They filled a whole compartment at
least there was one seat vacant, but people seemed
shy of taking it after a rapid survey of them all.
The whole seven of them, and only
Esther as bodyguard Esther in
a pink blouse an sailor hat, with a face as bright
and mischievous as Pip’s own.
The Captain had come to see them off,
with Pat to look after the luggage. He had bought
the tickets two whole ones for Esther and
Meg, and four halves for the others. Baby was
not provided with even a half, much to her private
indignation it was an insult to her four
years and a half, she considered, to go free like the
General.
But the cost of those scraps of pasteboard
had made the Captain look unhappy: he only received
eighteenpence change out of the ten pounds he had
tendered; for Yarrahappini was on the borders of the
Never-Never Land.
He spent the eighteenpence on illustrated
papers Scraps, Ally Sloper’s Half-Holiday,
Comic Cuts, Funny Folks, and the like, evidently having
no very exalted opinion of the literary tastes of
his family; and he provided Esther with a yellow-back on
which was depicted a lady in a green dress fainting
in the arms of a gentleman attired in purple, and
Meg with Mark Twain’s “Jumping Frog”,
because he had noticed a certain air of melancholy
in her eyes lately.
Then bells clanged and a whistle shrieked,
porters flew wildly about, and farewells were said,
sadly or gaily as the case might be.
There was a woman crying: in
a hopeless little way on the platform, and a girl
with sorrowful, loving eyes leaning out of a second-class
window towards her; there was a brown-faced squatter,
in a tweed cap and slippers, to whom the three-hundred-mile
journey was little more of an event than dining;
and there was the young man going selecting, and thinking
England was little farther, seeing his wife and child
were waving a year’s good-bye from the platform.
There were sportsmen going two hundred miles after
quail and wallaby; and cars full of ladies returning
to the wilds after their yearly or half-yearly tilt
with society and fashion in Sydney; and there were
the eight we are interested in, clustering around
the door and two windows, smiling and waving cheerful
good-byes to the Captain.
He did not look at all cast down as
the train steamed fussily away indeed,
he walked down the platform with almost a jaunty air
as if the prospect of two months bachelordom was not
without its redeeming points.
It was half-past six in the afternoon
when they started, and they would reach Curlewis,
which was the nearest railway station to Yarrahappini,
about five the next morning. The expense of
sleeping-berths had been out of the question with
so many of them; but in the rack with the bags were
several rolls of rugs and two or three air-pillows
against the weary hours. The idea of so many
hours in the train had been delightful to all the
young ones; none of them but Judy had been a greater
distance than forty or fifty miles before, and it
seemed perfectly fascinating to think of rushing on
and on through the blackness as well as the daylight.
But long before ten o’clock
a change came o’er the spirit of their dreams.
Nell and Baby had had a quarrel over the puffing out
of the air-cushions, and were too tired and cross
to make it up again; Pip had hit Bunty over the head
for no ostensible reason, and received two kicks in
return; Judy’s head ached, and the noise, was
not calculated to cure it; Meg had grown weary of
staring out into the moving darkness, and wondering
whether Alan would notice she was never on the river-boat
now; and the poor little General was filling the hot
air with expostulations, in the shape of loud roars,
at the irregularities of the treatment he was undergoing.
Esther had taken his day clothes off,
and made a picture of him in a cream flannel nightgown
and a pink wool jacket. And for half an hour,
he had submitted good-temperedly to being handed about
and tickled and half-smothered with kisses.
He had eyen permitted Nell to bite his little pink
toes severally, and say a surprising amount of nonsense
about little pigs that went to market and did similarly
absurd things.
He had hardly remonstrated when there
had been a dispute about the possession of his person,
and Bunty had clung to his head and body while Nell
pulled vigorously at his legs.
But after a time, when Esther made
him a little bed on one of the seats and tried to
lay him down upon it, a sense of his grievances came
over him.
He had a swinging cot at home; with
little gold bars at the foot to blink at he
could not see why he should be mulcted of it, and made
to put up with a rug three times doubled. He
was accustomed, too, to a shaded light, a quiet room,
and a warning H’sh! h’sh! whenever people
forgot themselves sufficiently to make the slightest
noise.
Here the great yellow light flared
all the time, and every one of the noisy creatures
at whose hands he endured so much was within a few
feet of him.
So he lifted up his voice and wept.
And when he found weeping did not produce his gold-barred
cot, and the little dangling tassels on the mosquito
nets, he raised his voice two notes, and when even
there Esther only went on patting his shoulder in
a soothing way he burst into roars absolutely deafening.
Nellie dangled all her long curls
in his face to engage his attention, but he clutched
them viciously and pulled till the tears came into
her eyes. Esther and Meg sang lullabies till
their tongues ached, Judy tried walking him up and
down the narrow space, but he stiffened himself in
her arms, and she was not strong enough to hold him.
Finally he dropped off into an exhausted sleep, drawing
deep, sobbing breaths and little hiccoughs of sorrow.
Then Bunty was discovered asleep on
the floor with his head under a seat, and had to be
lifted into an easier position; and Baby, bolt upright
in a corner, was nodding like a little pink-and-white
daisy the sun has been too much for.
One by one the long hours dragged
away; farther and farther through the silent, sleeping
country flew the red-eyed train, swerving round zigzag
curves, slackening up steeper places, flashing across
the endless stretching plains.
The blackness grew grey and paler
grey, and miles and miles of monotonous gum saplings
lay between the train and sky. Up burst the
sun, and the world grew soft and rosy like a baby waked
from sleep. Then the grey gathered again, the
pink, quivering lights faded out, and the rain came
down torrents of it, beating against the
shaking window-glass, whirled wildly ahead by a rough
morning wind, flying down from the mountains.
Such a crushed, dull-eyed, subdued-looking eight
they were as they tumbled out on the Curlewis platform
when five o’clock came. Judy coughed at
the wet, early, air, and was hurried into the waiting-room
and wrapped in a rug.
Then the train tossed out their trunks
and portmanteaux and rushed on again, leaving them
desolate and miserable, looking after it, for it seemed
no one had come to meet them.
The sound of wet wheels slushing through
puddles, the crack of a whip, the even falling of
horses’ feet, and they were all outside again,
looking beyond the white railway palings to the road.
There were a big, covered waggonette
driven by a wide yellow oil-skin with a man somewhere
in its interior, and a high buggy, from which an immensely
tall man was climbing.
“Father!”
Esther rushed out into the rain.
She put her arms round the dripping mackintosh and
clung fast to it for a minute or two. Perhaps
that is what made her cheeks and eyes so wet and shining.
“Little girl little
Esther child!” he said, and almost lifted her
off the ground as he kissed her, tall though Meg considered
her.
Then he hurried them all off into
the buggies, five in one and three in the other.
There was a twenty-five-mile drive before them yet.
“When did you have anything
to eat last?” he asked; the depressed looks
of the children were making him quite unhappy.
“Mother has sent you biscuits and sandwiches,
but we, can’t get coffee or anything hot till
we get home.”
Nine o’clock, Esther told him,
at Newcastle, but it was so boiling hot they had had
to leave most of it in their cups and scramble into
the train again. The horses were whipped up;
and flew over the muddy roads at a pace that Pip,
despite his weariness, could not but admire.
But it was a very damp, miserable
drive, and the General wept with hardly a break from
start to finish, greatly to Esther’s vexation,
for it was his first introduction to his grandfather.
At last, when everyone was beginning
to feel the very end of patience had come, a high
white gate broke the monotony of dripping wet fences.
“Home!” Esther said joyfully.
She jumped the General up and down on her knee.
“Little Boy Blue, Mum fell off
that gate when she was three,” said she, looking
at it affectionately as Pip swung it open.
Splash through the rain again; the
wheels went softly now, for the way was covered with
wet fallen leaves.
“Oh, where is the house?”
Bunty said, peeping through Pip’s arm on the
box seat, and seeing still nothing but an endless vista
of gum trees. “I thought, you said we
were there, Esther.”
“Oh, the front door is not quite
so near the gate as at Misrule,” she said.
And indeed it was not.
It was fifteen minutes before they
even saw the chimneys, then there was another gate
to be opened. A gravel drive now trimly kept,
high box round the flower-beds, a wilderness of rose
bushes that pleased Meg’s eye, two chip tennis-courts
under water.
Then the house.
The veranda was all they noticed;
such a wide one it was, as wide as an ordinary room,
and there were lounges and chairs and tables scattered
about, hammocks swung from the corners, and a green
thick creeper with rain-blown wisteria for an outer
wall.
“O o oh,”
said Pip; “o oh! I am stiff o oh,
I say, what are you doing?”
For Esther had deposited her infant
on his knee, and leapt out of the waggonette and up
the veranda steps.
There was a tiny old lady there, with
a great housekeeping apron on. Esther gathered
her right up in her arms, and they kissed and clung
to each other till they were both crying.
“My little girl!” sobbed
the little old lady, stroking, with eager hands, Esther’s
wet hair and wetter cheeks.
And Bunty, who had followed close
behind, looked from the tall figure of his stepmother
to the very small one of her mother and laughed.
Esther darted back to the buggy, took
the General from Pip, and, springing up the steps
again, placed him in her mother’s arms.
“Isn’t he a fat ’un!”
Bunty said, sharing in her pride; “just you
look at his legs.”
The old lady sat down for one minute
in the wettest chair she could find, and cuddled him
close up to her.
But he doubled his little cold fists,
fought himself free, and yelled for Esther.
Mr. Hassal had emptied the buggies
by now, and came up the steps himself.
“Aren’t you going to give
them some breakfast, little mother?” he said,
and the old lady nearly dropped her grandson in her
distress.
“Dear, dear!” she said.
“Well, well! Just to think of it!
But it makes one forget.”
In ten minutes they were all in dry
things, sitting in the warm dining-room and making
prodigious breakfasts.
“Wasn’t I hungry!”
Bunty said. His mouth was full of toast, and
he was slicing the top off his fourth egg and keeping
an eye on a dish that held honey in one compartment
and clotted cream in another.
“The dear old plates!”
Esther picked hers up after she had emptied it and
looked lovingly at the blue roses depicted upon it.
“And to think last time l ate off one I ”
“Was a little bride with the
veil pushed back from your face,” the old lady
said, “and everyone watching you cut the cake.
Only two have broken since oh yes, Hannah,
the girl who came after Emily, chipped off the handle
of the sugar-basin and broke a bit out of the slop-bowl.”
“Where did Father stand?”
Meg asked. She was peopling the room with wedding
guests; the ham and the chops, the toast and eggs and
dishes of fruit, had turned to a great white towered
cake with silver leaves.
“Just up there where Pip is
sitting,” Mrs. Hassal said, “and he was
helping Esther with the cake, because she was cutting
it with his sword. Such a hole you made in the
table-cloth, Esther, my very best damask one with
the convolvulus leaves, but, of course, I’ve
darned it dear, dear!”
Baby had upset her coffee all over
herself and her plate and Bunty, who was next door.
She burst into tears of weariness
and nervousness at the new people, and slipped off
her chair under the table. Meg picked her up.
“May I put her to bed?”
she said; “she is about worn out.”
“Me, too,” Nellie said,
laying down her half-eaten scone and pushing back
her chair. “Oh, I am so tired!”
“So’m I.”
Bunty finished up everything on his plate in choking
haste and stood up. “And that horrid coffee’s
running into my boots.”
So just as the sun began to smile
and chase away the sky’s heavy tears, they all
went to bed again to make up for the broken night,
and it was: six o’clock and tea-time before
any of them opened their eyes again.