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"The best right of all, Mrs. Burke. Had it not been for her splendid courage, they would both have been dead long before the doctor could reach them. She is the only one Mr. Dudgeon will bear near him."
"Oh."
For once the voluble Irish tongue was reduced to the use of a simple monosyllable, but into the word there was thrown as much venom as would have taken a hundred of the snakes St. Patrick banished from the island to supply.
"So it is fortunate I met you, otherwise you would have had a drive for nothing," Gale added.
"And how's the sub-inspector?"
"The doctor tells me he is doing as well as one can expect."
"I was going to see if I could not take one of them out to Waroona Downs--it's good nursing they'll want, and that they'll get if they're in a place where they are properly looked after."
"They are getting that now," Gale retorted shortly.
"I'll go and see for myself."
"If you want to tire your horse, do so, but that is all which will happen."
"And why am I to be shut out when that woman is allowed to be there, with her husband probably hanging about the place all the time to see who else there is to shoot and maim?"
"You have no right to say that," Gale cried angrily. "There is only suspicion against her husband, and even if there were more, it would not affect her. A n.o.ble-hearted woman such as she is should have sympathy, not unjust accusation."
"Sure Mr. Eustace would be pleased to know how well his deserted wife is getting on with all the admirers she has in the place traipsing after her wherever she goes," she retorted.
"You cannot go on even if you wish to," Gale exclaimed. "One of the troopers will stop you before you reach the huts."
"Oh, the troopers are there too, are they? It's well to be a miserly old skinflint to have the State providing troopers at the ratepayers'
expense to watch over one. Or maybe they're also giving sympathy to the poor distressed lady. Well, I'll interrupt them."
"You will do nothing of the kind, Mrs. Burke. I tell you the doctor sent to stop me from driving up to the huts where they are. You would do no good by going there; you may do a great deal of harm."
"Oh, indeed. And pray what is there about me that is likely to do harm to any man?"
"You know Mr. Dudgeon's character. The doctor says he is in a most critical condition. For him to see you now would probably mean his death. You remember how bitterly he resented the sale of Waroona Downs to you--your presence now would only irritate him and then----" he shrugged his shoulders.
"My presence? And what of the presence of the woman whose husband----"
"You must not say that," Gale exclaimed quickly. "It is unjust--unwomanly----"
The grey eyes flashed like steel.
"Unwomanly?" she cried. "Me unwomanly?"
She s.n.a.t.c.hed up the buggy whip and in her anger cut at him, but the lash fell short, striking one of the horses. The animal plunged at the sting and its companion also started.
By the time Gale had them under control, Mrs. Burke was vanis.h.i.+ng down the road in a cloud of dust.
Where the track to the station branched off the main road one of the troopers met and stopped her. The man recognised her from the previous day.
"Very sorry, Mrs. Burke," he said, "but I've been sent to stop anyone going near the place."
"Why can't I go? I want to know how they are and whether I can't help to nurse them," she said.
"They're both pretty bad, I believe," the trooper answered. "I don't think you could do anything now, because there's the doctor and Mrs.
Eustace and my mate looking after them. But I'll tell the doctor, and maybe to-morrow----"
Mrs. Burke slowly wheeled her horse.
"I shall not come to-morrow," she said. "It is evident I'm not wanted.
But I shall come in a few days and take one of them away with me to my house. I'm sure Mr. Durham would be much better away from here. Tell the doctor I say so. Who is taking Mr. Durham's place?"
"Taking up his work do you mean?"
"Yes--who is looking for the man who stole my deeds from the bank? Why aren't you doing it, instead of wasting your time here?"
"Oh, that'll be all right, Mrs. Burke. We've got a clue--don't you be uneasy."
"I shall be uneasy until Mr. Durham is able to look after it again. He is the only hope I have of ever seeing my papers again."
"You're right," the trooper exclaimed. "He's the smartest man for the job there is. That's why he's lying there now--we know for certain he was on their track when he got here, and as soon as they saw who it was after them, they went for him. It wasn't the fault of the chap who tried to brain him that the sub-inspector is alive to-day."
"He is very badly hurt?" Mrs. Burke asked.
"The chap who hit him saw to that--I'd just like to have my hands on him for a few minutes, the mean hound. There was probably more than one, and while the sub-inspector was facing the others, this one must have crept up behind him and tried to brain him from the back. But we'll get him, and then he will know something."
"You think you will catch them?"
"Catch them? Of course we shall. But it's the chap who knocked the sub-inspector on the head we want mostly."
"You'll punish him when you do catch him?" she asked, with a gleam in her eyes.
"Ah!" he exclaimed.
She leaned forward.
"I hope you do," she said. "I would--if I were a man--even if they had not stolen my papers."
CHAPTER XII
AS THROUGH A MIST
Wallace had scarcely completed his report when once more he was interrupted by Gale entering the office.
"Mrs. Eustace has given me this order to remove all her belongings at once," he said, as he entered the office and handed the order to Wallace.