Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) đ
- Author: Rolf Boldrewood
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As for dad, he told us out, plump and plain, that he wasnât going to shift. The Hollow was good enough for him, and there he was going to stop. If Jim and I and Starlight chose to try and make blank emigrants of ourselves, well and good. He didnât see as theyâd have such a rosy time getting over to these new townships on the other side. We might get took in, and wish we was back again before all was said and done. But some people could never let well alone. Here we had everything that any man in his senses could wish for, and we wasnât contented. Everyone was going to cut away and leave him; heâd be all by himself, with no one but the dog for company, and be as miserable as a bandicoot; but no one cared a blank brass farden about that.
âCome with us, governor,â says Starlight, âhave a cruise round the world, and smell salt water again. Youâve not been boxed up in the bush all your life, though youâve been a goodish while there. Make a start, and bring old Crib too.â
âIâm too old and getting stiff in the jâints,â says dad, brightening up a bit, âor I donât say as I wouldnât. Donât mind my growling. But Iâm bound to be a bit lonely like when you are all drawed off the camp. No! take your own way and Iâll take mine.â
âNext Monday ought to see us off,â says Starlight. âWe have got the gold and cash part all right. Iâve had that money paid to Knightleyâs credit in the Australian Bank I promised him, and got a receipt for it.â
âThatâs just like yer,â says father, âand a rank soft thing for a man as has seen the world to drop into. Losinâ yer share of the five hundred quid, and then dropping a couple of hundred notes at one gamble, besides buying a horse yer could have took for nothing. Heâll never bring twenty pound again, neither.â
âAlways pay my play debts,â says Starlight. âAlways did, and always will. As for the horseâ âa bargain, a bargain.â
âAnd a dashed bad bargain too. Why didnât ye turn parson instead of taking to the bush?â says father, with a grin. âDashed if I ainât seen some parsons that could give you odds and walk round ye at horse-dealinâ.â
âYou take your own way, Ben, and Iâll take mine,â says Starlight rather fierce, and then father left off and went to do something or other, while us two took our horses and rode out. We hadnât a long time to be in the old Hollow now. It had been a good friend to us in time of need, and we was sorry in a kind of way to leave it. We were going to play for a big stake, and if we lost we shouldnât have another throw in.
Our horses were in great buckle now; they hadnât been doing much lately. I had the one Iâd brought with me, and a thoroughbred brown horse that had been broken in the first season we came there.
Starlight was to ride Rainbow, of course, and he had great picking before he made up his mind what to choose for second horse. At last he pitched upon a thoroughbred bay mare named Locket that had been stolen from a mining township the other side of the country. She was the fastest mare theyâd ever bredâ âsound, and a weight-carrier too.
âI think Iâll take Locket after all,â says he, after thinking about it best part of an hour. âSheâs very fast and a stayer. Good-tempered too, and the old horse has taken up with her. It will be company for him.â
âTake your own way,â I said, âbut I wouldnât chance her. Sheâs known to a lot of jockey-boys and hangers-on. They could swear to that white patch on her neck among a thousand.â
âIf you come to that, Rainbow is not an everyday horse, and I canât leave him behind, can I? Iâll ship him, if I can, thatâs more. But it wonât matter much, for weâll have to take back tracks all the way. You didnât suppose we were to ride along the mail road, did you?â
âI didnât suppose anything,â says I, âbut that we were going to clear out the safest way we could. If weâre to do the swell business weâd better do it apart, or else put an advertisement into the Turon Star that Starlight, Marston, and Co. are giving up business and going to leave the district, all accounts owing to be sent in by a certain date.â
âA first-rate idea,â says he. âIâm dashed if I donât do it. Thereâs nothing like making oneâs exit in good form. How savage Morringer will be! Thank you for the hint, Dick.â
There was no use talking to him when he got into this sort of humour. He was the most mad, reckless character I ever came across, and any kind of checking only seemed to make
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