BLIND MAN'S BLOCK
It was some moments before Moya looked higher than that hand, and it prepared her for a worse face than she found waiting for her own. The face was fierce enough, and it poured a steady fire upon the girl from black eyes blazing in the double shade of a felt wideawake and the overhanging mallee. But it was also old, and lined, and hunted; the man had grown grey in prison; whatever his offences, there was rare spirit in a last dash for freedom at his age. Moya had not thought so before. She was surprised that she should think it now. The last thing that she had expected to feel was an atom of real sympathy with the destroyer of her happiness. And yet it was the first thing she felt.
"Please don't look at me like that," she begged. "I wish you no harm, believe me!"
There was a pause, and then a first stern question.
"Who sent you here?"
"Nobody."
"Rot!"
"It's the truth."
"How else did you find me?"
"I saw you yesterday in the hut; you know that; you saw me."
"This is not the hut."
"No, but as you weren't there I looked for your tracks. And I found them. And here I am."
Shaggy brows rose above the piercing eyes.
"I thought you didn't come from the bush?"
"Nor do I; but I have heard a good deal about tracking, this last day or two; and I had luck."
"You've come all this way alone?"
"Absolutely."
"Then nobody else knows anything about it. That's certain. But they will know! You'll be followed, and I shall be found!"
"I don't think so; they'll think I've gone somewhere else."
The convict gave her a long look, and his hawk's eye gleamed; then he turned his attention to the dapple-grey. It was over a minute before he spoke again.
"Do you know who I am?" he then asked.
"Captain Bovill."
He smiled wickedly.
"And nothing else?"
"Oh, yes," said Moya, sadly; "I know what else you are, of course. His father!"
"So he's had the pluck to tell you, after all?"
"He should have told me at once."
"And lost you?"
"He hasn't lost me yet!" cried Moya impulsively, but from her loyal heart none the less.
"Then why break away from him like this? Wasn't his word good enough?"
"I haven't broken away," said Moya, "from him. I couldn't. I've come to tell you why. They've taken him to prison!"
"Takenhim!"
"On your account. They know he helped you. That's all they do know."
The convict stared; but, in the perpetual twilight of the mallee that was the only fact to which Moya could have sworn. She could make nothing of the old man's expression. When he spoke, however, there was no mistaking his tone. It was hard and grim as a prison bell.
"In his turn!" said he. "Well, it'll teach him what it's like."
"But it isn't his turn," cried Moya, in a fury; "what has he done to deserve such degradation, except a good deal more than his duty by you? And this is all the thanks he gets! As though he had taken after you! How can you speak like that of him? How dare you—to me?"
So Moya could turn upon the whilom terror of a colony, a desperado all his days, yet surely never more desperate than now; and her rings flashed, and her eyes flashed, and there was no one there to see! No soul within many miles but the great criminal before her, whose turn it was to astonish Moya. He uncovered; he jerked a bowthat was half a shrug, but the more convincing for the blemish; and thereafter hung his cropped head in strange humility.
"You're right!" said he. "I deserve all you've said, and more. He has treated me ten thousand times better than I deserve, and that's my gratitude! Yet if you had been half a lifetime in the hulks—in irons—chained down like a wild beast—why, you'dbeone, even you!"
"I know," said Moya in a low voice. "It is terrible to think of!"
"And God bless you for admitting that much," the old man whined, "for it's few that will. Break the law, and the law breaks you—on a wheel! Talk about the wrongs of prisoners; they have neither wrongs nor rights in the eyes of the law; it's their own fault for being prisoners, and that's the last word."
"It is very terrible," said Moya again.
"Ah, but you little know how bad it is; and I'm not going to tell you. It's worse than your worst dreams, and that must do for you. The floggings, the irons, the solitary confinement in your irons with theblood running down your back! No, I said I wouldn't, and I won't. But it's hard to hold your tongue when you're talking to a lady for the first time in thirty years. And to think of a young lady like you coming all this way, alone too, to say a kind word to a double-dyed old rogue like me! It's the most wonderful thing I ever heard of in all my days. I can't think why you did it, for the life of me I can't!"
"It was to tell you about your son," Moya reminded him.
"Ah, poor fellow! God help him, for I can't."
"Are you quite sure?" said Moya gently, and for once rather nervously as well.
"Sure? Of course I'm sure! Why, what can I do?" cried the other, with sudden irritation as suddenly suppressed. "Hiding—hunted—with every hand against me but yours—I'd help him if I could, but I can't."
"So he's to go to prison instead of you?"
Moya spoke quietly, but with the more effect; indeed, she was herself beginning to feel surprised at her success with a desperate man in vital straits. He was more amenablethan she had imagined possible. That he should parley with her at all was infinite encouragement. But now there came a pause.
"I see what you're driving at," he cried savagely at last. "You want me to give myself up! I'll see you—further."
The oath was dropped at the last moment—another strange sign—but the tone could not have been stronger. Yet the mere fact that he had seen her point, and made it for her, filled Moya with increasing confidence.
"I don't wonder," she had the tact to say. "How could you be expected to go back—to that—of your own free will? And yet what can be worse than waiting—waiting till——"
"I'm taken, eh? Is that what you want to say? They shall never take me alive, curse them; don't you trouble about that!"
The tone was stubborn, ferocious, blood-curdling, but at least it was in keeping with the blazing eyes and the great jowl beneath. Moya looked steadily at the bushranger, the mutineer, the indomitable criminal of other days; more remained of him than she hadfancied. And to think that he had soft answers for her!
She made haste to earn another.
"Please—please—don't speak like that! It is dreadful. And I feel sure there is some middle course."
"I'm no believer in middle courses!"
"That I know. Yet—you have suffered so—I feel sure something could be done! I—that is my people—have influence—money——"
"They can keep their money."
Moya begged his pardon. It was not an act in which she excelled. Yet nothing could have been sweeter than her confusion, nothing finer than her frank humility.
"I was only wondering if there was anything—anything—we could any of us do! It would be understood so well. His father! Surely that would be enough! I know the Governor. I would think nothing of going to him. I honestly believe that he would pardon you both!"
Moya felt the black eyes burning, and for once her own eyes fell; indeed she was a wondrous picture of beauty and youth andenthusiasm, there in that place, in her dainty blouse and habit, with the dull green mallee above and all around her. But they were a yet more extraordinary pair, the old bushranger of a bygone day, and the Melbourne beauty of the present.
"So you believe that, do you?" said the former sardonically.
"From the bottom of my heart."
"Suppose you were wrong?"
"I would move heaven and earth."
"Then jump on your horse!"
"Why?"
"I'm coming with you—to the police-barracks!"
It was like a dream. Moya could have rubbed her eyes, and soon had to do so, for they were full of tears. She sobbed her thanks; she flung out both hands to press them home. The convict waited grimly at her horse's head.
"Better wait and see what comes of it," said he. "And think yourself lucky worse hasn't come of it yet! I'm not thinking of myself; do you know where you are? Do you know that this is Blind Man's Block?Haven't you heard about it? Then you should thank your stars you've a good old bushman to lead you out; for it's like getting out of a maze, I can tell you; and if you'd been warned, as I was, I don't think you'd have ventured in."
Moya had never realised that it was into Blind Man's Block she had plunged so rashly. Nor did the discovery disturb her now. She was too full of her supreme triumph to dwell for many moments upon any one of the risks that she had run for its accomplishment. Neither did she look too far ahead. She would keep faith with this poor creature; no need to count the cost just yet. Moya set her mind's eye upon the reunion at the police-barracks: her advent as the heroine of a bloodless victory, her intercession for the father, her meeting with the son.
The prospect dazzled her. It had its gravely precarious aspect. But one thing at a time. She had done her best; no ultimate ill could come of it; of that she felt as certain as of the fact that she was sitting in her saddle and blindly followingan escaped criminal through untrodden wilds.
Suddenly she discovered that she was not doing this exactly. She had not consciously diverged, and yet her leader was bearing down upon her with a scowl.
"Why don't you follow me?" he cried. "Do you want to get bushed in Blind Man's Block?"
"I wasn't thinking," replied Moya. "It must have been the horse."
Bovill seized the bridle.
"It's a fool of a horse!" said he. "Why, we're quite close to the fence, and it wants to head back into the middle of the block!"
Moya remarked that she did not recognise the country.
"Of course you don't," was the reply. "You came the devil of a round, but I'm taking you straight back to the fence. Trust an old hand like me; I can smell a fence as a sheep smells water. You trust yourself to me!"
Moya had already done so. It was too late to reconsider that. Yet she did begin to wonder somewhat at herself. That hairyhand upon the bridle, it lay also rather heavily on her nerves. And the mallee shrub showed no signs of thinning; the open spaces were as few as ever, and as short; on every hand the leaves seemed whispering for miles and miles.
"We're a long time getting to that fence," said Moya at length.
The convict stopped, looked about him in all directions, and finally turned round. In doing so his right hand left the bridle, but in an instant the other was in its place. Moya, however, was too intent upon his face to notice this.
"I'm afraid I've missed it," said he calmly.
"Missed the fence?"
"It looks like it."
"After what you said just now? Oh, what a fool I was to trust you!"
Their eyes were joined for the next few seconds; then the man's face relaxed in a brutal grin. And Moya began to see the measure of her folly.
"Hypocrite!" she gasped.
"Don't call names, my dear. It's notkind, especially to your father-in-law that is to be!"
Moya shuddered in every member except the hand that gripped her whalebone switch. The gold-mounted handle was deep in her flesh.
"Leave go of my bridle," she said quietly.
"Not just yet, my dear."
The whalebone whistled through the air, and came slashing down upon the dapple-grey's neck, within an inch of the hairy fingers, which were nevertheless snatched away. Moya had counted on this and its result. The animal was off at its best pace; but the desperate hands grabbed Moya's habit as it passed, and in another instant she was on the ground. In yet another she had picked herself up, but she never even looked for the horse; she fixed her eye upon her loathly adversary as on a wild beast; and now he looked nothing else, with canine jaw and one vile lip protruding, and hell's own fire in his wicked eyes.
Luckily her grip of the riding-whip had tightened, not relaxed; but now she held itas a sword; and it helped her to cow a brute who had the real brute's dread of the lash. But also she was young and supple, and the man was old. The contrast had never been so sharp; for now they were both in their true colours; and every vileness of the one was met by its own antithesis in the other. It was will against will, personality against personality, in an open space among the mallee and the full glare of a climbing sun, mile upon mile from human help or habitation. And the battle was fought to a finish without a word.
Moya only heard a muttering as the wretch swung round upon his heel, and walked after the dapple-grey, which had come to a standstill within sight. But she was not done with the blackguard yet. She watched him remove the lady's saddle, then carefully detach the water-bag, and sling it about himself by means of the stirrup-leather. Then he mounted, bare-back; but Moya knew that he would not abandon her without his say; and she was waiting for him with the self-same eye that had beaten him off.
He reined up and cursed her long and filthily. Her ear was deaf to that; but little of it conveyed the slightest meaning; her unchanged face declared as much. So then he trimmed his tongue accordingly.
"Sorry to take the water-bag; but through you I've forgot mine and my swag too. Better try and find 'em; they're away back where I camped last night; you're welcome to the drop that's left, if there is one. You look a bit black about the gills as it is. Have a drop to show there's no ill-feeling before I go."
And he dangled the bag before her, meaning to whisk it back again. But Moya disappointed him. She was parched with thirst, though she only realised it now. She neither spoke nor moved a muscle.
"Then die of thirst, and be damned to you! Do you know where you are? Blind Man's Block—Blind Man's Block! Don't you forget it again, because I shan't be here to remind you; a horse was what I wanted, and was promised, so you're only keeping that poor devil's word for him. Give him my blessing if you ever see him again; butyou never will. They say it's an easy place to die in, this here Blind Man's Block, but you'll see for yourself. A nice little corpse we'll make, won't we? But we'll die and rot the same, and the crows'll have our eyes for breakfast and our innards for dinner! And do you good, you little white devil, you!"
Moya remained standing in the same attitude, with the same steady eye and the same marble pallor, long after the monster disappeared, and the last beat of the dapple-grey's hoofs was lost among the normal wilds of the bush. Then all at once a great light leapt to her face. But it was not at anything that she had heard or seen; it was at something which had come to her very suddenly in the end. And for a long time after that, though lost and alone in Blind Man's Block, and only too likely to die the cruel death designed for her, Moya Bethune was a happier woman than she had been for many an hour.
HIS OWN COIN
"Cooo-eee!"
It was a far cry and faint, so faint that Moya was slow to believe her ears. She had not stirred from the scene of her late encounter, but this inactivity was not without design. Moya was tired out already; she had too much sense to waste her remaining strength upon the heat of the day. She found the chewing of leaves avert the worst pangs of thirst, so long as she remained in the shade, and there she determined to rest for the present. Sooner or later she would be followed and found, and the fewer her wanderings, the quicker and easier that blessed consummation. Her plight was still perilous enough, and Moya did not blink this fact any more than others. Yet another fact there was, of which she was finallyconvinced, though she had yet to prove it; meanwhile the mere conviction was her stay and comfort. She was gloating over it, a leaf between her dry lips, and her aching body stretched within reach of more leaves, when she thought she heard the coo-ee.
She sat up and listened. It came again. And this time Moya was sure.
She sprang to her feet, and, deliverance within hail, realised her danger for the first time fully. Sunburnt hands put a trembling trumpet to her lips, and out came a clearer call than had come to Moya.
The answer sounded hoarse, and was as far away as ever; but prompt enough; and now Moya was as sure of the direction as of the sound itself. Nor had she occasion to coo-ee any more. For the first thing she saw, perhaps a furlong through the scrub, was a riderless horse, bridled but unsaddled, with a forefoot through the reins.
True to its unpleasant habit, the dapple-grey had done noble service to the human race, by swerving under a branch at full gallop, and scraping its rider into space.
The wretch lay helpless in the sun, witha bloody forehead and an injured spine. Moya's water-bag had fallen clear, and lay out of his reach by a few inches which were yet too many for him to move. He demanded it as soon as she came up, but with an oath, and Moya helped herself first, drinking till her hands came close together upon the wet canvas.
"Now you can finish it," she said, "if you're such a fool. I've left you more than you deserve."
He cursed her hideously, and a touch of unmerited compassion came upon her as she discovered how really helpless he was. So she held his head while he drained the last drop, and as it fell back he cursed her again, but began whining when she made off without a word.
"My back must be broken—I've no feeling in my legs. And you'd let me die alone!"
"Your own coin," said Moya, turning at her distance.
"It wasn't. I swear it wasn't. I swear to God I was only doing it to frighten you! I was going for help."
"How can you tell such lies?" asked Moya sternly.
"They're not, they're the solemn truth, so help me God!"
"You're only making them worse; own they are lies, or I'm off this minute."
"Oh, they are then, damn you!"
Only the oath was both longer and stronger.
"Swear again, and it won't be this minute, it'll be this very second!" cried Moya decisively. "So own, without swearing, that youdidmean me to die of thirst, so far as you were concerned."
"You never would have done it, though; they'll be on your track by this time."
"That may be. It doesn't alter what you did."
"I offered you a drink, didn't I? It was my only chance to take the horse and the water-bag. I meant to frighten you, but that's all. And now I'm half mad with pain and heat; you'd swear yourself if you were in my shoes; and I can't even feel I've got any on!"
Moya drew a little nearer.
"Nearer, miss—nearer still! Come and stand between me and the sun. Just for a minute! It's burning me to hell!"
Moya took no notice of the word, nor yet of the request.
"Before I do any more for you," said she, "you must tell me the truth."
"I have!"
"Oh, no, you haven't: not the particular truth I want to know. I know it already. Still I mean to hear it from you. It's the truth on quite a different matter; that's what I want," said Moya, and stood over the poor devil as he desired, so that at last the sun was off him, though now he had Moya's eyes instead. "I—I wonder you can't guess—what I've guessed!" she added after a pause.
But she also wondered at something else, for in that pause the blood-stained face had grown ghastlier than before, and Moya could not understand it. The man was so sorely stricken that recapture must now be his liveliest hope: why then should he fear a discovery more or less? And it was quite a little thing that Moya thought she had discovered;a little thing to him, not to her; and she proceeded to treat it as such.
"You know you're not Captain Bovill at all," she told him, in the quiet voice of absolutely satisfied conviction.
"Who told you that?" he roared, half raising himself for the first time, and the fear and fury in his eyes were terrible to see.
"Nobody."
"Ah!"
"But I know it all the same. I've known it this last half-hour. And if I hadn't I should know it now. I see it—where I ought to have seen it from the first—in your face."
"You mean because my son's not the dead spit of his father? But he never was; he took after his mother; he'll tell you that himself."
"It's not what I meant," said Moya, "though it is through the man you call your son that I know he is nothing of the kind. His father may have been a criminal; he was something else first; he would not have left a woman to perish of thirst in the bush, a woman who had done him no harm—whoonly wished to befriend him—who was going to marry his son!"
There were no oaths to this; but the black eyes gleamed shrewdly in the blood-stained face, and the conical head wagged where it lay.
"You never were in the hulks, you see," said the convict; "else you'd know. No matter what a man goes in, they all come out alike, brute beasts every one. I'm all that, God help me! But I'm the man—I'm the man. Do you think he'd have held out a finger to me if I hadn't been?"
"I've no doubt you convinced him that you were."
"How can one man convince another that he's his father?"
"I don't know. I only know that you have done it."
"Why, he knew me at once!"
"Nonsense! He had never seen you before; he doesn't remember his father."
"Do you suppose he hasn't seen pictures, and heard plenty? No, no; all the rest's a true bill; but Captain Bovill I've lived, and Captain Bovill I'm going to die."
Moya looked at him closely. She could not help shuddering. He saw it, and the fear of death laid hold of him, even as he sweltered in the heat.
"With a lie on your lips?" said Moya, gravely.
"It's the truth!"
"You know it isn't. Own it, for your own sake! Who can tell how long I shall be gone?"
"You shan't go! You shan't go!" he snarled and whined at once. And he clutched vainly at her skirts, the effort leaving him pale as death, and in as dire an agony.
"I must," said Moya. "There's the horse; the saddle's quite near; you shall have all the help that I can bring you, with all the speed that's possible."
She moved away, and the ruthless sun played on every inch of him once more.
"I'm burning—burning!" he yelled. "Have I been in hell upon earth all these years to go to hell itself before I die? Move me, for Christ's sake! Only get me into the shade, and I'll confess—I'll confess!"
Moya tried; but it was terrible; he shrieked with agony, foaming at the mouth, and beating her off with feeble fists. So then she flung herself bodily on an infant hop-bush, and actually uprooted it. And with this and some mallee-branches she made a gunyah over him, though he said it stifled him, and complained bitterly to the end. At the end of all Moya knelt at his feet.
"Now keep your promise."
"What promise?" he asked with an oath, for Moya had been milder than her word.
"You said you would confess."
"Confess what?" he cried, a new terror in his eyes. "I'm not going to die! I don't feel like dying! I've no more to confess!"
"Oh, yes, you have—that you're not his father—nor yet Captain Bovill."
"But I tell you I am. Why—" and the pallid face lit up suddenly—"even the police know that, and you know that they know it!"
It was a random shot, but it made a visible mark, for in her instinctive certainty ofthe main fact Moya was only now reminded that Rigden himself had told her the same thing. Her discomfiture, however, was but momentary; she held obstinately to her intuition. The police might know it. She knew better than the police; and looking upon their quarry, and going over everything as she looked, came in a flash upon a fresh theory and a small fact in its support.
"Then they don't know who it is they're after!" cried Moya. "You're not eventheirman; his eyes were brown; it was in the description; but yours are the blackest I ever saw."
It was not a good point. He might well make light of it. But it was enough for Moya and her woman's instinct; or so she said, and honestly thought for the moment. She was less satisfied when she had caught the horse and still must hear the mangled man; for he railed at her, from the gunyah she had built him, to the very end. And to Moya it seemed that there was more of triumph than of terror in his tone.
THE FACT OF THE MATTER
Sergeant Harkness had his barracks to himself. To be sure, the cell was occupied; but, contrary to the usual amenities of the wilderness, such as euchre and Christian names between the sergeant and the ordinary run of prisoners, with this one Harkness would have nothing to do. It was a personal matter between them: the capital charge had divided them less. Constable and tracker had meanwhile been called out on fresh business. That was in the middle of the day. Since then the coach had passed with the mail; and Harkness had been pacing his verandah throughout the sleepiest hour of the afternoon, only pausing to read and re-read one official communication, when Moya's habit fluttered into view towards four o'clock.
"Well, I'm dished!" exclaimed the sergeant. "And alone, too, after all!"
He hastened to meet her.
"Where on earth have you been, Miss Bethune? Do you know there's another search-party out, looking foryouthis time? My sub and the tracker were fetched this morning. I'd have gone myself only——" and he jerked a thumb towards a very small window at one end of the barracks.
"Mr. Rigden?" said Moya, lowering her voice.
"Yes."
"So you've got him still! I'm glad; but I don't want him to know I'm here. Stay—does he think I'm lost?"
"No. I thought it better not to tell him."
"That was both wise and kind of you, Sergeant Harkness! He must know nothing just yet. I want to speak to you first."
And she urged the dapple-grey, now flagging sorely, towards the other end of the building; but no face appeared at the little barred window; for Rigden was sound asleep in his cell.
"We're all right," said Moya, sliding to the ground; "we stopped at a tank and a boundary-rider's hut, but not the Eureka boundary. I didn't get out the same way I got in, you see—I mean out of the Blind Man's Block."
"Blind Man's Block! Good God! have you been there? You're lucky to have got out at all!"
"It wasn't easy. I thought we should never strike a fence, and when we did I had to follow it for miles before there was a gate or a road. But the boundary-rider was very kind; he not only gave me the best meal I ever had in my life; he set me on the road to you."
Indeed the girl was glowing, though dusty and dishevelled from head to foot. Her splendid colouring had never been more radiant, nor had the bewildered sergeant ever looked upon such brilliant eyes. But it was a feverish brilliance, and a glance would have apprised the skilled observer of a brain in the balance between endurance and suspense.
"What on earth were you doing in BlindMan's Block?" asked Harkness, suspiciously.
"I'll tell you. I'll tell you something else as well! But first you must tell me something, Sergeant Harkness."
"I believe you know where he is," quoth the sergeant, softly.
"Doyouknowwhohe is?" cried Moya, coming finely to her point.
Harkness stared harder than ever.
"Well, I thought I did—until this afternoon."
"Who did you think it was?"
"Well, there's no harm in saying now. Rightly or wrongly, I only told Mr. Rigden at the time. But I always thought it was Captain Bovill, the old bushranger who escaped from Pentridge two or three weeks ago."
"Then you thought wrong," said Moya, boldly.
Nevertheless she held her breath.
"So it seems," growled the sergeant.
"Why does it seem so?"
It was a new voice crying, and one so tremulous that Harkness could scarcely recognise it as Miss Bethune's.
"I've heard officially——"
"What have you heard?"
"You see we were all informed of Bovill's escape."
"Go on! Go on!"
"So in the same way we've been advised of his death."
"His—death!"
"Steady, Miss Bethune! There—allow me. We'll get in out of the sun; he won't hear us at this end of the verandah. Here's a chair. That's the ticket! Now, just one moment."
He returned with something in a glass which Moya thought sickening. But it did her good. She ceased giggling and weeping by turns and both at once.
"So he's dead—he's dead! Have you told Mr. Rigden that?"
"No; I'm not seeing much of Mr. Rigden."
"I am glad. I will tell him myself, presently. You will let me, I suppose?"
"Surely, Miss Bethune. There's no earthly reason why he should be here, except his own obstinacy, if you'll excuse mysaying so. He was remanded this morning; but Mr. Cross of Strathavon, who signed the warrant yesterday, and came over for the examination this forenoon, not only wanted to take bail, but offered to find it himself. Wanted to carry him off in his own buggy, he did! But Mr. Rigden said here he was, and here he'd stick until his fate was settled. Would you like to see him now?"
"Presently," repeated Moya. "I want to hear more; then I may have something to tell you. When and where did this death occur, and what made you so sure that it was the dead man who came to Eureka? You will understand my questions in a minute."
"Only I must answer them first," said the sergeant, smiling. "I am to give myself clean away, am I?"
"We must all do that sometimes, Sergeant Harkness. It will be my turn directly. Let us trust each other."
Harkness looked into her candid eyes, calmer and more steadfast for their recent tears, and his mind was made up.
"I'll trust you," he said; "you may do as you like about me. Perhaps you yourself have had the wish that's father to the thought, or rather the thought that comes of the wish and nothing else? Well, then, that's what's been the matter with me. The moment I heard of that old rascal's escape, like every other fellow in the force, I yearned to have the taking of him. Of course it wasn't on the cards, hundreds of miles up-country as we are here, besides being across the border; yet when they got clear away, and headed for the Murray, there was no saying where they might or might not cast up. Well, it seems they never reached the Murray at all; but last week down in Balranald I heard a rum yarn about a stowaway aboard one of the Echuca river-steamers; they never knew he was aboard until they heard him go overboard just the other side of Balranald. Then they thought it was one of themselves, until they mustered and found none missing; and then they all swore it was a log, except the man at the wheel who'd seen it; so I pretended to think with the rest—but you bet I didn't!I went down the river on the off-chance, but I never let on who I hoped it might be. And what with a swaggy whose swag had been stolen, and his description of the man who he swore had stolen it, I at last got on the tracks of the man I've lost. He was said to be an oldish man; that seemed good enough; they were both of them oldish men, the two that had escaped."
"The two!" cried Moya in high excitement. "The two! I keep forgetting there were two of them; you see you never said so when you came to the station."
"I wanted to keep it all to myself," confessed the crest-fallen sergeant. "I only told two living men who I thought it was that I was after. One was my sub—who guessed—and the other was Mr. Rigden."
"Were the two men who escaped anything like each other?"
"Well, they were both old lags from theSuccess, and both superior men at one time; old particulars who'd been chained together, as you might say, for years; and I suppose that sort of thing does beat a man down into a type. However, their friendship didn't gofor much when they got outside; for Gipsy Marks murdered Captain Bovill as sure as emu's eggs are emu's eggs!"
"Murdered him!" gasped Moya; and her brain reeled to think of the hours she had spent with the murderer. But all was clear to her now, from the way in which Rigden had been imposed upon in the beginning, to the impostor's obstinate and terrified refusal to own himself as such to the very end.
"Yes, murdered him on the other side of the Murray; the body's only just been found; and meanwhile the murderer's slipped through my fingers," said the sergeant, sourly; "for if it wasn't poor old Bovill I was after, at all events it was Gipsy Marks."
Moya sprang to her feet.
"It was," she cried; "but he hasn't slipped through your fingers at all, unless he's dead. He wasn't when I left him two or three hours ago."
"When youlefthim?"
"Yes, I found him, and was with him all the morning."
"In Blind Man's Block—with that ruffian?"
"He took my horse and my water-bag, and left me there to die of thirst; but the dear horse turned the tables on him—poor wretch!"
"And you never told me!"
"I am trying to tell you now."
And he let her finish.
But she would not let him go.
"Dear Sergeant Harkness, I can't pretend to have an ounce of pity left for that dreadful being in Blind Man's Block. A murderer, too! At least I have more pity for some one else, and you must let me take him away before you go."
"Impossible, my dear young lady—that is, before communicating with Mr. Cross."
"About bail?"
"Yes."
"What was the amount named this morning?"
"Fifty pounds."
"Give me a sheet of paper and a stamp, and I'll write a cheque myself."
Harkness considered.
"Certainly that could be done," he said at length.
"Then quickly—quickly!"
Yet even when it was done she detained him; even when he put a big key into her hand.
"Mustthis go further—before the magistrates—after you have found him?"
Harkness hardened.
"The offence is the same. I'm afraid it must."
"It will make it very unpleasant for me," sighed Moya, "when I come up here. And when I've found him for you—and undone anything that was done—though I don't admit that anything was—I—well, I really think youmight!"
"Might what?"
"Withdraw the charge!"
"But those tracks weren't his. Mr. Rigden made them. He shouldn't have done that."
"Of course he shouldn't—if he did."
"But of course hedid, Miss Bethune. I've known Mr. Rigden for years; we used to be very good friends. I shouldn't speakas I do unless I spoke by the book. But—why on earth did he go and do a thing like that?"
Moya paused.
"If I tell you will you never tell a soul?"
"Never," said the rash sergeant.
"Then he was imposed upon. The wretch pretended he—had some claim—I cannot tell you what. I can tell you no more."
It was provokingly little to have to keep secret for lifetime; yet Harkness was glad to hear even this.
"It was the only possible sort of explanation," said he.
"But it won't explain enough for the world," sighed Moya, so meaningly that the sergeant asked her what she did mean.
"I must really get off," he added.
"Then I'll be plain with you," cried the girl. "Either you must withdraw this charge, and pretend that those tracks were genuine, or I can never come up here to live!"
And she looked her loveliest to emphasise the threat.
"I must see Mr. Rigden about that," was, however, all that Harkness would vouchsafe.
"Very well! That's only fair. Meanwhile—I—trust you, Sergeant Harkness. And I never yet trusted the wrong man!"
That was Moya's last word.
It is therefore a pity that it was not strictly true.
It was a wonderful ride they had together, that ride between the police-barracks and the station, and from drowsy afternoon into cool sweet night. The crickets chirped their welcome on the very boundary, and the same stars came out that Moya had seen swept away in the morning, one by one again. Then the moon came up with a bound, but hung a little as though caught in some pine-trees on the horizon, that seemed scratched upon its disc. And Moya remarked that they were very near home, with such a wealth of tenderness in the supreme word that a mist came over Rigden's eyes.
"Thank God," said he, "that I have livedto hear you call it so, even if it never is to be."
"But it is—it is. Our own dear home!"
"We shall see."
"What do you mean, darling?"
"I am going to tell Theodore the whole thing."
"After I've taken such pains to make it certain that none of them need ever know a word?"
"Yes; he shall know; he can do what he thinks fit about letting it go any further."
Moya was silent for a little.
"You're right," she said at last. "I know Theodore. He'll never breathe it; but he'll think all the more of you, dearest."
"I owe it to him. I owe it to you all, and to myself. I am not naturally a fraud, Moya."
"On the other hand, it was very natural not to speak of such a thing."
"But it was wrong. I knew it at the time. Only Icouldnot risk——"
Moya touched his lips with her switch.
"Hush, sir! That's the one part I shall never—quite—forgive."
"But you have taught me a lesson. I shall never keep another thing back from you in all my life!"
"And I will never be horrid to you again, darling! But of course there will be exceptions to both rules; to yours because there are some things which wouldn't be my business (but this wasn't one of them); to mine, because—well—we none of us have the tempers of angels."
"But you have been my good angel already—and more—so much more!"
They came to the home-paddock gate. The moon was high above the pines. Underneath there were the lesser lights, the earthly lights, but all else was celestial peace.
"I hope they're not looking for me still," said Moya.
"If they are I must go and look for them."
"I won't let you. It's too sweet—the pines—the moonlight—everything."
They rode up to the homestead, with each roof beaming to the moon.
"Not much of a place for the belle of Toorak," sighed Rigden.
"Perhaps not. But, of all places, the place for me!"
"You're as keen as Ives," laughed Rigden as he helped her to dismount. "And I was so afraid the place would choke you off!"