The coach from Tarrong railway station
to Emu Flat, and then on to Donohoe’s Hotel,
ran twice a week. Pat Donohoe was mailman, contractor
and driver, and his admirers said that Pat could hit
his five horses in more places at once than any other
man on the face of the earth. His coach was horsed
by the neighbouring squatters, through whose stations
the road ran; and any horse that developed homicidal
tendencies, or exhibited a disinclination to work,
was at once handed over to the mailman to be licked
into shape. The result was that, as a rule, Pat
was driving teams composed of animals that would do
anything but go straight, but under his handling they
were generally persuaded, after a day or two, to settle
down to their work.
On the day when Hugh and Mrs. Gordon
read Mr. Grant’s letter at Kuryong, the train
deposited at Tarrong a self-reliant young lady of about
twenty, accompanied by nearly a truck-full of luggage solid
leather portmanteaux, canvas-covered bags, iron boxes,
and so on which produced a great sensation
among the rustics. She was handsome enough to
be called a beauty, and everything about her spoke
of exuberant health and vitality. Her figure
was supple, and she had the clear pink and white complexion
which belongs to cold climates.
She seemed accustomed to being waited
on, and watched without emotion the guard and the
solitary railway official porter, station-master,
telegraph-operator and lantern-man, all rolled into
one haul her hundredweights of luggage
out of the train. Then she told the perspiring
station-master, etc., to please have the luggage
sent to the hotel, and marched over to that building
in quite an assured way, carrying a small handbag.
Three commercial travellers, who had come up by the
same train, followed her off the platform, and the
most gallant of the three winked at his friends, and
then stepped up and offered to carry her bag.
The young lady gave him a pleasant smile, and handed
him the bag; together they crossed the street, while
the other commercials marched disconsolately behind.
At the door of the hotel she took the bag from her
cavalier, and there and then, in broad Australian daylight,
rewarded him with twopence a disaster which
caused him to apply to his firm for transfer to some
foreign country at once. She marched into the
bar, where Dan, the landlord’s son, was sweeping,
while Mrs. Connellan, the landlady, was wiping glasses
in the midst of a stale fragrance of overnight beer
and tobacco-smoke.
“I am going to Kuryong,”
said the young lady, “and I expected to meet
Mr. Gordon here. Is he here?”
Mrs. Connellan looked at her open-eyed.
Such an apparition was not often seen in Tarrong.
Mr. and Mrs. Connellan had only just “taken the
pub.”, and what with trying to keep Connellan
sober and refusing drinks to tramps, loafers, and
black-fellows, Mrs. Connellan was pretty well worn
out. As for making the hotel pay, that idea had
been given up long ago. It was against Mrs. Connellan’s
instincts of hospitality to charge anyone for a meal
or a bed, and when any great rush of bar trade took
place it generally turned out to be “Connellan’s
shout,” so the hotel was not exactly a goldmine.
In fact, Mrs. Connellan had decided that the less
business she did, the more money she would make; and
she rather preferred that people should not stop at
her hotel. This girl looked as if she would give
trouble; might even expect clean beds and clean sheets
when there were none within the hotel, and might object
to fleas, of which there were plenty. So the
landlady pulled herself together, and decided to speed
the parting guest as speedily as possible.
“Mr. Gordon couldn’t git
in,” she said. “The cricks (creeks)
is all up. The coach is going down to Kiley’s
Crossing to-day. You had better go with that.”
“How soon does the coach start?”
“In an hour or two. As
soon as Pat Donohoe, the mailman, has got a horse
shod. Come in and have a wash, and fix yourself
up till breakfast is ready Where’s your bag?”
“My luggage is at the railway-station.”
“I’ll send Dan over for it. Dan,
Dan, Dan!”
“’Ello,” said Dan’s
voice, from the passage, where, with the wild-eyed
servant-girl, he had been taking stock of the new arrival.
“Go over to the station and
git this lady’s bag. Is there much to carry?”
“There are only four portmanteaux
and three bags, and two boxes and a hat-box, and a
roll of rugs; and please be careful of the hat-box.”
“You’d better git the barrer, Dan.”
“Better git the bloomin’
bullock-dray,” growled Dan, quite keen to see
this aggregation of luggage; and foreseeing something
to talk about for the next three months. “She
must ha’ come up to start a store, I reckon,”
said Dan; and off he went to struggle with boxes for
the next half-hour or so.
Over Mary Grant’s experiences
at the Tarrong Hotel we will not linger. The
dirty water, peopled by wriggling animalculae, that
she poured out of the bedroom jug; the damp, cloudy,
unhealthy-smelling towel on which she dried her face;
the broken window through which she could hear herself
being discussed by loafers in the yard; all these things
are matters of course in bush townships, for the Australian,
having a soul above details, does not shine at hotel-keeping.
The breakfast was enlivened by snatches of song from
the big, good-natured bush-girl who waited at table,
and who “fancied” her voice somewhat, and
marched into the breakfast-room singing in an ear-splitting
Soprano:
Its a vilet from me
(spoken.) “What you’ll
have, there’s chops, steaks, and bacon and eggs” “Chops,
please.”
(singer continues.) Sainted mothers
(spoken.) “Tea or coffee” “Tea,
please.”
(singer finishes.) “grave.”
While she ate, Miss Grant had an uneasy
feeling that she was being stared at; all the female
staff and hangers-on of the place having gathered
round the door to peer in at her and to appraise to
the last farthing her hat, her tailor-made gown, and
her solid English walking-shoes, and to indulge in
wild speculation as to who or what she could be.
A Kickapoo Indian in full war-paint, arriving suddenly
in a little English village, could not have created
more excitement than she did at Tarrong. After
breakfast she walked out on the verandah that ran
round the little one-story weatherboard hotel, and
looked down the mile and a-half of road, with little
galvanised-iron-roofed cottages at intervals of a
quarter of a mile or so, that constituted the township.
She watched Conroy, the policeman, resplendent in breeches
and polished boots, swagger out from the court-house
yard, leading his horse to water. The town was
waking to its daily routine; Garry, the butcher, took
down the clumsy board that passed for a window-shutter,
and McDermott, the carter, passed the hotel, riding
a huge rough-coated draught-horse, bare-backed.
Everyone gave him a “Mornin’, Billy!”
as he passed, and he returned the greeting as he did
every morning of his life. A few children loitered
past to the little school-house, staring at her as
though she were some animal.
She was in a hurry to get away English
people always are but in the bright lexicon
of the bush there is no such word as hurry. Tracey,
the blacksmith, had not by any means finished shoeing
the coach-horse yet. So Mrs. Connellan made an
attempt to find out who she was, and why she was going
to Kuryong.
“You’ll have a nice trip
in the coach,” she said. “Lier (lawyer)
Blake’s going down. He’s a nice feller.”
“Yes?”
“Father Kelly, too. He’s good company.”
“Yes?”
“Are you staying long at Kuryong?”
“Some time, I expect.”
“Are you going to teach the children?”
“No, I’m going to live
there. My father owns Kuryong. My father
is Mr. Grant.”
Mrs. Connellan was simply staggered
at this colossal treasure-trove, this majestic piece
of gossip that had fallen on her like rain from Heaven.
Mr. Grant’s daughter! Going out to Kuryong!
What a piece of news! Hardly knowing what she
did, she shuffled out of the room, and interrupted
the singing waitress who was wiping plates, and had
just got back to “It’s a vilet”
when Mrs. Connellan burst in on her.
“Maggie! Maggie! Do
you know who that is? Grant’s daughter!
The one that used to be in England. She must
be going to Kuryong to live, with all that luggage.
What’ll the Gordons say? The old lady won’t
like it, will she? This’ll be a bit of
news, won’t it?” And she went off to tell
the cook, while Maggie darted to the door to meet
Dan, and tell him.
Dan told the station-master when he
went back for the next load, and when he had finished
carting the luggage he got on a horse and went round
telling everybody in the little town. The station-master
told the ganger of the four navvies who went by on
their trolly down the line to work. At the end
of their four-mile length they told the ration-carrier
of Eubindal station, who happened to call in at their
camp for a drink of tea. He hurried off to the
head-station with the news, and on his way told three
teamsters, an inspector of selections, and a black
boy belonging to Mylong station, whom he happened
to meet on the road. Each of them told everybody
that they met, pulling up and standing in their stirrups
to discuss the matter in all its bearings, in the leisurely
style of the bush; and wondering what she had come
out for, whether the Gordons would get the sack from
Kuryong, whether she would marry Hugh Gordon, whether
she was engaged already, whether she was good-looking,
how much money she had, and how much old Grant would
leave her. In fact, before twenty-four hours
were over, all the district knew of her arrival; which
possibly explains how news travels in Africa among
the Kaffirs, who are supposed to have a signalling
system that no one has yet fathomed; but the way it
gets round in Australia is just as wonderful as among
the Kaffirs, in fact, for speed and thoroughness of
information we should be inclined to think that our
coloured brethren run a bad second.
At last, however, Tracey had finished
shoeing the coach-horse, and Miss Grant, with part
of her luggage, took a seat on the coach behind five
of Donohoe’s worst horses, next to a well-dressed,
powerfully-built man of about five-and-twenty.
He looked and talked like a gentleman, and she heard
the coachman address him as “Mr. Blake.”
She and he shared the box-seat with the driver, and
just at the last moment the local priest hurried up
and climbed on the coach. In some unaccountable
way he had missed hearing who the young lady was,
and for a time he could only look at her back-hair
and wonder.
It was not long before, in the free
and easy Australian style, the passengers began to
talk to each other as the coach bumped along its monotonous
road up one hill, through an avenue of dusty,
tired-looking gum-trees, down the other side through
a similar avenue, up another hill precisely the same
as the last, and so on.
Blake was the first to make advances.
“Not much to be seen on this sort of journey,
Miss Grant,” he said.
The young lady looked at him with
serious eyes. “No,” she said, “we’ve
only seen two houses since we left the town. All
the rest of the country seems to be a wilderness.”
Here the priest broke in. He
was a broth of a boy from Maynooth, just the man to
handle the Doyle and Donohoe congregation.
“It’s the big stations
is the roon of the country,” he said. “How
is the country to go ahead at all wid all the good
land locked up? There’s Kuryong on ahead
here would support two hundthred fam’lies, and
what does it employ now? Half a dozen shepherds,
widout a rag to their back.”
“I am going to Kuryong,”
said the girl; and the priest was silent.
By four in the afternoon they reached
Kiley’s River, running yellow and froth-covered
with melting snow. The coachman pulled his horses
up on the bank, and took a good, long look at the
bearings. As they waited, the Kuryong vehicle
came down on the other side of the river.
“There’s Mr. Gordon,”
said the coachman. “I don’t think
he’ll try it. I reckon it’s a trifle
deep for me. Do you want to get across particular,
Mr. Blake?”
“Yes, very particularly, Pat.
I’ve told Martin Donohoe to meet me down here
with some witnesses in a cattle-stealing case.”
“What about you, Father Kelly?”
“I’m go’n on to
Tim Murphy’s dyin’ bed. Put ’em
into the wather, they’ll take it aisy.”
The driver turned to the third passenger.
“It’s a bit dangerous-like, Miss.
If you like to get out, it’s up to you to say
so. The coach might wash over. There’s
a settler’s place up the river a mile. You
can go and stay there till the river goes down, and
Mr. Gordon ’ll come and meet you.”
“Thanks, I’ll go on,” said the lady.
Preparations for crossing the river
were soon made. Anything that would spoil by
getting wet, or that would float out of the coach,
was lifted up and packed on the roof. The passengers
stood up on the seats. Then Pat Donohoe put the
whip on his leaders, and calling to his two wheelers,
old-seasoned veterans, he put them at it.
Snorting and trembling, the leaders
picked their way into the yellow water, the coach
bumping over the rubble of the crossing-place.
Hugh Gordon, watching from the far-side of the river,
saw the coach dip and rock and plunge over the boulders.
On it came till the water was actually lapping into
the body of the coach, roaring and swirling round
the horses’ legs, up to their flanks and bellies,
while the driver called out to them and kept them
straight with voice and reins. Every spring he
had a similar crossing, and he knew almost to an inch
at what height it was safe to go into the river.
But this time, as ill-luck would have it, the off-side
leader was a young, vicious, thorough-bred colt, who
had been handed over to him to be cured of a propensity
for striking people with his fore-feet. As the
horses worked their way into the river, the colt,
with the courage of his breeding, pulled manfully,
and breasted the current fearlessly. But suddenly
a floating log drifted down, and struck him on the
front legs. In an instant he reared up, and threw
himself heavily sideways against his mate, bringing
him to his knees; then the two of them, floundering
and scrambling, were borne away with the current,
dragging the coach after them. In a few yards
they were off the causeway; the coach, striking deep
water, settled like a boat, and turned over on its
side, with the leaders swimming for their lives.
As for the wheelers, they were pulled down with the
vehicle, and were almost drowning in their harness.
Cool as a cucumber, Blake had turned
to the girl. “Can you swim?” he said.
And she answered him as cooly, “Yes, a little.”
“Well, put your hands on my
shoulders, and leave everything to me.”
Just then the coach settled over with one final surge,
and they were in the water.
Away they went with the roaring current,
the girl clinging fast to his shoulders, while he
gave his whole attention to dodging the stumps and
snags that were showing their formidable teeth above
water. For a while she was able to hold on.
Then, with a sickening sense of helplessness, she
felt herself torn from him, and whirled away like a
leaf. The rank smell of the muddy water was in
her nostrils, the fear of death in her heart.
She struggled to keep afloat. Suddenly a blood-streaked
face appeared, and Blake, bleeding from a cut on the
forehead, caught her with a strong grip and drew her
to him. A few more seconds of whirling chaos,
and she felt land under her feet, and Blake half-carrying
her to the bank. They had been swept on to one
of the many sand-banks which ran out into the stream,
and were safe.
Half-hysterical, she sat down on a
huge log, and waited while Blake ran up-stream to
give help to the coachman. While the two had been
battling in the water, the priest had stayed with
the coachman to cut the horses free, till at last
all four got clear of the wreck, and swam ashore.
Then the men followed them, drifting down the current
and fighting their way to shore at about the same
place.
Hugh Gordon drove the waggonette down
to pick up the party when they landed. The scene
on the bank would have made a good picture. The
horses, dripping with water and shaking with cold,
were snorting and staring, while the coachman was
trying to fix up some gear out of the wreck, so that
he could ride one of them. The priest, his broad
Irish face ornamented by a black clay pipe, was tramping
up and down in his wet clothes. Blake was helping
Miss Grant to wring the water out of her clothes,
and she was somewhat incoherently trying to thank him.
As Hugh drove up, Blake looked up and caught his eye,
and there flashed between the two men an unmistakable
look of hostility. Then Hugh jumped from the
waggonette, and walked up to Miss Grant, holding out
his hand.
“I’m Hugh Gordon,”
he said. “We only got your father’s
letter to-day, or I would have been down to meet you.
I hope you are not hurt. Jump into the trap,
and I’ll run down to the Donohoes’, and
get you some dry things.” Then, turning
to Blake, he said somewhat stiffly, “Will you
get in, Mr. Blake?”
“Thanks,” said Blake,
equally stiffly, “I can ride one of the mail
horses. It’s no distance. I wont trouble
you.”
But the girl turned and put her hand
into Blake’s, and spoke with the air of a queen.
“I am very much obliged to you more
than I can tell you. You have saved my life.
If ever I can do anything to repay you I will.”
“Oh, nonsense,” said Blake,
“that’s nothing. It was only a matter
of dodging the stumps. You’d better get
on now to Donohoe’s Hotel, and get Mrs. Donohoe
to find some dry things for you.”
The mere fact of his refusing a lift
showed that there was some hostility between himself
and Hugh Gordon; but the priest, who had climbed into
the Kuryong vehicle as a matter of course, settled
the matter off-hand.
“Get in the trap,” he
said. “Get in the trap, man. What’s
the use for two of ye to ride the mail horses, and
get your death o’ cold? Get in the trap!”
“Of course I’ll give you
a lift,” said Hugh. “Jump in, and
let us get away before you all get colds. What
will you do about the coach and the luggage, Pat?”
“I’ll borry them two old
draught horses from Martin Donohoe, and they’ll
haul it out. Bedad, some o’ that luggage
’ll be washed down to the Murrumbidgee before
night; but the most of it is strapped on. Push
along, Mr. Gordon, and tell Martin I’m coming.”
With some reluctance Blake got into
the waggonette; before long they were at Donohoe’s
Hotel, and Mary Grant was soon rigged out in an outfit
from Mrs. Donohoe’s best clothes a
pale-green linsey bodice and purple skirt everything,
including Mrs. Donohoe’s boots, being about four
sizes too big. But she looked by no means an unattractive
little figure, with her brown eyes and healthy colour
showing above the shapeless garments.
She came into the little sitting-room
laughing at the figure she cut, sat down, and drank
scalding tea, and ate Mrs. Donohoe’s cakes, while
talking with Father Kelly and Blake over the great
adventure.
When she was ready to start she got
into the waggonette alongside Hugh, and waved good-bye
to the priest and Blake and Mrs. Donohoe, as though
they were old friends. She had had her first touch
of colonial experience.