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Katharine Susannah Prichard was born in 1883 in Fiji. Her family moved to Australia in 1886, and she spent her childhood in Melbourne and Launceston.
Prichard worked as a journalist and travelled to London, where the appalling gulf between poverty and plenty affected her deeply, sowing the seeds for her later commitment to spending her life fighting for a fairer world. In 1915 her first published novel, The Pioneers, won the Hodder & Stoughton All Empire Novel Competition, which enabled her return to Australia to write ‘about Australia and the realities of life for the Australian people’.
In 1919 she married war veteran Hugo Throssell VC and they moved to Perth, where their son, Ric Throssell, was born in 1922.
Prichard is the author of thirteen novels, among them Working Bullocks (1926), Coonardoo (1929), Haxby’s Circus (1930) and Golden Miles (1948). She was a foundation member of The Australian Communist Party, and remained a committed member until her death in 1969, aged eighty-six.
HOUSE of BOOKSThis edition published by Allen & Unwin House of Books in 2012 First published by Heinemann, London, in 1921
Copyright © Katharine Susannah Prichard 1921
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Part One
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
Part Two
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
CHAPTER X
CHAPTER XI
CHAPTER XII
CHAPTER XIII
CHAPTER XIV
CHAPTER XV
CHAPTER XVI
CHAPTER XVII
CHAPTER XVIII
CHAPTER XIX
A STRING of vehicles moved slowly out of the New Town, taking the road over the long, low slope of the Ridge to the plains.
Nothing was moving on the wide stretch of the plains, or under the fine, clear blue sky of early spring, except this train of shabby, dust-covered vehicles. The road, no more than a track of wheels on shingly earth, wound lazily through paper daisies growing in drifts beside it, and throwing a white coverlet to the dim, circling horizon. The faint, dry fragrance of paper daisies was in the air: a native cuckoo calling.
The little girl sitting beside Michael Brady in Newton’s buggy glanced behind her now and then. Michael was driving the old black horse from the coach stables and Newton’s bay mare: Sophie and her father were sitting beside him on the front seat. In the open back of the buggy behind them lay a long box with wreaths and bunches of paper daisies and budda blossoms over it.
Sophie knew all the people on the road; and to whom the horses and buggies they had borrowed belonged. Jun Johnson and Charley Heathfield were riding together in the Afghan storekeeper’s sulky with his fat white pony before them. Anwah Kaked and Mrs. Kaked had the store cart themselves. Watty and Mrs. Frost were on the coach. Ed. Ventry was driving them and had put up the second seat for George and Mrs. Woods and Maggie Grant. Peter Newton and Cash Wilson followed in Newton’s newly varnished black sulky. Sam Nancarrow had given Martha M’Cready a lift, and Pony-Fence Inglewood was driving Mrs. Archie and Mrs. Ted Cross in Robb’s old heavy buggy, with the shaggy draught mare used for carting water in the township during the summer, in the shafts. The Flails’ homemade jinker, whose body was painted a dull yellow, came last of the vehicles on the road. Sophie could just see Arthur Henty and two or three stockmen from Warria riding through a thin haze of red dust. But she knew men were walking two abreast behind the vehicles and horsemen—Bill Grant, Archie and Ted Cross, and a score of miners from the Three Mile and the Punti rush. At a curve of the road she had seen Snow-Shoes and Potch straggling along behind the others, the old man stooping to pick wild flowers by the roadside: Potch plodding on, looking straight in front of him.
Buggies, horses, and people, they had come all the way from her home at the Old Town. Almost everybody who lived on Fallen Star Ridge was there, driving, riding, or walking on the road across the plains behind Michael, her father, and herself. It was all so strange to Sophie; she felt so strange in the black dress she had on which Mrs. Grant had cut down from one of her own. There was a black ribbon on her old yellow straw hat too, and she was wearing a pair of black cotton gloves.
Sophie could not believe her mother was what they called “dead”: that it was her mother in the box covered with flowers just behind her. They had walked along this very road, singing and gathering wild flowers, and waited to watch the sun set, or the moon rise, so often.
She glancd at her father. He was sitting beside her, a piece of black stuff on his arm and a strip of the same material round his felt hat. The tears poured down his cheeks: he shook out the large, new, white handkerchief he had bought at Chassy Robb’s store that morning, and blew his nose every few minutes. He spoke sometimes to Michael; but Michael did not seem to hear him. Michael sat staring ahead, his face as though cut in wood.
Sophie remembered Michael had been with her when Mrs. Grant said. … Her mind went back over that.
“She’s dead, Michael,” Mrs. Grant had said.
And Mrs. Grant had leaned against the window beside her mother’s bed, crying. Michael was on his knees by the bed. Sophie had thought Michael looked funny, kneeling like that, with his head in his hands, his great heavy boots jutting up from the floor. The light, coming in through the window near the head of the bed, shone on the nails in the soles of his boots. It was so strange to see these two people whom she knew quite well, and whom she had only seen doing quite ordinary, everyday things, behaving like this. Sophie had gazed at her mother who seemed to be sleeping. Then Mrs. Grant came to her, her face working, tears streaming down her cheeks. She had taken Sophie’s hand and they had gone out of the room together. Sophie could not remember what Mrs. Grant had said to her then. … After a little while Mrs. Grant had gone back to the room where her mother was, and Sophie went out to the lean-to where Potch was milking the goats.
She told him what Mrs. Grant had said about her mother, and he stopped milking. They had gazed at each other, inquiry and bewilderment in their eyes; then Potch turned his face away as he sat on the milking-stool, and Sophie knew he was crying. She wondered why other people had cried so much and she had not cried at all.
When Potch was taking the bucket of milk across the yard, her father had come round the corner of the house, his heavy figure with its broad, stooping shoulders outlined against the twilight sky. He made for the door, shouting incoherently. Sophie and Potch stood still as they saw him.
Catching sight of them, he had turned and come towards them.
“We’re on opal,” he cried. “On opal!”
There was a feverish light in his eyes; he was trembling with excitement.
He had pulled a small, washed oatmeal bag from his pocket, untied the string, tumbled some stones on to the outstretched palm of his hand, and held them for Potch to look at.
“Not a bad bit in the lot. … Look at the fire, there in the black potch!” he cried eagerly, going over the two or three small knobbies in his hand. “And there’s green and gold for you. A lovely bit of pattern! And look at this … and this!”
Potch looked at him dazedly.
“Didn’t they tell you——?” he began.
Her father had closed his hands over the stones and opal dirt.
“I’m going in now,” he said, thrusting the opals into the bag.
He had gone towards the house again, shouting: “We’re on opal! On opal!”
Sophie followed him indoors. Mrs. Grant had met her father on the threshold of the room where her mother was.
“Why didn’t you come when I sent for you?” she asked.
“I didn’t think it could be as bad as you made out—that she was really dying,” Sophie could hear her father saying again. “And we’d just struck opal, me and Jun, struck it rich. Got two or three stones already—great stuff, lovely pattern, green and orange, and fire all through the black potch. And there’s more of it! Heaps more where it came from, Jun says. We’re next Watty and George Woods—no end of good stuff’s come out of that claim.”
Mrs. Grant stared at him as Potch had done. Then she stood back from the doorway of the room behind her.
Every gesture of her father’s, of Mrs. Grant’s, and of Michael’s, was photographed on Sophie’s brain. She could see that room again—the quiet figure on the bed, light golden-brown hair, threaded with silver, lying in thin plaits beside the face of yellow ivory; bare, thin arms and hands lying over grey blankets and a counterpane of faded red twill; the window still framing a square of twilight sky on which stars were glittering. Mrs. Grant had brought a candle and put it on the box near the bed. The candle light had flared on Mrs. Grant’s figure, showing it, gaunt and accusing, against the shadows of the room. It had showed Sophie her father, also, between Michael and Mrs. Grant, looking from one to the other of them, and to the still figure on the bed. …
The horses jogged slowly on the long, winding road. Sophie was conscious of the sunshine, warm and bright, over the plains, the fragrance of paper daisies in the air, cuckoos calling in the distance. Her father snuffled: wiped his eyes and nose with his new handkerchief as he sat beside her.
She was so good, Michael,” he said, “too good for this world.”
Michael did not reply.
“Too good for this world!” Paul murmured again.
He had said that at least a score of times this morning. Sophie had heard him say it to people down at the house before they started. She had never heard him talk of her mother like that before. She looked at him, sensing vaguely and resenting the banality. She thought of him as he had always been with her mother and with her, querulous and complaining, or noisy and rough when he had been drinking. They had spent the night in a shed at the back of the house sometimes when he was like that. …
And her mother had said:
“You’ll take care of Sophie, Michael?”
Sophie remembered how she had stood in the doorway of her mother’s room, that afternoon—How long ago was it? Not only a day surely? She had stood there until her mother had seen her, awed without knowing why, reluctant to move, afraid almost. Michael had nodded without speaking.
“As though she were your own child?”
“So help me, God,” Michael said.
Her mother’s eyes had rested on Michael’s face. She smiled at him. Sophie did not think she had ever seen her smile like that before, although her smile had always been like a light on her face.
“Don’t let him take her away,” her mother had said after a moment. “I want her to grow up in this place in the quiet … never to know the treacherous … whirlpool … of life beyond the Ridge.”
Then her mother had seen and called to her.
Sophie glanced back at the slowly-moving train of vehicles. They had a dreary, dream-like aspect. She felt as if she were moving in a dream. Everything she saw, and heard, and did, was invested with unreality; she had an unfeeling curiosity about everything.
“You see, Michael,” her father was saying when she heard him talking again, “we’d just got out that big bit when Potch came and said that Marya … that Marya. … I couldn’t believe it was true … and there was the opal! When I got home in the evening she was gone. My poor Marya! And I’d brought some of the stones to show her.”
He broke down and wept. “Do you think she knows about the opal, Michael?”
Michael did not reply. Sophie looked up at him. The pain of his face, a sudden passionate grieving that wrung it, translated to her what this dying of her mother meant. She huddled against Michael; in all her trouble and bewilderment there seemed nothing to do but to keep close to Michael.
And so they came to the gate of a fenced plot which was like a quiet garden on the plains. Several young coolebahs, and two or three older trees standing in it, scattered light shade; a few head-stones and wooden crosses, painted white or bleached by the weather, showed above the waving grass and wild flowers.
Sophie held the reins when Michael got down to open the gate. Then he took his seat again and they drove in through the gateway. Other people tied their horses and buggies to the fence outside.
When all the people who had been driving, riding, or walking on the road, went towards an old coolebah under which the earth had been thrown up and a grave had been dug, Michael told Sophie to go with her father and stand beside them. She did so, and dull, grieving eyes were turned to her; glances of pitiful sympathy. But Snow-Shoes came towards the little crowd beside the tree, singing.
He was the last person to come into the cemetery, and everybody stared at him. An old man in worn white moleskins and cotton shirt, a battered white felt hat on his head, the wrappings of bag and leather, which gave him his name, on his feet—although snow never fell on the Ridge—he swung towards them. The flowers he had gathered as he came along, not only paper daisies, but the blue flowers of crowsfoot, gold buttons, and creamy and lavender, sweet-scented budda blossoms, were done up in a tight little bunch in his hand. He drew nearer still singing under his breath, and Sophie realised he was going over and over the fragment of a song that her mother had loved and used often to sing herself.
There was a curious smile in his eyes as he came to a standstill beside her. The leaves of the coolebah were bronze and gold in the sunshine, a white-tail in its branches reiterating plaintively: “Sweet pretty creature! Sweet pretty creature!” Michael, George Woods, Archie Cross, and Cash Wilson, came towards the tree, their shoulders bowed beneath the burden they were carrying; but Snow-Shoes smiled at everybody as though this were really a joyous occasion, and they did not understand. Only he understood, and smiled because of his secret knowledge.
IN a week or two Mrs. Rouminof’s name had dropped out of Ridge life almost as if she had never been part of it.
At first people talked of her, of Paul, of Sophie, and of Michael. They gossiped of her looks and manner, of her strange air of serenity and content, although her life on the Ridge, they surmised, was a hard one, and different from the life she had come from. But her death caused no more disturbance than a stone thrown into quiet water, falling to the bottom. No one was surprised when it was known Paul and Sophie had gone to live with Michael. Everyone expected Michael would try to look after them for a while, although they could not imagine where he was going to find room for them in his small house filled with his books.
It was natural enough that Michael should have taken charge of Sophie and Rouminof, and that he should have made all arrangements for Mrs. Rouminof’s funeral. If it had been left to Paul to bury his wife, people agreed, she would not have been buried at all; or, at least, not until the community insisted. And Michael would have done as much for any shiftless man. He was next-of-kin to all lonely and helpless men and women on the Ridge, Michael Brady.
Every man, woman, or child on the Ridge knew Michael. His lean figure in shabby blue dungarees, faded shirt, and weathered felt hat, with no more than a few threads of its band left, was as familiar as any tree, shed, or dump on the fields. He walked with a slight stoop, a pipe in his mouth always, his head bent as though he were thinking hard; but there was no hard thought in his eyes, only medita-tiveness, and a faint smile if he were stopped and spoken to unexpectedly.
“You’re a regular ’cyclopædia, Michael,” the men said sometimes when he had given information on a subject they were discussing.
“Not me,” Michael would reply as often as not. “I just came across that in a book I was reading the other day.”
Ridge folk were proud of Michael’s books, and strangers who saw his miscellaneous collection—mostly of cheap editions, old school books, and shilling, sixpenny, and penny publications of literary masterpieces, poetry, and works on industrial and religious subjects—did not wonder that it impressed Ridge folk; or that Michael’s knowledge of the world and affairs was so extensive. He had tracts, leaflets, and small books on almost every subject under the sun. Books were regarded as his weakness, and, remembering it, some of the men, when they had struck opal and left the town, occasionally sent a box of any old books they happened to come across to Michael, knowing that a printed page was a printed page to him in the long evenings when he lay on the sofa under his window. Michael himself had spent all the money he could, after satisfying the needs of his everyday life, on those tracts, pamphlets, and cheap books he hoarded in his hut on shelves made from wooden boxes and old fruit-cases.
But there was nothing of the schoolmaster about Michael. He rarely gave information unless he was asked for it. The men appreciated that, although they were proud of his erudition and books. They knew dimly but surely, Michael used his books for, not against, themselves: that he was attached to books and learning, chiefly for what they could do for them, his mates. In all community discussions his opinion carried considerable weight. A matter was often talked over with more or less heat, differences of opinion thrashed out while Michael smoked and listened, weighing the arguments. He rarely spoke until his view was asked for. Then in a couple of minutes he would straighten out the subject of controversy, show what was to be said for and against a proposition, sum up, and give his conclusions.
Michael Brady, however, was much more the general utility man than ’encyclopædia of Fallen Star Ridge. If a traveller—swagman—died on the road, it was Michael who saw he got a decent burial: Michael who was sent for if a man had his head smashed in a brawl, or a wife died unexpectedly. He was the court of final appeal in quarrels and disagreements between mates; and once when Martha M’Cready was away in Sydney, he had even brought a baby into the world. He was something of a dentist, too, honorary dentist to anyone on the Ridge who wanted a tooth pulled out; and the friend of any man, woman, or child in distress.
And he did things so quietly, so much as a matter of course, that people did not notice what he did for them, or for the rest of the Ridge. They took it for granted Michael liked doing what he did: that he liked helping them. It was his sympathy, the sense of his oneness with all their lives, his shy, whimsical humour and innate refusal to be anything more than they were, despite his books and the wisdom with which they were quite willing to credit him, that gained for Michael the regard of the people of the Ridge, and made him the unconscious power he was in the community.
Of about middle height, sparely built, Michael was forty-five, or thereabouts, when Mrs. Rouminof died. He looked older, yet had the vigour and energy of a much younger man. Crowsfeet had gathered at the corners of his eyes, and their were the lines beneath them all back-country men have from screwing their sight against the brilliant sunshine of the north-west. But the white of his eyes was as clear as the shell of a bird’s egg, the irises grey, flecked with hazel and ringed with fine black lines. When he pushed back his hat, half a dozen lines from frowning against the glare showed on his forehead. His thin, black hair, streaked with grey, lay flat and close to his head. He had a well-shaped nose and the sensitive nostrils of a thoroughbred, although all Michael knew no more of his breeding than that he was plain Australian—and proud of it. His father, born in the country, had been a teemster, and his mother a storekeeper’s daughter. Michael had wandered from one mining field to another in his young days. He had worked in Bendigo and Gippsland; later in Silver Town; and from the Barrier Ranges had migrated to Chalk Cliffs, and from the Cliffs to Fallen Star Ridge. He had been one of the first comers to the Ridge when opal was discovered there.
The Rouminofs had been on Chalk Cliffs too, and come to the Ridge in the early days of the rush. Paul had set up at the Cliffs as an opal buyer; though he knew very little about opal. Anybody could sell him a stone for twice as much as it was worth, and he could never get a price from other buyers for the stones he bought. He lost any money he possessed before long, and drifted with the careless life of the place, working as a gouger for a while when the blocks were bought up. Then when the rush to the Ridge started, and most of the men tramped north to try their luck on the new fields, he went with them; and Mrs. Rouminof and Sophie followed on Ed. Ventry’s bullock wagon, when Ed. was taking stores to the rush.
Mrs. Rouminof lived in a hut at the Old Town even after the township was moved to the eastern slope of the Ridge. She learnt a good deal about opal on the Cliffs, and soon after she came to the Ridge set up a cutting-wheel: started cutting and polishing stones. Several of the men brought her their stones, and after a while she was so good at her work that she often added a couple of pounds to the value of a stone. She kept a few goats too, to assure a means of livelihood when ther was no opal about, and sold goats’ milk and butter in the township. She had never depended on Rouminof to earn a living, which was just as well, Fallen Star folk agreed, since, as long as they had known him, he had never done so. For years he spent most of his time hovering between the mines and Newton’s, cadging drinks, or borrowing money from anybody who would lend to him. Sometimes he did odd jobs at Newton’s, or the mail stables, for the price of a few drinks; but no man who knew him would take up a claim, or try working a mine with Paul Rouminof.
His first mate on the Ridge had been Pony-Fence Ingle-wood. They sank a hole on a likely spot behind the Old Town; but Paul soon got tired of it. When they had not seen anything but bony potch for a while, Paul made up his mind there was nothing in the place. Pony-Fence rather liked it. He was for working a little longer; but to oblige his mate he agreed to sink again. Soon after they had started, Paul began to appear at the dump when the morning was half through, or not at all. As often as not, when he did decide to sling a pick, or dig a bit, he groaned so about the pains in his back or his head, that as often as not Pony-Fence told him to go home and get the missus to give him something for it.
The mildest man on the fields, Pony-Fence Inglewood did not discover for some time what the boys said was correct. There was nothing the matter with Rum-Enough but a dislike of shifting mullock if he could get anyone to shift it for him. When he did discover he was doing the work of the firm, Pony-Fence and Paul had it out with each other, and parted company. Pony-Fence took a new mate, Bully Bryant, a youngster from Budda, who was anxious to put any amount of elbow grease into his search for a fortune; and Paul drifted. He had several mates afterwards, newcomers to the fields, who wanted someone to work with them; but they were all of the same opinion about him.
“Tell Rum-Enough there’s a bit of colour about, and he’ll work like a chow,” they said. “But if y’ don’t see anything for a day or two, he goes as flat as the day before yesterday.”
If he had been working, and happened on a knobby, or a bit of black potch with a light or two in it, Paul was like a child, crazy with happiness. He could talk of nothing else. He thought of nothing else. He slung his pick and shovelled dirt as long as you would let him, with devouring impatience, in a frenzy of eagerness. The smallest piece of stone with no more than sun-flash was sufficient to put him in a state of frantic excitement.
Strangers to the Ridge sometimes wanted to know whether Rouminof had ever got a touch of the sun. But Ridge folk knew he was not mad. He had the opal fever all right, they said, but he was not mad.
When Jun Johnson blew along at the end of one summer and could not get anyone to work with him, he took Paul on. The two chummed up and started to sink a hole together. Bets were made as to the chance of their ever getting ten or a dozen feet below ground; but before long, the men were astounded to see the old saw of setting a thief to catch a thief, proving itself in this instance. If anybody was loafing on the new claim, it was not Rouminof. He did every bit of his share of the first week’s hard pick work and shovelling. If anybody was slacking, it was Jun rather than Paul. Jun kept his mate’s nose to the grindstone, and worked more successfully with him than anyone else had ever done. He knew it, too, and was proud of his achievement. At Newton’s in the evening, he would say:
“Great mate I’ve got now! Work? Never saw a cow work like him! Work his fingers to the bone, he would, if I’d let him. It’s a great life, a gouger’s, if only you’ve got the right sort of mate!”
Ordinarily, of course, mates shared their finds. There was no question of what partners would get out of the luck of one or the other. But Jun—he had his own little way of doing business, everybody knew. He had been on the Ridge before. He and his mate did not have any sensational luck; but they had saved up two or three packets of opal and taken them down to Sydney to sell. Old Bill Olsen was Jun’s mate then, and, although Bill had said nothing of the business, the men guessed there had been something shady about it. Jun had his own story of what happened. He said the old chap had “got on his ear” in Sydney, and that “a couple of spielers had rooked him of his stones.” But Bill no longer noticed Jun if they passed each other on the same track. Jun pretended to be sore about it.
“It’s dirt,” he said, “the old boy treating me as if I had anything to do with his bad luck losin’ those stones!”
“Why don’t you speak to him about it?” somebody asked.
“Oh, we had it out in Sydney,” Jun replied, “and it’s no good raking the whole thing up again. Bygones is bygones—that’s my motto. But if any man wants to have a grudge against me, well, let him. It’s a free country. “That’s all I’ve got to say. Besides, the poor old cuss isn’t all-there, perhaps.”
“Don’t you fret,” Michael had said, “he’s all right. He’s got as much there as you or me, or any of us for that matter.”
“Oh well, you know, Michael,” Jun declared. He was not going to quarrel with Michael Brady. “What you say goes, anyhow!”
That was how Jun established himself anywhere. He had an easy, plausible way. All the men laughed and drank with him: gave him grudging admiration, notwithstanding the threads and shreds of resentments and distrusts which old stories of his dealings, even with mates, had put in their minds. None of those stories had been proved against Jun, his friends said, Charley Heathfield among them. That was a fact. But there were too many of those yarns to be good for any man’s soul, Ridge men, who took Jun with a grain of salt, thought—Michael Brady, George Woods, Archie Cross, and Watty Frost among them; but Charley Heath-field, Michael’s mate, had struck up a friendship with Jun since his return to the Ridge.
George Woods and the Crosses said it was a case of birds of a feather; but they did not say that to Michael. They knew Michael had the sort of affection for Charley a man has for the dog he has saved from drowning.
Charley Heathfield had been down on his luck when he arrived on to the Ridge, his wife and a small boy with him; and the rush which he had expected to bring a couple of hundred pounds’ worth of opal at least, if it did not make his fortune, had left him worse off than it found him—a piece of debris in its wake. He and Rouminof had put down a shaft together; but as neither of them, after the first few weeks, did any more work than he could help—they were drunk or quarrelling half of their time, their claim fared badly.
Charley, when his wife died, was ill himself, and living in a hut a few yards from Michael’s. She had been a waitress in a city restaurant, and he married her, he said, because she could carry ten dishes of hot soup on one arm and four trays on the other. A tall, stolid, palefaced woman, she hated the back-country and her husband’s sense of humour, and had fretted herself to death rather than endure them. Charley, with no particular opinion of himself or of her, called his youngster Potch—“a little bit of Potch,” he said, because the kid would never be anything better than poor opal at the best of times.
Michael had nursed Charley while he was ill during that winter, and taken him in hand when he was well enough to get about again. Charley was supposed to have weak lungs; but better food, steady habits, and the fine, dry air of a mild summer set him up wonderfully. Snow-Shoes who had worked with Michael for years, said that he was getting too old for everyday toil in the mine, when Michael talked of taking on Charley to work with them. It would suit him all right if Michael found another mate. Michael and Charley Heathfield had worked together since then, and Snow-Shoes took to noodling on the dumps for a living.
For months no one had had any luck worth speaking of, until Jun Johnson and Paul struck that nest of knobbies on the day of Mrs. Rouminof’s death. Charley and Michael were hanging on to their claim, hoping each day they would strike something good. There is a superstition among the miners that luck often changes when it seems at it worst. Both Charley and Michael had storekeeper’s accounts as long as their arms, and the men knew if their luck did not change soon, one or the other of them would have to go over to Warria, or to one of the other stations, and earn enough money there to keep the other going on the claim.
They had no doubt it would be Michael who would have to go. Charley was not fond of work, and would be able to loaf away his time very pleasantly on the mine, making only a pretence of doing anything, until Michael returned. Fallen Star wondered why Michael did not get a move into his affairs at once. Paul and Sophie might have something to do with his putting off going, they told each other. Michael was anxious as to how Paul and his luck would fare when it was a question of squaring up with Jun, and the squaring up, when it came, would mean for Sophie.
Some of the men had been concerning themselves on Paul’s account also. They did not like a good deal they had seen of the way Jun was using Paul; and they had resolved to see he got fair play when it was time for a settlement of his and Jun’s account. George Woods, Watty Frost, and Bill Grant went along to talk the matter over with Michael one evening. They found him finishing a shed at the back of the hut which he and Potch had put up for Sophie and her father, a few yards from Charley Heath-field’s, and in line with Michael’s own hut at the old Flash-in-the-Pan rush.
“Paul says he’s going away if he gets a good thing out of his and Jun’s find,” George Woods said.
“It’ll be a good thing—if he gets a fair deal,” Michael replied.
“He’ll get that—if we can fix it,” Watty Frost said.
“We’ll fix it,” Michael agreed.
“Can’t think why you’re taking so much trouble with this place if Paul and Sophie are going away soon, Michael,” George Woods remarked at the end of their talk.
“They’re not gone yet,” Michael said, and went on fastening a sapling across the brushwood he had laid over the roof of the shed.
The men laughed. They knew Paul well enough to realise that there was no betting on what he would or would not do. They understood Michael did not approve of his plans for Sophie. Nobody did. But what was to be done? If Paul had the money and got the notion into his head that it would be a good thing to go away, Sophie and he would probably go away. But the money would not last, people thought; then Sophie and her father would come back to the Ridge again, or Michael would go to look for them. Being set adrift on the world with no one to look after her would be hard on Sophie, it was agreed, but nobody saw how Rouminof was to be prevented from taking her away if he wanted to.
THE unwritten law of the Ridge was that mates pooled all the opal they found and shared equally, so that all Jun held was Rouminof’s, and all that he held was Jun’s. Ordinarily one man kept the lot; and as Jun was the better dealer and master spirit, it was natural enough he should hold the stones, or, at any rate, the best of them. But Rouminof was like a child with opal. He wanted some of the stones to handle, polish up a bit, and show round. Jun humoured him a good deal. He gave Paul a packet of the stuff they had won to carry round himself. He was better tempered and more easy-going with Rouminof, the men admitted, than most of them would have been; but they could not believe Jun was going to deal squarely by him.
Jun and his mate seemed on the best of terms. Paul followed him about like a dog, referring to him, quoting him, and taking his word for everything. And Jun was genial with Paul; talked of the times they were going to have when they went down to Sydney together to sell their opal.
Paul was never tired of showing his stones, and almost every night at Newton’s he spread them out on a table, looked them over, and held them up to admiration. It was good stuff; but the men who had seen Jun’s package knew that he had kept the best stones.
For a couple of weeks after they had come on their nest of knobbies, Jun and Paul had gouged and shovelled dirt enthusiastically; but the wisp fires, mysteriously and suddenly as they had come, had died out of the stone they moved. Paul searched frantically. He and Jun worked like bullocks; but the luck which had flashed on them was withdrawn. Although they broke new tunnels, went through tons of opal dirt with their hands, and tracked every trace of black potch through a reef of cement stone in the mine, not a spark of blue or green light had they seen for over a week. That was the way of black opal, everybody knew; and knew, too, that the men who had been on a good patch of fired stone would not work on a claim, shovelling dirt, long after the good stuff disappeared. They would be off down to Sydney, if no buyer was due to visit the fields, eager to make the most of the fine time their luck and the opal would bring them. “Opal only brings you bad luck when you don’t get enough of it,” Ridge folk say.
George and Watty had a notion Jun would not stick to the claim much longer, when they arranged the night at Newton’s to settle his and Paul’s account with each other. Michael, the Crosses, Cash Wilson, Pony-Fence Inglewood, Bill Grant, Bully Bryant, old Bill Olsen, and most of the staunch Ridge men were in the bar, Charley Heathfield drinking with Jun, when George Woods strolled over to the table where Rouminof was showing Sam Nancarrow his stones. Sam was blacksmith, undertaker, and electoral registrar in Fallen Star, and occasionally did odd butchering jobs when there was no butcher in the township. He had the reputation, too, of being one of the best judges of black opal on the fields.
Paul was holding up a good-looking knobby so that red, green, and gold lights glittered through its shining potch as he moved it.
“That’s a nice bit of stone you’ve got, Rummy!” George exclaimed.
Paul agreed. “But you should see her by candle light, George!” he said eagerly.
He held up the stone again so that it caught the light of a lamp hanging over the bar where Peter Newton was standing. The eyes of two or three of the men followed the stone as Paul moved it, and its internal fire broke in showers of sparks.
“Look, look!” Paul cried, “now she’s showin’!”
“How much have you got on her?” Sam Nancarrow asked.
“Jun thinks she’ll bring £50 or £60 at least.”
Sam’s and George Woods’ eyes met; £50 was a liberal estimate of the stone’s value. If Paul got £10 or £15 for it he would be doing well, they knew.
“They’re nice stones, aren’t they?” Paul demanded, sorting over the opals he had spread out on the table. He held up a piece of green potch with a sun-flash.
“My oath!” George Woods exclaimed.
“But where’s the big beaut?” Archie Cross asked, looking over the stones with George.
“Oh, Jun’s got her,” Paul replied. “Jun!” he called, “the boys want to see the big stone.”
“Right!” Jun swung across to the table. Several of the men by the bar followed him. “She’s all right,” he said.
He sat down, pulled a shabby leather wallet from his pocket, opened it, and took out a roll of dirty flannel; he undid the flannel carefully, and spread the stones on the table. There were several pieces of opal in the packet. The men, who had seen them before separately, uttered oaths of admiration and surprise when they saw all the opals together. Two knobbies were as big as almonds, and looked like black almonds, fossilised, with red fire glinting through their green and gold; a large flat stone had stars of red, green, amethyst, blue and gold shifting over and melting into each other; and several smaller stones, all good stuff, showed smouldering fire in depths of green and blue and gold-lit darkness.
Jun held the biggest of the opals at arm’s length from the hanging lamp. The men followed his movement, light washing their faces as it did the stone.
“There she goes!” Paul breathed.
“What have you got on her?”
“A hundred pounds, or thereabouts.”
“You’ll get it easy!”
Jun put the stone down. He took up another, a smaller piece of opal, of even finer quality. The stars were strewn over and over each other in its limpid black pool.
“Nice pattern,” he said.
“Yes,” Watty Frost murmured.
“She’s not as big as the other … but better pattern,” Archie Cross said.
“Reckon you’ll get £100 for her too, Jun?”
“Yup!” Jun put down the stone.
Then he held up each stone in turn, and the men gave it the same level, appraising glance. There was no envy in their admiration. In every man’s eyes was the same worshipful appreciation of black opal.
Jun was drunk with his luck. His luck, as much as Newton’s beer, was in his head this night. He had shown his stones before, but never like this, the strength of his luck.
“How much do you think there is in your packet, Jun?” Archie Cross asked.
Jun stretched his legs under the table.
“A thou’ if there’s a penny.”
Archie whistled.
“And how much do you reckon there is in Rum-Enough’s?” George Woods put the question.
“Four or five hundred,” Jun said; “but we’re evens, of course.”
He leaned across the table and winked at George.
“Oh, I say,” Archie protested, “what’s the game?”
They knew Jun wanted them to believe he was joking, humouring Paul. But that was not what they had arranged this party for.
“Why not let Rum-Enough mind a few of the good stones, Jun?”
“What?”
Jun started and stared about him. It was so unusual for one man to suggest to another what he ought to do, or that there was anything like bad faith in his dealings with a mate, that his blood rose.
“Why not let Rum-Enough mind a few of the good stones?” George repeated, mildly eyeing him over the bowl of his pipe.
“Yes,” Watty butted in, “Rummy ought to hold a few of the good stones, Jun. Y’ see, you might be run into by rats … or get knocked out—and have them shook off you, like Oily did down in Sydney—and it’d be hard on Rummy, if—”
“When I want your advice about how me and my mate’s going to work things, I’ll ask you,” Jun snarled.
“We don’t mind giving it before we’re asked, Jun,” Watty explained amiably.
Archie Cross leaned across the table. “How about giving Paul a couple of those bits of decent pattern—if you stick to the big stone?” he said.
“What’s the game?” Jun demanded, sitting up angrily. His hand went over his stones.
“Wait on, Jun!” Michael said. “We’re not thieves here. You don’t have to grab y’r stones.”
Jun looked about him. He saw that men of the Ridge, in the bar, were all standing round the table. Only Peter Newton was left beside the bar, although Charley Heath-field, on the outer edge of the crowd, regarded him with a faint smile, sympathetic and cynical. Paul leaning over the table before him, looked from Jun to the men who had fallen in round the table, a dazed expression broadening on his face.
“What the hells the matter?” Jun cried, starting to his feet. “What are you chaps after? Can’t I manage me own affairs and me mate’s?”
The crowd moved a little closer to him. There was no chance of making a break for it.
George Woods laughed.
“Course you can’t, Jun!” he said. “Not on the Ridge, you can’t manage your affairs and your mate’s … your way … Not without a little helpful advice from the rest of us … Sit down!”
Jun glanced about him again; then, realising the intention on every face, and something of the purpose at the back of it, he sat down again.
“Well, I’m jiggered!” he exclaimed. “I see—you believe old Olsen’s story. That’s about the strength of it. Never thought… a kid, or a chicken, ’d believe that bloody yarn. Well, what’s the advice boys? Let’s have it, and be done with it!”
“We’ll let bygones be bygones, Jun. We won’t say anything about… why,” George remarked. “But the boys and I was just thinking it might be as well if you and Rum-Enough sort of shared up the goods now, and then … if he doesn’t want to go to Sydney same time as you, Jun, he can deal his goods here—or when he does go.”
No one knew better than Jun the insult which all this seemingly good-natured talking covered. He knew that neither he, nor any other man, would have dared to suggest that Watty, or George, or Michael, was not to be trusted to deal for their mates, to the death even. But then he knew, too, they were to be trusted; that there was not money enough in the world to buy their loyalty to each other and to their mates. He could measure their suspicion of his good faith by his knowledge of himself. To play their game as they would have played it was the only thing for him to do, he recognised.
“Right!” he said, “I’m more than willing. In fact, I wouldn’t have the thing on me mind—seein’ the way you chaps ’ve taken it. But ’d like to know which one of you wouldn’t ’ve done what I’ve done if Rum-Enough was your mate?”
Every man was uneasily conscious that Jun was right. Any one of them, if he had Paul for a mate, would have taken charge of the most valuable stones, in Paul’s interest as well as his own. At the same time, every man felt pretty sure the thing was a horse of another colour where Jun was concerned.
“Which one of us,” George Woods inquired, “if a mate’d been set on by a spieler in Sydney, would’ve let him stump his way to Brinarra and foot it out here … like you let old Olsen?”
Jun’s expression changed; his features blenched, then a flame of blood rushed over his face.
“It’s a lie,” he yelled. “He cleared out—I never saw him afterwards!”
“Oh well,” George said, “we’ll let bygones be bygones, Jun. Let’s have a look at that flat stone.”
Jun handed over the stone.
George held it to the light.
“Nice bit of opal,” he said, letting the light play over it a moment, then passed it on to Michael and Watty.
“You keep the big stone, and Paul’ll have this,” Archie Cross said.
He put the stone beside Paul’s little heap of gems.
Jun sat back in his chair: his eyes smouldering as the men went over his opals, appraising and allotting each one, putting some before Rouminof, and some back before him. They dealt as judicially with the stones as though they were a jury of experts on the case—as they were. When their decisions were made, Jun had still rather the better of the stones, although the division had been as nearly fair as possible.
Paul was too dazed and amazed to speak. He glanced dubiously from his stones to Jun, who rolled his opals back in the strip of dirty flannel, folded it into his leather wallet, and dropped that into his coat pocket. Then he pushed back his chair and stood up.
Big and swarthy, with eyes which took a deeper colour from the new blue shirt he had on, Jun stood an inch or so above the other men.
“Well,” he said, “you boys have put it across me to-night. You’ve made a mistake . .. but I’m not one to bear malice. You done right if you thought I wasn’t going to deal square by Rum-Enough .. . but I’ll lay you any money you like I’d ’ve made more money for him by selling his stones than he’ll make himself—Still, that’s your business … if you want it that way. But as far as I’m concerned, I’m just where I was—in luck. And you chaps owe me something… Come and have a drink.”
Most of the men, who believed Jun was behaving with better grace than they had expected him to, moved off to have a drink with him. They were less sure than they had been earlier in the evening that they had done Rouminof a good turn by giving him possession of his share of the opals. It was just on the cards, they realised as Jun said, that instead of doing Rouminof a good turn, if Jun had been going to deal squarely by him, they had done him a rather bad one. Paul was pretty certain to make a mess of trading his own stones, and to get about half their value from an opal-buyer if he insisted on taking them down to Sydney to sell himself.
“What’ll you do now your fortune’s fixed up, Rummy?” George Woods asked, jokingly, when he and two or three men were left with Paul by the table.
“I’ll get out of this,” Paul said. “We’ll go down to Sydney—me and Sophie—and we’ll say good-bye to the Ridge for good.”
The men laughed. It was the old song of an outsider who cared nothing for the life of the Ridge, when he got a couple of hundred pounds’ worth of opal. He thought he was made for life and would never come back to the Ridge; but he always did when his money was spent. Only Michael, standing a little behind George Woods, did not smile.
“But you can’t live for ever on three or four hundred quid,” Watty Frost said.
“No,” Paul replied eagerly, “but I can always make a bit playing at dances, and Sophie’s going to be a singer. You wait till people hear her sing. … Her mother was a singer. She had a beautiful voice. When it went we came here. … But Sophie can sing as well as her mother. And she’s young. She ought to make a name for herself.”
He wrapped the stones before him in a piece of wadding, touching them reverently, and folded them into the tin cigarette box Michael had given him to carry about the first stones Jun had let him have. He was still mystified over the business of the evening, and why the boys had made Jun give him the other stones. He had been quite satisfied for Jun to hold most of the stones, and the best ones, as any man on the Ridge would be for his mate to take care of their common property. There was a newspaper lying on the table. He took it, wrapped it carefully about his precious box, tied a piece of strong string around it, and let the box down carefully into the big, loose pocket of his shabby coat.
WATTY