Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) š
- Author: Rolf Boldrewood
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Like Jim and most natives of his sort, he could ride above a bit; and, my word! he sat down on his horse, and the way he went through the timber was a caution. The old horse was fully fit, and not even Sir Ferdinand was our equal in scrub riding, and we hitting out for our lives, too. Lucky for us and Joe we got into an angle in the scrub, where the timber was that close a naked horse could hardly get through comfortable.
Before weād gone five miles we steadied and listened. Sir Ferdinand and his troopers were clean out of sight; we couldnāt even hear their horsesā hoofs on the slaty ranges. Then we pulled up for a bit. There was no fear of Joeās pulling up though; the last we saw of him he was standing in his stirrups crossing a bit of open ground and riding for dear life. He was out of sight pretty soon after. He knew every foot of ground between here and where he lived on the Fish River, over 40 miles away. So we made sure heād be somewhere pretty close there before he drew rein. At his present pace all the police in New South Wales couldnāt catch him.
Starlight and I, first of all, looked well around for our landmarks, so as to make sure we shouldnāt be riding in a ring, and then stretched out for the Hollow, which we made a bit after sundown, and never saw a policeman all the way.
When we got in, father twigged at once that weād had a brush for it, and began to swear at us for being such cursed fools as to run all manner of risks when there was no call to do itā ānot as if we made anything by it, but just for simple foolishness and brag. When heād about done, all of a sudden he misses Jim, and he faces round on me as fierce as old Crib, and says, āWhat have ye done with the boy? If thereās anything happened to him, you can clear out, Dick Marston, and take your chance, for I wonāt have ye next or anigh the place.ā
I turned on him then, and gave it him back for a bit, because I was riled that everybody should always be thinking of Jim, while no one seemed to care a hang what became of me, except Gracey. Except Gracey! If it wasnāt for thinking of her sometimes, and how she stuck to me through thick and thin, I believe Iād have got that savage and desperate again all the world that Iād have turned out as bad as Moran himself.
That was what partly made him the wild beast he was, I rāaly believe. He always swore heād been lagged innocent for his first offence, and had to do five years for stealing a horse heād never seen. However, heād shook many a one he never was had for, so that made it even. But, somehow, Iāve always found that a man thinks nothing much about doing time for what he knows heās rightly punished for.
But he never forgets being made to sufferā āand hard lines it isā āfor what he hasnāt done. And that injusticeāll rankle in a manās heart for years and yearsā āperhaps all his lifeā āI and make him tenfold a worse criminal than he would have been. So thereās no mistakeā āmagistrates and judges and all that lot ought to be as careful as they can; for, youād better believe me, itās far and away better to let two or three bad āuns off now and again than to convict the wrong man.
However, Starlight stashed the row before long, and blew the old man up a bit for being venturesome himself and going out for the letters when any boy could have boned him, and then giving it, us for doing just the same thing.
āAs it turns out,ā he says, āJimās got the best chance for a getaway that heād have had for five years if heād stopped here; and if you cared half as much about him as anybody else in this world except your blessed old self, youād be thankful to Dick and me for helping him on his road off; for, by George! if heād been here another six months youād have had to bury him alongside of old Devereux.ā
Then he told father all about Jim driving the old gentleman down to Melbourne, and made such a good yarn out of Joe Moretonās chivey and the way he looked round and made tracks when he heard the bullets fly about his ears, that old dad smoothed over a bit, and we had a glass of grog all round and turned in.
Weād got something to do to get through our mail this time. Weād had none on purpose all the time Aileen was with us. There were papers in heaps, and a good lot of letters. Dad said old Davy would hardly speak to him and kept on muttering, āWoe and death. Woe and death. He that sheddeth manās blood,ā and things like that. That was what set him on the booze when he got home, and he was vexed as well that there was no one to let him know what was in the letters and read the papers to him. Well, I donāt wonder he was a bit crabbed, having to stop by himself for a couple of days, with nothing but his own thoughtsā āand what jolly companions they must have beenā āand a lot of papers alongside of him that he could have took off his mind with; and no way of getting a word or a sound out of them. I think about these things now, but I didnāt then.
My word! it must be awful rough on man or woman, when you come to think
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