She was a fine "lump" of a woman, with broad shoulders, and nearly

the same breadth all the way down to her feet. She wore a rusty

black dress, which fitted perilously tight to her arms and bust; on

her head was a lopsided, dismantled black bonnet with a feather--a

bonnet that had evidently been put away in a drawer and forgotten

for years. Any want of colour or style in her dress was amply

made up for by the fact that she positively glowed with opals. Her

huge, thick fingers twinkled with opal rings; from each of her ears

there dangled an opal earring the size of a form; her old dress

was secured round her thick, muscular neck by a brooch that looked

like an opal quarry, and whenever she turned to the sun she flashed

out rays like a lighthouse.

Her face was fat and red, full of a sort of good-humoured ferocity;

she moved like a queen among the bystanders, and shook hands

gravely with each and all of them. She was hot, but very dignified.

Evidently she was preparing to start in the coach, for she packed

into the vehicle with jealous care a large carpet-bag of garish

colouring that seemed to harmonise well with the opals. While she

was packing this away, Charlie and Carew went into the store, and

bought such supplies as were needed for the establishment at No

Man's Land. Gordon took the opportunity to ask the shock-headed

old storekeeper, Pike's deputy, some questions about the lady, who

was still scintillating between the coach and the house, carrying

various small articles each trip.

"Don't yer know 'er?" said the man, in much the same tone that Bret

Harte's hero must have used when he was so taken aback to find that

a stranger-"Didn't know Flynn,--

Flynn of Virginia."

"Don't yer know 'er?" he repeated, pausing in his task of scooping

some black cockroachy sugar from the bottom of a bin. "That's the

Hopal Queen! She's hoff South, she is. Yer'll be going in the coach,

will yer?"

"Yes," said Charlie. "We're going in the coach. There's no extra

fare for travelling with such a swell, is there? Where on earth

did she get all those opals?"

"Ho, blokes gives 'em to 'er, passin' back from the hopal fields.

In the rough, yer know! Hopal in the rough, well, it's 'ard to

tell what it'll turn out, and they'll give 'er a 'unk as sometimes

turns out a fair dazzler. She's a hay-one judge of it in the rough,

too. If she buys a bit of hopal, yer bet yer life it ain't a bad

bit when it's cut. What about these 'ere stores? Goin' to take 'em

with yer?"

"No," said Charlie. "The black boy is here for them. He's going to

take them back with him."




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