--her heart that
+had kept so still, but now bounded with tumultuous throbs that dulled
+her ears. Nearer and nearer came the sounds, till the welcome thud of
+a horse’s hoof rang out clearly.
+
+“Oh, God! Oh, God! Oh, God!” she cried for they were very close
+before she could make sure. She turned to the door, and with her baby
+in her arms tore frantically at its bolts and bars.
+
+Out she darted at last, and running madly along, saw the horseman
+beyond her in the distance. She called to him in Christ’s name, in
+her babe’s name, still flying like the wind with the speed that
+deadly peril gives. But the distance grew greater and greater between
+them, and when she reached the creek her prayers turned to wild
+shrieks, for there crouched the man she feared, with outstretched
+arms that caught her as she fell. She knew he was offering terms if
+she ceased to struggle and cry for help, though louder and louder
+did she cry for it, but it was only when the man’s hand gripped
+her throat, that the cry of “Murder” came from her lips. And when
+she ceased, the startled curlews took up the awful sound, and flew
+shrieking over the horseman’s head.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“By God!” said the boundary rider, “its been a dingo right enough!
+Eight killed up here, and there’s more down in the creek--a ewe and a
+lamb, I’ll bet; and the lamb’s alive!” And he shut out the sky with
+his hand, and watched the crows that were circling round and round,
+nearing the earth one moment, and the next shooting skywards. By
+that he knew the lamb must be alive; even a dingo will spare a lamb
+sometimes.
+
+Yes, the lamb was alive, and after the manner of lambs of its kind
+did not know its mother when the light came. It had sucked the still
+warm breasts, and laid its little head on her bosom, and slept till
+the morn. Then, when it looked at the swollen disfigured face, it
+wept and would have crept away, but for the hand that still clutched
+its little gown. Sleep was nodding its golden head and swaying its
+small body, and the crows were close, so close, to the mother’s
+wide-open eyes, when the boundary rider galloped down.
+
+“Jesus Christ!” he said, covering his eyes. He told afterwards how
+the little child held out its arms to him, and how he was forced to
+cut its gown that the dead hand held.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was election time, and as usual the priest had selected a
+candidate. His choice was so obviously in the interests of the
+squatter, that Peter Hennessey’s reason, for once in his life, had
+over-ridden superstition, and he had dared promise his vote to
+another. Yet he was uneasy, and every time he woke in the night (and
+it was often), he heard the murmur of his mother’s voice. It came
+through the partition, or under the door. If through the partition,
+he knew she was praying in her bed; but when the sounds came under
+the door, she was on her knees before the little altar in the corner
+that enshrined the statue of the Blessed Virgin and Child.
+
+“Mary, Mother of Christ! save my son! Save him!” prayed she in the
+dairy as she strained and set the evening’s milking. “Sweet Mary! for
+the love of Christ, save him!” The grief in her old face made the
+morning meal so bitter, that to avoid her he came late to his dinner.
+It made him so cowardly, that he could not say good-bye to her, and
+when night fell on the eve of the election day, he rode off secretly.
+
+He had thirty miles to ride to the township to record his vote. He
+cantered briskly along the great stretch of plain that had nothing
+but stunted cotton bush to play shadow to the full moon, which
+glorified a sky of earliest spring. The bruised incense of the
+flowering clover rose up to him, and the glory of the night appealed
+vaguely to his imagination, but he was preoccupied with his present
+act of revolt.
+
+Vividly he saw his mother’s agony when she would find him gone. At
+that moment, he felt sure, she was praying.
+
+“Mary! Mother of Christ!” He repeated the invocation, half
+unconsciously. And suddenly, out of the stillness, came Christ’s name
+to him--called loudly in despairing accents.
+
+“For Christ’s sake! Christ’s sake! Christ’s sake!” called the voice.
+Good Catholic that he had been, he crossed himself before he dared
+to look back. Gliding across a ghostly patch of pipe-clay, he saw a
+white-robed figure with a babe clasped to her bosom.
+
+All the superstitious awe of his race and religion swayed his brain.
+The moonlight on the gleaming clay was a “heavenly light” to him, and
+he knew the white figure not for flesh and blood, but for the Virgin
+and Child of his mother’s prayers. Then, good Catholic that once more
+he was, he put spurs to his horse’s sides and galloped madly away.
+
+His mother’s prayers were answered.
+
+Hennessey was the first to record his vote--for the priest’s
+candidate. Then he sought the priest at home, but found that he was
+out rallying the voters. Still, under the influence of his blessed
+vision, Hennessey would not go near the public houses, but wandered
+about the outskirts of the town for hours, keeping apart from the
+towns-people, and fasting as penance. He was subdued and mildly
+ecstatic, feeling as a repentant chastened child, who awaits only the
+kiss of peace.
+
+And at last, as he stood in the graveyard crossing himself with
+reverent awe, he heard in the gathering twilight the roar of many
+voices crying the name of the victor at the election. It was well
+with the priest.
+
+Again Hennessey sought him. He was at home, the house-keeper said,
+and led him into the dimly-lighted study. His seat was immediately
+opposite a large picture, and as the housekeeper turned up the lamp,
+once more the face of the Madonna and Child looked down on him, but
+this time silently, peacefully. The half-parted lips of the Virgin
+were smiling with compassionate tenderness; her eyes seemed to beam
+with the forgiveness of an earthly mother for her erring but beloved
+child.
+
+He fell on his knees in adoration. Transfixed, the wondering priest
+stood, for mingled with the adoration, “My Lord and my God!” was the
+exaltation, “And hast Thou chosen me?”
+
+“What is it, Peter?” said the priest.
+
+“Father,” he answered reverently, and with loosened tongue he poured
+forth the story of his vision.
+
+“Great God!” shouted the priest, “and you did not stop to save her!
+Have you not heard?”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Many miles further down the creek a man kept throwing an old cap into
+a water-hole. The dog would bring it out and lay it on the opposite
+side to where the man stood, but would not allow the man to catch
+him, though it was only to wash the blood of the sheep from his mouth
+and throat, for the sight of blood made the man tremble.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber’s Note:
+
+Words in italics are surrounded by underscores, _like this_.
+Underlined text is surrounded by tildes, ~like this~. Words may have
+multiple spelling variations or inconsistent hyphenation in the text.
+These have been left unchanged, as were jargon, dialect, obsolete and
+alternative spellings. Final stops missing at the end of sentences
+were added. Duplicate words at line endings were removed. Punctuation
+was standardized. Four misspelled words were corrected. Unprinted
+letters were added to three words:
+
+ ‘... who from time to t[ime] continued to take ...’
+ ‘... She [fea]red more from the look of his eyes,...’
+ ‘... and [l]ooked under the mat ...’
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78420 ***
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+ <title>
+ Bush studies | Project Gutenberg
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+</head>
+
+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78420 ***</div>
+<div class="chapter">
+<figure class="figcenter illowp50" id="cover" style="max-width: 107.75em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Front cover of the book. It is dark green fabric. The title is centered, surrounded by a box. Below that in another box is the author's name above a sketch of a tree on a hillside. At the bottom is a third box surrounding the words 'Duckworth's Greenback Library,' centered. All three boxes are fit within another box that runs about an inch inside each edge of the cover.">
+</figure>
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h1 class="ls">
+BUSH STUDIES
+</h1>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+</div>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="right">
+ <span class="u">BARBARA BAYNTON</span>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="p2un muchlarger">BUSH STUDIES</p>
+
+<p class="p4 center x-ebookmaker-important">
+<span class="allsmcap smaller">BY</span><br>
+<span class="ls">BARBARA BAYNTON</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="p4un muchsmaller">LONDON<br>
+DUCKWORTH &amp; <abbr title="Company">CO.</abbr>,<br>
+3, HENRIETTA STREET, <abbr title="Western Central">W.C.</abbr></p>
+
+<p class="p2 center smaller">
+<abbr title="1902">MDCCCCII.</abbr>
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center muchsmaller">
+PRINTED BY R. FOLKARD AND SON,<br>
+22, DEVONSHIRE STREET, QUEEN SQUARE, BLOOMSBURY,<br>
+LONDON, <abbr title="Western Central">W.C.</abbr>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smaller">TO</span><br>
+<span class="ls">HELEN McMILLEN</span><br>
+<span class="smaller">OF SYDNEY<br>
+NEW SOUTH WALES</span>
+</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">
+ CONTENTS.
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<table>
+<tr><td class="tdr smaller" colspan="2">PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">A Dreamer</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#A_DREAMER">1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl">Squeaker’s Mate</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#SQUEAKERS_MATE">15</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl">Scrammy ’And</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#SCRAMMY_AND">44</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl">Billy Skywonkie</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#BILLY_SKYWONKIE">79</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl">Bush Church</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#BUSH_CHURCH">106</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Chosen Vessel</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#THE_CHOSEN_VESSEL">142</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center">
+NOTE.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<span class="smcap">Scrammy ’And.</span><br>
+“Scrammy” indicates malformation of either hand or foot.<br>
+<br>
+<span class="smcap">Billy Skywonkie.</span><br>
+“Skywonkie” signifies weather-prophet.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1"></span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="A_DREAMER">
+ A DREAMER.
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A swirl</span> of wet leaves from the night-hidden
+trees decorating the little station, beat against
+the closed doors of the carriages. The porter
+hurried along holding his blear-eyed lantern to
+the different windows, and calling the name of
+the township in language peculiar to porters.
+There was only one ticket to collect.</p>
+
+<p>Passengers from far up-country towns have
+importance from their rarity. He turned his
+lantern full on this one, as he took her ticket.
+She looked at him too, and listened to the sound
+of his voice, as he spoke to the guard. Once she
+had known every hand at the station. The
+porter knew everyone in the district. This
+traveller was a stranger to him.</p>
+
+<p>If her letter had been received, someone would
+have been waiting with a buggy. She passed
+through the station. She saw nothing but an
+ownerless dog, huddled, wet and shivering, in a
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2"></span>corner. More for sound she turned to look up
+the straggling street of the township. Among
+the sheoaks, bordering the river she knew so
+well, the wind made ghostly music, unheeded by
+the sleeping town. There was no other sound,
+and she turned to the dog with a feeling of kinship.
+But perhaps the porter had a message!
+She went back to the platform. He was locking
+the office door, but paused as though expecting
+her to speak.</p>
+
+<p>“Wet night!” he said at length, breaking
+the silence.</p>
+
+<p>Her question resolved itself into a request for
+the time, though this she already knew. She
+hastily left him.</p>
+
+<p>She drew her cloak tightly round her. The
+wind made her umbrella useless for shelter.
+Wind and rain and darkness lay before her on
+the walk of three bush miles to her mother’s
+home. Still it was the home of her girlhood,
+and she knew every inch of the way.</p>
+
+<p>As she passed along the sleeping street, she
+saw no sign of life till near the end. A light
+burned in a small shop, and the sound of swift
+tapping came to her. They work late to-night,
+she thought, and, remembering their gruesome
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3"></span>task, hesitated, half-minded to ask these night
+workers, for whom they laboured. Was it someone
+she had known? The long dark walk—she
+could not—and hastened to lose the sound.</p>
+
+<p>The zigzag course of the railway brought the
+train again near to her, and this wayfarer stood
+and watched it tunnelling in the teeth of the
+wind. Whoof! whoof! its steaming breath
+hissed at her. She saw the rain spitting viciously
+at its red mouth. Its speed, as it passed,
+made her realise the tedious difficulties of her
+journey, and she quickened her pace. There
+was the silent tenseness, that precedes a storm.
+From the branch of a tree overhead she heard a
+watchful mother-bird’s warning call, and the
+twitter of the disturbed nestlings. The tender
+care of this bird-mother awoke memories of her
+childhood. What mattered the lonely darkness,
+when it led to mother. Her forebodings fled,
+and she faced the old track unheedingly, and
+ever and ever she smiled, as she foretasted their
+meeting.</p>
+
+<p>“Daughter!”</p>
+
+<p>“Mother!”</p>
+
+<p>She could feel loving arms around her, and a
+mother’s sacred kisses. She thrilled, and in her
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4"></span>impatience ran, but the wind was angry and
+took her breath. Then the child near her heart
+stirred for the first time. The instincts of
+motherhood awakened in her. Her elated body
+quivered, she fell on her knees, lifted her hands,
+and turned her face to God. A vivid flash of
+lightning flamed above her head. It dulled her
+rapture. The lightning was very near.</p>
+
+<p>She went on, then paused. Was she on the
+right track? Back, near the bird’s nest, were two
+roads. One led to home, the other was the old
+bullock-dray road, that the railway had almost
+usurped. When she should have been careful
+in her choice, she had been absorbed. It was a
+long way back to the cross roads, and she dug
+in her mind for landmarks. Foremost she recalled
+the “Bendy Tree,” then the “Sisters,”
+whose entwined arms talked, when the wind was
+from the south. The apple trees on the creek—split
+flat, where the cows and calves were
+always to be found. The wrong track, being
+nearer the river, had clumps of she-oaks and
+groups of pines in places. An angled line of
+lightning illumined everything, but the violence
+of the thunder distracted her.</p>
+
+<p>She stood in uncertainty, near-sighted, with
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5"></span>all the horror of the unknown, that this infirmity
+could bring. Irresolute, she waited for another
+flash. It served to convince her, she was wrong.
+Through the bush she turned.</p>
+
+<p>The sky seemed to crack with the lightning;
+the thunder’s suddenness shook her. Among
+some tall pines she stood awed, while the storm
+raged.</p>
+
+<p>Then again that indefinite fear struck at her.
+Restlessly she pushed on till she stumbled, and,
+with hands out-stretched, met some object that
+moved beneath them as she fell. The lightning
+showed a group of terrified cattle. Tripping
+and falling, she ran, she knew not where, but
+keeping her eyes turned towards the cattle.
+Aimlessly she pushed on, and unconsciously retraced
+her steps.</p>
+
+<p>She struck the track she was on when her
+first doubt came. If this were the right way,
+the wheel ruts would show. She groped, but
+the rain had levelled them. There was nothing
+to guide her. Suddenly she remembered that
+the little clump of pines, where the cattle were,
+lay between the two roads. She had gathered
+mistletoe berries there in the old days.</p>
+
+<p>She believed, she hoped, she prayed, that she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6"></span>was right. If so, a little further on, she would
+come to the “Bendy Tree.” There long ago a
+runaway horse had crushed its drunken rider
+against the bent, distorted trunk. She could recall
+how in her young years that tree had ever
+after had a weird fascination for her.</p>
+
+<p>She saw its crooked body in the lightning’s
+glare. She was on the right track, yet dreaded
+to go on. Her childhood’s fear came back. In
+a transient flash she thought she saw a horseman
+galloping furiously towards her. She
+placed both her hands protectingly over her
+heart, and waited. In the dark interval, above
+the shriek of the wind, she thought she heard a
+cry, then crash came the thunder, drowning her
+call of warning. In the next flash she saw nothing
+but the tree. “Oh, God, protect me!”
+she prayed, and diverging, with a shrinking heart
+passed on.</p>
+
+<p>The road dipped to the creek. Louder and
+louder came the roar of its flooded waters.
+Even little Dog-trap Gully was proudly foaming
+itself hoarse. It emptied below where she must
+cross. But there were others, that swelled it
+above.</p>
+
+<p>The noise of the rushing creek was borne to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7"></span>her by the wind, still fierce, though the rain had
+lessened. Perhaps there would be someone to
+meet her at the bank! Last time she had come,
+the night had been fine, and though she had
+been met at the station by a neighbour’s son,
+mother had come to the creek with a lantern
+and waited for her. She looked eagerly, but there
+was no light.</p>
+
+<p>The creek was a banker, but the track led to
+a plank, which, lashed to the willows on either
+bank, was usually above flood-level. A churning
+sound showed that the water was over the
+plank, and she must wade along it. She turned
+to the sullen sky. There was no gleam of light
+save in her resolute, white face.</p>
+
+<p>Her mouth grew tender, as she thought of the
+husband she loved, and of their child. Must
+she dare! She thought of the grey-haired
+mother, who was waiting on the other side.
+This dwarfed every tie that had parted them.
+There was atonement in these difficulties and
+dangers.</p>
+
+<p>Again her face turned heavenward! “Bless,
+pardon, protect and guide, strengthen and comfort!”
+Her mother’s prayer.</p>
+
+<p>Steadying herself by the long willow branches,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8"></span>ankle deep she began. With every step the
+water deepened.</p>
+
+<p>Malignantly the wind fought her, driving her
+back, or snapping the brittle stems from her
+skinned hands. The water was knee-deep now,
+and every step more hazardous.</p>
+
+<p>She held with her teeth to a thin limb, while
+she unfastened her hat and gave it to the greedy
+wind. From the cloak, a greater danger, she
+could not in her haste free herself; her numbed
+fingers had lost their cunning.</p>
+
+<p>Soon the water would be deeper, and the support
+from the branches less secure. Even if they
+did reach across, she could not hope for much
+support from their wind-driven, fragile ends.</p>
+
+<p>Still she would not go back. Though the roar
+of that rushing water was making her giddy,
+though the deafening wind fought her for every
+inch, she would not turn back.</p>
+
+<p>Long ago she should have come to her old
+mother, and her heart gave a bound of savage
+rapture in thus giving the sweat of her body for
+the sin of her soul.</p>
+
+<p>Midway the current strengthened. Perhaps
+if she, deprived of the willows, were swept down,
+her clothes would keep her afloat. She took
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9"></span>firm hold and drew a deep breath to call her
+child-cry, “Mother!”</p>
+
+<p>The water was deeper and swifter, and from
+the sparsity of the branches she knew she was
+nearing the middle. The wind unopposed by
+the willows was more powerful. Strain as she
+would, she could reach only the tips of the opposite
+trees, not hold them.</p>
+
+<p>Despair shook her. With one hand she
+gripped those, that had served her so far, and
+cautiously drew as many as she could grasp
+with the other. The wind savagely snapped
+them, and they lashed her unprotected face.
+Round and round her bare neck they coiled their
+stripped fingers. Her mother had planted these
+willows, and she herself had watched them grow.
+How could they be so hostile to her!</p>
+
+<p>The creek deepened with every moment she
+waited. But more dreadful than the giddying
+water was the distracting noise of the mighty
+wind, nurtured by the hollows.</p>
+
+<p>The frail twigs of the opposite tree snapped
+again and again in her hands. She must release
+her hold of those behind her. If she could make
+two steps independently, the thicker branches
+would then be her stay.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10"></span></p>
+
+<p>“Will you?” yelled the wind. A sudden
+gust caught her, and, hurling her backwards,
+swept her down the stream with her cloak for a
+sail.</p>
+
+<p>She battled instinctively, and her first thought
+was of the letter-kiss, she had left for the husband
+she loved. Was it to be his last?</p>
+
+<p>She clutched a floating branch, and was swept
+down with it. Vainly she fought for either bank.
+She opened her lips to call. The wind made a
+funnel of her mouth and throat, and a wave of
+muddy water choked her cry. She struggled
+desperately, but after a few mouthfuls she ceased.
+The weird cry from the “Bendy Tree” pierced
+and conquered the deep throated wind. Then a
+sweet dream voice whispered “Little Woman!”</p>
+
+<p>Soft, strong arms carried her on. Weakness
+aroused the melting idea that all had been a
+mistake, and she had been fighting with friends.
+The wind even crooned a lullaby. Above the
+angry waters her face rose untroubled.</p>
+
+<p>A giant tree’s fallen body said, “Thus far!”
+and in vain the athletic furious water rushed
+and strove to throw her over the barrier. Driven
+back, it tried to take her with it. But a jagged
+arm of the tree snagged her cloak and held her.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11"></span></p>
+
+<p>Bruised and half conscious she was left to her
+deliverer, and the back-broken water crept tamed
+under its old foe. The hammer of hope awoke
+her heart. Along the friendly back of the tree
+she crawled, and among its bared roots rested.
+But it was only to get her breath, for this was
+mother’s side.</p>
+
+<p>She breasted the rise. Then every horror
+was of the past and forgotten, for there in the
+hollow was home.</p>
+
+<p>And there was the light shining its welcome
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>She quickened her pace, but did not run—motherhood
+is instinct in woman. The rain had
+come again, and the wind buffeted her. To
+breathe was a battle, yet she went on swiftly, for
+at the sight of the light her nameless fear had
+left her.</p>
+
+<p>She would tell mother how she had heard her
+call in the night, and mother would smile her
+grave smile and stroke her wet hair, call her
+“Little woman! My little woman!” and tell
+her she had been dreaming, just dreaming. Ah,
+but mother herself was a dreamer!</p>
+
+<p>The gate was swollen with rain and difficult
+to open. It had been opened by mother last
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12"></span>time. But plainly her letter had not reached
+home. Perhaps the bad weather had delayed
+the mail boy.</p>
+
+<p>There was the light. She was not daunted
+when the bark of the old dog brought no one to
+the door. It might not be heard inside, for there
+was such a torrent of water falling somewhere
+close. Mechanically her mind located it. The
+tank near the house, fed by the spouts was running
+over, cutting channels through the flower
+beds, and flooding the paths. Why had not
+mother diverted the spout to the other tank!</p>
+
+<p>Something indefinite held her. Her mind went
+back to the many times long ago when she had
+kept alive the light while mother fixed the spout
+to save the water that the dry summer months
+made precious. It was not like mother, for such
+carelessness meant carrying from the creek.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she grew cold and her heart trembled.
+After she had seen mother, she would
+come out and fix it, but just now she could not
+wait.</p>
+
+<p>She tapped gently, and called “Mother!”</p>
+
+<p>While she waited she tried to make friends
+with the dog. Her heart smote her, in that
+there had been so long an interval since she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13"></span>saw her old home, that the dog had forgotten
+her voice.</p>
+
+<p>Her teeth chattered as she again tapped softly.
+The sudden light dazzled her when a stranger
+opened the door for her. Steadying herself by
+the wall, with wild eyes she looked around.
+Another strange woman stood by the fire, and a
+child slept on the couch. The child’s mother
+raised it, and the other led the now panting
+creature to the child’s bed. Not a word was
+spoken, and the movements of these women
+were like those who fear to awaken a sleeper.</p>
+
+<p>Something warm was held to her lips, for
+through it all she was conscious of everything,
+even that the numbing horror in her eyes met
+answering awe in theirs.</p>
+
+<p>In the light the dog knew her and gave her
+welcome. But she had none for him now.</p>
+
+<p>When she rose one of the women lighted a
+candle. She noticed how, if the blazing wood
+cracked, the women started nervously, how the
+disturbed child pointed to her bruised face, and
+whispered softly to its mother, how she who
+lighted the candle did not strike the match but
+held it to the fire, and how the light bearer led
+the way so noiselessly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14"></span></p>
+
+<p>She reached her mother’s room. Aloft the
+woman held the candle and turned away her
+head.</p>
+
+<p>The daughter parted the curtains, and the
+light fell on the face of the sleeper who would
+dream no dreams that night.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15"></span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="SQUEAKERS_MATE">
+ SQUEAKER’S MATE.
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> woman carried the bag with the axe and
+maul and wedges; the man had the billy and
+clean tucker bags; the cross-cut saw linked
+them. She was taller than the man, and the
+equability of her body contrasting with his
+indolent slouch, accentuated the difference.
+“Squeaker’s mate” the men called her, and
+these agreed that she was the best long-haired
+mate that ever stepped in petticoats. The
+Selectors’ wives pretended to challenge her right
+to womanly garments, but if she knew what
+they said, it neither turned nor troubled
+Squeaker’s mate.</p>
+
+<p>Nine prospective posts and maybe sixteen rails—she
+calculated this yellow gum would yield.
+“Come on,” she encouraged the man; “let’s
+tackle it.”</p>
+
+<p>From the bag she took the axe, and ring
+barked a preparatory circle, while he looked for
+a shady spot for the billy and tucker bags.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16"></span></p>
+
+<p>“Come on.” She was waiting with the
+greased saw. He came. The saw rasped
+through a few inches, then he stopped and
+looked at the sun.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s nigh tucker time,” he said, and when
+she dissented, he exclaimed, with sudden energy,
+“There’s another bee! Wait, you go on with
+the axe, an’ I’ll track ’im.”</p>
+
+<p>As they came, they had already followed one
+and located the nest. She could not see the
+bee he spoke of, though her grey eyes were as
+keen as a Black’s. However she knew the man,
+and her tolerance was of the mysteries.</p>
+
+<p>She drew out the saw, spat on her hands, and
+with the axe began weakening the inclining side
+of the tree.</p>
+
+<p>Long and steadily and in secret the worm had
+been busy in the heart. Suddenly the axe blade
+sank softly, the tree’s wounded edges closed on it
+like a vice. There was a “settling” quiver on
+its top branches, which the woman heard and
+understood. The man, encouraged by the
+sounds of the axe, had returned with an armful
+of sticks for the billy. He shouted gleefully,
+“It’s fallin’, look out.”</p>
+
+<p>But she waited to free the axe.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17"></span></p>
+
+<p>With a shivering groan the tree fell, and as
+she sprang aside, a thick worm-eaten branch
+snapped at a joint and silently she went down
+under it.</p>
+
+<p>“I tole yer t’ look out,” he reminded her, as
+with a crow-bar, and grunting earnestly, he
+forced it up. “Now get out quick.”</p>
+
+<p>She tried moving her arms and the upper part
+of her body. Do this; do that, he directed,
+but she made no movement after the first.</p>
+
+<p>He was impatient, because for once he had
+actually to use his strength. His share of a heavy
+lift usually consisted of a make-believe grunt,
+delivered at a critical moment. Yet he hardly
+cared to let it again fall on her, though he told
+her he would, if she “didn’t shift.”</p>
+
+<p>Near him lay a piece broken short; with his
+foot he drew it nearer, then gradually worked
+it into a position, till it acted as a stay to the
+lever.</p>
+
+<p>He laid her on her back when he drew her
+out, and waited expecting some acknowledgment
+of his exertions, but she was silent, and as
+she did not notice that the axe, she had tried to
+save, lay with the fallen trunk across it, he told
+her. She cared almost tenderly for all their
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18"></span>possessions and treated them as friends. But
+the half-buried broken axe did not affect her.
+He wondered a little, for only last week she had
+patiently chipped out the old broken head, and
+put in a new handle.</p>
+
+<p>“Feel bad?” he inquired at length.</p>
+
+<p>“Pipe,” she replied with slack lips.</p>
+
+<p>Both pipes lay in the fork of a near tree. He
+took his, shook out the ashes, filled it, picked up
+a coal and puffed till it was alight—then he
+filled hers. Taking a small firestick he handed
+her the pipe. The hand she raised shook and
+closed in an uncertain hold, but she managed by
+a great effort to get it to her mouth. He lost
+patience with the swaying hand that tried to
+take the light.</p>
+
+<p>“Quick,” he said “quick, that damn dog’s at
+the tucker.”</p>
+
+<p>He thrust it into her hand that dropped
+helplessly across her chest. The lighted stick
+falling between her bare arm and the dress,
+slowly roasted the flesh and smouldered the
+clothes.</p>
+
+<p>He rescued their dinner, pelted his dog out of
+sight—hers was lying near her head, put on the
+billy, then came back to her.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19"></span></p>
+
+<p>The pipe had fallen from her lips; there was
+blood on the stem.</p>
+
+<p>“Did yer jam yer tongue?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>She always ignored trifles he knew, therefore
+he passed her silence.</p>
+
+<p>He told her that her dress was on fire. She
+took no heed. He put it out, and looked at the
+burnt arm, then with intentness at her.</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes were turned unblinkingly to the
+heavens, her lips were grimly apart, and a strange
+greyness was upon her face, and the sweat-beads
+were mixing.</p>
+
+<p>“Like a drink er tea? Asleep?”</p>
+
+<p>He broke a green branch from the fallen tree
+and swished from his face the multitudes of
+flies that had descended with it.</p>
+
+<p>In a heavy way he wondered why did she
+sweat, when she was not working? Why did
+she not keep the flies out of her mouth and
+eyes? She’d have bungy eyes, if she didn’t. If
+she was asleep, why did she not close them?</p>
+
+<p>But asleep or awake, as the billy began to
+boil, he left her, made the tea, and ate his dinner.
+His dog had disappeared, and as it did not
+come to his whistle, he threw the pieces to hers,
+that would not leave her head to reach them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20"></span></p>
+
+<p>He whistled tunelessly his one air, beating his
+own time with a stick on the toe of his blucher,
+then looked overhead at the sun and calculated
+that she must have been lying like that for
+“close up an hour.” He noticed that the axe
+handle was broken in two places, and speculated
+a little as to whether she would again pick out
+the back-broken handle or burn it out in his
+method, which was less trouble, if it did spoil the
+temper of the blade. He examined the worm-dust
+in the stump and limbs of the newly-fallen
+tree; mounted it and looked round the plain.
+The sheep were straggling in a manner that
+meant walking work to round them, and he
+supposed he would have to yard them to-night,
+if she didn’t liven up. He looked down at
+unenlivened her. This changed his “chune”
+to a call for his hiding dog.</p>
+
+<p>“Come on, ole feller,” he commanded her dog.
+“Fetch ’em back.” He whistled further instructions,
+slapping his thigh and pointing to
+the sheep.</p>
+
+<p>But a brace of wrinkles either side the brute’s
+closed mouth demonstrated determined disobedience.
+The dog would go if she told him,
+and by and bye she would.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21"></span></p>
+
+<p>He lighted his pipe and killed half an hour
+smoking. With the frugality that hard graft
+begets, his mate limited both his and her own
+tobacco, so he must not smoke all afternoon.
+There was no work to shirk, so time began to
+drag. Then a goanner crawling up a tree
+attracted him. He gathered various missiles
+and tried vainly to hit the seemingly grinning
+reptile. He came back and sneaked a fill of
+her tobacco, and while he was smoking, the
+white tilt of a cart caught his eye. He jumped
+up. “There’s Red Bob goin’ t’ our place fur
+th’ ’oney,” he said, “I’ll go an’ weigh it an’ get
+the gonz” (money).</p>
+
+<p>He ran for the cart, and kept looking back as
+if fearing she would follow and thwart him.</p>
+
+<p>Red Bob the dealer was, in a business way,
+greatly concerned, when he found that Squeaker’s
+mate was “avin’ a sleep out there ’cos a tree
+fell on her.” She was the best honey strainer
+and boiler that he dealt with. She was straight
+and square too. There was no water in her
+honey whether boiled or merely strained, and in
+every kerosene tin the weight of honey was to
+an ounce as she said. Besides he was suspicious
+and diffident of paying the indecently eager
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22"></span>Squeaker before he saw the woman. So
+reluctantly Squeaker led to where she lay.
+With many fierce oaths Red Bob sent her lawful
+protector for help, and compassionately
+poured a little from his flask down her throat,
+then swished away the flies from her till help
+came.</p>
+
+<p>Together these men stripped a sheet of bark,
+and laying her with pathetic tenderness upon it,
+carried her to her hut. Squeaker followed in
+the rear with the billy and tucker.</p>
+
+<p>Red Bob took his horse from the cart, and
+went to town for the doctor. Late that night at
+the back of the old hut (there were two) he and
+others who had heard that she was hurt, squatted
+with unlighted pipes in their mouths, waiting
+to hear the doctor’s verdict. After he had given
+it and gone, they discussed in whispers, and
+with a look seen only on bush faces, the hard
+luck of that woman who alone had hard-grafted
+with the best of them for every acre and hoof
+on that selection. Squeaker would go through it
+in no time. Why she had allowed it to be taken
+up in his name, when the money had been her
+own, was also for them among the mysteries.</p>
+
+<p>Him they called “a nole woman,” not because
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23"></span>he was hanging round the honey tins, but
+after man’s fashion to eliminate all virtue. They
+beckoned him, and explaining his mate’s injury,
+cautioned him to keep from her the knowledge
+that she would be for ever a cripple.</p>
+
+<p>“Jus’ th’ same, now then fur ’im,” pointing
+to Red Bob, “t’ pay me, I’ll ’ev t’ go t’ town.”</p>
+
+<p>They told him in whispers what they thought
+of him, and with a cowardly look towards where
+she lay, but without a word of parting, like
+shadows these men made for their homes.</p>
+
+<p>Next day the women came. Squeaker’s mate
+was not a favourite with them—a woman with
+no leisure for yarning was not likely to be. After
+the first day they left her severely alone, their
+plea to their husbands, her uncompromising independence.
+It is in the ordering of things that
+by degrees most husbands accept their wives’
+views of other women.</p>
+
+<p>The flour bespattering Squeaker’s now neglected
+clothes spoke eloquently of his clumsy
+efforts at damper making. The women gave
+him many a feed, agreeing that it must be miserable
+for him.</p>
+
+<p>If it were miserable and lonely for his mate,
+she did not complain; for her the long, long days
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24"></span>would give place to longer nights—those nights
+with the pregnant bush silence suddenly cleft by
+a bush voice. However, she was not fanciful,
+and being a bush scholar knew ’twas a dingo,
+when a long whine came from the scrub on the
+skirts of which lay the axe under the worm-eaten
+tree. That quivering wail from the billabong
+lying murkily mystic towards the East was only
+the cry of the fearing curlew.</p>
+
+<p>Always her dog—wakeful and watchful as she—patiently
+waiting for her to be up and about
+again. That would be soon, she told her complaining
+mate.</p>
+
+<p>“Yer won’t. Yer back’s broke,” said Squeaker
+laconically. “That’s wot’s wrong er yer; injoory
+t’ th’ spine. Doctor says that means
+back’s broke, and yer won’t never walk no more.
+No good not t’ tell yer, cos I can’t be doin’
+everythin’.”</p>
+
+<p>A wild look grew on her face, and she tried to
+sit up.</p>
+
+<p>“Erh,” said he, “see! yer carnt, yer jes’ ther
+same as a snake w’en ees back’s broke, on’y yer
+don’t bite yerself like a snake does w’en ’e carnt
+crawl. Yer did bite yer tongue w’en yer fell.”</p>
+
+<p>She gasped, and he could hear her heart beating
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25"></span>when she let her head fall back a few
+moments; though she wiped her wet forehead
+with the back of her hand, and still said that
+was the doctor’s mistake. But day after day
+she tested her strength, and whatever the result,
+was silent, though white witnesses, halo-wise,
+gradually circled her brow and temples.</p>
+
+<p>“’Tisn’t as if yer was agoin’ t’ get better t’morrer,
+the doctor says yer won’t never work no
+more, an’ I can’t be cookin’ an’ workin’ an’ doin’
+everythin’!”</p>
+
+<p>He muttered something about “sellin’ out,”
+but she firmly refused to think of such a monstrous
+proposal.</p>
+
+<p>He went into town one Saturday afternoon
+soon after, and did not return till Monday.</p>
+
+<p>Her supplies, a billy of tea and scraps of salt
+beef and damper (her dog got the beef), gave
+out the first day, though that was as nothing to
+her compared with the bleat of the penned sheep,
+for it was summer and droughty, and her dog
+could not unpen them.</p>
+
+<p>Of them and her dog only she spoke when he
+returned. He d——d him, and d——d her, and
+told her to “double up yer ole broke back an’ bite
+yerself.” He threw things about, made a long-range
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26"></span>feint of kicking her threatening dog, then sat
+outside in the shade of the old hut, nursing his
+head till he slept.</p>
+
+<p>She, for many reasons, had when necessary
+made these trips into town, walking both ways,
+leading a pack horse for supplies. She never
+failed to indulge him in a half pint—a pipe was
+her luxury.</p>
+
+<p>The sheep waited till next day, so did she.</p>
+
+<p>For a few days he worked a little in her sight;
+not much—he never did. It was she who always
+lifted the heavy end of the log, and carried the
+tools; he—the billy and tucker.</p>
+
+<p>She wearily watched him idling his time; reminded
+him that the wire lying near the fence
+would rust, one could run the wire through
+easily, and when she got up in a day or so, she
+would help strain and fasten it. At first he pretended
+he had done it, later said he wasn’t goin’
+t’ go wirin’ or nothin’ else by ’imself if every
+other man on the place did.</p>
+
+<p>She spoke of many other things that could be
+done by one, reserving the great till she was
+well. Sometimes he whistled while she spoke,
+often swore, generally went out, and when this
+was inconvenient, dull as he was, he found the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27"></span>“Go and bite yerself like a snake,” would instantly
+silence her.</p>
+
+<p>At last the work worry ceased to exercise her,
+and for night to bring him home was a rare
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>Her dog rounded and yarded the sheep when
+the sun went down and there was no sign of
+him, and together they kept watch on their
+movements till dawn. She was mindful not to
+speak of this care to him, knowing he would
+have left it for them to do constantly, and she
+noticed that what little interest he seemed to
+share went to the sheep. Why, was soon demonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>Through the cracks her ever watchful eyes
+one day saw the dust rise out of the plain.
+Nearer it came till she saw him and a man on
+horseback rounding and driving the sheep into
+the yard, and later both left in charge of a little
+mob. Their “Baa-baas” to her were cries for
+help; many had been pets. So he was selling
+her sheep to the town butchers.</p>
+
+<p>In the middle of the next week he came from
+town with a fresh horse, new saddle and bridle.
+He wore a flash red shirt, and round his neck a
+silk handkerchief. On the next occasion she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28"></span>smelt scent, and though he did not try to display
+the dandy meerschaum, she saw it, and heard
+the squeak of the new boots, not bluchers.
+However he was kinder to her this time, offering
+a fill of his cut tobacco; he had long ceased to
+keep her supplied. Several of the men who
+sometimes in passing took a look in, would have
+made up her loss had they known, but no word
+of complaint passed her lips.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at Squeaker as he filled his pipe
+from his pouch, but he would not meet her
+eyes, and, seemingly dreading something, slipped
+out.</p>
+
+<p>She heard him hammering in the old hut at
+the back, which served for tools and other things
+which sunlight and rain did not hurt. Quite
+briskly he went in and out. She could see him
+through the cracks carrying a narrow strip of
+bark, and understood, he was making a bunk.
+When it was finished he had a smoke, then came
+to her and fidgetted about; he said this hut was
+too cold, and that she would never get well in it.
+She did not feel cold, but, submitting to his mood,
+allowed him to make a fire that would roast a
+sheep. He took off his hat, and fanning himself,
+said he was roastin’, wasn’t she? She was.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29"></span></p>
+
+<p>He offered to carry her into the other; he
+would put a new roof on it in a day or two, and
+it would be better than this one, and she would
+be up in no time. He stood to say this where
+she could not see him.</p>
+
+<p>His eagerness had tripped him.</p>
+
+<p>There were months to run before all the
+Government conditions of residence, etc., in
+connection with the selection, would be fulfilled,
+still she thought perhaps he was trying to sell
+out, and she would not go.</p>
+
+<p>He was away four days that time, and when
+he returned slept in the new bunk.</p>
+
+<p>She compromised. Would he put a bunk
+there for himself, keep out of town, and not sell
+the place? He promised instantly with additions.</p>
+
+<p>“Try could yer crawl yerself?” he coaxed,
+looking at her bulk.</p>
+
+<p>Her nostrils quivered with her suppressed
+breathing, and her lips tightened, but she did
+not attempt to move.</p>
+
+<p>It was evident some great purpose actuated
+him. After attempts to carry and drag her, he
+rolled her on the sheet of bark that had brought
+her home, and laboriously drew her round.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30"></span></p>
+
+<p>She asked for a drink, he placed her billy and
+tin pint besides the bunk, and left her gasping
+and dazed to her sympathetic dog.</p>
+
+<p>She saw him run up and yard his horse, and
+though she called him, he would not answer nor
+come.</p>
+
+<p>When he rode swiftly towards the town, her
+dog leaped on the bunk, and joined a refrain to
+her lamentation, but the cat took to the bush.</p>
+
+<p>He came back at dusk next day in a spring
+cart—not alone—he had another mate. She
+saw her though he came a roundabout way,
+trying to keep in front of the new hut.</p>
+
+<p>There were noises of moving many things from
+the cart to the hut. Finally he came to a crack
+near where she lay, and whispered the promise
+of many good things to her if she kept quiet, and
+that he would set her hut afire if she didn’t.
+She was quiet, he need not have feared, for that
+time she was past it, she was stunned.</p>
+
+<p>The released horse came stumbling round to
+the old hut, and thrust its head in the door in a
+domesticated fashion. Her dog promptly resented
+this straggler mistaking their hut for a
+stable. And the dog’s angry dissent, together
+with the shod clatter of the rapidly disappearing
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31"></span>intruder, seemed to have a disturbing effect on
+the pair in the new hut. The settling sounds
+suddenly ceased, and the cripple heard the
+stranger close the door, despite Squeaker’s assurances
+that the woman in the old hut could not
+move from her bunk to save her life, and that
+her dog would not leave her.</p>
+
+<p>Food, more and better, was placed near her—but,
+dumb and motionless, she lay with her face
+turned to the wall, and her dog growled menacingly
+at the stranger. The new woman was
+uneasy, and told Squeaker what people might
+say and do if she died.</p>
+
+<p>He scared at the “do,” went into the bush
+and waited.</p>
+
+<p>She went to the door, not the crack, the face
+was turned that way, and said she had come to
+cook and take care of her.</p>
+
+<p>The disabled woman, turning her head slowly,
+looked steadily at her. She was not much to
+look at. Her red hair hung in an uncurled bang
+over her forehead, the lower part of her face had
+robbed the upper, and her figure evinced imminent
+motherhood, though it is doubtful if the
+barren woman, noting this, knew by calculation
+the paternity was not Squeaker’s. She was not
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32"></span>learned in these matters, though she understood
+all about an ewe and lamb.</p>
+
+<p>One circumstance was apparent—ah! bitterest
+of all bitterness to women—she was younger.</p>
+
+<p>The thick hair that fell from the brow of the
+woman on the bunk was white now.</p>
+
+<p>Bread and butter the woman brought. The
+cripple looked at it, at her dog, at the woman.
+Bread and butter for a dog! but the stranger
+did not understand till she saw it offered to the
+dog. The bread and butter was not for the dog.
+She brought meat.</p>
+
+<p>All next day the man kept hidden. The
+cripple saw his dog, and knew he was about.</p>
+
+<p>But there was an end of this pretence when
+at dusk he came back with a show of haste, and
+a finger of his right hand bound and ostentatiously
+prominent. His entrance caused great
+excitement to his new mate. The old mate, who
+knew this snake-bite trick from its inception,
+maybe, realised how useless were the terrified
+stranger’s efforts to rouse the snoring man after
+an empty pint bottle had been flung on the outside
+heap.</p>
+
+<p>However, what the sick woman thought was
+not definite, for she kept silent always. Neither
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33"></span>was it clear how much she ate, and how much
+she gave to her dog, though the new mate said
+to Squeaker one day that she believed that
+the dog would not take a bite more than its
+share.</p>
+
+<p>The cripple’s silence told on the stranger,
+especially when alone. She would rather have
+abuse. Eagerly she counted the days past and
+to pass. Then back to the town. She told no
+word of that hope to Squeaker, he had no place
+in her plans for the future. So if he spoke of
+what they would do by-and-bye when his time
+would be up, and he able to sell out, she listened
+in uninterested silence.</p>
+
+<p>She did tell him she was afraid of “her,” and
+after the first day would not go within reach,
+but every morning made a billy of tea, which
+with bread and beef Squeaker carried to her.</p>
+
+<p>The rubbish heap was adorned, for the first
+time, with jam and fish tins from the table in
+the new hut. It seemed to be understood that
+neither woman nor dog in the old hut required
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Squeaker’s dog sniffed and barked joyfully
+around them till his licking efforts to bottom a
+salmon tin sent him careering in a muzzled
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34"></span>frenzy, that caused the younger woman’s thick
+lips to part grinningly till he came too close.</p>
+
+<p>The remaining sheep were regularly yarded.
+His old mate heard him whistle as he did it.
+Squeaker began to work about a little burning
+off. So that now, added to the other bush
+voices, was the call from some untimely falling
+giant. There is no sound so human as that
+from the riven souls of these tree people, or the
+trembling sighs of their upright neighbours
+whose hands in time will meet over the victim’s
+fallen body.</p>
+
+<p>There was no bunk on the side of the hut to
+which her eyes turned, but her dog filled that
+space, and the flash that passed between this
+back-broken woman and her dog might have
+been the spirit of these slain tree folk, it was so
+wondrous ghostly. Still, at times, the practical
+in her would be dominant, for in a mind so free
+of fancies, backed by bodily strength, hope died
+slowly, and forgetful of self she would almost
+call to Squeaker her fears that certain bees’
+nests were in danger.</p>
+
+<p>He went into town one day and returned, as
+he had promised, long before sundown, and next
+day a clothes line bridged the space between two
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35"></span>trees near the back of the old hut; and—an
+equally rare occurrence—Squeaker placed across
+his shoulders the yoke that his old mate had
+fashioned for herself, with two kerosene tins
+attached, and brought them filled with water
+from the distant creek; but both only partly
+filled the tub, a new purchase. With utter disregard
+of the heat and Squeaker’s sweating
+brow, his new mate said, even after another trip,
+two more now for the blue water. Under her
+commands he brought them, though sullenly,
+perhaps contrasting the old mate’s methods
+with the new.</p>
+
+<p>His old mate had periodically carried their
+washing to the creek, and his mole skins had
+been as white as snow without aid of blue.</p>
+
+<p>Towards noon, on the clothes line many
+strange garments fluttered, suggestive of a taunt
+to the barren woman. When the sun went
+down she could have seen the assiduous Squeaker
+lower the new prop-sticks and considerately
+stoop to gather the pegs his inconsiderate new
+mate had dropped. However, after one load
+of water next morning, on hearing her estimate
+that three more would put her own things
+through, Squeaker struck. Nothing he could
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36"></span>urge would induce the stranger to trudge to
+the creek, where thirst-slaked snakes lay waiting
+for someone to bite. She sulked and pretended
+to pack up, till a bright idea struck Squeaker.
+He fastened a cask on a sledge and harnessing
+the new horse, hitched him to it, and, under the
+approving eyes of his new mate, led off to the
+creek, though, when she went inside, he bestrode
+the spiritless brute.</p>
+
+<p>He had various mishaps, any one of which
+would have served as an excuse to his old mate,
+but even babes soon know on whom to impose.
+With an energy new to him he persevered and
+filled the cask, but the old horse repudiated such
+a burden even under Squeaker’s unmerciful
+welts. Almost half was sorrowfully baled out,
+and under a rain of whacks the horse shifted it
+a few paces, but the cask tilted and the thirsty
+earth got its contents. All Squeaker’s adjectives
+over his wasted labour were as unavailing as the
+cure for spilt milk.</p>
+
+<p>It took skill and patience to rig the cask
+again. He partly filled it, and just as success
+seemed probable, the rusty wire fastening the
+cask to the sledge snapped with the strain, and
+springing free coiled affectionately round the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37"></span>terrified horse’s hocks. Despite the sledge (the
+cask had been soon disposed of) that old town
+horse’s pace then was his record. Hours after,
+on the plain that met the horizon, loomed two
+specks: the distance between them might be
+gauged, for the larger was Squeaker.</p>
+
+<p>Anticipating a plentiful supply and lacking in
+bush caution, the new mate used the half bucket
+of water to boil the salt mutton. Towards noon
+she laid this joint and bread on the rough table,
+then watched anxiously in the wrong direction
+for Squeaker.</p>
+
+<p>She had drained the new tea-pot earlier, but
+she placed the spout to her thirsty mouth
+again.</p>
+
+<p>She continued looking for him for hours.</p>
+
+<p>Had he sneaked off to town, thinking she had
+not used that water, or not caring whether or no.
+She did not trust him; another had left her.
+Besides she judged Squeaker by his treatment
+of the woman who was lying in there with wide-open
+eyes. Anyhow no use to cry with only
+that silent woman to hear her.</p>
+
+<p>Had she drunk all hers?</p>
+
+<p>She tried to see at long range through the
+cracks, but the hanging bed clothes hid the billy.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38"></span>She went to the door, and avoiding the bunk
+looked at the billy.</p>
+
+<p>It was half full.</p>
+
+<p>Instinctively she knew that the eyes of the
+woman were upon her. She turned away, and
+hoped and waited for thirsty minutes that
+seemed hours.</p>
+
+<p>Desperation drove her back to the door, dared
+she? No, she couldn’t.</p>
+
+<p>Getting a long forked propstick, she tried to
+reach it from the door, but the dog sprang at the
+stick. She dropped it and ran.</p>
+
+<p>A scraggy growth fringed the edge of the
+plain. There was the creek. How far? she
+wondered. Oh, very far, she knew, and besides
+there were only a few holes where water was, and
+the snakes; for Squeaker, with a desire to shine in
+her eyes, was continually telling her of snakes—vicious
+and many—that daily he did battle
+with.</p>
+
+<p>She recalled the evening he came from hiding
+in the scrub with a string round one finger, and
+said a snake had bitten him. He had drunk the
+pint of brandy she had brought for her sickness,
+and then slept till morning. True, although
+next day he had to dig for the string round the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39"></span>blue swollen finger, he was not worse than the
+many she had seen at the “Shearer’s Rest”
+suffering a recovery. There was no brandy to
+cure her if she were bitten.</p>
+
+<p>She cried a little in self pity, then withdrew
+her eyes, that were getting red, from the outlying
+creek, and went again to the door. She
+of the bunk lay with closed eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Was she asleep? The stranger’s heart leapt,
+yet she was hardly in earnest as she tip-toed
+billy-wards. The dog, crouching with head between
+two paws, eyed her steadily, but showed
+no opposition. She made dumb show. “I want
+to be friends with you, and won’t hurt her.”
+Abruptly she looked at her, then at the dog.
+He was motionless and emotionless. Beside if
+that dog—certainly watching her—wanted to
+bite her (her dry mouth opened), it could get her
+any time.</p>
+
+<p>She rated this dog’s intelligence almost human,
+from many of its actions in omission and commission
+in connection with this woman.</p>
+
+<p>She regretted the pole, no dog would stand
+that.</p>
+
+<p>Two more steps.</p>
+
+<p>Now just one more; then, by bending and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40"></span>stretching her arm, she would reach it. Could
+she now? She tried to encourage herself by remembering
+how close on the first day she had
+been to the woman, and how delicious a few
+mouthfuls would be—swallowing dry mouthfuls.</p>
+
+<p>She measured the space between where she
+had first stood and the billy. Could she get anything
+to draw it to her. No, the dog would not
+stand that, and besides the handle would rattle,
+and she might hear and open her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The thought of those sunken eyes suddenly
+opening made her heart bound. Oh! she must
+breathe—deep, loud breaths. Her throat clicked
+noisily. Looking back fearfully, she went swiftly
+out.</p>
+
+<p>She did not look for Squeaker this time, she
+had given him up.</p>
+
+<p>While she waited for her breath to steady, to
+her relief and surprise the dog came out. She
+made a rush to the new hut, but he passed
+seemingly oblivious of her, and bounding across
+the plain began rounding the sheep. Then he
+must know Squeaker had gone to town.</p>
+
+<p>Stay! Her heart beat violently; was it
+because she on the bunk slept and did not want
+him?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41"></span></p>
+
+<p>She waited till her heart quieted, and again
+crept to the door.</p>
+
+<p>The head of the woman on the bunk had
+fallen towards the wall as in deep sleep; it was
+turned from the billy, to which she must creep
+so softly.</p>
+
+<p>Slower, from caution and deadly earnestness,
+she entered.</p>
+
+<p>She was not so advanced as before, and felt
+fairly secure, for the woman’s eyes were still
+turned to the wall, and so tightly closed, she
+could not possibly see where she was.</p>
+
+<p>She would bend right down, and try and reach
+it from where she was.</p>
+
+<p>She bent.</p>
+
+<p>It was so swift and sudden, that she had not
+time to scream when those bony fingers had
+gripped the hand that she prematurely reached
+for the billy. She was frozen with horror for a
+moment, then her screams were piercing. Panting
+with victory, the prostrate one held her
+with a hold that the other did not attempt to
+free herself from.</p>
+
+<p>Down, down she drew her.</p>
+
+<p>Her lips had drawn back from her teeth, and
+her breath almost scorched the face that she
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42"></span>held so close for the starting eyes to gloat over.
+Her exultation was so great, that she could only
+gloat and gasp, and hold with a tension that
+had stopped the victim’s circulation.</p>
+
+<p>As a wounded, robbed tigress might hold and
+look, she held and looked.</p>
+
+<p>Neither heard the swift steps of the man, and
+if the tigress saw him enter, she was not daunted.
+“Take me from her,” shrieked the terrified one.
+“Quick, take me from her,” she repeated it
+again, nothing else. “Take me from her.”</p>
+
+<p>He hastily fastened the door and said something
+that the shrieks drowned, then picked up
+the pole. It fell with a thud across the arms
+which the tightening sinews had turned into
+steel. Once, twice, thrice. Then the one that
+got the fullest force bent; that side of the
+victim was free.</p>
+
+<p>The pole had snapped. Another blow with a
+broken end freed the other side.</p>
+
+<p>Still shrieking “Take me from her, take me
+from her,” she beat on the closed door till
+Squeaker opened it.</p>
+
+<p>Then he had to face and reckon with his old
+mate’s maddened dog, that the closed door had
+baffled.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43"></span></p>
+
+<p>The dog suffered the shrieking woman to
+pass, but though Squeaker, in bitten agony,
+broke the stick across the dog, he was forced to
+give the savage brute best.</p>
+
+<p>“Call ’im orf, Mary, ’e’s eatin’ me,” he
+implored. “Oh corl ’im orf.”</p>
+
+<p>But with stony face the woman lay motionless.</p>
+
+<p>“Sool ’im on t’ ’er.” He indicated his new
+mate who, as though all the plain led to the
+desired town, still ran in unreasoning terror.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s orl er doin’,” he pleaded, springing on
+the bunk beside his old mate. But when, to
+rouse her sympathy, he would have laid his hand
+on her, the dog’s teeth fastened in it and pulled
+him back.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44"></span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="SCRAMMY_AND">
+ SCRAMMY ’AND.
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Along</span> the selvage of the scrub-girt plain the
+old man looked long and earnestly. His eyes
+followed an indistinct track that had been cut by
+the cart, journeying at rare intervals to the distant
+township. At dawn some weeks back it
+had creaked across the plain, and at a point where
+the scrub curved, the husband had stopped the
+horse while the woman parted the tilt and waved
+goodbye to the bent, irresponsive old man and
+his dog. It was her impending motherhood that
+made them seek the comparative civilisation of
+the township, and the tenderness of her womanhood
+brought the old man closer to her as they
+drove away. Every week since that morning
+had been carefully notched by man and dog, and
+the last mark, cut three nights past, showed that
+time was up. Twice this evening he thought he
+saw the dust rise as he looked, but longer scrutiny
+showed only the misty evening light.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45"></span></p>
+
+<p>He turned to where a house stood out from a
+background of scrub. Beside the calf-pen near
+it, a cow gave answer and greeting to the penned
+calf. “No use pennin’ up ther calf,” he muttered,
+“when they don’t come. Won’t do it
+ter-morrer night.” He watched anxiously along
+the scrub. “Calf must ’ave got ’is ’ed through
+ther rails an’ sucked ’er. No one else can’t ’ave
+done it. Scrammy’s gorn; ’twarn’t Scrammy.”
+But the gloom of fear settled on his wizened
+face as he shuffled stiffly towards the sheep yard.</p>
+
+<p>His body jerked; there was a suggestion of the
+dog in his movements; and in the dog, as he
+rounded up the sheep, more than a suggestion
+of his master. He querulously accused the dog
+of “rushin’ ’em, ’stead er allowin’ Billy (the
+leader) to lead ’em.”</p>
+
+<p>When they were yarded he found fault with
+the hurdles. “Some ’un ’ad been meddlin’ with
+’em.” For two pins he would “smash ’em up
+with ther axe.”</p>
+
+<p>The eyes of the sheep reflected the haze-opposed
+glory of the setting sun. Loyally they
+stood till a grey quilt swathed them. In their
+eyes glistened luminous tears materialised from
+an atmosphere of sighs. The wide plain gauzed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46"></span>into a sea on which the hut floated lonely.
+Through its open door a fire gleamed like the
+red, steaming mouth of an engine. Beyond the
+hut a clump of myalls loomed spectral and
+wraith-like, and round them a gang of crows
+cawed noisily, irreverent of the great silence.</p>
+
+<p>Inside the hut, the old man, still querulous,
+talked to the listening dog. He uncovered a
+cabbage tree hat—his task of the past year—and
+laid upside down, on the centre of the crown, a
+star-shaped button that the woman had worked
+for him.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s orl wrong, see!” The dog said he did.
+“’Twon’t do!” he shouted with the emphasis
+of deafness. The dog admitted it would not.
+“An’ she done it like thet, ter spile it on me ’er
+purpus. She done it outer jealersy, cos I was
+makin’ it for ’im. Could ’ave done it better meself,
+though I’m no ’and at fancy stitchin’. But
+she can’t make a ’at like thet. No woman could.
+The’re no good.” The dog did not dispute this
+condemnation.</p>
+
+<p>“I tole ’er ter put a anker jes’ there,” he continued.
+He pointed to the middle of the button
+which he still held upside down. “Thet’s no
+anker!” The dog subtly indicated that there
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47"></span>was another side to the button. “There ain’t,”
+shouted the old man. “What do you know
+about an anker; you never see a real one on a
+ship in yer life!” There was an inaudible disparaging
+reference to “imperdent kerloneyals”
+which seemed to crush the dog. To mollify him
+the man got on his knees, and bending his neck,
+showed the dog a faded anchor on the top of the
+cabbage tree hat on his head. A little resentment
+would have served the dog, but he was too
+eager for peace.</p>
+
+<p>Noting this, the old man returned to the button
+for reminiscences. “An’ yet you thort at fust
+a thing like thet would do.” There was a sign
+of dissent from the dog. “Yer know yer did—Sir.
+An’ wot’s more yer don’t bark at ’er like
+yer used ter!”</p>
+
+<p>The dog was uneasy, and intimated that he
+would prefer to have that past buried.</p>
+
+<p>“None er thet now; yer know yer don’t.”
+Bending the button he continued, “They can’t
+never do anythin’ right, an’ orlways, continerally
+they gets a man inter trouble.”</p>
+
+<p>He had accidently turned the button, he reversed
+it looking swiftly at the dog. “Carn’t
+de nothin’ with it. A thing like thet! Might
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48"></span>as well fling it in the fire!” He put it carefully
+away.</p>
+
+<p>“W’ere’s ’e now?” he asked abruptly. The
+dog indicated the route taken by the cart.</p>
+
+<p>“An’ ’ow long as ’e bin away?” The dog
+looked at the tally stick hanging on the wall.
+“Yes, orl thet time! What does ’e care about
+me an’ you, now ’e’s got ’er! ’e was fust rate
+afore ’e got er. Wish I ’ad er gorn down thet
+time ’e took their sheep. I’d er seen no woman
+didn’t grab ’im. They’re stuck away down there
+an’ us orl alone ’ere by ourselves with only ther
+sheep. Scrammy sez ’e wouldn’t stay if ’e wus
+me. See’s there any signs er ’em comin’ back!”</p>
+
+<p>While the dog was out he hastily tried to fix
+the button, but failed. “On’y mist, no dust?”
+he asked, when his messenger returned. “No
+fear,” he growled, “’e won’t come back no more;
+stay down there an’ nuss ther babby. It’ll be a
+gal too, sure to be! Women are orlways ’avin’
+gals. It’ll be a gal sure enough.”</p>
+
+<p>He looked sternly at the unagreeing dog.
+“Yer don’t think so! Course yer don’t. You
+on ’er side? Yer are Loo!”</p>
+
+<p>The dog’s name was “Warderloo” (Waterloo)
+and had three abbreviations. “Now then, War!”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49"></span>meant mutual understanding and perfect fellowship.
+“What’s thet, Warder?” meant serious
+business. But “Loo” was ever sorrowfully
+reminiscent. And accordingly “Loo” was now
+much affected and disconcerted by the steady
+accusing eyes of the old man.</p>
+
+<p>“An’ wot’s more,” he continued, “I believe
+ye’ll fool roun’, ye’ll fool aroun’ ’er wusser nor
+ever w’en she comes back with ther babby.” At
+this grave charge the dog, either from dignity or
+injury, was silent. His master, slowly and with
+some additions, repeated the prophecy, and again
+the dog gave him only silent attention.</p>
+
+<p>“’Ere she comes with ther babby,” he cried,
+flinging up his arms in clumsy feigned surprise.
+Loo was not deceived, and stood still.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh I’m a ole liar, am I? Yit’s come ter
+thet; ez it? Well better fer I ter be a liar ’n
+fer you ter lose yer manners,—Sir.”</p>
+
+<p>In vain Loo protested. His master turned
+round, and when poor Loo faced that way, he
+drew his feet under him on the bunk and faced
+the wall. When the distressed Loo, from outside
+the hut, caught his eye through the cracks,
+he closed his own, to stifle remorse at the
+eloquent dumb appeal.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50"></span></p>
+
+<p>Usually their little differences took some time
+to evaporate; the master sulked with his silent
+mate till some daring feat with snake or dingo
+on the dog’s part mollified him. Loo, probably
+on the look out for such foes, moved to the end
+of the hut nearest the sheep. Two hasty squints
+revealed his departure, but not his whereabouts,
+to the old man, who coughed and waited, but
+for once expected too much from poor Loo. His
+legs grew cramped, still he did not care to make
+the first move. It was a godsend when an undemonstrative
+ewe and demonstrative lamb came in.</p>
+
+<p>Before that ewe he held the whole of her
+disgraceful past, and under the circumstances,
+“er imperdence—’er blarsted imperdence—”
+in unceremoniously intruding on his privacy
+with her blanky blind udder, and more than
+blanky bastard, was something he could not and
+would not stand.</p>
+
+<p>“None er yer sauce now!” He jumped
+down, and shook his fist at the unashamed,
+silent mother. “Warder,” he shouted, “Warder,
+put ’em out!”</p>
+
+<p>Warder did so, and when he came back his
+master explained to him that the thing that
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51"></span>“continerally an’ orlways” upset him was
+“thet dam ole yeo.” It was the only sorrow he
+had or ever would have in life. “She wusn’t
+nat’ral, thet ole yeo.” There was something
+in the Bible, he told War, about “yeos” with
+barren udders. “An’ ’twarn’t as though she
+didn’t know.” For that was her third lamb he
+had had to poddy. But not another bite would
+he give this one. He had made up his mind
+now, though it had been “worritin’” him all
+day. “Jes’ look at me,” showing his lamb-bitten
+fingers. “Wantin’ ter get blood outer a
+stone!”</p>
+
+<p>He shambled round, covered the cabbage-tree
+hat and the despised woman-worked button
+carefully; then his better nature prevailed.
+“See ’ere!” and there was that in his voice
+that indicated a moral victory. He took off the
+cloth and placed the button right side up and in
+its proper place. “Will thet do yer?” he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>After this surrender his excitement was so
+great, that the dog shared it. He advised War
+to lie down “an’ ’ave a spell,” and in strong
+agitation he went round the sheep yard twice,
+each time stopping to hammer down the hurdles
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52"></span>noisily, and calling to War not to “worrit;
+they’s orlright now, an’ firm as a rock.”</p>
+
+<p>Through these proceedings the ewe and lamb
+followed him, the lamb—lamb fashion—mixing
+itself with his legs. He had nothing further to
+say to the ewe, but from the expression of her
+eyes she still had an open mind towards him.
+Both went with him inside the hut. Were they
+intruders? the dog asked. He coughed and
+affected not to hear, went to the door, looked
+out and said the mist was gone, but the dog re-asked.
+“I think, War, there’s some er that
+orker’d little dam fool’s grub lef’” he said,
+gently extricating the lamb from between his legs,
+“an’ it’ll on’y spile. ’Jes this once ’an no more,
+min’ yer, an’ then you skiddy addy,” he said to
+the ewe. He carried the lamb outside, for he
+would not finger-suckle it that night before
+Waterloo.</p>
+
+<p>From his bunk head he took an axe, cut in
+two a myall log, and brought in half. He
+threw it on the fire for a back-log, first scraping
+the live coals and ashes to a heap for his
+damper.</p>
+
+<p>He filled and trimmed his slush lamp, and
+from a series of flat pockets hanging on the wall
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53"></span>he took thread, needle, and beeswax. He hung
+a white cloth in a way that defined the eye of
+the needle which he held at long range; but
+vary as he would from long to longest the
+thread remained in one hand, the needle in the
+other. Needle, thread, light, everything was
+wrong, he told War. “Es fer me, thenk a Lord
+I ken see an’ year’s well’s ever I could. Ehm
+War! See any change?” War said there
+had been no change observable to him. “There
+ain’t no change in you neither, War!” he said in
+gratitude to the grizzled old dog. But he felt
+that War had been disappointed at his failure,
+and he promised that he would rise betimes
+to-morrow and sew on the button by daylight.</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind, War; like ter see ’em after supper?”
+Comradeship was never by speech
+better demonstrated.</p>
+
+<p>From the middle beam the old man untied
+two bags. Boiled mutton was in one, and the
+heel of a damper in another.</p>
+
+<p>“No blowey carn’t get in there, eh?” the
+dog looked at the meat uncritically, but critically
+noted the resting place of two disturbed
+“bloweys.”</p>
+
+<p>“No bones!” He had taken great care to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54"></span>omit them. “Neow!” As ever, War took his
+word; he caught and swallowed instantly several
+pieces flung to him. At the finish his master’s
+“Eny?” referred to bones. War’s grateful
+eyes twinkled. “Not a one.” “Never is neow!”
+had reference to a trouble War had had with
+one long ago.</p>
+
+<p>It was now time for his own supper, but after
+a few attempts he shirked it. “Blest if I evven
+fergot t’bile th’ billy; funny ef me t’ ferget!”
+He held his head for a moment, then filled the
+billy, and in a strange uncertainty went towards
+and from the fire with it, and in the end War
+thought there was no sense at all in putting it
+so far from the blaze when it had to boil.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell yer wot, War, w’ile it biles us’ll count
+’em. Gimme appertite, ehm, War?”</p>
+
+<p>War thought “countin’ ’em” was the tonic.
+Then together they closed the door, spread a
+kangaroo skin on the floor, and put the slush
+lamp where the light fell on it. The man sat
+down, so did War, took off his belt, turned it
+carefully, tenderly, and opened his knife to cut
+the stitching. This was a tedious process, for it
+was wax thread, and had been crossed and re-crossed.
+Then came the chink of the coins falling.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55"></span>The old man counted each as it rolled
+out, and the dog tallied with a paw.</p>
+
+<p>“No more?” Certainly more, said War. A
+jerk, tenderly calculated, brought another among
+the seductive heap.</p>
+
+<p>“All?” no—still the upraised paw. The old
+man chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>“Ole ’en gets more b’ scratchin’.” This was
+the dog’s opinion, and a series of little undulations
+produced another, and after still further
+shaking, yet another.</p>
+
+<p>War was asked with ridiculous insincerity,
+“All?” and with ridiculous sincerity his solemn
+eyes and dropped paw said “all.” Then there
+was the honest count straight through, next the
+side show with its pretence of “disrememberin’,”
+or doubts as to the number—doubts never laid
+except by a double count. In the first, so intent
+was the man, that he forgot his mate; though
+his relief in being good friends again, had made
+him ignore his fear.</p>
+
+<p>But the dog had heard an outside sound, and,
+moving to the door, waited for certainty. At
+this stage the man missed his mate’s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He lay face downward, covering his treasure,
+when he realised that his friend was uneasy.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56"></span>And as the dog kept watch, he thrust them back
+hurriedly, missing all the pleasure and excitement
+of a final recount.</p>
+
+<p>With dumb show he asked several questions
+of his sentinel, and took his answers from his
+eyes. Then, when Warder relieved began to
+walk about, the old man with forced confidence
+chaffed him. He sought refuge from his own
+fears by trying to banish the dog’s, and suggested
+dingoes at the sheep yard, or a “goanner”
+on the roof. “Well ’twas ’possum,” he said,
+making a pretence of even then hearing and distinguishing
+the sound.</p>
+
+<p>But round his waist the belt did not go that
+night. Only its bulk in his life of solitariness
+could have conceived its hiding place.</p>
+
+<p>He bustled around as one having many tasks,
+but these he did aimlessly. With a pretence of
+unconcern he attempted to hum, but broke off
+frequently to listen. He was plainly afraid of
+the dog’s keen ears missing something. But
+his mate’s tense body proclaimed him on duty.</p>
+
+<p>“I know who yer thort ’twas, Warder!”
+They were sitting side by side, yet he spoke
+very loudly. “Scrammy ’and, Ehm?” He had
+guessed correctly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57"></span></p>
+
+<p>“An’ yer thort yer see ’im lars’ night!” He
+was right again.</p>
+
+<p>“An’ yer thort ’twas ’im that ’ad bin ramsakin’
+the place yesterday, when we was shepherdin’.
+An’ yer thort ’t must ’ave bin ’im
+shook the tommy!” The dog’s manner evinced
+that he had not altered this opinion. The old
+man’s heart beat loudly.</p>
+
+<p>“No fear, Warder! Scrammy’s gone, gone
+’long ways now, Warder!” But Warder’s
+pricked ears doing double duty showed he was
+unconvinced. “’Sides, Scrammy wouldn’t ’urt
+er merskeeter,” he continued. “Poor ole
+Scrammy! ’Twarn’t ’im shook the tommy,
+Warder!” The dog seemed to be waiting for
+the suggestion of another thief having unseen
+crept into their isolated lives, but his master had
+none to offer. Both were silent, then the man
+piled wood on the fire, remarking that he was
+going to sit up all night. He asked the dog to
+go with him to the table to feed and trim the
+slush lamp.</p>
+
+<p>Those quavering shadows along the wall were
+caused by its sizzeling flare flickering in the
+darkness, the dog explained. “Thort it mighter
+bin ther blacks outside,” the man said. “They
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58"></span>ain’t so fur away, I know! ’Twar them killed
+ther lamb down in ther creek.” He spoke unusually
+loudly. He hoped they wouldn’t catch
+“poor ole one-’anded Scrammy.” He said how
+sorry he was for “poor ole Scrammy, cos
+Scrammy wouldn’t ’urt no one. He on’y jes’
+came ter see us cos ’e was a ole friend. He was
+gone along ways ter look fur work, cos ’e was
+stoney broke after blueing ’is cheque at ther
+shanty sixty miles away.”</p>
+
+<p>“I tole ’im,” he continued in an altered voice,
+“thet I couldn’t lend ’im eny cos I ’ad sent all
+my little bit er money (he whispered ‘money’)
+to ther bank be ther boss. Didn’ I?” Emphatically
+his mate intimated that this was the case.
+He held his head in his shaking hands, and complained
+to the dog of having “come over dizzy.”</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a few moments, then, abruptly
+raising his voice, he remarked that their master
+was a better tracker than “Saddle-strap Jimmy,”
+or any of the blacks. He looked at the tally
+stick, and suddenly announced that he knew for
+a certainty that the boss and his wife would return
+that night or early next morning, and that
+he must see about making them a damper. He
+got up and began laboriously to mix soda and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59"></span>salt with the flour. He looked at the muddy
+coloured water in the bucket near the wall, and
+altered his mind.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll bile it first, War, same as ’er does, cos
+jus’ neow an’ then t’ day I comes over dizzy-like.
+See th’ mist t’s even! Two more, then
+rain—rain, an’ them two out in it without no
+tilt on the cart.” He sat down for a moment,
+even before he dusted his ungoverned floury
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>“Pint er tea, War, jes’ t’ warm ther worms
+an’ lif’ me ’art, eh!”</p>
+
+<p>Every movement of the dog was in accord
+with this plan.</p>
+
+<p>His master looked at the billy, and said,
+“’twarn’t bilin’,” and that a watched pot never
+boiled. He rested a while silently with his
+floury hands covering his face. He bent his
+mouth to the dog’s ear and whispered. Warder,
+before replying, pointed his ears and raised his
+head. The old man’s hand rested on the dog’s
+neck.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell yer wot, War, w’ile it’s bilin’ I’ll ’ave
+another go at ther button, cos I want ter give
+’im ther ’at soon as he comes. S’pose they’ll
+orl come!” He had sat down again, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60"></span>seemed to whistle his words. “Think they’ll
+orl come, Loo?”</p>
+
+<p>Loo would not commit himself about “orl,”
+not being quite sure of his master’s mind.</p>
+
+<p>The old man’s mouth twitched, a violent effort
+jerked him. “Might be a boy arter orl; ain’t
+cocky sure!” His head wagged irresponsibly,
+and his hat fell off as he rolled into the bunk.
+He made no effort to replace it, and, for once
+unheeded, the fire flickered on his polished head.
+Never before had the dog seen its baldness. The
+change from night-cap to hat had always been
+effected out of his sight.</p>
+
+<p>“War, ain’t cocky sure it’ll be a gal?”</p>
+
+<p>The dog discreetly or modestly dropped his
+eyes, but his master had not done with concessions.</p>
+
+<p>“Warder!” Warder looked at him. “Tell
+yer wot, you can go every Sunday evenin’ an’
+see if ’tis a boy!”</p>
+
+<p>He turned over on his side, with his face to the
+wall. Into the gnarled uncontrolled hand swaying
+over the bunk the dog laid his paw.</p>
+
+<p>When the old man got up, he didn’t put on his
+hat nor even pick it up. Altogether there was
+an unusualness about him to-night that distressed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61"></span>his mate. He sat up after a few
+moments, and threw back his head, listening
+strainingly for outside sounds. The silence
+soothed him, and he lay down again. A faded
+look was in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Thort I ’eard bells—church bells,” he said
+to the dog looking up too, but at him. “Couldn’t
+’ave. No church bells in the bush. Ain’t ’eard
+’em since I lef’ th’ ole country.” He turned his
+best ear to the fancied sound. He had left his
+dog and the hut, and was dreaming of shadowy
+days.</p>
+
+<p>He raised himself from the bunk, and followed
+the dog’s eyes to a little smoke-stained bottle on
+the shelf. “No, no, War!” he said. “Thet’s
+for sickness; mus’ be a lot worser’n wot I am!”
+Breathing noisily, he went through a list of diseases,
+among which were palsy, snake-bite,
+“dropersy,” and “suddint death,” before he
+would be justified in taking the last of his painkiller.</p>
+
+<p>His pipe was in his hidden belt, but he had
+another in one of those little pockets. He tried
+it, said “’twouldn’t draw’r,” and very slowly and
+clumsily stripped the edge of a cabbage tree
+frond hanging from the rafter, and tried to push
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62"></span>it through the stem, but could not find the opening.
+He explained to the intent dog that the
+hole was stopped up, but it didn’t matter. He
+placed it under the bunk where he sat, because
+first he would “’ave a swig er tea.” His head
+kept wagging at the billy. No, until the billy
+boiled he was going to have a little snooze.
+The dog was to keep quiet until the billy boiled.</p>
+
+<p>Involuntarily he murmured, looking at his
+mate, “Funny w’ere ther tommy’awk’s gone
+ter!” Then he missed the axe. “My Gord,
+Warder!” he said, “I lef’ the axe outside;
+clean forgot it!” This discovery alarmed the
+dog, and he suggested they should bring it in.</p>
+
+<p>“No, no!” he said, and his floury face grew
+ghastly.</p>
+
+<p>He stood still; all his faculties seemed paralyzed
+for a time, then fell stiffly on his bunk. Quite
+suddenly he staggered to his feet, rubbed his
+eyes, and between broken breaths he complained
+of the bad light, and that the mist had come
+again.</p>
+
+<p>One thing the dog did when he saw his
+master’s face even by that indifferent light, he
+barked low, and terribly human.</p>
+
+<p>The old man motioned for silence. “Ah!”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63"></span>His jaw fell but only for a moment. Then a
+steely grimness took possession. He clung to
+the table and beckoned the dog with one crooked
+finger. “Scrammy?” cunningly, cautiously,
+indicating outside, and as subtly the dog replied.
+Then he groped for his bunk, and lay with his
+eyes fixed on the billy, his mouth open.</p>
+
+<p>He brought his palms together after a while.
+“’Cline our ’earts ter keep this lawr,” he
+whispered, and for a moment his eyes rested on
+the hiding place, then turned to the dog.</p>
+
+<p>And though soon after there was a sinister
+sound outside, which the watchful dog immediately
+challenged, the man on the bunk lay
+undisturbed.</p>
+
+<p>Warder growling savagely went along the
+back wall of the hut, and despite the semidarkness
+his eyes scintillating with menace
+through the cracks, drove from them a crouching
+figure who turned hastily to grip the axe
+near the myall logs. He stumbled over the
+lamb’s feeding-pan lying in the hut’s shadow.
+The moonlight glittering on the blade recalled the
+menace of the dog’s eyes. The man grabbed
+the weapon swiftly, but even with it he felt the
+chances were unequal.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64"></span></p>
+
+<p>But he had planned to fix the dog. He
+would unpen the sheep, and the lurking dingoes,
+coming up from the creek to worry the lambs,
+would prove work for the dog. He crouched
+silently to again deceive this man and dog, and
+crept towards the sheep yard. But the hurdles
+of the yard faced the hut, and the way those
+thousand eyes reflected the rising moon was disconcerting.
+The whole of the night seemed
+pregnant with eyes.</p>
+
+<p>All the shadows were slanting the wrong way,
+and the moon was facing him, with its man
+calmly watching every movement. It would be
+dawn before it set. He backed from the yard
+to the myall’s scant screen. Even they had
+moulted with age. From under his coat the
+handle of the axe protruded. His mind worked
+his body. Hugging the axe, he crept towards
+some object, straightened himself to reach, then
+with the hook on his handless arm, drew back
+an imaginary bolt, and stooping entered. With
+the axe in readiness he crept to the bunk.
+Twice he raised it and struck.</p>
+
+<p>It was easy enough out there, yet even in imagination
+his skin was wet and his mouth was
+dry. Even if the man slept, there was the dog.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65"></span>He must risk letting out the sheep. He covered
+the blade of the axe and went in a circuit to the
+sheep, and got over the yard on the side opposite
+to the hut. They rushed from him and huddled
+together, leaving him, although stooping, exposed.
+He had calculated for this, but not for
+the effect upon himself. Could they in the hut
+see him, he would be no match for the dog even
+with the axe. Heedlessly, fear-driven, he rushed
+to where he could see the door, regardless of
+exposing himself. Nothing counted now, but
+that the dog or the old man should not steal
+upon him unawares.</p>
+
+<p>The door was still closed. No call for
+“Warder!” came from it, though he stood
+there a conspicuous object. While he watched
+he saw an ewe lamb make for the hut’s shelter.
+He stooped, still watching, and listened, but
+could hear nothing. He crept forward and
+loosened the hurdles. Never were they noisier,
+he was sure. He knew that the sheep would
+not go through while he was there. He crept
+away, but although the leader noted the freed
+exit, he and those he led were creatures of
+habit. None were hungry, and they were
+unused to feeding at night, though in the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66"></span>morning came man and dog never so early they
+were waiting.</p>
+
+<p>Round the yard and past the gateway he
+drove them again and again. He began to feel
+impotently frenzied in the fear that the extraordinary
+lightness meant that daylight must be
+near. Every moment he persuaded himself
+that he could see more plainly. He held out
+his one hand and was convinced.</p>
+
+<p>He straightened himself, rushed among them,
+caught one, and ran it kicking through the opening.
+It came back the moment he freed it.
+However it served his purpose, for as he
+crouched there, baffled, he unexpectedly saw
+them file out. Then they rushed through in an
+impatient struggling crowd, each fearing to be
+last with this invader.</p>
+
+<p>When he “barrowed” out the first, he
+had kept his eyes on the hut, and had seen
+an old ewe and lamb run to it and bunt
+the closed door. But if there was any movement
+inside, the noise of the nearer sheep
+killed it.</p>
+
+<p>They were all round the hut, for above it
+hung the moon, and they all made for the light.
+He crept after them, his ears straining for
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67"></span>sound, but his head bobbing above them to
+watch the still closed door.</p>
+
+<p>Inside, long since, the back-log had split with
+an explosion that scattered the coals near
+enough to cause the billy to boil, and the blaze
+showed the old man’s eyes set on the billy. The
+dog looked into them, then laid his head between
+his paws, and still watching his master’s face,
+beat the ground with his tail. He whined softly
+and went back to his post at the door, his eyes
+snapping flintily, his teeth bared. Along his
+back the hair rose like bristles. He sent an
+assurance of help to the importunate ewe and
+lamb. As the sheep neared the hut, he ran to
+the bunk, raised his head to a level with his
+master’s, and barked softly. He waited, and
+despite the eager light in his intelligent face,
+his master and mate did not ask him any
+questions as to the cause of these calling
+sheep. Why did he not rise, and with him
+re-yard them, then gloatingly ask him where
+was the chinky crow by day, or sneaking
+dingo by night, that was any match for them,
+and then demand from his four-footed trusty
+mate the usual straightforward answer? Was
+there to be no discussion as to which heard
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68"></span>the noise first, nor the final compromise of a
+dead-heat?</p>
+
+<p>The silence puzzled the man outside sorely;
+he crouched, watching both door and shutter.
+The sheep were all round the hut. Man and
+dog inside must hear them. Why, when a
+dingo came that night he camped with them,
+they heard it before it could reach a lamb. If
+only he had known then what he knew now!
+His hold on the axe tightened. No one had
+seen him come; none should see him go! Why
+didn’t that old fellow wake to-night? for now, as
+he crept nearer the hut, he could hear the
+whining dog, and understood, he was appealing
+to his master.</p>
+
+<p>He lay flat on the ground and tried to puzzle
+it out. The sheep had rushed back disorganised
+and were again near the hut and yard. Both
+inside must know. They were waiting for him.
+They were preparing for him, and that was why
+they were letting the dingoes play up with the
+sheep. That was the reason they did not openly
+show fight.</p>
+
+<p>Still he would have sacrificed half of the
+coveted wealth to be absolutely certain of
+what their silence meant. It was surely almost
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69"></span>daylight. He spread out the fingers of his one
+hand; he could see the colour of the blood in
+the veins. He must act quickly, or he would
+have to hide about for another day. And
+the absent man might return. To encourage
+himself, he tried to imagine the possession of
+that glittering heap that he had seen them
+counting on the mat. Yet he had grown cold
+and dejected, and felt for the first time the
+weight of the axe. It would be all right if the
+door would open, the old man come out and
+send the dog to round up the sheep. It was
+getting daylight, and soon shelter would be impossible.</p>
+
+<p>He crept towards the hut, and this time he
+felt the edge of the axe. Right and left the
+sheep parted. There was nothing to be gained
+now in crawling, for the hostility of the dog told
+him that he could be seen. He stood, his body
+stiffened with determination.</p>
+
+<p>Mechanically he went to the door; he knew
+the defensive resources of the hut. He had
+the axe, and the stolen tomahawk was stuck in
+the fork of those myalls. He had no need for
+both. The only weapon that the old fellow
+had was the useless butcher’s knife. His eyes
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70"></span>protruded, and unconsciously he felt his stiffened
+beard.</p>
+
+<p>He breathed without movement. There was
+no sound now from man or dog. In his
+mind he saw them waiting for him to attack
+the door; this he did not debate nor alter.
+He went to the shutter, ran the axe’s edge
+along the hide hinges, pushed it in, then
+stepped back.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately the dog’s head appeared. He
+growled no protest, but the flinty fire from
+his eyes and the heat of his suppressed breath,
+hissing between his bared fangs, revealed to
+Scrammy that in this contest, despite the axe,
+his one hand was a serious handicap.</p>
+
+<p>With the first blow his senses quickened. The
+slush lamp had gone out and there was no
+hint of daylight inside. This he noted between
+his blows at the dog, as he looked for his
+victim. It was strange the old fellow did not show
+fight! Where was he hiding? Was it possible
+that, scenting danger, he had slipped out? He
+recalled the dog’s warning when his master was
+counting his hoard. The memory of that chinking
+belt-hidden pile dominated greedily. Had
+the old man escaped? He would search the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71"></span>hut; what were fifty dogs’ teeth? In close
+quarters he would do for him with one blow.</p>
+
+<p>He was breathing now in deep gasps. The
+keen edge of the axe severed the hide-hinged
+door. He rushed it; then stood back swinging
+the axe in readiness. It did not fall for the bolt
+still held it. But this was only what a child
+would consider a barrier. One blow with the
+axe head smashed the bolt. The door fell across
+the head of the bunk, the end partly blocking
+the entrance. He struck a side blow that sent
+it along the bunk.</p>
+
+<p>The dog was dreadfully distressed. The
+bushman outside thought the cause the fallen
+door. Face to face they met—determined battle
+in the dog’s eyes met murder in the man’s.
+He brandished an axe circuit, craned his
+neck, and by the dull light of the fire searched
+the hut. He saw no one but the dog. Unless
+his master was under the bunk, he had
+escaped. The whole plot broke on him quite
+suddenly! The cunning old miser, knowing
+his dog would show his flight by following,
+had locked him in, and he had wasted all this
+time barking up the wrong tree. He would
+have done the old man to death that minute
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72"></span>with fifty brutal blows. He would kill him by
+day or night.</p>
+
+<p>He ran round the brush sheep yard, kicking
+and thrusting the axe through the thickest parts.
+He had not hidden there, nor among the myall
+clump where he had practised his bloody plot.
+The dog stood at the doorway of the hut. He
+saw this as he passed through the sheep on his
+way to search the creek. He was half minded
+to try to invite the dog’s confidence and cooperation
+by yarding them.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at them, and the moonlight’s
+undulating white scales across their shorn backs
+brought out the fresh tar brand 8, setting him
+thinking of the links of that convict gang chain
+long ago. Lord, how light it must be for him
+to see that!</p>
+
+<p>He held out his hand again. There was no
+perceptible change in the light. There were
+hours yet before daylight. He moulded his
+mind to that.</p>
+
+<p>The creek split the plain, and along it here
+and there a few she-oak blots defined it. He
+traversed it with his eyes. There were no likely
+hiding places among the trees, and it would be
+useless to search them. Suddenly it struck him
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73"></span>that the old man might be creeping along with
+the sheep—they were so used to him. He ran
+and headed them, driving them swiftly back to
+the yard. Before they were in he knew he was
+wrong. Again he turned and scanned the creek,
+but felt no impulse to search it. It was half a
+mile from the hut. It was impossible that the
+old man could have got there, or that he could
+have reached the more distant house. Besides,
+why did the dog stay at the door unless on
+guard? He ran back to the hut.</p>
+
+<p>The dog was still there, and in no way
+appeased by the yarding of the sheep. He
+swore at the threatening brute, and cast about
+for a gibber to throw, but stones were almost
+unknown there. A sapling would serve him!
+Seven or eight myall logs lay near for firewood,
+but all were too thick to be wielded. There was
+only the clump of myalls, and the few stunted
+she-oaks bordering the distant creek. To reach
+either would mean a dangerous delay. Oh, by
+God, he had it! These poles keeping down the
+bark roof. He ran to the back of the hut, cut a
+step in a slab, and putting his foot in it, hitched
+the axe on one of the desired poles and was up
+in a moment. He could hear the cabbage fronds
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74"></span>hanging from the rafters shiver with the vibration,
+but there was no other protest from inside.</p>
+
+<p>He shifted a sheet of rotten bark; part of it
+crumbled and fell inside on the prostrate door,
+sounding like the first earth on a coffin, in a way
+that the dog particularly resented. He knelt
+and carefully eyed the interior. The dog’s glittering
+eyes met his. The door lay as it had
+fallen along the bunk. The fire was lightless,
+yet he could see more plainly, but the cause was
+not manifest, till from the myalls quite close the
+jackasses chorused. From his post the dog sent
+them a signal. Quite unaccountably the man’s
+muscles relaxed. “Oh, Christ!” he said, dropping
+the pole. He sprang up and faced the
+East, then turned to the traitorous faded moon.
+The daylight had come.</p>
+
+<p>The sweat stung his quivering body. Slowly,
+he made an eye circuit round the plain; no
+human being was in sight. All he had to face
+was a parcel of noisy jackasses and a barking
+dog! He would soon silence the dog. He took
+the pole and made a jab at the whelping brute.
+One thing he noticed, that if he did get one
+home, it was only when he worked near the
+horizontal door. His quickened senses guessed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75"></span>at the reason. He could have shifted the door
+easily with his pole, yet feared, because, if the
+old man were under, he would expose himself to
+two active enemies. He must get to close
+quarters with the dog, and chop him in two, or
+brain him with the axe.</p>
+
+<p>He ripped off another sheet of bark, and
+smashed away a batten that broke his swing.
+Encircling a rafter with his hooked arm, he lay
+flat, his feet pressing another just over the bunk,
+because only there would the dog hold his
+ground. One blow well directed got home. He
+planted his feet firmly, and made another with
+such tremendous force that his support snapped.
+He let go the axe and it fell on the door. He
+gripped with his hand the rafter nearest, but
+strain as he would he could not balance his body.
+He hung over the door, and the dog sprang at
+him and dragged him down. In bitten agony,
+he dropped on the door that instantly up-ended.</p>
+
+<p>It was daylight, and in that light the power of
+those open eyes set in that bald head, fixed on
+the billy beside the dead fireplace, was mightier
+than the dog. His unmaimed hand had the
+strength of both. He lifted the door and shielded
+himself with it as he backed out.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76"></span></p>
+
+<p>But that was not all the dog wanted. At the
+doorway he waited to see that the fleeing man
+had no further designs on the sheep.</p>
+
+<p>It was time they were feeding. Though the
+hurdles were down, even from the doorway, the
+dog was their master. He waited for commands
+from his, and barked them back till noon.</p>
+
+<p>Several times that day the ewe and lamb came
+in, looked without speculation at the figure on
+the bunk, then moved to the dead fire-place. But
+though the water in the billy was cold, the dog
+would not allow either to touch it. That was
+for tea when his master awoke.</p>
+
+<p>There was another circumstance. Those blow
+flies were welcome to the uncovered mutton.
+Throughout that day he gave them undisputed
+right, but they had to be content with it.</p>
+
+<p>Next day the ewe and lamb came again. The
+lamb bunted several irresponsive objects—never
+its dam’s udder—baaing listlessly. Though the
+first day the ewe had looked at the bunk, and
+baaed, she was wiser now, though sheep are
+slow to learn. Around that dried dish outside
+the lamb sniffed, baaing faintly. Adroitly the
+ewe led the way to the creek, and the lamb
+followed. From the bank the lamb looked at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77"></span>her, then faced round to the hut, and baaing
+disconsolately, trotted a few paces back. From
+the water’s edge the mother ewe called. The lamb
+looked at her vacantly, and without interest descended.
+The ewe bent and drank sparingly,
+meaningly. The lamb sniffed the water, and unsatisfied,
+complained. The hut was hidden, but
+it turned that way. Again the ewe leisurely drank.
+This time the lamb’s lips touched the water, but
+did not drink. Into its mouth raised to bleat a
+few drops fell. Hastily the mother’s head went
+to the water. She did not drink, but the lamb
+did. Higher up, where the creek was dry, they
+crossed to tender grass in the billabong, then
+joined the flock for the first time.</p>
+
+<p>Through the thicker mist that afternoon a
+white tilted cart sailed joltingly, taking its bearings
+from the various land marks rather than
+from the undefined track. It rounded the scrub,
+and the woman, with her baby, kept watch for
+the first glimpse of her home beyond the creek.
+She told her husband that there was no smoke
+from the nearer shepherd’s hut, but despite his
+uneasiness, he tried to persuade her that the
+mist absorbed it.</p>
+
+<p>It was past sun-down, yet the straggling unguarded
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78"></span>sheep were running in mobs to and from
+the creek. Both saw the broken roof of the hut,
+and the man, stopping the horse some distance
+away, gave the woman the reins and bade her
+wait. He entered the hut through the broken
+doorway, but immediately came out to assure
+himself that his wife had not moved.</p>
+
+<p>The sight inside of that broken-ribbed dog’s
+fight with those buzzing horrors, and the reproach
+in his wild eyes, was a memory that the
+man was not willing she should share.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79"></span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="BILLY_SKYWONKIE">
+ BILLY SKYWONKIE.
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> line was unfenced, so with due regard to
+the possibility of the drought-dulled sheep
+attempting to chew it, the train crept cautiously
+along, stopping occasionally, without warning,
+to clear it from the listless starving brutes. In
+the carriage nearest the cattle-vans, some drovers
+and scrub-cutters were playing euchre, and
+spasmodically chorusing the shrill music from
+an uncertain concertina. When the train
+stopped, the player thrust his head from the
+carriage window. From one nearer the engine,
+a commercial traveller remonstrated with the
+guard, concerning the snail’s pace and the
+many unnecessary halts.</p>
+
+<p>“Take yer time, ole die-ard,” yelled the
+drover to the guard. “Whips er time,—don’t
+bust yerself fer no one. Wot’s orl the worl’ to a
+man w’en his wife’s a widder.” He laughed
+noisily and waved his hat at the seething bagman.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80"></span>“Go an’ ’ave a snooze. I’ll wake yer up
+ther day after termorrer.”</p>
+
+<p>He craned his neck to see into the nearest
+cattle-van. Four were down, he told his mates,
+who remarked, with blasphemous emphasis, that
+they would probably lose half before getting
+them to the scrub country.</p>
+
+<p>The listening woman passenger in a carriage
+between the drover and the bagman, heard a
+thud soon after in the cattle-truck, and added
+another to the list of the fallen. Before dawn
+that day the train had stopped at a siding to
+truck them, and she had watched with painful
+interest these drought-tamed brutes being driven
+into the crowded vans. The tireless, greedy
+sun had swiftly followed the grey dawn, and in
+the light that even now seemed old and worn,
+the desolation of the barren shelterless plains,
+that the night had hidden, appalled her. She
+realised the sufferings of the emaciated cattle.
+It was barely noon, yet she had twice emptied
+the water bottle, “shogging” in the iron
+bracket.</p>
+
+<p>The train dragged its weary length again,
+and she closed her eyes from the monotony of
+the dead plain. Suddenly the engine cleared
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81"></span>its throat in shrill welcome to two iron tanks,
+hoisted twenty feet and blazing like evil eyes
+from a vanished face.</p>
+
+<p>Beside them it squatted on its hunkers, placed
+a blackened thumb on its pipe, and hissed
+through its closed teeth like a snared wild cat,
+while gulping yards of water. The green slimy
+odour penetrated to the cattle. The lustiest of
+these stamped feebly, clashing their horns and
+bellowing a hollow request.</p>
+
+<p>A long-bearded bushman was standing on the
+few slabs that formed a siding, with a stockwhip
+coiled like a snake on his arm. The
+woman passenger asked him the name of the
+place.</p>
+
+<p>“This is ther Never—Never,—ther lars’ place
+Gord made,” answered one of the drovers who
+were crowding the windows.</p>
+
+<p>“Better’n ther ’ell ’ole yous come from,
+any’ow,” defended the bushman. “Breakin’
+ther ’earts, an’ dyin’ from suerside, cos they lef’
+it,” he added derisively, pointing to the cattle.</p>
+
+<p>In patriotic anger he passed to the guard-van
+without answering her question, though she
+looked anxiously after him. At various intervals
+during the many halts of the train, she had
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82"></span>heard some of the obscene jokes, and with it in
+motion, snatches of lewd songs from the drovers’
+carriage. But the language used by this bushman
+to the guard, as he helped to remove a ton
+of fencing wire topping his new saddle, made
+her draw back her head. Near the siding was
+a spring cart, and she presently saw him throw
+his flattened saddle into it and drive off. There
+was no one else in sight, and in nervous fear
+she asked the bagman if this was Gooriabba
+siding. It was nine miles further, he told her.</p>
+
+<p>The engine lifted its thumb from its pipe.
+“Well—well—to—be—sure; well—well—to—be—sure,”
+it puffed, as if in shocked remembrance
+of its being hours late for its appointment
+there.</p>
+
+<p>She saw no one on the next siding, but a
+buggy waited near the sliprails. It must be for
+her. According to Sydney arrangements she
+was to be met here, and driven out twelve miles.
+A drover enquired as the train left her standing
+by her portmanteau, “Are yer travellin’ on yer
+lonesome, or on’y goin’ somew’ere!” and another
+flung a twist of paper towards her, bawling unmusically,
+that it was “A flowwer from me angel
+mother’s ger-rave.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83"></span></p>
+
+<p>She went towards the buggy, but as she
+neared it the driver got in and made to drive
+off. She ran and called, for when he went she
+would be alone with the bush all round her, and
+only the sound of the hoarse croaking of the
+frogs from the swamp near, and the raucous
+“I’ll—’ave—’is—eye—out,” of the crows.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, he was from Gooriabba Station, and had
+come to meet a young “piece” from Sydney,
+who had not come.</p>
+
+<p>She was ghastly with bilious sickness,—the
+result of an over-fed brain and an under-fed
+liver. Her face flushed muddily. “Was it a
+housekeeper?”</p>
+
+<p>He was the rouseabout, wearing his best
+clothes with awful unusualness. The coat was
+too long in the sleeve, and wrinkled across the
+back with his bush slouch. There was that
+wonderful margin of loose shirt between waistcoat
+and trousers, which all swagger bushies
+affect. Subordinate to nothing decorative was
+the flaring silk handkerchief, drawn into a sailor’s
+knot round his neck.</p>
+
+<p>He got out and fixed the winkers, then put his
+hands as far as he could reach into his pockets—from
+the position of his trousers he could not
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84"></span>possibly reach bottom. It was apparently some
+unknown law that suspended them. He thrust
+forward his lower jaw, elevated his pipe, and
+squirted a little tobacco juice towards his foot
+that was tracing semi-circles in the dust.
+“Damned if I know,” he said with a snort, “but
+there’ll be a ’ell of a row somew’ere.”</p>
+
+<p>She noticed that the discoloured teeth his bush
+grin showed so plainly, were worn in the centre,
+and met at both sides with the pipe between
+the front. Worn stepping stones her mind
+insisted.</p>
+
+<p>She looked away towards the horizon where
+the smoke of the hidden train showed faintly
+against a clear sky, and as he was silent, she
+seemed to herself to be intently listening to the
+croak of the frogs and the threat of the crows.
+She knew that, from under the brim of the hat
+he wore over his eyes, he was looking at her sideways.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he withdrew his hands and said
+again, “Damned if I know. S’pose its alright!
+Got any traps? Get up then an’ ’ole the
+Neddy while I get it.” They drove a mile or
+so in silence; his pipe was still in his mouth
+though not alight.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85"></span></p>
+
+<p>She spoke once only. “What a lot of frogs
+seem to be in that lake!”</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. “That’s ther Nine Mile Dam!”
+He laughed again after a little—an intelligent
+complacent laugh.</p>
+
+<p>“It used ter be swarmin’ with teal in a good
+season, but Gord A’mighty knows w’en its ever
+goin’ ter rain any more! I dunno!” This was
+an important admission, for he was a great
+weather prophet. “Lake!” he sniggered and
+looked sideways at his companion. “Thet’s
+wot thet there bloke, the painter doodle, called
+it. An ’e goes ter dror it, an’ ’e sez wot ’e ’ll
+give me five bob if I’ll run up ther horses,
+an’ keep ’em so’s ’e ken put ’em in ther picshure.
+An’ ’e drors ther Dam an’ ther trees,
+puts in thet there ole dead un, an’ ’e puts
+in ther ’orses right clost against ther water
+w’ere the frogs is. ’E puts them in too, an’
+damned if ’e don’t dror ther ’orses drinkin’
+ther water with ther frogs, an’ ther frogs spit
+on it! Likely yarn ther ’orses ud drink ther
+water with ther blanky frogs’ spit on it! Fat
+lot they know about ther bush! Blarsted
+nannies!”</p>
+
+<p>Presently he enquired as to the place where
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86"></span>they kept pictures in Sydney, and she told him,
+the Art Gallery.</p>
+
+<p>“Well some of these days I’m goin’ down ter
+Sydney,” he continued, “an I’ll collar thet one
+’cos its a good likerness of ther ’orses—you’d
+know their ’ide on a gum tree—an’ that mean
+mongrel never paid me ther five bob.”</p>
+
+<p>Between his closed teeth he hissed a bush tune
+for some miles, but ceased to look at the sky and
+remarked, “No sign er rain! No lambin’ this
+season; soon as they’re dropt we’ll ’ave ter knock
+’em all on ther ’ead!” He shouted an oath of
+hatred at the crows following after the tottering
+sheep that made in a straggling line for the
+water. “Look at ’em!” he said, “Scoffin’ out
+ther eyes!” He pointed to where the crows
+hovered over the bogged sheep. “They putty
+well lives on eyes! ‘Blanky bush Chinkies!’ I
+call ’em. No one carn’t tell ’em apart!”</p>
+
+<p>There was silence again, except for a remark
+that he could spit all the blanky rain they had
+had in the last nine months.</p>
+
+<p>Away to the left along a side track his eyes
+travelled seachingly, as they came to a gate. He
+stood in the buggy and looked again.</p>
+
+<p>“Promised ther ‘Konk’ t’ leave’im ’ave furst
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87"></span>squint at yer,” he muttered, “if ’e was ’ere t’
+open ther gate! But I’m not goin’ t’ blanky well
+wait orl day!” He reluctantly got out and opened
+the gate, and he had just taken his seat when
+a “Cooee” sounded from his right, heralded by
+a dusty pillar. He snorted resentfully. “’Ere
+’e is; jes’ as I got out an’ done it!”</p>
+
+<p>The “Konk” cantered to them, his horse’s
+hoofs padded by the dust-cushioned earth. The
+driver drew back, so as not to impede the newcomer’s
+view. After a moment or two, the
+“Konk,” preferring closer quarters, brought his
+horse round to the left. Unsophisticated bush
+wonder in the man’s face, met the sophisticated
+in the girl’s.</p>
+
+<p>Never had she seen anything so grotesquely
+monkeyish. And the nose of this little hairy
+horror, as he slewed his neck to look into her face,
+blotted the landscape and dwarfed all perspective.
+She experienced a strange desire to extend
+her hand. When surprise lessened, her mettle
+saved her from the impulse to cover her face
+with both hands, to baffle him.</p>
+
+<p>At last the silence was broken by the driver
+drawing a match along his leg, and lighting his
+pipe. The hairy creature safely arranged a pair
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88"></span>of emu eggs, slung with bush skill round his
+neck.</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’t yer goin’ to part?” enquired the
+driver, indicating his companion as the recipient.</p>
+
+<p>“Wot are yer givin’ us; wot do yer take me
+fur?” said the “Konk” indignantly, drawing
+down his knotted veil.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, give ’em ter me fer Lizer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Will yer ’ave ’em now, or wait till yer get
+’em?”</p>
+
+<p>“Goin’ ter sit on ’em yerself?” sneered the
+driver.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, an’ I’ll give yer ther first egg ther cock
+lays,” laughed the “Konk.”</p>
+
+<p>He turned his horse’s head back to the gate.
+“I say, Billy Skywonkie! Wot price Sally Ah
+Too, eh?” he asked, his gorilla mouth agape.</p>
+
+<p>Billy Skywonkie uncrossed his legs, took out
+the whip. He tilted his pipe and shook his head
+as he prepared to drive, to show that he understood
+to a fraction the price of Sally Ah Too.
+The aptness of the question took the sting out of
+his having had to open the gate. He gave a
+farewell jerk.</p>
+
+<p>“Goin’ ter wash yer neck?” shouted the man
+with the nose, from the gate.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89"></span></p>
+
+<p>“Not if I know it.”</p>
+
+<p>The “Konk” received the intimation
+incredulously. “Stinkin’ Roger!” he yelled. In
+bush parlance this was equal to emphatic disbelief.</p>
+
+<p>This was a seemingly final parting, and both
+started, but suddenly the “Konk” wheeled
+round.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Billy!” he shouted.</p>
+
+<p>Billy stayed his horse and turned expectantly.</p>
+
+<p>“W’en’s it goin’ ter rain?”</p>
+
+<p>The driver’s face darkened. “Your blanky
+jealersey ’ll get yer down, an’ worry yer yet,” he
+snarled, and slashing his horse he drove rapidly
+away.</p>
+
+<p>“Mickey ther Konk,” he presently remarked
+to his companion, as he stroked his nose.</p>
+
+<p>This explained her earlier desire to extend her
+hand. If the “Konk” had been a horse she
+would have stroked his nose.</p>
+
+<p>“Mob er sheep can camp in the shadder of
+it,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>Boundless scope for shadows on that sun-smitten
+treeless plain!</p>
+
+<p>“Make a good plough-shere,” he continued
+“easy plough a cultivation paddock with it!”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90"></span></p>
+
+<p>At the next gate he seemed in a mind and body
+conflict. There were two tracks; he drove along
+one for a few hundred yards. Then stopping,
+he turned, and finding the “Konk” out of sight,
+abruptly drove across to the other. He continually
+drew his whip along the horse’s back, and
+haste seemed the object of the movement, though
+he did not flog the beast.</p>
+
+<p>After a few miles on the new track, a blob
+glittered dazzlingly through the glare, like a
+fallen star. It was the iron roof of the wine
+shanty—the Saturday night and Sunday resort
+of shearers and rouseabouts for twenty miles
+around. Most of its spirits was made on the
+premises from bush recipes, of which blue-stone
+and tobacco were the chief ingredients.
+Every drop had the reputation of “bitin’ orl
+ther way down.”</p>
+
+<p>A sapling studded with broken horse-shoes
+seemed to connect two lonely crow stone trees.
+Under their scanty shade groups of dejected
+fowls stood with beaks agape. Though the
+buggy wheels almost reached them, they were
+motionless but for quivering gills. The ground
+both sides of the shanty was decorated with
+tightly-pegged kangaroo skins. A dog, apathetically
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91"></span>blind and dumb, lay on the verandah, lifeless
+save for eyelids blinking in antagonism to
+the besieging flies.</p>
+
+<p>“Jerry can’t be far off,” said Billy Skywonkie,
+recognising the dog. He stood up in the buggy.
+“By cripes, there ’e is—goosed already, an’ ’e
+on’y got ’is cheque lars’ night.”</p>
+
+<p>On the chimney side of the shanty a man lay
+in agitated sleep beside his rifle and swag. There
+had been a little shade on that side in the morning,
+and he had been sober enough to select it,
+and lay his head on his swag. He had emptied
+the bottle lying at his feet since then. His swag
+had been thoroughly “gone through,” and also
+his singlet and trouser pockets. The fumes from
+the shant-grog baffled the flies. But the scorching
+sun was conquering; the man groaned, and
+his hands began to search for his burning head.</p>
+
+<p>Billy Skywonkie explained to his companion
+that it was “Thet fool, Jerry ther kangaroo-shooter,
+bluein’ ’is cheque fer skins.” He took
+the water bag under the buggy, and poured the
+contents into the open mouth and over the face
+of the “dosed” man, and raised him into a sitting
+posture. Jerry fought this friendliness
+vigorously, and, staggering to his feet, picked up
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92"></span>his rifle, and took drunken aim at his rescuer,
+then at the terrified woman in the buggy.</p>
+
+<p>The rouseabout laughed unconcernedly. “’E
+thinks we’re blanky kangaroos,” he said to her.
+“Jerry, ole cock, yer couldn’t ’it a woolshed!
+Yer been taking ther sun!”</p>
+
+<p>He took the rifle and pushed the subdued
+Jerry into the chimney corner.</p>
+
+<p>He tilted his hat, till, bush fashion, it “’ung on
+one ’air,” and went inside the shanty. “Mag!”
+he shouted, thumping the bar (a plank supported
+by two casks).</p>
+
+<p>The woman in the buggy saw a slatternly
+girl with doughy hands come from the back,
+wiping the flour from her face with a kitchen
+towel. They made some reference to her she
+knew, as the girl came to the door and gave her
+close scrutiny. Then, shaking her head till her
+long brass earrings swung like pendulums, she
+laughed loudly.</p>
+
+<p>“Eh?” enquired the rouseabout.</p>
+
+<p>“My oath!” “Square dinkum!” she answered,
+going behind the bar.</p>
+
+<p>He took the silk handkerchief from his neck,
+and playfully tried to flick the corner into her
+eye. Mag was used to such delicate attentions
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93"></span>and well able to defend herself. With the dirty
+kitchen towel she succeeded in knocking off his
+hat, and round and round the house she ran
+with it dexterously dodging the skin-pegs. He
+could neither overtake nor outwit her with any
+dodge. He gave in, and ransomed his hat with
+the “shouts” she demanded.</p>
+
+<p>From the back of the shanty, a bent old
+woman, almost on all fours, crept towards the
+man, again prostrate in the corner. She
+paused, with her ear turned to where the girl
+and the rouseabout were still at horse-play.
+With cat-like movements she stole on till within
+reach of Jerry’s empty pockets. She turned
+her terrible face to the woman in the buggy, as
+if in expectation of sympathy. Keeping wide of
+the front door, she came to the further side of
+the buggy. With the fascination of horror the
+woman looked at this creature, whose mouth
+and eyes seemed to dishonour her draggled grey
+hair. She was importuning for something, but
+the woman in the buggy could not understand
+till she pointed to her toothless mouth (the mission
+of which seemed to be, to fill its cavernous
+depths with the age-loosened skin above and
+below). A blue bag under each eye aggressively
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94"></span>ticked like the gills of the fowls, and the sinews
+of the neck strained into bassi relievi. Alternately
+she pointed to her mouth, or laid her
+knotted fingers on the blue bags in pretence of
+wiping tears. Entrenched behind the absorbed
+skin-terraces, a stump of purple tongue made
+efforts at speech. When she held out her claw,
+the woman understood and felt for her purse.
+Wolfishly the old hag snatched and put into her
+mouth the coin, and as the now merry driver,
+followed by Mag, came, she shook a warning
+claw at the giver, and flopped whining in the
+dust, her hands ostentatiously open and wiping
+dry eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“’Ello Biddy, on ther booze again!”</p>
+
+<p>The bottle bulging from his coat pocket made
+speech with him intelligible, despite the impeding
+coin.</p>
+
+<p>He placed the bottle in the boot of the buggy,
+and turning to Mag, said “Give ther poor ole
+cow a dose!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, one in a billy; anything else might
+make her sick!” said Mag. “I caught ’er jus’
+now swiggin’ away with ther tap in ’er mug!”</p>
+
+<p>He asked his companion would she like a wet.
+She asked for water, and so great was her need,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95"></span>that, making a barricade of closed lips and
+teeth to the multitude of apparently wingless
+mosquitoes thriving in its green tepidity, she
+moistened her mouth and throat.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I say, Billy!” called Mag as he drove
+off. Her tones suggested her having forgotten
+an important matter, and he turned eagerly.
+“W’en’s it goin’ ter rain?” she shrieked,
+convulsed with merriment.</p>
+
+<p>“Go an’ crawl inter a ’oller log!” he shouted
+angrily.</p>
+
+<p>“No, but truly, Billy.” Billy turned again.
+“Give my love to yaller Lizer; thet slues yer!”</p>
+
+<p>They had not gone far before he looked round
+again. “Gord!” he cried excitedly, “Look at
+Mag goin’ through ’er ole woman!”</p>
+
+<p>Mag had the old woman’s head between her
+knees, dentist-fashion, and seemed to concentrate
+upon her victim’s mouth, whose feeble impotence
+was soon demonstrated by the operator releasing
+her, and triumphantly raising her hand.</p>
+
+<p>What the finger and thumb held the woman
+knew and the other guessed.</p>
+
+<p>“By Gord. Eh! thet’s prime; ain’t it? No
+flies on Mag; not a fly!” he said, admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>“See me an’ ’er?” he asked, as he drove on.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96"></span></p>
+
+<p>His tone suggested no need to reply, and his
+listener did not. A giddy unreality took the
+sting from everything, even from her desire to
+beseech him to turn back to the siding, and
+leave her there to wait for the train to take her
+back to civilization. She felt she had lost her
+mental balance. Little matters became distorted,
+and the greater shrivelled.</p>
+
+<p>He was now more communicative, and the
+oaths and adjectives so freely used were surely
+coined for such circumstances. “Damned”
+the wretched, starving, and starved sheep looked
+and were; “bloody” the beaks of the glutted
+crows; “blarsted” the whole of the plain they
+drove through!</p>
+
+<p>Gaping cracks suggested yawning graves,
+and the skeleton fingers of the drooping myalls
+seemingly pointed to them.</p>
+
+<p>“See me an’ Mag?” he asked again. “No
+flies on Mag; not a wink ’bout ’er!” He
+chuckled in tribute. “Ther wus thet damned
+flash fool, Jimmy Fernatty,” he continued “—ther
+blanky fool; ’e never ’ad no show with Mag.
+An’ yet ’e’d go down there! It wus two mile
+furder this way, yet damned if ther blanky fool
+wouldn’t come this way every time, ’less ther
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97"></span>boss ’e wus with ’im, ’stead er goin’ ther short
+cut,—ther way I come this mornin’. An’ every
+time Mag ud make ’im part ’arf a quid! I wus
+on’l there jus’ ’bout five minits meself, an’ I
+stuck up nea’ly ’arf a quid! An’ there’s four
+gates (he flogged the horse and painted them
+crimson when he remembered them) this way,
+more ’n on ther way I come this mornin’.”</p>
+
+<p>Presently he gave her the reins with instructions
+to drive through one. It seemed to take a
+long time to close it, and he had to fix the back
+of the buggy before he opened it, and after it
+was closed.</p>
+
+<p>After getting out several times in quick succession
+to fix the back of the buggy when there
+was no gate, he seemed to forget the extra distance.
+He kept his hand on hers when she gave
+him the reins, and bade her “keep up ’er pecker.”
+“Someone would soon buck up ter ’er if their
+boss wusn’t on.” But the boss it seemed was
+a “terrer for young uns. Jimmy Fernatty ’as
+took up with a yaller piece an’ is livin’ with ’er;
+But not me; thet’s not me! I’m like ther boss,
+thet’s me! No yeller satin for me!”</p>
+
+<p>He watched for the effect of this degree of
+taste on her.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98"></span></p>
+
+<p>Though she had withdrawn her hand, he kept
+winking at her, and she had to move her feet to
+the edge of the buggy to prevent his pressing
+against them. He told her with sudden anger
+that any red black-gin was as good as a half chow
+any day, and it was no use gammoning for he
+knew what she was.</p>
+
+<p>“If Billy Skywonkie ’ad ter string onter yaller
+Lizer, more ’air on ’is chest fer doin’ so,” (striking
+his own). “I ken get as many w’ite gins as
+I wanter, an’ I’d as soon tackle a gin as a chow
+anyways!”</p>
+
+<p>On his next visit to the back of the buggy she
+heard the crash of glass breaking against a tree.
+After a few snatches of song he lighted his pipe,
+and grew sorrowfully reminiscent.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes s’elp me, nea’ly ’arf a quid! An’ thet
+coloured ole ’og of a cow of a mother, soon’s
+she’s off ther booze, ’ll see thet she gets it!”
+Then he missed his silk handkerchief. “Ghost!”
+he said, breathing heavily, “Mag’s snavelled it!
+Lizer ’ll spot thet’s gone soon’s we get ’ithin
+cooee of ’er!”</p>
+
+<p>Against hope he turned and looked along
+the road; felt every pocket, lifted his feet, <a id="chg3"></a>and
+looked under the mat. His companion, in
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99"></span>reply, said she had not seen it since his visit to
+the shanty.</p>
+
+<p>“My Gord!” he said, “Mag’s a fair terror!”
+He was greatly troubled till the braggart in him
+gave an assertive flicker. “Know wot I’ll do ter
+Lizer soon’s she begins ter start naggin’ at me?”
+He intended this question as an insoluble conundrum,
+and waited for no surmises. “Fill ’er
+mug with this!” The shut fist he shook was
+more than a mugfull. “’Twouldn’ be ther first
+time I done it, not ther lars’.” But the anticipation
+seemed little comfort to him.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the journey was done in silence,
+and without even a peep at the sky. When
+they came to the homestead gate he said his
+throat felt as though a “goanner” had crawled
+into it and died. He asked her for a pin and
+clumsily dropped it in his efforts to draw the
+collar up to his ears, but had better luck with a
+hair-pin.</p>
+
+<p>He appeared suddenly subdued and sober, and
+as he took his seat after closing the gate, he
+offered her his hand, and said, hurriedly, “No
+’arm done, an’ no ’arm meant; an’ don’t let on
+ter my missus—thet’s ’er on the verander—thet
+we come be ther shanty.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100"></span></p>
+
+<p>It was dusk, but through it she saw that the
+woman was dusky too.</p>
+
+<p>“Boss in, Lizer?” There was contrition and
+propitiation in his voice.</p>
+
+<p>“You’ve bin a nice blanky time,” said his
+missus, “an’ lucky fer you: Billy Skywonkie ’e
+ain’t.”</p>
+
+<p>With bowed head, his shoulders making kindly
+efforts to hide his ears, he sat silent and listening
+respectfully. The woman in the buggy thought
+that the volubility of the angry half-caste’s tongue
+was the nearest thing to perpetual motion. Under
+her orders both got down, and from a seat under
+the open window in the little room to which
+Lizer had motioned, she gave respectful attention
+to the still rapidly flowing tirade. The
+offence had been some terrible injustice to a respectable
+married woman, “slavin’ an’ graftin’
+an’ sweatin’ from mornin’ ter night, for a slungin’
+idlin’ lazy blaggard.” In an indefinable way
+the woman felt that both of them were guilty,
+and to hide from her part of the reproof was
+mean and cowardly. The half-caste from time
+to time included her, and by degrees she understood
+that the wasted time of which Lizer complained
+was supposed to have been dissipated
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101"></span>in flirtation. Neither the shanty nor Mag had
+mention.</p>
+
+<p>From a kitchen facing the yard a Chinaman
+came at intervals, and with that assumption of
+having mastered the situation in all its bearings
+through his thorough knowledge of the English
+tongue, he shook his head in calm, shocked surprise.
+His sympathies were unmistakeably
+with Lizer, and he many times demonstrated
+his grip of the grievance by saying, “By Cli’
+Billy, its a bloo’y shame!”</p>
+
+<p>Maybe it was a sense of what was in his mind
+that made the quivering woman hide her face
+when virtuous Ching Too came to look at her.
+She was trying to eat when a dog ran into the
+dining-room, and despite the violent beating of
+her heart, she heard the rouseabout tell the
+boss as he unsaddled his horse, “The on’y
+woman I see was a ’alf chow, an’ she ses she’s
+the one, an’ she’s in ther dinin’-room ’avin’ a
+tuck in.”</p>
+
+<p>She was too giddy to stand when the boss
+entered, but she turned her mournful eyes on
+him, and supporting herself by the table, stood
+and faced him.</p>
+
+<p>He kept on his hat, and she, watching, saw
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102"></span>curiosity and surprise change into anger as he
+looked at her.</p>
+
+<p>“What an infernal cheek <em>you</em> had to come!
+Who sent you?” he asked stormily.</p>
+
+<p>She told him, and added that she had no intention
+of remaining.</p>
+
+<p>“How old?” She made no reply. His last
+thrust, as in disgust he strode out, had the effect
+of a galvanic battery on her dying body.</p>
+
+<p>Her bedroom was reeking with a green heavy
+scent. Empty powder boxes and rouge pots
+littered the dressing table, and various other aids
+to nature evidenced her predecessor’s frailty.
+From a coign in its fastness a black spider eyed
+her malignantly, and as long as the light lasted
+she watched it.</p>
+
+<p>The ringing of a bell slung outside in the
+fork of a tree awoke her before dawn. It was
+mustering—bush stocktaking—and all the station
+hands were astir. There was a noise of galloping
+horses being driven into the stockyard, and the
+clamour of the men as they caught and saddled
+them. Above the clatter of plates in the kitchen
+she could hear the affected drawl of the Chinaman
+talking to Lizer. She trod heavily along
+the passage, preparing the boss’s breakfast. This
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103"></span>early meal was soon over, and with the dogs
+snapping playfully at the horses’ heels, all rode
+off.</p>
+
+<p>Spasmodic bars of “A Bicycle Built for Two”
+came from the kitchen, “Mayly, Mayly, give me
+answer do!” There was neither haste nor
+anxiety in the singer’s tones. Before the kitchen
+fire, oblivious to the heat, stood the Chinaman
+cook, inert from his morning’s opium. It was
+only nine, but this was well on in the day for
+Ching, whose morning began at four.</p>
+
+<p>He ceased his song as she entered. “You
+come Sydiney? Ah! You mally? Ah! Sydiney
+welly ni’ place. This placee welly dly—too
+muchee no lain—welly dly.”</p>
+
+<p>She was watching his dog. On a block lay a
+flitch of bacon, and across the freshly cut side
+the dog drew its tongue, then snapped at the
+flies, “That dog will eat the bacon,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“No!” answered the cook. “’E no eat ’em—too
+saw.”</p>
+
+<p>It was salt; she had tried it for breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>He began energetically something about, “by-an’-bye
+me getty mally. By Cli’ no ’alf cas—too
+muchee longa jlaw.” He laughed and
+shook his head, reminiscent of “las’ a night,”
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104"></span>and waited for applause. But, fascinated, she
+still watched the dog, <a id="chg1"></a>who from time to time
+continued to take “saw” with his flies.</p>
+
+<p>“Go ou’ si’, Sir,” said the cook in a spirit of
+rivalry. The dog stood and snapped, “Go ou’
+si’, I say!” No notice from the dog “Go ou’
+si’, I tella you!” stamping his slippered feet
+and taking a fire stick. The dog leisurely sat
+down and looked at his master with mild reproof.
+“Go insi’ then, any bloo’y si’ you li’!”
+but pointing to their joint bed-room with the
+lighted stick. The dog went to the greasy door,
+saw that the hens sitting on the bed were quietly
+laying eggs to go with the bacon, and came
+back.</p>
+
+<p>She asked him where was the rouseabout who
+had driven her in yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Billy Skywonkie, ’e mally alri’! Lizer
+’im missie!” He went on to hint that affection
+there was misplaced, but that he himself was
+unattached.</p>
+
+<p>She saw the rouseabout rattle into the yard
+in a spring cart. He let down the backboard
+and dumped three sheep under a light gallows.
+Their two front feet were strapped to one behind.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105"></span></p>
+
+<p>He seemed breathless with haste. “Oh, I
+say!” he called out to her. “Ther boss ’e tole
+me this mornin’ thet I wus ter tell you, you wis
+ter sling yer ’ook. To do a get,” he explained.
+“So bundle yer duds tergether quick an’ lively!
+Lizer’s down at ther tank, washin’. Le’ss get
+away afore she sees us, or she’ll make yer
+swaller yer chewers.” Lowering his voice, he
+continued: “I wanter go ter ther shanty—on’y
+ter get me ’ankerchief.”</p>
+
+<p>He bent and strained back a sheep’s neck,
+drew the knife and steel from his belt, and skilfully
+danced an edge on the knife.</p>
+
+<p>She noticed that the sheep lay passive, with
+its head back, till its neck curved in a bow, and
+that the glitter of the knife was reflected in its
+eye.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106"></span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="BUSH_CHURCH">
+ BUSH CHURCH.
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3><abbr title="One">I.</abbr></h3>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> hospitality of the bush never extends to
+the loan of a good horse to an inexperienced
+rider. The parson bumping along on old Rosey,
+who had smelt the water of the “Circler Dam,”
+was powerless to keep the cunning experienced
+brute from diverting from the track. With
+the bit in her teeth, her pace kept him fully
+occupied to hold his seat. At the edge of the
+Dam, old Rosey, to avoid the treacherous mud,
+began, with humped back and hoofs close
+together, to walk along the plank, that pierwise
+extended to the deeper water. The parson’s
+protests ended in his slipping over the arched
+neck of the wilful brute, on to the few inches of
+plank that she considerately left for him. The
+old mare drank leisurely, then backed off with
+the same precaution, and stood switching the
+flies with her stunted tail. The parson followed
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107"></span>her and thankfully grabbed the reins. After
+several attempts to get up on the wrong side,
+he led the exacting animal to a log. He removed
+the veil he wore as a protection from the sticky
+eye-eating flies, so that Rosey might recognise
+him as her erstwhile rider. It was at this stage
+that “flash” Ned Stennard, always with time
+to kill and a tongue specially designed for the
+purpose, rode up and gave him lurid instructions
+and a leg up.</p>
+
+<p>He had come to their remoteness, he told
+Ned, as they rode along, to hold a service at a
+grazier’s homestead some miles distant. Under
+Ned’s sympathetic guidance he pulled up at the
+sliprails of a cockey’s selection to announce
+these tidings. It was Ned’s brother’s place,
+but Ned, who was not on speaking terms with
+his sister-in-law, rode on and waited.</p>
+
+<p>A group of half-naked children lay entangled
+among several kangaroo pups, in a make-believe
+of shade from a sickly gum tree. A
+canvas bag, with a saddle strap defining its
+long neck, hung from a bough, and the pups
+were yelping mildly at its contents, and licking
+the few drops of blood that fell. The parson
+saw the children rub the swarming flies from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108"></span>their eyes and turn to look at him. An older
+girl, bare-footed and dressed in a petticoat and
+old hat, was standing near a fire before the wide
+opening that served as a doorway to the humpy.
+She had a long stick, and was employed in
+permitting an aged billy-goat to bring his nose
+within an inch of the simmering water in the
+bucket slung over the fire.</p>
+
+<p>“Are your parents in?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“You aint ole Keogh?” said the girl.</p>
+
+<p>When he admitted that he wasn’t, he saw her
+interest in his personality was gone. “Are
+your mother and father in?”</p>
+
+<p>The thirsty billy was sneaking up again to
+the water, and she let him advance the prescribed
+limit before she made the jab that she enjoyed
+so thoroughly. “Mum’s gorn ter Tilly Lumber’s
+ter see t’ ther kid, and ther rester them’s gorn
+ter ther Circler Dam.”</p>
+
+<p>He made known his mission to the girl, but
+she didn’t divide her attention. The water
+would soon be too hot for the billy to drink,
+and there was no fun to be got out of the pups.
+For when she took the salt pork out of the
+canvas bag and put it in the bucket, they
+wouldn’t try to get it out of boiling water.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109"></span></p>
+
+<p>Doubtful of his success, the parson rejoined
+Ned, and along the dusty track they jogged.
+The parson’s part in the dialogue was chiefly
+remonstrative as to the necessity of Ned’s
+variegated adjectives. And he had frequently
+to assure the bushman that it would be useless
+for him to search in his clerical pockets for
+tobacco, as he didn’t smoke.</p>
+
+<p>At the Horse Shoe Bend they overtook hairy
+Paddy Woods of eighteen withering summers.
+Paddy was punching and blaspheming a nine
+mile day out of his bullocks. These were straining
+their load along with heads bent close to the
+dust-padded track, silent, for all the whip weals,
+but for a cough to free their mouths and nostrils
+from dust. Old Rosey, an inveterate yarner,
+pulled up abruptly; but Paddy, who had his
+day’s work cut out to a minute, gave a voiceless
+side-long nod in recognition of the parson’s
+greeting, and went on driving his team. Probably
+his share of the conversation, mainly catechismal,
+would have been yea and nay nods, but for
+catching Ned’s eye when the parson asked if he
+were married. Paddy struck an attitude of
+aged responsibility, and, tipping Ned an intelligent
+wink, made a pretence of searching
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110"></span>through a dusty past, and replied that he thought
+he was. The parson, giving him the benefit of
+the doubt, enquired if there were any children
+for baptism. Paddy, still with an eye on Ned,
+reckoned that the number of his offspring was
+uncertain, but promised that as soon as he
+delivered his load of wool he would have a day’s
+“musterin’ an’ draftin’ an’ countin’ an’ ear-markin’”
+and send him the returns. Ned’s loud
+laugh and “Good old Paddy” had not the
+effect on its young-old recipient’s well-filled
+tobacco pouch that he had hoped. The disgusted
+parson was trying to urge Rosey onward, but
+Rosey refused to leave her pleasant company
+till Ned brought his switch across her back.</p>
+
+<p>Ned stayed with Paddy long enough to tell
+him that, in his opinion, the black-coated parson
+was “nothin’ but a sneakin’ Inspector, pokin’ an’
+prowlin’ roun’ fur ole Keogh”—the lessee of the
+run, and their common enemy. He added that
+the green veil he wore over his eyes was a “mast”
+(mask), but that it didn’t deceive him. Tobaccoless
+Ned tried further to arouse practical admiration
+from pouch-full Paddy, by adding that
+he would ride after this disguised Inspector,
+“pump ’im dry as a blow’d bladder, an’ then
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111"></span>’ammer ’ell outer ’im.” But even this serious
+threat against the parson’s stock-in-trade had
+no fruitful result, and putting his empty pipe
+back he galloped after his companion.</p>
+
+<p>As they rode along, the parson in admiration
+watched the wiry little bushman dexterously
+winking both eyes to the confusion of the flies,
+and listened to the substitution of words of his
+own coinage dropped red hot into the conversation
+in place of the sulphurous adjectives. Soon
+there was but little unknown to Ned’s listener
+of the inner history—and with such additions as
+contrasted unfavourably with his own—of every
+selector on this sun-sucked run. In order of
+infamy Ned placed the lessee first; a good
+second came the Land Agent in the little township
+whence this pilgrim parson had come. But
+this fact was made clear to him, that were the
+lessee ten times richer, the Land Agent ten
+times more unscrupulous, were “dummy” selectors
+occupying every acre, Ned was more than
+a match for them all.</p>
+
+<p>At a later stage of their journey, when he
+turned again to the narratives of his cockey
+brethren, another circumstance stood out. It
+was only when Ned had exhausted the certainty,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112"></span>probability, and possibility of increase among
+the mares, cows, ewes, and nannies of his and
+the other cockeys’ flocks and herds, that he
+would descend to the human statistics, and the
+parson found that impending probability and
+possibility entered largely into Ned’s computation
+of these.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time they sighted the cockeys’
+humpies, but Ned, intent on making the most
+of his amazed listener, kept him on the track to
+his destination by promising to call at all the
+selections on his way back, and tell them that
+there was to be a service to-morrow morning.
+To emphasise his thoroughness, he added, with a
+wink of bush freemasonry, that he would “on’y
+tell two sorts—them wot arsts me, an’ them wot
+don’t.” And this clerical brother, newly initiated
+into the mysteries of bush craft, could not
+have found a better messenger. But the wonder
+expressed in his eyes, as he watched this new
+labourer in the vineyard cantering briskly away
+to bear the glad tidings, would have changed to
+awe could he have heard the varied versions
+Ned gave to the scattered families as to the need
+of their being at the grazier’s homestead the
+first thing next day. Moreover, most of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113"></span>conversation related by Ned as having taken
+place between the parson and him would have
+been as new to the former as it was to Ned’s
+audience. For the adjectives with which he
+flavoured the parson’s share proved him to have
+readily and fluently mastered the lurid bush
+tongue.</p>
+
+<p>It was shearing time, and being also the
+middle of the week, most of the men were away.
+Those who were at home left their dinners, and
+came outside to talk to him. A visitor at meal
+times is always met outside the humpy, and the
+host, drawing a hand across a greasy mouth,
+leads the way to the nearest log. The women
+of the bush have little to share, and nursing the
+belief that how they live is quite unknown to
+one another, they have no inclination to entertain
+a caller. Two of the daily meals consist
+mainly of sliced damper dipped in a pan of fat,
+that always hangs over the fire. Mutton at
+shearing time is a rarity, as the men feed at the
+sheds. Wild pigs caught and killed by the
+women make the chief flesh food, but these are
+often scarce in the dry season.</p>
+
+<p>And in addition Ned was no favourite among
+the women. This was partly from his being
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114"></span>“flash,” but more from his reputation for
+flogging his missus. Ned, moreover, had tried to
+force his example on the male community by impressing
+upon them his philosophy, that it was
+the proper thing to hit a woman every time you
+met her, since she must either be coming from
+mischief or going to it. As to his flashness, he
+considered he had something to be flash about.
+He had been twice to Sydney; and not only could
+he spell by ear, but, given an uncertain number
+of favouring circumstances, he could use a pen to
+the extent of putting his name to a cheque.
+Certainly before he would attempt this, Liz, his
+missus, had to pen up the goats, shut the hut,
+and, with the dogs and the kids, drive the fowls
+a mile from the house, and keep them there till
+Ned fired a gun. Left to himself, Ned would
+tear out a cheque, lay it on the table, place a
+block of wood on the bottom edge of the paper,
+to keep his hand from travelling off it to the
+table below. Then he had to tie his wrist to
+the left side of his belt—he was left-handed—in
+such a manner that his hand could not stray to
+the foreign region above the cheque, ink the pen
+with his right hand, and place it in the left. But
+even then the task was often unaccomplished.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115"></span>Sometimes he would be so intent on trying to
+keep the <span class="smcap">Edward</span> on the line, that it would run
+to the end of the paper, excluding the <span class="smcap">Stennard</span>,
+and, despite Ned’s protests anent insufficient
+space, the bank did not approve of part
+of the signature being placed on the back of the
+cheque. When he tried to write small and straight,
+the result generally seemed satisfactory till a
+careful analysis showed a letter or so missing.
+Or, just as success seemed probable, his cheque
+book would give out, or his pen break. It was
+bad for Liz and her own boy Joey when either
+of these accidents occurred, for he would fire no
+gun, and, despite all the perspiring activity of
+Liz, the kids, and the dogs, some of the fowls
+would make their way home to roost on the hut
+when night came. For allowing him to be disturbed
+“jes as I wus gettin’ me ’and in” he would
+“take it outer” Liz, or, what was worse to her,
+“outer” Joey.</p>
+
+<p>But on this occasion Ned, ever resourceful
+and now hungry, refused to be led to a log.
+His reputation for startling discoveries was
+against him, but he knew that many of them
+must have seen him riding past with a black-coated
+stranger, and he trusted to that to
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116"></span>support the story his ingenious imagination had
+ready for them. Authoritatively he demanded
+in each case to see the missus. They came
+ungraciously, but after his dark, bodeful hints
+as to the necessity of their attending service
+at the grazier’s homestead next day, he was
+invited inside and a place was cleared for him
+at the table. Quite recklessly they plied him
+with pints of tea and damper and dip, sprinkled
+with salt, and in some extravagant instances
+with pepper. And Ned took these favours as
+his due, though he knew he was no favourite.</p>
+
+<p>Flogging and flashness were lost sight of by
+these anxious women, as they listened to all he
+had to say. They coaxed him to wait while
+they searched among the few spare clothes in
+the gin cases with hide-hinged lids, for land
+receipts, marriage lines, letters from Government
+Departments, registered cattle brands,
+sheep ear-marks, and every other equipment
+that protects the poor cockey from a spiteful
+and revengeful Government, whose sole aim
+was “ter ketch ’em winkin’” and then forfeit
+the selection. All of these documents Ned
+inspected upside down or otherwise, and pronounced
+with unlegal directness that “a squint
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117"></span>et them ’ud fix ’im if thet’s wot ’e’s smellin’
+after.” He told them to bring them next day.
+Those of the men who had swapped horses
+with passing drovers, without the exchange of
+receipts, were busy all afternoon trumping up
+witnesses.</p>
+
+<h3><abbr title="Two">II.</abbr></h3>
+
+<p>Next morning the minister was sitting in the
+rocking chair on the verandah of the grazier’s
+house. He had a prayer book in one hand and
+a handkerchief in the other, with which he
+lazily disputed the right of the flies to roost on
+his veil. This gave an undulating motion to
+the chair which was very soothing after old
+Rosey’s bumping. He saw a pair of brown
+hands part the awning enclosing the verandah.
+Then a black head, held in the position of a
+butting animal, came in view. Free of the screen,
+the head craned upwards. He saw a flat,
+shrewd face, with black beady eyes set either
+side of a bridgeless nose. A wisp of dried grass
+hung from the wide mouth.</p>
+
+<p>“Sis wants er ride in thet ther cock ’orse yer
+in,” said the mouth, ejecting the grass with considerable
+force in his direction.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118"></span></p>
+
+<p>Sis’ had worked her head in by this. She was
+fair, with nondescript hair and eyes, and she
+was “chawrin’”.</p>
+
+<p>“Wer’s ther cock ’orse, Jinny?” she asked,
+for the chair was not rocking.</p>
+
+<p>“Ridey it an’ let ’er see it; an’ undo this,”
+commanded Jinny.</p>
+
+<p>“Come round to the front,” said the minister
+mildly, and pointing to the opening opposite the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>They came in and walked up to him, with
+hoods hanging by the strings down their
+backs.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you come alone?”</p>
+
+<p>“The ether uns er comin’. Me an’ Sis giv’
+’em ther slip; we didn’ wanter ’ump ther dash
+kid.”</p>
+
+<p>“How far have you walked?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yer parst our place yesserday mornin’.
+Didn’ yer see me an’ ther billy? Gosh, we nigh
+bust oursels at ther way yer legs stuck out.
+Fust I thort yer wus ole Keogh. Yer rides jes’
+like er Chinymun.” The dark one did all the
+talking.</p>
+
+<p>“Our Sis wants er ride in this,” she continued.
+She gave the chair a lurch that sent the parson’s
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119"></span>feet in the air. To avoid the threatened
+repetition he gripped both sides and planted his
+feet firmly on the boards.</p>
+
+<p>The younger one poked a stem of dried grass
+from her mouth through the mesh of the veil in
+a line with his left ear. Thoroughly routed, he
+sprang up, and the elder child leapt in.</p>
+
+<p>“’Ere they cum, Jinny,” warned Sis.</p>
+
+<p>Jinny peeped through the awning. “So they
+is. You gammon ter them we aint cum, w’en
+they arsts yer,” she said to the parson, “an’
+we’ll sneak roun’ ther back. Eh, Sis?”</p>
+
+<p>Mammy and Daddy—commonly called “Jyne”
+and “Alick” even by their offspring—came in
+with four children, all younger than Jinny and
+Sis. Jyne carried the youngest “straddled”
+across her hip.</p>
+
+<p>The most pronounced feature of Jyne’s face
+was her mouth, and it seemed proud of its teeth,
+especially of the top row. Without any apparent
+effort, the last tooth there was always visible.
+She was a great power in the bush, being styled
+by the folk themselves “Rabbit Ketcher,”
+which, translated, means mid-wife. And the
+airs Jyne gave herself were justifiable, for she
+was the only “Rabbit Ketcher” this side of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120"></span>township. To bring a qualified mid-wife from
+civilization would have represented a crippling
+expenditure to these cockies. Jyne’s moderate
+fees were usually four-legged.</p>
+
+<p>“D’y ter yous,” said Alick, blinking his bungy
+eyes, and smiling good-naturedly at the parson
+and at the grazier and his wife. He sat down
+without removing his hat. Jyne’s teeth saluted
+them but without any good nature. Jinny and
+Sis sneaked in behind their mother.</p>
+
+<p>“You young tinkers,” cried Jyne, “tyke this
+chile this minute.” Her voice, despite the size
+of her mouth, came through her nose. She put
+the baby on the floor, and, taking off her hood,
+mopped her face with the inside of her print
+dress.</p>
+
+<p>“We wus lookin’ fer you an’ Alick,” said
+Jinny to her mother, and winking at the parson.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, you wus,—with ther ’ook,” answered
+Jyne.</p>
+
+<p>Without further introduction she slewed her
+head to one side, shut one eye knowingly, and
+said to the staring minister, “Ther ain’t a wink
+about Jinny.”</p>
+
+<p>The unblinking daughter instantly offered an
+illustration of her wakefulness. “Yer orter
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121"></span>seen me an’ gran’dad th’ ether mornin’. ’E wus
+milkin’ ther nannies, an’ ther billy you seen ’e
+wus jes close agen ’im. I sneaks up to ther
+billy an’ gives ’im er jab. Lawr ter see ’im rush
+et ole Alex an’ bunt ’im! ’E’d er killed th’ ole
+feller on’y fer me. Wou’dn’ ’e, mum?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yer a bol’ gal,” said mum in a proud voice.</p>
+
+<p>The bewildered minister, to turn the conversation,
+took a vase of wild flowers.</p>
+
+<p>“They belong to the lily tribe, I think,” said
+the hostess. “They are bulbous.”</p>
+
+<p>“Wile hunyions,” sniffed Jyne, making no
+attempt to conceal her contempt for this cur of a
+woman, who thought so much of herself that
+she always brought a nurse from town.</p>
+
+<p>Then came Alick’s brother, “Flash” Ned;
+they were as unlike as brothers sometimes are.
+Ned greeted the parson with bush familiarity.
+He had his hat on one side, and was wearing a
+silk Sydney coat that reached to his heels. He
+was followed by Liz with their family of five.
+Joey stayed outside, and from time to time
+dexterously located his step-father. He was
+Liz’s child by an early marriage—at least, she
+always said she had been married.</p>
+
+<p>Perched on Liz’s head was a draggled hat
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122"></span>that a month ago had been snow white. This
+also was one of Ned’s Sydney purchases. It
+was the first time Liz had worn it, but she and
+the children had overhauled it many times and
+tried it on. This privilege had been extended
+to all the women whose curiosity and envy had
+brought them to Liz’s place. Jinny had called
+on her way to church, and the missing end of
+the white feather, after being licked of its ticklesomeness,
+was now in her safe keeping.</p>
+
+<p>Jyne, catching sight of Joey, invited him
+inside. But the boy, at a warning glance from
+his mother, slunk further back. He had run in
+the wrong horse for his step-father that morning,
+and was evading a threatened hiding that was
+to remove both skin and hair. Liz would
+gladly have taken the hiding herself in place of
+Joey, but her interference, as she knew to her
+cost, would mean one for herself without saving
+the boy.</p>
+
+<p>But for all this Liz thought she was fairly
+happy. For it was not every day that Ned
+tried to sign a cheque or that the sheep got
+boxed, or that his horse refused to be caught.
+Nor did it always rain when he wanted it fine.
+Things did not go wrong every day, and he did
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123"></span>not beat her or Joey unless they did. A pound
+of lollies for her and the kids from a dealer’s
+cart when one came round, would make her
+think him the best husband in the world.</p>
+
+<p>There was between Jyne and Ned the opposition
+that is instinctive between commanding
+spirits. Liz yielded obedience first to Ned then
+to Jyne.</p>
+
+<p>“Ow’s Polly?” enquired Liz, her countenance
+showing the gravity of the question.</p>
+
+<p>“Arst ’im,” snarled Jyne, baring her fangs
+and looking at uneasy shuffling Alick. “Makin’
+’er dror three casts er worter ten mile, an’ er
+thet way. Wil’ pigs eatin’ ’er as I cum along.”</p>
+
+<p>“No!” said Liz, though she had known it
+all yesterday. News of such catastrophes soon
+spread in the bush.</p>
+
+<p>“Better corl me a liar at onct,” snapped
+Jyne.</p>
+
+<p>Next to arrive were Jyne’s mother and Alick’s
+father, both of whom lived with Jyne. The old
+woman rode on a horse astride a man’s saddle.
+The old man led it. She had Jyne’s mouth, or
+rather Jyne had hers, but the teeth were gone.
+The old man greeted the parson reverently,
+blew with his breath on the seat, and wiped it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124"></span>carefully with the handkerchief he had taken
+from his hat. Even then before sitting he
+raised the tails of the coat he had been married
+in so long ago. Until Ned’s Sydney purchase his
+had been the only decorative coat in the district.</p>
+
+<p>Tilly and Jim Lumber, with their ten-days-old
+baby, followed. Jim was the champion concertina
+player and bullock driver in the district.
+He came as the representative of the several
+families across the creek, whom energetic Ned
+had rounded up the day before. He had been
+chosen by them for his size and strength to do
+battle on their behalf. Ned’s effort to frighten
+those women whose husbands were away shearing
+into the necessity of attending service had
+over-reached itself, and they had been afraid
+to come. But they had entrusted their precious
+documents to Jim’s powerful keeping. He had
+his own registered brand tied up in a spotted
+handkerchief. This he dropped with a clank
+beside him as he sat sheepishly and gingerly on
+the edge of a chair. He was over six feet, but
+he sat with his head almost between his knees,
+till he resembled a quadruped. His shirt front
+bulged like a wallet with his clients’ papers.
+He slyly took stock of those assembled. Spry
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125"></span>little Tilly got the credit of having done all the
+courting. Even after marriage she had always
+done his share of the talking.</p>
+
+<p>“Ow’s ther kiddy maroo?” said Alick to Jim,
+lisping from the size of the plug he had just
+bitten. He had a fatherly interest in all Jyne’s
+“rabbit ketchin’.”</p>
+
+<p>Jim, who never used his voice except to drive
+his bullocks, answered with a subterranean
+laugh.</p>
+
+<p>“Noo bit er flesh,” said Ned, nodding at the
+baby.</p>
+
+<p>“Ow’s Polly this mornin’?” gravely enquired
+Tilly, as she took a seat near Jyne.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, poor Polly,” quavered Jyne’s mother, and
+sparing Jyne by telling of Polly’s untimely end.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I’m blest; what a lorse!” said the
+sympathetic Tilly. She repeated a well-known
+story of the bu’stin’ of a poley cow last year.</p>
+
+<p>Jyne took the baby, and began to rate the
+mother mildly for “walkin’ seven mile ser soon,”
+but Jyne’s mother interposed with a recital of
+“wot I dun w’en Jun (John) wur two days old.”
+John was present, fully six feet of him, grinning
+with a mouth bigger than Jyne’s, but mercifully
+hidden by a straggled moustache.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126"></span></p>
+
+<p>However, Jyne was not to be outdone even
+by her own mother, and the narrative of her
+last, assisted in many minor details by Jinney,
+aged eleven, left little to be desired in the way
+of hardihood.</p>
+
+<p>Liz kept her teething baby respectfully silent
+by industriously rubbing its lower gum with a
+dirty thumb. She expressed her surprise at
+Jyne’s phenomenal endurance by little clicks
+of the tongue, shakes of the head, and other
+signs indicative of admiration and astonishment.
+When Jyne finished, she began eagerly on an
+experience of her own. “Well, w’en I wus
+took with Drary (short for Adrarian), think I
+could fin’ ther sissers?”</p>
+
+<p>Jyne, who knew that the recital of a daring
+feat was coming, enquired, “W’en yer wus took
+with Joey?”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” said Liz, stopping short with a nervous
+click in her voice, and looking at Ned.</p>
+
+<p>The next item was ventriloquising by Jyne
+per medium of Tilly’s uneasy baby. “My
+mammy, she sez, yer dot me all o’a hoo, she sez.
+No wunny, she sez, me can’t keep goody, she
+sez, ’ith me cosey all o’a hoo, she sez.” She
+had been examining the baby’s undergear, and
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127"></span>at this stage her tone of baby banter suddenly
+changed to one of professional horror. “My
+Gawd, Tilly!” she cried, the drooping corners
+of her mouth nearly covering her upper teeth.
+“Look w’er er little belly-bands is—nearly
+un’er ’er arms,” she explained, probably to the
+company, but looking directly at the clergyman.
+And, with true professional acumen, she intimated
+that had she not been on the spot, an intricate
+part of the little one’s anatomy in another
+minute would “’a bust out a bleedin’ an’ not all
+ther doctors in ther worl’ couldn’ astoppt it.”</p>
+
+<p>The minister was very busy, meanwhile,
+blushing and getting his books in order,
+and with this congregation of ten adults and
+eighteen children he began, “Dearly beloved
+brethren——”</p>
+
+<p>Jim Lumber gripped his bullock brand, took
+a swift look at him and turned to Tilly. It had
+been settled between them that she was to do
+the talking. Alick, who, despite his father’s
+efforts to enlighten him as to the nature of a
+church service, and encouraged by Jyne’s remark
+that “they’d eat nothin’,” had also brought his
+valuable documents in his shirt front, thrust in
+a groping hand.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128"></span></p>
+
+<p>For a few minutes the adults listened and
+watched intently, but the gentle voice of the
+parson, and his nervous manner, soon convinced
+them that they had nothing to fear from him.
+Ned had been ’pokin’ borak’ at them again;
+they added it to the long score they owed
+him.</p>
+
+<p>The children wandered about the room. Jinny
+and Sis invited their little sister to “Cum an’
+see ther pooty picters in the man’s book,” and
+they assisted the minister to turn over the leaves
+of his Bible.</p>
+
+<p>Alick’s father, who was from the North of
+Ireland, and, for all his forty years in the bush,
+had not lost his reverence for the cloth, bade his
+grand-daughters beseechingly to “quet,” whereupon
+Jinny showed him quite two inches of
+inky tongue. Ink was a commodity unknown
+in Jinny’s home, and all the unknown is edible
+to the bush child.</p>
+
+<p>“Woman!” he said, appealing to Jinny’s
+mother, “whybut you bid ’er to quet?”</p>
+
+<p>“You orter be in er glars’ ban’ box w’er ther
+ain’t no children; thet’s w’er you orter be,”
+answered Jyne.</p>
+
+<p>He beckoned to one straggler, a girl of six,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129"></span>with Alick’s face, who came to him promptly and
+sat on his knee.</p>
+
+<p>Presently her brown hand stroked his old
+cheek. “Gran’ dad,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Choot, darlin’,” he whispered, reverently.</p>
+
+<p>The child looked at him wonderingly. “I
+says you’s gran’ dad,” she repeated, “not ole
+Alick.”</p>
+
+<p>He laid his white head on hers.</p>
+
+<p>“Gran’ dad, ole Tommy Tolbit’s dead.”</p>
+
+<p>Turning his glistening face to Liz in momentary
+forgetfulness, he said solemnly, “The
+knowledge of this chile!”</p>
+
+<p>“Ole Talbert” had been dead for two years,
+and the knowledgable child had been surprising
+him so, at least twice a week.</p>
+
+<p>“We have erred and strayed from Thy ways
+like lost sheep,” murmured the minister.</p>
+
+<p>The smaller children wandered in and out of
+the bedrooms, carrying their spoils with them.
+But Jinny and Sis had drawn the now disabled
+rocking chair up to the window, and were
+busy poking faces at two of Liz’s children, who
+were standing on the couch inside. One of
+these made a vicious smack with a hair-brush
+at Jinny’s tongue, flattened against the glass.
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130"></span>The ensuing crash stopped even the parson for
+a moment.</p>
+
+<p>Bravely he began again. He paused occasionally
+for a sudden subterranean laugh to
+cease or to put one book after another on the
+shelf behind him out of the children’s reach.
+Just as he read the last line of the Te Deum,
+“Oh Lord in Thee have I trusted, let me never
+be confounded,” one of Liz’s children tugged at
+his trousers, with a muzzled request that his
+teeth might be freed from a square of pink soap.
+Another offered to the baby Liz was nursing a
+pincushion she brought from the bedroom.</p>
+
+<p>“Jyne,” called Jinny from the verandah,
+“’Ere cums young Tommy Tolbit by ’isself.
+You wus right, Jyne; she ain’t cummin’!”</p>
+
+<p>Even Jyne’s gums gleamed; she looked
+triumphantly at Alick her husband, at Liz, then
+at all but Ned.</p>
+
+<p>In shambled Tommy, moist and panting.
+He had been a drover, and had recently taken
+up a selection on the run. He was a bridegroom
+of a month’s standing. His missus had
+been a servant at one of the hotels in the township.</p>
+
+<p>“Made a start!” he remarked. His voice
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131"></span>gave the impression that he did not mind their
+not waiting for him.</p>
+
+<p>“Missus ain’t comin’?” enquired Alick, trying
+to atone to Jyne for overloading Polly.</p>
+
+<p>“Not ter day,” said the bridegroom, but his
+voice intimated that in all probability she would
+have been able to come to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>“No!” said Jyne, putting him under fire,
+and trying to keep the crow out of her voice.</p>
+
+<p>“Ain’t very well, is she? Didn’ eat a very
+’earty breakfuss this mornin’?” And a further
+remark suggested that even if the meal had
+been hearty, the usual process of assimilation
+had not taken place.</p>
+
+<p>“Ow’s Polly?” he enquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Cooked,” said Jyne, instantly diverted.</p>
+
+<p>“Go on!” said the bridegroom, with well
+feigned astonishment. His breathless and perspiring
+state had been caused by his “going
+on” to capture one of the wild suckers that had
+been eating Polly.</p>
+
+<p>“Let us pray,” said the minister. His host,
+hostess, and Alick’s father knelt, but the rest sat
+as usual.</p>
+
+<p>The knowledgable child, considering the
+grandfather’s position an invitation to mount,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132"></span>climbed on his back. Making a bridle of the
+handkerchief round the old fellow’s neck, and
+digging two heels into his sides, she talked
+horse to him. The protesting old man bucked
+vigorously, but it was no easy task to throw
+her.</p>
+
+<p>The clergyman gave out his text, and the
+sermon began.</p>
+
+<p>Jyne’s children commenced to complain of
+being “’ungery” and a fair-sized damper was
+taken from a pillow-slip. This, together with
+two tin tots and a bottle of goat’s milk, was
+given to Jinny and she was told to do “ther
+sharin’.”</p>
+
+<p>The hostess asked Jyne in a whisper to send
+them to the verandah, and for a time there was
+comparative quiet. Such interruptions as
+“Jinny won’t gimme nun, Arnie” (Auntie)
+from Liz’s children being checked by Jyne with
+“Go an’ play an’ doan’ ’ave ser much gab, like
+yer father.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thet greedy wretch uv er Jinny is guzzlin’
+all ther milk inter ’er, Jyne,” from her own
+children, was appeased by her promise to “break
+ther young faggit’s back w’en I get ’ome.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a wail of anguished hunger from
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133"></span>Liz’s empty children that aroused paternal
+sympathy in Ned. “Sep me Gord,” he said,
+“some wimmen is like cows. They’ll give ther
+own calf a suck, but if anyone else’s calf cums
+anigh ’em they lif’ their leg an’ kick it ter
+blazes.”</p>
+
+<p>Jyne tossed her head and, with a derisive
+laugh, expressed the opinion that “It ’ed fit
+sum people better if ther munny wasted in
+buyin’ flash coats an’ rediclus ’ats wus spent in
+flour bags.”</p>
+
+<p>For a short space only the voice of the
+preacher sounded, as, in studied stoicism, he
+pursued his thankless task. Occasionally they
+looked at him to see “’Oo ’e wus speakin’ ter,”
+but finding nothing directly personal, even this
+attention ceased.</p>
+
+<p>Liz leant across to Tilly Lumber and asked,
+“Fowl layin’?”</p>
+
+<p>“Ketch ’em er layin’ et Chrissermus.”</p>
+
+<p>Ned told how he had brought home a number
+of law books from Sydney, and that he and an
+old man he had picked up “wus readin’ ’em.”
+It was his intention to absorb such an amount
+of knowledge that all he would have to do with
+the lessee of the run—an ex-barrister—would
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134"></span>be to put him in a bail. What would follow
+was graphically illustrated by Ned’s dropping
+his head, gripping an imaginary bucket between
+his knees, and opening and shutting his hands
+in rhythmic up and down movements. Some
+of his audience, remembering his threats and
+warning against the parson, thought this pantomime
+must have an ominous meaning for the
+preacher.</p>
+
+<p>But sceptical Jyne was not impressed. “Upon
+me soul,” she said, “sum people is the biggest
+lyin’ blowers that ever cockt er lip.”</p>
+
+<p>Alick, always for peace, stepped into the
+breach. “Comin’ along jes’ now,” he said,
+shifting his plug of tobacco from one side to
+the other, and aiming at the flies in the fireplace
+with the juice, “we ’as a yarn with Mick
+Byrnes. ’E ’as ther luck of er lousy calf. ’E
+sez ’e got eightpence orl roun’ fer ’ees kangaroo
+skins. Damned if I can.”</p>
+
+<p>“Now a good plan ’ed be,” said Ned, “ter
+get a good lot, sen’ ’em down ter them Sydney
+blokes. Slip down yerself, go ter ther sale,
+don’ let on ’oo yer are, an’ run ’em up like
+blazes. Thet’s wot I’ll do with my wool nex’
+year.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135"></span></p>
+
+<p>This plan seemed commendable to Alick.
+“By Goey,” he said, his mild eyes blinking.</p>
+
+<p>Jyne never, on any occasion, showed the
+slightest interest or attention when Ned was
+speaking, unless to sniff and lay bare her bottom
+teeth, but here she remarked, “Sum people ’ud
+keep runnin’ ter Sydney till ’e ’asen’ er penny
+ter fly with.”</p>
+
+<p>“If sum people with ser much jawr, an’ ’er
+mouth ’es big ’es ’er torn pocket, belonged ter
+me,” said Ned, “I’d smash er ugly jawr.”</p>
+
+<p>Jyne slewed hers to an awful angle in his
+direction, “I’d like ter see yer try it.”</p>
+
+<p>A look of agony came into the eyes of the
+grazier’s wife as she heard the door of the
+dining-room open. The children were so quiet,
+that she knew they were up to mischief.</p>
+
+<p>She heard Jinny’s hoarse whisper. “Orl of
+yez wait an’ I’ll bring yer sumsin’.” On the
+dining-room table was the cold food prepared
+for the clergyman’s dinner. She looked across
+at her husband with dumb entreaty. He, with
+eyes devoutly on the carpet, was listening
+intently to Ned’s account of how he nearly made
+the squatter take a “sugar doodle” (back somersault)
+when he heard that he had been to Sydney.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136"></span></p>
+
+<p>“’Day Keogh,” sez I.</p>
+
+<p>“’Oo ’ave I ther ’oner of speakin’ ter?”
+sez ’e.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Stennard,” I sez.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh indeed,” ’e sez, “very ’appy ter make yer
+acquaintance, Mr. Stennard, Esquire,” ’e sez.</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind no blarsted acquaintance,” I
+sez, “w’en are yer goin’ ter take yer flamin’
+jumbucks orf my lan’?” I sez.</p>
+
+<p>“Your lan’,” ’e sez, “I didn’ know you ’ad
+any lan’ about ’ere,” ’e sez.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, didn’ yer,” I sez, “you ner ther Lan’
+Agent won’ frighten me orf,” I sez, “gammonin’
+I’m on er reserve,” sez I, “I’ve paid me deposit,
+an’ I’ve been ter Sydney,” I sez, “I put me name
+ter a cheque,” sez I, “an’ ——”</p>
+
+<p>Jyne ceased sniffing, to laugh long and loudly.
+“Gawd, eh!” she said, with her eyes on the
+ceiling and apparently appealing to the flies.
+“Wot ’erbout sech game cocks plantin’ under
+ther dray w’en old Keogh kem bullyin’ w’en we
+fust kem out ’ere?”</p>
+
+<p>Ned went hastily out at the front door “ter
+squint at ther jumbucks,” three miles away.
+Joey, who had been peering round that door,
+now appeared at the back.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137"></span></p>
+
+<p>“Come in, Joey,” snorted Jyne. “No one
+ain’t game ter ’it yer w’en I’m ’ere.”</p>
+
+<p>The minister still preached, but he had only
+old Alick for a listener.</p>
+
+<p>The hostess’ mental picture of Jinny “sharin’”
+her dinner for three among that voracious brood
+was distracting. Only the fear of suffering in
+the clergyman’s mind as one of “them” kept
+her to her seat. She could give the sermon no
+attention, but listened to Sis licking her fingers,
+and wondered if it was the vinegar or the wine
+that caused Jinny’s cough. Presently Jinny set
+that doubt at rest by coming in odorous, and
+with the front of her dress wine-stained.</p>
+
+<p>“Little ’un snoozin’!” Jinny remarked, lurching
+giddily towards her to merrily twirl her fist
+in the snoozer. The snoozer’s mother wondered
+if they had shut the dining-room door. Soon
+the noise of the fowls scattering the crockery
+told her they had not.</p>
+
+<p>“Thum busted fowls is eatin’ orl yer dinner,”
+said Jinny dreamily.</p>
+
+<p>“’Unt ’em out an’ shet ther door,” said sympathetic
+Jyne.</p>
+
+<p>“You go, Sis, I’m tired.” Jinny laid her
+giddy head on the floor, and went to sleep.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138"></span></p>
+
+<p>“Liz,” said Jyne, maliciously, for she immediately
+grudged Sis’ efforts to chase the fowls out
+of the dining-room. “Wot’s thet there flower?”
+pointing to the vase.</p>
+
+<p>“Wile huniyon,” said Liz, promptly.</p>
+
+<p>“Er, is it? Thet’s orl yer know. Thet’s a
+bulbers, thet is. Thet’s ther noo name fer it.”
+She looked at the grazier’s wife and laughed
+ironically.</p>
+
+<p>“Bulbers! yer goat,” said Liz, laughing dutifully.</p>
+
+<p>The sermon was over, and the worried minister
+began the christening.</p>
+
+<p>The naming of the hostess’ baby was plain
+sailing. He then drew towards him a child of
+about two years, and asked, “What is this
+child’s name?”</p>
+
+<p>“Adrarian,” said Liz. An old shepherd reading
+to her a love story had so pronounced the
+hero’s name. It staggered the minister, until
+his hostess spelt “Adrian.”</p>
+
+<p>“What is its age?”</p>
+
+<p>“About two year.”</p>
+
+<p>This was too vague for him, and he pressed
+for dates. But for these dwellers in the bush
+the calendar had no significance. The mother
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139"></span>thought it might be in November. “Cos it wus
+shearin’, an’ I’d ter keep Teddy at ’ome ter do
+ther work.” Teddy was “about ten.” From
+these uncertainties the clergyman had to supply
+the dates for his official returns to the Government.</p>
+
+<p>“But Lawd,” as Jyne remarked to ease his perplexity,
+“wot did it matter fer a brat of er boy.”
+She had a family of six, and all were girls.</p>
+
+<p>There was much the same difficulty with all
+the others, an exception being Tilly Lumber’s
+baby of under a fortnight. A cowardly look
+came into the minister’s eyes as he turned to this
+grotesque atom already in the short coat stage.
+He remembered Jyne’s awful discovery of a
+little while back, and shirked the duty of holding
+it even for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>The christening was a matter that had some
+personal interest for the elders, and they grouped
+round the minister. Bridegroom Tommy, striking
+the mossy back of Alick’s old father, suggested
+that he and Jyne’s mother should get
+spliced, and he expressed the opinion of the
+fruitfulness of such union within record time as
+a set-off dig at Jyne.</p>
+
+<p>She instantly balanced matters between herself
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140"></span>and the incautiously smiling Liz and the
+laughing unfilial Ned, “Stop scratchin’ yer
+’ed, miss; anyone ’ud think there wus anythink
+in it,” she said to Liz’s eldest girl, who was
+brushing the christening water from her hair.
+Ned’s stepson she invited to come nearer, and
+tell her who had blackened his poor eye. She
+advised the silent lad “ter get a waddy ther
+nex’ time anyone bigger’n yer goes ter ’it yer.”
+And she gave him directions by twirling an
+imaginary waddy swiftly, its circuit suddenly
+diverting in a line with Ned’s skull.</p>
+
+<p>It was long past noon when the ceremony was
+ended. The minister drained his glass of water,
+mopped his face, and heaved a deep sigh. As
+the whole congregation still sat on, he gave them
+a hint that “church” was out, and their presence
+no longer required. He spoke with a show
+of concern of how very hot they would find the
+walk home, and to further emphasise his meaning,
+he shook hands with all the adults, and
+walked to the verandah. Without the slightest
+concern they sat on, listening intently to the
+sounds the hostess made in trying to scrape
+together a meal for the clergyman. Apparently
+they all meant to stay the day.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141"></span></p>
+
+<p>The grazier’s wife appeared for a moment to
+beckon him to go round the house into the
+dining-room. He sat down to the remains of
+the dinner the children had left.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Jinny, who had been awakened
+for the christening, looked round the door. “Our
+Sis wants ter know w’en’s ’er supper’s goin’ ter
+be!” she said.</p>
+
+<p>This perhaps was an acknowledgment that
+Sis had already dined.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142"></span></p>
+ <h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_CHOSEN_VESSEL">
+ THE CHOSEN VESSEL.
+ </h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">She</span> laid the stick and her baby on the grass
+while she untied the rope that tethered the calf.
+The length of the rope separated them. The
+cow was near the calf, and both were lying
+down. Feed along the creek was plentiful, and
+every day she found a fresh place to tether it,
+since tether it she must, for if she did not, it
+would stray with the cow out on the plain. She
+had plenty of time to go after it, but then there
+was baby; and if the cow turned on her out on
+the plain, and she with baby,—she had been a
+town girl and was afraid of the cow, but she did
+not want the cow to know it. She used to run
+at first when it bellowed its protest against the
+penning up of its calf. This satisfied the cow,
+also the calf, but the woman’s husband was
+angry, and called her—the noun was cur. It
+was he who forced her to run and meet the
+advancing cow, brandishing a stick, and uttering
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143"></span>threatening words till the enemy turned and
+ran. “That’s the way!” the man said, laughing
+at her white face. In many things he was
+worse than the cow, and she wondered if the
+same rule would apply to the man, but she
+was not one to provoke skirmishes even with
+the cow.</p>
+
+<p>It was early for the calf to go “to bed”—nearly
+an hour earlier than usual; but she
+had felt so restless all day. Partly because it
+was Monday, and the end of the week that
+would bring her and baby the companionship
+of its father, was so far off. He was a shearer,
+and had gone to his shed before daylight that
+morning. Fifteen miles as the crow flies
+separated them.</p>
+
+<p>There was a track in front of the house, for
+it had once been a wine shanty, and a few
+travellers passed along at intervals. She was
+not afraid of horsemen; but swagmen, going
+to, or worse, coming from the dismal, drunken
+little township, a day’s journey beyond, terrified
+her. One had called at the house to-day, and
+asked for tucker.</p>
+
+<p>Ah! that was why she had penned up the
+calf so early! <a id="chg2"></a>She feared more from the look
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144"></span>of his eyes, and the gleam of his teeth, as he
+watched her newly awakened baby beat its
+impatient fists upon her covered breasts, than
+from the knife that was sheathed in the belt
+at his waist.</p>
+
+<p>She had given him bread and meat. Her
+husband she told him was sick. She always
+said that when she was alone, and a swagman
+came, and she had gone in from the kitchen
+to the bedroom, and asked questions and replied
+to them in the best man’s voice she could assume.
+Then he had asked to go into the kitchen to boil
+his billy, but she gave him tea, and he drank it
+on the wood heap. He had walked round
+and round the house, and there were cracks in
+some places, and after the last time he had
+asked for tobacco. She had none to give him,
+and he had grinned, because there was a
+broken clay pipe near the wood heap where he
+stood, and if there were a man inside, there
+ought to have been tobacco. Then he asked
+for money, but women in the bush never have
+money.</p>
+
+<p>At last he had gone, and she, watching
+through the cracks, saw him when about a
+quarter of a mile away, turn and look back at
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145"></span>the house. He had stood so for some moments
+with a pretence of fixing his swag, and then,
+apparently satisfied, moved to the left towards
+the creek. The creek made a bow round the
+house, and when he came to it she lost sight
+of him. Hours after, watching intently for
+signs of smoke, she saw the man’s dog chasing
+some sheep that had gone to the creek for
+water, and saw it slink back suddenly, as if
+the man had called it.</p>
+
+<p>More than once she thought of taking her
+baby and going to her husband. But in the
+past, when she had dared to speak of the dangers
+to which her loneliness exposed her, he had
+taunted and sneered at her. She need not
+flatter herself, he had coarsely told her, that any
+body would want to run away with her.</p>
+
+<p>Long before nightfall she placed food on the
+kitchen table, and beside it laid the big brooch
+that had been her mother’s. It was the only
+thing of value that she had. And she left the
+kitchen door wide open.</p>
+
+<p>The doors inside she securely fastened. Beside
+the bolt in the back one she drove in the steel
+and scissors; against it she piled the table and
+the stools. Underneath the lock of the front
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146"></span>door she forced the handle of the spade, and the
+blade between the cracks in the flooring boards.
+Then the prop-stick, cut into lengths, held the
+top, as the spade held the middle. The windows
+were little more than portholes; she had nothing
+to fear through them.</p>
+
+<p>She ate a few mouthfuls of food and drank a
+cup of milk. But she lighted no fire, and when
+night came, no candle, but crept with her baby
+to bed.</p>
+
+<p>What woke her? The wonder was that she
+had slept—she had not meant to. But she was
+young, very young. Perhaps the shrinking of
+the galvanized roof—yet hardly, since that was
+so usual. Something had set her heart beating
+wildly; but she lay quite still, only she put her
+arm over her baby. Then she had both round
+it, and she prayed, “Little baby, little baby,
+don’t wake!”</p>
+
+<p>The moon’s rays shone on the front of the
+house, and she saw one of the open cracks, quite
+close to where she lay, darken with a shadow.
+Then a protesting growl reached her; and she
+could fancy she heard the man turn hastily.
+She plainly heard the thud of something striking
+the dog’s ribs, and the long flying strides of the
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147"></span>animal as it howled and ran. Still watching,
+she saw the shadow darken every crack along
+the wall. She knew by the sounds that the
+man was trying every standpoint that might
+help him to see in; but how much he saw she
+could not tell. She thought of many things she
+might do to deceive him into the idea that she
+was not alone. But the sound of her voice
+would wake baby, and she dreaded that as
+though it were the only danger that threatened
+her. So she prayed, “Little baby, don’t wake,
+don’t cry!”</p>
+
+<p>Stealthily the man crept about. She knew he
+had his boots off, because of the vibration that
+his feet caused as he walked along the verandah
+to gauge the width of the little window in her
+room, and the resistance of the front door.</p>
+
+<p>Then he went to the other end, and the uncertainty
+of what he was doing became unendurable.
+She had felt safer, far safer, while he was
+close, and she could watch and listen. She felt
+she must watch, but the great fear of wakening
+baby again assailed her. She suddenly recalled
+that one of the slabs on that side of the house
+had shrunk in length as well as in width, and
+had once fallen out. It was held in position
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148"></span>only by a wedge of wood underneath. What if
+he should discover that! The uncertainty
+increased her terror. She prayed as she gently
+raised herself with her little one in her arms,
+held tightly to her breast.</p>
+
+<p>She thought of the knife, and shielded her
+child’s body with her hands and arms. Even
+its little feet she covered with its white gown,
+and baby never murmured—it liked to be held
+so. Noiselessly she crossed to the other side,
+and stood where she could see and hear, but not
+be seen. He was trying every slab, and was
+very near to that with the wedge under it. Then
+she saw him find it; and heard the sound of the
+knife as bit by bit he began to cut away the
+wooden support.</p>
+
+<p>She waited motionless, with her baby pressed
+tightly to her, though she knew that in another
+few minutes this man with the cruel eyes, lascivious
+mouth, and gleaming knife, would enter.
+One side of the slab tilted; he had only to cut
+away the remaining little end, when the slab,
+unless he held it, would fall outside.</p>
+
+<p>She heard his jerked breathing as it kept time
+with the cuts of the knife, and the brush of his
+clothes as he rubbed the wall in his movements,
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149"></span>for she was so still and quiet, that she did not
+even tremble. She knew when he ceased, and
+wondered why. She stood well concealed; she
+knew he could not see her, and that he would
+not fear if he did, yet she heard him move
+cautiously away. Perhaps he expected the slab
+to fall. Still his motive puzzled her, and she
+moved even closer, and bent her body the better
+to listen. Ah! what sound was that? “Listen!
+Listen!” she bade her heart—her heart that
+had kept so still, but now bounded with tumultuous
+throbs that dulled her ears. Nearer and
+nearer came the sounds, till the welcome thud of
+a horse’s hoof rang out clearly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, God! Oh, God! Oh, God!” she cried
+for they were very close before she could make
+sure. She turned to the door, and with her
+baby in her arms tore frantically at its bolts and
+bars.</p>
+
+<p>Out she darted at last, and running madly
+along, saw the horseman beyond her in the distance.
+She called to him in Christ’s name, in
+her babe’s name, still flying like the wind with
+the speed that deadly peril gives. But the distance
+grew greater and greater between them,
+and when she reached the creek her prayers
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150"></span>turned to wild shrieks, for there crouched the
+man she feared, with outstretched arms that
+caught her as she fell. She knew he was offering
+terms if she ceased to struggle and cry for
+help, though louder and louder did she cry for it,
+but it was only when the man’s hand gripped
+her throat, that the cry of “Murder” came from
+her lips. And when she ceased, the startled
+curlews took up the awful sound, and flew
+shrieking over the horseman’s head.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>“By God!” said the boundary rider, “its
+been a dingo right enough! Eight killed up
+here, and there’s more down in the creek—a ewe
+and a lamb, I’ll bet; and the lamb’s alive!”
+And he shut out the sky with his hand, and
+watched the crows that were circling round and
+round, nearing the earth one moment, and the
+next shooting skywards. By that he knew the
+lamb must be alive; even a dingo will spare a
+lamb sometimes.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, the lamb was alive, and after the manner
+of lambs of its kind did not know its mother
+when the light came. It had sucked the still
+warm breasts, and laid its little head on her
+bosom, and slept till the morn. Then, when it
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151"></span>looked at the swollen disfigured face, it wept and
+would have crept away, but for the hand that
+still clutched its little gown. Sleep was nodding
+its golden head and swaying its small body, and
+the crows were close, so close, to the mother’s
+wide-open eyes, when the boundary rider galloped
+down.</p>
+
+<p>“Jesus Christ!” he said, covering his eyes.
+He told afterwards how the little child held out
+its arms to him, and how he was forced to cut
+its gown that the dead hand held.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It was election time, and as usual the priest
+had selected a candidate. His choice was so
+obviously in the interests of the squatter, that
+Peter Hennessey’s reason, for once in his life,
+had over-ridden superstition, and he had dared
+promise his vote to another. Yet he was uneasy,
+and every time he woke in the night (and it was
+often), he heard the murmur of his mother’s
+voice. It came through the partition, or under
+the door. If through the partition, he knew she
+was praying in her bed; but when the sounds
+came under the door, she was on her knees before
+the little altar in the corner that enshrined
+the statue of the Blessed Virgin and Child.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152"></span></p>
+
+<p>“Mary, Mother of Christ! save my son!
+Save him!” prayed she in the dairy as she
+strained and set the evening’s milking. “Sweet
+Mary! for the love of Christ, save him!” The
+grief in her old face made the morning meal so
+bitter, that to avoid her he came late to his
+dinner. It made him so cowardly, that he could
+not say good-bye to her, and when night fell
+on the eve of the election day, he rode off
+secretly.</p>
+
+<p>He had thirty miles to ride to the township
+to record his vote. He cantered briskly
+along the great stretch of plain that had nothing
+but stunted cotton bush to play shadow to the
+full moon, which glorified a sky of earliest
+spring. The bruised incense of the flowering
+clover rose up to him, and the glory of the night
+appealed vaguely to his imagination, but he was
+preoccupied with his present act of revolt.</p>
+
+<p>Vividly he saw his mother’s agony when she
+would find him gone. At that moment, he felt
+sure, she was praying.</p>
+
+<p>“Mary! Mother of Christ!” He repeated
+the invocation, half unconsciously. And suddenly,
+out of the stillness, came Christ’s name
+to him—called loudly in despairing accents.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153"></span></p>
+
+<p>“For Christ’s sake! Christ’s sake! Christ’s
+sake!” called the voice. Good Catholic that
+he had been, he crossed himself before he dared
+to look back. Gliding across a ghostly patch
+of pipe-clay, he saw a white-robed figure with
+a babe clasped to her bosom.</p>
+
+<p>All the superstitious awe of his race and
+religion swayed his brain. The moonlight on
+the gleaming clay was a “heavenly light” to
+him, and he knew the white figure not for flesh
+and blood, but for the Virgin and Child of his
+mother’s prayers. Then, good Catholic that
+once more he was, he put spurs to his horse’s
+sides and galloped madly away.</p>
+
+<p>His mother’s prayers were answered.</p>
+
+<p>Hennessey was the first to record his vote—for
+the priest’s candidate. Then he sought the
+priest at home, but found that he was out rallying
+the voters. Still, under the influence
+of his blessed vision, Hennessey would not go
+near the public houses, but wandered about the
+outskirts of the town for hours, keeping apart
+from the towns-people, and fasting as penance.
+He was subdued and mildly ecstatic, feeling as
+a repentant chastened child, who awaits only
+the kiss of peace.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154"></span></p>
+
+<p>And at last, as he stood in the graveyard
+crossing himself with reverent awe, he heard in
+the gathering twilight the roar of many voices
+crying the name of the victor at the election.
+It was well with the priest.</p>
+
+<p>Again Hennessey sought him. He was at
+home, the house-keeper said, and led him into the
+dimly-lighted study. His seat was immediately
+opposite a large picture, and as the
+housekeeper turned up the lamp, once more the
+face of the Madonna and Child looked down
+on him, but this time silently, peacefully. The
+half-parted lips of the Virgin were smiling with
+compassionate tenderness; her eyes seemed to
+beam with the forgiveness of an earthly mother
+for her erring but beloved child.</p>
+
+<p>He fell on his knees in adoration. Transfixed,
+the wondering priest stood, for mingled
+with the adoration, “My Lord and my God!”
+was the exaltation, “And hast Thou chosen
+me?”</p>
+
+<p>“What is it, Peter?” said the priest.</p>
+
+<p>“Father,” he answered reverently, and with
+loosened tongue he poured forth the story of his
+vision.</p>
+
+<p>“Great God!” shouted the priest, “and you
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155"></span>did not stop to save her! Have you not
+heard?”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Many miles further down the creek a man
+kept throwing an old cap into a water-hole.
+The dog would bring it out and lay it on the
+opposite side to where the man stood, but would
+not allow the man to catch him, though it was
+only to wash the blood of the sheep from his
+mouth and throat, for the sight of blood made
+the man tremble.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<figure class="figcenter illowp50" id="back_cover" style="max-width: 43.375em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/back_cover.jpg" alt="Back cover of the book. It is dark green fabric; in the lower left corner is an embossed image, in black, of vines surrounding two fleur-de-lis.">
+</figure>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter transnote">
+<h3>Transcriber’s Note:</h3>
+
+<p>Words
+may have multiple spelling variations or inconsistent hyphenation in
+the text. These have been left unchanged, as were jargon, dialect,
+obsolete and alternative spellings. Final stops missing at the end
+of sentences were added. Duplicate words at line endings were removed.
+Punctuation was standardized. Four misspelled words were corrected.
+Unprinted letters were added to three words:</p>
+
+<ul>
+ <li>‘... who from time to <a href="#chg1">t[ime]</a> continued to take ...’</li>
+ <li>‘... She <a href="#chg2">[fea]red</a> more from the look of his eyes,...’</li>
+ <li>‘... and <a href="#chg3">[l]ooked</a> under the mat ...’</li>
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78420 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #78420
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78420)