第10章 Part I.(9)
I thought it was a low,brutal business all round.Romany was a quiet chap after all,and the chaps had no right to chyack him.Perhaps he'd had a hard life,and carried a big swag of trouble that we didn't know anything about.He seemed a lonely man.I'd gone through enough myself to teach me not to judge men.I made up my mind to tell him how I felt about the matter next time we met.Perhaps I made my usual mistake of bothering about `feelings'in another party that hadn't any feelings at all --perhaps I didn't;but it's generally best to chance it on the kind side in a case like this.Altogether I felt as if I'd made another fool of myself and been a weak coward.
I drank the rest of the beer and went to sleep.
About daylight I woke and heard Jack's horse on the gravel.
He came round the back of the buggy-shed and up to my door,and then,suddenly,a girl screamed out.I pulled on my trousers and 'lastic-side boots and hurried out.It was Mary herself,dressed,and sitting on an old stone step at the back of the kitchen with her face in her hands,and Jack was off his horse and stooping by her side with his hand on her shoulder.
She kept saying,`I thought you were --!I thought you were --!'
I didn't catch the name.An old single-barrel,muzzle-loader shot-gun was lying in the grass at her feet.It was the gun they used to keep loaded and hanging in straps in a room of the kitchen ready for a shot at a cunning old hawk that they called `'Tarnal Death',and that used to be always after the chickens.
When Mary lifted her face it was as white as note-paper,and her eyes seemed to grow wilder when she caught sight of me.
`Oh,you did frighten me,Mr Barnes,'she gasped.Then she gave a little ghost of a laugh and stood up,and some colour came back.
`Oh,I'm a little fool!'she said quickly.`I thought I heard old 'Tarnal Death at the chickens,and I thought it would be a great thing if I got the gun and brought him down;so I got up and dressed quietly so as not to wake Sarah.And then you came round the corner and frightened me.
I don't know what you must think of me,Mr Barnes.'
`Never mind,'said Jack.`You go and have a sleep,or you won't be able to dance to-night.Never mind the gun --I'll put that away.'
And he steered her round to the door of her room off the brick verandah where she slept with one of the other girls.
`Well,that's a rum start!'I said.
`Yes,it is,'said Jack;`it's very funny.Well,how's your face this morning,Joe?'
He seemed a lot more serious than usual.
We were hard at work all the morning cleaning out the big wool-shed and getting it ready for the dance,hanging hoops for the candles,making seats,&c.I kept out of sight of the girls as much as I could.
One side of my face was a sight and the other wasn't too classical.
I felt as if I had been stung by a swarm of bees.
`You're a fresh,sweet-scented beauty now,and no mistake,Joe,'said Jimmy Nowlett --he was going to play the accordion that night.
`You ought to fetch the girls now,Joe.But never mind,your face'll go down in about three weeks.My lower jaw is crooked yet;but that fight straightened my nose,that had been knocked crooked when I was a boy --so I didn't lose much beauty by it.'
When we'd done in the shed,Jack took me aside and said --`Look here,Joe!if you won't come to the dance to-night --and I can't say you'd ornament it --I tell you what you'll do.You get little Mary away on the quiet and take her out for a stroll --and act like a man.
The job's finished now,and you won't get another chance like this.'
`But how am I to get her out?'I said.
`Never you mind.You be mooching round down by the big peppermint-tree near the river-gate,say about half-past ten.'
`What good'll that do?'
`Never you mind.You just do as you're told,that's all you've got to do,'said Jack,and he went home to get dressed and bring his wife.
After the dancing started that night I had a peep in once or twice.
The first time I saw Mary dancing with Jack,and looking serious;and the second time she was dancing with the blarsted Jackaroo dude,and looking excited and happy.I noticed that some of the girls,that I could see sitting on a stool along the opposite wall,whispered,and gave Mary black looks as the Jackaroo swung her past.
It struck me pretty forcibly that I should have taken fighting lessons from him instead of from poor Romany.I went away and walked about four miles down the river road,getting out of the way into the Bush whenever I saw any chap riding along.I thought of poor Romany and wondered where he was,and thought that there wasn't much to choose between us as far as happiness was concerned.Perhaps he was walking by himself in the Bush,and feeling like I did.I wished I could shake hands with him.
But somehow,about half-past ten,I drifted back to the river slip-rails and leant over them,in the shadow of the peppermint-tree,looking at the rows of river-willows in the moonlight.
I didn't expect anything,in spite of what Jack said.
I didn't like the idea of hanging myself:I'd been with a party who found a man hanging in the Bush,and it was no place for a woman round where he was.
And I'd helped drag two bodies out of the Cudgeegong river in a flood,and they weren't sleeping beauties.I thought it was a pity that a chap couldn't lie down on a grassy bank in a graceful position in the moonlight and die just by thinking of it --and die with his eyes and mouth shut.
But then I remembered that I wouldn't make a beautiful corpse,anyway it went,with the face I had on me.
I was just getting comfortably miserable when I heard a step behind me,and my heart gave a jump.And I gave a start too.
`Oh,is that you,Mr Wilson?'said a timid little voice.
`Yes,'I said.`Is that you,Mary?'
And she said yes.It was the first time I called her Mary,but she did not seem to notice it.
`Did I frighten you?'I asked.
`No --yes --just a little,'she said.`I didn't know there was any one --'then she stopped.
`Why aren't you dancing?'I asked her.
`Oh,I'm tired,'she said.`It was too hot in the wool-shed.I thought I'd like to come out and get my head cool and be quiet a little while.'