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Barber laughed at this sudden change of front, for prior to Slaughter's appearance d.i.c.kson had been telling, with great glee, how he had put on to Slaughter's shoulders the reputation of his own iniquity. He had told the story with the air of one who knew that he had done something which would earn the admiration of his listeners; with the air of one who, mean and cowardly himself, regarded his companions as being similarly const.i.tuted. It was the suggestion of implied meanness that rankled with Barber, and made him interpose upon d.i.c.kson's efforts to beat a hasty retreat.
"It's a girl at the station, you fool," he said. "The youngster said----"
"Silence!" Slaughter shouted, as he advanced a step into the hut and faced the black-browed man, with the gleam in his eyes which had held the men of Birralong back, and his fists clenched. "You bandy her name, and----"
"Well, what then?" Barber interrupted.
"You'll deal with me," Slaughter added, facing the other, and meeting his eyes in as steady and as hard a glance as was given.
The other two occupants of the hut stood silent, watching--Tap from under his eyebrows, askance; d.i.c.kson, with a face that was growing pale and eyes that were s.h.i.+fty and timid. Barber and Slaughter faced each other, the one with a heavy, sullen look, the other with a gleam of fierce anger in his eyes--just as he had looked at Marmot and his comrades when they essayed to follow him into the schoolmaster's cottage. Barber, through his growing rage, realized that he had a different man to deal with than the ordinary run; he remembered also that to quarrel with Slaughter at the moment would be dangerous to the scheme he was working. He allowed his eyes to go down before the steady stare that faced him.
"No one wants to harm her," he said sullenly; and both Tap and d.i.c.kson looked up at Slaughter with a momentary feeling akin to awe--it was the first time they had seen or heard of Barber wavering.
"No one _shall_ harm her," Slaughter cried. "If any man harms her by word or deed, he'll have me to answer. Do you hear?" he shouted, flinging round on d.i.c.kson, who started and cowered.
"The boy said nothing," Barber exclaimed. "Come, get out of it," he added to d.i.c.kson, as he went up to him and, taking him by the arm, roughly, pushed him out of the hut.
Slaughter stood where he was, and Tap slunk out after the others.
"You young fool," Barber said, as he pushed d.i.c.kson along towards the paddock where his horse was, gripping his arm so fiercely that the boy writhed with the pain of it, and yet was too frightened to cry out, "if our game goes wrong through your tricks, we'll flay you. You keep out of sight till I send for you; do you hear?"
Tap came up behind them as Barber was speaking.
"We had best meet somewhere else, and----"
Barber glanced round. If he had given way to Slaughter he was not going to allow any one else to override him.
"Are you boss of this game or am I?" he said quickly; and Tap held back.
"You ride straight back to Barellan," he added to d.i.c.kson. "When I want you I'll send for you, so you'll be on hand any time; and if you play up any more tricks till my game's through, look out."
He pushed him away as he spoke, and d.i.c.kson hastily caught his horse and rode off without a word. As he disappeared, Tap said in a cringing voice--
"He's like his mother--only good for a sneak thief."
"He's the dead spit of his father, if you want to know," Barber answered savagely; and Tap again slunk back.
CHAPTER XVII.
A BUSHMAN'S BANKER.
When Bobby Murray rode from Birralong with a couple of months' supply of stores for the mining camp, he found that during his brief absence the others had made great progress in their work. The boulder which had first revealed the secrets of Peters's reef, had been entirely broken up and crushed, with such crude appliances as the three were able to construct, the result, a heap of coa.r.s.e gold, testifying that, even if crude, the appliances were effective. Other boulders had also been disposed of and the free, coa.r.s.e gold extracted; while the tailings, or residue from the crus.h.i.+ngs, were carefully piled up by Palmer Billy, the blowpipe of Peters, now almost a fetish with the former sceptic, having shown that gold in considerable quant.i.ty still remained to be extracted.
They had also sunk a shallow trial shaft near the site of the original boulder, and though the hole was only a few feet deep, it showed on all sides the same cla.s.s of stone. Lower down the slope of the hill there were also outcrops of the stone, and, as Palmer Billy said, it seemed as though, now they had struck it, there was no getting away from the payable ore.
The two more experienced miners of the party debated as to the best methods of working their find, and had decided that they should all work as they had commenced, until they had won enough gold to set them on their feet, financially, whatever might occur. With it, three should journey to Birralong, and place it in the keeping of Marmot, while one--Palmer Billy bespoke the post--should remain on the ground, and "hold" it in case other prospectors came along. Then, when their first earnings were in the safe keeping of Marmot, Tony and Murray were to return, while Peters journeyed to the nearest mining official, declared the find, and had the reward claims of the four, as pegged out, proclaimed and secured.
"Peters's reef will run to a towns.h.i.+p then, boys, and my swamp will be a fortune in corner lots," Palmer Billy exclaimed with enthusiasm.
"Or a tank for the sharks when they come along," Tony said.
"Sharks? If a darned shark comes around now we'll roast him. It's the last chance I'll ever have of striking it rich, and this time I'm going to be fly," Palmer Billy retorted.
For nearly six weeks they worked on, always with success, until the gold they had won filled several canvas bags they made for it, and amounted to as heavy a load as the four horses could carry, in addition to the three men and their swags and stores.
Leaving Palmer Billy comfortable in camp, Peters, Tony, and Murray started for Birralong. By following the route Murray had taken when he returned with the stores, they managed to reach the scene of Gleeson's rush on the second evening; and while camping there, Murray pointed out that as no one was expecting them in the towns.h.i.+p for at least another month, it might be as well if one of them rode in and told the towns.h.i.+p they were coming. He volunteered to ride in as soon as it was daylight, and tell Marmot that the others were bringing a pack-horse laden with gold, which they wanted to leave in his charge. It was a good idea, Peters said; and with the morning Murray started, the other two following leisurely and some hours after.
When they arrived at Marmot's, early in the afternoon, they found him on the verandah with Murray, while the latter's horse, still sweating, was. .h.i.tched up to one of the posts in front.
"My word! you've come along at a pace," Marmot exclaimed, as they rode up. "Murray here was saying----"
"Where's the use of wasting time when you've struck it?" Tony interrupted to ask; adding, as he looked at Murray's horse, "Been raising the district?"
"I just told one or two," Murray replied. "I reckoned there'd be a sing-song to-night at the Rest."
"But what's this about a team-load of nuggets coming in?" Marmot said, advancing to the top of the verandah steps and looking at Tony and Peters as they dismounted. "You'll want an escort. We'll have to send Leary back to the coast for a sergeant and a squad of troopers; and then the bank'll have to be told. It won't be safe to plank all that gold in a bank at once without telling them it's coming."
Peters laughed.
"There's no team-load," he said. "The boy has been pulling your leg.
We've got it on the pack-horse here, and the bank where it's going, for the present, anyway, is in there;" and he nodded towards the store.
Marmot braced himself up, and then, fearing lest they should see how proud he was at the flattery of their trust, attempted to demur.
"But, boys, this is a big contract," he said seriously. "I'm on to run a tally for most things; but--how much do you make it?"
"Say about a couple of thousand ounces and you overshoot it," Peters answered.
"And good gold--four notes an ounce gold?"
"Ah, now you're getting into expert talk," Peters replied. "It looks all right, but it hasn't been a.s.sayed, and it hasn't been weighed yet. We've got it; that's our point."
He and Tony were loosening the bags from where they were fastened to the pack, and as he spoke, he removed one, and came up to the verandah with it in his hands.
"Where will you have it?" he asked.
"Put it in the post-office safe," Marmot replied, with dignity, as he led the way into the store and round behind one of the counters, where a yellow-j.a.panned tin box, with a broken bra.s.s lock and a dented lid, rested in peaceful indifference to the t.i.tle given to it since the half-crown's worth of postage stamps Marmot kept on hand were placed in it with other post-office valuables.
He stood by the box as five bags, all similar to the one Peters first produced, were placed in it. Then he closed the lid carefully, pa.s.sed a piece of string round it, and sealed it with the Birralong date-stamp.
"That's as safe as the Queensland National," he exclaimed, as he stood up with pride on his face and faced the three lucky diggers.
"It ought to be, unless Birralong has changed," Tony answered, with a short laugh. "Now, suppose we give the Rest a chance?"
Marmot looked round and smiled. Then he went to the back door, closed and bolted it, and came on to the verandah where they were, closing and locking the door after him, and suspending on a nail a notice-board, always ready, and bearing the legend, "Gone to Rest."