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'Strong as a bullock,' said Summers.
'He looked very pale, I thought, and that place is damp--damp and dangerous.'
Summers dangled the keys.
'Let the rascal go,' he said. 'Justice will never be done wi'in range o'
those bright eyes. Let the young villain loose.'
Chris liberated the boy, and filled his pockets with fruit before sending him away.
'My word, you are a brick,' murmured d.i.c.k, quite overcome, and then Chris, being hidden from the house by the shrubbery, did an astounding thing; she put her arm about the boy's neck and kissed him, and d.i.c.k's face flamed red, and a delicious confusion possessed him. If he were her wors.h.i.+pper before he was her slave now--her unquestioning, faithful slave.
'You know,' she said, 'I must be your friend, because if it had not been for you my father might have died out there.'
d.i.c.k had recalled the incident several times lately, but always, it must be regretfully admitted, with a pang of angry compunction. There were occasions when he felt that it would have been wise to have left the superintendent to his fate. He wondered now, casually, why the daughter should entertain sentiments of grat.i.tude that never seemed to find a place in the arid bosom of her sire.
'Oh, that ain't nothin',' he said awkwardly, digging his heel into the turf, all aglow with novel emotions. Never had he felt quite so grand before.
'd.i.c.k, will you take a message from me to--to--' The young woman was toying with his sleeve, her cheeks were ruddy, and the girlish timidity she displayed was in quaint contrast with her fine face and commanding figure.
'To Harry Hardy?' said d.i.c.k, with ready conjecture.
'Yes,' said Chris. 'However could you have guessed that? Tell him I am very thankful to him--'
'Fer clearin' out Sunday. Yes, I'll tell him. I say, Miss Chris, do you know I think he's awful fond o' you--awful.'
'No, d.i.c.k, he is not. He hates us--father and I.'
'No fear, he don't. He was at our place Sunday night, lookin' at that photo of you in our albium. He looked at it more'n he looked at all the rest put together, an' kep' sneakin' peeps, an' that don't show hate, if you ask me.'
d.i.c.k was half an hour late for school that afternoon, but he never faced Joel ham with a lighter heart or more careless mien. The master pretended to be absorbed in a patch on the roof till d.i.c.k had almost reached his seat; then he beckoned the boy, took him on the point of his cane, like a piece of toast, and backed him against the wall, where he held him transfixed for a few moments, blinking humorously.
'Ginger, my boy, I regret to have to say it, but you are late again.'
'Never said I wasn't,' said d.i.c.k, accepting the inevitable.
'True, Ginger, perfectly true. Any explanation? But let me warn you anything you may say will be taken down as evidence against you.'
'I was visitin'--visitin' Mr. John Summers up at The House' (Summers'
residence was always 'The Rouse '), 'an'--an' he detained me.'
Joel's face suddenly fell into wrinkles, and his disengaged fingers clawed his spa.r.s.e whiskers.
'And you used to be quite a clever liar, Ginger,' he said with philosophical regret.
'Arsk Jock Summers yerseif if you don't believe me,' growled the boy.
'No, no,' said the master shaking his head sadly, 'you are lying very badly to-day, Ginger. You have the heart to do it, but not the art. Hold up!
d.i.c.k's hand went out unfalteringly.
'One,' said the master. 'Two! Hurt, eh? Well, be consoled with the reflection that all knowledge is simply pain codified. Three! Four--no, I will owe you the fourth.'
Jacker Mack, and Ted, and Peterson were prey to the wildest curiosity.
Peterson risked cuts with criminal recklessness in his efforts to communicate with d.i.c.k when the latter took his seat, and Jacker, who sat next, edged up close to d.i.c.k and whispered excitedly:
'What happened? What'd he do? Where yer been?'
'Been,' said d.i.c.k, 'oh, just havin' dinner up at The House.'
'Wha-at--with ole Jock?'
'With Mr. and Mrs. Summers, J.P.'
'Gerrout! yer can't stuff me.'
'Oh, all right, Jacker, don't excite yerseif. Perhaps they didn't give me a load o' cherries to bring away, an' strawberries--thumpin' ripe strawberries, hid somewhere what I know of. Oh, I think not. An' maybe I wasn't told to come up to The House Sundays an' help myself. Very likely not.' All this in an airy whisper.
'Halves!' hissed Jacker.
'Quarters!' murmured Peterson from his hiding place behind the desk.
'P'raps I don't know somethin' too,' continued Jacker mysteriously.
d.i.c.k Haddon c.o.c.ked his eye.
'Pompey, the woodjammer, tol' me he see that bandy whimboy what you fought at the picnic ridin' your billy down to Cow Flat, an' b.u.t.ts seemed to like it.'
This was serious. The idea of b.u.t.ts becoming attached to another master gave d.i.c.k a real pang. Already he had suffered many twinges of conscience in consequence of his neglect of the goat in captivity.
'Wait till r get hold o' that cove,' he said bitterly. 'I'll murder him.'
'Ain't we never goin' after them goats?' asked Jacker.
d.i.c.k nodded emphatically.
'My oath, I'll fix it.'
'An' you'll sh.e.l.l out wif the strawb'ries?'
d.i.c.k nodded again; Jacker went peacefully to his work and Peterson crawled back to his seat. Confidence was restored.
CHAPTER X.
HARRY HARDY'S first few s.h.i.+fts below only served to convince him of the difficulties of the task he had set himself. The Silver Stream was a big alluvial mine working two levels, and there were close upon a hundred hands below on each s.h.i.+ft. All these he could not watch; but he was working in the same drive and with the set of men Frank had worked with, and was always alert for hint or sign that would give him a clue, whilst at the same time being careful not to set the thieves on their guard. He must watch closely without letting it be seen that he was watching at all. Keen as he was in the pursuit of his object, he found, with some self-resentment, that his mind frequently reverted to another subject altogether; and that subject was Miss Christina s.h.i.+ne. When he caught himself absorbed in a reverie in which Miss Chris was the centre of interest, he metaphorically took himself by the neck and shook himself up, and during the next few minutes reviewed with quite extravagant ferocity the excellent reasons he had for hating Chris for her father's sake. It was a melancholy pleasure to him to see the searcher pawing his clothes about, digging into his pockets and his billy, and examining his boots. His old instinct would have prompted him to attack Ephraim on the floor of the shed, but now, with lamentable unreason and injustice, he nursed the insult as good and sufficient cause for contemning the daughter. He had seen Chris once since Sunday, and then only from the recesses of a clump of scrub into which he had retreated on seeing her approach; but he felt, without admitting the knowledge even to himself, that he would need all the excuses he could find, just or unjust, reasonable or otherwise, to battle with something that was rising up within him to drive him on his knees to the feet of this grey-eyed girl, a humble and abject penitent.
For an hour or two each day Harry was fossicking in the creek on the spot where Frank had been working, with the idea of satisfying himself whether or not such gold as Frank had sold was obtainable there; and here the searcher's daughter came upon him one morning shortly after the incident of the Sunday School. Harry had his cradle pitched near the crossing, and to ignore the young woman would be an avowal of enmity. Here was his opportunity. Harry set his face over the hopper and cradled industriously. He thought he was displaying proper firmness, but his hand trembled, his heart beat like a plunger, and he was the victim of an ign.o.ble bashfulness. Chris approached with some timidity; but Maori bounded up to the young man, making elephantine overtures of friendliness, which were resented by Harry's cattle-dog Cop, who walked round and round the mastiff in narrowing circles, bristling like a cat and snarling hoa.r.s.ely. Maori treated the challenge with a lordly indulgence. Cop went further, he snapped and brought blood. There were some things Maori could not stand: this was one. Out of a small storm of pebbles, chips, leaves, and dust, the two dogs presently came into view again, Cop on his back, pawing wildly at the unresisting air, and Maori at his throat, pinning him with a vice-like grip.
Harry rushed to the rescue, tore his dog free, and held back the furious animal up-reared and exposing vicious fangs. Chris laid a trembling hand on the collar of the penitent Maori, and in this way the young people faced each other. Their eyes met for a moment, Harry's frowning blackly, hers anxious and beseeching.