The spring the glorious
hill-country spring was down on Kuryong.
All the flats along Kiley’s River were knee-deep
in green grass. The wattle-trees were out in
golden bloom, and the snow-water from the mountains
set the river running white with foam, fighting its
way over bars of granite into big pools where the
platypus dived, and the wild ducks busy
with the cares of nesting just settled occasionally
to snatch a hasty meal and then hurried off, with
a whistle of strong wings, back to their little ones.
The breeze brought down from the hills a scent of
grass and bush flowers. There was life and movement
everywhere. The little foals raced and played
all day in the sunshine round their big sleepy mothers;
the cattle bellowed to each other from hill to hill;
even those miserable brutes, the sheep, frisked in
an ungainly way when anything startled them. At
all the little mountain-farms and holdings young Doyles
and Donohoes were catching their horses, lean after
the winter’s starvation, and loading the pack-saddles
for their five-months’ trip out to the borders
of Queensland, from shearing-shed to shearing-shed,
A couple of months before they started, they would
write to the squatters for whom they had worked on
previous shearings such quaint, ill-spelled
letters asking that a pen might be kept
for them. Great shearers they were, too, for
the mountain air bred hardy men, and while they were
at it they worked feverishly, bending themselves nearly
double over the sheep, and making the shears fly till
the sweat ran down their foreheads and dripped on
the ground; and they peeled the yellow wool off sheep
after sheep as an expert cook peels an apple.
In the settled districts such as Kuryong, where the
flocks were small, they were made to shear carefully;
but away out on the Queensland side, on a station
with two hundred thousand sheep to get through, they
rushed the wool off savagely. He was a poor specimen
of the clan who couldn’t shear his hundred and
twenty sheep between bell and bell; and the price
was a pound a hundred, with plenty of stations wanting
shearers, so they made good cheques in those days.
One glorious spring morning, Hugh
Gordon was sitting in his office every
squatter and station-manager has an office waiting
with considerable impatience the coming of the weekly
mail. The office looked like a blend of stationer’s
shop, tobacconist’s store, and saddlery warehouse.
A row of pigeon-holes along the walls was filled with
letters and papers; the rafters were hung with saddles
and harness; a tobacco-cutter and a jar of tobacco
stood on the table, side by side with some formidable-looking
knives, used for cutting the sheep’s feet when
they became diseased; whips and guns stood in every
corner; nails and saws filled up a lot of boxes on
the table, and a few samples of wool hung from a rope
that was stretched across the room. The mantelpiece
was occupied by bottles of horse-medicine and boxes
of cartridges; an elderly white cockatoo, chained by
the leg to a galvanised iron perch, sunned himself
by the door, and at intervals gave an exhibition of
his latest accomplishment, in which he imitated the
yowl of a trodden-on cat much better than the cat could
have done it himself.
The air was heavy with scent.
All round the great quadrangle of the house acacia
trees were in bloom, and the bees were working busily
among the mignonette and roses in front of the office
door.
Hugh Gordon was a lithe, wiry young
Australian with intensely sunburnt face and hands,
and a drooping black moustache; a man with a healthy,
breezy outdoor appearance, but the face of an artist,
a dreamer, and a thinker, rather than that of a practical
man. His brother Charlie and he, though very
much alike in face, were quite different types of
manhood. Charlie, from his earliest school-days,
had never read a book except under compulsion, had
never stayed indoors when he could possibly get out,
had never obeyed an unwelcome order when by force or
fraud he could avoid doing so, and had never written
a letter in his life when a telegram would do.
He took the world as it came, having no particular
amount of imagination, and never worried himself.
Hugh, on the other hand, was inclined to meet trouble
half-way, and to make troubles where none existed,
which is the worst misfortune that a man can be afflicted
with.
Hugh walked to the door and gazed
out over the garden and homestead, down the long stretch
of green paddocks where fat cattle were standing
under the trees, too well fed to bother themselves
with looking for grass. He looked beyond all
this to the long drab-coloured stretch of road that
led to Kiley’s, watching for the mailboy’s
arrival. The mail was late, for the melting snow
had flooded the mountain creeks, and Hugh knew it
was quite likely that little Patsy Donohoe, the mail-boy,
had been blocked at Donohoe’s Hotel for two
days, unable to cross Kiley’s River. This
had happened often, and on various occasions when Patsy
had crossed, he, pony and all, had been swept down
quite a quarter of a mile in the ice-cold water before
they could reach land. But that was an ordinary
matter in the spring, and it was a point of honour
with Patsy and all his breed not to let the elements
beat them in carrying out the mail contract, which
they tendered for every year, and in which no outsider
would have dared to compete.
At last Hugh’s vigil was rewarded
by the appearance of a small and wild-looking boy,
mounted on a large and wild-looking horse. The
boy was about twelve years of age, and had just ridden
a half-broken horse a forty-mile journey for
of such is the youth of Australia. Patsy was
wet and dirty, and the big leather mail-bag that he
handed over had evidently been under water.
“We had to swim, Mr. Hugh,”
the boy said triumphantly, “and this great,
clumsy cow” (the child referred to his horse),
“he reared over on me in the water, twyst, but
I stuck to him. My oath!”
Hugh laughed. “I expect
Kiley’s River will get you yet, Patsy,”
he said. “Go in now to the kitchen and
get dry by the fire. I’ll lend you a horse
to get back on to-morrow. You can camp here till
then, there’s no hurry back.”
The boy let his horse go loose, dismissing
it with a parting whack on the rump with the bridle,
and swaggered inside, carrying his saddle, to show
his wet clothes and recount his deeds to the admiring
cook. Patsy was not one to hide his light under
a bushel.
Hugh carried the bag into the office,
and shook out the letters and papers on the table.
Everything was permeated with a smell of wet leather,
and some of the newspapers were rather pulpy.
After sending out everybody else’s mail he turned
to examine his own. Out of the mass of letters,
agents’ circulars, notices of sheep for sale,
catalogues of city firms, and circulars from pastoral
societies, he picked a letter addressed to himself
in the scrawling fist of William Grant. He opened
it, expecting to find in it the usual Commination Service
on things in general, but as he read on, a vivid surprise
spread over his face. Leaving the other letters
and papers unopened, he walked to the door and looked
out into the courtyard, where Stuffer, the youngest
of his nephews, who was too small to be allowed to
join in the field sports of the others, was playing
at being a railway train. He had travelled in
a train once, and now passed Hugh’s door under
easy steam, working his arms and legs like piston-rods,
and giving piercing imitations of a steam-whistle
at intervals.
“Stuffer,” said Hugh,
“do you know where your grandmother is?”
“No” said the Stuffer
laconically. “I don’t Choo, choo,
choo, Whee-aw!”
“Well, look here,” said
Hugh, “you just railway-train yourself round
the house till you find her, and let me know where
she is. I want to see her. Off you go now.”
The Stuffer steamed himself out with
the action of an engine drawing a long train of cars,
and disappeared round the corner of the house.
Before long he was back, drew himself
up alongside an imaginary platform, intimated that
his grandmother was in the verandah, and then proceeded
to let the steam hiss out of his safety-valve.
Hugh walked across the quadrangle,
under the acacia tree, heavy with blossoms, in which
a myriad bees were droning at their work, and through
the house on to the front verandah, which looked over
the wide sweep of river-flat. Here he found his
mother and Miss Harriott, the governess, peeling apples
for dumplings great rosy-checked, solid-fleshed
apples, that the hill-country turns out in perfection.
The old lady was slight in figure, with a refined
face, and a carriage erect in spite of her years.
Miss Harriott was of a languid Spanish type, with black
eyes and strongly-marked eyebrows. She had a
petite, but well-rounded figure, with curiously small
hands and feet. Though only about twenty-four
years of age she had the sedate and unemotional look
that one sees in doctors and nurses–people
who have looked on death and birth, and sorrow and
affliction. For Ellen Harriott had done her three
years’ course as a nurse; she had a natural
faculty for the business, and was in great request
among the wild folk of the mountains, who looked upon
her (and perhaps rightly) as quite equal to the Tarrong
doctor in any emergency. She knew them all, for
she had lived nearly all her life at Kuryong.
When the family moved there from the back country a
tutor was needed for the boys, and an old broken-down
gentleman accepted the billet at low pay, on condition
that he was allowed to bring his little daughter with
him. When he died, the daughter still stayed on,
and was made governess to the new generation of young
folk. She was a queer, self-contained girl, saying
little; and as Hugh walked in, she looked up at him,
and wondered what new trouble was bringing him to
his mother with the open letter in his hand.
“Mother,” said Hugh, “I
have had a most extraordinary letter.”
“From Mr. Grant?” said the old lady, “What
does he say?”
She saw by her son’s face that
there was something more than usual in the wind, but
one who had lived her life, from fortune to poverty,
through strife and trial, was prepared to take things
much more easily than Hugh.
“Is it anything very serious?”
“His daughter’s coming out to live here.”
“What?”
“Yes, here’s the letter.
It only came this morning. Patsy was late, the
river is up. I’ll read it to you.”
Seating himself at the table, Hugh spread out the letter, and read it:
Dear Gordon,
The last lot of wethers, though they
topped the market, only realised 10/-. I think
you would show better judgment in keeping these sheep
back a little. Don’t rely upon Satton’s
advice. He is generally wrong, and is always
most wrong when he is most sure he is right.
My daughter has arrived from England,
and will at once go up to the station. I have
written to your mother on the subject. My daughter
will represent me in everything, so I wish her to learn
a little about stations. Send to meet her at
the train on Wednesday next.
Yours truly,
W. G. Grant.
“Wednesday next!” said
Hugh, “that letter is three days delayed.
Patsy couldn’t cross the river. She’ll
be there before we can possibly get down. If
no one meets her I wonder if she’ll have pluck
enough to get into the coach and come on to Donohoe’s.”
“I don’t envy her the
trip, if she does,” said Miss Harriott.
“The coach-drive over those roads will seem
awful to an English girl.”
“I’ll have to go down
at once, anyhow,” said Hugh, “and meet
her on the road somewhere. If she is at the railway,
I can get there in two days. Have you a letter,
Mother?”
“Yes,” said the old lady,
“but I won’t show it to you now. You
shall see it some other time.”
“Well, I’ll set about
making a start,” said Hugh. “What
trap had I better take?”
“You’d better take the
big waggonette,” said the old lady, in her soft
voice. “A young girl just out from England
is sure to have a great deal of luggage, you know.
I wonder if she is anything like Mr. Grant. I
hope her temper is a little bit better.”
“You’d better come down
with me, Miss Harriott, to meet her,” said Hugh.
“I don’t suppose your luggage would be
a load there and back, anyhow.”
“What about crossing the river?” said
the old lady.
“Oh, we’ll get across somehow,”
said Hugh, “will you come?”
“I think I’ll wait,”
said the young lady meditatively, “She’ll
be tired from travelling and looking after her luggage,
and she had better meet the family one at a time.
You go and meet her, and your mother and I will get
her room ready. Does the letter say any more about
her?”
“No, that’s all,”
said Hugh. “Well, I’ll send the boy
to run in the horses. I’ll take four horses
in the big waggonette; I expect she’ll be waiting
at Donohoe’s that is, if she left
the railway-station in the coach if she
is at Donohoe’s I’ll be back before dark.”
With this he went back to the office,
and his mother and Miss Harriott went their separate
ways to prepare for the comfort of the heiress.
To Ellen Harriott the arrival was a new excitement,
a change in the monotony of bush life; but to the
old lady and Hugh it meant a great deal more.
It meant that they would be no longer master and mistress
of the big station on which they had lived so long,
and which was now so much under their control that
it seemed almost like their own.
Everything depended on what the girl
was like. They had never even seen a photograph
of her, and awaited her coming in a state of nervous
expectancy. All over the district they had been
practically considered owners of the big station;
Hugh had taken on and dismissed employees at his will,
had controlled the buying and selling of thousands
of sheep and cattle, and now this strange girl was
to come in with absolute power over them. They
would be servants and dependants on the station, which
had once belonged to them.
After Hugh had gone, the old lady sat back in her armchair
and read over again her letter from Mr. Grant; and, lest it should be thought
that that gentleman had only one side to his character, it is as well for the
reader to know what was in the letter. It ran as follows:
Dear Mrs. Gordon,
I am writing to you about a most important
matter. Colonel Selwyn is dead, and my daughter
has come out from England. I don’t know
anyone to take charge of her except yourself.
I am an old man now, and set in my ways, and this
girl is really all I have to live for. Looking
back on my life, I see where I have been a fool; and
perhaps the good fortune that has followed me has
been more luck than anything else. Your husband
was a smarter man than I am, and he came to grief,
though I will say that I always warned him against
that Western place.
Do you remember the old days when
we had the two little homesteads, and I used to ride
down from the out-station of a Saturday and spend Sunday
with you and Andrew, and talk over the fortunes we
were going to make? If I had met a woman like
you in those days I might have been a better man.
As it was, I made a fool of myself. But that’s
all past praying for.
Now about my girl. If you will
take her, and make her as good a woman as yourself,
or as near it as you can, you will earn my undying
thanks. As to money matters, when I die she will
of course have a great deal of money, so that it is
well she should begin now to learn how to use it;
I have, therefore, given her full power to draw all
money that may be required. I may tell you that
I intend to leave your boys enough to start them in
life, and they will have a first-class chance to get
on. I am sending Charlie out to the West, to
take over a block which those fools, Sutton and Co.,
got me to advance money on, and on which the man cannot
pay his interest. He will be away for some time.
Meanwhile, dear Mrs. Gordon, for the
sake of old times, do what you can for the girl.
I expect she has been brought up with English ideas.
I can’t get her to say much to me, which I daresay
is my own fault. After she has been with you
for a bit, I will come up and stay for a time at the
station.
Yours very truly,
W. G.
Grant.
Reading this letter called back the
whole panorama of the past the old days
when she and her husband were struggling in the rough,
hard, pioneering life, and the blacks were thick round
the station; the birth of her children, and the ups
and downs of her husband’s fortunes; then the
burial of her husband out on the sandhills, and her
flight to this haven of rest at Kuryong. Though
she had lost interest in things for herself, she felt
keenly for her children, and was sick at heart when
she thought what this girl, who was to wield such power
over them, might turn out to be. But she hoped
that Grant’s daughter, whatever else she might
be, would at any rate be a genuine, straight-forward
girl; and filled with this hope, she sat down to answer
him:
“Dear Mr. Grant,” she
wrote, “I have received your letter. Hugh
has gone down to meet your daughter, but the mails
were delayed owing to the river being up, and he may
not get to the railway station as soon as she arrives.
I will do what I can for her, and I thank you for what
you say you will do for my boys. I will let you
know the moment she arrives. I wish you would
come up and live on the station for a time. It
would be better for you than life in the club, without
a friend to care for you. If ever you feel inclined
to stay here for a time, I hope you will at once let
me know. With thanks and best wishes,
Yours truly,
Annette Gordon.”