Fishing.
A case of bottling-plums, the bloom
still on their purple cheeks, stood on the kitchen
table. Beside it stood Rose, her arms bare to
the elbows, and a snowy apron flowing from breast
to ankle. Marshalled in regular array in front
of the case, stood a small army of glass jars, which
presently were to receive the fruit.
In a huge preserving-pan a thick syrup
was simmering on the stove; and Rose had just begun
to place the fruit in this saccharine mixture, when
a succession of knocks, gentle but persistent, was
heard coming from the front door.
“Oh, bother,” said Rose,
as she paused with a double handful of plums half
way between the fruit-case and the stove. “Who
can that be?”
Again the knocking resounded through the house.
“I suppose I must go,”
said Rose, placing the fruit carefully in the pan,
and then, slipping off her flowing apron, she went
hurriedly to the front door.
There stood the pretty figure of Rachel
Varnhagen, dressed in billowy muslin, a picture hat
which was adorned with the brightest of ribbons and
artificial flowers, and the daintiest of shoes.
Her sallow cheeks were tinged with a carmine flush,
her pearly teeth gleamed behind a winning smile, and
a tress of glossy hair, escaped from under her frail
head-dress, hung bewitchingly upon her shoulder.
“Oh, how do you do?”
she exclaimed effusively, as she closed her silk parasol.
“I look an awful guy, I know; but there’s
such a wind, that I’ve almost been blown
to pieces.”
It was the first time that Rose’s
humble roof had had the privilege of sheltering the
daughter of the rich Jew.
“I’m afraid I hardly expected
you.” The Pilot’s daughter looked
frankly and with an amused smile at Rachel. “I’m
in the middle of bottling fruit. Do you mind
coming into the kitchen? the fruit will
spoil if I leave it.”
Leading the way, she was followed
by her pretty caller, who, in all her glory, seated
herself on a cane-bottomed chair in the kitchen, and
commenced to gossip.
“I’ve such news,”
she said, tapping the pine floor with the ferrule of
her parasol. Rose continued to transfer her plums
to the preserving-pan. “I expect you heard
of the dreadful experience I had with that horrid,
drunken digger who caught me on the foot-bridge everybody
heard of it. Who do you think it was that saved
me?”
She waited for Rose to risk a guess.
“I suppose,” said the
domestic girl, her arms akimbo as she faced her visitor,
“I should think it ought to have been Mr. Zahn.”
“Oh, him!” exclaimed Rachel,
disgustedly. “I’ve jilted him he
was rude to Papa.”
“Then who could it be?”
Rose placed more plums in the preserving-pan.
“You ought to know.”
Just the trace of a pout disfigured Rachel’s
pretty mouth. “He’s a friend of yours,
I believe; a very great friend, indeed.”
“I’ve a good many friends.”
The preserving-pan was now full, and Rose sat down,
to wait a few minutes till the fruit should be ready
for bottling.
“Papa is simply in love with
him. He says he can never repay him. And
how he laughed when I told him that my gallant rescuer
threw the digger into the water! Can’t
you guess who it is, now?”
Rose was silent.
“Really, I think this stupid
cooking and jam-making has made you silly. Why
don’t you work in the morning, and go out in
the afternoon to see your friends?”
Rose turned her blue eyes on her visitor.
They distinctly said, “What business is that
of yours?” But her lips said, “Now, really,
how can I?”
“When a girl’s engaged” Rachel
sighed as she spoke “she doesn’t
care much about society.”
Rose smiled.
“At least that was the way with
me.” Rachel’s carmine lips gave a
little quiver at the corners. “I suppose
you feel like that.”
“Me? I feel just as usual.”
“But you’re so English, nothing would
disturb you.”
Rose laughed aloud. “I should shriek if
a digger touched me,” she said.
“But it was almost worth the
fright, dear.” Rachel leaned forward confidentially.
“First, he put me on his horse, and we forded
the river together; then, he took me home and was
so kind. I do think you’re such
a lucky girl.”
“Me? Why?”
Suddenly Rachel’s manner altered.
Bursting into a rippling laugh, she raised her parasol,
and skittishly poked Rose in the ribs.
“How very close some people
are,” she exclaimed. “But you might
as well own the soft impeachment, and then all the
girls could congratulate you.”
The thought went through Rose’s
mind, that if the good wishes of her acquaintances
were like this girl’s perhaps they might well
be spared. She was completing her task by ladling
the plums from the big pan into the array of jars,
and she bent over her work in order to hide her annoyance.
“And I hear he’s so
rich,” continued Rachel. “He’s
had such wonderful luck on the diggings. Papa
says he’s one of the best marks in Timber Town barring
old Mr. Crewe, of course.”
Rose gazed, open-eyed, at her visitor.
“How much do you think he is worth?” asked
Rachel, unabashed.
“I really don’t know. I have no notion
whom you mean.”
Again the rippling laugh rang through the kitchen.
“Really, this is too funny. Own up:
wasn’t Mr. Scarlett very lucky?”
“Oh! Mr. Scarlett? I believe he got
some gold he showed me some.”
“Surely, he had it weighed?”
“I suppose so I thought there was
something in the paper about it.”
“Was all that gold Mr. Scarlett’s?”
“Yes, about as much as would
fill this saucepan. He poured it out on the dining-room
table, and Captain Sartoris and my father stared at
it till their eyes almost dropped out.”
“You lucky girl! They say he gave you the
dandiest ring.”
Rose mutely held out her unadorned
fingers. When they had been closely inspected,
she said, “You see, this is all rubbish about
my being engaged. As for Mr. Scarlett, I have
reason to think that he left his heart behind him
in the Old Country.”
“Confidences, my dear.
If he has told you that much, it won’t take you
long to hook him. We giddy girls have no chance
against you deep, demure stay-at-homes. The dear
men dance and flirt with us, but they don’t
propose. How I wish I had learned to cook, or
even to bottle plums! Fancy having a man all
to yourself in a kitchen like this; making a cake,
with your sleeves tucked up to the elbows, and no one
to interrupt why, I guarantee, he’d
propose in ten minutes.” She tapped her
front teeth with her finger. “I have to
go to the dentist to-morrow. I do hate it so,
but I’ve got to have something done to one of
my front teeth. I’m thinking of getting
the man to fill it with gold, and put a small diamond
in the middle. That ought to be quite fetching,
don’t you think?”
“It certainly would be unique.”
“I think I’ll go along to Tresco’s
shop, and get the stone.”
“But don’t you think the
sight of a diamond in a tooth would pall after a while?
or perhaps you might loosen it with a bit of biscuit,
and swallow it. A diet of diamonds would pall,
too, I fancy.”
“It’s not the expense.”
Rachel pouted as she spoke. “The question
is whether it’s done among smart people.”
“You could but try your friends would
soon tell you.”
“I believe it’s quite the thing over in
Melbourne.”
“Then why not in Timber Town?”
“But perhaps it’s only amongst actresses
that it’s ‘the thing.’”
“So that the glitter of their smiles may be
intensified?”
Rachel had risen from her seat.
“I must be going,” she said. “I
looked in for a minute, and I’ve stopped half-an-hour.”
“Then won’t you stay just a little longer I’m
going to make some tea.”
“It’s very tempting.”
Rachel took off her gloves, and displayed her begemmed
fingers. “I think I must stop.”
Rose infused the tea in a brown earthenware
pot, and filled two china cups, in the saucers of
which she placed two very old ornamented silver teaspoons.
The two girls sat at opposite sides
of the white-pine table, in complete contrast; the
one dark, the other fair; the one arrayed in purple
and fine linen, the other dressed in plain starched
print and a kitchen apron; the one the spoilt pet
of an infatuated father, the other accustomed to reproof
and domestic toil.
But they met on common ground in their
taste for tea. With lips, equally pretty, they
were sipping the fragrant beverage, when a hoarse voice
resounded through the house.
“Rosebud, Rosebud, my gal!
Where’s my slippers? Danged if I can see
them anywhere.”
Into the kitchen stumped the Pilot
of Timber Town, weary from his work. Catching
sight of Rachel, he paused half-way between the door
and the table. “Well, well,” he said,
“I beg pardon, I’m sure bellowing
like an old bull walrus at my dar’ter.
But the gal knows her old Dad don’t
you, Rosebud? He don’t mean nothing at
all.”
In a moment, Rose had the old man’s
slippers in her hand, and the Pilot sat down and commenced
to take off his boots and to put on the more comfortable
footgear.
Rachel was on her feet in a moment.
“I must be going,” she said. “Which
way do I get out?”
“Rosebud, show the young lady
the door she’s in a hurry.”
The Pilot never so much as took his eyes off the boot
that he was unlacing.
Leading the way through the intricate
passages, Rose conducted Rachel to the front door,
and came back, smiling.
“Now, what does she want?”
asked the Pilot. “She’s a mighty strange
craft to be sailing in these waters. There’s
a queer foreign rake about her t’gallant mast
that’s new to me. Where’s she owned,
Rosebud?”
“That’s Miss Varnhagen.”
“What! the Jew’s dar’ter?
Well, well. That accounts for the cut of her
jib. Old Varnhagen’s dar’ter?
’Want to sell anything?”
Rose laughed. “Oh, no. She came, fishing.”
“Fishing?”
“Fishing for news. She’s
very anxious to know how much gold Mr. Scarlett has
got; in fact, she’s very anxious to know all
about Mr. Scarlett.”
The old Pilot laughed, till the shingles
of the roof were in danger of lifting. “The
wimmen, oh! the wimmen!” he said. “They’re
deep. There’s no sounding ’em.
No lead’ll bottom them. You’ll have
to protect that young man, my gal; protect him from
scheming females. Once they can lure him on a
lee shore, they’ll wreck him to pieces and loot
the cargo. So she wanted to know how he was freighted?
He’s down to Plimsoll, my gal; down to Plimsoll
with gold. A mighty fine cargo for wreckers!”
At the very time that Rachel was walking
out of the garden of roses, Scarlett was turning into
The Lucky Digger. He had come in from the “bush,”
weary and tired, and was met in the passage by a man
who packed stores to the new gold-field. In the
bar stood Isaac Zahn, who was flirting with the bar-maid.
But the regal dispenser of liquors responded to the
young clerk’s sallies with merely the brief politeness
which she was paid to show towards all the customers
of the inn. He could extort no marked encouragement,
in spite of every familiarity and witticism at his
command.
Turning his back on the Israelite,
Scarlett gave all his attention to the packer.
“The track’s clear to the field,”
said Jack, “all but four miles at the further
end. In a few days, you’ll be able to take
your horses through easily.”
“My rate is L15 per ton,” said the man.
“The Syndicate won’t quarrel
with that.” Jack’s head turned involuntarily,
as an unusual sound occurred in the bar-room.
Zahn, leaning over the counter, had
caught Gentle Annie roughly by the wrist. There
was a struggle, the crash of falling glass, and a scream.
From the fair arm of the bar-maid blood was flowing.
In a moment, Scarlett was in the bar-room.
He seized the spruce bank-clerk by the collar, and
dragged him into the passage.
Zahn kicked and swore; but, setting
his teeth, Scarlett pulled his struggling victim towards
the front-door; and there, with a suddenness which
would have done credit to a field-gun, he kicked the
Jew into the street.
The trajectory was low, but Zahn,
with legs and arms extended, shot across the asphalt
pavement, and fell sprawling at the feet of a dainty
figure dressed in muslins and ribbons of rainbow hue.
It was Rachel Varnhagen, tripping
home to her tea. With a little scream of elegant
surprise, she dropped her parasol, and gazed at the
prostrate form of her jilted lover.
Gathering himself up stiffly, Isaac
stood, whimpering, before her; his whining interspersed
with unprintable invective.
Scarlett, however, heedless of the
anathemas of the stricken clerk, stepped from the
door of The Lucky Digger, picked up the fallen parasol,
and handed it politely to Rachel.
In less than a moment she recognised him.
“Oh, thanks,” she said. “It’s
really awfully good of you.”
“What? To kick this unmitigated blackguard?”
“I’ve no doubt he deserved
it,” she said, glancing with disgust at the
clerk. “It’s charming of you to pick
up my sunshade. I hope you’re coming up
to see us Papa wants to see you awfully.
It would be lovely if you would come to-night.”
“Thank you. I’ll
try. I hope you are none the worse for the fright
you got.”
“Thanks, I’m not dead.
What a terrible man you are I wouldn’t
like to quarrel with you. Say eight o’clock.”
“Very good, eight.”
“Don’t forget. I shall expect you.”
Zahn, who heard all the conversation,
ground his teeth, and slunk away. Rachel smiled
her farewell and bowed to Jack, who lifted his hat,
and went into the inn, to see what could be done for
the bar-maid’s injured wrist.