Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) đ
- Author: Rolf Boldrewood
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A kind of natural cellar had been made by scooping out the soft sandstone behind a ledge. From this father took a bag of flour and cornmeal. We very soon made some cakes in the pan, that tasted well, I can tell you. Tea and sugar too, and quart pots, some bacon in a flour-bag; and that rasher fried in the pan was the sweetest meat I ever ate in all my born days.
Then father brought out a keg and poured some rum into a pint pot. He took a pretty stiff pull, and then handed it to us. âA little of it wonât hurt you, boys,â he said, âafter a nightâs work.â
I took someâ ânot much; we hadnât learned to drink thenâ âto keep down the fear of something hanging over us. A dreadful fear it is. It makes a coward of every man who doesnât lead a square life, let him be as game as he may.
Jim wouldnât touch it. âNo,â he said, when I laughed at him, âI promised mother last time I had more than was good for me at Dargo Races that I wouldnât touch it again for two years; and I wonât either. I can stand what any other man can, and without the hard stuff, either.â
âPlease yourself,â said father. âWhen youâre ready weâll have a ride through the stock.â
We finished our meal, and a first-rate one it was. A man never has the same appetite for his meals anywhere else that he has in the bush, specially if he has been up half the night. Itâs so fresh, and the air makes him feel as if heâd ate nothing for a week. Sitting on a log, or in the cave, as we were, Iâve had the best meal Iâve ever tasted since I was born. Not like the close-feeling, close-smelling, dirty-clean graveyard they call a gaol. But itâs no use beginning on that. We were young men, and free, too. Free! By all the devils in hell, if there are devilsâ âand there must be to tempt a man, or how could he be so great a fool, so blind a born idiot, as to do anything in this world that would put his freedom in jeopardy? And what for? For folly and nonsense. For a few pounds he could earn with a monthâs honest work and be all the better man for it. For a false womanâs smile that he could buy, and ten like her, if he only kept straight and saving. For a bit of sudden pride or vanity or passion. A short bit of what looks like pleasure, against months and years of weariness, and cold and heat, and dull half-death, with maybe a dogâs death at the end!
I could cry like a child when I think of it now. I have cried manyâs the time and often since I have been shut up here, and dashed my head against the stones till I pretty nigh knocked all sense and feeling out of it, not so much in repentance, though I donât say I feel sorry, but to think what a fool, fool, fool Iâd been. Yes, fool, three times overâ âa hundred timesâ âto put my liberty and life against such a miserable stakeâ âa stake the devil that deals the pack is so safe to win at the end.
I may as well go on. But I canât help breaking out sometimes when I hear the birds calling to one another as they fly over the yard, and know itâs fresh air and sun and green grass outside that I never shall see again. Never see the river rippling under the big drooping trees, or the cattle coming down in the twilight to drink after the long hot day. Never, never more! And whose fault is it? Who have I to blame? Perhaps father helped a bit; but I knew better, and no one is half as much to blame as myself.
Where were we? Oh, at the cave-mouth, coming out with our bridles in our hands to catch our horses. We soon did that, and then we rode away to the other cattle. They were a queer lot, in fine condition, but all sorts of ages and breeds, with every kind of brand and earmark.
Lots of the brands we didnât know, and had never heard of. Some had no brands at allâ âfull-grown beasts, too; that was a thing we had very seldom seen. Some of the best cattle and some of the finest horsesâ âand there were some real plums among the horsesâ âhad a strange brand, JJ.
âWho does the JJ brand belong to?â I said to father. âTheyâre the pick of the lot, whose ever they are.â
Father looked black for a bit, and then he growled out, âDonât you ask too many questions, lad. Thereâs only four living men besides yourselves knows about this place; so take care and donât act foolishly, or youâll lose a plant that may save your life, as well as keep you in cash for many a year to come. That brand belongs to Starlight, and he was the only man left alive of the men that first found it and used it to put away stock in. He wanted help, and told me five years ago. He took in a half-caste chap, too, against my will. He helped him with that last lot of cattle that you noticed.â
âBut where did those horses come from?â Jim said. âI never hardly saw such a lot before. All got the JJ brand on, too, and nothing else; all about three year
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