For the next couple of weeks, affairs at Kuryong flowed on in usual

station style. A saddle-horse was brought in for Miss Grant, and

out of her numerous boxes that young lady produced a Bond Street

outfit that fairly silenced criticism. She rode well too, having

been taught in England, and she, Poss, Binjie and Hugh had some great

scampers after kangaroos, half-wild horses, or anything else that

would get up and run in front of them. She was always so fresh,

cheerful, and ready for any excitement that the two boys became

infatuated in four days, and had to be hunted home on the fifth, or

they would have both proposed. Some days she spent at the homestead

housekeeping, cooking, and giving out rations to swagmen--the

wild, half-crazed travellers who came in at sundown for the dole

of flour, tea and sugar, which was theirs by bush custom. Some days

she spent with the children, and with them learnt a lot of bush

life. It being holiday-time, they practically ran wild all over

the place, spending whole days in long tramps to remote parts in

pursuit of game. They had no "play," as that term is known to English

children. They didn't play at being hunters. They were hunters in

real earnest, and their habits and customs had come to resemble

very closely those of savage tribes that live by the chase.

With them Mary had numberless new experiences. She got accustomed

to seeing the boys climb big trees by cutting steps in the bark

with a tomahawk, going out on the most giddy heights after birds'

nests, or dragging the opossum from his sleeping-place in a hollow

limb. She learned to hold a frenzied fox-terrier at the mouth of

a hollow log, ready to pounce on the kangaroo-rat which had taken

refuge there, and which flashed out as if shot from a catapult on

being poked from the other end with a long stick. She learned to

mark the hiding-place of the young wild-ducks that scuttled and

dived, and hid themselves with such super-natural cunning in the

reedy pools. She saw the native companions, those great, solemn,

grey birds, go through their fantastic and intricate dances, forming

squares, pirouetting, advancing, and retreating with the solemnity

of professional dancing-masters. She lay on the river-bank with

the children, gun in hand, breathless with excitement, waiting for

the rising of the duck-billed platypus--that quaint combination of

fish, flesh and fowl--as he dived in the quiet waters, a train of

small bubbles marking his track. She fished in deep pools for the

great, sleepy, hundred-pound cod-fish that sucked down bait and hook,

holus-bolus, and then were hauled in with hardly any resistance,

and lived for days contentedly, tethered to the bank by a line

through their gills.

In these amusements time passed pleasantly enough, and by the time

school-work was resumed Mary Grant had become one of the family.




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