Part 4 (1/2)
”The voice of him is like the voice of my boy that was took away. But he was smooth-faced, like a girl, and ye're a dark, wrinkled man.
'Sides, he died years agone, over the water.”
But the old lady grew thoughtful and silent from that day, and three weeks after she was carried up to her grave,--
”By the little grey church on the windy hill.”
At the funeral, William Lee, the man whom I have been describing, pushed quietly through the little crowd, and as they threw the first earth on the coffin, stood looking over the shoulder of his brother, who was unconscious of his existence.
Like many men who have been much in great solitudes, and have gone days and weeks sometimes without meeting a fellow-creature, he had acquired the habit of thinking aloud, and if anyone had been listening they would have heard much such a soliloquy as the following, expletives omitted, or rather softened:--
”A brutal cold country this, for a man to camp out in. Never a buck-log to his fire, no, nor a stick thicker than your finger for seven mile round; and if there was, you'd get a month for cutting it. If the young'un milks free this time, I'll be off to the bay again, I know.
But will he? By George, he shall though. The young sn.o.b, I know he daren't but come, and yet it's my belief he's late just to keep me soaking out in the rain. Whew! it's cold enough to freeze the tail of a tin possum; and this infernal rubbish won't burn, at least not to warm a man. If it wasn't for the whisky I should be dead. There's a rush of wind; I am glad for one thing there is no dead timber overhead. He'll be drinking at all the places coming along to get his courage up to bounce me, but there ain't a public-house on the road six miles from this, so the drink will have pretty much died out of him by the time he gets to me, and if I can get him to sit in this rain, and smoke 'backer for five minutes, he won't be particular owdacious. I'll hide the grog, too, between the stones. He'll be asking for a drink the minute he comes. I hope d.i.c.k is ready; he is pretty sure to be. He's a good little chap, that d.i.c.k; he has stuck to me well these five years. I wouldn't like to trust him with another man's horse, though. But this other one is no good; he's got all the inclination to go the whole hog, and none of the pluck necessary. If he ever is lagged, he will be a worse one than ever I was, or d.i.c.k either. There he is, for a hundred pounds.”
A faint ”halloo!” sounded above the war of the weather; and Lee, putting his hand to his mouth, replied with that strange cry, so well known to all Australians--”Coee.”
A man was now heard approaching through the darkness, now splas.h.i.+ng deep into some treacherous moss hole with a loud curse, now blundering among loose-lying blocks of stone. Lee waited till he was quite close, and then seizing a bunch of gorse lighted it at his fire and held it aloft; the bright blaze fell full upon the face and features of George Hawker.
”A cursed place and a cursed time,” he began, ”for an appointment. If you had wanted to murder me, I could have understood it. But I am pretty safe, I think; your interests don't lie that way.”
”Well, well, you see,” returned Lee, ”I don't want any meetings on the cross up at my place in the village. The whole house ain't mine, and we don't know who may be listening. I am suspected enough already, and it wouldn't look well for you to be seen at my place. Folks would have begun axing what for.”
”Don't see it,” said George. ”Besides, if you did not want to see me at home, why the devil do you bring me out here in the middle of the moor?
We might have met on the hill underneath the village, and when we had done business gone up to the publichouse. D----d if I understand it.”
He acquiesced sulkily to the arrangement, however, because he saw it was no use talking about it, but he was far from comfortable. He would have been still less so had he known that Lee's shout had brought up a confederate, who was now peering over the rocks, almost touching his shoulder.
”Well,” said Lee, ”here we are, so we had better be as comfortable as we can this devil's night.”
”Got anything to drink?”
”Deuce a swipe of grog have I. But I have got some real Barret's twist, that never paid duty as I know'd on, so just smoke a pipe before we begin talking, and show you aint vexed.”
”I'd sooner have had a drop of grog, such a night as this.”
”We must do as the Spaniards do, when they can't get anything,” said Lee; ”go without.”
They both lit their pipes, and smoked in silence for a few minutes, till Lee resumed:--
”If the witches weren't all dead, there would be some of them abroad to-night; hear that?”
”Only a whimbrel, isn't it?” said George.
”That's something worse than a whimbrel, I'm thinking,” said the other.
”There's some folks don't believe in witches and the like,” he continued; ”but a man that's seen a naked old hag of a gin ride away on a myall-bough, knows better.”
”Lord!” said George. ”I shouldn't have thought you'd have believed in the like of that--but I do--that old devil's dam, dame Parker, that lives alone up in Hatherleigh Wood, got gibbering some infernal nonsense at me the other day, for shooting her black cat. I made the cross in the road though, so I suppose it won't come to anything.”
”Perhaps not,” said Lee; ”but I'd sooner kill a man than a black cat.”