Carew awoke next morning to find that
it was broad daylight, and the horses had been run
in, caught, and saddled, all ready for a start to
the run. Breakfast was soon disposed of, and the
cavalcade set out. Naturally, the old man had
heaps of questions to ask about his inheritance, and
made the Englishman ride alongside while he questioned
him.
“If I go to England after this
money, Mister, I suppose they won’t be handin’
me out ten years for perjury, same as they done for
Roger Tichborne, eh? I won’t have no law
case, will I?”
“Shouldn’t think so.
You’ve been advertised for all over the place,
I believe.”
“Ha! Well, now they’ve
got me they mightn’t like me, don’t you
see? I never took no stock in them unclaimed-money
fakes. I never see any money goin’ beggin’
yet, long as I’ve lived, but what some chap had
his hands on it quick enough. But I s’pose
it’s all right.”
“It’s me wife I’m
troublin’ about. I’m no dandy, Goodness
knows, but if people’ll let me alone I’ll
let them alone, and I don’t interfere with anyone.
But if old Peg turns up she’ll want to be right
in front of the percession. If she follows me,
I’ll realise everything by public auction, unreserved
sale, for spot cash, and I’ll sneak back here
to a place I knows of, where there’s no trooper
can find me. I ain’t goin’ halves
with that woman, I tell you. She wouldn’t
stick to me if I was poor, and I ain’t goin’
to take her up again now. You’d better come
back with me, Mister, and show me the way round a
bit.”
“There’s a mob of cattle,
Gordon.” he went on, changing the subject quickly;
“let’s ride up here, while the boys bring
’em into camp.” And off they went
at a carter, leaving the question of his social prospects
in abeyance for the time being.
The ceremony of taking delivery lasted
some days, Considine’s signature to the deed
of transfer being only the first step. This long
document, prepared in Sydney, kept them going in literature
for about a week; and they were delighted to find
that, through the carelessness of a clerk, in one
part of the deed there figured “one bull of mixed
sexes and various ages.”
They rode out, day after day, through
interminable stretches of dull timbered country, or
over blazing plains waving with long grass. Here
they came on mobs of half-wild cattle, all bearing
the same brand, a huge RL5. These were not mustered
into a yard or counted, except roughly. Gordon
was not completing a purchase, but simply taking over
what were there many or few; good or bad,
he could only take what he found.
Miles and miles they rode, always
in the blazing heat, camping for a couple of hours
in the middle of the day. To the Englishman it
seemed always the merest chance that they found the
cattle, and accident that they got home again.
At rare intervals they came upon substantial mustering-yards,
where the calves were brought for branding; near these
a rough hut had been constructed, so that they could
camp there at night, instead of returning to the head
station.
They always slept out of doors.
In the intense heat it was no hardship, and the huts,
as a rule, fairly jumped with fleas. Once they
camped alongside a big lagoon, on whose surface were
huge pink and blue water-lilies and rushes, and vast
flocks of wild fowl. After the stretches of blazing
plain and dull timber this glimpse of water was inexpressibly
refreshing.
On their way back they struck new
country, great stretches of almost impenetrable scrub,
tropical jungle, and belts of bamboo. In this
cover wild cattle evidently abounded, for they frequently
heard the bellow of the bulls.
“There should be a terrible
lot of wild cattle here,” said Charlie.
“Don’t you ever get any out of the scrubs?”
“Oh, yes, we moonlight for ’em.”
said Considine. “We take coachers out.
We have a very fair coaching mob. Some of our
coachers are as quick as racehorses, and they’ll
hustle wild cattle away from the scrub just as if
they understood.”
“What do you mean by coachers?”
asked Carew. “Not cattle that go in carts,
eh?”
“Carts, no. The way we
get wild cattle here-abouts is to take out a
mob of quiet cattle, what we call coachers, and let
’em feed in the moonlight alongside the scrub,
while we wait back out o’ the road and watch
’em. When the wild cattle come out, they
run over to see the coachers, and we dash up and cut
’em off from the scrub, and hustle ’em
together into the open. It’s good sport,
Mister. We might try a dash at it, if you like,
before we go back; it’s moonlight now.”
“Let’s have a try to-night”
said Gordon. “Are your coachers handy?”
“Yairs. They feed near
the house. I’ll send ’em on with the
gins to-night.”
When they got back that evening, Carew
was so dead-tired that he wished the wild cattle expedition
at Jericho. But Considine and Charlie were in
great form, directing, arguing, and planning the expedition.
One of the black boys rode out, and returned driving
a big mob of horses that dashed into the yard at full
gallop. The gins and the black boys caught fresh
mounts out of these and started away, driving some
fifty head of cattle selected from a mob that made
their headquarters within a few miles of the house.
Most of them were old stagers, and strung away in
the evening quite tranquilly, while the blacks, always
smoking, rode listlessly after. Considine produced
two stockwhips, and gave one to Charlie.
“No good givin’ you one.
Mister,” he said to Carew. “You’d
hang yourself with it most likely. I’ve
got a rare good horse for you old Smoked
Beef. He’d moonlight cattle by himself,
I believe. You’d better have a pistol,
though.”
“What for?” asked Carew,
as Considine produced three very heavy navy revolvers
and a bag of cartridges.
“To shoot any beast that won’t
stay with the mob. Some of ’em won’t
be stopped. They have to go. Well, if one
goes, the rest keep trying to follow, and no forty
men will hold ’em. You just keep your eyes
open, and if a beast breaks out in spite of the whips,
you shoot him if the blacks tell you. See?”
“Where am I to shoot him?”
“Shoot him any place. In
the earhole, or the shoulder, or the ribs, or the
flank. Any place at all. Shoot him all over
if you like. One or two bullets don’t hurt
a beast. It takes a lead-mine to kill some of
’em.”
“Do the blacks shoot?” asked Charlie.
“No, I don’t never trust
no blacks with firearms. One boy knifes well,
though. Races alongside and knifes ’em.”
This seemed a fairly difficult performance;
while the Englishman was wondering how it would be
carried out, they made a start. They rode mile
after mile in the yellow moonlight, until they discerned
a mob of cattle feeding placidly near some big scrub.
They whistled to the blacks, and all rode away down
wind to a spot on the edge of the plain, a considerable
distance from the cattle.
Here they dismounted and waited, Considine
and Charlie talking occasionally in low tones, while
the blacks sat silent, holding their horses.
Carew lay down on the long dry grass and gazed away
over the plain. His horse stood over him with
head down, apparently sleeping. Far away under
the moon, in vague patches of light and shade, the
cattle were feeding. Hours seemed to pass, and
Carew almost fell asleep.
Suddenly a long-drawn bellow, the
angry challenge of a bull, broke the silence.
A mob of wild cattle were evidently coming along the
edge of the scrub, and had caught scent of the strangers.
Again the bull roared; there is no animal on earth
with so emphatically warlike a note as the wild bull
when advancing to meet a strange mob. The quiet
cattle answered with plaintive, long-drawn lowings,
and the din became general as the two lots met.
“Let ’em get well mixed
up,” said Considine quietly, tightening his
girths, and swinging into the saddle. Everyone
followed his example. Carew was shaking with
excitement. Angry bellowing now arose from the
cattle, which were apparently horning one another such
being their manner of greeting.
Considine said, “There’s
a big lot there. Hope to blazes we can hold ’em.
Are you ready, Mister?”
“Yes, I’m ready,” replied Carew.
“Come on, then. We’ll
sneak up slowly at first, but once I start galloping
let your horse go as fast as he likes, and trust him
altogether. Don’t pull him at all, or he’ll
break your neck.”
They started slowly in Indian file,
keeping well in the shadow of the scrub. The
horses picked their way through the outlying saplings
and bushes, until suddenly Considine bent forward
on his horse’s neck, and said, “Come on!”
What a ride that was! The inexperienced
reader is apt to imagine that because a plain is level,
it is smooth, but no greater fallacy exists.
The surface of a plain is always bad galloping.
The rain washes away the soil from between the tussocks,
which stand up like miniature mountains; the heat
cracks the ground till it opens in crevices, sometimes
a foot wide and a yard or two deep; fallen saplings
lie hidden in the shadows to trip the horse, while
the stumps stand up to cripple him, and over all is
the long grass hiding all perils, and making the horse
risk his own neck and his master’s at every
stride.
They flew along in the moonlight,
Considine leading, Charlie next, then the two black
boys, and then Carew, with a black gin on each side
of him, racing in grim silence. The horses blundered
and “peeked,” stumbled, picked themselves
up again, always seeming to have a leg to spare.
Now and again a stump or a gaping crack in the ground
would flash into view under their very nose, but they
cleared everything stumps, tussocks, gaps,
and saplings.
In less time than it takes to write,
they were between the mob and the scrub; at once a
fusillade of whips rang out, and the men started to
ride round the cattle in Indian file. The wild
ones were well mixed up with the tame, and hardly
knew which way to turn. Carew, cantering round,
caught glimpses of them rushing hither and thither small,
wiry cattle for the most part, with big ears and sharp,
spear-pointed horns. Of these there were fifty
or sixty, as near as Considine could judge three
or four bulls, a crowd of cows and calves and half-grown
animals, and a few old bullocks that had left the station
mobs and thrown in their lot with the wild ones.
By degrees, as the horses went round
them, the cattle began to “ring,” forming
themselves into a compact mass, those on the outside
running round and round. All the time the whips
were going, and the shrill cries of the blacks rang
out, “Whoa back! Whoa back, there!
Whoa!” as an animal attempted to break from
the mob. They were gradually forcing the beasts
away from the scrub, when suddenly, in spite of the
gins’ shrill cries, some of the leaders broke
out and set off up the plain; with the rush of a cavalry
charge the rest were after them, racing at full speed
parallel with the edge of the scrub, and always trying
to make over towards it.
Old Considine met this new development
with Napoleonic quickness. He and the others
formed a line parallel with the course of the cattle,
and raced along between them and the timber, keeping
up an incessant fusillade with their whips, while
the old man’s voice rang out loudly in directions
to the blacks behind.
“Keep the coachers with ’em!
Flog ’em along! Cut the hides off ’em!”
In the first rush the quiet cattle
had dropped to the rear, but the blacks set about
them with their whips; and, as they were experienced
coachers, and had been flogged and hustled along in
similar rushes so often that they knew at once what
was wanted, they settled down to race just as fast
as the wild ones. As the swaying, bellowing mass
swept along in the moonlight, crashing and trampling
through the light outlying timber, some of the coachers
were seen working their way to the lead, and the wild
cattle having no settled plan, followed them blindly.
Considine, on his black horse, was close up by the
wing of the mob, and the others rode in line behind
him, always keeping between the cattle and the scrub.
“Crack your whips!” he
yelled. “Crack your whips! Keep ’em
off the scrub! Go on, Billy, drive that horse
along and get to the lead!”
Like a flash one of the black boys
darted out of the line, galloped to the head of the
cattle, and rode there, pursued by the flying mob,
the cracks of his heavy stockwhip sounding above the
roar of hoofs and the bellowing of the cattle.
Soon they steadied a little, and gradually sobered
down till they stopped and began to “ring”
again.
“That was pretty pure, eh, Mister?”
roared Considine to Carew. “Ain’t
it a caution the way the coachers race with ’em?
That old bald-face coacher is worth two men and a
boy in a dash like this.”
Suddenly an old bull, the patriarch
of the wild herd, made towards one of the gins, whose
shrill yells and whip-cracking failed to turn him.
Considine dashed to her assistance, swinging his whip
round his head.
“Whoa back, there! Whoa
back, will you!” he shouted. The bull paused
irresolute for a second, and half-turned back to the
mob, but the sight or scent of his native scrub decided
him. Dropping his head, he charged straight at
Considine. So sudden was the attack that the stock-horse
had barely time to spring aside; but, quick as it
was, Considine’s revolver was quicker.
The bull passed bang! went the revolver,
and bang! bang! bang! again, as the horse raced alongside,
Considine leaning over and firing into the bull’s
ribs at very short range.
The other cattle, dazed by the firing,
did not attempt to follow, and at the fourth shot
the bull wheeled to charge. He stood a moment
in the moonlight, bold and defiant, then staggered
a little and looked round as though to say, “What
have you done to me?” Bang went the revolver
again; the animal lurched, plunged forward, sank on
his knees, and fell over on his side, dead.
“There, you swab,” said
the old man, “that’ll larn you to break
another time.” Then he took once more his
place in the patrol round the mob. They circled
and eddied and pushed, always staring angrily at the
riders. Suddenly a big, red bullock gave a snort
of defiance, and came out straight towards Carew.
He stopped once, shook his head ominously, and came
on again. One of the gins dashed up with the whip;
but the bullock had evidently decided to take all
chances, and advanced on his foes at a trot.
“Choot him, that feller!”
screamed the gin to Carew. “You choot him!
He bin yan away! No more stop! Choot him!”
Carew lugged out his revolver, and
tried to pull his horse to a standstill, but the wary
old veteran knew better than to be caught standing
by a charging bullock; just as Carew fired, he plunged
forward, with the result that the bullet went over
the mob altogether, and very nearly winged Charlie,
who was riding on the far side. Then the bullock
charged in earnest; and Carew’s horse, seeing
that if he wished to save human life he must take
matters into his own hands, made a bolt for it.
Carew half-turned in the saddle, and fired twice, only
making the black boys on the far side cower down on
their horses’ necks. Then the horse took
complete charge, and made off for the scrub with the
bullock after him, and every animal in the mob after
the bullock.
Nothing in the world could have stopped
them. Considine and Charlie raced in front, alongside
Carew, cracking their whips and shouting; the blacks
flogged the coachers up with the wild cattle; but they
held on their way, plunged with a mighty crash into
the thick timber, and were lost. No horseman
could ride a hundred yards in that timber at night.
Coachers and all were gone together, and the dispirited
hunters gathered at the edge of the scrub and looked
at each other.
“Well, Mister, you couldn’t stop him,”
said the old man.
“I’m afraid I made rather
a mess of things, don’t you know,” said
the Englishman. “I thought I hit him the
second time, too. Seemed to be straight at him.”
“I think you done very well
to miss us! I heard one bullet whiz past me like
a scorpyun. Well, it can’t be helped.
Those old coachers will all battle their way home
again before long. Gordon, I vote we go home.
They’re your cattle now, and you’ll have
to come out again after ’em some day, and do
a little more shootin’. Get a suit of armour
on you first, though.”
As they jogged home through the bright
moonlight, they heard loud laughter from the blacks,
and Carew, looking back, found the fat gin giving
a dramatic rehearsal of his exploits. She dashed
her horse along at a great pace, fell on his neck,
clutched wildly at the reins, then suddenly turned
in her saddle, and pretended to fire point-blank at
the other blacks, who all dodged the bullet.
Then she fell on the horse’s neck again, and
so on ad lib.
This made the Englishman very morose.
He was quite glad when Charlie said he had seen enough
of the cattle, and they would all start next day for
civilisation Charlie to resume the management
of Mr. Grant’s stations, Carew to go with him
as “colonial experiencer,” and Considine
to start for England to look after his inheritance.