The Germ Growers: An Australian story of adventure and mystery by Robert Potter (books you have to read .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Robert Potter
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โI did have a look at him,โ said the physician, โand I found him just a steady old bush hand, with an uncommon degree of intelligence and good sense, and a lot of information about the country and the aborigines. I was just wondering what on earth they could have sent him here for when he told me with the gravest face the following story:โHe had been more than a year among the blacks and he did not know how he was to get back to his own people. It was away in the north-west somewhere, the far north-west. Well, one [269] day, he said, there was a sort of panic among the blacks, he didnโt know the cause of it, and he wandered away a mile or two from the camp. He said that when these panics take them they are jealous of the presence of strangers. He had a loaded revolver with him.
โThere was no sun and he began to think he might lose his way, and so he made up his mind to return to the blacksโ camp. Just then he heard a sort of rustle in the air above him, and presently a man, so he said, jumped out of the clouds and caught him by the collar of his coat. He said that this man never touched the ground himself, but tried to lift him off the ground. He drew his revolver and fired.
โThen he saidโโLook here, doctor, Iโm blest if the fellow didnโt turn into bilinโ water and then into steam and then into nothinโ at all, and while I was wonderinโ what in the mischief war the matter with me back he comes again, fust steam, and then bilinโ water, and then an ugly tawny-looking beggar, neither nigger nor white man, and makes another grab at me. So I said, Man or devil, have at you again, and I gave him the contents of another barrel, and Iโm blest if he didnโt go of in a bile again and I took to my heels and ran as I never ran before until I got back to the darkiesโ camp.โ That was his story,โ said the physician, โand it appears that [270] he was picked up some months later on the headwaters of the Oakover River by some explorers, and so he got round to Adelaide, and thence to Sydney, and so found his way to the asylum.โ
In answer to further questions the physician said, โI told the superintendent of the asylum that the man was quite sane, or at least sane enough for the purposes of life; that he was no doubt under some strange delusion, but that I had observed that people who had been much among the blacks were liable to such delusions, and that in my opinion he was quite harmless and that it was cruel to keep him shut up in an asylum, and I made a memorandum in the visitorsโ book to that effect.โ
I told this story to Jack that night and we went off the very next day to Tarban Creek to look for the man. He had been discharged and was now working as a clerk on a station on the Murrumbidgee. So the superintendent of the asylum told us.
We hurried off to the Murrumbidgee and found the station where he had been employed. It was somewhere near Balranald. But he had gone away to America about six months before, and we could find no means of tracing him. This affair unsettled us again and was indirectly the cause of our letting the negotiation in which we were engaged drift away from us.
But it is now quite a year since we have made a clean [271] breast of it and committed our story to paper, although we have not at the moment of writing made up our minds about its publication. And the effect upon us both has been decidedly good. Jack says we have done better than the Ancient Mariner, for he had to tell his tale over and over again whenever he met a man whose doom it was to hear him; but we have just told our tale once for all and let the doomed ones read it. And now we have actually settled down to business and have become part owners of a station in Queensland and have our homes within ten miles of each other; that is to say we are quite next door neighbours, and I may as well finish by giving you the details of a conversation which passed between myself and Jack only a few months ago.
We were both staying with some friends at a pleasant little place very near a station on the Southern Railway, about thirty miles from Sydney. I say a little place, for it looked so; but when you came to know it well it turned out to be a very big place. There were as many bedrooms as its hospitable owner could fill with guests; and not to speak of dining and drawing-rooms, which were large and airy and very pretty, there were bath-rooms, billiard-rooms, and smoking-rooms without stint.
It was a quiet, unpretending place to look at, but it [272] was really a most luxurious place. There were pictures and books and musical instruments everywhere; and most delightful contrivances, part couch, part hammock, part swing; and hothouse fruits and flowers; and horses of easiest pace if you wanted them, but somehow you seldom did want them. And whenever there were guests there, and that was three parts of the year, there was the best company in all Australia, and as good as there is anywhere in the world.
Just now the broad verandah, which ran along the main front, was covered with banksia roses, jessamine, and woodbine, and between this and the neat wicket-gate, which was the main entrance to this little paradise, were all sorts of spring and early summer flowers.
At the gate Jack and I were standing; he had come up from Sydney about an hour before. And this was what we said:โ
Wilbraham. Well, Bob, can you tell me when you are going to be married?
Easterley. I cannot quite say, but it will be soon. Bessie and I have talked it over and she has listened to reason. She promised me that her friend, Violet Fanshawe, shall fix the day, and Violet is coming here to-morrow.
Wilbraham. And you can trust Violet?
[273] Easterley. I think I can.
Wilbraham. Do you know, Bob, I saw Miss Fanshawe yesterday, and we were talking about you. But she didnโt seem to know that she was to decide so momentous a question.
Easterley. Perhaps she didnโt know.
Wilbraham. Perhaps not; but, Bob, I think I should like, if it could be so arranged, to be married on the same day as you and Bessie.
Easterley. Jack, I am very glad indeed, but I never guessed it, though I did wonder what was taking you to Sydney so often.
Wilbraham. It was not that; it was, in the first place, to leave you and Bessie together; but sure enough it led to that.
Easterley. But who is she? Oh, Jack, I hope we shall not be worse friends after we are married.
Wilbraham (with a knowing smile). Somehow, Bob, I donโt think we will.
Easterley. Surely it is not Violet?
Wilbraham. Yes, itโs Violet; so she and Bessie may as well settle both days in one.
Easterley. Well, I am very glad; but how is it that Bessie never told me, for surely Violet must have told her.
Wilbraham. No, she didnโt. It was only settled [274] yesterday. But there is Bessie on the verandah, and she has just got a letter.
We both went up to her; indeed we had parted from her scarce half an hour ago. I saw that the letter was Violetโs writing. โIโll tell you,โ I said, โwhatโs in that letter, Bessie. Violet is going to marry Jack.โ
It was very sudden, and she turned pale and red and then opened the letter. Then, after a few seconds, she cried, โOh, Bob, Iโm so glad!โ and she kissed me, and I think she was very near kissing Jack.
So Violet came the next day and the conclave was held and the day was fixed, and just four weeks later Jack and Violet, Bessie and I, were married at All Saints, St. Kilda, for Bessie and Violet were Victorian girls and lived near Melbourne.
And now, as I have already told you, we are living in Queensland, in homes only ten miles apart.
I thought you might like just a little bit of human interest after so much of the other thing.
So nowโFarewell!
THE END.
PRINTED BY J. S. VIRTUE AND CO., LIMITED, CITY ROAD, LONDON.
Inconsistent hyphenation (bee-line/bee line, half-turn/half turn, half-way/half way, head-waters/headwaters, seed-beds/seed beds, small-pox/smallpox, well-defined/well defined) has been left as printed in the original.
A few misspellings have been corrected and a handful of quotation marks adjusted for clarity.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Germ Growers, by Robert Potter
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