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Iā€™d had a laugh in me, I should have had a joke against the Police Department for not keeping safer horses for their prisoners to ride. They keep them till they havenā€™t a leg to stand upon, and long after they canā€™t go a hundred yards without trying to walk on their heads theyā€™re thought good enough to carry packs and prisoners.

ā€œSome day,ā€ Goring said, ā€œone of those old screws will be the death of a prisoner before heā€™s committed for trial, and then thereā€™ll be a row over it, I suppose.ā€

We hadnā€™t a bad journey of it on the whole. The troopers were civil enough, and gave me a glass of grog now and then when they had one themselves. Theyā€™d done their duty in catching me, and that was all they thought about. What came afterwards wasnā€™t their lookout. Iā€™ve no call to have any bad feeling against the police, and I donā€™t think most men of my sort have. Theyā€™ve got their work to do, like other people, and as long as they do what theyā€™re paid for, and donā€™t go out of their way to harass men for spite, we donā€™t bear them any malice. If oneā€™s hit in fair fight itā€™s the fortune of war. What our side donā€™t like is men going in for police duty thatā€™s not in their line. Thatā€™s interfering, according to our notions, and if they fall into a trap or are met with when they donā€™t expect it they get it pretty hot. Theyā€™ve only themselves to thank for it.

Goring, I could see by his ways, had been a swell, something like Starlight. A good many young fellows that donā€™t drop into fortunes when they come out here take to the police in Australia, and very good men they make. They like the half-soldiering kind of life, and if they stick steady at their work, and show pluck and gumption, they mostly get promoted. Goring was a real smart, dashing chap, a good rider for an Englishman; that is, he could set most horses, and hold his own with us natives anywhere but through scrub and mountain country. No man can ride there, I donā€™t care who he is, the same as we can, unless heā€™s been at it all his life. There we have the pullā ā€”not that it is so much after all. But give a native a good horse and thick country, and heā€™ll lose any man living thatā€™s tackled the work after heā€™s grown up.

By and by we got to Nomah, a regular hot hole of a place, with a log lockup. I was stuck in, of course, and had leg-irons put on for fear I should get out, as another fellow had done a few weeks back. Starlight and Warrigal hadnā€™t reached yet; they had farther to come. The trial couldnā€™t come till the Quarter Sessions. January, and February too, passed over, and all this time I was mewed up in a bit of a place enough to stifle a man in the burning weather we had.

I heard afterwards that they wanted to bring some of the cattle over, so as Mr. Hood could swear to ā€™em being his property. But he said he could only swear to its being his brand; that he most likely had never set eyes on them in his life, and couldnā€™t swear on his own knowledge that they hadnā€™t been sold, like lots of others, by his manager. So this looked like a hitch, as juries wonā€™t bring a man in guilty of cattle-stealing unless thereā€™s clear swearing that the animals he sold were the property of the prosecutor, and known by him to be such.

Mr. Hood had to go all the way to Adelaide himself, and they told me we might likely have got out of it all, only for the imported bull. When he saw him he said he could swear to him point blank, brand or no brand. Heā€™d no brand on him, of course, when he left England; but Hood happened to be in Sydney when he came out, and at the station when he came up. He was stabled for the first six months, so he used to go and look him over every day, and tell visitors what a pot of money heā€™d cost, till he knew every hair in his tail, as the saying is. As soon as he seen him in Adelaide he said he could swear to him as positive as he could to his favourite riding horse. So he was brought over in a steamer from Adelaide, and then drove all the way up to Nomah. I wished heā€™d broken his neck before we ever saw him.

Next thing I saw was Starlight being brought in, handcuffed, between two troopers, and looking as if heā€™d ridden a long way. He was just as easygoing and devil-may-care as ever. He said to one of the troopersā ā€”

ā€œHere we are at last, and Iā€™m deuced glad of it. Itā€™s perfectly monstrous you fellows havenā€™t better horses. You ought to make me remount agent, and Iā€™d show you the sort of horses that ought to be bought for police service. Let me have a glass of beer, thatā€™s a good fellow, before Iā€™m locked up. I suppose thereā€™s no tap worth speaking of inside.ā€

The constable laughed, and had one brought to him.

ā€œIt will be some time before you get another, captain. Hereā€™s a long one for you; make the most of it.ā€

Where, in the devilā€™s name, is that Warrigal? I thought to myself. Has he given them the slip? He had, as it turned out. He had slipped the handcuffs over his slight wrists and small hands, bided his time, and then dashed into a scrub. There he was at home. They rode and rode, but Warrigal was gone like a rock wallaby. It was a good while before he was as near the gaol again.

All this time Iā€™d been wondering how it was they came

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