The sheep themselves, to begin with, seem always in league against

their owners. Merinos, though apparently estimable animals, are

in reality dangerous monomaniacs, whose sole desire is to ruin the

man that owns them. Their object is to die, and to do so with as

much trouble to their owners as they possibly can. They die in the

droughts when the grass, roasted to a dull white by the sun, comes

out by the roots and blows about the bare paddocks; they die in

the wet, when the long grass in the sodden gullies breeds "fluke"

and "bottle" and all sorts of hideous complaints. They get burnt

in bush fires from sheer malice, refusing to run in any given

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direction, but charging round and round in a ring till they are

calcined. They get drowned by refusing to leave flooded country,

though hunted with frenzied earnestness.

It was not the sheep so much as the neighbours whose depredations

were drawing lines on Hugh Gordon's face. "I wouldn't care," he

confided to Miss Grant, "if they only took a beast or two. But the

sheep are going by hundreds. We mustered five hundred short in one

paddock this month. And there isn't a Doyle or a Donohoe cow but

has three calves at least, and two of each three belong to us."

He dared not prosecute them. No local jury would convict in face

of the hostility that would be aroused. They had made "alibis" a

special study; the very judges were staggered by the calmness and

plausibility with which they got themselves out of difficulties.

A big station with a lot of hostile neighbours is like a whale

with the killers round it; it is open to attack on all sides, and

cannot retaliate. A match dropped carelessly in a patch of grass

sets miles of country in a blaze. Hugh, as he missed the stock,

and saw fences cut and grass burnt, could only grind his teeth and

hope that a lucky chance would put some of the enemy in his power.

To Mary it seemed incredible that in the nineteenth century people

should be able to steal sheep without suffering for it; and Hugh

soon saw that she was a true daughter of William Grant, as far as

fighting was concerned. She listened with set teeth to all stories

of depredation and trespass, and they talked over many a plan

together. But though they became quite friendly their intimacy

seemed to make no progress. To her he was rather the employee than

the friend. In fact he did not get on half so far as did Gavan

Blake, who came up to Kuryong occasionally, and made himself so

agreeable that already his name was being coupled with that of the

heiress. Ellen Harriott always spoke to Blake when he came to the

station, and gave no sign of jealousy at his attentions to Mary

Grant; but she was waiting and watching, as one who has been a nurse

learns to do. And things were in this state when an unexpected

event put an altogether different complexion on affairs.




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