The question whether Mick Donohoe
should be prosecuted was not likely to be prejudiced
by his claim of kinship. Billy the Bully would
as soon prosecute his own brother-in-law as anybody
else sooner, in fact. So Hugh, having
reached home very crest-fallen and angry, wrote a full
account of the affair in his report of the station
work, and asked whether he should lay an information.
Grant’s reply was brief and
to the point; he seldom wrote letters, always telegraphing
when possible. On this occasion the telegram said,
“Prosecute at once; offer reward informers;”
which, leaking out (as telegrams frequently did at
the local office) put Red Mick considerably on the
qui vive. The old man actually paid
him the compliment of writing a letter about him later
on, saying that it would be a good thing to prosecute it
would give Red Mick a good scare, even if it didn’t
get him into gaol. Circumstances, no doubt, justified
a prosecution, and it was hard to see bow Mick could
make a counter-move.
But that gentleman was not without resource; an anonymous
letter arrived for Hugh by the mailboy, a dirty, scrawled epistle, unsigned and
undated, running as follows:
“Mr. Gordon i herd you was gone
to summons Michael Donohoe for sheep stealing.
You better bewar there is some seen you and that girl
in the bush you will get a grate shown up and her
two.”
This precious epistle was signed “A
Friend,” and on first reading it Hugh laughed
heartily; but the more he thought it over the less
he liked it. It was all very well to put Red
Mick in the dock, but it was evident that part of
the defence would be, “How came you to be under
the boughs of a fallen tree with an attractive young
woman when Red Mick’s dogs came up with the
sheep?” At the very least they would look ridiculous;
and the unknown correspondent who promised them a “grate
shown up” would probably take care that the
story was as highly-coloured as possible. He
shuddered to think what the Donohoes would say, and
heartily wished he had let Red Mick alone.
He fretted for some hours, and then
decided to talk it over with the girl herself.
He did not care to let Red Mick think that the anonymous
letter had stopped the prosecution; at the same time,
he was determined to do nothing that would cause Miss
Grant the least annoyance. He opened the discussion
that evening while strolling about the garden.
“About this business of Red
Mick’s,” he said. “I am rather
worried.”
“Why?”
“Well, the trouble is this:
I’ve got an anonymous letter from Red Mick or
some of his people, saying that they are going to give
you and me a great showing-up about being hidden in
the tree together.”
“What can they say?” she asked, uncomprehendingly.
“Well, of course, they will
talk about our being in the tree together and all
that kind of thing, you know. They will make things
as unpleasant for us as they can. They may want
you to give evidence, and all that sort of thing and
I thought, perhaps you mightn’t like it.”
She froze into dignity at once.
“I certainly shouldn’t like it,”
she said. “About being in the tree, that
does not matter, of course, but I hope you will keep
my name out of the affair altogether. I must ask
you to do that for me.”
Then he rushed on his fate. Many
a time he had pictured how he would wait till they
were alone together in the garden on some glorious
moonlit night, and he would take her hand, and tell
her how much he loved her; and now, seeing the girl
standing before him flushed with insulted dignity,
he suddenly found himself gasping out, in what seemed
somebody’s else’s voice, “Couldn’t
we look here, Miss Grant, won’t you
be engaged to me? Then it won’t matter what
they say.”
He tried to take her hand, but she
drew back, white to the lips.
“No, no; let me go; let me go,”
she said. Then the colour came back to her face,
and she drew herself up, and spoke slowly and cuttingly:
“I thank you very much for what
you have just said. But I really think that I
shall be able to put up with anything these people
may choose to say about me. It won’t hurt
me, and I shouldn’t like you to sacrifice yourself
to save me from the talk of such people. Let us
go back to the house, please.”
He stared helplessly at her, and could
not find his voice for a moment. At last he blurted
out:
“It’s not because of that.
I don’t care about them any more than you do.
Don’t think it’s that, Miss Grant.
Why
“Let us go back to the house,
please,” she said quietly, “and don’t
say anything more about it. And whatever happens,
I must ask you to keep my name out of the affair altogether.
You’ll do that, won’t you? Let us
go back now, if you don’t mind.”
They walked back in silence.
He looked at her once or twice, but her face was stern
and rigid, and she would not give him even one glance.
At the door she gave him her hand, with a matter-of-fact
“I will say good-night now,” and disappeared
into her room, where she threw herself on the bed
and sobbed bitterly; for the truth was that she was
very, very fond of him. She, too, had built her
little castles in the air as to what she would say
and do when he put the momentous question. Girls
do foresee these things, somehow; although they do
pretend to be astonished when the time arrives.
She had pictured him saying all sorts
of endearing things, and making all sorts of loving
protestations; and now it had come to this she
had been asked as if it were merely a matter of avoiding
scandal. It was too great a shock. She lay
silently crying, while Hugh, his castles in the air
having crumbled around him, was trying in a dazed way
to frame a letter to Mr. Grant.
His thoughts were anything but pleasant.
What a fool he had been, talking to her like that!
Making it look as if he had only proposed to her because
he ought to protect her good name! Why hadn’t
he spoken to her before in the tree, on
the ride home, any other time? Why hadn’t
he spoken differently? To him the refusal seemed
the end of all things. He thought of asking Mr.
Grant to give him the management of the most out-back
place he had, so that he could go away and bury himself.
He even thought of resigning his position altogether
and going to the goldfields. Red Mick and his
delinquencies seemed but small matters now; and, after
what had passed, he must, of course, see that Miss
Grant was not dragged into the business. So he
sat down and began to write.
The letter took a good deal of thinking
over. It had got about the station that Red Mick
had at last been caught in flagrante delicto; the
house-cook had told the cook at the men’s hut,
and he had told the mailman, who stopped on the road
to tell the teamsters ploughing along with their huge
waggons to Kiley’s Crossing; they told the publican
at Kiley’s, and he told everybody he saw.
The children made a sort of play out of it, the eldest
boy personating Red Mick, while two of the younger
ones hid in a fallen tree, and were routed out by Thomas
Carlyle. The station-hands were all excitement;
the prospect of a big law-case was a real godsend
to them. To drop the matter would be equivalent
to a confession of defeat, but, after what had passed,
Hugh had no option. So he told Mr. Grant that,
on thinking it over, he did not consider it advisable
to go on with the case against Red Mick; Miss Grant
would have to go into the box to give evidence, which
would be very unpleasant for her.
Poor Hugh! He was too honourable
to give any false reason, and too shy to tell the
whole truth. If he had said that there was no
hope of a conviction, it would have been all right.
But consideration for the feelings of anyone, even
his own daughter, was to Billy the Bully quite incomprehensible,
and he wrote back, on a letter-card, “Go on with
the prosecution.”
This put Hugh in a frightful dilemma.
He had no trouble whatever in making up his mind to
disobey the order, as he was bound to stand by his
promise to Miss Grant. But what answer should
he send to her father? He was in a reckless mood,
but he knew well enough that Grant would order him
off the place, neck and crop, if he dared to disobey;
and he owed it to his mother and sister to avoid such
a thing. The more he looked at the position of
affairs, the less he liked it. He wrote a dozen
letters, and tore them up again.
He thought of making Red Mick a sporting
offer of, say, a couple of hundred pounds, to disappear
altogether Mick could have arranged that
easily enough. Then he thought of going down to
see Mr. Grant to explain; but the more he thought
of that the less he liked it. He worried and
worried over it, and when he went to bed lay awake
thinking about it. He fell into dozes, and dreamt
that Mr. Grant had turned him off the place, and had
made Red Mick manager, and that Miss Grant was going
to marry Red Mick; then he woke with a start, and heard
through the darkness the rapid hoof-beats of a horse
ridden at speed up the road from Kiley’s, and
the barking of dogs that announced the arrival of a
stranger.
He went out and found in the yard
one of the telegraph operators from Kiley’s,
on a smoking horse. “Very important telegram,
Mr. Gordon,” he said. “I borrowed
the horse, and brought it over as fast as I could.”
Hugh opened the envelope hurriedly.
The operator struck a match and held it up while he
read. The message was from the secretary of Grant’s
club, and ran as follows:
“William Grant died suddenly
this morning. Pinnock taking charge of affairs;
am making arrangements funeral. Better come down
at once.”
Her father dead! The question
of Red Mick and his prosecution became at once a matter
of no moment. How absurd his worry and vexation
now seemed. On the other hand, what new complications
might arise? All these years the Gordons had
lived on the assumption that Mr. Grant would provide
for them, without having any promise or agreement from
him; and, owing to the old man’s violent temper,
they had been in daily risk of being ordered off the
place. They had got used to this as people get
used to living on the side of a volcano. But now?
Her father dead! He could not
bear to see her grief, and the thought of it made
him determined to get away as quickly as possible.
Quietly he awoke his mother, and told her what had
happened, and by dawn was well on his way to Tarrong
to catch the train to Sydney.