Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) đ
- Author: Rolf Boldrewood
Book online «Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) đ». Author Rolf Boldrewood
âIâm not sure that Iâll ever come back, boys,â he said, âand if I were you I donât think I would either. If you get over to San Francisco youâd find the Pacific Slope a very pleasant country to live in. The people and the place would suit you all to pieces. At any rate Iâd stay away for a few years and wait till all this blows over.â
I wasnât sorry when the steamer cleared the port, and got out of sight of land. There we wereâ âwhere weâd never been beforeâ âin blue water. There was a stiff breeze, and in half-an-hour we shouldnât have turned our heads if weâd seen Hood and the rest of âem come riding after us on seahorses, with warrants as big as the mainsail. Jim made sure he was going to die straight off, and the pair of us wished weâd never seen Outer Back Momberah, nor Hoodâs cattle, nor Starlight, nor Warrigal. We almost made up our minds to keep straight and square to the last day of our lives. However, the wind died down a bit next day, and we both felt a lot betterâ âbetter in body and worse in mindâ âas often happens. Before we got to Melbourne we could eat and drink, smoke and gamble, and were quite ourselves again. Weâd laid it out to have a regâlar good month of it in town, takinâ it easy, and stopping nice and quiet at a good hotel, havinâ some reasonable pleasure. Why shouldnât we see a little life? Weâd got the cash, and weâd earned that pretty hard. Itâs the hardest earned money of all, thatâs got on the cross, if fellows only knew, but they never do till itâs too late.
When we got tired of doing nothing, and being in a strange place, weâd get across the border, above Albury somewhere, and work on the mountain runs till shearing came round again; and we could earn a fairish bit of money. Then weâd go home for Christmas after it was all over, and see mother and Aileen again. How glad and frightened theyâd be to see us. It wouldnât be safe altogether, but go we would.
XIIIWe got to Melbourne all right, and though itâs a different sort of a place from Sydney, itâs a jolly enough town for a couple of young chaps with money in their pockets. Most towns are, for the matter of that. We took it easy, and didnât go on the spree or do anything foolish. No, we werenât altogether so green as that. We looked out for a quiet place to lodge, near the seaâ âSt. Kilda they call it, in front of the beachâ âand we went about and saw all the sights, and for a time managed to keep down the thought that perhaps sooner or later weâd be caught, and have to stand our trial for this last affair of ours, and maybe one or two others. It wasnât a nice thing to think of; and now and then it used to make both of us take an extra drop of grog by way of driving the thoughts of it out of our heads. Thatâs the worst of not being straight and square. A manâs almost driven to drink when he canât keep from thinking of all sorts of miserable things day and night. We used to go to the horse-yards now and then, and the cattle-yards too. It was like old times to see the fat cattle and sheep penned up at Flemington, and the butchers riding out on their spicy nags or driving trotters. But their cattle-yards was twice as good as ours, and me and Jim used often to wonder why the Sydney people hadnât managed to have something like them all these years, instead of the miserable cockatoo things at Homebush that weâd often heard the drovers and squatters grumble about.
However, one day, as we was sitting on the rails, talking away quite comfortable, we heard one butcher say to another, âMy word, this is a smart bit of cattle-duffingâ âa thousand head too!â âWhatâs that?â says the other man. âWhy, havenât you heard of it?â says the first one, and he pulls a paper out of his pocket, with this in big letters: âGreat Cattle Robbery.â âA thousand head of Mr. Hoodâs cattle were driven off and sold in Adelaide. Warrants are out for the suspected parties, who are supposed to have left the colony.â Here was a bit of news! We felt as if we could hardly help falling off the rails; but we didnât show it, of course, and sat there for half-an-hour, talking to the buyers and sellers and cracking jokes like the others. But we got away home as soon as we could, and then we began to settle what we should do.
Warrants were out, of course, for Starlight, and us too. He was known, and so were we. Our descriptions were sure to be ready to send out all over the country. Warrigal they mightnât have noticed. It was common enough to have a black boy or a half-caste with a lot of travelling cattle. Father had not shown up much. He had an old pea-jacket on, and they mightnât have dropped down to him or the three other chaps that were in it with us; they were just like any other road hands. But about there being warrants out, with descriptions, in all the colonies, for a man to be identified, but generally known as Starlight, and for Richard and James Marston, we were as certain as that we were in St. Kilda, in a nice quiet little inn, overlooking the beach; and what a murder it was to have to leave it at all.
Leave the place we had to do at once. It wouldnât do to be strollinâ about Melbourne with the chance of every policeman
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