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Aulain laughed as he swung his light, wiry figure into his saddle, and then he and Jim cantered off.
A few hours later, as he and the lad were returning to the station, he lit his pipe and said:
"So your aunt doesn't care about the beach, and the sea, and the old Dutch s.h.i.+p buried in the sand, eh, Jim?"
"No, Mr Aulain. She says she cannot look at the sea without shuddering--it always makes her think of her father and mother, and the wreck of the _Ca.s.sowary_. But Uncle Tom and Miss Fraser like the beach, and always went there in preference to anywhere else when they went for a ride."
Poor Jim, never for one moment imagining the cause of Aulain's interest in Miss Fraser's movements, was then led on by him to relate nearly everything that had occurred at the station during her last visit. "Was she fond of fis.h.i.+ng?" Aulain asked. "Oh, yes, and so was Uncle Tom. They would go out nearly every day either to the beach for bream, or up one of the creeks for spotted mullet."
Sometimes he (Jim) and Mary would go with them, and then it would be a regular all-day sort of fis.h.i.+ng and shooting picnic Miss Fraser used to shoot too, and Uncle Tom was teaching her to shoot from the left shoulder as well as the right--like he could. Then he went on to say that next time Kate came to Ocho Rios she, Gerrard and Mary and himself were all going to Duyphen Point, where there was a small coco-nut grove.
"It will be grand, won't it, Mr Aulain? You see we are going to take two pack-horses, and our guns and fis.h.i.+ng-lines, and will camp there for three or four days and come back with a load of coco-nuts."
"It ought to be splendid, Jim. When is it to be?"
"In about a month. Miss Fraser is coming to stay with aunt for three whole months. Uncle Tom and I are going to Black Bluff Creek for her, if Mr Fraser can't spare the time to come with her. You see, it's ninety miles, and you can't do it in one day, because some of the country is very rough, and none of our horses have ever been shod. Look at this colt's hoofs," and he pointed to them; "ain't they an awful size?--real 'soft country' hoofs, and no mistake."
Aulain gave a short nod, and then became silent, scarcely noticing Jim's further remarks concerning such interesting subjects as kangarooing, alligator-shooting, the big tribe of cannibal n.i.g.g.e.rs on the Coen River, who had killed and eaten sixteen Chinamen diggers, etc., etc.
For the rest of the day he was, Gerrard and Mrs Westonley noticed, very restless, and the former observed with some surprise that he helped himself freely and frequently to the brandy; hitherto he had known him as a somewhat abstemious man in the matter of liquor.
He left soon after daylight, declining Gerrard's pressing invitation to stay for breakfast on the ground of wis.h.i.+ng to "do a good twenty miles before the cursed sun got too hot," and somehow the master of Ocho Rios was not sorry to say good-bye to him, for his manner seemed to have undergone a very great, and not pleasant change.
"Take care of the n.i.g.g.e.rs, Aulain," he said as they parted.
The ex-officer smiled grimly, and he touched the Winchester carbine slung across his shoulder. Then leading his pack-horse, he rode away.
CHAPTER XXV
"Oh, men who have, or have had fever as badly as Aulain has, often act very queerly, Lizzie, so don't be too hard on him."
"I know that, Tom. But at the same time there is something about him--those strange eyes of his--that made me afraid of him. When I told him last night that Kate Fraser was coming here on a long visit, he did not answer; his eyes were fixed on your face in such a strange, intense look that it made me feel quite 'creepy'."
Gerrard laughed. "Were they? I didn't notice it."
"No, of course not. You were too busy showing Jim how to unscrew the nipples of his gun, and perhaps did not even hear what I was saying."
"Oh, I did. But I didn't make any comment, as I noticed that at supper, whenever you or I spoke of the Frasers, he answered in curt monosyllables."
"Did you tell him she was coming here next month?"
"No. I daresay I should have done so if I had thought of it."
"Tom, I am not a female Lavater, but when I saw him looking at you like that, I disliked and distrusted him."
"Poor Aulain! Why, Lizzie, he's one of the straightest fellows that ever lived, and I am sure he has a sincere regard for me. You must never take notice of the queer looks and actions of men who have had fever badly."
"Tom! I'm a woman, and I know. He was thinking of Kate Fraser--and you.
And he is suffering from another fever--the fever of violent jealousy."
Gerrard looked up--they were at breakfast. "Well, if that is the case, it is a bad complication of diseases, and I am sorry for him. He has no earthly reason to be jealous of me."
"He _is_ jealous, Tom, 'deadly jealous,' as Jim would say, and I dislike him, dislike him intensely for it You have been so good to him, too."
"Only keeping things quiet about Big Boulder Creek, as I promised him I should. And then, you see, Lizzie, his not getting the Government reward of five thousand pounds, as he thought he should, has been a big disappointment to him."
Mrs Westonley rose, came over to him, and placed her two hands against his bronzed cheeks.
"Thomas Gerrard, Esquire?"
"Mrs Elizabeth Westonley!"
"You are to marry Kate Fraser!"
"Am I, old woman? You're a perfect jewel of a sister to find me such a charming wife. But you see there are one or two trifling formalities to be observed. First of all, I should have to ask her her views on the subject."
"You ought to have done that a year ago."
"And have met with a refusal like poor Forde and Aulain."
"No, you would _not_ have been refused. I know that much," was his sister's emphatic observation. "But you are letting the time go by, Tom.
And I am sure she is wondering why you don't ask. I know that she loves you."
"Do you really?" and he shook his head smilingly.
"Yes, I do. I'm certain. And I know you are fond of her."
"Been long in the clairvoyant business, Lizzie?"
"Don't talk nonsense, Tom. I am very serious--and it would make me very happy. Ask her this time, Tom. You must--else you have no right to be with her so much. It is not fair to the girl."
"We are very great friends, Lizzie. I like her better than any woman I have ever met. And I have sometimes thought--but anyway, I'm not in a position to ask her."
"Nonsense! Your affairs are improving every day."
Gerrard was silent for a minute, then he said:
"I think Aulain means to try again."
"I am sure of it. But he is wasting his time. High-spirited as she is, she is almost frightened of him. She told me so. She resented very much a letter she received from him in reply to hers telling him she could not marry him; and moreover she told me that even if she cared ever so much for a man, she would never marry a Roman Catholic."
"I don't think she will ever marry, Lizzie, so it is no use my indulging in ridiculous visions; she is too much attached to her father to ever leave him. And you will always be mistress of Ocho Rios and master of Tom Gerrard."
Mrs Westonley laughed, and pulled his short, dark-brown, pointed beard.
"Silly man! I know better than that; and I know also that Douglas Fraser would be pleased to see Kate become Mrs Tom Gerrard, for he likes you immensely. Now, promise me you will ask her?"