While Gavan Blake was conferring with
his clients, a very different sort of conference was
being held at Kuryong. The return of Charlie Gordon,
accompanied by Carew, had been voted by common consent
an occasion for holiday; and although, according to
theory, a bush holiday is invariably spent in kangaroo-hunting,
yet the fact is that men who are in the saddle from
daylight to dark, from week-end to week-end, generally
spend a holiday resting legs that are cramped from
the saddle, and arms that ache from lifting sheep
over hurdles or swinging the gates of drafting-yards.
Thus it was that, on the holiday at
Kuryong, the Bachelors’ Quarters two
large dormitory-like rooms that opened into one another were
full of athletic male figures sprawling on the beds,
smoking black pipes all day, and yarning interminably.
The main topic of conversation was Peggy’s claim
against the estate. They had all heard the rumours
that were going round; each had quietly been trying
to find out what Peggy had to go on, and this pow-wow
was utilised for the purpose of comparing notes.
They had one advantage over Gavan Blake they
knew all about Considine, which Blake did not.
On one bed lay Pinnock, who had come
up to make arrangements for carrying on the station
till the will was proved. On another bed sprawled
Carew, who, by virtue of his trip out back, was looked
upon as a bit of an oracle by Poss and Binjie, who
had never been further than the mountains. Poss
and Binjie had dragged an old couch out of the next
room and were stretched on that, listening to the talk,
and occasionally throwing in a word of such wisdom
as they had. Hugh sat in an armchair by the window,
smoking and dreaming.
Poss’s voice cut knife-like
through a cloud of tobacco smoke. He spoke as
one on the defensive.
“Well, I believe there’s
something in it, anyhow. Briney Donohoe told
me
Charlie Cordon’s cold drawl
interrupted the youth. “It’s all rot,”
he said. “Briney Donohoe told you what
does he know about it? You two boys and Hugh
have been stuck at home here so long, you believe anything.
I tell you, they’ll do nothing. It’s
all talk, just to make themselves big people.
They have nothing to do just now, so it comes in handy
as an excuse to ride from one selection to another
all day long and leave our gates open. We have
Peggy’s measure, haven’t we, Carew?
That long-lost relation of yours, old Considine!”
“I wish you did have him,”
said the lawyer. “He might come in very
handy. With a big property like this to go for,
they are nearly sure to have a try at it.”
Poss took heart at finding himself
supported by this new champion. “Yes,”
he said. “Red Mick and Peggy are down at
Gavan Blake’s to-day. I saw their horses
hanging up outside as I came through. And Briney
Donohoe told me
“What do you think, Carew?”
said Charlie, cutting Briney Donohoe off again.
“Don’t you think that old fellow was telling
the truth when he said he married Peggy?”
“Sure he was,” said the
Englishman. “Never saw a fellow in such
a funk in my life.”
“What about Peggy?” said Pinnock.
“How did she take it?”
“Bold as brass! I thought
she was going to kiss Charlie there, when she found
out who he was.”
Pinnock laughed. “Funny
thing,” he said, “a woman like Peggy having
the chance to choose between two fortunes. Pity
we couldn’t induce her to take the old bushman
and be done with it. How much money has he come
into, Carew?”
“Oh, plenty of money. But
of course there’s an old place to keep up, and
the death duties are very heavy. Very expensive
thing having money left you in England, you know.”
Charlie Gordon turned to Pinnock.
“What you ought to do,” he said (the far-out
man who has to shift for himself is always quite sure
he can settle all difficulties better than those whose
profession it is), “what you ought to do,”
he repeated, “is to send someone to Peggy and
tell her not to be such a fool. Tell her to stick
to old Considine. That’s what you ought
to do.”
“Well, suppose you go and do
it. You know the lady better than anyone here,
seemingly. But if she has been to see Blake, I
expect the fat’s in the fire by this time.”
“I don’t think much of
Blake takin’ up the case,” said Binjie,
“after the old lady asked him here. It’s
doing the black-snake act, I call it. I don’t
suppose he’ll come here any more after this.”
Hugh still sat looking out of the
window, smoking silently. “Here comes Blake
now, anyhow,” he said. “He’s
just coming up the flat.”
“Wants to see me, I expect,”
said Pinnock. “We’ll know all about
it now. Must have heard I was here, and is come
to declare war or sue for peace. Someone had
better go and meet him, I suppose.”
“Dashed if I’ll go,”
said Poss. “I don’t care about a chap
that doesn’t act white. I saw Red Mick’s
and Peggy’s horses at his office to-day, and
now he comes up here as bold as brass.”
“Let him go round to the front,”
said Hugh, “and then he can ask the servants
for whoever he wants. If we go out and meet him,
we’ll have to ask him to stay.”
The approach to houses in the bush
is generally by way of the yard where the horses arrive,
and it is very unusual for anyone, except a stranger
making a formal visit, to be allowed to find their
way round to the front.
Blake rode up and gave his horse to
the horse-boy. “Put him in the stable for
a while,” he said. “I may want him
again.” Then he went round to the front
door and asked for Mrs. Gordon.
“I have come to see Miss Grant
on very important business,” he said when the
old lady came in. “Would you ask her if
she would see me?”
The old lady was in a quandary.
She had heard all the rumours that were going about,
but she knew that they had been kept from Mary Grant,
and she thought that if Blake meant to talk business
he might shock or startle the girl terribly.
“Mr. Pinnock the lawyer is here,”
she said. “Perhaps you had better see him.
Miss Grant does not know
“I am come as a friend of Miss
Grant’s, Mrs. Gordon,” he said. “But,
if Mr. Pinnock is here, perhaps it would be better
for me to see him first. Shall I wait for him
here?”
“If you will go into the office
I will send him in there,” and the old lady
withdrew to talk of commonplace matters with Mary,
all the time feeling that a great crisis was at hand.
Soon the two lawyers faced one another
over the office table, and Blake got to business at
once.
“Mr. Pinnock,” he said,
“I am asked to act for Margaret Donohoe, or
Margaret Grant as she claims to be; and I want you
to believe that I am seriously telling you what I
believe to be the truth, when I say that Miss Grant
had better settle this case.”
“Why should she pay one penny?
What proofs have you? It looks to me, with all
respect to you, Mr. Blake, like an ordinary case of
blackmail.”
“If it were blackmail,”
said Blake quietly, “do you think that I would
be here, giving you particulars of the case? I
tell you, man, I am ready now to give you all particulars,
and you can soon see whether to advise a settlement
or not.”
“Fire away, then,” said
Pinnock. “It will take a lot to convince
me, though, and so I tell you.”
Blake gave him the particulars gleaned
from Peggy. “I have examined and cross-examined
and re-cross-examined her, and I can’t shake
her story.”
Pinnock listened with an immovable
face, but his mind was working like lightning.
As the name of the missionary and Pike’s Hotel
were mentioned, he remembered that he had seen these
very names on the butts of Grant’s cheque-books.
Getting Blake to excuse him for a moment, he hurried
to his room and pulled out a bundle of cheque-butts.
The best diary of many a man is found in his cheque-butts.
There he saw on the very date mentioned by Blake,
cheques drawn to “Self and P.”, also one
drawn to “Pike accommodation,” and one
simply to the name of Nettleship for five pounds.
Of course it was quite possible that the latter was
only a donation to charity, such as old Bully was occasionally
very free with; but, taken together, the whole lot
made Blake’s story look unpleasantly probable.
Pinnock whistled to himself as he tied the bundle
up again. “Case of settle or be sorry,”
he said to himself. “I wonder how much
will settle it?”
When he faced Blake again, he had
pulled the mask of professional stolidity over his
features; also he lied boldly.
“I can see nothing to corroborate
this story,” he said; “but it may be that
Miss Grant would rather pay a few pounds than have
the unpleasantness of a trial. I will get her
in and ask her if you like, but I don’t think
it will lead to anything.”
They were holding their conference
in the office. Outside, the station was dozing
in the sun. The house dog slept in the yard, and
a stray wild pigeon had come down into the quadrangle,
and was picking at some grain that was spilt there.
From the garden came the shouts of the children and
the happy laughter of Mary Grant.
“There she is now,” said
Pinnock. “Hadn’t I better get her
to come in and get the thing over?”
He went out, and came back very soon.
“Mrs. Gordon and Miss Grant are coming,”
he said. “She said she would like Mrs. Gordon
to be with her.”
Before long they came in and sat down.
Mary Grant had no idea what she was wanted for.
She greeted Blake with a glad smile, and waited to
hear what Pinnock had to say. It did not take
the lawyer long to put the story before her:
but it was some time before she could understand it.
Nothing so tragic had ever entered her life before,
and she seemed almost stunned.
Mrs. Gordon moved to her side and took her hand.
“It is very terrible for you for
us all, dear,” she said. “You must
listen to what Mr. Pinnock says, and make up your mind.
He can advise you best what to do.”
Again Pinnock went through the case.
As a full understanding broke in on her, she drew
herself up; the look of distress and perplexity left
her face, and her eyes were full of scorn and anger.
“Hello, what’s coming
now?” thought Pinnock. “I hope she
says nothing rash.”
She tried to speak once or twice,
but the words seemed to choke her.
“What do you advise me to do,
Mr. Pinnock?” she said, turning to him suddenly.
“I advise you to give me power
to act for you in the matter as I think best,”
said Pinnock, who saw that matters were likely to slip
beyond his control. “From what Mr. Blake
tells me, I daresay this woman can give you a lot
of trouble and annoyance. Whatever you pay her,
you won’t miss the money. You will save
the family here from being turned out; you will avoid
scandal; and if there should be any foundation for
Mr. Blake’s story, it may mean that if you don’t
settle you lose everything.”
From him Mary Grant turned to the old lady.
“Mrs. Gordon,” she said, “do you
advise me to pay this money?”
“My dear, I don’t advise
at all. Don’t consider us in the matter
at all. It is for you to say.”
“Then I will pay nothing.
It is a cruel, infamous, wicked slander. These
poor, ignorant people don’t know what they are
doing. Sooner than pay one penny in compromise,
I will walk off this station a pauper. God will
not let such villainy win. Mrs. Gordon, surely
you don’t think that I ought to blacken my father’s
and mother’s name by paying money to keep this
claim quiet?”
Here Pinnock broke in on her speech.
“But if they should manage to produce evidence
“Let them produce it, and let
the judge believe it if he likes. You and I and
everybody know that it is a lie; even if they win the
case, it is still a lie. I will pay nothing not
one halfpenny. My mother’s name is more
than all the money in the world, and I will not blacken
it by compromises. Mr. Pinnock, the case is to
be fought out, and if we lose we shall still know
that justice is on our side; but if we pay money
Mrs. Gordon took her hand, and lifted it to her lips.
“I think you are quite right,
my dear. You put us all to shame for even thinking
of it.”
“I am very sorry, Mr. Blake,”
the girl went on, “very sorry indeed that you
should have come here on such an errand. You saved
my life, and if I could pay you for that I would;
but this offer is an insult, and I hope that you will
never come here again. Whether I am turned out
of the old station or not, I hope that you will never
come here again.” And with that the two
ladies walked out, leaving the lawyers looking at each
other.
“I am afraid, Mr. Blake”
said Pinnock at last, “that we have lost any
hope we might ever have had of settling this case.”
But Blake, as he rode homewards, felt
that he had lost for ever a much higher hope.
He had played for a high stake on two chances.
One of them had failed him. There remained only
the chance of pulling Peggy’s case through;
and he swore that if hard work, skill, and utter unscrupulousness
could win that case, it should be won.