No snow, no frosts, no bare trees,
but in the daytime glowing, sultry heat, and of a
night soft, balmy, dewy, moonlit hours, and yet it
was Christmas-time, and the whole of the past day
I had been picturing to myself the cold, sharp, bracing
weather at home, with the busy shops and the merry
Christmas faces, and now on that 24th of December I
was dreaming away of the old home, fourteen thousand
miles away; going over again the sad hearts with which
we come away, and how we gazed till our eyes swam
at the fast fading shores; recalling every sigh and
sorrowful thought, when all at once there seemed to
be a feeling of horror come over me, and I started
up on the heath bed and looked about. But all
was still; close beside me lay Abel Franks, my mate
and companion, sleeping heavily; the moon was shining
through the little window right upon the two dogs
stretched before the fireplace, and made it light
enough for me to see that everything was in its place.
There were the skin rugs on the floor, the rough
bench, stool, and table; the guns, rods, nets, and
oars of our boat; the shelf with its pile of birds’
skins, the brightest hued which fell to our guns; skins
of opossum and kangaroo hung against the wall; the
burnt-out lamp on the table, with the fragments of
our supper, all just as we had left them, while as
the surest sign that nothing had disturbed me the
dogs were curled up quite motionless, when their quick
ears would have heard a step in an instant.
I lay down again and listened attentively
for a few minutes, and once heard faintly the howl
of a wild dog, but that was all, and there in the
stillness of night, in that far-off Australian wild,
I was slowly dozing off when I again started up and
this time Abel was up too staring at me.
“What is it, Harry?” he
cried, as at the same instant I asked him a similar
question, and then up leaped both dogs, set up the
rough hair round their necks, and ran to the door
growling fiercely. The moment after came the
cracking of sticks, a rustling through the bushes,
and a heavy body fell up against the door, making
the rough woodwork creak.
Living as we did in a hut of our own
making, furnished by ourselves, our own cooks and
managers, we studied dress and toilets but very little;
our custom was to throw ourselves down upon our skin-covered
bed of heath, so that upon this occasion we were both
instantly upon our feet, and, seizing our guns, stood
in readiness for action, if defence were needed, for
in the days of Australia’s early settlements,
before the bursting forth of the gold fever, many
were the raids made by the savage, and the worse than
savage bushranger, escaped “hand,” or
convict, sent over from the mother country as a part
of the dregs of her population, to settle in the infant
colonies.
To open the door seemed the first
thing, but we naturally hesitated, for that meant
giving perhaps an enemy admission to our fortress,
for the noise at the door might have been but a ruse
to get the better of our caution. A heavy groan,
however, decided us, and as I stood with my double
gun ready cocked, and a couple of ready patched bullets
rammed hastily down upon the charges of duck-shot,
Abel cautiously undid the fastenings, and the two
dogs, no mean aids at such a time, stood ready for
a spring.
There was something startling and
oppressive there in the stillness of the great wild,
quite two miles as we were from the nearest station,
and now roused from slumber in so strange a way; but
there was no time for thought, for grasping his long
knife in one hand, with the other my companion sharply
opened the door, and as he did so a figure fell into
his arms. The moonbeams, which streamed in at
the open door, gave enough light to show us that we
had nothing to fear from the new-comer, who lay before
us groaning, while the dogs darted out after a momentary
pause by his side, and began scouring about the open.
“Shut the door quick quick,”
groaned the man, “they’re tracking me.”
We quickly acted upon his advice,
and then, carefully covering the window and door with
rugs, obtained a light and began to examine our visitor.
And a ghastly spectacle he presented: a gash
on his forehead was bleeding profusely, covering his
face with blood; his shirt was torn and dragged half
off, while one arm lay doubled under him in a strange
unnatural position, as if it were broken.
“Why it’s Jepson,”
cried Abel in a whisper, and as he spoke the wounded
man started, opened his eyes and stared wildly, but
closed them again, groaning heavily.
We lifted the poor fellow on to our
bed, all the while listening for the warning we expected
momentarily to hear from our dogs, for without explanation
we knew well enough what had happened, namely, a night
attack upon the little station of our neighbour, Mr
Anderson, whose shepherd had made his escape to us.
Abel was, like me, all in a tremble,
for we knew not yet what was the extent of the disaster,
and though we neither of us spoke, we knew each other’s
thoughts; and our trembling was not from fear for ourselves,
but for what might be the fate of Mary Anderson, the
blue-eyed Scottish girl, whose presence lent a charm
to this far-off wild.
Hastily binding up the poor fellow’s
head, I looked at and laid in an easier position his
arm, which was also bleeding, having evidently been
broken by a ball from gun or revolver. A few
drops of rum poured between his teeth revived him,
and he was able to answer our questions.
“Rangers, sir six
of ’em. They’ve burnt the place down,
shot the master and young Harry, and gone off with
Miss Mary and the servant gal. I was tracking
them, but they were too much for me; two of them hung
back and caught me from behind. I did all I could,
and then ran on here.”
The exertion of saying this was too
much for him, and he fainted away, while half mad
with grief and horror, Abel and I stood gazing at one
another.
It was evident that the villains would
not molest us, for they probably only followed poor
Jepson for a short distance, and then hurried after
their companions. If they had been in pursuit
we should have known of their presence before this
from the dogs, which now came whining and scratching
at the door for admittance.
We did all we could for the shepherd,
and then, following Abel’s example, I drew the
shot charge from my gun, replaced the bullets, buckled
on an ammunition pouch, and then reloaded and primed
my revolver. Seeing these preparations going
on, the dogs immediately became uneasy and eager to
be off, and though our quarry was to be far different
to any to which they were accustomed, it would have
been a strong, daring man that could have successfully
combatted our four-footed allies.
Our preparations were soon made, and
then, after placing the spirit and water beside the
wounded man, we started off for Anderson’s Creek
through the dense tea-scrub, for in our then excited
state we made for the shortest cut. The moon
was fast sinking towards a heavy bank of clouds, but
she gave us light for best part of our journey, while
the remainder was made plain for us by the glowing
house and farm buildings in our front.
I couldn’t help it when
I saw the wreck of that house where I had spent so
many happy hours, and shudderingly thought of poor
Mary, dragged off by the bloodthirsty villains, I
stopped short and gave vent to a bitter groan.
This roused Abel, who cried savagely
to me to come on; for, faithful and true friends in
everything else, there was one rock upon which we split,
and that was our admiration for Mary Anderson.
He was maddened himself, and scarcely knew how to
contain his feelings, but the idea of me grieving
for her at such a time seemed to exasperate him, and
he almost yelled out
“Don’t be a woman, Fred;
come on, or we shall be too late.”
“Too late!” Too late
for what? A shudder ran through me as I asked
myself the question, and taking no notice of Abel’s
angry manner, I was at his side in an instant, and
we dashed on though the bushes.
Just as we got up to the rough fence
Abel stumbled and fell over something, and on recovering
himself he stooped and raised the head of a man.
The ruddy flames shone full upon his countenance,
and we saw that it was Harry, one of Mr Anderson’s
men. He was quite dead, for the side of his
head was battered in. Abel softly laid down the
poor fellow’s head, and then we went cautiously
round the building, with guns cocked and ready, in
case the villains might be lurking about, though we
knew enough of such catastrophes to feel assured that
directly they had secured all the plunder and ammunition
they could carry off they would decamp.
The greater part of the buildings
were blazing. The house was nearly level with
the ground, but the men’s shed and the wool store
still blazed furiously, and on getting round to the
back we both raised our pieces to fire, but dropped
them again directly, for just in front, squatting
round some glowing embers, were a party of black fellows,
whom we might have taken for the perpetrators of this
foul outrage, had we not known of their peaceable,
inoffensive conduct.
In another instant they were running
up to us, and a tall fellow, evidently their leader,
suddenly threw himself into position, with his long,
slender spear held horizontally, as if for throwing,
and with the point aimed directly at my breast.
Even in the midst of my trouble and anxiety I could
not help thinking what an effect such a salute would
have upon a stranger, for the unerring aim with which
these untutored men can throw a spear is something
surprising. But in another instant the spear
end touched the ground, and the party closed round
us, chattering and begging, and earnest in their efforts
to make us aware that they had not been the guilty
parties.
“Mine no fire,” said the
leader. “No black fellow kill.”
“No, no,” I said; “but who was it?”
“Dat Sam, Sooty Sam,”
said the savage, holding up six fingers, and pointing
towards the bush.
I nodded, and shuddered, for I knew
but too well the character of the mulatto convict
known as Sooty Sam.
“You give me tickpence, mine shar,” cried
the fellow.
Money was an article I seldom carried
then, unless bound for the nearest settlement for
stores, but I happened to have a fourpenny piece in
my tobacco pouch, and I gave it to him.
“Dat not tickpence, dat fourpenny,”
shouted the fellow, indignantly, for constant communion
with the settlers had induced a strong desire for the
coins that would procure rum or whisky.
A display of my empty pocket, however,
satisfied my black ally, and leading us towards one
of the sheep pens, he coolly pointed out the body
of Mr Anderson, shot through the head, and lying just
as he had fallen.
We soon learned from the blacks which
way the men had fled, and tried to induce them to
go with us to track the marauders, but without avail,
night work being their special abomination, and nothing
short of a fire like the present sufficing to draw
them from their resting-place. We knew that
our proper course was to rouse the neighbours at the
nearest stations, but in our impatience to pursue
the scoundrels prudence and management were forgotten.
Unable to gain the assistance of the blacks, we determined
to commence the pursuit alone with our dogs, after
promising the fellows “much rum” if they
would rouse the neighbouring settlers, who, we knew,
would soon be on our trail; but in spite of the direction
being pointed out, we found, to our disappointment,
that the darkness would prove an enemy, and that we
must wait for daylight, and reluctantly turned back.
All at once a ray of hope shot through
my breast; just before me was old Gyp, my favourite
dog, a great half-bred sheep and wolf hound, who was
growling and snarling over a heap of what looked like
sail cloth, but which inspection showed to be a tattered
duck frock, filthily dirty, and stained with blood,
evidently having been cut off by some wounded man.
Old Gyp was licking the bloody part,
and growling angrily, and on my speaking to him, and
encouraging him, he yelped and whined; and then, setting
his nose to the ground, ran a few yards, looked back,
yelped again, and then would have set off full speed
along the trail, had I not called him back and tied
a piece of tar band to his neck, holding the other
end in my hand.
Abel’s eyes glittered as he
saw the great powerful beast strain to be off, and
then, without a word, we set off at a trot, and leaving
the glowing fire behind, plunged into the darkness
before us.
We reckoned that the villains had
about two hours start, but encumbered, as we knew
they must be, with booty, and the two women, we felt
sure that, even with the horses they had doubtless
taken, they could not have retreated at a very great
rate; why, though we both felt that it was like plunging
into the lion’s jaws, and that most likely one,
if not both of us, would lose our lives in the impending
struggle, there was not a thought in either of our
breasts that savoured of fear, for the desire to overtake
the villains was intense.
But it was a fearful task. The
darkness was now terrible, and the eager beast struggled
on, irrespective of bush or thorn, while every now
and then some thick tuft in the track would trip me
up. Abel had a hard task to keep up with me.
But before daylight matters grew better, for we were
in the wood, where there was scarcely any undergrowth,
and when day broke we were threading our way through
the sombre forest, where the tree trunks were all
around, apparently endless, and so similar that only
the sagacious beast before us, or a native, could have
found a way through.
Now and then we could catch a glimpse
of a star or two, but directly after the clouds seemed
to close up again, and we stumbled on till a faint
light announced the coming day, which found us blackened,
torn, and bleeding, but as feverishly eager for the
fray as ever.
As for track, that was invisible to
us, excepting now and then, where the print of a horse’s
hoof showed in a moist place, and told us that the
faithful beast with us was worthy of the trust placed
in him. Now we were out in the open, then making
our way again through the tea-scrub, and then skirting
a ravine beside the range of rugged, bleak rocks,
standing out bold and barren, while the ravine, now
here and there green, where a pool of water remained,
or a tiny rivulet trickled along where we saw a rushing
river in the rainy season.
If one’s heart could have been
at rest how beautiful was the scene around, tree,
bush, flower, and rugged mossy stone, where the track
wound in and out, now down into the deep ravine, now
crossing the little bright rill which sometimes trickled
beneath the grass, and again appeared, leaping from
rock to rock. Birds everywhere flitting and
climbing about the trees, or hanging in places, like
flowers of gorgeous hues.
But there was no peace for us, and
we strode on till from the early freshness of the
morning we were panting through the heat of the day,
heat so oppressive that it grew unbearable, and but
for the errand of life and death upon which we were
engaged, we should have rested until the sun was again
low down in the horizon.
Sooner or later we felt sure that
we should come upon some traces of the marauders,
and we were not disappointed, for, all at once, the
dog gave a whining bark, and began snuffing about
in the grass, where lay a bottle evidently but lately
cast aside. Then on again, panting, with parched
lips and tongue: any doubts that we had formerly
had respecting the dog’s ability to trace the
marauders being now fully put to flight.
And now the track led us right down
into the deep ravine, where the sides rose seventy
or eighty feet high on either side, at times almost
perpendicular; but in spite of the roughness of the
path, the coolness was most grateful as we struggled
on beneath the shade.
I was at times so faint that I could
gladly have rested, but the thought of those on before
acted as a spur to my flagging energies, and I pressed
on. Abel seemed to know no fatigue, and when
he was in front, holding the dog, I had hard work
to keep up with him, while I could hear him muttering
to himself angrily as he pressed on.
All at once we pulled short up, startled
by the threatening aspect that had come over the heavens.
It was evident that a storm was coming on; and knowing,
as we did, the character of the rain in the region
we were in, the thought crossed both our minds, what
would the ravine be if a storm came. But the
dragging of the dog roused us, and again we pressed
on, feeling convinced that we must be close upon the
scoundrels; and indeed we were so close that, at the
next turning, we came in sight of them six,
with two horses, two of the fellows being mounted,
and with one of the women before him.
No sooner were we in sight than the
dog bayed loudly; the two mounted men dashed on, while
the other four posted themselves to oppose our further
passage. There was no turning to the right or
left, for the rugged banks effectually opposed all
exit, in some parts completely overhanging the glen,
and, outnumbered as we were, ours was but an awkward
position. However, in the excitement of the moment,
fear seemed to have fled, and holding the dog back,
we hurried forward to where the fellows stood, taking
advantage of every screen which presented itself as
we advanced, for we knew how much mercy we had to expect
as soon as we came within shot.
Fortunately for us, the huge blocks
of quartz lying about afforded ample shelter, and
we darted from place to place, each minute getting
nearer and nearer. All at once, as I made a
run forward to a mass in my front, there was a sharp
reverberating crack, and I heard a bullet whistle by
my ears, but the next moment I was in safety, and then
Abel rushed to my side, but he was not so fortunate,
for, as he crossed the open, two shots were fired,
one of which grazed his shoulder and just drew blood.
It was now a matter of regular Indian
warfare, and we knew well enough that if we dashed
forward we must be shot down before we could get hand-to-hand
with the ruffians, so Abel took one side of the rock,
and I the other, to try and get a return shot at our
enemies. It was a mass some fifty feet in length,
and when I reached the end I heard Abel fire, and
directly after, he fired again, emptying his second
barrel, when there was a reply of three shots.
I was hopeful that, hearing two shots,
the fellows would think we were both together, and
taking advantage of some low bushes, I crawled right
to the side of the ravine, and then screening myself
behind a buttress, found that I could climb up a few
feet to where there was a ledge, which I soon reached,
and was then some twenty feet above the bottom, well
screened by some bushes; and, to my intense satisfaction,
I found, upon creeping to the edge and thrusting my
double-barrel between the leaves, I had a good sight
at two of the miscreants, whose heads and shoulders
were just visible.
As I looked, Abel gave two more shots
from his gun, and I saw the chips fly from the rock
a little farther off, and then the two men I had not
seen before rose up and delivered their fire dropping
down again directly and evidently with
some effect, for I heard a dismal howl, which told
of the dog being struck. Directly after, one
of the fellows in sight began to crawl forward, evidently
intending to take us in the flank; but he had been
outwitted, and with the barrel of my gun trembling
as I took aim, I fired, and he lay motionless.
In an instant his companion turned
in my direction, evidently saw the puff of smoke,
and raised his gun towards where I was; but he was
too late, I already had him well covered, and I fired
again, when the poor wretch gave a wild shriek, sprang
into the air, and then fell out of sight amongst the
bushes.
I was so horrified that I lay there
trembling, so that I could scarcely reload.
The perspiration ran off my forehead, and my teeth
quite chattered, but it was but for a few moments,
for I recalled the scene of the past night, and then
remembered what must be the fate of the prisoners
were they not rescued. I felt that it was but
life for life, and with another shot I might myself
be weltering in my blood. The next moment I
was cautiously peering out again to get another aim,
and now my hand was quite steady. I could see
the place where one of the men had shown to get a
shot at Abel, but nothing of him was visible, so I
crawled a little more forward, when in a moment there
was a sharp pang in my left arm, so acute that I could
not refrain from crying out, as I started up on one
knee; and then I fell again, for, as I heard a second
shot, my cap was struck from my head, and I saw that
one of the men had changed his position, and was a
little higher up the valley, leaning forward to see
the result of his aim. But he was too eager,
for the next moment there was a shot from Abel and
the fellow rolled over, and lay full in my view, quivering
and clutching at the ground, tearing up tufts of grass,
and gnashing his teeth frightfully. Then came
a run and a rush, and I saw the last of the four rush
up the ravine, running zigzag, but I got a sight at
him, in spite of my pain, and Abel fired too, though
apparently without effect; and then the sky seemed
to turn black, and the rocks around to swim, and I
saw no more till I found Abel leaning over me, dropping
some spirit between my lips from his flask.
“There, old fellow,” he
said, grimly, as he bound up my arm. “Can
you walk?”
I nodded; and seeming to gather strength
each moment, I followed him down into the ravine,
where we found that two of the men were quite dead,
while the other was in a dying state, but he struck
at us savagely with his knife whenever we tried to
approach.
I saw Abel’s hand playing angrily
with the butt of his revolver, and but for me I believe
he would have shot the fellow as he lay, but I hurried
him on, and we cautiously proceeded for about a hundred
yards, but this time without our dog to track, for
the poor brute was lying bleeding to death, shot through
the lungs.
All at once there was a shot from
a little gully on our right, when Abel threw up his
arms and let fell his gun, which exploded as it fell,
and then the poor fellow staggered, and went down
upon his face.
I did not stop to think that the next
bullet might find its billet in my heart, but dashed
forward towards the spot from whence the shot had been
fired, and directly after I was face to face with an
enemy. He was sitting with his back supported
by a block of stone, and his gun across his knees,
glaring at me with a look of the bitterest hate, and
a moment’s reflection would have told me that
he was wounded unto the death, but in the anger and
heat of the moment there was no pausing for thought,
and the next moment both barrels of my gun, held pistol-wise,
were discharged into his breast.
I ran back to Abel, and raised his
head, but with a sickening, deathly feeling, I again
let it fall, for the expression of his wild and staring
eyes told too well how true had been the aim the
last sting of the dying viper; and when I somewhat
recovered, it was to cover the body with fragments
of stone, to keep off the birds, and then, weak and
faint, I struggled on after the two mounted men.
But a change had now come over the
scene; the wind tore furiously overhead, while where
I was toiling along it was a perfect calm. Then
came the rain a few big drops, then a cessation;
then again a loud and furious howling of the wind;
then a calm; while, piled up in huge, lurid, black
masses, the clouds seemed to shut out the light of
day, save when they were rent asunder by some jagged
flash of lightning of a vivid violet hue. Ever
and anon there was a glare of light playing behind
the clouds, lighting them up in the most glorious way,
so that the rolling massy-looking vapours were displayed
in all their grandeur, while along the edges, quivering
and darting, there was an incessant tremulous light
of every brilliant sunset hue. Now came the thunder
in a mighty diapason, rolling along the ravine, and
seeming as if the sound split and crumbled upon the
bare summits of the range of mountains, while fragments
of the giant peal were scattered, and came hurrying
along the ravine. Then, again, burst after burst
of huge, bellowing, metallic peals rumbling hollow
and deafening as though discharged from some vast
cannon mouth. Blackness again, as if it were
night; till in a few seconds came again a blinding
flash, displaying the wild aspect of the glen, but
only to leave it darker than before; and now again
a few drops of rain, pattering upon the dry ground,
and splashing from the surface of the lichen-covered
rocks, then a sharp fall as of a thunder shower, and
I crept beneath the shelter of an overhanging rock,
while I hastily covered the lock of my gun, and tried
to load it with my one uninjured hand, when again
came the lightning playing down the ravine, then black
darkness and bellowing, deafening thunder, and then
down came the rain not pouring not
streaming, but in one huge cataract of hissing and
foaming waters, as though, indeed, the heavens were
opened and the fountains of the great deep broken
up. It was as though to have stood beneath it
for a moment would have been to be beaten down and
swept helplessly away by the waters bubbling and foaming
at my feet.
But how refreshing and cooling it
seemed as I bathed my fevered brow and moistened the
handkerchief hastily bound round my bleeding arm; while,
though stopped from continuing my pursuit, I knew that
it was impossible for the fugitives to proceed, and
I waited anxiously for the cessation of the storm.
Once there came a lull, but only for
a few moments, while the brilliant rose-coloured and
violet lightning played around, when down came the
rain again, more violently than ever, as though it
would never cease. The ravine had been turned
into a little river, once again towards which, winding
in and out amidst the huge blocks of rock, hundreds
of watercourses were hurrying. Now it was black
darkness, and nothing visible, and the next moment
again flaming swords appeared to cut through the rain,
and light up the ravine with every rainbow tint; and
still came that deafening mighty rushing sound of the
waters, as though I were standing upon the spray-wet
rock beneath Niagara.
I was standing where a weather-stained
mass jutted out from the rocky side and protected
me from the heavy fall, but from every jagged and
time-worn point around the water streamed down as it
leaped and plunged from the mountain side into the
ravine. At some early epoch in the world’s
history, the earth must have divided in some awful
internal throe, and then imperfectly closing, have
left this long rift forming a watercourse in the rainy
season, but in the dry-time merely a stony bed, with
here and there a pool. Save where the rains had
washed away, and masses of rock had fallen, the sides
showed how once they had been torn asunder, and displayed
prominence and indentation at every bend.
All at once the rain ceased, as if
in obedience to an omnipotent command, the black clouds
passed over, and the sun shone down into the ravine.
But what a sight met my gaze. Already up to
my knees, and teeming along with awful velocity, was
a mighty clay-stoned river, eddying, foaming, and
sweeping round the rock-strewn bed, and bearing with
it leaf, branch, and trunk; bushes and masses of grass
torn from the gully sides; while large pieces of rock
were being moved from their places, or tottered where
they stood.
I stood waiting for the waters to
subside, for where I stood it was impossible to scale
the rocks, even for an active man, while in my crippled
state, I could not have climbed a foot. But they
did not seem to subside at first; and I fancied that
they perceptibly rose, till I called to mind that
I had altered my position a little. But now there
was no doubt about it; the waters were rising fast,
and I trembled as I thought of being swept away, and
my helplessness to cope with the rushing stream; while,
again, it was horrid to be prisoned there, while the
poor girl I sought to rescue was perhaps being borne
farther and farther away. Then came a grim smile
as I thought of the vengeance which had overtaken
four of the miscreants, and then I shuddered as I
thought of the cost at which it had been purchased poor
Abel now perhaps swept from his stony resting-place
and borne far away towards the sea.
But now it was time to think of self
and life, for the water was rising fast, and as I
stood hesitating and watching for a place of safety,
and to which I could wade, heard above the present
rushing of the waters, came a hideous hollow-sounding
roar, and gazing with affrighted eyes, I saw as it
were a tall wave rushing down the ravine, making the
water in its path foam and roar as, like some large
cylinder, it rolled over and over, sweeping all before
it, and the next moment I was caught, torn from my
feeble hold on the rock, and hurried along, buffeting
the strangling waters.
Those were horrible moments:
now I was beneath, now above, now dashed half-stunned
and senseless against some mass of rock, now thrust
down and held beneath the rushing stream by the branches
of some torn-up tree. It was impossible to swim,
while even in the stillest water such an effort would
have been hard to a wounded man. A few despairing
thoughts crowded through my brain as I feebly buffeted
the waves, and struggled for a few more draughts of
the fresh air of heaven, and then after grasping and
catching at twigs, branches, and masses of floating
turf, I was dashed against a mass of rock, to which
I tried to cling. There was a cleft in it wherein
I thrust my fingers, and then tried to hold on by
my teeth on the soft crumbling stone. At first
the little projection broke off, filling my mouth
with pieces of grit, but despairingly I again hung
on by my teeth, and this time hope seemed to dawn
again within my breast, for I thought if I could hold
on for awhile, the waters must subside. But
as the thought animated me, there came a fiercer rush
than ever, I felt the mass of rock totter, roll over,
and I gave a wild despairing cry, as I was again swept
away faster and faster, while the horrid dread of
death gave place to a strange lulling sensation as
I closed my eyes.
Once more I was aroused by a violent
blow, and as my arm was raised mechanically to grasp,
I passed it over the trunk of a large floating tree,
and holding on for dear life, I was hurried down with
the foaming waters.
The hard battle for breath past, fear
came again, and I looked despairingly from left to
right for rescue from my perilous position, but everywhere
ruin and desolation, while the din of the rushing waters
was frightful. Everywhere the sides of the ravine
seemed to be crumbling down, and masses of earth and
rock were undermined and fell with a terrible splash
into the stream, growing more furious every moment,
while, wherever the gorge narrowed, the turbulence
was awful.
Dashed against masses of drift wood,
and bruised against the summits of the projecting
rocks, I was faint and despairing, when all at once
the roots of the tree I was in caught against a massive
stone, the trunk swung round, and I found myself brought
up by the side of the gorge, where the branches of
a tree hung down; and rousing my last strength I clutched
them, and drew myself up, till I could rest my knees
upon the floating tree; then I nearly over-balanced
myself as the trunk rolled about, but getting hold
of a stouter branch I again drew myself up, so that
I stood, and then as the trunk again broke loose and
floated away, I got one foot upon the rocky side,
and hung suspended over the stream, whose waves seemed
to leap angrily, to beat me down.
To an uninjured man a slight effort
would have been sufficient to place him in safety,
but a strange fear seemed to creep over me, as I felt
that in a few moments I must fall from my hold, and
be swept away. But once more the desire for
life came again to renew my strength, and slowly and
painfully I got hold for my other foot, and then crawled
to a rift, where a little stream of water was rushing
down from the table-land above, when by dint of again
battling with the blinding water, falling from weakness
again and again, I managed to reach the top, crawl
beyond the reach of the stream, and then fell exhausted,
where I could gaze down upon the raging torrent.
The pain from my wounded arm roused
me at last from a half-drowsy, fainting state, and
then I eagerly drank from the spirit-flask in my pocket.
I then loosened the handkerchief round my wound, and
remembering that my task was yet unperformed, I examined
my powder, which was fortunately dry, and after carefully
wiping, reloaded my revolver, which was safe in my
belt, but my gun was lost when I was swept away.
The sun was now setting, and I tried to make my plans
for the future, but a sense of confusion and dizziness
seemed to rob me of all power of action, and at last
I threaded my way amongst the trees slowly and painfully,
keeping close to the great gully, and listening to
the hurrying waters; now shuddering as I thought of
the past now stopping short to think of
the possibility of those I was I was in search of
being yet in between the walls of the rift, when the
storm came, and then I trembled for their fate.
But all seemed troubled and confused as I stumbled
along, trying to recover my lost ground, for I must
have been swept back a mile, though what I could have
done to save those I sought from their peril would
have been but little. The last I remember then
is kneeling down to try and make out some object borne
along by the stream, surging along in the darkness
below me, for all seemed wild and blank, till I was
again hastening with Abel through the wood, guided
by the burning farmstead, and watching the black demon-like
figures flitting about. Then I could feel the
dog tug tug at the string as we tracked the bushrangers,
and I listened to his low whimpering cry. Then
again came the fight in the gully, and I saw again
the agonies of the man I shot, as he griped and clutched
with talon-like fingers at the earth; and then came
the horrible crashing, rushing voice of the mighty
stream, as it raged along, sweeping all before it in
its headlong passage. Now, again I was stifling
and strangling, grasping and clutching at everything
I touched, and then I seemed to be borne under, and
all was darkness.
The sun was high in the heavens when
I awoke from my stupor-like sleep, with my head throbbing,
and gazed at the brilliant blue sky above me, trying
to recall the past. I was in pain, and could
not raise my arm; there was a delicious cool breeze
fanning my cheek, while bright, fresh, and pure, all
around seemed grateful to the senses; but as I lay
there was a strange trembling vibration of the ground
beneath me, and I wondered as with it came a tremendous
roar a rushing noise.
All at once thought came again with
a flash, and I shuddered as I recalled the past, and
thought of having slept so many hours. Then I
sat up and saw that I had fallen within a few feet
of the precipice where the stream rushed along still
fiercely and impetuously, but with the swift fierceness
of a deep and mighty current.
I might well tremble as I gazed upon
that huge current a torrent which had risen
fifty feet in a few hours, sweeping all before it,
and I trembled again as I thought of those I sought.
I rose to my feet and tottered for a few paces, but
was soon fain to sit down beneath a tree, and there
in the great wild I stayed, faint and weary, hour after
hour, listless and but little troubled, as I sat within
sound of the rushing waters.
It was towards night when all at once
I roused up and stared around me, for it seemed that
I heard voices. I listened and all was silent;
but again the sound came, again heard above the roaring
of the torrent, and then I tried to give the well-known
call of the Australian woods, when to my inexpressible
joy it was answered, and five minutes after I was
surrounded by a party, half squatters, half blacks,
who had been upon the track for the murderers of Mr
Anderson.
I learned afterwards that the blacks
had followed our trail till the storm was coming,
when they immediately hurried back, and the whole
party had a very narrow escape, but though they had
struck the gully again and again, they had seen no
traces of those they sought, and but for my hearing
them, they would have passed me on their return.
They turned back once more upon learning
my history; and, guided by the blacks, kept as close
to the brink of the rift as was possible; while, after
refreshment and rest, I struggled on with them, hoping
against hope that the two poor girls might yet be
alive. I knew that if they had escaped they
could not be far off; and so the sequel proved.
The search was about concluded; and,
sick at heart, I listened to the talked-of return.
“Poor things! they must have
been swept away,” said one of the squatters,
when he started, and ran towards the gully edge, for
a long, wild cry for help arose apparently from beneath
our feet.
One of the blacks then let himself
over the edge, and climbed down, to return directly
after with the announcement that Miss Anderson was
below.
A rope of handkerchiefs and straps
was soon improvised, with which the black again descended;
and in a few minutes the poor, fainting girl was drawn
up from the shelf of rock upon which she had been for
hours resting; and, after regaining her strength somewhat,
she related how that, when the storm set in, the men
had hurriedly dismounted; and, securing their horses
at the bottom, climbed with the two poor girls to
the shelf where she was found a place well
sheltered by the overhanging rock; and, of course,
at the same time thoroughly hidden from those who
passed above.
Then came a time of horror, for they
could climb no higher; and slowly they had seen the
water swell and rise till it came nearer and nearer;
and at last, giddy with fright, the poor servant had
slipped from her hold into the fierce stream.
The men hesitated for a moment, but directly after
let themselves down, and swam boldly after her.
Soon after there came a shout, and then one or two
strange, gurgling cries, which chilled the hearer’s
blood, and then all was silent save the rushing of
the river, till voices were heard overhead when her
cry for help brought salvation.
Times have altered since then, and
I often look with pride at the wife who shares my
home in the wilderness; and now, years after, in spite
of the changes that have taken place, and the safety
of person and property in the colony, Mary never hears
an unusual noise by night without tremblingly grasping
my arm, and listening eagerly, while she recalls the
horrors of the deep gully.