What Looked Like Courting.
On the terrace of the Pilot’s
house was a garden-seat, on which sat Rose Summerhayes
and Scarlett.
Rose was looking at her dainty shoe,
the point of which protruded from beneath her skirt;
while Scarlett’s eyes were fixed on the magnificent
panorama of mountains which stretched north and south
as far as he could see.
Behind the grass-covered foot-hills,
at whose base crouched the little town, there stood
bolder and more rugged heights. In rear of these
rose the twin forest-clad tops of an enormous mountain
mass, on either side of which stretched pinnacled
ranges covered with primeval “bush.”
Scarlett was counting hill and mountain
summits. His enumeration had reached twenty distinct
heights, when, losing count, he turned to his companion.
“It’s a lovely picture
to have in front of your door,” he said, “a
picture that never tires the eye.”
A break in the centre of the foot-hills
suddenly attracted his attention. It was the
gorge through which a rippling, sparkling river escaped
from the mountain rampart and flowed through the town
to the tidal waters of the harbour.
“That valley will take us into
the heart of the hills,” he said. “We
start to-morrow morning, soon after dawn Moonlight
and I. Do you know him?”
The girl looked up from her shoe,
and smiled. “I can’t cultivate the
acquaintance of every digger in the town,” she
replied.
“Don’t speak disparagingly
of diggers. I become one to-morrow.”
“Then, mind you bring me a big
nugget when you come back,” said the girl.
“That’s asking me to command
good luck. Give me that, and you shall have the
nugget.”
“Does luck go by a girl’s
favour? If it did, you would be sure to have
it.”
“I never had it on the voyage out, did I?”
“Perhaps you never had the other either.”
“That’s true I left England
through lack of it.”
“I shouldn’t have guessed that. Perhaps
you’ll gain it in this country.”
Scarlett looked at her, but her eyes
were again fixed on the point of her shoe.
“Well, Rosebud flirting
as usual?” Captain Summerhayes, clad in blue
serge, with his peaked cap on the back of his head,
came labouring up the path, and sat heavily on the
garden-seat. “I never see such a gal always
with the boys when she ought to be cooking the dinner.”
“Father!” exclaimed Rose,
flushing red, though she well knew the form that the
Pilot’s chaff usually took. “How can
you tell such fibs? You forget that Mr. Scarlett
is not one of the old cronies who understand your
fun.”
“There, there, my gal.”
The Pilot laid his great brown hand on his daughter’s
shoulder. “Don’t be ruffled.
Let an old sailor have his joke: it won’t
hurt, God bless us; it won’t hurt more’n
the buzzing of a blue-bottle fly. But you’re
that prim and proper, that staid and straight-laced,
you make me tease you, just to rouse you up. Oh!
them calm ones, Mr. Scarlett, beware of ’em.
It takes a lot to goad ’em to it, but once their
hair’s on end, it’s time a sailor went
to sea, and a landsman took to the bush. It’s
simply terrible. Them mild ’uns,
Mr. Scarlett, beware of ’em.”
“Father, do stop!” cried
Rose, slapping the Pilot’s broad back with her
soft, white hand.
“All right,” said her
father, shrinking from her in mock dread; “stop
that hammerin’.”
“Tell us about the fever-ship,
and what they’re doing with Sartoris,”
said Scarlett.
“Lor’, she’s knocked
the breath out of a man’s body. I’m
just in dread o’ me life. Sit t’other
end o’ the seat, gal; and do you, Mr. Scarlett,
sit in between us, and keep the peace. It’s
fearful, this livin’ alone with a dar’ter
that thumps me.” The old fellow chuckled
internally, and threatened to explode with suppressed
merriment. “Some day I shall die o’
laffing,” he said, as he pulled himself together.
“But you was asking about Sartoris.”
He had now got himself well in hand. “Sartoris
is like a pet monkey in a cage, along o’ Chinamen,
Malays, Seedee boys, and all them sort of animals.
Laff? You should ha’ seen me standing up
in the boat, hollerin’ at Sartoris, and laffin’
so as I couldn’t hardly keep me feet. ‘Sartoris,’
I says, ‘when do the animals feed?’ An’
he looks over the rail, just like a stuffed owl in
a glass case, and says nothing. I took a bottle
from the boat’s locker, and held it up.
’What wouldn’t you give for a drop o’
that!’ I shouts. But he shook his fist,
and said something disrespectful about port wine;
but I was that roused up with the humour o’
the thing, I laffed so as I had to set down. A
prisoner for full four weeks, or durin’ the
pleasure o’ the Health Officer, that’s
Sartoris. Lord! what a trap to be caught
in.”
“But what’s the disease
they’ve on board?” asked Scarlett.
“That’s where it is,”
replied the Pilot “nobody seems to
know. The Health Officer he says one thing, and
then, first one medical and then another must put
his oar in, and say it’s something else dengey
fever, break-bone, spirrilum fever, beri-beri, or
anything you like. One doctor says the ship shouldn’t
ha’ bin currantined, and another says she should,
and so they go on quarrelling like a lot o’ cats
in a sack.”
“But there have been deaths on board,”
said Rose.
“Deaths, my dear? The first
mate’s gone, and more’n half the piebald
crew. This morning we buried the Chinese cook.
You won’t see Sartoris, not this month or more.”
“Mr. Scarlett is going into
the bush, father. He’s not likely to be
back till after the ship is out of quarantine.”
“Eh? What? Goin’
bush-whacking? I thought you was town-bred.
Well, well, so you’re goin’ to help chop
down trees.”
Scarlett smiled. “You’ve
heard of this gold that’s been found, Pilot?”
“I see it in the paper.”
“I’m going to try if I can find where
it comes from.”
“Lord love ’ee, but you’ve
no luck, lad. This gold-finding is just a matter
o’ luck, and luck goes by streaks. You’re
in a bad streak, just at present; and you won’t
never find that gold till you’re out o’
that streak. You can try, but you won’t
get it. You see, Sartoris is in the same streak no
sooner does he get wrecked than he is shut up aboard
this fever-ship. And s’far as I can see,
he’ll get on no better till he’s out o’
his streak too. You be careful how you go about
for the next six months or so, for as sure as you’re
born, if you put yourself in the way of it, you’ll
have some worse misfortune than any you’ve yet
met with. Luck’s like the tide you
can do nothing agin it; but when it turns, you’ve
got everything in your favour. Wait till the tide
of your luck turns, young man, before you attempt
anything rash. That’s my advice, and I’ve
seen proof of it in every quarter of the globe.”
“Father is full of all sorts
of sailor-superstitions. He hates to take a ship
out of port on a Friday, and wouldn’t kill an
albatross for anything.”
“We caught three on the voyage
out,” said Scarlett; “a Wandering Albatross,
after sighting the Cape of Good Hope, and two sooty
ones near the Campbell Islands. I kept the wing-bones,
and would have given you one for a pipe-stem, Captain,
if the ship had reached port.”
“But she didn’t, my lad,”
growled the Pilot, “and that’s where the
point comes in. Why sailors can’t leave
them birds alone astonishes me: they don’t
hurt nobody, and they don’t molest the ship,
but sail along out of pure love o’ company.
On the strength o’ that you must kill ’em,
just for a few feathers and stems for tobacco-pipes.
And you got wrecked. P’r’aps you’ll
leave ’em alone next voyage.”
During the last part of the conversation,
Rose had risen, and entered the house. She now
returned with a small leather case in her hand.
“This, at any rate, will be
proof against bad luck,” she said, as she undid
the case, and drew out a prismatic compass. She
adjusted the eye-piece, in which was a slit and a
glass prism and lifted the sight-vane, down the centre
of which a horsehair stretched perpendicularly to
the card of the compass. Putting the instrument
to her eye, Rose took the bearing of one of the twin
forest-clad heights, and said, “Eighty degrees
East is that right?”
“You’ve got the magnetic
bearing,” said Scarlett, taking the instrument
from the girl’s hand. “To find the
real bearing, you must allow for the variation between
the magnetic and true North.”
“Oh, dear!” she exclaimed;
“that’s too dreadfully technical.
But take the compass: it should keep you from
being lost in the bush, anyway.”
“Thank you,” said Jack.
“It will be very useful. It’s a proper
mining-compass.”
“I hope its needle will guide
you to untold gold, and that the mine you are looking
for will act on it like a loadstone.”
“Practical and sentimental that’s
Rosebud,” said the Pilot, from the further end
of the seat. “And you’ll always notice,
Scarlett, that it’s the practical that comes
first with her. Once upon a time she give me a
cardigan jacket to wear under my coat. She’d
knitted it herself. She said it would keep me
warm on frosty nights, and prevent me gettin’
cold and all that; and when I gets into the boat one
night, and was feeling for a match, bless you if I
didn’t find a piece o’ paper, folded up,
in the pocket o’ that there cardigan jacket.
I took it out and read it by the lantern. It
was from my own dar’ter, jest as if I’d
ha’ been her sweetheart, and in it was all manner
o’ lovey-dovey things just fit to turn her old
dad’s head. Practical first, sentimental
afterwards that’s Rosebud. Very
practical over the makin’ of an apple-pie very
sentimental over the eatin’ of it, ain’t
you, my gal?”
“I don’t know about the
sentiment,” said Rose, “but I am sure about
the pie. If that were missing at dinner-time
I know who would grumble. So I’ll go, and
attend to my duties.” She had risen, and
was confronting Scarlett. “Good-bye,”
she said, “and good fortune.”
Jack took her proffered hand. “Thank you,”
he said.
She had walked a few steps towards
the house, when she looked over her shoulder.
“Don’t forget the nuggets,” she said
with a laugh.
“I sha’n’t forget,”
he replied. “If I get them, you shall have
them. I hope I may get them, for your
sake.”
“Now, ain’t that a wee
bit mushy, for talk?” said the old Pilot, as
his daughter disappeared. “You might give
a gal a few pennyweights, or even an ounce, but when
you say you hope you may find gold for her sake, ain’t
that just a trifle flabby? But don’t think
you can deceive my gal with talk such as that.
She may be sentimental and stoopid with her old dad,
but I never yet see the man she couldn’t run
rings round at a bargain. And as for gettin’
soft on a chap, he ain’t come along yet; and
when he does, like as not I’ll chuck him over
this here bank, and break his impident neck.
When my gal Rosebud takes a fancy, that’s another
matter. If she should have a leanin’
towards some partic’lar chap, why, then I’d
open the door, and lug him in by the collar if he didn’t
come natural and responsive. I’ve got my
own ideas about a girl marrying I had my
own experience, and I say, give a girl the choice,
an’ she’ll make a good wife. That’s
my theory. So if my gal is set agin a man, I’m
set agin him. If she likes a partic’lar
man, I’ll like him too. She won’t
cotton to any miserable, fish-backed beach-comber,
I can promise you. So mushy, flabby talk don’t
count with Rose; you can make your mind clear on that
point.”
The young man burst into a laugh.
“Keep her tight, Pilot,”
he said, in a voice loud with merriment. “When
you know you’ve got a good daughter, stick to
her. Chuck every interloper over the bank.
I should do so myself. But don’t treat me
so when I come with the nuggets.”
“Now, look ’ee here,”
said the Pilot, as he rose cumbersomely, and took
Scarlett by the arm. “I’ve said you’re
in a bad streak o’ luck, and I believe it.
But, mark me here: nothing would please me better
than for you to return with a hatful of gold.
All I say is, if you’re bent on going, be careful;
and, being in a bad streak, don’t expect great
things.”
“Good-bye,” said Scarlett.
“I’m in a bad streak? All right.
When I work out of that you’ll be the first
man I’ll come to see.”
“An’ no one’ll be gladder to see
you.”
Captain Summerhayes took Scarlett’s
hand, and shook it warmly. “Good-bye,”
he said. “Good luck, and damn the bad streak.”
Jack laughed, and walked down the winding path.
The Pilot stood on the bank, and looked after him.
“Hearten him up: that’s
the way,” he said to himself, as he watched the
retreating figure; “but, for all that, he’s
like a young ‘more-pork’ in the bush,
with all his troubles to come.”