Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) š
- Author: Rolf Boldrewood
Book online Ā«Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) šĀ». Author Rolf Boldrewood
Here the Misses Whitman saidā ā
āYes, indeed, we willā āto our lifeās end.ā
Then she turned to Jim, who still stood there looking at her with his big gray eyes, that had got ever so much darker lately.
āYou, poor old Jim,ā she said, and she took hold of his brown hand and held it in her own, āI am more sorry than I can tell to hear all I have done about you and Dick too. This is the second time you have saved me, and I am not the girl to forget it, if I could only show my gratitude. Is there any way?ā
āThereās Jeanie,ā just them two words he said.
āYour wife? Oh yes, I heard about her,ā looking at him so kind and gentle-like. āI saw it all in the papers. Sheās in Melbourne, isnāt she? What is her address?ā
āEsplanade Hotel, St. Kilda,ā says Jim, taking a small bit of a letter out of his pocket.
āVery well, Jim, I have a friend who lives near it. She will find her out, and do all for her that can be done. But why donāt youā āwhy donāt all of you contrive to get away somehow from this hateful life, and not bring ruin and destruction on the heads of all who love you? Say you will try for their sakeā āfor my sake.ā
āItās too late, Miss Falkland,ā I said. āWeāre all thankful to you for the way youāve spoken. Jim and I would be proud to shed our blood for you any time, or Mr. Falkland either. Weāll do what we can, but weāll have to fight it out to the end now, and take our chance of the bullet coming before the rope. Good night, Miss Falkland, and good luck to you always.ā
She shook hands heartily with me and Jim, but when she came to Starlight he raised her hand quite respectful like and just touched it with his lips. Then he bowed low to them all and walked slowly out.
When we got to the public-house, which wasnāt far off, we found that Moran and the other two had stayed there a bit till Wall and Hulbert came; then they had a drink all round and rode away. The publican said Moran was in an awful temper, and he was afraid heād have shot somebody before the others got him started and clear of the place.
āItās a mercy you went over, Captain,ā says he; āthereād have been the devil to pay else. He swore heād burn the place down before he went from here.ā
āHeāll get caught one of these fine days,ā says Starlight. āThereās more risk at one station than half-a-dozen road scrimmages, and that heāll find, clever as he thinks himself.ā
āWhereās Mr. Whitman, Jack?ā says I to the landlord (he wasnāt a bad sort, old Jack Jones). āWhat made him leave his place to the mercy of the world, in a manner of speaking?ā
āWell, it was this way. He heard that all the shepherds at the lower station had cut it to the diggings, ye see; so he thought heād make a dart up to the Castlereagh and rigālate the place a bit. Heāll be back afore morning.ā
āHow dāye know that?ā
āWell, heās ridinā that famous roan pony oā his, and he always comes back from the station in one day, though he takes two to go; eighty-five miles every yard of it. Itās a big day, but that ponyās a rum un, and can jump his own height easy. Heāll be welcome home tonight.ā
āI daresay he will, and no wonder. The missus must haā been awful frightened, and the young ladies too. Good night, Jack;ā and we rattled off.
It wasnāt so very late after all when we got back to Jonathanās; so, as the horses wanted a bit of a rest and a feed, we roused up the girls and had supper. A very jolly one it was, my word.
They were full of curiosity, you bet, to know how we got on when they heard Moran was there and the others. So bit by bit they picked it out of us. When they heard it all, Maddie got up and threw her arms round Jimās neck.
āI may kiss you now youāre married,ā she says, āand I know thereās only one woman in the world for you; but you deserve one from every woman in the country for smashing that wretch Moran. Itās a pity you didnāt break his neck. Never mind, old man; Miss Falkland wonāt forget you for that, you take my word. Iām proud of you, that I am.ā
Jim just sat there and let her talk to him. He smiled in a serious kind of way when she ran over to him first; but, instead of a good-looking girl, it might have been his grandmother for all he seemed to care.
āYouāre a regular old image, Jim,ā says she. āI hope none of my other friendsāll get married if it knocks all the go out of them, same as it has from you. However, you can stand up for a friend, canāt you? You wouldnāt see me trod upon; dāye think you would, now? Iād stand up for you, I know, if you was bested anywhere.ā
āMy dear Maddie,ā says Starlight, āJames is in that particular stage of infatuation when a man only sees one woman in the whole world. I envy him, I assure you. When your day comes you will understand much of what puzzles you at present.ā
āI suppose so,ā said Maddie, going back to her seat with a wondering, queer kind of look. āBut it must be dreadful dull being shut in for weeks and weeks in one place, perhaps, and with
Comments (0)