“You’re just the man I
was looking for,” said Hugh, taking in the stranger
with his eyes. “I want to get out to Reeves’s
buffalo camp, and I hear you’re the only man
who knows that country at all. Can you get time
to come down with me? I’ll make it worth
your while.”
He waited for the reply with a beating
heart. If this man failed him he saw nothing
for it but to go back. The stranger lit his pipe
with the leisurely movements of a man who had never
been in a real hurry in his life.
Then he spoke slowly.
“Well, it’s this way,
boss, you see. I’m just startin’ off
in no end of a hurry to go and take a team of bullocks
to the Oriental to draw quartz.”
“Can’t you put it off
for a while?” said Hugh. “It’s
getting near the wet season.”
“Well, I’d like to go
with you, boss, but I couldn’t chuck ’em
over not rightly I couldn’t.”
He stroked his beard and relapsed into thought.
“Let’s go in and get a
drink,” said Hugh. “I suppose there
is some square-face inside.”
The square-face settled it. They
had one drink, and the stranger began to think less
of the needs of the Oriental. They had another,
and he said he didn’t suppose it’d matter
much if the Oriental had to wait a bit for their stone,
and the bullocks were all over the bush and very poor,
and by the time he got them together the wet season
would be on. They had a third, and he said that
the Oriental had been hanging on for six months, and
it wouldn’t hurt it to hang on for seven, and
he wouldn’t see a man like Hugh stuck.
So the shareholders in that valuable
concern, the Oriental Mine, were kept in pleasing
suspense for some months longer, while the mine-manager
(whose salary was going on all the time) did nothing
but smoke, and write reports to the effect that “a
very valuable body of stone was at grass, awaiting
cartage to the battery, when a splendid crushing was
a certainty.” Meanwhile Tommy Prince was
gaily journeying with Hugh down to the buffalo camp.
Prince, a typical moleskin-trousered,
cotton-shirted, cabbage-tree-hatted bushman, soon
fixed up all details. He annexed the horses belonging
to the store, sagely remarking that, as Hugh had saved
their owner’s life, he could afford to let him
have a few horses. He also helped himself to
pack-saddles, camping gear, supplies, and all sorts
of odds and ends not forgetting a couple
of gallons of rum, mosquito-nets made of cheese cloth,
blankets, and a rifle and cartridges. They fitted
out the expedition in fine style, while unconscious
Sampson slept the sleep of the half-drowned. The
placid Chinese cook fried great lumps of goat for
them to eat, heedless of all things except his opium-pipe,
to which he had recourse in the evening, the curious
dreamy odour of the opium blending strangely with the
aromatic scent of the bush.
At daylight they started, and for
three days rode through the wilderness, camping out
at night, while the horses with bells and hobbles
grazed round the camp. Tommy Prince steered a
course by instinct, guided as unerringly as the Israelites
by their pillar of fire.
By miles of trackless, worthless wilderness,
by rolling open plains, by rocky ranges and stony
passes, they pushed out and ever further out, till
at last, one day, Tommy said, “They ought to
be hereabouts, some place.” So saying,
he dropped a lighted match into a big patch of grass,
and in a few seconds a line of fire half a mile wide
was roaring across the plain; above it rose smoke
as of a burning city.
“They’ll see that,”
said Tommy, “without the buff’loes have
got ’em.” So they camped for the
day under a huge banyan-fig tree and awaited developments.
About evening, away on the horizon, there arose an
answering cloud of smoke, connecting earth and sky,
like a waterspout.
“That’s them,” said
Tommy. They climbed once more into their saddles,
and set out. Just as the sun was setting, they
saw a singular procession coming towards them.
In front rode two small, wiry, hard-featured, inexpressibly
dirty men on big well-formed horses. They wore
dungaree trousers, which had once been blue, but were
now begrimed and bloodstained to a dull neutral colour.
Their shirts once coloured, but now nearly
black were worn outside the trousers, like
a countryman’s smock frock, and were drawn in
at the waist by broad leathern belts full of cartridges.
Their faces were half-hidden by stubbly beards, and
their bright alert eyes looked out from under the
brims of two as dilapidated felt hats as ever graced
head of man. Each carried a carbine between thigh
and saddle. These were the buffalo shooters.
Behind them rode an elderly, grizzled
man, whom Hugh had no difficulty in recognising as
Keogh, or Considine. Following him were some seven
or eight packhorses, all heavily laden with hides.
And behind the packhorses rode three or four naked
blacks and a Chinaman.
Hugh’s guide at once made himself
welcome in his happy-go-lucky style. He introduced
Hugh as Mr. Lambton, from New South Wales. The
buffalo shooters made him welcome after the fashion
of their kind; but Considine was obviously uneasy,
and avoided him, riding with Tommy Prince for a while,
and evidently trying to find out what Hugh had come
for.
That night, when they got to the buffalo
shooters’ camp, Hugh opened fire on Considine.
The veteran was in a cheerful mood after his meal,
and Hugh wanted to start diplomatically, thinking he
might persuade him. If that failed he would give
him the summons; but he would start with the suaviter
in modo. When it came to the point, however,
he forgot his diplomacy, and plunged straight into
trouble.
“I’ll tell you what I’ve
come up here for, Considine,” he said. “My
name’s Hugh Gordon, and I want to find out something
about your marriage with Peggy Donohoe.”
“Well, if that’s what
you come for, Mister,” said the veteran, pulling
a firestick out of the fire, and slowly lighting his
pipe, “if that’s what you come for” puff,
puff, puff “you’ve come on a
wild goose chase. I never knew no Peggy Donohoe
in my life. My wife” puff “was
a small, dark woman, named Smith.”
“I thought you told my brother
that you married Peggy Donohoe.”
“So I might have told him,”
assented the veteran. “Quite likely I did,
but I must ha’ made a mistake. A man might
easy make a mistake over a thing like that. What
odds is it to you who I married, anyhow?”
“What odds? Why look here,
Considine, it means that my old mother will be turned
out of her home. That’s some odds to me,
isn’t it?”
“Yairs, that’s right enough,
Mister,” said the courteous Considine; “it’s
lots of odds to you, but what I ask you is what
odds is it to me? Why should I go and saddle
myself with a she-devil just when I’m coming
into a bit of money? I’d walk miles to do
her a bad turn.”
“Well, if you want to do her
a bad turn, come down and block her getting Mr. Grant’s
estate.”
“Yes, an’ put her on to
meself What next? I tell you, Mister, straight,
I wouldn’t have that woman tied to me for all
the money in China. That English bloke said there
was a big fortune for me in England. Well, if
I have to take Peggy Donohoe with it, it can stay.
I’ll live here with the blacks and the buffalo
shooters, and I’ll get my livin’ for meself,
same as I got it all my life; but take on Peggy again
I will not. Now, that’s Domino that’s
the dead finish. I won’t go with you, and
I won’t give you no information. And I’m
sorry too, ’cause you seem a good sort of a
young feller but I won’t do anything
that’ll mix me up with Peggy any more.”
Hugh ground his teeth with mortification.
Then he played his next card.
“There’s a man they call Flash Jack do
you know him?”
“Perhaps I do, and perhaps I don’t,”
said the sage in a surly tone.
“Well, he told me to ask you
to help us. He said to tell you that he particularly
wanted you to give evidence if you can.”
“Want’ll be his master, then,” snarled
the old man.
“He said he would put the police
on to a job about some cattle at Cross-roads,”
said Hugh.
The rage fairly flashed out of Considine’s eyes.
“He said that, did he?”
he yelled. “The rotten informer! Well,
you tell Flash Jack from me that where he can put
me away for one thing I can put him away for half-a-dozen;
and if I go into gaol for a five-stretch he goes in
for ten. I ain’t afraid of Flash Jack, nor
you either. See that, now!”
Hugh felt that his mission had failed.
He pulled out the summons as a last resource, and
passed it to the old man.
“What’s this?” he said.
“Summons to give evidence,” said Hugh.
“Victoria by the Grace of God,”
read the old man, by the flickering firelight.
“Victoria by the Grace of God, eh? Well,
see here,” he continued, solemnly putting the
summons in the fire and watching it blaze, “if
Victoria by the Grace of God wants me, she can send
for me send a coach and six for Patrick
Henry Considine, late Patrick Henry Keogh! And
then I mightn’t go! There’ll be only
one thing make me go where I don’t want to go,
and that’s a policeman at each elbow and another
shovin’ behind. I’d sooner do a five-stretch
than take Peggy back again. And that’s
the beginning and the end and the middle of it.
And now I’ll wish you good night.”