instead of having her stuck out there in the scrub, or jolting
through the dust in a cart like some old Mother Flourbag.'
He called her `little Mary' because the Galletly family had known her
when she was a girl.
I rubbed my head and looked at the buggy again. It was a great temptation.
`Look here, Joe,' said Bill Galletly in a quieter tone.
`I'll tell you what I'll do. I'll let YOU have the buggy.
You can take it out and send along a bit of a cheque
when you feel you can manage it, and the rest later on, --
a year will do, or even two years. You've had a hard pull,
and I'm not likely to be hard up for money in a hurry.'
They were good fellows the Galletlys, but they knew their men.
I happened to know that Bill Galletly wouldn't let the man
he built the buggy for take it out of the shop without cash down,
though he was a big-bug round there. But that didn't make it easier for me.
Just then Robert Galletly came into the shop. He was rather quieter
than his brother, but the two were very much alike.
`Look here, Bob,' said Bill; `here's a chance for you
to get rid of your
harness. Joe Wilson's going to take that buggy
off my hands.'
Bob Galletly put his foot up on a saw-stool, took one hand out of his pockets,
rested his elbow on his knee and his chin on the palm of his hand,
and bunched up his big beard with his fingers, as he always did
when he was thinking. Presently he took his foot down,
put his hand back in his pocket, and said to me, `Well, Joe, I've got
a double set of
harness made for the man who ordered that
damned buggy,
and if you like I'll let you have it. I suppose when Bill there
has
squeezed all he can out of you I'll stand a show of getting something.
He's a regular Shylock, he is.'
I pushed my hat forward and rubbed the back of my head and stared
at the buggy.
`Come across to the Royal, Joe,' said Bob.
But I knew that a beer would settle the business, so I said
I'd get the wool up to the station first and think it over,
and have a drink when I came back.
I thought it over on the way to the station, but it didn't seem good enough.
I wanted to get some more sheep, and there was the new run to be fenced in,
and the instalments on the selections. I wanted lots of things
that I couldn't well do without. Then, again, the farther I got away
from debt and hard-upedness the greater the
horror I had of it.
I had two horses that would do; but I'd have to get another later on,
and
altogether the buggy would run me nearer a hundred than fifty pounds.
Supposing a dry season threw me back with that buggy on my hands.
Besides, I wanted a spell. If I got the buggy it would only mean
an extra turn of hard graft for me. No, I'd take Mary for a trip to Sydney,
and she'd have to be satisfied with that.
I'd got it settled, and was just turning in through the big white gates
to the goods-shed when young Black, the squatter, dashed past the station
in his big new waggonette, with his wife and a driver
and a lot of portmanteaus and rugs and things. They were going
to do the grand in Sydney over Christmas. Now it was young Black
who was so shook after Mary when she was in service with the Blacks
before the old man died, and if I hadn't come along --
and if girls never cared for vagabonds -- Mary would have been
mistress of Haviland
homestead, with servants to wait on her;
and she was far better fitted for it than the one that was there.
She would have been going to Sydney every
holiday and putting up
at the old Royal, with every comfort that a woman could ask for,
and
seeing a play every night. And I'd have been knocking around
amongst the big stations Out-Back, or maybe drinking myself to death
at the shanties.
The Blacks didn't see me as I went by,
ragged and dusty,
and with an old, nearly black, cabbage-tree hat drawn over my eyes.
I didn't care a damn for them, or any one else, at most times,
but I had moods when I felt things.
One of Black's big wool teams was just coming away from the shed,
and the driver, a big, dark, rough fellow, with some foreign blood in him,
didn't seem inclined to wheel his team an inch out of the middle of the road.
I stopped my horses and waited. He looked at me and I looked at him -- hard.
Then he wheeled off, scowling, and swearing at his horses.
I'd given him a hiding, six or seven years before, and he hadn't forgotten it.
And I felt then as if I wouldn't mind
trying to give some one a hiding.
The goods clerk must have thought that Joe Wilson was pretty grumpy that day.
I was thinking of Mary, out there in the
lonely hut on a
barren creek
in the Bush -- for it was little better -- with no one to speak to
except a
haggard, worn-out Bushwoman or two, that came to see her on Sunday.
I thought of the hardships she went through in the first year --
that I haven't told you about yet; of the time she was ill, and I away,
and no one to understand; of the time she was alone with James and Jim sick;
and of the
loneliness she fought through out there. I thought of Mary,
outside in the blazing heat, with an old print dress and a felt hat,
and a pair of 'lastic-siders of mine on, doing the work of a station manager
as well as that of a
housewife and mother. And her cheeks were getting thin,
and her colour was going: I thought of the gaunt, brick-brown,
saw-file voiced,
hopeless and spiritless Bushwomen I knew -- and some of them
not much older than Mary.
When I went back down into the town, I had a drink with Bill Galletly
at the Royal, and that settled the buggy; then Bob shouted,*
and I took the
harness. Then I shouted, to wet the
bargain.
When I was going, Bob said, `Send in that young scamp of a brother of Mary's
with the horses: if the collars don't fit I'll fix up a pair of makeshifts,
and alter the others.' I thought they both gripped my hand harder than usual,
but that might have been the beer.
--
* `Shout', to buy a round of drinks. -- A. L., 1997.
--
IV. The Buggy Comes Home.
I `whipped the cat' a bit, the first twenty miles or so, but then, I thought,
what did it matter? What was the use of grinding to save money
until we were too old to enjoy it. If we had to go down in the world again,
we might as well fall out of a buggy as out of a dray --
there'd be some talk about it, anyway, and perhaps a little sympathy.
When Mary had the buggy she wouldn't be tied down so much
to that
wretched hole in the Bush; and the Sydney trips needn't be off either.
I could drive down to Wallerawang on the main line, where Mary
had some people, and leave the buggy and horses there,
and take the train to Sydney; or go right on, by the old coach-road,
over the Blue Mountains: it would be a grand drive.
I thought best to tell Mary's sister at Gulgong about the buggy;
I told her I'd keep it dark from Mary till the buggy came home.
She entered into the spirit of the thing, and said she'd give the world
to be able to go out with the buggy, if only to see Mary open her eyes
when she saw it; but she couldn't go, on
account of a new baby she had.
I was rather glad she couldn't, for it would spoil the surprise a little,
I thought. I wanted that all to myself.
I got home about
sunset next day, and, after tea, when I'd finished
telling Mary all the news, and a few lies as to why I didn't
bring the cart back, and one or two other things, I sat with James,
out on a log of the wood-heap, where we generally had
our smokes and interviews, and told him all about the buggy.
He whistled, then he said --
`But what do you want to make it such a Bushranging business for?
Why can't you tell Mary now? It will cheer her up. She's been
pretty
miserable since you've been away this trip.'
`I want it to be a surprise,' I said.
`Well, I've got nothing to say against a surprise, out in a hole like this;
but it 'ud take a lot to surprise me. What am I to say to Mary
about
taking the two horses in? I'll only want one to bring the cart out,
and she's sure to ask.'
`Tell her you're going to get yours shod.'
`But he had a set of slippers only the other day. She knows as much
about horses as we do. I don't mind telling a lie so long as a chap
has only got to tell a straight lie and be done with it.
But Mary asks so many questions.'
`Well, drive the other horse up the creek early, and pick him up as you go.'
`Yes. And she'll want to know what I want with two bridles.
But I'll fix her -- YOU needn't worry.'
`And, James,' I said, `get a chamois leather and
sponge --
we'll want 'em anyway -- and you might give the buggy a wash down
in the creek, coming home. It's sure to be covered with dust.'
`Oh! -- orlright.'
`And if you can, time yourself to get here in the cool of the evening,
or just about
sunset.'
`What for?'
I'd thought it would be better to have the buggy there
in the cool of the evening, when Mary would have time
to get excited and get over it -- better than in the blazing hot morning,
when the sun rose as hot as at noon, and we'd have the long broiling day
before us.
`What do you want me to come at
sunset for?' asked James. `Do you want me
to camp out in the scrub and turn up like a
blooming sundowner?'
`Oh well,' I said, `get here at
midnight if you like.'
We didn't say anything for a while -- just sat and puffed at our pipes.
Then I said, --
`Well, what are you thinking about?'
I'm thinking it's time you got a new hat, the sun seems to get in
through your old one too much,' and he got out of my reach and went to see
about penning the
calves. Before we turned in he said, --
`Well, what am I to get out of the job, Joe?'
He had his eye on a double-
barrel gun that Franca the gunsmith
in Cudgeegong had -- one
barrel shot, and the other rifle; so I said, --
`How much does Franca want for that gun?'
`Five-ten; but I think he'd take my single
barrel off it.
Anyway, I can
squeeze a couple of quid out of Phil Lambert
for the single
barrel.' (Phil was his bosom chum.)
`All right,' I said. `Make the best
bargain you can.'
He got his own breakfast and made an early start next morning,
to get clear of any instructions or messages that Mary might have forgotten
to give him
overnight. He took his gun with him.
I'd always thought that a man was a fool who couldn't keep a secret
from his wife -- that there was something womanish about him. I found out.
Those three days
waiting for the buggy were about the longest I ever spent
in my life. It made me scotty with every one and everything;
and poor Mary had to suffer for it. I put in the time
patching up the
harness and mending the stockyard and the roof,
and, the third morning, I rode up the ridges to look for trees
for fencing-timber. I remember I
hurried home that afternoon
because I thought the buggy might get there before me.
At tea-time I got Mary on to the buggy business.
`What's the good of a single buggy to you, Mary?' I asked.
`There's only room for two, and what are you going to do with the children
when we go out together?'
`We can put them on the floor at our feet, like other people do.
I can always fold up a blanket or 'possum rug for them to sit on.'
But she didn't take half so much interest in buggy talk
as she would have taken at any other time, when I didn't want her to.
Women are aggravating that way. But the poor girl was tired
and not very well, and both the children were cross. She did look knocked up.
`We'll give the buggy a rest, Joe,' she said. (I thought I heard it
coming then.) `It seems as far off as ever. I don't know why
you want to harp on it to-day. Now, don't look so cross, Joe --
I didn't mean to hurt you. We'll wait until we can get a double buggy,
since you're so set on it. There'll be plenty of time when we're better off.'
After tea, when the youngsters were in bed, and she'd washed up,
we sat outside on the edge of the verandah floor, Mary sewing,
and I smoking and watching the track up the creek.
`Why don't you talk, Joe?' asked Mary. `You scarcely ever speak to me now:
it's like
drawing blood out of a stone to get a word from you.
What makes you so cross, Joe?'
`Well, I've got nothing to say.'
`But you should find something. Think of me -- it's very
miserable for me.