Settling Day
The doors were pushed ope
and he seemed to be listening intently. Th
me step on to the ve
lthough he had no desire to spy upon him, he tho
y,' said Jim to himself. 'He could take
the t
ly, and then came the sound of
e part of Rodney Shaw, and Jim
nd he decided to slip off the ve
eard a cry of surprise, almost of terror
w sitting on his bed, in his pyjamas, an
you?' said Shaw in
y me, Jim
you spying about on my verandah?
and made ex
, he's been drink
ped in a chair on the verandah to wai
eve it. It's
ou have been on a "jag," I a
pulling himself together, thought better of
ologetic way. 'I have been absent so long t
e looks,' thought Jim.
on a "jag"?' as
m. He evidently did not
ght this
a "jag" means. You have been on one
Shaw
ve a drop too much-first with Machinson, then after he l
kind,' said Jim. 'Let me tell you why I
ght. Si
n a couple of chairs, an
ke much interest in it, he seeme
ld insist upon Machinson "going" for them. They are a bad lot, and ought to
n don't seem to h
cused me of things I have never been mixed up in,' said Jim. 'You ought t
in par
ny of us. You have only to mention the matter to the P.M. and he'll soon see
?' questi
laug
s stood your friend more than once when you have been in a scrape. Don't you recollec
otice it. He was laughing to himself over the thoug
ol
ey,' sa
eh? Queer beggar and a rum name. Ho
d Jim, spel
k of the rest of his chair w
it,' said Jim. 'You must
was riding in a hurdle race and came a cropper on m
counts for it. I thought you seemed curi
gave a sig
ve been to with you, and what we formerly did together, I shall recall it all, and not
. 'I once knew a steeplechase rider who almost
ey Shaw. 'What was that row
and you kissed his daughter, and he went for you hot and s
hich a lot of damage was done. Your old man was very angry about it, but Adye Dauntsey smoothed it over. I took your
laughed as
some rare sprees in those days. You
be ready to help a pa
afraid I treated you rathe
onfess,' said Jim. 'I thought y
tood me. I hope we shall b
. 'It will not be my
gang. No good will come out of it, and I ha
lease,' r
ct if they were bundled out, neck and crop,
will tell him all about your capture of the horse
ou see if he do
say he stands in wi
d Jim; 'but it looks like it. He
til I put some decent clothes on, and we'll go round and have a look at the hors
answered Jim. 'Thoroughbred sta
of the house to where Jim
Rodney Shaw called to a ma
who brought the horse as
d him over and d
omer, I'll bet
d the stallio
the man in evident s
aid Jim, pointi
deuce did h
ve him up,' said Jim,
knew who s
on's
ey be?' ask
this district,' said Jim. 'I'd advise you to k
to mix up with a
s on that head, b
f a temper, but I have tamed him down a bit. He had one of the biggest hid
ut of Mermaid, and h
enthusiastically. 'I'd like to send a cou
I can do after all the trouble
mares,' said Jim, 'and I'll
standing by,
get hold of that blood. He's one of those pr
eg would like Jim Dennis, becau
is departure, Alec Beg
get hold of the Fisherman blood. You
r much, and, besides, he got the
ays he's a bad lot, and not to be trusted. He may
id Shaw. 'If he were one of the gang w
leaving Beg grum
?-oh, here it is, and he picked up a piece of paper-Barragong. I wonder if the worthy P.M. will think I have altered much during the last eight or nine years. Probably he will, most people about here think me changed, even Benj
er London. I think in a few years I'll sell out and go back again. And if I do return, that lady friend of mine will probably find m
an ugly laugh, a laugh that betrayed the baseness of the man,
Romance
Romance
Billionaires
Romance
Romance
Romance