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<h2> Chapter 11 </h2>
<p>Warrigal left his horse at the edge of the timber, for fear he might want
him in a hurry, I suppose. He was pretty 'fly', and never threw away a
chance as long as he was sober. He could drink a bit, like the rest of us,
now and then—not often—but when he did it made a regular devil
of him—that is, it brought the devil out that lives low down in most
people's hearts. He was a worse one than usual, Jim said. He saw him once
in one of his break-outs, and heard him boast of something he'd done. Jim
never liked him afterwards. For the matter of that he hated Jim and me
too. The only living things he cared about were Starlight and the
three-cornered weed he rode, that had been a 'brumbee', and wouldn't let
any one touch him, much less ride him, but himself. How he used to snort
if a stranger came near him! He could kick the eye out of a mosquito, and
bite too, if he got the chance.</p>
<p>As for Warrigal, Starlight used to knock him down like a log if he didn't
please him, but he never offered to turn upon him. He seemed to like it,
and looked regular put out once when Starlight hurt his knuckles against
his hard skull.</p>
<p>Us he didn't like, as I said before—why, I don't know—nor we
him. Likes and dislikes are curious things. People hardly know the rights
of them. But if you take a regular strong down upon a man or woman when
you first see 'em it's ten to one that you'll find some day as you've good
reason for it. We couldn't say what grounds we had for hating the sight of
Warrigal neither, for he was as good a tracker as ever followed man or
beasts. He could read all the signs of the bush like a printed book. He
could ride any horse in the world, and find his way, day or night, to any
place he'd ever once been to in his life.</p>
<p>Sometimes we should have been hard pushed when we were making across
country at night only for him. Hour after hour he'd ride ahead through
scrub or forest, up hill or down dale, with that brute of a horse of his—he
called him 'Bilbah'—ambling away, till our horses, except Rainbow,
used to shake the lives out of us jogging. I believe he did it on purpose.</p>
<p>He was a fine shot, and could catch fish and game in all sorts of ways
that came in handy when we had to keep dark. He had pluck enough, and
could fight a pretty sharp battle with his fists if he wasn't
overweighted. There were white men that didn't at all find him a good
thing if they went to bully him. He tried it on with Jim once, but he
knocked the seven senses out of him inside of three rounds, and that
satisfied him. He pretended to make up, but I was always expecting him to
play us some dog's trick yet. Anyway, so far he was all right, and as long
as Starlight and us were mixed up together, he couldn't hurt one without
the other. He came gliding up to the old hut in the dull light by bits of
moves, just as if he'd been a bush that had changed its place. We
pretended to be asleep near the fire.</p>
<p>He peeped in through a chink. He could see us by the firelight, and didn't
suppose we were watching him.</p>
<p>'Hullo, Warrigal!' sung out Jim suddenly, 'what's up now? Some devil's
work, I suppose, or you wouldn't be in it. Why don't you knock at a
gentleman's door when you come a visiting?'</p>
<p>'Wasn't sure it was you,' he answered, showing his teeth; 'it don't do to
get sold. Might been troopers, for all I know.'</p>
<p>'Pity we wasn't,' said Jim; 'I'd have the hobbles on you by this time, and
you'd have got "fitted" to rights. I wish I'd gone into the police
sometimes. It isn't a bad game for a chap that can ride and track, and
likes a bit of rough-and-tumble now and then.'</p>
<p>'If I'd been a police tracker I'd have had as good a chance of nailing
you, Jim Marston,' spoke up Warrigal. 'Perhaps I will some day. Mr. Garton
wanted me bad once, and said they'd never go agin me for old times. But
that says nothin'. Starlight's out at the back and the old man, too. They
want you to go to them—sharp.'</p>
<p>'What for?'</p>
<p>'Dunno. I was to tell you, and show the camp; and now gimme some grub, for
I've had nothing since sunrise but the leg of a 'possum.'</p>
<p>'All right,' said Jim, putting the billy on; 'here's some damper and
mutton to go on with while the tea warms.'</p>
<p>'Wait till I hobble out Bilbah; he's as hungry as I am, and thirsty too,
my word.'</p>
<p>'Take some out of the barrel; we shan't want it to-morrow,' said Jim.</p>
<p>Hungry as Warrigal was—and when he began to eat I thought he never
would stop—he went and looked after his horse first, and got him a
couple of buckets of water out of the cask they used to send us out every
week. There was no surface water near the hut. Then he hobbled him out of
a bit of old sheep-yard, and came in.</p>
<p>The more I know of men the more I see what curious lumps of good and bad
they're made up of. People that won't stick at anything in some ways will
be that soft and good-feeling in others—ten times more so than your
regular good people. Any one that thinks all mankind's divided into good,
bad, and middlin', and that they can draft 'em like a lot of cattle—some
to one yard, some to another—don't know much. There's a mob in most
towns though, I think, that wants boilin' down bad. Some day they'll do
it, maybe; they'll have to when all the good country's stocked up. After
Warrigal had his supper he went out again to see his horse, and then
coiled himself up before the fire and wouldn't hardly say another word.</p>
<p>'How far was it to where Starlight was?'</p>
<p>'Long way. Took me all day to come.'</p>
<p>'Had he been there long?'</p>
<p>'Yes; had a camp there.'</p>
<p>'Anybody else with him?'</p>
<p>'Three more men from this side.'</p>
<p>'Did the old man say we were to come at once?'</p>
<p>'Yes, or leave it alone—which you liked.'</p>
<p>Then he shut his eyes, and his mouth too, and was soon as fast asleep as
if he never intended to wake under a week.</p>
<p>'What shall we do, Jim?' I said; 'go or not?'</p>
<p>'If you leave it to me,' says Jim, 'I say, don't go. It's only some other
cross cattle or horse racket. We're bound to be nobbled some day. Why not
cut it now, and stick to the square thing? We couldn't do better than
we're doing now. It's rather slow, but we'll have a good cheque by
Christmas.'</p>
<p>'I'm half a mind to tell Warrigal to go back and say we're not on,' I
said. 'Lots of other chaps would join without making any bones about it.'</p>
<p>'Hoo—hoo—hoo—hoo,' sounded once more the night-bird from
the black tree outside.</p>
<p>'D——the bird! I believe he's the devil in the shape of a
mopoke! And yet I don't like Starlight to think we're afraid. He and the
old man might be in a fix and want help. Suppose we toss up?'</p>
<p>'All right,' says Jim, speaking rather slowly.</p>
<p>You couldn't tell from his face or voice how he felt about it; but I
believe now—more than that, he let on once to me—that he was
awfully cut up about my changing, and thought we were just in for a spell
of straightforward work, and would stash the other thing for good and all.</p>
<p>We put the fire together. It burnt up bright for a bit. I pulled out a
shilling.</p>
<p>'If it's head we go, Jim; if it's woman, we stay here.'</p>
<p>I sent up the coin; we both bent over near the fire to look at it.</p>
<p>The head was uppermost.</p>
<p>'Hoo—hoo—hoo—hoo,' came the night-bird's harsh croak.</p>
<p>There was a heavyish stake on that throw, if we'd only known. Only ruin—only
death. Four men's lives lost, and three women made miserable for life.</p>
<p>Jim and I looked at one another. He smiled and opened the door.</p>
<p>'It's all the fault of that cursed owl, I believe,' he said; 'I'll have
his life if he waits till it's daylight. We must be off early and get up
our horses. I know what a long day for Warrigal and that ambling
three-cornered devil of his means—seventy or eighty miles, if it's a
yard.'</p>
<p>We slept sound enough till daybreak, and COULD SLEEP then, whatever was on
the card. As for Jim, he slept like a baby always once he turned in. When
I woke I got up at once. It was half dark; there was a little light in the
east. But Warrigal had been out before me, and was leading his horse up to
the hut with the hobbles in his hand.</p>
<p>Our horses were not far off; one of them had a bell on. Jim had his old
brown, and I had a chestnut that I thought nearly as good. We weren't
likely to have anything to ride that wasn't middlin' fast and plucky. Them
that overhauled us would have to ride for it. We saddled up and took our
blankets and what few things we couldn't do without. The rest stopped in
the hut for any one that came after us. We left our wages, too, and never
asked for 'em from that day to this. A trifle like that didn't matter
after what we were going in for. More's the pity.</p>
<p>As we moved off my horse propped once or twice, and Warrigal looked at us
in a queer side sort of way and showed his teeth a bit—smile nor
laugh it wasn't, only a way he had when he thought he knew more than we
did.</p>
<p>'My word! your horse's been where the feed's good. We're goin' a good way
to-day. I wonder if they'll be as flash as they are now.'</p>
<p>'They'll carry us wherever that three-cornered mule of yours will shuffle
to to-night,' said Jim. 'Never you mind about them. You ride straight, and
don't get up to any monkey tricks, or, by George, I'll straighten you, so
as you'll know better next time.'</p>
<p>'You know a lot, Jim Marston,' said the half-caste, looking at him with
his long dark sleepy eyes which I always thought were like a half-roused
snake's. 'Never mind, you'll know more one of these days. We'd better push
on.'</p>
<p>He went off at a hand-gallop, and then pulled back into a long darting
kind of canter, which Bilbah thought was quite the thing for a journey—anyhow,
he never seemed to think of stopping it—went on mile after mile as
if he was not going to pull up this side of sundown. A wiry brute, always
in condition, was this said Bilbah, and just at this time as hard as
nails. Our horses had been doing nothing lately, and being on good young
feed had, of course, got fat, and were rather soft.</p>
<p>After four or five miles they began to blow. We couldn't well pull up; the
ground was hard in places and bad for tracking. If we went on at the pace
we should cook our horses. As soon as we got into a bit of open I raced up
to him.</p>
<p>'Now, look here, Warrigal,' I said, 'you know why you're doing this, and
so do I. Our horses are not up to galloping fifty or sixty miles on end
just off a spell and with no work for months. If you don't pull up and go
our pace I'll knock you off your horse.'</p>
<p>'Oh! you're riled!' he said, looking as impudent as he dared, but
slackening all the same. 'Pulled up before if I knowed your horses were
getting baked. Thought they were up to anything, same as you and Jim.'</p>
<p>'So they are. You'll find that one of these days. If there's work ahead
you ought to have sense enough not to knock smoke out of fresh horses
before we begin.'</p>
<p>'All right. Plenty of work to do, my word. And Starlight said, "Tell 'em
to be here to-day if they can." I know he's afraid of some one follerin'
up our tracks, as it is.'</p>
<p>'That's all right, Warrigal; but you ride steady all the same, and don't
be tearing away through thick timber, like a mallee scrubber that's got
into the open and sees the devil behind him until he can get cover again.
We shall be there to-night if it's not a hundred miles, and that's time
enough.'</p>
<p>We did drop in for a long day, and no mistake. We only pulled up for a
short halt in the middle, and Warrigal's cast-iron pony was off again, as
if he was bound right away for the other side of the continent. However,
though we were not going slow either, but kept up a reasonable fast pace,
it must have been past midnight when we rode into Starlight's camp; very
glad Jim and I were to see the fire—not a big one either. We had
been taking it pretty easy, you see, for a month or two, and were not
quite so ready for an eighty-mile ride as if we had been in something like
training. The horses had had enough of it, too, though neither of them
would give in, not if we'd ridden 'em twenty mile farther. As for
Warrigal's Bilbah he was near as fresh as when he started, and kept
tossin' his head an' amblin' and pacin' away as if he was walkin' for a
wager round a ring in a show-yard.</p>
<p>As we rode up we could see a gunyah made out of boughs, and a longish wing
of dogleg fence, made light but well put together. As soon as we got near
enough a dog ran out and looked as if he was going to worry us; didn't
bark either, but turned round and waited for us to get off.</p>
<p>'It's old Crib,' said Jim, with a big laugh; 'blest if it ain't. Father's
somewhere handy. They're going to take up a back block and do the thing
regular: Marston, Starlight, and Company—that's the fakement. They
want us out to make dams or put up a woolshed or something. I don't see
why they shouldn't, as well as Crossman and Fakesley. It's six of one and
half-a-dozen of the other, as far as being on the square goes. Depend upon
it, dad's turned over a new leaf.'</p>
<p>'Do you fellows want anything to eat?' said a voice that I knew to be
Starlight's. 'If you do there's tea near the fire, and some grub in that
flour bag. Help yourselves and hobble out your horses. We'll settle
matters a bit in the morning. Your respected parent's abed in his own
camp, and it's just as well not to wake him, unless you want his blessing
ere you sleep.'</p>
<p>We went with Starlight to his gunyah. A path led through a clump of pines,
so thick that a man might ride round it and never dream there was anything
but more pines inside. A clear place had been made in the sandhill, and a
snug crib enough rigged with saplings and a few sheets of bark. It was
neat and tidy, like everything he had to do with. 'I was at sea when I was
young,' he once said to Jim, when he was a bit 'on', 'and a man learns to
be neat there.' There was a big chimney outside, and a lot of leaves and
rushes out of a swamp which he had made Warrigal gather.</p>
<p>'Put your blankets down there, boys, and turn in. You'll see how the land
lies in the morning.' We didn't want asking twice, Jim's eyes were nigh
shut as it was. The sun was up when we woke.</p>
<p>Outside the first thing we saw was father and Starlight talking. Both of
these seemed a bit cranky. 'It's a d——shame,' we heard
Starlight say, as he turned and walked off. 'We could have done it well
enough by ourselves.'</p>
<p>'I know what I'm about,' says father, 'it's all or none. What's the use of
crying after being in it up to our neck?'</p>
<p>'Some day you'll think different,' says Starlight, looking back at him.</p>
<p>I often remembered it afterwards.</p>
<p>'Well, lads,' says father, looking straight at us, 'I wasn't sure as you'd
come. Starlight has been barneying with me about sending for you. But
we've got a big thing on now, and I thought you'd like to be in it.'</p>
<p>'We have come,' says I, pretty short. 'Now we're here what's the play
called, and when does the curtain rise? We're on.' I was riled, vexed at
Starlight talking as if we were children, and thought I'd show as we were
men, like a young fool as I was.</p>
<p>'All right,' says father, and he sat down on a log, and began to tell us
how there was any quantity of cattle running at the back where they were
camped—a good lot strayed and mixed up, from the last dry season,
and had never been mustered for years. The stockmen hardly ever came out
till the autumn musters. One of the chaps that was in it knew all this
side and had told them. They were going to muster for a month or so, and
drive the mob right through to Adelaide. Store cattle were dear then, and
we could get them off easy there and come back by sea. No one was to know
we were not regular overlanders; and when we'd got the notes in our
pockets it would be a hard matter to trace the cattle or prove that we
were the men that sold 'em.</p>
<p>'How many head do you expect to get?' says Jim.</p>
<p>'A thousand or twelve hundred; half of 'em fat, and two-thirds of them
young cattle.'</p>
<p>'By George! that's something like a haul; but you can't muster such a lot
as that without a yard.'</p>
<p>'I know that,' says father. 'We're putting up a yard on a little plain
about a mile from here. When they find it, it'll be an old nest, and the
birds flown.'</p>
<p>'Well, if that ain't the cheekiest thing I ever heard tell of,' says I
laughingly. 'To put up a yard at the back of a man's run, and muster his
cattle for him! I never heard the like before, nor any one else. But
suppose the cove or his men come across it?'</p>
<p>''Tain't no ways likely,' says father. 'They're the sleepiest lot of chaps
in this frontage I ever saw. It's hardly worth while "touching" them.
There's no fun in it. It's like shooting pheasants when they ain't
preserved. There's no risk, and when there's no risk there's no pleasure.
Anyway that's my notion.'</p>
<p>'Talking about risks, why didn't you work that Marquis of Lorne racket
better? We saw in the papers that the troopers hunted you so close you had
to kill him in the ranges.'</p>
<p>Father looked over at us and then began to laugh—not long, and he
broke off short. Laughing wasn't much in his line.</p>
<p>'Killed him, did we? And a horse worth nigh on to two thousand pounds. You
ought to have known your old father better than that. We did kill A
chestnut horse, one we picked out a purpose; white legs, white knee, short
under lip, everything quite regular. We even fed him for a week on prairie
grass, just like the Marquis had been eating. Bless you, we knew how to
work all that. We deceived Windhall his own self, and he thinks he's
pretty smart. No! the Marquis is all safe—you know where.'</p>
<p>I opened my eyes and stared at father.</p>
<p>'You've some call to crow if you can work things like that. How you ever
got him away beats me; but not more than how you managed to keep him hid
with a ring of troopers all round you from every side of the district.'</p>
<p>'We had friends,' father said. 'Me and Warrigal done all the travelling by
night. No one but him could have gone afoot, I believe, much less led a
blood horse through the beastly scrub and ranges he showed us. But the
devil himself could not beat him and that little brute Bilbah in rough
country.'</p>
<p>'I believe you,' I said, thinking of our ride yesterday. 'It's quite bad
enough to follow him on level ground. But don't you think our tracks will
be easy to follow with a thousand head of cattle before us? Any fool could
do that.'</p>
<p>'It ain't that as I'm looking at,' said father; 'of course an old woman
could do it, and knit stockings all the time; but our dart is to be off
and have a month's start before anybody knows they are off the run. They
won't think of mustering before fat cattle takes a bit of a turn. That
won't be for a couple of months yet. Then they may catch us if they can.'</p>
<p>We had a long talk with Starlight, and what he said came to much the same.
One stockman they had 'squared', and he was to stand in. They had got two
or three flash chaps to help muster and drive, who were to swear they
thought we were dealers, and had bought cattle all right. One or two more
were to meet us farther on. If we could get the cattle together and clear
off before anything was suspected the rest was easy. The yard was nearly
up, and Jim and I wired in and soon finished it. It didn't want very grand
work putting into it as long as it would last our time. So we put it up
roughly, but pretty strong, with pine saplings. The drawing in was the
worst, for we had to 'hump' the most of them ourselves. Jim couldn't help
bursting out laughing from time to time.</p>
<p>'It does seem such a jolly cheeky thing,' he said. 'Driving off a mob of
cattle on the quiet I've known happen once or twice; but I'm dashed if
ever I heard tell of putting up duffing improvements of a superior class
on a cove's run and clearing off with a thousand drafted cattle, all quiet
and regular, and him pottering about his home-station and never "dropping"
to it no more than if he was in Sydney.'</p>
<p>'People ought to look after their stock closer than they do,' I said. 'It
is their fault almost as much as ours. But they are too lazy to look after
their own work, and too miserable to pay a good man to do it for them.
They just get a half-and-half sort of fellow that'll take low wages and
make it up with duffing, and of course he's not likely to look very sharp
after the back country.'</p>
<p>'You're not far away,' says Jim; 'but don't you think they'd have to look
precious sharp and get up very early in the morning to be level with chaps
like father and Starlight, let alone Warrigal, who's as good by night as
day? Then there's you and me. Don't try and make us out better than we
are, Dick; we're all d——scoundrels, that's the truth of it,
and honest men haven't a chance with us, except in the long run—except
in the long run. That's where they'll have us, Dick Marston.'</p>
<p>'That's quite a long speech for you, Jim,' I said; 'but it don't matter
much that I know of whose fault it is that we're in this duffing racket.
It seems to be our fate, as the chap says in the book. We'll have a jolly
spree in Adelaide if this journey comes out right. And now let's finish
this evening off. To-morrow they're going to yard the first mob.'</p>
<p>After that we didn't talk much except about the work. Starlight and
Warrigal were out every day and all day. The three new hands were some
chaps who formed part of a gang that did most of the horse-stealing in
that neighbourhood, though they never showed up. The way they managed it
was this. They picked up any good-looking nag or second-class racehorse
that they fell across, and took them to a certain place. There they met
another lot of fellows, who took the horses from them and cleared out to
another colony; at the same time they left the horses they had brought. So
each lot travelled different ways, and were sold in places where they were
quite strange and no one was likely to claim them.</p>
<p>After a man had had a year or two at this kind of work, he was good, or
rather bad, for anything. These young chaps, like us, had done pretty well
at these games, and one of them, falling in with Starlight, had proposed
to him to put up a couple of hundred head of cattle on Outer Back
Momberah, as the run was called; then father and he had seen that a
thousand were as easy to get as a hundred. Of course there was a risky
feeling, but it wasn't such bad fun while it lasted. We were out all day
running in the cattle. The horses were in good wind and condition now; we
had plenty of rations—flour, tea, and sugar. There was no cart, but
some good packhorses, just the same as if we were a regular station party
on our own run. Father had worked all that before we came. We had the best
of fresh beef and veal too—you may be sure of that—there was
no stint in that line; and at night we were always sure of a yarn from
Starlight—that is, if he was in a good humour. Sometimes he wasn't,
and then nobody dared speak to him, not even father.</p>
<p>He was an astonishing man, certainly. Jim and I used to wonder, by the
hour, what he'd been in the old country. He'd been all over the world—in
the Islands and New Zealand; in America, and among Malays and other
strange people that we'd hardly ever heard of. Such stories as he'd tell
us, too, about slaves and wild chiefs that he'd lived with and gone out to
fight with against their enemy. 'People think a great deal of a dead man
now and then in this innocent country,' he said once when the grog was
uppermost; 'why, I've seen fifty men killed before breakfast, and in cold
blood, too, chopped up alive, or next thing to it; and a drove of slaves—men,
women, and children—as big nearly as our mob, handed over to a
slave-dealer, and driven off in chains just as you'd start a lot of
station cattle. They didn't like it, going off their run either, poor
devils. The women would try and run back after their pickaninnies when
they dropped, just like that heifer when Warrigal knocked her calf on the
head to-day.' What a man he was! This was something like life, Jim and I
thought. When we'd sold the cattle, if we got 'em down to Adelaide all
right, we'd take a voyage to some foreign country, perhaps, and see sights
too. What a paltry thing working for a pound a week seemed when a rise
like this was to be made!</p>
<p>Well, the long and short of it is that we mustered the cattle quite
comfortably, nobody coming anext or anigh us any more than if we'd taken
the thing by contract. You wouldn't have thought there was anybody nearer
than Bathurst. Everything seemed to be in our favour. So it was, just at
the start. We drafted out all the worst and weediest of the cattle,
besides all the old cows, and when we counted the mob out we had nearly
eleven hundred first-rate store cattle; lots of fine young bullocks and
heifers, more than half fat—altogether a prime well-bred mob that no
squatter or dealer could fault in any way if the price was right. We could
afford to sell them for a shade under market price for cash. Ready money,
of course, we were bound to have.</p>
<p>Just as we were starting there was a fine roan bull came running up with a
small mob.</p>
<p>'Cut him out, and beat him back,' says father; 'we don't want to be
bothered with the likes of him.'</p>
<p>'Why, I'm dashed if that ain't Hood's imported bull,' says Billy the Boy,
a Monaro native that we had with us. 'I know him well. How's he come to
get back? Why, the cove gave two hundred and fifty notes for him afore he
left England, I've heard 'em say.'</p>
<p>'Bring him along,' said Starlight, who came up just then. 'In for a penny,
in for a pound. They'll never think of looking for him on the Coorong, and
we'll be there before they miss any cattle worth talking about.'</p>
<p>So we took 'Fifteenth Duke of Cambridge' along with us; a red roan he was,
with a little white about the flank. He wasn't more than four year old.
He'd been brought out from England as a yearling. How he'd worked his way
out to this back part of the run, where a bull of his quality ain't often
seen, nobody could say. But he was a lively active beast, and he'd got
into fine hard fettle with living on saltbush, dry grass, and scrub for
the last few months, so he could travel as well as the others. I took
particular notice of him, from his little waxy horns to his straight locks
and long square quarters. And so I'd need to—but that came after. He
had only a little bit of a private brand on the shoulder. That was easily
faked, and would come out quite different.</p>
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