登陆注册
20065500000022

第22章 No Place for a Woman(1)

He had a selection on a long box-scrub siding of the ridges, about half a mile back and up from the coach road. There were no neighbours that I ever heard of, and the nearest "town" was thirty miles away.

He grew wheat among the stumps of his clearing, sold the crop standing to a Cockie who lived ten miles away, and had some surplus sons; or, some seasons, he reaped it by hand, had it thrashed by travelling "steamer" (portable steam engine and machine), and carried the grain, a few bags at a time, into the mill on his rickety dray.

He had lived alone for upwards of 15 years, and was known to those who knew him as "Ratty Howlett".

Trav'lers and strangers failed to see anything uncommonly ratty about him.

It was known, or, at least, it was believed, without question, that while at work he kept his horse saddled and bridled, and hung up to the fence, or grazing about, with the saddle on -- or, anyway, close handy for a moment's notice -- and whenever he caught sight, over the scrub and through the quarter-mile break in it, of a traveller on the road, he would jump on his horse and make after him.

If it was a horseman he usually pulled him up inside of a mile.

Stories were told of unsuccessful chases, misunderstandings, and complications arising out of Howlett's mania for running down and bailing up travellers.

Sometimes he caught one every day for a week, sometimes not one for weeks -- it was a lonely track.

The explanation was simple, sufficient, and perfectly natural -- from a bushman's point of view. Ratty only wanted to have a yarn.

He and the traveller would camp in the shade for half an hour or so and yarn and smoke. The old man would find out where the traveller came from, and how long he'd been there, and where he was making for, and how long he reckoned he'd be away; and ask if there had been any rain along the traveller's back track, and how the country looked after the drought; and he'd get the traveller's ideas on abstract questions -- if he had any. If it was a footman (swagman), and he was short of tobacco, old Howlett always had half a stick ready for him. Sometimes, but very rarely, he'd invite the swagman back to the hut for a pint of tea, or a bit of meat, flour, tea, or sugar, to carry him along the track.

And, after the yarn by the road, they said, the old man would ride back, refreshed, to his lonely selection, and work on into the night as long as he could see his solitary old plough horse, or the scoop of his long-handled shovel.

And so it was that I came to make his acquaintance -- or, rather, that he made mine. I was cantering easily along the track -- I was making for the north-west with a pack horse -- when about a mile beyond the track to the selection I heard, "Hi, Mister!" and saw a dust cloud following me. I had heard of "Old Ratty Howlett" casually, and so was prepared for him.

A tall gaunt man on a little horse. He was clean-shaven, except for a frill beard round under his chin, and his long wavy, dark hair was turning grey; a square, strong-faced man, and reminded me of one full-faced portrait of Gladstone more than any other face I had seen.

He had large reddish-brown eyes, deep set under heavy eyebrows, and with something of the blackfellow in them -- the sort of eyes that will peer at something on the horizon that no one else can see.

He had a way of talking to the horizon, too -- more than to his companion; and he had a deep vertical wrinkle in his forehead that no smile could lessen.

I got down and got out my pipe, and we sat on a log and yarned awhile on bush subjects; and then, after a pause, he shifted uneasily, it seemed to me, and asked rather abruptly, and in an altered tone, if I was married. A queer question to ask a traveller; more especially in my case, as I was little more than a boy then.

He talked on again of old things and places where we had both been, and asked after men he knew, or had known -- drovers and others -- and whether they were living yet. Most of his inquiries went back before my time; but some of the drovers, one or two overlanders with whom he had been mates in his time, had grown old into mine, and I knew them. I notice now, though I didn't then -- and if I had it would not have seemed strange from a bush point of view -- that he didn't ask for news, nor seem interested in it.

Then after another uneasy pause, during which he scratched crosses in the dust with a stick, he asked me, in the same queer tone and without looking at me or looking up, if I happened to know anything about doctoring -- if I'd ever studied it.

I asked him if anyone was sick at his place. He hesitated, and said "No."

Then I wanted to know why he had asked me that question, and he was so long about answering that I began to think he was hard of hearing, when, at last, he muttered something about my face reminding him of a young fellow he knew of who'd gone to Sydney to "study for a doctor". That might have been, and looked natural enough; but why didn't he ask me straight out if I was the chap he "knowed of"?

Travellers do not like beating about the bush in conversation.

He sat in silence for a good while, with his arms folded, and looking absently away over the dead level of the great scrubs that spread from the foot of the ridge we were on to where a blue peak or two of a distant range showed above the bush on the horizon.

I stood up and put my pipe away and stretched. Then he seemed to wake up.

"Better come back to the hut and have a bit of dinner," he said.

"The missus will about have it ready, and I'll spare you a handful of hay for the horses."

同类推荐
  • 杂记上

    杂记上

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 野菜赞

    野菜赞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 河间伤寒心要

    河间伤寒心要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 法句譬喻经

    法句譬喻经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 五千五百佛名神咒除障灭罪经

    五千五百佛名神咒除障灭罪经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 极品大少

    极品大少

    张大海,名字虽然有点俗,但是,他天生有一个很大特点,那就是能够看透人的心理活动,也不知道是怎么回事,从小的时候,张大海的心就格外的敏感,对待很多事情的感知能力也是非常的强,只要是别人的脑海里一想到的事情,他就知道了,这个秘密只有他自己知道的,就连自己的父母也是不知道。
  • 神级男护士

    神级男护士

    在一次千年渡劫中,蒋飞遭奸人暗算,坠落重生到一个妇幼科男护士身上,重生到了家族灾难降临的前一年:那一年,初恋女神和前世妻子婀娜多姿,那一年,羞涩小护士,极品女医生,美女蛇老师柔情似水,那一年,妩媚女杀手,绝色女明星,冷傲女总裁含苞怒放……
  • 做个禅女人:女人善待心灵的100个阳光禅

    做个禅女人:女人善待心灵的100个阳光禅

    女人,很多时候都会感到累、感到无助、感到孤单、感到迷茫……”其实在没有月光也没有星光的时候,你也不要绝望和哭泣,禅的智慧会带你走出黑暗和迷雾,走向幸福和光明,让你学会自已送自己一枝鲜花,自己给自己撑一柄避雨的伞,自己给自己一个明媚的笑容。
  • 獠牙:吸血恶魔缠上身

    獠牙:吸血恶魔缠上身

    “我没家,你要带走我么?”午夜零点,她不过跑了趟便利店却从此碰上了一个绝对不能碰的恶魔。而他发现,血族最为擅长的读心术竟对她失效!“白小姐您好,赫连总裁让我转告您,如果想知道白澄七的下落,请您在今晚九点打扮好自己到这里来。”一张超五星级酒店的房卡交到她手上,她咬了咬牙,为了被她视为唯一亲人的那个怪小鬼,她必须去。“好啊,放她走,你留下……好么?”俊美邪魅的男人慵懒转动着高脚杯,而躺在他脚边的女人手腕正大片大片冒着鲜血——赫然是让她恨之入骨的同父妹妹!“好。”她将手指攥紧刺破手掌。那一夜,金碧辉煌的豪华套房变成了她的无间地狱……噩梦开始。短短百天,在她刚查出怀孕时,他却搂着另一个妖艳女人将浑身是血的她扔在大街上,一脚踢开她抓着自己脚腕的手。“女人,我玩腻了。看在你取悦我三个月的份上,留你一条贱命。”为了保住腹中的宝宝,她不得不躲起来不人不鬼的找血喝……这个孩子,才是她真正唯一的亲人,她不能不要!&&&&&&&&半年后,一阵能量波动震惊血族——有着完整第三代吸血鬼血统的新生儿降世了!只是,任凭所有人找破头也再没发现半点当年那发出可怕能量波动的血统继承人……%%%%%%%%五年后,她拉着一个咬着棒棒糖可爱到吸引无数视线的小‘女孩’走下飞机,俊美高挑的男人更是温柔满溢的守在身旁。“白悠然,你姐姐去哪儿了……”某唐咬牙切齿,突然发现不对劲。“咦?妈咪,我就是宝贝呀!”“是你个头——把裤子脱了看看!”机场的人全部黑线了,而在机场门口,坐在豪车里的男人脸色突然变得阴沉。这个消失了五年多的愚蠢人类,不但嫁人了,而且……还生了孩子?----------------------【此文邪恶中夹杂着温情,温情里夹杂着绝望,小白女主各种受虐……亲们!!手指动起来~点击放入书架吧╭(╯3╰)╮哇咔咔。。求收藏求咖啡求留言求支持求包养!飞吻亲们~】
  • 混在神秘酒吧的日子

    混在神秘酒吧的日子

    直到秦川无意中接手了神秘酒吧,他才知道这世界远比他看到的更广阔,神秘的酒吧,里面蕴藏着无数来历不明的物品,每一件都具有神奇的效果。正因为如此,秦川的生活越来越精彩,但也引来了许多人的注意,纨绔恶少只是最底层的蝼蚁,国术高手也只能充当马前卒,真正厉害的是那些终日修仙的方外人士,他们因为各种原因,出现在秦川面前,或为朋友或为仇敌,然而秦川却是坐拥数美,傲视群雄,在这繁华的都市中,将神秘酒吧继续经营下去。
  • 休夫王妃太有财

    休夫王妃太有财

    她竟然赶着潮流华丽丽的穿越了!但是,为什么人家穿越不是皇后就是王妃,再不行也是地方富豪的夫人……为什么到了她就全变样了呢?老公不疼,下人不敬,还整天受尽小三的欺负!哼,风流的狗屁禽兽王爷,既然你不给我面子,那我就让你面子里子都没有!
  • 落幕英雄传

    落幕英雄传

    科技进步,思想解放,让旧时代渐渐落下了帷幕。本书讲述了一位年轻贵族,在新旧交替之时,凭着智慧和勇气同命运抗争的故事。虽然有着阶级局限性,虽然已成为时代眼泪,但依旧保持着旧时代骑士的尊严与荣耀。本书不穿越、未重生、无转世。此为一铁杆德棍的幻想之作。
  • 七世情:忆朝歌

    七世情:忆朝歌

    她,轮回七世,为爱奋不顾身坠入魔道;他,因爱万劫不复,与她世世痴缠。他,本是仙,注定孤老,为天下奉献一切,注定绝情绝爱。动心,那便是触犯禁忌。她为他,负尽天下,换来的却是一件穿心与一句天命如此。天?她改天又如何?这天何时公道过?既然如此改了它又有何不可?当他再次回头,去寻那抹空无时,她笑看他,她笑看天下,即是你的选择又何须回头呢?原谅他?晚了。除非六界颠覆,四海倾倒否则再无可能。当心已死,那么支撑着她的就只有恨了!当他决定为她抛弃繁华,抛弃天下之时,她却站在了他的对面,说:如今你我再也不是那什么可笑的师徒!时过境迁,不是早已物是人非了么?
  • 韵史

    韵史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 我叫小狐狸

    我叫小狐狸

    当战五渣画风略萌萌的小狐狸逆袭成战斗力过百的女神时,原来一切都已浮出水面。