CHAPTER I
One had only to look at William
Standerton in order to realise that he was, what is usually termed,
a success in life. His whole appearance gave one this impression;
the bold unflinching eyes, the square, resolute chin, the
well–moulded lips, and the lofty forehead, showed a determination
and ability to succeed that was beyond the ordinary.
The son of a hardworking country
doctor, it had fallen to his lot to emigrate to Australia at the
early age of sixteen. He had not a friend in that vast, but
sparsely–populated, land, and was without influence of any sort to
help him forward. When, therefore, in fifty years’ time, he found
himself worth upwards of half–a–million pounds sterling, he was
able to tell himself that he owed his good fortune not only to his
own industry, but also to his shrewd business capabilities. It is
true that he had had the advantage of reaching the Colonies when
they were in their infancy, but even with this fact taken into
consideration, his was certainly a great performance. He had
invested his money prudently, and the rich Stations, and the
streets of House Property, were the result.
Above all things, William
Standerton was a kindly–natured man. Success had not spoilt him in
this respect. No genuine case of necessity ever appealed to him in
vain. He gave liberally, but discriminatingly, and in so doing
never advertised himself.
Strange to say, he was nearly
thirty years of age before he even contemplated matrimony. The
reason for this must be ascribed to the fact that his life had been
essentially an active one, and up to that time he had not been
brought very much into contact with the opposite sex. When,
however, he fell in love with pretty Jane McCalmont—then employed
as a governess on a neighbouring Property—he did so with an
enthusiasm that amply made up for lost time.
She married him, and presented
him with two children—a boy and a girl. Within three months of the
latter’s arrival into the world, the mother laid down her gentle
life, leaving her husband a well nigh broken–hearted man. After her
death the years passed slowly by with almost monotonous sameness.
The boy James, and the girl Alice, in due course commenced their
education, and in so doing left their childhood behind them. Their
devotion to their father was only equalled by his love for them. He
could scarcely bear them out of his sight, and entered into all
their sports, their joys and troubles, as if he himself were a
child once more.
It was not, however, until James
was a tall, handsome young fellow of four–and–twenty, and Alice a
winsome maid of twenty, that he arrived at the conclusion that his
affairs no longer needed his personal supervision, and that he was
at liberty to return to the Mother Country, and settle down in it,
should he feel disposed to do so.
“It’s all very well for you young
folk to talk of my leaving Australia,” he said, addressing his son
and daughter; “but I shall be like a fish out of water in the Old
Country. You forget that I have not seen her for
half–a–century.”
“All the more reason that you
should lose no time in returning, father,” observed Miss Alice, to
whom a visit to England had been the one ambition of her life. “You
shall take us
about and show us everything; the
little village in which you were born, the river in which you used
to fish, and the wood in which the keeper so nearly caught you with
the rabbit in your pocket. Then you shall buy an old–fashioned
country house and we’ll settle down. It will be lovely!”
Her father pinched her shapely
little ear, and then looked away across the garden to where a
railed enclosure was to be seen, on the crest of a slight eminence.
He remembered that the woman lying there had more than once
expressed a hope that, in the days then to come, they would be able
to return to their native country together, and take their children
with them.
“Well, well, my dear,” he said,
glancing down at the daughter who so much resembled her mother,
“you shall have it your own way. We will go Home as soon as
possible, and do just as you propose. I think we may be able to
afford a house in the country, and perhaps, that is if you are a
very dutiful daughter, another in London. It is just possible that
there may be one or two people living who may remember William
Standerton, and, for that reason, be kind to his son and daughter.
But I fear it will be rather a wrench for me to leave these places
that I have built up with my own hands, and to which I have devoted
such a large portion of my life. However, one can be in harness too
long, and when once Australia is left behind me, I have no doubt I
shall enjoy my holiday as much as any one else.”
In this manner the matter was
settled. Competent and trustworthy managers were engaged, and the
valuable properties, which had contributed so large a share to
William Standerton’s wealth, were handed over to their
charge.
On the night before they were to
leave Mudrapilla, their favourite and largest station, situated on
the Darling River, in New South Wales, James Standerton, called Jim
by his family and a multifarious collection of friends, was slowly
making his way along the left bank of the River. He had ridden out
to say good–bye to the manager of the Out Station, and as his horse
picked his way along the bank, he was thinking of England, and of
what his life was to be there. Suddenly he became aware of a man
seated beneath a giant gum tree near the water’s edge. From the
fact that the individual in question had kindled a fire and was
boiling his billy, he felt justified in assuming that he was
preparing his camp for the night. He accordingly rode up and
accosted him. The man was a Foot Traveller, or Swagman, and
presented a somewhat singular appearance. Though he was seated, Jim
could see that he was tall, though sparsely built. His age must
have been about sixty years; his hair was streaked with grey, as
also was his beard. Taken altogether his countenance was of the
description usually described as “hatchet–faced.” He was dressed
after the swagman fashion, certainly no better, and perhaps a
little worse. Yet with it all he had the appearance of having once
been in better circumstances. He looked up as Jim approached, and
nodded a “good evening.” The latter returned the salutation in his
customary pleasant fashion.
“How much further is it to the
Head Station?” the man on the ground then enquired. “Between four
and five miles,” Jim replied. “Are you making your way
there?”
“That’s my idea,” the stranger
answered. “I hear the owner is leaving for England, and I am
desirous of having a few words with him before he goes.”
“You know him then?”
“I’ve known him over thirty
years,” returned the other. “But he has gone up in the world while,
as you will gather, I have done the opposite. Standerton was always
one of Life’s lucky ones; I am one of Her failures. Anything he
puts his hand to prospers; while I, let it be ever so promising,
have only to touch a bit of business, and it goes to pieces like a
house of cards.”
The stranger paused and took
stock of the young man seated upon the horse.
“Now I come to think of it,” he
continued, after having regarded Jim intently for some seconds,
“you’re not unlike Standerton yourself. You’ve got the same eyes
and chin, and the same cut of mouth.”
“It’s very probable, for I am his
son,” Jim replied. “What is it you want with my father?”
“That’s best known to myself,”
the stranger returned, with a surliness in his tone that he had not
exhibited before. “When you get home, just tell your governor that
Richard Murbridge is on his way up the river to call upon him, and
that he will try to put in an appearance at the Station early
to–morrow morning. I don’t fancy he’ll be best pleased to see me,
but I must have an interview with him before he leaves Australia,
if I have to follow him round the country to get it.”
“You had better be careful how
you talk to my father,” said Jim. “If you are as well acquainted
with him as you pretend to be, you should know that he is not the
sort of man to be trifled with.”
“I know him as well as you do,”
the other answered, lifting his billy from the fire as he spoke.
“William Standerton and I knew each other long before you were
born. If it’s only the distance you say to the Head Station, you
can tell him I’ll be there by breakfast time. I’m a bit foot–sore,
it is true, but I can do the journey in an hour and a–half. On what
day does the coach pass, going South?”
“To–morrow morning,” Jim replied.
“Do you want to catch it?”
“It’s very probable I shall,”
said Murbridge. “Though I wasn’t born in this cursed country, I’m
Australian enough never to foot it when I can ride. Good Heavens!
had any one told me, twenty–five years ago, that I should
eventually become a Darling Whaler, I’d have knocked, what I should
have thought then to be the lie, down their throats. But what I am
you can see. Fate again, I suppose? However, I was always of a
hopeful disposition, even when my affairs appeared to be at their
worst, so I’ll pin my faith on to–morrow. Must you be going? Well,
in that case, I’ll wish you good–night! Don’t forget my message to
your father.”
Jim bade him good–night, and then
continued his ride home. As he went he pondered upon his curious
interview with the stranger he had just left, and while so doing,
wondered as to his reasons for desiring to see his father.
“The fellow was associated with
him in business at some time or another, I suppose?” he said to
himself, “and, having failed, is now on his beam ends and wants
assistance. Poor old Governor, there are times when he is called
upon to pay pretty dearly for his success in life.”
James Standerton was proud of his
father, as he had good reason to be. He respected him above all
living men, and woe betide the individual who might have anything
to say against the sire in the son’s hearing.
At last he reached the Home
Paddock and cantered up the slope towards the cluster of houses,
that resembled a small village, and surrendered his horse to a
black boy in the stable yard. With a varied collection of dogs at
his heels he made his way up the garden path, beneath the trellised
vines to the house, in the broad verandah of which he could see his
sister and father seated at tea.
“Well, my lad,” said Standerton
senior, when Jim joined them, “I suppose you’ve seen Riddington,
and have bade him good–bye. It’s my opinion he will miss you as
much as any one in the neighbourhood. You two have always been such
friends.”
“That’s just what Riddington
said,” James replied. “He wishes he were coming with us. Poor chap,
he doesn’t seem to think he’ll ever see England again.”
Alice looked up from the cup of
tea she was pouring out for her brother.
“I fancy there is more in poor
Mr. Riddington’s case than meets the eye,” she said
sympathetically. “Nobody knows quite why he left England. He is
always very reticent upon that point. I cannot help thinking,
however, that there was a lady in the case.”
“There always is,” answered her
brother. “There’s a woman in every mystery, and when you’ve found
her it’s a mystery no longer. By the way, father, as I was coming
home, I came across a fellow camped up the river. He asked me what
the distance was to here, and said he was on his way to see you. He
will be here the first thing to–morrow morning.”
“He wants work, I suppose?”
“No, I shouldn’t say that he
did,” James replied. “He said that he wanted to see you on
important private business.”
“Indeed? I wonder who it can be?
A swagman who has important private business with me is a rara
avis. He didn’t happen to tell you his name, I suppose?”
“Yes, he did,” Jim answered,
placing his cup on the floor as he spoke. “His name is Richard
Murbridge, or something like it.”
The effect upon the elder man was
electrical.
“Richard Murbridge?” he cried.
“Camped on the river and coming here?”
His son and daughter watched him
with the greatest astonishment depicted upon their faces. It was
not often that their father gave way to so much emotion. At last
with an effort he recovered himself, and, remarking that Murbridge
was a man with whom he had had business in bygone days, and that he
had not seen him for many years, went into the house.
“I wonder who this Murbridge can
be?” said James to his sister, when they were alone together. “I
didn’t like the look of him, and if I were the Governor, I should
send him about his business as quickly as possible.”
When he had thus expressed
himself, Jim left his sister and went off to enjoy that luxury so
dear to the heart of a bushman after his day’s work, a swim in the
river. He was some
time over it, and when he
emerged, he was informed that his presence was required at the
Store. Thither he repaired to arbitrate in the quarrel of two
Boundary Riders. In consequence, more than an hour elapsed before
he returned to the house. His sister greeted him at the gate with a
frightened look upon her face.
“Have you seen father?” she
enquired. “No,” he answered. “Isn’t he in the house?”
“He went down the track just
after you left, riding old Peter, and as he passed the gate he
called to me not to keep dinner for him, as he did not know how
long it might be before he would be back. Jim, I believe he is gone
to see that man you told him of, and the thought frightens
me.”
“You needn’t be alarmed,” her
brother answered. “Father is quite able to take care of
himself.”
But though he spoke with so much
assurance, in his own mind he was not satisfied. He remembered that
it had been his impression that the swagman bore his father a
grudge, and the thought made him uneasy.
“Look here, Alice,” he said,
after he had considered the matter for some time, “I’ve a good mind
to go back along the track, and to bring the Governor home with me.
What do you think?”
“It would relieve me of a good
deal of anxiety if you would,” the girl replied. “I don’t like the
thought of his going off like this.”
Jim accordingly went to the end
of the verandah, and called to the stables for a horse. As soon as
the animal was forthcoming he mounted it, and set off in the
direction his father had taken. It was now quite dark, but so well
did he know it, that he could have found his way along the track
blindfolded, if necessary. It ran parallel with the river, the high
trees on the banks of which could be seen, standing out like a
black line against the starlit sky. He let himself out of the Home
Paddock, passed the Woolshed, and eventually found himself
approaching the spot where Murbridge had made his camp. Then the
twinkle of the fire came into view, and a few seconds later he was
able to distinguish his father standing beside his grey horse,
talking to a man who was lying upon the ground near the fire. Not
wishing to play the part of an eavesdropper, he was careful to
remain out of earshot. It was only when he saw the man rise, heard
him utter a threat, and then approach his father, that he rode up.
Neither of the men became aware of his approach until he was close
upon them, and then both turned in surprise.
“James, what is the meaning of
this?” his father cried. “What are you doing here, my lad?” For a
moment the other scarcely knew what reply to make. At last he
said:—
“I came to assure myself of your
safety, father. Alice told me you had gone out, and I guessed your
errand.”
“A very dutiful son,” sneered
Murbridge. “You are to be congratulated upon him, William.”
James stared at the individual
before him with astonishment. What right had such a man to
address his father by his
Christian name?
“Be careful,” said Standerton,
speaking to the man before him. “You know what I said to you just
now, and you are also aware that I never break my word. Fail to
keep your part of the contract, and I shall no longer keep
mine.”
“You know that you have your heel
upon my neck,” the other retorted; “and also that I cannot help
myself. But I pray that the time may come when I shall be able to
be even with you. To think that I am tramping this infernal
country, like a dead beat Sundowner, without a cent in my pocket,
while you are enjoying all the luxuries and happiness that life and
wealth can give. It’s enough to make a man turn Anarchist right
off.”
“That will do,” said William
Standerton quietly. “Remember that to–morrow morning you will go
back to the place whence you came; also bear in mind the fact that
if you endeavour to molest me, or to communicate with me, or with
any member of my family, I will carry out the threat I uttered just
now. That is all I have to say to you.”
Then Standerton mounted his
horse, and turning to his son, said:—
“Let us return home, James. It is
getting late, and your sister will be uneasy.”
Without another word to the man
beside the fire, they rode off, leaving him looking after them with
an expression of deadly hatred upon his face. For some distance the
two men rode in silence. Jim could see that his father was much
agitated, and for that reason he forbore to put any question to him
concerning the individual they had just left. Indeed it was not
until they had passed the Woolshed once more, and had half
completed their return journey that the elder man spoke.
“How much of my conversation with
that man did you overhear?”
“Nothing but what I heard when
Murbridge rose to his feet,” James replied. “I should not have come
near you had I not heard his threat and seen him approach you. Who
is the man, father?”
“His name is Murbridge,” said
Standerton, with what was plainly an effort. “He is a person with
whom I was on friendly terms many years ago, but he has now got
into disgrace, and, I fear has sank very low indeed. I do not think
he will trouble us any more, however, so we will not refer to him
again.”
All that evening William
Standerton was visibly depressed. He excused himself from playing
his usual game of cribbage with his daughter, on the plea that he
had a headache. Next morning, however, he was quite himself. He
went out to his last day’s work in the bush as cheerfully as he had
ever done. But had any one followed him, he, or she, would have
discovered that the first thing he did was to ride to the spot
where Richard Murbridge had slept on the previous night. The camp
was deserted, and only a thin column of smoke, rising from the
embers of the fire, remained to show that the place had been lately
occupied.
“He has gone, then,” said
Standerton to himself. “Thank goodness! But I know him too well to
be able to assure myself that I have seen the last of him. Next
week, however, we shall put the High Seas between us, and then,
please God, I shall see no more of him for the remainder of my
existence.”
At that moment the man of whom he
was speaking, was tramping along the dusty track with a tempest of
rage in his heart.
“He may travel wherever he
pleases,” he was muttering to himself, “but he won’t get away from
me. He may go to the end of the world, and I’ll follow him and be
at his elbow, just to remind him who I am, and of the claims I have
upon him. Yes, William Standerton, you may make up your mind upon
one point, and that is the fact that I’ll be even with you
yet!”
CHAPTER II