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'An' d'ye think he saw us?'
'I don't. He'd 'a' split at once.'
'Well, well, an' what'll you do?'
'Collar young Haddon, an' frighten the truth out o' him or break every bone in his cursed skin.'
'But he'd know then, you fool.'
'Will he? I'll take all sorts o' care he doesn't know me, you can take your colonial oath on that.'
'An' if you get the gold back, no dirty tricks. It's halves, you know--fair halves!'
'Yes, an' haven't you always got your share all fair an' square? An'
what' ye you ever done fer it but whimper an' cant an' snuffle, like the cur you are?'
'I was goin' to give it up after this,' whined s.h.i.+ne, disregarding Joe's outburst, 'an' get married again, an' live G.o.d-fearin' an' respectable.'
Rogers glared at him in the darkness, and laughed in an ugly way.
'Marry! 'he sneered. 'Man, the little widow wouldn't have you. She's waitin' fer Frank Hardy; an', as fer yer G.o.d-fearin' life, you're such an all-fired hippercrit, s.h.i.+ne, that I believe you fool yourself that you're a holy man in spite o' everythin,' 'pon me soul I do!
'Ah, Joseph Rogers, the devil may triumph fer a while, but I'm naturally a child o' grace, an' if you'd on'y turn--'
Rogers uttered an oath, and drawing back struck the searcher in the face with his open hand.
'Enough o' that!' he cried. 'None o' your sick'nin' Sunday-school humbug fer me, Mr. Superintendent. We've talked o' that before.'
s.h.i.+ne arose, and moved back a few paces.
'I'd better be goin',' he said. ''Taint fer us to quarrel, Joseph. Leave the usual sign when we're to meet again.'
Bent over his unconscionable feet, he stole away amongst the trees, and a few minutes later Rogers moved oft slowly in another direction, towards the lights of the Drovers' Arms. His thoughts as he strolled were not very favourable to his fellow criminal.
'Let me once get my hands on that gold,' he muttered, 'an' I'll bolt for 'Frisco.
CHAPTER XVII.
d.i.c.k remained very subdued throughout the next day; his head was full of the oppressive secret, and he had no heart for new enterprises. At school his mates found him taciturn and uncompanionable, and Joel Ham was astonished at his obedience and industry. Harry Hardy returned home on the Wednesday evening, and visited Mrs. Haddon's kitchen that night. His head was swathed in bandages, and he was pale and hollow-eyed. d.i.c.k felt strange towards his friend and shrank from conversation with him, but listened eagerly when Harry described his experiences in the mine on the night of the attack.
'I'd stopped the pump for a spell,' he said, 'an' presently thought I heard sounds like someone working in the 'T' drive. I crept quietly to the mouth of the drive, an' could see a man with a candle crouched down at work on the floor. I was making towards him when another darted out of the darkness beside me, an' brought me a fearful lick on the head. I staggered back into the main drive an' had a sort o' confused idea of running feet an' loud voices, an' then came another welt an' over I went.
They must have dragged me up above the water level, an' I ought to thank them for that, I s'pose.'
'An' you couldn't recognise either of them?' asked Mrs. Haddon.
'No, I haven't the slightest notion who it was. .h.i.t me, an' the figure of the other was just visible an' no more. I could swear to nothing except this.' He touched his head and smiled.
'The cowardly wretches!' cried Mrs. Haddon, her bosom swelling with indignation.
'They're all that,' said Harry, 'but this is something to be grateful for. Can't you see what it means? It means that everyone is ready to believe Frank's story now, an' a broken head's worth having at that price, ain't it?'
'You're a good fellow, Harry,' said the little widow softly. 'Do you think they might let Frank go now?
'No, worse luck, not without further evidence; but the company'll probably go in for a big hunt, an' that may be the saving of him.'
This latter piece of news gave d.i.c.k further cause for agitation, and his mother's distress grew with his deepening melancholy. She was alarmed for his health, and had been trying ever since the return from Yarraman to induce him to drink copious draughts of her favorite specific, camomile tea, but without success; the boy knew of no ailment and could imagine none that would not be preferable to camomile tea taken in large doses.
On the following morning at about eleven o'clock a visitor called upon Mr. Joel Ham at the school, a slightly-built skinny man in a drab suit.
He carried a small parcel, and this he opened on the master's desk as he talked in a slow sleepy way, the sleepiness accented by his inability to lift his eyelids like other people, so that they hung drowsily, almost veiling the eyes. After a few minutes Joel stepped forward and addressed the Fifth Cla.s.s:
'Boys, attend! Each of you take off his left boot.'
The boys stared incredulously.
'Your left boots,' repeated the master. 'This gentleman is--eh--a chiropodist, and eh--come, come!' Joel Ham slashed the desk: the boys hastened to remove their left boots, handed them to the stranger, and watched him curiously as he examined them at the desk. The astonished scholars could see little, but the man in drab had two plaster casts before him and he was deliberately comparing the boys' boots with these.
When he came to d.i.c.k's boot he turned carelessly to the master and said:
'This is our man.'
'Richard Haddon, the first boy on the back seat.'
The chiropodist did not look up.
'Boy with red hair,' he said. 'Mixed up in that Cow Flat road affair.
Evidently an enterprising nipper, on the high road to the gallows.'
Joel Ham drew thumb and forefinger from the corners of his mouth to the point of his chin, and blinked his white lashes rapidly.
'No,' he said, quite emphatically; 'I don't often give advice--sensible people don't need it, fools won't take it--but you might waste time by regarding that boy's share in this business from a wrong point of view.
If he has had a hand in it--and I have no doubt of it since his foot appears--think of him at the worst as the accomplice of some scoundrel cunning enough to impose upon the folly of a romantic youngster stuffed with rubbishy fiction, and gifted with an extraordinarily adventurous spirit.'
This was perhaps the longest speech ever made by Joel Ham in ordinary conversation since he came to Waddy, and it quite exhausted him. The stranger yawned pointedly.
'Where does he live?' he asked.
'Third house down the road. Mother a widow.'
'Right. You might make an excuse to send him home presently. You are a discreet man, Mr. Ham.'
'In everybody's business but my own, Mr. Downy.
The stranger took up his parcel and marched out, and the boots having been restored to their owners work was resumed. About twenty minutes later d.i.c.k was called out, and Joel presented him with an envelope.
'Take that note to your mother, Ginger, will you? Stay a moment,' he said, as d.i.c.k turned away. He took the boy by the coat and blinked at him complaisantly for a moment.
'When in doubt, my boy, always tell the truth,' he said.
Noting a puzzled expression in d.i.c.k's face, he condescended to explain.