"Shooting the blacks?" interpolated Gordon.

"Somethin' like that, Mister. I did let off a rifle a few times,

and I dessay one or two poor, ignorant black feller-countrymen that

had been fun' my cattle as full of spears as so many hedgehogs--I

dessay they got in the road of a bullet or two. They're always

gettin' in the road of things. But we don't talk of shootin' blacks

nowadays These parts is too civilised--it's risky. Anyhow, I made

them blacks let my cattle alone. And I slaved like a driven nigger,

day in and day out, brandin' calves all day long in the dust, with

the sun that hot, the brandin' iron 'ud mark without puttin' it in

the fire at all. And then down comes the tick, and kills my cattle

by the hundred, dyin' and perishin' all over the place. And what

lived through it I couldn't sell anywhere, because they won't let

tick-infested cattle go south, and the Dutch won't let us ship 'em

north to Java, the wretches! And then Mr. Grant's debt was over

everything; and at last I had to chuck it up. That's how I got

broke, Mister. I hope you'll have better luck."

While he was delivering this harangue, Carew had been taking notes

of the establishment. There was just a rough table, three boxes

to sit on, a meat safe, a few buckets, and a rough set of shelves,

supporting a dipper and a few tin plates, and tins of jam, while in

the corner stood some rifles and a double-barrelled gun. Saddlery

of all sorts was scattered about the floor promiscuously.

Certainly the owner of No Man's Land had not lived luxuriously.

A low galvanised-iron partition divided the house into two rooms,

and through the doorway could be seen a rough bunk made of bags

stretched on saplings.

As the old man finished speaking, Ah Loy brought in the evening

meal--about a dozen beautifully tender roast ducks in a large tin

dish, a tin plate full of light, delicately-browned cakes of the

sort known as "puftalooners," and a huge billy of tea. There were

no vegetables; pepper and salt were in plenty, and Worcester sauce.

They ate silently, as hungry men do, while the pigs and cattle-dogs

marched in at the open-door, and hustled each other for the scraps

that were thrown to them.

"How is it the pigs have no tails?" asked Carew.

"Bit off, Mister. The dogs bit them off. They've got the ears pretty

well chawed off 'em too."

Just then a pig and a dog made a simultaneous rush for a bone, and

the pig secured it. The dog, by way of revenge, fastened on to the

pig, and made him squeal like a locomotive engine whistling. The

old man kicked at large under the table, and restored order.




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