As soon as Hugh got his team swinging
along at a steady ten miles an hour on the mountain
road, Mary Grant opened the conversation.
“Mr. Gordon,” she said, “who is
Mr. Blake?”
“He’s the lawyer from Tarrong.”
“Yes, I know. Mrs. Connellan
called him the ‘lier.’ But I thought
you didn’t seem to like him. Isn’t
he nice?”
“I suppose so. His father
was a gentleman the police magistrate up
here.”
“Then, why don’t you like
him? Is there anything wrong about him?”
Hugh straightened his leaders and
steadied the vehicle over a little gully.
“There’s nothing wrong
about him,” he said, “only his
mother was one of the Donohoes not a lady,
you know and he always goes with those
people; and, of course, that means he doesn’t
go much with us.”
“Why not?”
“Well, you see, they’re
selectors, and they look on the station people as well,
rather against them, you know sort of enemies and
he has never come to the station. But there is
no reason why he shouldn’t.”
“He saved my life,” said Mary Grant.
“Certainly he did,” said
Hugh. “I’ll say that for Blake, he
fears nothing. One of the pluckiest men alive.
And how did you feel? Were you much frightened?”
“Yes, horribly. I have
often wondered whether I should be brave, you know,
and now I don’t think I am. Not the least
bit. But Mr. Blake seemed so strong directly
he caught hold of me I felt quite safe, somehow.
If you don’t mind, I would like to ask him out
to the station.”
“Certainly, Miss Grant.
My mother will only be too glad. She was sorry
that we did not get down to meet you. The letter
was delayed.”
Mary Grant laughed as she looked down
at Mrs. Donohoe’s clothes. “What a
sight I am!” she said.
“But, after all, it’s
Australia, isn’t it? And I have had such
adventures already! You know you will have to
show me all about the station and the sheep and cattle.
Will you do that?”
Hugh thought there was nothing in
the world he would like better, but contented himself
with a formal offer to teach her the noble art of
squatting.
“You must begin at once and
tell me things. What estate are we on now?”
she asked.
“This is your father’s
station. All you can see around belongs to him;
but after the next gate we come on some land held by
selectors.”
“Who are they?”
“Well,” said Hugh, a little
awkwardly, “they are relations of Mr. Blake’s.
You’ll see what an Australian farmer’s
homestead is like.”
They drove through a rickety wire-and-sapling
gate and across about a mile of bush, and suddenly
came on a little slab house nestling under the side
of a hill. At the back were the stockyards and
the killing-pen, where a contrivance for raising dead
cattle called a gallows waved
its arms to the sky. In front of the house there
was rather a nice little garden. At the back
were a lot of dilapidated sheds, leaning in all directions.
A mob of sheep was penned in a yard outside one of
the sheds; and in the garden an old woman, white-haired
and wrinkled, with a very short dress showing a lot
of dirty stocking and slipshod elastic-sided boot,
was bending over a spade, digging potatoes.
The old woman straightened herself as they drove up.
“Good daah to you, Misther Gordon,” she
said. “Good daah to you, Miss.”
“Good day, Mrs. Doyle,”
said Hugh. “Hard work that, this weather.
How’s all the family?”
“Mag Marg’rut,
I mane she’s inside. That’s
her playin’ the pianny. She just got it
up from Sydney.”
“And where’s Peter?”
“Peter’s shearin’
the sheep. He’s in that shed there beyant.
He’s the only shearer we have, so we tell him
he’s the ringer of the shed. He works terr’ble
hard, does Peter. He’s not ”
and the old woman dropped her voice “he’s
not all there in the head, is Peter, you know.”
“And where’s Mick?”
“Mick, bad scran to him!
He’s bought a jumpin’ haarse (horse), and
he’s gone to hell leppin! Down at one of
the shows he is, some place. He has too much
sense to work, has Mick. Won’t you come
in and have a cup of tay?”
“No, we must get on, thank you,”
and Hugh and Mary drove off, watched by the old lady
and the lanky-legged, shock-headed youth Peter
himself who came to the door of the big
shed to stare at them.
As they drove off Hugh was silent,
wondering what effect the sight of the selectors might
have had on Miss Grant.
She seemed to read his thoughts, and
after a little while she spoke.
“So those are Mr. Blake’s
poor relations, are they? Well, that is not his
fault. My father was poor once, just as poor as
those people are. And Mr. Blake saved my life.”
Hugh felt that she was half-consciously
putting him in the wrong for having more or less disapproved
of Mr. Blake; so he kept silence.
As the team bore them along at a flying
trot, they climbed higher and higher up the range;
at last, as they rounded a shoulder of the hillside,
the whole valley of Kiley’s River lay beneath
them, stretching away to the far blue foothills.
Beyond again was a great mountain, its top streaked
with snow. At their feet was a gorgeous scheme
of colour, greens and greys of the grass, bright tints
of willow and poplar, and the speckled forms of the
cattle, so far down that they looked like pigmy stock
feeding in fairy paddocks. Across the valley
there came now and again, softened by distance, the
song of the river; and up in the river-bend, on a
spur of the hills, were white walls rising from clustered
greenery.
“How beautiful!” said
the girl, half standing up in the waggonette, “and
is that
“That’s Kuryong, Miss Grant. Your
home station.”