Classic Audiobook Collection - The Adventure of the Broad Arrow - An Australian Romance by Morley Roberts ~ Full Audiobook [adventure]

Episode Date: August 8, 2023

The Adventure of the Broad Arrow - An Australian Romance by Morley Roberts audiobook. Genre: adventure When a few men decide to go for looking for gold in the outback of Australia, days of extreme he...at with no water and no rain in sight, make them turn back and give up the trip; all but two of them that is, Smith and Mandeville, aka the 'Baker. Smith and Baker decide to tough it out and go after their dreams, chancing their lives to find 'their luck'. Little do they realize, they will put their lives in grave danger, and this quest for gold will turn into a nightmare. Life threatening food and water deprivation is a constant issue, and they had no idea they would stumble upon an unknown tribe of prehistoric white men that are head hunters and cannibals. Will they survive the harsh bush conditions, the fierce inferno of the desert, and a deadly tribe? And what about the gold? Is there gold to be found, and if so, will it ever be their reality? An incredible adventure with lots of twists and turns awaits... For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:09:09) Chapter 02 (00:17:52) Chapter 03 (00:28:44) Chapter 04 (00:37:47) Chapter 05 (00:51:10) Chapter 06 (01:03:31) Chapter 07 (01:16:21) Chapter 08 (01:26:47) Chapter 09 (01:38:18) Chapter 10 (01:56:17) Chapter 11 (02:10:11) Chapter 12 (02:18:52) Chapter 13 (02:30:44) Chapter 14 (02:44:28) Chapter 15 (03:07:53) Chapter 16 (03:17:02) Chapter 17 (03:32:43) Chapter 18 (03:50:40) Chapter 19 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Adventure of the Broad Arrow, an Australian romance by Morley Roberts. New Find It's possible to be damned without being dead, said Smith, as he drank his nobler at the Pilbara Hotel, and miners are the men who know it in such a place as this. He looked out of the reeking barroom on the light brown glare of waterless desert with a few thirsty trees scattered over it. We're in the pit, so to speak, he continued,
Starting point is 00:00:35 but not the lowest, for there are drinks here still. Fill them up again, Bob, and have one yourself. As for me, I feel like it blew my skin and shirt for a last one before I tumbled to pieces and wrought finger by finger in this hole. The men in the bar stood and drank with him silently, yet one who was mad drunk with brandy and sunlight, smashed his tumbler on the bar top and pitched the bottom at a mongrel dog slinking outside in a thin shadow. Where's the best news, Smith? asked Bob, who was the only cheerful man in the crowd.
Starting point is 00:01:13 The best news, answered Smith, is that we are back and the water's nearly done here, and the rain is not coming, and the camp is rotting. Tin meats and fever water are doing for us. I might as well have stayed out yet. and got sun-dried and mulga and spine effects and he went off foolishly into the blazing sun which came down at a slant of ninety degrees and shone back from the hot dust with a glare that could blister a man under his chin the town that he strode through was of boards and canvas and corrugated iron it stank in the still air and as man or horse or camel went by the dust rose thick and thick, and empty cans rang. But into the stagnant desolation came in perpetually. They came in with gold fever and went out with typhoid, and still their empty places filled up. The Western Australian papers screamed no water, and the Eastern papers copied them with jealous additions,
Starting point is 00:02:21 but men came in to drink thick mud and rot like silly sheep piled against the windward fence, in a dry season, when the creeks and tanks are dry, and grass is not. From Albany, Perth, and Fremantle, from Kimberly, Murchison, and Cool Gardy, men rushed in, till New Find, so greatly boomed, was full of good men and thieves, of workers and loafers, of white men, and of Chinamen, and they were all bent on gold, till the fever got them, and they yelled under canvas, which was no shelter from the sun. But ants and spiders and scorpions gloried while men died, and the flies were thick on sick men's mouths,
Starting point is 00:03:10 and onerless dogs dug up corpses and died of blood poisoning. For the ways of men under ancient stresses are as the ways of ancient instinct, inevitable in unalterable channels. They drift where gold, is, or where the thought of its possibility lies, they march like locusts into a ditch which is death. They pour out of the towns like ants from a disturbed ant hill. They try the absurd, and storm the impossible. They rot and stick in the mire. They perish, and are known no more. They wither like grass, and are of no avail. Yet each individual man is even there the center of his world,
Starting point is 00:03:55 and thinks that he will do this and do that, and each day he does what the dead day willed, and the knight subscribed to, but does no more and does no other, and such as these was Smith, who braved sudden death in a bitter sun, as he walked through the hideous town to his mates' hup out west on the plain.
Starting point is 00:04:18 As he went out of the sunlight into shadow, which was thick darkness after the glare of the noonday light, he stumbled across someone. Where the devil are you treading? Grawled the somnolent man he had disturbed. Can't see after being in the sun, said Smith. Is that you, Tom? Yes, said Tom, the Water Carter,
Starting point is 00:04:40 whose job looked like giving out. For Water now was bought by rich men in measured buckets and by poor ones in mean tin panikins. You mean you can't see after soaking in whiskey at the Pelbarra, don't you? he added a little of both said smith lying down on a pile of dirty gunny-sacks i've been out facing the earth destroyer and the dryer up of water and i wanted to get blind why are you back asked tom i came in and saw the baker yonder and i found hicks too so i just lay down you had a bad time the men he spoke of were at the far end of the hut one was in an old bush bed made of stakes and sticks and stretched sacking while the other sat at the table and scraped grease from it with a clasp-knife we funked it said smith there's no other word for it oh blazes i can't lie still he rose and went to the table and sat opposite to hicks reaching over he borrowed the other man's knife without ceremony and scratched his name in big capital letters in the wood when he had finished smith he jabbed the knife into the eye of his name and went on talking
Starting point is 00:05:56 we got sixty miles out across the sand a mulga and the porcupine grass yes sixty miles into the desert and we saw its red-rimmed dance and it scrubbed crackle and the water-bags looked mean betting against the sun so we put our tails between our legs and crawled back sick and ready to rot here but when the rain comes we're there where there why didn't you take camels asked tom smith smiled why didn't we organize an expedition camels and afghans cost money and i don't like their ways horses are good enough for me you wait till the rain comes, but another chipped into the talk. It'll never rain no more, said the man who lay on the bed. I'm going home to my ma, and I'll live where there's water, and make love to the aff a crown of weak slavey, and be a thawth in a back street.
Starting point is 00:06:55 What did I come out here for? It's better to be a sneak and be jugged in London than be here, if they did anything apt so bad to long-timers as make them come to see. such a place as this ear, they'd have a valley agitation in hangling and a meeting in the park. Dry up, you, Cockney Baker, you, said Smith more good-humorly than he had yet spoken. It's never home you'll get. You and I will fill a sandpit here, and I'll dig yours. We'll scrape it out with a broken bottle and a kerosene tin, and we'll write your name on the height of your dead dog and plan him with you to keep you faithful company. But the cockney,
Starting point is 00:07:37 He took it all in good part, and only pretended to weep at his mate's brutal suggestions. "'Boo-hoo, boo-hoo!' said he, "'that I should ever be mates with a man whose name is Smith when mine is Mondaville.' "'And that you stole with your passage money,' said Hicks, who had not spoken yet. But now he angered Manderville, who suggested forcibly in the very choicest Australian that if he didn't dry up, he would soon put the kibosh on him. But Hicks laughed, as he was six feet four and height, and five stone the heavier man.
Starting point is 00:08:13 He could afford to let the cockney say what he pleased, and Mondeville said it till Smith interfered. Now then, leave each other alone. It's not you that's quarrelling. It's the sun, moon, and stars, the wind and sand and weather you've got a fight with. Get out and claw the sand, man. hurrah, hurrah! Go it, dear boys, against the devil. Who is the patroncy of Pilbara? He lighted his pipe and smoked, and there was silence for a space in that sweet heaven.
Starting point is 00:08:45 End of Chapter 1. Chapter 2 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow, an Australian romance by Morley Roberts. This Liber Box recording is in the public domain. Read by lore. you'd better come with us Tom said Smith a few days after there's not much need for you here now this rain has done you out of a job which would never make you rich they were walking together on the outskirts of the barren town close by the new find which had turned the inside of the earth up to the sky they were making money there though every night the men working it had nightmares and sweated to think The gold was done. Smith waved his hands toward it.
Starting point is 00:09:41 They've taken out fifty thousand already, Tom, he said. And I dare say they'll take out no more, said Red Face Tom, whose natural good-humored and hopefulness were a little off in color. What then? They'll float it, said Smith. It would do us for. I could show my peeled nose in England again. He rubbed his opuline down.
Starting point is 00:10:06 beak, which was badly skinned. His blue eyes were bright and eager and courageous. Oh, if you didn't drink such a lot, you'd be a daisy, said Tom, who spent years in America, and mixed his talk as the other did his drinks. Hang it, said Smith, I give you my word I'm off drink. I tell you honestly that I mean it, and out yonder we shan't be able to get it. Tom looked out across the north, northeast plain and shook his head. No, perhaps not, he answered, but Smith grew impatient. This rain has filled up the holes, he cried, and they'll be plenty for a week or two,
Starting point is 00:10:49 even if no more falls. No more will fall, said Tom. It's rare luck as this fell. But all the same, before they went back, he promised to go with the others upon their expedition. It must be out there somewhere, said. Hicks that night when everything was ready for the morning start. For Bill Herder, that brought that bit of stuff in, was only gone a fortnight, and if he was off his nut with the fever, I believe he spoke the gospel truth. And anyhow, that lump of stuff doesn't lie, and where it came from is not more
Starting point is 00:11:28 than a week's journey. For Herder, who had helped to turn their faces to the northeast, had died in the very bed occupied by the cockney. He dropped off his horse at the door one evening as the chums were at supper, and three days afterwards he collapsed and went out. All he had brought back with him was one lump of quartz and gold, weighing about eight pounds. He looked at them pitifully before he died, but could tell them nothing but that he got it out yonder. So he was buried, and no one knew if he had a friend and to whom news of his death should be sent. The first expedition made by Hicks, Smith, and Mondavell was an ill-considered and rash one,
Starting point is 00:12:14 for Smith was reckless. He was always ready to take chances that any other man would shirk. He rushed his chums into a violent hurry and got them a day out on the burning plane before they knew it. Some of the men in town believed they knew where they were going and followed them from a distance. But when they saw the open, dry horror of a flat world before them, those who sneaked behind failed in their hearts and turned back.
Starting point is 00:12:43 They spread reports of the country in that quarter, which gave rise at last to circumstantial rumors that the Smith Party was already dead of thirst. But on the fourth day they came in, Smith had growled even then, for he swore that another few hours would bring them to water, a faint cloud line on the horizon he described, big trees by a creek, but the water in their big bags was nearly done, and one had leaked. This time, said Smith, I'm going through, if I die like a dog on a wet sack. A dry sack, said Hicks, but early in the dawn the three faced the plain once more,
Starting point is 00:13:25 and with them went Tom. I might just as well make a spoon, or spoil a horn, said Tom, and there is gold in this all-fired rotten country anyhow. It was still almost dark when they saddled up and struck out northwest upon the endless, mysterious plain, and by the time the white-hot sun shot up on their right hands and the light poured across the dead level, the town was ten miles behind them. But they could still see its tin roofs and ten walls gleaming. This reminds me that I once went from a ship in a boat, said Tom, when it was dead calm,
Starting point is 00:14:03 and the sea was thick blue oil. It's like being at sea here. He was riding by the side of the cockney, who nodded and whistles. It's a blooming rum start this is, said Mondabille, to think that two years ago I was never outside London, and now to be on a plane like this year, I was a moke ever to leave the bakery business, and yet I don't know.
Starting point is 00:14:29 Bacon wasn't nice work. Was that you at home, talking? "'Pound a weak clerk,' said Tom. "'What fetched ye out here?' "'I got sack. "'Con't get another job, so I came to my brother in Melbourne. "'And there and there,' cried Mandibille, "'it's a sight worse than at home.'
Starting point is 00:14:48 "'That's where you hit it,' said Tom. "'So then I went to San Francisco, or thereabouts, and stayed for two years, "'and this gold racket fetched me back. "'Do you know who Smith was before he came out?' asked Mandibille. Tom shook his head. He was a real gent, a clergyman's son, and add a lot of money. Drink done him, and a woman, I dare say, but he's a rare good sort, and a good plucked him.
Starting point is 00:15:17 He'd fight it so be it's aust him. I've seen him fight till he was a red rag, and crying because the other licked him, and when he's drunk, he's a terror, and a holy dare, and it stands from under when ye fly's eye. for mandeville adored smith and felt that it was a high privilege to be the friend of a clergyman's son he always spoke as if such a parentage was a kind of profession at about ten o'clock they made camp by a thickish bit of mulgol scrub where there was a little grass newly sprung up about a small water-hole they ate a lunch of mutton and bread no more good bread said smith our baker will have to come down to johnny cakes and flap Jacks.
Starting point is 00:16:03 Never mind us, said the Baker, which was one of Mountedabell's names. I'm thinking of the horses. It's little there is to pick, and with this there's some like a hooving-free. It'll dry up in two days. Don't croak, growled Hicks, whose vast length was stretched under the only bit of shade thereabouts. I ain't growling, said the Baker. I'm only just expressing opinions.
Starting point is 00:16:30 And your horse? We'll want Tucker, if he's to carry your blooming carcass far. Hicks laughed, and reached out for Mondadell, who rolled a foot farther away from him? What kind of horses do you breed down on the Oxbury River, old man? He asked, or does your folks go on foot, or perhaps you're bigger than most? I'm the little in the family, said Hicks, and they all laughed. Lord, save us from your brothers, said Smith, but let's go. be getting a bit of a snooze. So they lay and sweated, and hunted off the infernal ubiquitous flies, and got sticky and bad-tempered till the sun was two hours past the meridian. And before them,
Starting point is 00:17:16 as they rode on again, was the eternal plain, which ran ahead of them forever. But when they camped at night, they were thirty miles or perhaps more from the new find. End of chapter two. Chapter 3 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow An Australian Romance by Morley Roberts This Lieberbox recording is in the public domain Read by lore Going It Blind
Starting point is 00:17:50 The second day found all the four men cheerful But it left them a little apprehensive For as the day went on Though it appeared impossible for the morning's heat to be greater, it still grew and grew till noon. That seemed its full flood, and yet they knew it must be worse, and after one o'clock, when they guessed the time intuitively, as Bushmen will, for Hicks was their clock, the little breeze that blew from the southeast failed. They were then pushing across a patch of dense, thick scrub with openings in it, which were partially overgrown
Starting point is 00:18:34 with dried spine effects, the color of ripe wheat straw, and every piece of exposed whitish ground shone with reflected heat which was as intense as the sun. And about two o'clock, a breeze came from the north. Hicks shook his head and pulled up his horse, for they took no no noontime that day. It was better to push on through the spine effects, which murdered the horses. What's wrong? asked Smith, who is riding with both legs on one side like a woman. What's wrong? said Hicks. Well, and don't get narked about it, I should say a north wind here was nothing to yearn for. It will soak every pool of water up in 24 hours, and we shall be done. Tup, man, cried Smith. But Hicks went on.
Starting point is 00:19:29 And now we are almost as far as we were last time, or even further. where's your creek that you gasped about they wrangled for ten minutes and then rode on rather sullenly tom and mondaville who knew least about the country said little but the baker would say ditto to smith if smith said die that was evident the north wind blew steadily about ten miles an hour and it was in truth like a breath from the furnace it caught the men on the left cheek and tom's skin fairly burnt and blue blistered. The others grinned and were silent and rode through the living invisible flame. Their horses were evidently distressed, and their legs streamed with blood for wounds made by the porcupine grass. At last, about six, when Hicks' big horse was almost done for, they came to a waterhole. Before they could check them, though animals were half up to their knees, they drank till they stretched their girths almost to breaking point. That night, by their little fire of scrub, there was the usual
Starting point is 00:20:41 discussion, which now bore more continually on the thing most to be considered. They did not navigate into common ribaldry, neither did they discuss horse flesh in general. They spoke only on their horses of what are now and what are tomorrow, and the prospects of getting through to someplace where they could stay in prospect, or to some rise in the ground which they looked for, for so much they had gathered from herders dying, delirious gabble. And now it began to seem to Tom, and to Hicks, who was influenced by the condition of his horse, that they had gone out into the big impossible without much chance of doing anything. What had they to go on in estimating their chances? A heavy lump.
Starting point is 00:21:31 of gold mixed with quartz, a quantity of fevered talk streaked with a possible vein of real consciousness. How can we know he had his senses, even when he talked most sensibly? asked Hicks. I dare say, the fever invented it for him. It didn't invent the gold, urged the baker. Hicks grinned. Yes, but he might have got that anywhere. And who's to know? Now I come to think of it that he didn't get it and the tip from another chap. This damped them a little. But it's all the same if he did, said Smith, and with water and a bit of grass, I'm for going on. I'll go by myself. Not you, said Mandible. I will by the powers, cried Smith, but recognizing what the baker meant, he reached out his hand to his faithful chum. If you go, I go, said the baker with tears in his eyes. Good old
Starting point is 00:22:31 man, murmured Smith, and they lay down on their spread blankets and sweated through an intolerable night, while the stars winked hotly in the drying air. At early dawn, Tom filled up all the water bags, and they ate breakfast in comparative silence. They opened no new discussion and saddled their horses at the same time. If Hicks was a little behind the others, that was only customary. Is it go on? he, as Smith mounted, and he saw Smith turn his head to the northeast. There was no more said they followed their leader. But by noon Hicks stopped. My horse is nearly done, he said gloomily, and the others paused. Give him a mouthful of water in your hat, said Tom. And Hicks grumbled, but gave it, and don't hiss your carcass on him again, said the baker, such a man as you
Starting point is 00:23:29 shouldn't have an elephant. Dry up, said Higgs. That's enough. And Smith frowned at Mondavelle, who rode on a yard or two. If we go easy, he can do the rest of the day, said Smith, and if there's no water, or we can get back tomorrow. Against his judgment, Hicks went with them, but as he walked, their pace was slower, and the heat was peculiar and sickening. The wind was no longer quite steady, and it came in blast, as if they were being fanned by a red-hot fan, and its touch was scalding. To make matters worse, they were now on a piece of country, bare even of scrub, and the white ground was like a bright pan on a fire. The haze danced and shimmered until a bit of scrub looked alive against the faint blue of a far low range to the south,
Starting point is 00:24:24 and at last in the northwest they saw some trees they were without visible support for their thin trumps were not yet to be seen they might even be a mirage is there water there said tom to hicks and hicks shook his head it ain't likely they camped under those trees that night and there was no water there not even a dried water-hole was to be found the evening tea was scanty and the top talk was scantier still. The men smoked in silence and turned in early, but Smith and the baker, who were close together, talked a little. Hicks will go no further, said Smith. And you, asked Mondeville, I'm going on, said Smith. There is a low range out ahead, and if there isn't, it's mighty near as bad going back. That waterhole will be dry tomorrow morning, or pretty near, and if so, how will Hicks get through to the next? What about Tom?
Starting point is 00:25:28 whispered to Cockney. I don't know, said Smith, but I reckon it will be a fair division. He'll go with Hicks. There was a short silence, but presently Smith was touched. And you, Smith, aren't you scared? Scared, said Smith bitterly. What have I to be scared of? Hell, here or there anywhere.
Starting point is 00:25:50 And death, well, what's life here? and how shall I ever get back without money? Ah, you don't know, but for money, young chap, they will pardon the devil. Yes, said the baker, but he couldn't help wondering how a clergyman's son ever got into such a way of talking. He must have run through a heap of cash, he said to himself, but there it's all one, and I'm with him, and he fell asleep. The others had been talking to, and the result of that talk was seeing when Hicks rose about eleven and rolled up his blankets. Tom imitated him in silence, but when they brought the horses up, Hicks roused Smith.
Starting point is 00:26:35 We're off back, Smith, he said. Hey, said Smith, drowsily. What's up? We're going back, mate. There's nothing but death in this, death of thirst. Smith rolled over and rested on his elbows and whistled. blow. I don't know, but what you are right, Hicks, he said, but to me it's a question if it's not better to go on. That waterhole will be dry when you reach it. If it is, can you put it through to the next? If we don't, we don't, said Hicks, and it's best to travel now while it's cool. I guess we can strike it by the morning. Are you coming? Smith rolled over and touched Mondavelle, who was a nervous
Starting point is 00:27:18 sleeper and jumped upright in a scare. Hicks is going, Baker, said Smith. And you, asked the cockney, I'm going on. Then what the blazes did you wake a chap for? asked the baker, and he lay down again. You mean it, Smith? asked Tom. I guess so, replied Smith. So long then, and we wish you well through it, said Hicks. It seems mean, perhaps, Smith, but I'm not so keen on it as you. I don't know what life's worth to you, but it's worth more than this to me. Smith reached out his hand. Don't apologize, old son.
Starting point is 00:27:58 It's my lookout, and Mandy's here. We don't make it, we shall do the other thing. So long, said Hicks. So long, said Smith. Baker, cried Tom, half crying. but the baker was fast asleep and didn't answer, and the two who traveled by night rode slowly to the southwest.
Starting point is 00:28:21 End of Chapter 3. Chapter 4 of the Adventures of the Broad Arrow and Australian Romance by Morley Roberts. This Liberbox recordings in the public domain, read by lore. Two in a desert. Smith roused Mondabelle two hours before dawn. and they boiled a quart pot of tea for the water would run to no more they had to husband it but before they drank smith spoke to his chum seriously do you know the odds are against us mandy old boy i didn't put it right last night though it's bad going back that chance is much the best i'll do what you do said the baker obstinately brushing away a fly it's all one to me old man
Starting point is 00:29:17 i'm going on said smith with a curious hard determination and i'll tell you why i believe in this i believe i'm going to strike it i know there's gold out here yes i know it as if i'd seen it mandy he drank a little tea and munched a bit of damper i want it mandy bad there's the devil to pay in england and no pitch hot i half ruined my folks before i was twenty and I heard last mail that everything was wrong. The old man crazy, and my mother living as she never lived before. And there's another woman in it too. I'll tell you about it someday. But, said Mandabille, suppose you go under, Smith. I stand, said Smith.
Starting point is 00:30:06 If I do, they'll know I'm dead and can't help them. I've been a bad hat, old man, and if I rot in the sun, it will serve me right. And the mill stopped rolling up his swag. You may be what you like, but you're a blooming good pal, said he. And if you're at a corps it here, I'll corpse it too. You stuck by me when I wanted a friend Bad in Albany and at Newfound, and that's enough, say. If you're in it, I'm on. He brought up the horses, which were not in such bad case as they might have been.
Starting point is 00:30:41 They don't look so blooming bad, said the baker. I'll tell you what, Smith. I believe there's a drop of water around here somewhere. I heard a mosquito this morning, and it's a deal too dry for them if there ain't water. He went to look, and at the end of the patch of timber, and just under the roots of a tree, he found mud marked with trampling hoofs. It's a pity that didn't leave some, and then we could have filled up them bags, said the baker. He went back and told his chum.
Starting point is 00:31:14 We're in luckways, said Smith, who said Smith, who, who was in a fever of suppressed excitement, that saves a cord of water. I'd have given the poor devils a pint apiece if we died ourselves. And an hour before dawn, they got away and traveled fast. For two or three hours, their northeast way led them through much the same country as they had passed through before, for it was as flat as a calm sea, and bear of scrub higher than a horse's knee.
Starting point is 00:31:43 But when the sun was two hours up, they came. to a more rolling country, which was here and there broken by a dry creek bed. Yet sign of water was none. It seemed that the heavy rain which had tempted them out had not fallen there, yet right ahead of them was a low range which looked timbered. How far is it? asked the baker. I should guess thirty miles, said Smith. Then it's not for today?
Starting point is 00:32:13 No, said Smith. They rode on for an hour. If we get no water tonight, it's all up with the GGs, said the Baker. And when they had ridden half a mile, Smith spoke. Yes, you're right, said he. As he rode, his face twitched and his expression changed a thousand times, for he was wrought up to a strange pitch, and his nerves were tried. His face, which was thin and brown and very finely cut,
Starting point is 00:32:44 showed every thought in his mind, and the poor Baker watched it wonderingly. I wonder what's in his head, said he, for just then Smith looked very gluing. What's wrong, he asked. Smith turned in his saddle and smiled an odd, faraway smile. I was thinking of champagne with ice in it. Oh, but it's well this moment that I'm not with it, he said. you're wonderful, awkward to deal with when you're blind, said the baker, and Smith nodded. It's damned hard lines, he said presently. What's ard? My father drank, said Smith.
Starting point is 00:33:26 This took them on the villa back. What? He cried, but I thought you said your father was a clergyman. Smith nodded. There's many a person doing time, said he. What for? asked the baker and rather, contemptuous disbelief. But Smith did not answer. Shall we drink? he asked. And they wedded their parched throats.
Starting point is 00:33:50 When the horses heard the terrible sound of pouring water, they turned their heads and whinnied pitefully. Poor, poor devils, said Smith, but he rode a bit harder. Yet he gave them their pint at noon. It only aggravated their thirst, and when after a little rest they went on, they showed every sign of terrible distress. That night they camped in a dry gully in a broken country. With all their searching they could find no sign of water. They rose at midnight and traveled northeast still, having now a little over a quart of water between them. The next night they are across the first range, and Smith's horse fell and died. They cut the throat of the Mondebel's horse in the morning, for they had no water left, but they did not speak and looked half-ascance at each other.
Starting point is 00:34:47 It seemed an intolerable and brutal murder. They now walked straight ahead in a fairly timbered country. Smith kept his eyes open for any sign of a native well, but he saw nothing. It's all a dream-maker, said Smith. I could believe anything. We are, we are, were no white man ever. was. No one has been within 200 miles of this place. Where are the others now? asked the choking, Baker.
Starting point is 00:35:18 But Smith spat thickly. God knows. And they walked for hours in bitter anguish. It's a country of black enchantment, said Smith. I dare say it doesn't exist. Perhaps we don't exist. Perhaps we are only dreaming. It's devilish hot, Baker. And Baker nodded painfully. "'What do you talk for?' he murmured. "'Because I must,' answered his pal.
Starting point is 00:35:45 "'And there's gold here. I smell it. But I've brought you to your death, Baker.' Poor Mondeville laid his hand on Smith's arm and looked at him like a dumb animal in pain. "'Never mind, old man, but my name's Baker, and I'm baked.' He turned blind as he spoke and stumbled. "'Hold up, damn it!' cried Smith. an agony which sounded like anger, and he could have cried if his thickening blood had not
Starting point is 00:36:15 sucked every tear out of him. He put his arm round Baker and they stumbled on till they came to a shady tree. "'I'm done,' mumbled Mandelvel and he fell on his knees. Smith got down by him. "'Oh!' said the baker, and he was half unconscious, but he spoke. Smith bent down to catch what he said, but heard nothing. And Smith laughed with a thin, dry laugh, and bending down, he kissed the baker upon the low forehead, which
Starting point is 00:36:47 held a faithful little soul now in the valley of the shadow of a horrible death. Then Smith shook him, rouse that baker. And Mondeville drew back his mind to the bitter earth. Yes, old man, there may be water within reach,
Starting point is 00:37:03 Baker. Now listen and get hold of it. I'm going to look for water. If I don't come back, we're done. Do you understand? The Baker nodded, looking wistfully at his mate. Smith stooped and kissed him again, and the baker smiled as Smith went off towards the thicker timber. End of Chapter 4. Chapter 5 of the Adventures of the Broad Arrow and Australian Romance by Morley Roberts. This Lieber box recording is in the public domain, read by lore. looking for water.
Starting point is 00:37:45 Smith, whose throat was dry and whose tongue was half blackened, stumbled on for a hundred yards before he thought of taking his bearings. For now in a country of scanty timber, which only gradually grew denser, one part was terribly like another. He returned to the tree, and, getting his tomahawk, blazed his way for nearly a mile. And though the trees were thicker, he saw no signer. of water, and few signs of life beyond swarms of ants and some native bees. As he walked,
Starting point is 00:38:20 he spoke a little to himself, but it was chiefly of faraway things, and he chuckled now and again with a very frightful sound, though every once in a while he became half delirious, he was yet able to control his wandering mind. It occurred to him that he felt as he had sometimes done and drink when it was necessary to have his wits about him. So, as he walked, he stopped sometimes and said to himself, as if he were another man, pull yourself together, old son. He stumbled on in the intense heat, and sometimes he stayed behind a bigger tree and let the shade cover him. As he slashed at one tree, he noticed the bark was not wholly dry, so cutting into the sapwood, he got a chip and sucked it. Why hadn't he done that for the poor baker? And as he traveled he was aware of
Starting point is 00:39:16 men or shadows or ghosts behind every tree. He called to them, but when he came up, they were far ahead of him. He believed in them at last, and they terrified him a little. He held his tomahawk as if to defend himself, and then he grew angry and remembered with particular gusto, the hot, taste of the blood of the Mondeville's murdered horse. But the delirium left him when he caught his foot in a root and went headlong, for he turned about in a blind rage and cut the root through savagely. He was alive and had done it on purpose. He was no more than a child. And by some odd and ridiculous notion of his mind, he began to feel angry with the baker. Why did the man not come himself? Why did he send him on such a hideous and futile errand while he took his ease lying down in the
Starting point is 00:40:14 shade? When he got so far, it struck Smith with terrible distinctness that he did not remember in any way how he came to be with Mondeville in such a position. He could not recollect anything of the yesterday, and though he recalled the new find, that seemed very far off and vague, and in no way connected with their present trouble. But he said at last that when he saw the baker he would ask him about it. Meantime, he had to get water, and he held up his water bag, which was as dry as a last year's bone. But the trees now became denser, and there were patches of very thick scrub. He remembered that he had not blazed the tree for a good time, and he stupidly blazed every one he came to. presently he found himself futilely going round one tree as though he meant to ring bark it and for a moment he could not remember in which direction he should go
Starting point is 00:41:14 but at last he recalled the fact that the sun was on the right side of the back of his neck and that his foolish squat shadow should be on his left he walked fast and ran he had been traveling about an hour when it occurred to him what a horrible shock that he neither knew who he was nor what he was doing. He sat down on a wind-fallen tree and pondered painfully, sucking his finger in a babyish manner. He knew very well that he was somebody who was thirsty, but he could not remember his own name, nor his own identity, and the frightful catastrophe appalled him. He had a peculiar desolation around him, the desolation of some newly created being, born full grown without knowledge of his destiny. He struggled with his brain for what seemed innumerable centuries, and it gave no answer.
Starting point is 00:42:10 An intolerable melancholy oppressed him, and he still sucked his finger. And suddenly he noticed that it seemed to taste like milk. Then he appeared to smell milk. He bit it and tongued a little blood, which tasted like milk too. He resumed his fight for his own soul, and he took up his tomahawk.
Starting point is 00:42:30 looking at it idly. He saw Mandibille's name on it and said he knew that name. And then he saw Mandibille and his own mind came back. He knew who he was. It was an intolerable relief. But then the thirst came on him again, and his oral center went wrong. He heard frogs. He swore to himself, he heard them croaking. But it was all as dry as his throat. What was a frog doing in a dry forest. He rose up suddenly and began to run again, and then he heard frogs once more. While there were millions, millions of them, and they deafened him. He dropped his tomahawk and ran through a bit of blind scrub and out into sudden silence, which was quite as appalling as the noise he had heard. He ran on again and stopped and ran with his dry tongue between his
Starting point is 00:43:24 teeth. He knew he had thirst delusions on him. When he heard a frog next, he shook his head pettishly, and was as angry as a nervous man worried by drumming in his ears. He would be seeing water soon, and the big frog boomed, boomed, and boomed. He went on slowly through the scrub and came to some saplings. The bit of whitish ground under them looked like water, and he shook his head again, a little more, and he would believe it, believe there was water. And then the maddening boom of a world of frogs began again. He cursed them without a voice, for now his voice was gone, and he put his fingers in his ears and ran a little,
Starting point is 00:44:09 and came right out of the saplings. He stayed glaring, and then, turning, sat down on the ground. Oh, these horrible, horrible delusions! What had he done to be so tormented? from that time he had seen water, a deep, deep creek of cool water. No, no, he cried to himself. It's the devil's country and devil's water and all of a peace with the frogs. He turned round again slowly, trembling as he turned,
Starting point is 00:44:42 and then he crawled on his hands and knees, and at last he rose and fell again with his mouth in thick mud and water on his burning brow. pushed forward six inches and drank. No, it was not a delusion. It was water after all. He lay and drank like an animal, and then, feeling his brain real, he twisted round and blindly clawed his way back up the bank. For he felt dimly that if he became insensible there, he would drown like a thirsty fly. and when he was in safety his senses did leave him poor space. When he came to, he felt for a long time as weak as a child, but he was sane, quite sane,
Starting point is 00:45:29 and the strange and horrible delusions of the thirsty bush had banished. He remembered that poor Mandibille was dying. Perhaps, he said, he is even now dead. At the thought of that, he sprang to his feet, but went blind and fell on his knees. When he next rose he could walk. but he filled his water-bag with trembling hands he turned to go but staying wondered if this was a creek or only a water-hole perhaps there was some motion in the water he threw in a twig to try and found it did move slowly to the south it was a creek and so would be easier to discover again but could he find mondaville he almost doubted it for when he began to go back over his journey from the tree under the tree
Starting point is 00:46:18 under which his chum was still lying, it seemed such an incredible one, both of time and distance that the sun appeared to lie. By the position of the sun, he could not have been more than three hours. That seemed absurd and ridiculous. Had he been laying insensible 24 hours? It occurred to him that he might possibly have been by the creek for a night. It certainly was possible. Such a thing he knew might happen. But how, how could he could have been by the creek for a night? It certainly was possible. Such a was he to know? How indeed? And as he asked himself the question, his heart sank. He knew that if he found Mondable alive, his mad journey had only consumed a few hours, but a day more would certainly kill him when it was doubtful if a few hours would not do it. And to go back would inevitably
Starting point is 00:47:09 take longer than it had taken to come. He began to run, and then he stopped. It would never do to go too hastily. If he missed the blazed way, he might never see mandible again, so he tracked himself back through the thicker scrub by some hardly visible footsteps and some broken twigs. He came at last to the spot where he had dropped his tomahawk, and his heart beat more freely. He forgot how insane he had been, for now he was quite himself. He forgot how rarely he had blazed the trees, before he found himself hacking round one single trunk like a madman. And when he came to that tree, it struck him with the shock which shakes every man, who, believing himself in a lone land, finds evidence of other human beings. For Smith could not, for a long time, believe he had done it himself.
Starting point is 00:48:04 It looked purposed. It suggested some end which he thought alien to his own journey, until he fitted the edge of the tomahawk exactly into a clean wide cut of the ring barking, he was alarmed. But that reassured him, I must have been crazy, he muttered, and taking his direction he went on. But he now came to the gap which he had left in his marking, and he found no more slashes in trees for 200 yards. He examined each carefully and often went back, just as he came to the conclusion that he would probably know,
Starting point is 00:48:40 never get through. He saw a whitish mark in a tree fifty yards further south. His heart leapt up. He was once more in the true line. And now he ran till he came upon the dried creek bed he and Mandabille had crossed. He shouted aloud, Mandiville! Mandy! And no answer came back to him. He ran like a madman, and at last spied the tree under which he had left his chum. He knew it for the same one, for he could see his own blankets rolled up leaning against it. But when he reached it, Mondaville was not there. I say, Mandy, where are you? Called Smith in a high, tremulous voice, and there was no answer. The silence seemed to flood. It made Smith shake, for that silence promised to be eternal. The loneliness was complete. He began searching like a madman, and suddenly
Starting point is 00:49:37 he remembered that they had gone twenty yards further when he dropped his swag, for the next tree gave the most shade. The moment after, Smith was kneeling by the baker, who was breathing very laboriously and quite unconscious. Smith's face
Starting point is 00:49:54 twitched as he poured a little water between the others' dry lips, for he believed he was back too late. Mondaville seemed in the very act of death, the heavy, slow pulsation of the artery in his neck looked as if it might stop at any moment. His heart strove dreadfully with his thirsty, thickened blood,
Starting point is 00:50:16 but his lips opened, and he drank unconsciously drop by drop, and very slowly life came back to him. If Smith could have prayed at any time, he would have prayed as his one friend turned hesitatingly from the open door of death, and not even his bitterness against the world and the heaven of brass above could prevent him from breaking down with joy and sobbing like a child as the baker opened his weary eyes end of chapter five chapter six of the adventure of the broad arrow an australian romance by morley roberts this lever box recording is in the public domain read by lore the billabong the baker was quite himself by the time the sun went down and though smith lighted the fire he cooked the supper such as it was for what stores they had were chiefly flour tea and sugar and bacon
Starting point is 00:51:22 and most of these lay beside mondaville's dead horse what are we going to do said smith for now having nearly killed him he thought it a good time to see what mondaville really thought do you mean about going on or backing out asked the baker that's about it the baker twisted up his mouth and looked north there's water there smith nodded and plenty of it plenty mondavelle made a step or two in a northerly direction when he came back he shook his fist in the southwest quarter and do you think i'm such a nincompoop as to go back across that blazing desert till the rains come not me not by a particularly large jug-fool smith and what then what about tucker asked smith mandy shrugged his shoulders that's what we veer sannie and with what we left back yonder and with what we left back yonder there's enough to last us the three weeks we reckoned on it's more than three weeks to the big rains said smith one thing at a time please your highness said the baker who was sitting by the fire smoking hard i guess there'll be possums by your creek and if there ain't we mustn't grubs like the blackfellows does and as smith was quite insane about the gold they stayed next day they went back and brought in the other stores poor old man said the bear to his dead horse. You brought me here and you died thirsty. You know, Smith, I sometimes think it's a blooming queer world. Do you, said Smith with a savage bitterness that made Mandy jump?
Starting point is 00:53:04 Do you? What a big discovery. Have you found out that it's a bit queer for animals to suffer as we make them suffer? Yes, you're right. It's a queer world, a particularly, damnably, disagreeably queer world, and some folks who will never get to any heaven would actually object to meet the ghost of a vivisected rabbit there, except in a celestial pie. I don't tumble, said the puzzled baker, but Smith didn't explain as he savagely humped stores under a blazing sun. Their new camp was right on the edge of Smith's Creek, in a small clearing with thick and almost impenetrable scrub around them. And it'd better be very small fires, Mandy, said Smith.
Starting point is 00:53:51 If there are any black fellows about, we needn't shout to them with a big blaze. Do you think there are any? asked Mandy, who had no liking for any black, Negro, or Popwin, or Australian Aboriginal. For if there are, I wish we'd brought more weapons than my rebalder and yours. A repeating rifle now, Smith, that's a repeatin'rife. would make him skip but smith did not look for any trouble of that kind we must chance it and just be careful said he and we'll put in time prospecting it looks a good country you might strike anything here and they camped down cooling quietly at their pipes as they lay in the smoke of their fire damped to keep the mosquitoes off the whole of the next week which was one of the unmitigated heat they spent looking for gold they tried every gully and every range though they got very rich indications of alluvial they never struck any outcrop of gold in quartz such as herder specimen could come from
Starting point is 00:54:55 and smith now particularly greedy was after this and this only he grumbled at any alluvial work with the pan as waste of time and as the baker's special leaning was paid dirt they sometimes almost quarrelled but since they loved each other dearly their rose never amounted to much yet all the time in the minds of both was a sense of futility whether they succeeded or did not succeed the baker let his mind out one night and drew up out Smith's. Say, Smith, old man, what are we working for? If I get a streak, Wot went a pound to the pan, and fie for the matter of that, what use would it be?
Starting point is 00:55:38 And if you do strike herders find, it won't buy Tucker, nor take us on to our blooming pals. That's so, said Smith, then why work? Why not? Let's get out instead, old man. Across the way we came?
Starting point is 00:55:54 Though they were talking by a regular blackfellow's fire of two sticks and a red coal, Smith knew what kind of face the baker's was, all screwed up in knots and lines indicative of the keenest apprehension. Across Dale, said the baker. No, what I mean is, let's run the Blooming Creek down till we gets to a river, and then we can scoot down the river. What river is it likely to be? Smith grunted, for his geography was little better,
Starting point is 00:56:24 than that of most miners and tramps, and it was a ten-to-one chance that he could have drawn a rough outline of Australia, or have even placed Albany, Perth, or Fremantle on a Australian map. Well, you don't know, said the baker, and I don't know, but it's likely that there'll be something or another down it, and after my last little try, I ain't going to quit no water again. Angry I've been both at home and ear, but thirsty for a thing like water, that I never was. I'd rather croak with the flaps of my stomach glued together, and eating each other, than go two days without water. Any common death's easy to half die in a thirst.
Starting point is 00:57:10 Smith grunted again. That's what I says, says the baker. I know you'd agree, and now do you really think as we can foot it back two hundred miles of new five, with that lot of water, our two bags full? No, I don't, said Smith. When the horses went, that chance went. How much tuckers left? Ten days, I should think, replied the baker. Then we'll go down the creek tomorrow, if you like, said Smith,
Starting point is 00:57:37 but it's all risky, as we may get done starved or speared. I'll go, said the baker, and they went to sleep. In the morning they divided up to stores, and stowed them as well as they could in their blankets. they were in the wallaby track by six o'clock travellers looking for a job said the baker can we see the boss and if not can we put our horses in the paddock and grub at the men's hut what's your trade smith when you talk to the bush and go for a job cattle answered smith gloomily for now he was getting downcast it hurt him bitterly not to find herder's reef for he had got it into his mind that this journey was his luck and whatever misfortunes overtook him yet there would be gold in it after all and gold meant england and england meant what it can mean to a man who has lived there long and has then gone into the desert ah what wouldn't i give to touch a lady's hand again he sometimes quoted but not allowed for the baker had an unconscious way of jumping on his better side when it came up the only time he had quoted it in the baker's hearing mondayville told the story of the litty in the mild end road which was nothing but a vile variant of an ancient
Starting point is 00:58:54 ancient Joe Miller translated into the language of the east end and brought up to date. The general trend of Smith's Creek, for so Mandelville named it, with great ceremony and the emptying of some tea leaves upon its waters, lay generally north and south. It flowed south, and that made Smith a little uneasy. At spite of his geographical weakness, he had some idea that such a creek should run into a river, and he could think of no river on the coast. now some four hundred miles away into which it could flow on the second day of their tramps south by the slow waters a notion came to him which he kept to himself for some hours but when they camped at noon to boil the billy he spoke which way are we heading now i never give it a thwart answered mandy look at the sun the baker looked at the noonday light and drawing a few lines on the sand looked up and shook his head why smith we're going going southeast, and more east, nor that.
Starting point is 00:59:58 Yes, we're going inland, said Smith, and I don't believe this is a creek at all. What do you mean, asked the baker, whose colonial knowledge was very small compared with Smith. But his chum didn't answer. He rose and stood by the creek bank. Do you think there's as much water in it as there was? He asked, and the baker rose.
Starting point is 01:00:20 It may be my blooming fancy, but I don't think as there is, he allowed. then this, said Smith, is a billabong, and we've been fooled. The baker, who had not the faintest notion what a billabong was, or how it differed in its nature from the common creek, looked extremely puzzled. What the blue blazes is a billy-bong? He asked.
Starting point is 01:00:43 Water that runs is a creek. At least that's my idea. What is a billy-bong, or what y'all call it? Smith went back to his tea and was followed by the baker. A billabong, he said, a little didactedly, is a thing I never heard of in any other country, but this hot jewel of the beautiful British Empire. It doesn't run into a river at all. What do you think we shall find at the end of this? The baker shook his head. A bit of a swamp, maybe, or else it'll just go on and on till the bed dries out, said Smith,
Starting point is 01:01:19 for a billabong runs out of a river, not into it. It's again the same. the nature of things, said the baker, who began to think Smith was mad. Not Australian things, my son, said Smith. In some of the rivers here there are natural outlets onto the plains. When the river rises a certain height, the water pours down a billabong. I know one out of the Loughlin, in New South Wales, which is full 300 miles long and ends in a swamp. There must be a big river to the north of us, and the rain we had at Newfine must have been very heavy up at its headwaters, wherever they are. The baker, after a few explanations, got hold of the main facts, which are just as Smith stated them, but he criticized the premises.
Starting point is 01:02:09 How can you be sure this is a billabong, he asked? Smith shrugged his shoulders. There's only one way to be certain, and that's to follow it down to the end, but I think a very little more might settle it. Then I reckon as we've come so far, we better be sure, said the baker, though it will be an awful sickener to have to do backtracks. So that day and part of the next, they still went south. By noon they found the water dwindling rapidly, as the timber got smaller and scantier, and there was little more beyond it than a boundless dried desert of scrub. It must vanish in this wilderness, said Smith. It will be sucking. It will be sucking, up in another twenty miles for dead sure i think it's right about baker and turning they faced the three days journey back to the first camp upon the billabong's banks they were very silent and ate sparingly
Starting point is 01:03:08 end of chapter six chapter seven of the adventure of the broad arrow an australian romance by morley roberts this labor box recording is in the public domain read by lore running up the billabong as fate now seemed to be closing in on the two wanderers they did the journey back much faster than they had come for they had wasted at least six days food in their feudal southern trip but But the heat of the northern journey seemed even more intense than the heat had been before, and there was hardly a breath of air. What did blow came from the north, and scorched them by day and by night. They could not stay in their blankets and had to camp far from the creek, which was in some parts a hotbed of mosquitoes. They came back to the old camp early on the morning of the third day, and passed it in silence.
Starting point is 01:04:11 but now the unknown was before them, and possibly the unexpected, for what white man had ever been there, so far as they knew they were the first. On the second day from the old camp it certainly seemed that the billabong was larger than it had been. On the third day they were sure of it. The timber, too, was larger, but that third day the current of the water to the south had ceased. The river that feeds it is falling, said Smith. I wonder how far it is away. He was oppressed by all the strange uncertainties of their position. They were cut off from the world. They had seen no sign of life beyond one or two birds and a possum that Baker had extracted from a hole in a tree as it slept its daily sleep. But the Baker was quite cheerful. Nothing seemed to matter to him. He chattered on
Starting point is 01:05:07 about everything and nothing, telling stories of London life and London bakeries, which might have been useful to a Royal Commission on sweating in both its senses. "'Lord love you,' said he, "'it ain't the eats as knocks me. "'If a London baker can't stand eat, what can he stand?' "'A blooming old baker up aloft there can't put a crust on me direct. "'As long as the water holds out, I'm good. "'It's one of that does me. you're very cheerful mandy said smith and why not asked mandy i'm used to be cheerful when i don't see more than a day or two ahead if i'd lie down and died because i couldn't see grub and a dost three days off i'd have been corpse years ago
Starting point is 01:05:53 and haven't you anything to make you wish to get back home asked smith not me said the baker i'm as good here as anywhere give me a job regular for choice and a chance to get married when I'm ready, and I'm all right here or in England or a Mercky, Smith laughed. Good old man, and would a black woman suit you? No, said the baker seriously. I bar blacks. I want my kids such as we'll wash white on so weak anyhow. I know the woman in the he stand, and she lived in Dragoon court, Whitechapel, as married a black man, and the time her kids had was orred. The hother woman took to washing their kids twice the week regular, just out of spite, for they aided her bad. Her man was Ed Porter to a music-all, and got eaps of tips, and he took to singing. She's my rorty carity cell, and she comes from White Chappelle, with such an air of intense
Starting point is 01:06:54 enjoyment and total disengagement from his surroundings, that Smith gave way and shouted with laughter. "'What you're laughing at?' asked the baker with a grin. "'I was thinking what you would do without me to cheer you up,' said Smith. "'Cheer me up, his it,' said the baker, winking and contemptuous. "'Why, you were like a mute at a funeral when he's going. I mean, not when he's coming back, jolly on the earth, but what would I do without you in this ear eating solitude? What would I do?
Starting point is 01:07:26 Well, I'd go stark staring Raven Valley mad, and I'd cut my blooming throat from ear to ear and jump in the Biddle-Bong. That's me. And he tramped for half an hour in somber silence. What's your name, really, Smith? said he, when his spirits came back and he could hold his tongue no longer. Lord muck of Barking Creek, said Smith, with a coarseness rare to him. I know you was a lord, said the baker. I seed one from a distance, honest.
Starting point is 01:07:57 He had the same oddie air. ways as you have, and his nose was quite similar, same shape as a cheese cutter, on which Smith felt his nose to reassure himself on the subject. And your christend name, Smith? Archibald, said Smith. It don't go with Smith, said the baker. It sounds like the name of a master baker I worked for once, Bartholomew onions. Archibald don't fit Smith, really. Oh, dry up, said Smith. My name is Archibald, and you can call me what you like? When are we going to camp? How much more Tucker is there? It should run three days if we don't be greedy, said the baker. So they camp that night with just three days food ahead of them, and Smith,
Starting point is 01:08:42 as he preferred to be called, was rather cast down. For they were getting further and further into the unknown, day by day, as to the mythical river, who know where it led? It might debouch into the salt sea a thousand miles from any settlement, and how are they to live in a start? carving country where they never saw more than a rare possum and had no means of killing a kangaroo further off than 50 yards. And while he had serious doubts of his own revolver shooting, he was quite certain that the baker could not hit the bad marksman flying haystack, unless by the greatest good luck. For now it was a much more serious thing than finding gold. He knew they had left plenty of that behind them, and should they again reach Newfine,
Starting point is 01:09:28 they could come out to his creek with every prospect of going back fairly rich men. But now they wanted food, and soon would want it badly, and there was every prospect of not getting it. And when would they get to the river? They had now traveled steadily for six days since leaving the place at which they first struck the creek, and though they were in a more wooded country, there was no particular indication yet of the heavy timber
Starting point is 01:09:55 which always lines a big Australian river. in three days more their food would be done unless they eked it out with another possum and these marsupials were not easy to find asleep they needed a black fellow to do that and when the food was done what then they could in desperation and misery perhaps go on for three or four days he had heard of some starving for much longer but to walk in hopeless misery was a fearful drain on a man's strength and courage if nothing turned up he saw little prospect of more than a week's life. And now he began to hope they might come across some wandering black fellows. If they were savage and cannibal, it would be a spear-thrust or two,
Starting point is 01:10:39 and the farce would be played out. If they were amiable and not themselves hungry, they might help two wandering white men. If they were not accustomed to the whites, their revolvers would stand them in good stead. And the weapons might be useful, if they met with neither friend nor foe to put an end to unnecessary waiting.
Starting point is 01:11:00 And so one more day passed, and they tramped through the mysterious, endless, thin forest upon the banks of the Solon quiet billabom. But the continued oppression of a vast and awful sameness began to get overwhelming. It was scrub and open timber, open timber and scrub. They passed Jerrah Forest and Solon Casarina's melancholy to see, and scrambled through sharp scrub,
Starting point is 01:11:26 which tore their flesh. And what they did one hour was done the next, and one day was dreadfully like another. So the second day was done, and one more day's food remained. And now the solemn trees seem personal and cruel to Smith, whose mind was the easiest affected. The baker tramped and whistled and talked, but his companion only smiled his answer, and the smile was often melancholy and far away. These tall trees with their motionless metallic blue-green leaves seemed to look down on him and take the same notice that mountains far aloof take of a solitary traveler. A rustle in their somber foliage was a whisper and the cries of the birds were human too. But they all said that these two white ants could never, never get out, that they would presently lie down and stay until they died.
Starting point is 01:12:21 this is my luck said smith after a long long hour of silence i said that this journey would be my luck i felt assured it would be luck for me and i'm humping my swag through endless hell with starvation at the end of it you never know said mandebell eagerly come now smith old son cheer up it's a long lane no proverbs for god's sake cried smith irritably give me platitudes in your own language but spare me the futile and concentrated optimism of the proverb. That's very fine jaw, said the chop-fallen baker. But if you'd speak English, I'd understand it a deal easier. Of course, I know a nobleman, such as Tick-Borne, or you must talk different from common, ordinary folk. But you've been here long enough to learn the language.
Starting point is 01:13:14 And he chattered desperately, trying to encourage his mate, while Smith stocked on in silence. That night, no more food was. was left and would make a scanty morning meal, and all the baker's possum hunting was futile. And the next hungry day was even as the last. They went on and on to the north, sometimes going a little to the east, through the same somber and melancholy nightmare of a forest. Their evening meal was a little weak tea and a chew of tobacco, and an earlier camped unusual. That night Smith was easier in his mind and more communicated. He was resigning himself. to the inevitable.
Starting point is 01:13:53 You're quite right, Baker, he said suddenly as they lay by the fire. You're quite right in thinking my name's not Smith. I took that name when I left England seven years ago. Yes, said Mondebel, and what's your real name and title? Smith laughed. My name is Archibald's Hildegard, Oswald a stone, core, he said. Holy Moses, cried the Baker, and to think I've been mates with a name like that. If it wasn't that I add a name myself, as looks as I add on a boot black, I'd be fair ashamed.
Starting point is 01:14:28 My name is William Interny Mandibille. That's what it is, and it's always been a damn nuisance ever since I went to school. And Smith, what did you do to get out here? I got through a lot more money than I've ever likely to pick up again, said Smith, and I made a particular fool of myself, the baker pondered. you ever in the harmy smith he asked for there was a bloke and new find as said he knew you was a calvary man by the way you sat in orse i was said smith and why should i tell you anything i don't know but just now you're all the world old man and i don't think it will matter anyway i was in the dragoons and when i left i left most of what i cared for except a woman who went and married the wrong chap baker squirmed uneasily and lived as sympathetic as he dared for Smith was talking in a cold, hard, dry way. Good old man, he murdered. Then you never did nothing as you can't go back for, he added.
Starting point is 01:15:32 My only crime is not having money, and not having the wits to take others in a legal way. And I'll see you back home yet, riding a Norse down Piccadilly, and if I goes back, perhaps you'll give me your custom. You knows my bread. And they talked idly till the night. fell. I'm pretty hungry, said the baker before he fell asleep, and he dreamt a fried fish. End of Chapter 7. Chapter 8 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow, an Australian romance by Morda Roberts.
Starting point is 01:16:11 This Libra Box recording is in the public domain, read by lore. The Ashes of a Fire Save that the trees were a little bigger and more closely set, there was no change in the scenery next bay. Perhaps the ground rolled a trifle more, and patches of thicker scrub sometimes turned them from the billabong. But the heat was the same, and the accursed flies got worse. Each time they lay down, they were hunted by Pismayers, whose bite is a little red-hot stab, and they saw innumerable ants of other kinds. But though the ants and flies and mosquitoes were maddening, their big trouble was hunger, which they found nothing to assuage. Not yet having come to the point
Starting point is 01:17:01 where they could swallow their natural antipathies and cook a snake, and let one pass unharmed, which would have made a meal for six men, and Smith, who was saving his strength, did not go out of his way to kill it, though it was a black snake and very deadly. It can't hurt anyone in this country, he said. Is there a human being within a thousand miles now? The Lord who started earth-making in this quarter of the globe, and never brought anything to perfection but reptiles and vermin, only knows. And the baker was on in front. If he had endured thirst less easily than Smith,
Starting point is 01:17:39 it was evident that he could stand hunger better. I think hunger's very much a matter of abbot, Smith, he said encouragingly, if you fill yourself up regular three times a day, a bit of starving knocks the stuffing right out of you quick, But if you live ard and uncertain, you can go without a deuce of a time. And except when I was in a job, I never have been very regular. And I add too much say at home to keep a job long. I was too independent. That's what I was. So now we're here, and that's where we are. But all the same, to use his own picturesque expression, much near psychological truth than he knew, the flaps of his stomach was glued together in eating each other. other, and the pain he suffered was at times very intense, but he grunted little and only stayed sometimes half bent down when an extra spasm of anguish got hold of him. I give in over thirst, he said to himself, but Mandy, my boy, you don't give in about hunger.
Starting point is 01:18:42 So he talked with courage, though the mosquitoes robbed him of his blood, and perhaps planted malaria and ague as they bored, for Smith obviously suffered badly, though he never mentioned food and made no complaint. He continually drank water and chewed tobacco, but his face got thin and thinner, and deep anxiety set within his eyes. That night they had to make a dense smoke to keep away the mosquitoes, for they were surrounded by half-dried swamps, which bred these pests in millions. Till sundown, they saw them swaying in long clouds under the trees, but when the sun went down some horrible ancient instinct in them cried out for blood, though in that desert these creatures of a day could not have tasted it for unnumbered generations,
Starting point is 01:19:32 and they swept down upon them singing. Yet their instincts were still true. They knew their work and made the long, hot night and an utterable torture, and a ceaseless bitter combat in which victory was theirs. The two starving men fought against them, until early dawn, and as they fell asleep, the mosquitoes had them at their will. They sat in the trees mirrored globules of red blood, rejoicing at a satisfaction granted to one and ten thousand.
Starting point is 01:20:03 When the two men woke, they felt as if their little tortured sleep had done them harm beyond reparation. They were ghastly and worn, and poor Mondeville was half blind, but he did not growl. They rolled up through blankets, though this day Smith left one of his, upon the ground. One's enough to carry, said he, and the baker made no answer as he swung his swag on his back. Even without food in it, it now felt sufficiently heavy. At noon, he too dropped a heavy blue blanket and felt the loss of its weight as an extreme relief. Their progress now was slow. They often rested and sat in silence, sometimes broken by a bitter laugh from Smith. For God's sake, old man, said the baker. But he could
Starting point is 01:20:50 could say no more. But that day, they caught a brown snake and cooked it on the coals. Smith was ill after it, and as wide as death, they rose and staggered on. And during the night, Smith was slightly delirious. He spoke in his sleep, and once or twice the baker heard him say, Carrie. Next morning, Smith talked a good deal. It won't be much longer, Baker, he said, and when I drop, you go on. I found water for you. Perhaps you'll find food for me. I don't want to die in this hole. Some might be glad if I never turned up again, but I'll turn up if I can.
Starting point is 01:21:27 He nod his lip and his blonde mustache, and turning the end of his beard into his mouth, he chewed it in deep contemplation. Money, money, he said. Why, what a fool a man is! There's gold everywhere in this country. It's more and more like it. I can smell it.
Starting point is 01:21:46 He rose staggering, but grabbing up his blankets, walked on, followed by the baker. How many days without food, Mandy? This is the fourth day, Smith, barred the snake. Pah, said Smith, but do you know, Mandy, I think I could do with a bit of snake now. He laughed thinly and walked on again, muttering to himself. But now, for a time, the pains had left him.
Starting point is 01:22:10 The Baker, too, was easier, though very weak. How much more can you stand, Baker? Asked Smith an hour later. "'Two days I reckon,' said Mondeville. "'That's one more than my life,' said Smith, "'but let's push on.' And presently Smith stayed again. He pointed through a little opening in the bush,
Starting point is 01:22:30 and Mondeville saw a faint blue range. "'How far?' said Smith, but the baker didn't know. "'Too far to reach,' said Smith, "'but the gold's there.' "'How do you know?' asked Mandeville. "'I know,' said Smith angrily, and the baker's heart died within him.
Starting point is 01:22:49 He saw his chum was failing fast, and going round the next bend of the creek. They trod in a pile of dust that rose beneath them. Smith went on blindly, but the baker stayed with his heart in his mouth. My God, he said, and called to Smith. Who came back? What's them? asked the baker, and Smith went down on his knees.
Starting point is 01:23:11 Ashes, my God, he said in a loud voice, and then he fainted dead away. It took the baker half an hour to bring him to his senses. What's up? asked Smith. You fainted, I guess, said the baker, but we must be near some people now. And with Smith propped against a tree, they considered the matter in all its bearings.
Starting point is 01:23:33 Blackfellow's, said Smith. How old is a fire do you think? But Mondeville shook his head. It's dead cold, and might have been here a year. No, said Smith, with his hand in the gun. gray ashes it hasn't rained here since it was lighted and when was the last rain here asked the baker cheerfully smith looked at the dried grass and tore up a thin tussock not so very long he answered but the blacks who lighted it may be a hundred miles off and that would lick us and if we found them they would most likely spear us it ain't certain said mandeville no answered smith but probable and rising he took up his swag and walked on side by side with his chum.
Starting point is 01:24:17 It's likely they will stay by the billabong, he said. There may be fish in it, and they're sure to be fish in the river, and though we have seen very few kangaroos, yet there'll be plenty about somewhere, we may strike them yet. He walked a little faster at the notion. If I have to live on grubs out of a rotten stump, I'll live, he said, and hope gave him more strength. He walked better, though he felt light-headed,
Starting point is 01:24:43 and just before sundown they came on the ashes of another fire by the creek. This time Smith spotted them first, and he thrust his hand in to feel if they had more warmth than the day's burning sun could give them, but they were cold. Smith sat down on a fallen tree and contemplated the ashes in silence. Once or twice he opened his mouth to speak, but he said nothing. The baker brought up some water from the billabong and made a little weak tea of the last tea they had,
Starting point is 01:25:12 and part of that was leave, saved from two infusions. Then Smith spoke. I suppose we are the first white men that ever got so far in this direction, he said. Unless we are near Warburton's track when he crossed the continent in 73, we'll call it Mandibiland, if we ever get back. The baker smiled faintly, and lighted a little fire. Not too big, said Smith. We want to see the blacks first, and then we'll have a chance.
Starting point is 01:25:41 and after the tea they lay down no further to-day said smith and mandeville undid his swag for him and presently it was quite dark and mondavelle fell unto an uneasy slumber how long it lasted he could not say but he was waked by hearing smith talk he turned over an alarm but smith presently broke into laughter mondaville you damn fool wake up he said yes said the baker shaking you're a fool i'm a fool but i see it now i see it now see what smith asked the baker and smith came over to him and knelt down it's a white man's fire mandy end of chapter eight chapter nine of the adventure of the broad arrow an australian romance by morley roberts this labor box recording is in the public domain read by lore the white man the baker's first and most natural impulse was to curse smith for waking him up in the middle of the night and his second was that now and at last his chum had gone definitely off his head he groaned as he sat up and prepared to soothe the man and combat his wild delusion. But Smith was by no means crazy or delirious. Indeed, he was keen enough to perceive from the very tone of Mondabille's voice what was in his mind. I'm not crazy, Baker, he said earnestly, as he raked the ashes of their own fire together. I'm quite sane, and what I say is right. That white men lighted this fire,
Starting point is 01:27:28 said the baker and oh the deuce did you find that out in pitch dark smith laughed a far more pleasant laugh than usual why man alive i saw it last night and i didn't see it it was written large and i missed it how i can't tell for it's plain enough it was far too large a fire for any black fellow to light haven't you heard me often enough tell you to light a black fellow's fire three sticks and two hot coals. Well, and this fire was big enough to roast a sheep hole. I tell you, white men did it. But the baker was not so easily convinced. His mind was acute. And how do you know
Starting point is 01:28:13 as black fellows always does as you say? Australia's big enough for a hundred ways of fire lighting. That's all right, said Smith impatiently, but I know their usual custom, and I'm just a in thinking what I say is right. The Baker shook his head,
Starting point is 01:28:33 and granting, as some white man lighted it, where is the blooming white man? And poor Smith's castle in the air collapsed. His head sank upon his breast. That's true, he groaned, but it was a white man anyhow. When it's light, we can search and see if there is nothing to confirm it.
Starting point is 01:28:55 No, said the baker. If it's so, don't look. Let's waste no time. Let's off straight down the creek. If so, be as he were, e'er at all, E would go that way, and I dare say we shall find him, I'm a blooming corpse, if we find him at all.
Starting point is 01:29:14 You're a croaker, said Smith, who was recovering again, and then laid down till dawn. The pace they went at the next day was very slow, for they were at an extremity. The internal pains which had tormented them, on the second and third days of starvation returned again like seven devils worse than the first and mondaville who was the stronger suffered the most they had covered little more than six miles when they camped just before noon if we strike nothing to-night it's all up with smith said the baker and when they started again about three o'clock he insisted on carrying his chum's swag
Starting point is 01:29:54 dropped them both said smith about four o'clock they did drop them and walked on light the baker leading through the open forest carrying nothing but the water-bags smith even threw away his coat which hung on him as loosely as if it had been made for hicks he found it easier going but hope was gradually dying white fellow or black fellow what did it matter he was a thousand times inclined to stay to lie down and die. And when he was at his lowest, he saw the baker stop and bend down. Poor devil, he's got the grips again, said Smith in a curious detached way, as if the baker was someone whom he was looking at from some other than a human standpoint. But Mondeville had nothing wrong with him when he stooped. He bent down to pick something up, and that something made his eyes bolt out of his head. He put it in his coat pocket, and walked on. No, I never picked anything up, he said obstinately to himself, and then diving into his
Starting point is 01:31:02 pocket, he pulled the thing out again. If I shows it to Smith, he'll go fair off as nut, he said. It ain't possible, that's what it ain't, but lordy, ain't it heavy? And sitting down, he waited till Smith came stumbling along blindly. I found something, Smith, he said casually. Yes, said, Smith Dooley. It's gold Smith. Smith smiled wanly and sat down. Let's eat, Mandy. But the baker produced his fine and handed it over. It was obviously human handiwork, and Smith lightened up. A ball and weighs about seven pounds, he said, and the hole through it is for a handle. By Jove, it's a costly kind of a black fellow's waddy. But what's this? And he sprang on his feet, look and Mandy saw what he had not noticed before he paled to the lips and Smith fell back again on the log it's white men again and why this marked
Starting point is 01:32:07 but Smith could not tell him for the heavy ball was plainly marked with a broad arrow thus arrow up and with his thumb on it Smith sprang up again and shouted loud coo-wee but the forest swallowed up his crime as it had swallowed them up. They walked again, and Mondable carried the gold ball. The broad arrow is the navel sign on stores, said Smith, and on convicts clothes, too, said Mondable. I knowed a man as did time, and he told me. We're not likely to meet either sailors or convicts here, said Smith. It's a mystery.
Starting point is 01:32:47 I don't feel hungry, but sick. What kind of a country is it? It's full of horror and thirst and hungry, and cannibals from the Lewin to the North Cape, and he stopped trembling. Steady, old man, said the Baker. We may strike it yet. We'll never get out. It's my luck, said Smith.
Starting point is 01:33:08 This day will do me. Give me a drop of water. He sat down and twisted. Oh, these a curse pains, he groaned. And then he looked up at the Baker. I'm sorry to how, Baker, but it did catch me then. and moundellville was quite as bad though being a bit stronger he said nothing then went on for half an hour by the billabong which was here pretty straight and deeper within its banks but in that half hour they did barely a mile what's the use screamed the man smith to his inherited desire of life what's the use why should i suffer why not lie down and die and yet the desire for life clawed on to his inherited desire of life
Starting point is 01:33:52 hope and struggled still, driving the failing creature of a day through torture which was sometimes lulled, and sometimes grew monstrously, splitting the man's mind as a tree-roots drive rocks asunder, as a cancer penetrates the living tissue. When they talked, they returned again and again to the white man's fire, and to the great ball of gold, the lost weapon of some impenetrable mystery, and Smith striving with its solution was near setting him mad. He felt almost as he had done in that day of thirst when his personality left him, and he became a nameless, brainless creature that only suffered blindly, ignorant of destiny. But though they knew it not, a partial solution of the strange problem was at hand,
Starting point is 01:34:43 a solution which solved it to present another still more terrible, still more inexecutive, still more inexecutive. Explicable. As the sun went down upon the trees, they came suddenly, and without any dreadful warning in the warm wind upon the body of a white man. Only a few days dead. But what a white man he was, said the two dying wanderers who found him lying there. No, indeed no. He was like no man they had ever seen, for his hair hung down his shoulders. His beard was below his breast. As he lay upon his back with bared teeth, they beheld the great arched chest of a giant, and they could know even yet the scars of spear wounds on his breast and arms. He looked a savage, a strange and awful survival,
Starting point is 01:35:36 for in the aspect of him there was no suggestion that he had ever known any influence of any civilization. He might have been solitary from his birth, for aloofness and suspicion were visible in him still. His face was burnt to an extreme brownness, which might have left doubts as to his race, but the muscles under the arms were white. He lay there with a rudely kang kangaroo skin just across his feet. There was no ornament nor any sign of personal adornment upon him, but in his hand was clenched a short stick which Mondeville dared to drag from him. It fitted the golden ball, which he still carried. my god said smith what's all of this didn't i say it was a nightmare land what's it mean mandy but the baker shook his head save us from such white men he said in a whisper did he die or was he killed when they went round the other side the answer was easy they saw the broken shaft of a spear still in his side he fought down yonder and came here to die said smith
Starting point is 01:36:50 but mandy who did he fight with let's get away said mandy hurriedly and they left the awful sight in silence was it blacks or other white men that killed him they fought the question out for an hour but could give it no answer what could he be did we dream it said smith he looked just like a savage perhaps he's got lost like us years ago suggested mandeville but smith shook his head if he had been lost as a child it might have been and with that whore behind them and death in front they wandered on presently half forgetting what or where they were they sat down and rose again until it got almost dark and just as they were failing utterly they came out of the forest to a line of big gum-trees the river at last said smith and he fell in a limp heap mondabel left him and running twenty yards he saw the river across it was the light of a camp fire end of chapter nine chapter ten of the adventure of the broad arrow an australian romance by morley roberts the sleeper-box recording is in the public domain read by lore the rhodaro according to smith's notion it's too big to be black fellows said the baker but black or white it's all the one, and here goes for death or glory, spears or grub.
Starting point is 01:38:26 And he cooed very loudly, standing right out in the open, on the edge of the deep-cut bank. As his voice echoed from the dense trees opposite, he saw a figure or two pass in front of the blaze. I've roused him, said Mandy, and he felt his revolver in his belt. If there are man-eaters, I'll do for one or two. Then his cooie was answered from the other side of the river. hallo said the baker and he dimly distinguished some tall figures on the opposite bank but his answer appeared to disturb them curiously he could hear a quick low chattering and saw them disperse
Starting point is 01:39:06 he cooed again impatiently and this time he was answered in an unknown tone blacks said the baker disconsolately i guess we're done but he replied don't understand your lingo he said boldly but we're starving and want some grub and to his horror for it was now utterly unexpected he was answered in english but in english of an accent that he had never heard it sounded rather guttural and quite foreign who are you said the man who spoke two miners said mandy and for god's sake send over some grub i and my men's sake send over some grub i and my men mate have been five days without food and we're near dead. Where do you come from? asked the voice. Up the billabong. He heard them repeat the word billabong, and then there was silence. How many are you? said the voice again. Only two, dang it, said Mandy, and then he heard a bit of harsh laughter. Then stay where you are till we come, said the voice,
Starting point is 01:40:13 and Mandy sat down with his face to the river. But in five minutes, minutes someone leapt on him from behind and had him pinned as in a vice he could not move and would not have been able to help himself if he had had his full strength hello what's this he said as he heard the heavy breathing of the man who held him then he saw another figure in front holding a spear if it's whites the other side it's black's this said mandy and he called aloud to smith good-bye old man they've got me and smith and smith who had recovered from his feint, came staggering to his doom like a drunken man. He too was made a prisoner in a moment by yet another man whom the baker had not seen. Then their captors spoke in English. Is that all? And he made a struggle.
Starting point is 01:41:04 Why are you English? Holy Moses! I thought you was blackfellows. No, we are English, said the man who held them. But the voice was so strange, so wild, so utterly unlike any. voice that he had ever heard, that it made his blood run cold. His skin crept, and his hair bristled. Then why do you hold me, said he, when he got his own voice back? I'm half dead, and my mate's worse than I am. Let me go, do now. And add a word from the man with the spear, Mandy's
Starting point is 01:41:37 captor let go. The baker went to Smith. They're English, old man, he said, and it's all right. It must be minors, too, or something. I don't know what. But, by the Lord, my head's gone wrong, I do think. He looked up and saw the big man who had ordered his captors to release him. He saw his great beard dimly, and like a flash there came back to him the great bearded white savage whom they had seen that day. If they are like that, why, the Lord save us, he muttered. It's a dream.
Starting point is 01:42:10 But Smith was lying there dying. The thought of that brought his courage back. "'We can talk to him anyway,' he said, and tried to get Smith upon his feet. One of the others helped him, and they went down to the riverbank silently. A little way further down the river than the place the Bilobong entrance lay were some rough canoes, and they put Smith in one and Mandabille in the other. "'Cheer up, old man,' said the baker, and they shot out on the gloomy water, just there some thirty yards across,
Starting point is 01:42:43 and with about ten strokes they reached the other side. The baker landed easily, and the other men helped Smith. A bit roughly, but not unkindly. They went up the bank, and going about 50 yards, came out on an open space in which was a large camp, and some native-looking gun-yaz, or leaf and branch huts. And then Mondeville could see his host or his captors, whichever they might turn out to be,
Starting point is 01:43:11 and his heart sank within him, for they were nearly all big, and one was gigantic, and their whole appearance was that of the dead man whom they had seen. It was like a nightmare truly to see them clad in skins, rough and hairy and burnt as black as white men can ever get. But their features were English, if strangely altered, and very few appeared to have traces of black blood in them. Those who had were the smaller, and apparently the less considered.
Starting point is 01:43:42 and he saw the women too. They did not at first lessen his fear of the men, but he had no time just then to speculate ignorantly, Smith called for his attention. He seemed absolutely dying. He lay quite unconscious, and only moaned a little every now and then. Can you give me something for my mate?
Starting point is 01:44:03 He asked, and the chief nodded and spoke to one of the women. She disappeared into the large gunya, and brought out a dish with some boiled or steward, you'd meet in it. I oaps to God it ain't man, said the baker. But when he took the dish from the savage woman, whose matted hair hung to her bare knees, he nearly let it drop. It was heavy, truly, but it was a pure gold. I'm done, said Mandy going on his knees by Smith. I'm fair beat. This cooks my goose. When did I die? And he fed Smith with his fingers until the same woman who had given him the dish snatched it away from him,
Starting point is 01:44:44 and taking Smith's head on her lap, she fed him with a rudely fashioned spoon of the same minel as the dish. Then another woman, who was younger and fairer to look on, brought Mandy some food which he ate too ravenously, but when he nearly choked, he put the brake on, and forcing himself to stay, he took out his pipe and lighted it with a hot coal.
Starting point is 01:45:08 This proceeding was curiously, not to say, watched by every one of the twenty or thirty people, young and old, who composed the camp. But when he took a deep inhalation and then blew out the smoke, there was a stampede among the little boys and girls, but the men were intensely interested. Is that Baca? asked the big man. Yes, said the baker. I've heard of it, said the chief.
Starting point is 01:45:35 My father's father told me, is it good? My father said it was good. "'Would you like to try it?' asked the baker, holding his precious pipe out, but not too much, or it'll make you sick. And the chief very solemnly took a draw, which he managed fairly well. It did not seem to commend itself to him, however, and he handed it back to Mandy, who, alternately, eating and smoking, was soon in a state of repletion, which prevented him caring what happened.
Starting point is 01:46:06 And now Smith began to get really conscious. "'Where am I?' he asked the Baker, whom he found sitting-land. "'We're in a camp with white men,' said Baker loudly, "'and then he added rapidly, and in a lower tone. "'And I'm beat, Smith. "'They're all like the man what we saw dead this afternoon.' "'Smith sat up as if he'd been pricked by a spear "'and looked at their captors standing in the glare of the fire.
Starting point is 01:46:34 "'Preastoric men,' he said. "'I knew I was crazy. I want to go to sleep.' and the baker took off his coat to roll it up for a pillow he still had the golden ball in his pocket and he took it out it was snatched from his hand the next moment by the chief who seemed greatly disturbed you where did you get this he demanded and the baker related as simply as possible what they had found by the bellabong his recital was listened to with groans and one woman shriek and was taken away by the others she was his wife and apparently a woman the dead man was the chief's brother. When the baker finished, he placed his coat under Smith's head, and his chum fell fast asleep. But now the camp was in agitation, and everyone got out his arms, which were all of a kind resembling Blackfellow's weapons, but most of the clubs were of gold, with wooden handles, and some were globular, some pear-shaped, and some the shape of a jagged
Starting point is 01:47:34 nugget. When they were ready, the chief called to the baker. will stay, and I will leave five men here. Tomorrow night we shall be back. You are friends, but if you are not, we will burn you alive. And he departed with fifteen others towards the river, while the baker lay down under a kangaroo skin, given him by the girl who had offered him food. She'd be good-looking if she'd comb her hair and take her first bath, said the baker, but who they are and what they are, and how they came here, just licks me. He fell asleep, and every time he woke during the night, he heard the melancholy wail of the bereaved woman. It struck him as if she ought not to feel it so much, being so savage to look at.
Starting point is 01:48:21 When he woke in the morning, he found Smith sitting up with his hands to his head. Am I crazy, baker? If you are, I am, said the baker. Then we are alive, and not so hungry, and in a camp of prehistoric men? asked Smith. "'I don't know about prehistoric, but we're in a camp of jumped-up white savages that talk English,' said the Baker. Smith rose. "'Look here, Baker. Draw it mild.
Starting point is 01:48:49 I tell you, they talks English just as good as you or me, though sometimes they shoves in a word I don't savvy,' said the Baker. And what's more, everything they have is solid gold, jugs and pots and clubs and everything, and they think no more of it than you or I would of a bawly old iron camp up. And to convince Smith of that, he went to the outside of a hut and brought back a hammered-out basin, which must have weighed eight pounds at least. Is this my luck? said Smith, but he could believe nothing till a girl came out into the darn. Do you mean she talks English? asked Smith.
Starting point is 01:49:28 That's what I mean, said the baker stubbornly, and Smith called to the girl who came near, somewhat in the manner of a shy and curious Philly. are you English said Smith yes said the girl and you can talk it of course said the girl what the devil do you mean but she used the word in an odd wild natural way which showed mere curiosity not anger it struck smith as being so utterly incongruous that he was absolutely thunderstruck and for a moment could say nothing presently he recovered he asked i don't savvy said the girl a bit sulkily have you always lived here the young savage shook her head and looked at him contemptuously no fear she replied we came here from wanga wanga wanga and where's wanga wanga wanga but this was too much for the girl if this strange-looking man didn't know where wanga wanga wanga was and couldn't believe she knew her own language he was evidently neither more nor less than a fool she didn't answer and turned away as she went two of the men came from the river with some fish they were absolute savages to look at a fugian or the wildest tartar on the siberian steps was a civilized being to them smith rose and said good morning the bigger man of the two looked at him with peculiar apprehension mixed with some ferocity and passed on but the younger who was far more open countenance returned his
Starting point is 01:51:06 salutation civilly. Will you have a fish, he asked, and without waiting for acceptance, he dropped a Murray cod or big barbell at Smith's feet. Thank you, said Smith, and as the man looked quite as friendly as his gift showed, he invited him to sit down and plover. But it was a continual effort for him to comprehend that the other understood him if he used any but the very easiest words, and indeed he soon discovered that many abstracts,
Starting point is 01:51:36 terms were beyond them. How long will the other men be away? He asked, and he and the prehistoric person sat on a log, and the baker lay on the ground. Not long, mate, said his friend, when they have killed all the eumews they find. Emus? said Smith, and his new pal explained that he meant a tribe of black fellows.
Starting point is 01:51:58 What's your name, mate? asked Smith. Billy. Billy, and what else? But this the man didn't comprehend. hand. He was Billy, and was the son of Bill who was out emu-hunting, and the man who didn't understand that must be a fool. That was his opinion. And now it began to dawn on Smith that the accent, which had sounded so strange, even to the baker, was nothing else the variation or descendant of the purest cockney. The aspirates were invariably omitted, and most, if not all,
Starting point is 01:52:32 the A's had come, eyes, and the open O of English. was undeniably the U with the umla of German. What other changes had taken place were due, probably to the influence of climate and some black fellow lingo, which they could all talk fluently and mix with their English, especially when talking together. But now Bill wanted to satisfy his curiosity. Give me the smoke thing you gave big Jack yesterday, he said to the baker. and as the baker filled it, some of the others came round. When it was filled, Mondeville struck a match on the seat of his trousers, and this caused a monstrous and absurd commotion.
Starting point is 01:53:15 One of the men at last grabbed hold of Mondeville and insisted on examining his bridges, and the baker only obtained release by striking another match. They stood a little further off then, and were terribly suspicious, but Bill tried the pipe very courageously. "'That's enough,' said Smith, "'when he had had a few puffs, "'or else you will be very sick.' "'But Bill was loath to relinquish
Starting point is 01:53:39 "'the extraordinary object he held. "'I like it,' he said, "'as if that settled it. "'However, after a few more puffs, "'he gave it up and resumed the conversation, "'this time taking the lead. "'Where do you come from, "'and what tribe are you?' he asked.
Starting point is 01:53:55 "'We come from Newfound, "'many day's journey,' said Smith, "'pointing to the southwest, but we are not a tribe we are english so are we said the big suspicious-looking man and you are not like us then how did you come to be in australia at all asked smith he was rapidly reaching the conclusion that they must be the descendants of people shipwreck generations ago upon the australian coast but his question was greeted with laughter the real question to them was where these white men came from we shall act to ask big jack said the baker he seemed to ave more savvy than all this lot put together blow me if i ever saw a stitch a bloomin crew "'Dry up,' said Smith. "'You'll get your head caved in, and mine too, if you shoot off your mouth here and they catch on to your guff.'
Starting point is 01:54:49 And as the community proceeded to make a morning meal in the most savage and primitive way, they joined in, and roughly cleaning the fish Bill had given them, they cooked it in the hot coals in the approved manner. "'Where does all this gold come from?' asked Smith, when he was satisfied. And Bill pointed east. "'Over there,' he said. how far? Not far, said Bill. Show it to us, Bill, said the Baker greedily. But Bill shook his head. Not now. Wait till
Starting point is 01:55:22 Big Jack comes back, and what is your name? He spoke to Smith, who told him. Smith, Smith, said Bill. And you? Mondaville, said the Baker. Bill tried it, but seemed to decide it was too long. He called you Baker, he said, looking doubtfully at the little man. Baker will do answered mandy and the idle throng returned to them and asked questions about their journey and their people which made smith despair he prayed for night and the big man's return end of chapter ten chapter eleven of the adventure of the broad arrow an australian romance by morley roberts this liber box recording is in the public domain read by lore a solution they spent the remainder of the day in sleep when they were at last left alone except by bill who seemed to consider himself their companion or custodian for smith was thoroughly done up by the journey and starvation the excitement had been too much for him and the speculations his tired brain indulged as to the origin of an english-speaking white race of savages nearly drove him crazy who could they be the likeliest solution was certainly the one he had struck on it occurred to him once that they might be the descendants of some lost explorer such as lechart who had taken up some tribe of black fellows
Starting point is 01:57:03 but there were very many in the camp obviously without a taint of black blood in them some would have been as fair as himself if they had not been burnt so intensely by their wild life and nearly all had big blonde beards and mustaches which reached to their shoulders and so far whether they had legends as to their origin or not he had not been able to get them to speak plainly they had come from over there a long time ago bill said when pressed but over there was not definite and though he pointed due east it meant little he tried once before he fell asleep to find out if Bill understood anything about the sea. Yes, the word was familiar to the man, but it obviously meant nothing more than a lagoon or waterhole much bigger than any piece of water he had seen. And when Smith suggested to him that the sea was like the boundless plain and without limit, the notion became abstract and as unintelligible as eternity. That this was so seemed to dispose of the notion that they were castaways, such as the Pitcairn Islanders might have been, if they had
Starting point is 01:58:20 reached their island without any implements of civilization, and had been left to a hand-to-hand fight with a barren land and fierce savages. He fell asleep thinking that he had perhaps discovered a new white race who had learnt English from the Lost Explorer whom he had once believed their ancestor. But why should they give up their native tongue was an insoluble? problem, unless indeed they had regarded the new white man as their superior, and had learnt his language as a quasi-court language fitter for them than their own, and from what period did they date? Obviously, he said, they must have been savages for centuries. When he woke, it was quite dark, save for the light of the campfire, by which he saw the baker sitting with several of the
Starting point is 01:59:11 younger men, some of the boys, and one or two girls. The girl whom they had interrogated was on Mondaville's right hand, and the strange party seemed to be enjoying itself thoroughly. For the baker was singing sweet bell mohoned to them, and the simple melancholy of the old air seemed to please them greatly. They tried to join in the chorus, and the baker's right-hand neighbor caught the air pretty accurately. Smith advanced to the fire and was greeted with a, sit down, mate, which if he had closed his eyes, would have seemed to emanate from any ordinary crowd of miners. But there they were, savage, her suit, wild, and half-clad in untanned skins. Smith was careful not to sit next to the baker, for he wished to be as friendly as possible with those who might resent with a gold club any sign of
Starting point is 02:00:07 suspicion or aloofness. He squatted amicably between two of the men and held out his hand to the blaze. How goes it, matey? said the baker. Bully, said Smith and you? Fust-rate, said the baker. I'm all at home and making a regular sing-song. These chaps are a good sort, a bally good sort. I should have been dead now, but for them, said Smith, and catching Bill's eyes shining under his matted forelock. Bill appealed for his pipe. It was lighted and passed around. The boys and girls each took their turn to splutter and cough over the magical instrument. When it was returned to Smith, he was glad that it was out, for he would have felt obliged to continue smoking without wiping the mouthpiece. As he filled it again, he managed to do that
Starting point is 02:01:00 furtively. Sing again, Baker, said Bill, showing his teeth. and the baker began the song of the old convicts i'm off by the morning train to cross the rage at main and to the astonishment of smith they all burst in and joined the baker knowing both the air and the words he sat as if he was turned into stone and could not sing for his jaw had dropped but when they came to the lines two in the grand in a distant land ten thousand miles away away the truth came to him like a lightning flash and he half rose to sit down again gasping by all that's holy and unholy by all the gods and little fishes said smith i've hit it this time the baker too though he did not understand was so taken aback that he stopped in the middle of the verse and let the wild crowd thunder through it by themselves hello he cried and ow the blazes did you learn that air song our father sang it said three or four wondering at his astonishment and ow the deuce did they know it asked the baker but that was too much for them why did these strangers asked such silly questions. Their journey from their far-off tribe had obviously affected their minds. But just then they heard a cry from across the river, which was answered apparently by a sentinel
Starting point is 02:02:35 on the bank, and the crowd deserted the fire at once, leaving Smith and the baker alone. Bill and the other man and the boys took their spears, but without any such haste as would suggest an enemy, and then they heard a wild noise, which sounded strangely like a clamorous hurrah repeated angrily. The women who were in the gunyaz came out and thronged to the edge of the open space on which the camp stood. Presently the throng split open, and the fifteen warriors, who had left the night before under the command of Big Jack, came through amidstrange guttural cries and screams of triumph and revenge. The woman whose man had been killed was the only one who did not join in the triumph. She sat moody and alone outside her savage hut in terrible and inconsolable morning.
Starting point is 02:03:32 Her face was scored with the marks of her own nails, and the blood dried on the wounds made her look as if she were tattooed. "'Where is the wife of the slayer?' said Big Jack as he came into the light. she is by her gunya father cried the others but the baker clutch smith's arms what have they caught smith he cried in a thick whisper and smith did not answer for each one of the party was carrying two heads and big jack came to the woman and without a word put his terrible trophies on the ground in front of her the next man did the same and turning joined big jack at the fire As each burden was put down, a yell arose from the crowd, and when there were thirty grinning heads in one awful pile, they shouted, hurrah, once more.
Starting point is 02:04:26 Do you think they ate the rest? asked the baker. But Smith, who felt sick, could not answer that question. How could he tell if these men were cannibals? If they were, what a strange and awful reversion! What a savage satire upon the white world of a boasted but vain civilization. And meanwhile, Big Jack related their experiences. We found the Slayer's body,
Starting point is 02:04:53 and his wound was made with an emu spear. Yesterday we followed their tracks and caught them by noon. There are none left. But some of the men were wounded, and the woman attended their hurts. Their chief or captain was not touched. The others told stories of his strength and skill
Starting point is 02:05:14 in a strange mixed dialect that came to them easiest when excitement stirred them. Smith and the baker, who kept rather out of the way, until the fervor of the savage welcome was overpassed, now came into the crowd about the fire, for Smith was horribly curious to know if they had brought anything else home from their hunting but heads. He was reassured when he saw the women cooking fish and a big kangaroo. Yet that says nothing. "'Smith told himself. "'They have been away twenty-four hours and more. "'They may be cannibals when they are oppressed.
Starting point is 02:05:51 "'May fate send them plenty while we are here, "'if indeed we ever get out.' "'So when the feeding was done, "'he came in again and sat down by Big Jack. "'Good day to you,' said he civilly, "'and Big Jack nodded a grim salute. "'You did well today,' said Smith. "'We killed them all,' mumbled Jack with gusto.
Starting point is 02:06:14 men and women and the children, it is a bad day for the emus. But the heads we brought were all men's heads. May I talk with you, said Smith, or are you weary? I am never weary, said the giant, and I want to talk with you. Who are you? And where do you come from? Smith told him, then there are many white men in this land? asked Big Jack. Very many. Then why do you not kill all the boys?
Starting point is 02:06:44 black fellows, asked Jack. Smith explained to him that the white men had done so as far as they could until the law stopped them. The law, said Big Jack, my father's father used to speak of the law, but I never understood it. Tell me what it is. And Smith toiled hard to explain the enigma, but he had to come to concrete examples. The law is a custom which says one man must not kill another except in war, and if he does, he is killed too. Who kills him? asked Big Jack. The people who have the power, said Smith, who is rapidly becoming confused. Then it is not wrong to kill if you can, asked Jack.
Starting point is 02:07:32 Yes, it is, unless you are in the right, said poor Smith. What is right? asked Jack, and then Smith was quite done. It seems foolish talk. says Big Jack. Let us speak of other things. Why did you come here? To look for gold, said Smith. Do you want to make clubs with it? asked Jack.
Starting point is 02:07:55 And when Smith had finished explaining currency, Jack wanted to ask no more. The tribe you belong to must all be fools, he said. Gold is useful to make clubs with and things to boil food in, but who would give me a fish for a little bit of it when he can go out yonder and get all he wants. It is foolish talk. My father's father used to speak of such things, but he was an old man and very silly. Who was your father's father? asked Smith eagerly. And the baker, too, came closer. He had been listening to the talk with his mouth open,
Starting point is 02:08:33 for the mystery weighed on him heavily. He was an old man and silly, said Jack, but he was a good fighter when was young, and my father says he had killed white men belonging to a tribe over yonder. He too pointed to the east. Where? At Sydney? asked Smith. I do not know, said Jack, who was wearied of the aimless talk. You can ask my father, who is now an old man, and no good except to talk and eat, and very soon he will die, which will be a good thing, for now he cannot even catch fish. and Big Jack dismissed Smith with a wave of his huge paw.
Starting point is 02:09:16 As they went to their tree, they saw the widowed woman sitting close to the pile of heads and talking to them. The baker shrank away and got the other side of Smith. They lay down close together. Do you know who these people are? asked Smith. Ain't got a notion, said the baker. They are the descendants of convicts escaped a hundred, years ago, said Smith, and the Baker fairly gasped.
Starting point is 02:09:48 End of Chapter 11. Chapter 12 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow, an Australian romance by Morley Roberts. This Lieberbox's recording is in the public domain, read by lore. The Beginning of Trouble. Whether Smith was right or wrong in this assumption of his, remained to be seen, and from the vague way in which Big Jack spoke, he might never get sufficient evidence to corroborate or upset his theory. The evidence for it would depend on the chatter of a senile old savage, who, in his turn, had obtained it from an outlaw. Smith knew enough of testimony to be aware that this might be no more than a presumption easily capable of being upset.
Starting point is 02:10:43 but he desired intensely to solve the mystery, and not even the danger and uncertainty of being the guest of people little superior in their habits and customs to men up the Stone Age could prevent his feeling ardent curiosity. And then there was the question of the gold. From the way they employed it, from Bill's talk, and from what Big Jack said, it was obvious that there must be sufficient near at hand to make the fortune of a hundred men. On a rough calculation, he estimated that there was then in the camp consumed in the making of their waddies and other weapons and in the rude bowls which represented their degree of civilization
Starting point is 02:11:27 at least 200 pounds weight of the metal, and that at four pounds an ounce was roughly worth about 12,000 pounds. Besides this, he found lumps of gold quartz about the camp sufficient to make any ordinary miner go clean out of his mind. The boys used the smaller pieces as missiles, and one big lump was used in putting the weight. On lifting it, Smith found it weighed at least 40 pounds, and its bulk was gold. There must be an outcrop of a vein here, he said to the baker,
Starting point is 02:12:04 which would take our breath away. There can't be a mine like it in the universe, if we can only get out of here and find it again we shall be the richest men in the world that is unless we sell it to a syndicate but the getting-outs the thing i've a notion said the baker that it will be good to slope pretty soon as soon anyway as we see this ear mind for to tell the truth smith i think there will be a row he looks so serious and yet so ashamed that smith was puzzled "'What have you been up to?' he demanded. The baker shook his head and looked down half-fashfully. "'Well, Smith, I ain't done nothing,' he began. "'But do you know I've a kind of notion that the wildcat
Starting point is 02:12:52 "'that gives me the tucker regular is a bit mashed on me?' "'Smith was uneasy. "'Of all things this was the most likely to cause trouble. "'Go on,' he said severely. "'But the baker remonstrated against the way he spoke. you ain't no call to look at me in that tone of voice, he said. If it's true, I can't help it, and Lord knows I've done nothing to encourage her, but she just freezes to me quite natural, and the bloke that goes with Bill,
Starting point is 02:13:23 I think he tumbles to it. Smith was quite alarmed. If you aren't careful, you'll do for us, Baker, he said. You must be careful. Are you sure of it? The baker shrugged his shoulders. You just watch it yourself. You'll see me icy purlite, and are trying to thaw me out.
Starting point is 02:13:44 And if the bloke's about, his eyes'll be like gimlets. It fair gives me the ump for a savage woman to be gone on me. I'll have my head open when I ain't looking. Then just avoid her, said Smith. And then maybe she'll jab me with a spear, said the baker, half between crying and laughing. "'I'm glad I've got my revolver. Where's your in Smith?' Smith topped the waist of his trousers. "'Inside the lining,' said he.
Starting point is 02:14:14 "'I wish it was a bit bigger, but it will scare them anyhow if it comes to trouble.' The baker, forgetting his woes and the danger he stood in between the lady and the savage, fairly laughed. "'I should think so, mate,' he said. "'Sometimes I think it would be a good thing to let them hear it and see what it will do.' but that meant the loss of a cartridge, and one out of about fifty between them might be wanted in a tight corner. You keep it dark till it's useful, said Smith, and find out what you can about the canoes in the river. See how many there are, and keep your eye skin, for they may shove us out of this at any moment. Or shove us in if Grub gets scarce, cried the baker.
Starting point is 02:14:59 I wish I's out of it. If I was on the track with ten days, Tucker, I'd be able to. half inclined to oof it back down the billibone and make a big shy for new find and then their conversation was cut into by bill who came demanding a smoke the baker who for a moment thought he was the man he was most particularly in dread of stepped aside when he saw his mistake he couldn't help watching the two men together for smith was as tall as bill and very libe his beard was almost golden and short and curly. In spite of his mole-skin trousers, his broken boots, and his ragged shirt, he looked a gentleman. And to see him give his pipe to a savage who, ten times over, satisfied all the baker's childlike notions of savages, was something strange, horrible, and yet irresistibly ridiculous. For Bill was bra and as muscular as a young Hercules, and if he had been shaved both on his breast and back, as well as his head and face,
Starting point is 02:16:05 he might, except for his feet, which were over large and flat and misshapen, have stood as a model for the nude. But it was the possession of his beard and hair, and the skin which covered him, and his wild carriage, which made the contrast tremendous. If he had been black, it would have seemed natural enough. If he had spoken some unintelligible language, it would not have presented so many features of tragic and comic interest irresistibly combined.
Starting point is 02:16:38 So when Bill remarked that he now wanted a pipe of his own because he liked tobacco so much, the baker was all of a sudden taken with a hysterical fit of laughter, which he could not control. He fairly screamed and shouted and at last lay down. Smith, who had a notion of what had taken the man, was at first alarmed, lest Bill should understand. But he reckoned on his possessing keenness and a sense of humor which were both beyond him. And like a flash, it came to his chum that it would be no bad plan to suggest that the baker was not quite in his right senses. He's mad, I think, he said to Bill, who was puffing at the pipe quite calmly and taking no notice of the laughter, he's mad, Bill, the hunger was too much for him.
Starting point is 02:17:26 and at that the baker yelled to the whole camp came in sober curiosity to see a phenomenon which was curious and highly absurd for they very rarely laughed during generations life had been too hard for humor and not advanced enough for sarcastic or sardonic laughter it pleased smith to see the girl whom the baker believed to have taken a fancy for him looking at the lunatic on the ground with something resembling content Perhaps someone once hit him on the head with a wadi, said Bill, for such an incident might account for a man's acting in an absurd way. But when the crowd dispersed and Bill was full of as much nicotine as he could take, Smith gave the baker a word. They think you are off your chump, old man, and if you keep it up a little, you will choke off the girl. and as soon as we get a look at the mine and I have a bit of jaw with the old man, we'll try and hook it. End of Chapter 12. Chapter 13 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow, an Australian romance by Morley Roberts.
Starting point is 02:18:43 This lever box recording is in the public domain, read by lore. The Father of the Tribe. That evening, Smith asked Big Jack if he might see his father and have a talk with him. he can do nothing but talk said big jack glimly returning to what he evidently considered a grievance if when you go back to your tribe you will take him away i will give him to you this completely took the wind out of smith and helped him better than anything he had yet seen or heard to understand how these poor devils had reverted to absolute savagery he recalled stories of african's savagery. He recalled stories of African savages putting their elderly relatives to death, sometimes with a view to the needs of the commissariat. That the old man who talked was still alive showed that pressure had not at any rate been so severe as to suggest resort to such extreme
Starting point is 02:19:44 measures. And in another minute he was squatted in front of a very old man with snowy white hair and beard, who was seated inside a gunya about big enough for a large dog. This is the white man who came from the billabong, said Big Jack without saluting his parent in any way. And he wants to speak with you. And Smith, give me your pipe and back. For a moment, Smith resented the tone in which the man said this, but knowing how absurd the impulse was to say nothing of its uselessness, he handed his smoking implements over together with his knife. What is this? asked Jack, and Smith had to explain what it was. He saw Jack go back to the fire where he was presently surrounded by a crowd
Starting point is 02:20:37 to whom he expatiated on the wonders of the new weapon, which, as a cutting instrument, far surpassed anything they possessed. Then Smith turned to the old man, who, if unable to fight, showed no particular sign of great senility. Where did your tribe come from, father? said Smith. From the east, Smith, is your name Smith? I remember my father speaking of a man called Smith, said the old man. But that is a long time ago. I was young then, quite young, and we was from this ear place. He mumbled a little as his mind went back, but his talk was easier to Smith than that the younger generations. It was more like ordinary vulgar English and not so mixed with
Starting point is 02:21:28 Aboriginal terms. But who was your father, old man? asked Smith. Let me think a bit. It was a long time ago, said he, and I have almost forgotten. But now I remember. Yes, I remember. He was a very big man, and he and Smith were together when they took to the bush. Yes, it was Smith, but I never knew him. He was killed over yonder before I was born. And he returned upon the strange memories of the long plains which they had overpassed. But who was your father? insisted Smith gently. He said he was a lag, said the old man.
Starting point is 02:22:12 But I don't understand what that is. If Jack's mother was alive, she could tell you. He must have been a prisoner. said Smith. Yes, a prisoner, said the old man. He was, perhaps, taken in war and escaped. Smith shook his head. I mean, he had committed a crime, said he.
Starting point is 02:22:36 What is that? Asked the old man. I don't know what that is. And Smith could not tell him either. He did wrong, he suggested. Yes, cried the old man, brightening. I heard him say that he did. I remember.
Starting point is 02:22:54 What was it he did? He said he could have killed all of his enemies, and he only killed two. It made him feel bad even when he died. I always killed mine, and so does Jack, my big son Jack. And grasping at Smith's arm, he nodded, and his eyes brighten. They brought in 30 heads just now, he cried. I never brought in so many, no, not even I, and I was a big man once. His voice ran out low into a whisper, and he bowed his head, thinking of his brave youth and manhood.
Starting point is 02:23:34 But where did the white women come from, said Smith, I mean your mother. The old man laughed. I remember that, yes, because my mother told me after my father died. She helped him to escape from his enemies. But Smith took his wife by force as they went. I remember that. And was the place they came from, Sydney? asked Smith. The old man shook his head, but looked up and smiled.
Starting point is 02:24:03 Yes, he was a Sydney cider, he cried. But I do not remember anymore, Smith. When I was a man and led the tribe, we came towards the setting sun always. And the weak ones died, or we, them and the strong ones were saved and our tribe is small but it is strong and the black fellow is furious as they do the devils and when they see our mark they fly what is the mark asked smith the brodero cried the old man as if it was a war cry and the word was so like the sound of a native word that for a moment smith did not understand then he sought ah the broad arrow he said i said the brodero said the old man again and where we come the others go they call us the white devils of the bordero but they are snakes snakes and scorpions and we tread on them we tread on them my boy jack eats their tribes up he is a man and can fight and the old man fell upon his knees and pushed smith away let me come out of to the fire. He crawled till he came to the entrance and then rose. I was a man, Smith, take me to the fire. Smith took him by the arm and led the feeble father of that fierce race into the
Starting point is 02:25:32 light. He saw then that the man who talked was the wreck of a giant, though he stooped he must have once been taller even than his son, who overtopped Smith by inches. The old man trembled as he walked, and his knotty joints creaked, but there was a gleam in his eyes still. "'Let me come to the fire,' he said, and those near it gave him and Smith's scant room with scant or courtesy. Old age had no claims on them. It was but a burden. He who could no longer fight, who could not hunt, who was no longer able to fish, of what use was he. Let him die and free them of a useless member of a band who could give no hostages in a merciless fight with nature. But the old man would not trouble them long.
Starting point is 02:26:26 Where is Jack? he asked, looking round the camp. Here, said his son, who was seated on a stump, smoking Smith's pipe in a business-like way that made the owner wonder if he would ever get it back again. I wish to speak to the tribe of the Brodero, cried his father. For the man of another white tribe has brought back the past to me, and I remember my father, and the time when I was young,
Starting point is 02:26:54 when I could fight and run as fast as a flying doe, when I was as strong as an old man kangaroo. And now, men of the brodero, I am old and feeble and nearly blind, and there is no pleasure for me in the fight. I can bring no more heads to the, camp. I can neither hurl the spear nor throw the boomerang. Neither can I lie and wait for our enemies. His voice became a melancholy wail, like the night cry of a curlew. But as he spoke again,
Starting point is 02:27:30 strength came back to him, and his form straightened, and his voice grew resonant. But men of the brodero, all of you, my children, this is what I say to you as darkness opens to me, and I go out among the spirits of the bush. My father came out from a white tribe who were his enemies, and with him came another man and two women, and their life and the life of their children was free. We could fight and live as we wished, and there wasn't no man over us.
Starting point is 02:28:06 And I remember how my father said that among the other white tribes were many dang cruel customs, and that no man was the equal of another, and that some starved, though there was food in the camp, and if one who starved took from any of his mates, he was tortured, and kept alive to be tortured, and given no meat, nor fish, nor was he allowed to look upon the sun. And he told me, as he died, to live as a free man with my children, and to have not to do with the other white tribes who were too cunning. So now I say this to you. And his voice was like a trumpet, and he rose to his full height. Even as my father said it, have not to do with the white men of any other tribe, for they are blacker in their hearts than an emu, and more powerful and more
Starting point is 02:29:04 cunning than the little devils in the caves of the northern country. And he called to his son Jack, who came to him as obediently as though he feared the old man, for his father was as one possessed. Come, my son, give me a spear in my right hand, and let me shout our war cry once more, as I shouted it when I led you against the genuaries, and when we brought in the heads of the red kangaroos. And they brought him a spear, placing it in his hand.
Starting point is 02:29:37 Farewell, men of Brodero, and the big plains and the rivers and the ranges. Come, my children, shout with me before I go. And the tribe rose to their feet, shaking with excitement, as the old man lifted his spear and brandished it like a youth. Brodero! they shouted, but above all was the clarion cry of the old man, who cried it thrice, and at the third time pitched headlong
Starting point is 02:30:07 and rolled over upon his back. by the red edge of the blazing fire. Smith dropped on his knees by the old warrior, but he knew that the father of the Roderos was dead. End of Chapter 13. Chapter 14 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow, An Australian Romance by Morley Roberts. This Lieberbox recording is in the public domain.
Starting point is 02:30:39 Read by lore. The Gold Outcrop The sensation which the old man had caused subsided as rapidly as it rose, and most of the tribe resumed their idle occupations at once. But Big Jack and three others lifted the dead and went rapidly into the bush. Smith crossed over to the baker, who was sitting by the side of Bill. What have they done with the old man, Bill? he asked. They will give him to the big aunts, said Bill. carelessly, and in three days his bones will be as white as his hair. It is a good thing he is dead.
Starting point is 02:31:21 But why did the blooming old prophet want to do us a bad turn, said Baker, hmm? said Bill, as Smith squatted by him. I mean, why did he say as the men of Brodero was to have no truck with other white men? He spoke foolishness, said Bill, but then he was an old man. "'It don't matter what he said, as long as Big Jack likes you and I like you,' he added with a grin. "'Good old chap,' said the baker. "'And tomorrow, Bill, will you show us the gold?' Bill nodded. "'Show us tonight, Bill,' said Smith.
Starting point is 02:32:00 "'There's a good moon, and I will give you a smoke. "'At least the Baker will, for Big Jack has my pipe.' Bill rose and fetched his spear. "'Come,' he said, and they slipped out of the camp and getting beyond the big trees. They were soon in the full blaze of the high moon, which shone almost like day. The shadows of the trees cast were very solid and opaque. Their own shadows were peculiarly black and clear cut,
Starting point is 02:32:30 and against the sky every branch was like a silhouette. When they looked behind them, they saw the big blaze of the fire like a great red eye. Why do you make such big fires, Bill? asked Smith. Do not the black fellows ever attack you? Bill laughed contemptuously. If they saw two men of the broderill, they would run like wallabies and hide. But they killed the slayer, Bill, said the baker. The slayer was a fool, said Bill. He always went alone to get heads, and though he got many, they killed him at last, for he had to sleep after three days, and when a man is asleep, a snake can bite him. But when two men are together, one can sleep and the eyes of the other are open. And he stalked across the bush.
Starting point is 02:33:22 There is not a black fellow now within a day's journey, he said. They are frightened of us now. And I don't wonder at it, cried the baker. I'm scared to death of you myself. Eh? said Bill. Then Baker went up to him and felt his arm. By God. I say I'm frightened of you myself. I'm such a little-in' by you, Bill. There ain't no need, said Bill shortly, but look out for my brother. He thinks the little girl likes you, and he wants her. He might kill you. What did I tell you, Smith? exclaimed the banker and alarm. There it is. I'm courted by a young wildcat, and there will be L to pay and no pitch-off. As I said before, I say, Bill,
Starting point is 02:34:08 when we get back, you tell that brother and yorne that I'm not on. You say that I think the young lady, lady, what's that? asked Bill. I was only just respectful, said the baker, but Bill shook his head and turned to Smith. The little man uses strange words, and sometimes I don't understand. You don't savvy, respectful, said the baker. Well, Bill, I mean this. I likes the girl and thinks she's all right. but I want to get back. To your own tribe?
Starting point is 02:34:41 That's about it, said the baker, and I don't want no wife to trouble me on the journey. If she was a trouble, you could kill her, said Bill simply. Thank you, replied the baker, but I don't care about it, so you say to your blooming bloke of a brother that e's welcome to the girl for me. I think she likes you, said Bill. Then my goose is cooked, replied the baker in melancholy, resignation. I want to sling my ook right now. Here, here, hurry up, Smith, let's do our prospecting,
Starting point is 02:35:16 and I'm for off in it quick. And he lagged behind, considering his prospects between the devil, Bill's brother, and the deep sea of savage and unsophisticated maidenhood. After about 20 minutes walking, they came to some broken ground that rose gently. Here and there, Smith saw some quartz glittering in the moonlight. Every bit he picked up was rich with gold, or it would have seemed rich to any ordinary miner. He also remarked some rocks jutting out of the ground. They looked like the outcrop of reefs, but still Bill went straight ahead and going through a belt of thin scrub. They came on a narrow valley about 50 yards across and some hundred and fifty yards long. It evidently ended in the river for the belt.
Starting point is 02:36:06 of heavy timber rose blackly at its south end. But in the middle of the scully was a huge lump of rock, some square yards, which gleamed white in the moon. That's it, said Bill, and the two miners went on while he sat on Little Knoll, which commanded a view of the near country. Stop a minute, said Smith, when they got within 20 yards. Stop a minute, Baker, I can't believe this. man alive, it's all gold with just a quartz casing.
Starting point is 02:36:39 But the baker went on and was followed by Smith. All around the casing of the vein were scattered lumps of quartz studded with gold, but inside the casing it was pure, though here and there divided by thin bands of stone, for the grass and earth had been torn away, and sufficient gold cut out to leave the mass visible. Smith sat down on a lump of stone. "'Is this my luck, after all?' he said. "'Oh, if I can only get back!'
Starting point is 02:37:11 And if the baker had been near enough, he might have heard Smith speak the same name that he muttered on that night of his delirium. But the baker was on the top of the Golden Hill. He was dazed, but as ever, half humorous. "'I suppose it's the stuff, Smith, "'but I'm half inclined to doubt it. "'There ain't so much in the universe.
Starting point is 02:37:32 "'If it's only just a look, on top, there's millions in it, and if it runs a true reef, why, gold's come down to England as it's ear to the making of cooking pots. And Smith joined them. The sight was one calculated, if ever any sight was, to make a man crazy who had been hunting for wealth but never found it. Smith had to hold himself tight, and suddenly he leapt off the golden throne. Come, Baker, he cried, that's enough. Let's try. Let's try. try and get away. The sooner the better. If we get through, we're millionaires, and waiting won't help. Come. And the three men went towards the camp. It's very useful, said Bill, for it makes better
Starting point is 02:38:18 waddies than would. The black fellows never found that out, but they are fools. What does your tribe do with it, Smith? But Smith was not to be drawn into any more explanations of currency in exchange. We make things of it too, he said, and after avoiding this opportunity of puzzling poor Bill, he turned the talk in a direction which might be useful. Have you ever been down the river, Bill? he asked. But Bill shook his head. We came here from the east, the last big rain. How many boats do you have? Two, we made them with fire, said Bill proudly. They are better than a log. For Jack's father, dead and was not so foolish a little while ago told us about hollow logs which he called boats. And he went on shattering while Smith was thinking how he could get possession of the boats.
Starting point is 02:39:14 He wondered, too, whether it would be wiser to take them or to make some kind of an exchange. It was possible that the knife which Big Jack had might be considered an equivalent. He wished now they had brought their tomahawks and pondered about the possibility of returning down the billabong for them, for with them they might make canoes for themselves. But fate solved the problem for them far more suddenly than he thought possible, and it solved it that very night not long after they returned to the camp. Just sneak off if you can, said Smith to the baker an hour later, and try and find out where they keep the canoes, and see if the paddles are there.
Starting point is 02:39:57 I don't like leaving you, said Mondaville. That's a fact. for there's some that's took up the old'n's prophecy that i can see and bill's brother is talkin aginous plain and when smith looked it certainly seemed that the baker was right for the objectionable suitor for the wild cat's hand was holding forth by the fire on a subject which made those with him continually look at the two from that other tribe of white men "'Never mind,' said Smith. "'I'll stick to Bill and Jack, and they're all right so far.' "'So presently, Little Baker casually sauntered into the darkness "'and went down to the river with his heart in his mouth.
Starting point is 02:40:42 "'I want more back of Smith,' said Big Jack, "'and Smith reluctantly parted with what he had left. "'If you will send one of your young men back with me,' said Smith, "'I will give you a great deal of tobacco and many knives.' mm-hmm said big jack ponderously how far is your tribe ten days journey said smith and just then he saw the girl baker feared so slip out of the camp on the riverside apparently her departure was usual or not noticed as far as smith could see in spite of bill's suggestion that a troublesome wife might be clubbed to death the women had a great deal of liberty and were greatly considered They were not the beast of burden that they become in agricultural communities, but when Smith looked up again, he saw that Bill's brother was gone too,
Starting point is 02:41:38 and that seriously alarmed him. If the wildcat had gone after the baker with any notions of gentle dalliance on the riverbank, it was possible that her savage suitor might catch them. He made an excuse to go into the bush, and when he was out of range of the fire, he ran rapidly to the river. When he reached the bank, he went slowly
Starting point is 02:42:02 and kept as much as he could in the shadow of the trees. Once, as he stayed, he fancied he heard voices below him, and then he made sure he had heard a little twig break. He looked round and saw Bill's brother
Starting point is 02:42:18 peering over the bank into the darkness. Smith's impulse that moment was to call to the baker to warn him, but the next brought him caution. He might have to fight the man himself, and it was certainly better not to let the savage know he was observed. He lay still and waited. But the next moment Smith had his revolver sights dead on him as he was lifting his spear. He could see the man's very expression,
Starting point is 02:42:47 the snarl of rage, the deadly intent as he took aim. But before the spear could leave the strong hand, Smith fired, and without a sound, the would-be assassin leapt in the air and went tumbling down the bank. He heard the baker cry out, and heard a woman scream as the whole camp behind him rose. He almost fell down the bank and found his chum with the girl. "'Where are the canoes?' he said. He was going to spear you and I had to shoot. Quick, quick!' and the girl ran to the dead man. When she saw who it was, she came back. "'Where are the canoes, girl?' asked Smith again. And she nodded and ran as they followed her close.
Starting point is 02:43:32 The next moment they were at the water's edge in a narrow cut gully. The girl thrusts the canoes out. "'We must take both,' said Smith. And as he got into one, the baker sprang into the other. The girl shoved both off into deep water, but as the bakers left the ground, she sprang into it and grasped the paddle. They shot out upon the slow, dark stream. But behind them they heard a terrible shouting and clamor.
Starting point is 02:44:00 And above the hubbub rose the cry, Brodero! End of Chapter 14. Chapter 15 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow, an Australian romance by Morley Roberts. This Lieberbox recording is in the public domain, read by lore. The Fight on the River The current in the river was running barely a mile an hour, and it was difficult to make the canoes go more than four or five even by paddling desperately. And at first they did not dare paddle too hard for fear of being heard.
Starting point is 02:44:42 But as soon as they got well round the first bend, they put their backs into it, and finally the Baker's boat drew ahead. When he saw this, Mondaville stopped paddling. "'Get in ours, old man. One's enough.' "'What about this one?' said Smith. They steered over to the other bank and left it there, for when they capsized it, they found it would not sink as they had hoped. "'But we've all the paddles,' said the girl, the beautiful cause of the war.
Starting point is 02:45:14 They paddled steadily once more until Smith suddenly made a sound expressive of entire dexation. "'What is it?' said the baby. We've no food, and the water bags are left behind. The baker laughed. Water enough, Sonny, and as for food, Miss Kitty here will have to find it. What made the big noise? asked Kitty, which was what the baker had christened the girl. And Manderville showed her the revolver in his belt.
Starting point is 02:45:45 Smith has one like it. It makes a noise and kills men. She came down to the river to tell me about the row, as was likely to be, Smith. "'and brought it on right off,' said Smith. "'And if this hadn't happened, "'we might have got away with Tucker and everything else tomorrow. "'It's cursedly annoying!' "'And they paddled steadily for half an hour,
Starting point is 02:46:08 "'still keeping as much in the shade as possible. "'The river ran here between deep cut, steep banks, "'lined all the way with very high and heavy timber. "'As it seemed, there was much scrub as well, and this gave Smith hopes that if they were pursued by land, they would not be seen. In any case, the presence of scrub would make pursuit difficult. He wondered what the girl thought of it. She should know how her tribe would act.
Starting point is 02:46:38 Kitty, what will your people do, he said, when they took a spell after an hour's steady paddling, which made the sweat poured down them like water. but Smith noticed that the girl who worked quite as hard had never turned to hair. If they catch us, they will take your heads, she said. And you? They would kill me unless I said you had taken me against my will, Smith. And I would not say that, because I want to go with Baker. I am glad you killed Tommy. I did not like him. But do you think they will catch us, asked Smith, as they began paddling again.
Starting point is 02:47:17 She shook her head. Perhaps the big noise frightened them. If they do not find we took the boats, they will not come after us. They were afraid of you, Smith, many of them. Because in spite of what Big Jack's father said, we did not believe there were any other white men in the world. And they said you jumped up after being dead. The baker laughed.
Starting point is 02:47:40 You didn't, Kitty. Not after you kissed me, said Kitty. Oh, said Smith, indeed. that's it, is it? But the baker took his paddle again. They worked hard for another hour. Thank the Lord, this river isn't like the Lachlan, said Smith.
Starting point is 02:47:56 All curls and whirls and meandrings. It does seem to go straight. Kitty, can you get anything to eat here? I could get a possum, perhaps, said Kitty, but we shall not be hungry till tomorrow, and there are plenty of white grubs
Starting point is 02:48:12 under the dead bark, at which the baker visibly squirmed. that his wild lady-love should eat grubs seemed rather too much. He began to wonder what he would do with her if they ever got back to some kind of civilization and could only console himself with the poor consolation that they were never likely to do so. For to be on an unknown river going into the unknown
Starting point is 02:48:37 with no food and little chance of any and a savage set of headhunters after them seemed heavy odds against the lucky termination, to their wanderings. He was glad to slave at the paddle to keep from speculating. And as Smith worked, the whole adventure assumed the peculiar quality of a dream. It was just that kind of vision which sometimes comes to a man who has had adventures. Often in the old days, when in some kind of ease he had dreamed such dreams, which began suddenly with his going somewhere in a strange impossible land,
Starting point is 02:49:14 with some strange and yet more impossible perils in front of him. As he thought of the last week or two, it seemed to him that he had never left Newfound at all. Was not the whole adventure of the nature of a nightmare? He had suffered dream thirst and dream hunger, and had come into a mere vision of mixed origin, of knowledge and fantasy, and had handled fairy gold.
Starting point is 02:49:42 And now he and his dream, companions were stretched on the rack of imagination, toiling down a black river, margined by ghostly trees, clear-cut against a gibbous moon with prehistoric devils behind them. For he conceived it as possible that no one would credit their story if they ever returned. But then the girl was with them. If they brought her back and did obtain belief through her corroboration, it pleased him to think that he could make a rare stir in the world of travel. At the very notion, ambitions long dead within him began to lift their heads,
Starting point is 02:50:22 but was not that the biggest dream of all? By this time the moon, which had been almost in front of them for some time as the river turned nearly due west, came closer to the trees and was soon hidden. It was now close on midnight, perhaps even later, and he was conscious of feeling fatigue. spillo, he said softly, and they floated idly for some minutes. I've been thinking, Baker, he said, that the most dangerous time for us will be in the early morning, for if they go for the canoes and see we have them, as they must, and if they do determine to chase us, they will surely have the savvy to go as fast as they can down the river and wait for us.
Starting point is 02:51:07 At the utmost, we can't have done much more than 30 miles when it begins to get light. And if they aren't scared of going into an unknown country, they can do that too, if they hurry and trot a bit. The baker nodded. And what's your notion? I think as soon as it begins to show the first sign of dawn, we had better shove the canoes into the bank here, hide them, and lie up and see what happens. What's the girl think, I wonder?
Starting point is 02:51:37 "'She's asleep,' said the baker, "'poor little devil. "'She was lying in the bottom of the canoe "'with her head on the baker's knees.' "'Yes,' said Smith, "'and you've acted like an idiot over this baker. "'I couldn't help it,' said the gay Lothario, "'anything but gaily.
Starting point is 02:51:56 "'She's a regular scorcher she is, "'and she fair rushed me, "'and if her air was combed and she was washed, "'she'd be good-looking.' "'hmm,' said Smith, lay her down and let's start again so they paddled once more and kitty who was not used to such exercise lay on her arm and her matted hair which would have defied anything less than a horse's mane comb and slept like a child in a rocked cradle if we get through you'll have to marry your catch said smith when they easied i'd as soon do that as marry some as glawed after me said the baker i reckon she's a kind of princess and if so be as we land some of the posh and are rich,
Starting point is 02:52:42 I'll have her educated at a high school. Lord, but she'd wake some of them up if she got slinging yarns about ed hunting. How does a man who marries a princess call himself, Smith? Is he a prince, too? He's our husband, Baker, said Smith dryly, and is often mistaken for a waiter, but I'd hold on if I were you.
Starting point is 02:53:05 When they spoke again, it was black. dark, for the moon was lower, and the heavy timber made the river as somber as a narrow canyon two hundred feet deep. Go easy, cried Smith, and look out, Baker, for any snags. It won't do to get capsized. How's the girl? Dreaming of her happy own, said the baker cheerfully. I was just wondering, Smith, as to what that long, sulky swine Ix would say, if he'd knowed what he'd missed. He could have took up with the Brodero and been king, being big and huddly enough,
Starting point is 02:53:41 and what the boys will say about Mrs. Mondeville ear rather does for me. You'll have to stand a lot of chie-ackin, said Smith, but I'm sorry for the girl. What she will do in civilization, I don't know. But it is getting light in the East Baker. Look out for a
Starting point is 02:53:59 hiding place. They pulled in close to the southern bank, which was steep, but broken with small gullies cut by the rain. None of those will do, said Smith, and I'm afraid the river's too low for us to get much cover, unless we find a creek, but one we passed an hour ago would have done. Wake the girl up, we better push on till we reach some sort of cover. When Kitty was roused, she sat up and stared about her, as if she were dazed. They explained to her what they wanted, and after kissing the baker's hand,
Starting point is 02:54:30 an act of loving homage he received with every visible sign of discomfort. They paddled on faster. And just as it was obviously dawn, they came to a bit of a creek and shoved the canoe into it. If they come down this side were cooked, said the baker. We must risk something, replied Smith. They would hardly swim over when one side's like another, and he uttered an exclamation.
Starting point is 02:54:58 What is it? asked the baker. By Jove, perhaps they think we just crossed, shoved the canoes adrift, and went back the way we came, he said. They might, but if they did, they would soon find out they were off it, answered the baker. And then they might come down this side, and our name would be, we must chance it, said Smith. Have you any tobacco? Jack took all mine. I hope he'll go in for a debauch and get sick. The baker handed him over a fig of black twist, and he took a chew. Give it me, said Mrs. Mondaville. I can eat too.
Starting point is 02:55:36 It took a deal of explanation before she could understand that they were chewing what would make her very ill, and even then she insisted on trying. Don't take much, said the baker anxiously. You'll only spit it out. And spit it out she did with every sign of disgust when she got the same. savor of the luscious black morsel. I told you so, Mrs., said the baker, but ain't she just like a woman, Smith? He said this with an air of intense enjoyment in discovering feminine qualities in Kitty. But Smith chuckled. What the devil else did you expect her to be like? he demanded, and Kitty,
Starting point is 02:56:17 to take the taste out of her mouth, went ashore in spite of their remonstrances and found something to eat, which they refused with every sign of abhorrence. You eat bacca? I eat these, said Kitty, and the baker found it so difficult to explain to her that he was entitled, by his customs, to make a beast of himself, that at last he began to see dimly that chewing tobacco might be objectionable from some points of view. And just as they were discussing the matter in low tones, Smith, who was on a nervous dread, which made every sense preacher naturally keen, held up his hand warningly to the others. I thought I heard something, he said.
Starting point is 02:57:01 Listen. And then all three distinctly heard the noise of someone or something making its way through the dense scrub. Kangaroos? said the baker. But the girl smiled, and Smith shook his head. Fly low and say nothing, he whispered as he got out of the canoe with his cock revolver in his hand. He lay flat on his stomach and wriggled a yard or two till he could see the further bank. Which side is it, Kitty? asked Baker, who began to trust the girl's instincts better than his own. She pointed across the stream.
Starting point is 02:57:39 That's good, said the Baker, but nevertheless he got out his weapon, turned the barrels to see they all had cartridges and cocked it. And presently Smith came back, feet foremost, and that. inch by inch. They're there, he said. How many? I see six, and there are some on the bank. At least, I think so. They came from downstream. I was right, you see, the baker nodded. Who are they? There's big Jack and some of the rest. Poor old Bill, I hope we shan't have to wipe him out, said Smith. He's the best of the gang. Yes, said Mrs. Mondaville. He is good. I like, I like, like Bill, I want to see Smith.
Starting point is 02:58:26 No, no, whispered Smith, keep quiet. But she got out of the boat, sliding like a snake and lay by him. And gradually, with the invisible motion of a snake who sees its prey, she crept out of the skin, which was her only garment, and went the three yards between her and the low-growing scrub, which concealed them. She lay with her head in the scrub for ten minutes, and came back again as she went.
Starting point is 02:58:56 There are ten, she said, and after the manner of a savage counting, she showed her five fingers twice. Smith, who had once read something about the low, arithmetic powers of savages, had noticed that these had not degenerated so far as to come to the inclusive word, many under a hundred.
Starting point is 02:59:19 Yes, there are ten, she repeated, and some want to go back, and some want to go down the river again, and I think, Smith, that some say, let us swim over. We can kill them all in the water, said Smith, showing his revolver. She nodded. But they might come over further up, she added presently. Smith looked behind him apprehensively. This was now all that he feared. If they were taken by surprise in the rear, it would be a close shave. Baker, he said, turn around and keep your eyes skinned and your ears open. Don't trouble about this side.
Starting point is 02:59:58 And you, Kitty, go back and watch them. Smith held out his hand to the baker. Shake, old man, he said with emotion. And if we don't get out, we've been good old pals. Right you are, replied the baker. Good old man. And then Kitty put one hand behind her and held up one finger. Then she made a motion with her hand, which suggested,
Starting point is 03:00:21 swimming. There's one swimming over, said Smith, but don't you look round unless I tell you. And he went a little bit up the bank in order to get a view of the stream. He saw a head in the water halfway across and was heartily glad to see that it was not Bill. He looked at his sixth shooter again. It was only a 42 caliber, and he had always been accustomed to a 45, but he thought he could hit the man at 15 yards. He bent down and made a low noise, which caused Kitty to turn her head. He put his fingers to his ears to make her understand that she was not to be afraid, and raising his revolver, he brought it up slowly till he saw the foresight right in the neck. Staying one second to make sure his hand was steady, he pulled the trigger. He noticed that never in his life had the time
Starting point is 03:01:16 seemed so long from the time the hammer fell to the explosion of the cartridge. But as the shot echoed, the swimmer gave one plunge, rolled over on his back, and went under. And until a heavy body came tumbling down the bank and struck him from his seat, he did not know that the baker had fired at the very same moment as himself, for one of their enemies was lying dead with his matted hair in the very water under the canoe. And as the double shot rang out, the men of the Brodero rose upon the other bank and shouted terribly.
Starting point is 03:01:52 But they are awful scared, said Kitty, who is now back with the baker. Who did you kill? And reaching out, she caught the dead man by the hair. It is Bill, she said lamentably. I did not want Bill killed. And the baker could hardly speak, If it was possible to feel affection for any man among that awful tribe,
Starting point is 03:02:16 he had felt it for the poor wretch who lay in the water killed by his hand, and this was the first time he had ever fired a shot in anger in his life. He called to Smith in a low voice, but Smith waved to him angrily to keep quiet, for he was wondering what the rest would do. Presently he slipped down the bank and joined them. What will they do, do you think, Kitty? he asked, but the girl shook her head. If you kill Big Jack, they will go, she said.
Starting point is 03:02:47 Are you sure? The others are not brave unless they see their enemies, she said. When we fought with the devil men in the caves, they were always frightened at night, for the little men killed many of us with small arrows. Give me your pistol baker, said Smith, and taking the bigger weapon he crawled down to the scrub. It was a shot of 40 yards, and he doubted his skill.
Starting point is 03:03:13 But the affair was desperate. If they went up or downstream and swam across, there were still eight to their two, and in a hand-to-hand rush, he could not doubt the termination. Taking very careful aim, he at last fired and fancied he heard the bullet strike. He could even see the man's face,
Starting point is 03:03:36 which was turned towards him. He noticed in that brief space of time that Big Jack dropped his spear and put his hand to his heart. An expression of futile rage passed over him as he staggered. He made an effort to keep his balance, but failing fell on his knees. He rose again, grasping his spear, but as he endeavored to hurl it towards the quarter, once his unseen death had come, he staggered again, fell headlong, and rolled into the river. After one moment in which the rest stood as though they were carved figures, they broke, ran up the bank, and burst into the scrub like startled kangaroos. Smith heard them breaking
Starting point is 03:04:21 through it for a long minute, and when the noise died away in the distance, he returned to the canoe. He found the baker looking greatly distressed, for the girl was on the bank with the dead man's head upon her knees, and she was sobbing terribly. She said, she said, says she doesn't think Bell meant any harm, said the baker, and for all I know she's right, for she says him and his brother never hid it off, and perhaps he just meant to tell us to lie low. And the baker broke down and cried too. I feel just like a murderer, he said. Smith, as he looked on the man, stretched out upon the bank, could not help thinking that he was as magnificent dead as he had been alive.
Starting point is 03:05:06 and far more like an ordinary human being who is not degenerate or an unparalleled reversion. For in the quiet sleep of death, much of the ferocity natural to a savage had disappeared, and there was a calmness on his face which gave him an air of peculiar and strong serenity. He looked still like some ancient warrior, but centuries had dropped away from him. instead of a savage of the Stone Age, clad in skins, he might have been a Viking slain in some uncommon adventure. His hair was now drawn backwards from his forehead by the girl who mourned him, and she had separated his long golden moustache from the deeper brown of his curly beard, and wiped away the bloody froth from his lips. He looked like a man, sufficient to himself in life
Starting point is 03:05:59 or in death, brave, enduring, and now almost wise. Smith turned away with a sigh. I'm sorry for this, he said. What shall we do now? What do you do with the dead in your tribe, Kitty? he asked. They are given to the ants, she said. And between them the two men with difficulty carried the corpse up the bank. Kitty, who went in front, showed them where she wanted the body put.
Starting point is 03:06:28 they returned in silence to their boat. I'm very sorry, Kitty, said the baker. You could not help it, sobbed the girl. And what shall we do now, asked Smith. Do you think they will come after us again? Kitty shook her head. They will be too frightened, she said. I am frightened.
Starting point is 03:06:49 How did you do it? But there was no time to explain the inexplicable to her. Do you think we can go on? Yes. said Kitty. But first let us go over and see if they left anything to eat on the other side. I tell you, she's got a lot of savvy, said the baker who was getting furiously hungry, and talked as if glad to discover the strange girl who had attached herself to him was not quite a fool. She's got a lot of savvy. And crossing the stream, they found some lumps of kangaroo flesh,
Starting point is 03:07:23 which had been half cooked. They turned the canoe downstream again, and eight as they paddled. End of Chapter 15. Chapter 16 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow, an Australian romance by Morley Roberts. This Libra Box recording is in the public domain. Read by lore. The river sink.
Starting point is 03:07:51 The next 24 hours were without incident, as they went through the intolerable and blatant monotony of Australian river scenery, in which all change was quiet renewal. The banks of the stream were still steep, and one bend was so like another that their progress seemed vain. They were like three ants floating desperately in a ditch.
Starting point is 03:08:18 The sunset and the close heat remained. The heavy odors of the bush drifted down into their drain, and the mosquitoes made their lives a burden. And then the sun rose once more and climbed into a bridge. brazen sky, and burn them into blisters, for no breeze tempered its fierce rays, not a shadow of a cloud protected them. They went steadily west towards the sea, perhaps, but more certainly still, into the unknown. Though Smith believed that the Brodero would now leave them, being terrified by the inexplicable and terrible loss of four of their best and bravest men, it was by no means certain that
Starting point is 03:09:01 that they might not at any moment come across some tribe of black fellows as hard to deal with, and of infinitely more natural ferocity. The Brodero descendants of white men had some of the white man's qualities, and they were not naturally the enemies of their own color in these later generations. But with the blacks, it would be different. At any rate, it might be. If the Brodero were ever cannibal, it was only under exceptional and heavy pressure, but many of the Aboriginal tribes were men-eaters, always, and needed no other excitement than common need. They could then only pray that they might meet none. It was curious, however, that Kitty showed little fear of the Aboriginals. Her people had so harried and destroyed those with whom they came into hostile
Starting point is 03:09:56 conflict that she could hardly understand how they would dare to attack two whites together. And now that she was with two white men of an entirely superior order, who had weapons, which made a most awe-inspiring row, and killed as far as a well-thrown spear, she entirely despised black fellows. They are foolish men, she said, and do not really know how to fight. They can throw spears at a man. man who is asleep, that is all. Only the little devilmen of the caves are bad. She had referred to these before. Who are the little devilmen, Kitty? Smith asked. A long time ago we fought with them,
Starting point is 03:10:41 she said. They lived in caves over yonder, she pointed to the northeast. And when I was smaller, we came there, and every night a man died, and sometimes a woman, and they had a little arrow in them as long as my hand, but we never saw those who shot them. We were very much frightened and thought they were spirits. Big Jack found they lived in caves, red caves, and we made a big, big fire in the mouths of the caves, and then we saw the smoke come out far off, and some went there and found a hole big enough for a dingo. And then a little woman came out. She was white like clay, and Bill speared her. Then some men came. They were no bigger than a child when it no longer sucks,
Starting point is 03:11:29 but they were very strong. So we speared them until no more would come out. The rest died in the smoke. We found them after three days. They had little spears and little bows and arrows, and the scratch of an arrow killed a man like the bite of a snake. Horrible, said Smith. On my soul, Baker, Mrs. Mondaville.
Starting point is 03:11:53 can spin a yarn. I'm not surprised at her carrying nothing about the ordinary open-air black fellow after that, but then these were white too. And he pondered over all the problems this journey presented for a solution. What did we know yet about all the world's secrets? If we were told anything out of the way, we smiled, and those who exercised their little faculties and little books sat on the judgment seat. But neither Smith nor Baker had overmuch thought to spare for quiet speculation. For now their stock of burned kangaroo was almost done for. How are we going to live? asked Smith. We might go up to the bank and lay for a kangaroo, said the baker. Lay? How long? asked Smith. Kitty, how are we to get more to eat?
Starting point is 03:12:47 I can get grubs, said Kitty. And when she saw the the men shake their heads, she suggested she might find a possum. You can try later, said Smith. And that night she caught a possum, which was coiled up most comfortably in a hole in a rotten stump. She banged it on the ground and killed it, and they cooked their dinner. I think, said Smith, as they smoked the baker's pipe in turns, that we are coming to a change in this infernal scenery. The baker looked up the banks. don't see much ballet hot duration he answered you have as much observation as a policeman said smith the timber is scantier and not so dense and the banks are not so high if i'm not off it we are going into a brown burnt desert with no trees at all
Starting point is 03:13:39 the lord forbid said the baker piously but there's water anyhow that suits me i don't mind hunger no not when you're full of possum, said Smith, who stood at best on the billabon, asked the baker. Why, you did, old man, said Smith. Then that's all right, cried the baker cheerfully, and don't get snake-headed if I says so.
Starting point is 03:14:04 If we gets very hard up for grub, we can eat Mrs. Mandeville, eh, kitty? And Kitty grinned and snuggled up close to her man. You can, Baker, she said, but not Smith. They camped that night, on the bank, but the earliest dawn they were afloat again. And long before noon, it was obvious that Smith's prediction as to the change in the scenery was rapidly coming true, for the trees were scantier and scantier still, and the banks
Starting point is 03:14:36 obviously lower. Finally the timber disappeared, and they came to a low range through which the river flowed. The only vegetation was a small, dense scrub, and even that grew in patches of among sand. If this ain't an un-oldy-looking country, I don't know what a god-forsaken place is, said the baker. You can't catch no possum in this ear place, Mrs. But Mrs. Mondaville laughed. If there were no possums, there were sure to be ground iguanas, she explained. So they paddled on through the red desolation. The range was no more than five miles across, and, at its highest, the river flowed through like a canyon-like passage 200 feet deep.
Starting point is 03:15:23 When they were through, the range dropped away pretty suddenly, and just before they came to a bend, they could, by standing up, see an illimitable plain before them. By gosh, said the baker, it's good to have a river to take us through that. It reminds me of the lookout from New Fine, Smith, and they drifted out upon the open plain, which was not quite level, but rolling like sand dunes. And it is sand, said Smith, as he worked the bow paddle.
Starting point is 03:15:55 But gradually anxiety grew into his keen brown face. If it's so, God help us, he said. The two behind him saw nothing but chattered together. Good old baker, said Smith, he's quite happy with this girl just now, and I'm thinking of another kind of woman. shall I ever see her? And he shoved his paddle straight down into the water. It touched the bottom.
Starting point is 03:16:22 Hello, Smith, cried the baker. Don't go and miss your blooming tip and tumble overboard. They rounded a bend. It wouldn't matter, said Smith, gravely. Where's the river, Baker? And they grounded on a sandbank. End of Chapter 16. Chapter 17 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow,
Starting point is 03:16:49 an Australian romance by Morley Roberts. This Lieberbox recording is in the public domain, read by lore. The sand tornado. The canoe was now in a part of the river, which looked like a lagoon bounded on every side by sandhills, and it had no visible outlet, nor was there any current. But every now and again, air bubbles came up from the bottom, and at one place the water appeared to move in a circular direction. Smith gave a stroke or two of his paddle,
Starting point is 03:17:25 and the canoe came within the influence of this circle. It moved slowly round and round. Meantime, the baker sat motionless with a fallen jaw, and even Kitty seemed disturbed. What is it? he asked at length. It's a river sink, said Smith gloomily. "'The water goes in the sand or under it.' "'Rot!' cried the baker.
Starting point is 03:17:51 "'There must be a way out.' He took his paddle again and made the canoe move fast, but behind each little mound of sand was only a bay. It was true there was no outlet. "'Is there another billabong?' he cried. But Smith shook his head. "'This is a true river, but here is its sink,' he answered. it's not such an uncommon thing.
Starting point is 03:18:16 There's one on the Humboldt River in Western America. And does it come up again? asked the baker. How can I tell? cried Smith impatiently. What are we to do? And how the devil can I answer that? said the baker. They were again in the slow circle of the sinking water, moving slowly round and round. Did you ever see anything like this, Kitty?
Starting point is 03:18:43 asked Smith, but the girl shook her head and was silent. Shove her into the sand, said Smith, and he went ashore. He climbed with difficulty upon the highest dune and looked west. Presently he called to the others. Come up and tell me what you can see, if you can see anything. They plowed their way through the sand and stood by him, looking west. You, Baker? said Smith. And shading his eyes, the Baker looked.
Starting point is 03:19:13 across the glaring white uneven plain rolling in big sand waves with here and there a few waddles upon its barren surface there may be a bit of a bluish range out yonder but i ain't sure said he you kitty asked smith there's a big tree smith said the girl and smith nodded it stands by itself he said and the trunk of it isn't to be seen what shall we do baker but at the sight of the hideous thirst land the baker was done. I guess I'm finished, he said. I'd rather stay and die where there's water. He sat down and looked despairing for the first time. It made Smith pluck up courage. It would never do for both to be down at once.
Starting point is 03:20:01 Cheer up, old man, he said. I guess this river must come out again. It's not likely to go into the bowels of the earth, and that tree is not more than 30 miles away. can do that easy no water-bags said the baker and smith's side if the sand were as heavy all the way they could hardly hope to do much more than a mile an hour if they started at sundown or a little before that would mean toiling through the night only to reach it by the next night if they had no other bad luck we must try it he said let's have the canoe up it will give us a bit of shade and we must start the moment the sun begins to go down. They dragged the boat out of the water, and laying it bottom-upmost,
Starting point is 03:20:51 scoop some of the sand away on the south side. They could, at any rate, get shelter for their heads. But Kitty would not lie down. She asked the baker for his knife and went away a little distance. She's after gunners, said the baker, but he was wrong. She came back in half an hour, or even less, and dumped what looked like a particularly fat and shapeless possum down by him. He felt it, gave a cry of joy, and catching hold of her, kissed her most violently.
Starting point is 03:21:25 What's up, said Smith, withdrawing his head from his hole. What's up? said the baker deliriously. Why, this is up. Mrs. Manderville is a darling, and cleverer than they make them. She's made a water-bag, Smith. What? said Smith. She done it with the bloominable. old possum skin, cried the baker, hugging Kitty still more violently. Ain't she a darling?
Starting point is 03:21:49 Just tying up the neck, oh, and three of its legs. Kitty, said Smith, you're a genius, and have very likely saved our lives. But he wondered why he had not thought of it himself. They started within an hour on their heavy and toilsome journey as the hot sun went down a peculiar and bloody red. They had nothing to eat, and only about three quarts of water between them. Smith, taking his direction by the setting sun, led the way, and the others followed side by side. As soon as it became dark, a star served him as a compass till midnight. The aspect of the
Starting point is 03:22:30 sand desert in the darkness was one of peculiar desolation, and the fact that it rolled sufficiently to prevent them seeing fifty yards ahead made them exoner. Made them exonerated. exercise caution even when caution appeared unnecessary. They could not tell whether some black fellows who knew the country might not cross it occasionally, and they might possibly stumble upon them sleeping. But as the heavy hours passed, and the labor of merely lifting their feet became painful, their needless caution vanished. They went blindly and hardly noticed the visible changes in the sky. For now, there was a cool, quick breeze springing from the northwest quarter, and in the low northwest were clouds. Just as the wind became strong enough to blow the sand in their teeth,
Starting point is 03:23:21 it suddenly failed, and the air got hot and heavy once more. But it seemed hotter than it had been. The sweat poured from them and ran salty upon their lips, and still the clouds grew in the northwest until at last they suddenly obscured the star by which their leader steered. He stayed till the others joined him. Rain, he said, pointing to the heavy cloud bank. And as he spoke, forked lightning ran upon the clouds and split them wonderfully, opening in tense and awful depths. As the baker opened his mouth to speak, he heard a sound such as he had never heard before.
Starting point is 03:24:05 Listen, he cried, what is it? And Smith stood still as he heard a roar, which was not thunder, nor loosed waters. It was the sound of a tornado in the desert, and he saw even the dark a dun cloud low down, but close upon them, for as a distant thunder roared at last, another flash of lightning showed the white sand sea,
Starting point is 03:24:32 as in noonday, and he beheld the desert, rise. Lie down, he cried, and the next moment the wind swept over them with a roar, and the grit flew like fine shot, screaming, and they grasped at unstable sand, which fled from between their fingers to hold to the moving earth. At last they grasped each other and waited as the sand piled about them, as if it was alive and got into their eyes and their hair and their dry mouths. They could not speak, and if they could have spoken, their voices would have been swallowed up. They could not open their eyes, and if they could, they would have seen no more
Starting point is 03:25:13 than if they had lain drowning in a turbid flood, but there was no rain. Through the frightful uproar and the red blast there came now incredible and incessant flashes of lightning, which burnt into their brains even as they lay face down with closed eyes. And through the, the vast diapason of the organic storm were short-splitting roars, which shocked and half-deffined them. They felt like blind beasts stricken of God in the wilderness. They were scapegoats for the crimes of things, and then they were nothing but struggling physical blots of mere suffering life. For the sand drifted upon them and covered them up.
Starting point is 03:25:57 They struggled out of it and were rolled over. They tore at each other for something to hold to. And then, as suddenly as it came, so suddenly the dry storm passed and went howling across the wilderness in the chariot of the winds. For now, overhead, the stars were shining and the moon was clear-cut and bright and splendid. They rose out of the sand, which had so nearly been their grave, and spat thick dust from their parched mouths. "'Where's the water?' asked Smith.
Starting point is 03:26:30 and kitty gave a cry i've lost it she said and their being half blind gave them a horrible shock for it lay at their very feet the girl had held on to it until the very last gust that was a close one said the baker and now i hope we've done the devil must have his finger in our pie but after this we should get through don't be too sanguine said smith but there he asked for something quite beyond his chum's strength for the baker's remarks on the storm and the desert and their luck were of an extremely sanguine nature at least his one adjective was and kitty too was about as badly frightened as she could be though sand storms were not uncommon in the bush yet she had never had such an experience as this she clung closely to the baker when they resume their interminable tramp cheer up old girl said the east ender we'll be in the mile-end road yet i'll show you life and baker for the first time in a week burst into a shout of laughter if Smith can smile that way, said the Baker. There ain't nothing very wrong, not to say really wrong. And when he bites that air mustache of his and shuts his eyes,
Starting point is 03:27:55 that's when I funk it, day or night. What's o'clock, Smith? It's five and twenty to three by the clock on Bow Church, said Smith. Gone, said the baker, and they went on through the sand in silence. Presently, Smith stopped. Did you hear anything, Baker? he asked. Distant thunder, said the Baker. Hmm, said Smith.
Starting point is 03:28:20 I don't know, but he walked on again. Do you really think we shall strike that blooming river again, Smith? He asked. It's quite likely, Baker. It's pretty sure to come out somewhere, and if this infernal desert ends at the tree yonder, it may be there. What kind of a tree is it? A pine, I suppose, said St.
Starting point is 03:28:43 Smith, one of the beautiful, useful colonial pines. Yes, cried the baker. Drive a tin tack into a board and it splits from one end to the other. That's it, but I wish we was hot of this, and I'm as hungry as I can stick. How goes it, Kitty, my girl? Kitty came closer to him and smiled. More thunder, said the baker presently, and then he stopped. Smith, what's up?
Starting point is 03:29:10 Look at it. Look. and right ahead of them there was a great jet of sand it rose in a cloud and then died away there was another low roar what is it said smith to himself and then he turned on the baker how should i know when they came to the place where the jet was they found nothing but a deeper hollow than usual perhaps it's one of those whirlwinds dust devils some column said the baker whom the strange phenomenon had frightened. But the dawn was growing up behind them like a magical golden mango plant, and the light gave him courage. We'll do it, he cried cheerfully, and as for the blooming tree, I'm beginning to see it myself. Let's take a spell, Smith. I'm that tired. I can hardly stir. As Smith was fearfully tired, too, he did not require much asking, and they sat down.
Starting point is 03:30:09 and continually there was the sound of distant thunder, once it was not distant, but quite near, and the very desert trembled. Can it be an earthquake? asked Smith. But he could not remember any happening in Australia, and he dismissed the notion. He lay back on the sand, and half went to sleep. Presently the baker caught him by the shoulder.
Starting point is 03:30:35 "'Wake up, Smith!' he cried in a curious voice, so unlike his own that Smith fairly jumped. Come, get out of this! And he saw the baker ghastly pale. What's up? he cried, but Mandeville was stumbling blindly up the dune towards Kitty, who continually rose and fell again on a steep slope. Come! Or you're a dead man!
Starting point is 03:30:59 Shrieked the baker, and Smith ran. But as he ran with laboring limbs, the sand ran down beneath him, he did not think he could not, but it seemed to him that some black whore was behind, and that he was in a nightmare in which he could make no progress. And looking up, yes, looking up, he said he saw the baker on the top, shouting madly, come, come!
Starting point is 03:31:24 And the man looked over and passed him. He made an incredible effort and fell flat, but rose and leaped. As he fell again, the baker caught his hand. Hold my feet, Kitty! he cried and the girl clutched his ankles. The next moment, Smith was on the top and looked back on a round pit about 30 yards across, which went down to a point at a rapidly increasing angle.
Starting point is 03:31:52 And the sand perpetually ran down the side. He could see it moving, but still the pit deepened and deepened. What is it? he gasped. But the baker clutched him. Come away, he said in a whisper. And just then there was a black mouth to the pit, a little funnel hole, which grew till it was big enough for ten men to drop through. And the sand drained over its edges into a bottomless chasm. End of Chapter 17.
Starting point is 03:32:27 Chapter 18 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow, an Australian romance by Morley Roberts. This Lieberbox recording is in the public domain, read by lore. The Road with Pits. come said the baker come where asked smith with a sick heart and looking at his chum he saw the horror in the poor fellow's face for it was wrinkled and seamed and the courage and hope which had helped them both so often had for that time at least left him utterly "'I don't know,' said the baker, and he caught Smith's hand, and then let it go, and took hold of Kitty, who was also the victim of extreme terror. The sight of the others broken down brought back strength to the older man. "'What are you scared of?' he cried contemptuously. "'Do you funk death so much, Baker?'
Starting point is 03:33:25 "'No,' said the baker in a whisper. "'But to go down into a pit when one is asleep—' Oh, my God, it's horrible. He kept glancing around him uneasily, and anxiety made him stare. He stamped on the loose sand. How did you notice it? asked Smith. I slid, said the baker, and I saw the sand trickle and trickle, and we was on and ill when we lay down, but when I slid we was in a sort of cup, Smith?
Starting point is 03:33:57 What was it, Smith? But Smith shook his head. Let's come on, he said. "'Where?' asked the baker. "'Smith, old man, I'm scared!' His shaking hands and his loose lips bore witness to the truth of that. "'Where?' said Smith.
Starting point is 03:34:13 "'Why, out of this, and as soon as we can. I'll go first.' And then he heard again the sound of distant thunder, or perhaps it was subterranean, for once more in the hot morning light they saw ahead of them big jets and spurts of dun sand thrown up against the sun, as though some strange beasts blew blasts like the spouting of a whale in that dry sea.
Starting point is 03:34:40 And with each dust spout, the ground was shaken and the sound was heard. Smith caught the baker muttering mixed prayers, half-childlike entreaty to an anthropomorphous god, half-savage blasphemy against a treacherous fetish. He remembered with a smile the old story of the sailor who prayed for hell, and as an inducement for the deity to assist him, said that he had never asked before and wouldn't again. He turned and looked at Kitty who walked like one dazed. It had taken the courage out of her too. They walked slowly towards the west, where the tall pine was now visible.
Starting point is 03:35:22 Beyond it was a low range of hills, but their progress was slow. They avoided every sand hollow and wound in and out across the little ridges. If some sand went sliding from under him, the baker whimpered like a dreaming hound, and then they stopped again. A pit! a pit! cried Mandeville, with staring eyes, and they saw an open black hole before them, crater-shaped and crumbling. God, help us, said Smith. Shall we get off this before the night?
Starting point is 03:35:55 Be a man, Baker. Do you want to spend the night here and be sucked down like sand in an hourglass? I'm coming, said the baker gulping down his whore. Come, kitty! But the sun would set soon. It shot level over the desert and turned the pine, now some five miles away, into a black bar across the mouth of a furnace.
Starting point is 03:36:19 Then it touched the range, bit out of a red gap, plunged, and left a red star on a blue crest for a moment and died. The night came with a swing from the east of lucid stars, and a moon, with its horns turned westward, was sharply visible towards the north. Come, said Smith, while there's a little light left! He led the way as fast as he dared, and did not stop even when the last daylight was gone on the wings of the afterglow, for on the whitish-red sand the light of moon and stars showed the way almost as clearly as in the thin day of an Arctic winter.
Starting point is 03:36:59 yet every now and again there came the noise of subterranean thunder. He began to guess at its cause. If they could but get off that road of pits, it bade him hope. Yet now he, too, was so terribly fatigued that he could hardly lift his feet. Every motion he made required resolution, and his eyelids dropped as he walked. The baker was in worst case physically, and only Kitty held out. Sleep, as heavy as that which takes men in deep frost, laid hold of Mandeville. He rocked to and fro like a drunken man.
Starting point is 03:37:38 He implored Smith to stop. Let me sleep! And he pitched upon his face. Wake him, said Smith, and Kitty lifted him on his feet. We are close to the edge of the sand, said the leader. Let's try a bit more. He caught the baker by the hair. He wrenched his ear till it almost bled and men.
Starting point is 03:37:59 And Aviville struck at him blindly. Kitty cried out aloud in anger, and yet she understood. But at last they could not move. The baker lay down like a dead man, and Kitty took him in her arms. She was asleep in a moment, and then a sudden dream caught the baker. The pits, the pits! he shrieked, and again deep sleep had him, as Smith smiled wanly and drifted into dreamland. and in his dream he saw the desert and under the desert the sunken ribbon which for long generations had eaten away the foundations of the desert until the flat rocks and baked earth under the sand was supported by little columns that melted day by day and he heard the columns give and then the ruptured rocks cracked there were distant sounds of thunder and the huge tilted slabs threw sand into the air down each riddle of the river down each rid of the river and the huge tilted slabs threw sand into the air down each rid of the river Down each rift as through horrible funnel holes, the sand fell which measured human lives. He saw himself slip. He heard the others cry. And then there was loud thunder in his dream,
Starting point is 03:39:11 and the blown sand filled his mouth. He heard an awful scream and woke with it in his ears. Help, Smith! Help! He sprang to his feet, and he saw a dark body, which was kitty, sliding on the flat in front of him towards a great cup, whose edge was within six feet. He threw himself down and grasped the girl by her ankles, and digging his toes into the sand, he wrenched her back. But as he did so, she screamed dreadfully, and on her scream, there came another further cry, half-choked, half dreamlike. Such a cry as a man would make in a nightmare if he could free his chest from the horrible squat beast that chokes him. And Kitty, whom he had saved, reethed around on him and struck at him.
Starting point is 03:40:02 Let me go! she screamed. Where's Baker? he said. And she wreathed and shrieked terribly. The pit! In the pit! And rising he saw the big black cup which held death. Kitty rose to and half escaped him. In another moment. she would have been beyond help. He caught hold of her, and they fought upon the increasing verge of the slipping sand, which was like quick sand, and seemed to cling to them. But Smith lifted her desperately and ran ten yards,
Starting point is 03:40:35 and throwing her down, held her till the mad fit passed, and shaking with horror and sick at the loss of friend and lover, they sat there till dawn with deep holes about them. But Kitty perpetually wailed for the man who was, gone, and half she said was unintelligible to her companion. For now, not caring to be understood, she used the commoner talk of the broadero, which was mixed strangely with fragments of many aboriginal dialects. "'My man is gone!' she cried. "'My little man who was strong and brave!' "'Yes, the baker was gone, gone without a farewell, without a handshake, and his goodbye was a
Starting point is 03:41:20 shriek, which still rang in Smith's ears. Perhaps those who were left would now escape, but all the joy was gone out of him at the loss of his faithful companion, whose courage was proof against any natural horror, and only failed in dangers which appeared ghastly beyond all imagination. But he was gone, gone, said Smith, forever. And the dawn came up in the east upon the plain, and he saw within half a mile of him the big pine tree which had been their landmark. He rose and took Kitty by the hand. She wished to look into the crater which had swallowed her man, but he drew her away towards the west. She walked quietly, with her head hanging down. As he approached the pine, Smith began to see other smaller timber about it, and further on what seemed
Starting point is 03:42:15 like the usual gums lining a river. If I'm right, he said, we shall come to the river. We need it badly. The ground was now more broken and not altogether sandy. Here and there he saw rocks projecting, and once they came to hard ground. They passed one or two of the ghastly funnel holes, and finally came out of the sand upon a little higher ground.
Starting point is 03:42:43 Right beneath them was the silver lost river. running through a flat which rose gradually to the north in the low range they had seen the day before. As they came in sight of the stream, Kitty broke down and cried. Oh, Baker! she said. But Smith knew what she meant, and he touched her arm. Come, Kitty. Even as he spoke, he stayed. What is on the bank, Kitty? He asked. For two hundred yards away, there was a black spot on the white spot. sand. It looks like a body, said Kitty with a shiver. And they went slowly towards the stream, wondering what this could be. Was the dead man black or white? It might mean so much to them.
Starting point is 03:43:30 It might mean further hazard or strange, quick release from all their anxiety. But suddenly, when they came upon the level ground, Kitty loosed her hold of Smith and ran along the river's like a deer. Smith stopped and then ran too. Was it possible? Possible? Yes, it was possible. For Kitty had the baker's head against her bosom and she was crying over him like a mother. He was still alive. Smith dropped on his knees. It's half a miracle, he said. Yes, he's alive, Kitty. Rubbed his hands. He's dropped into the river, the sunken river. Good old Baker. And Smith broke down himself as the baker opened his eyes and then shut them, relapsing once more into unconsciousness. They stripped off his wet clothes and laid him in a sunny, sheltered place.
Starting point is 03:44:25 Smith wiped his body with his own shirt, which he took off, and presently the baker opened his eyes and saw them. Such a valley nightmare, he said. Where's Kitty? And Kitty bent and kissed him. Good old girl, he said. "'What's wrong?' "'Nothing, nothing,' cried Smith, cheerfully. "'We're out of it all now.' "'Ah!' said the baker.
Starting point is 03:44:52 "'I remember?' "'He sat up and his real consciousness came back. "'Memory returned, too, and he shivered. "'A strange, one-pinched look was on his face. "'He looked a worn, broken man and much, much older. "'From that hour his hair rapidly whitened.' but he was quite sane do you feel all right now asked smith will i ever feel right asked the baker but i feels hungry and i suppose that's a good sign but there was nothing to eat they held a bit of a council while the baker's clothes dried tell us all about it said smith but the baker shook his head give me a bit of time olden he pleaded can you get any tucker kitty she said she thought she thought she
Starting point is 03:45:41 might get a lizard, but if she did, they might have to eat it raw, for the only matches among them had been in baker's possession, and they were wet through. This reminded them of that, and they spread them out to dry. Never mind, said Smith cheerfully, if they are done for, Mrs. Mondaville will make a fire aboriginal fashion. And she acknowledged that she might be able to do that if she tried, though it was a man's job. Fortunately, however, There was no necessity for her to attempt it, as they saved at least half a box of the wet matches. Their dinner was made of a particularly objectionable-looking lizard, with spurs and frills, and of a couple of bullfrogs, which kitty caught near the river.
Starting point is 03:46:28 It made their courage rise again. And now it's for the coast, said Smith. Do you think you can travel, Baker? I can that, said Mandibille. ain't I a new man? Last night I was killed. I died and went down into the pit. Tell us, said Smith, I'll show you where I came out, said the baker, and they walked upstream till they came to the place once the river issued. There were several mouths to it along the edge of the sand desert, some large and some small, but it was evident that it had once issued from a single
Starting point is 03:47:04 big cave. The new mouths were made by slabs or rock fallen together, or rusting on huge lumps of sandstone, mixed with a harder conglomerate, and they were, pretty evidently, the result of the last night's destruction. I guess I came out here, said the baker, pointing to a triangular opening near the north bank, for this one close to us is very shaller, and I should have come ashore, but I drifted considerable after I got into the light. I'll tell you about it. They all sat down on a sand heap to listen. I don't remember going to sleep, Smith. No, said Smith, you went to sleep walking. Anyhow, I don't remember it, and the first thing I do remember was doing the blooming-sliding trick again. And then kitty ear callers me, and I erred er-er-aller for you playing. I caught her by the ankles, said Smith. And that done me, said the baker, because I was
Starting point is 03:48:04 tore out of her hands before I could catch old myself, and then I gives a yell, and I just slid, and I thinks, Now you're done, Baker, for I keeps on falling forever. I guess it weren't really far, but it seemed so, and then I was overhead in water all of a sudden, and choking with sand in water at once. Of course I strikes out blind, and swims easy, but near choked with the orable scare,
Starting point is 03:48:30 and the darkness was stinking thick. I never seen the like, no. never and I thinks little bits of you and kitty overhead not able to help me and you may believe it or you may do the other thing but I feels quite sorry for you I remember too what a blooming coward I was over them pits and I think some oom in the mile-end road of a Saturday night then my aunt touches a rock I tries to grab the thing but it was smooth and it had nothing to hold by Then I finds I was slipping past it easy. And mind you, all this time I made sure I was dead.
Starting point is 03:49:07 I couldn't see other than I'd drown. But when I finds the water was going, another blooming horror strikes me. I thinks, now I'm going into another blooming water pit. I screams then, and my voice comes back on me and almost stuns me. I grabs at the rock the what floor? I don't know. And just then I thinks, why to be sure? this is the blooming sunk river and maybe it comes out so i lets up trying to old and swims easy with the current and i believe that i swum steady for years for years yes and as i got tired i fell old oh but it was bad smith and just as i thinks i'm done i seize that three square old light and i four i'd knowed i was through it and i seed the stars and the banks
Starting point is 03:49:59 I scrambled to it and clawed out a yard or so, and then I tumbles flat where you found me. You and Kitty here. God bless her and you. He kissed Kitty and held out his hand to his old chum. They rose and began their journey once more. End of Chapter 18. Chapter 19 of the Adventure of the Broad Arrow,
Starting point is 03:50:27 An Australian Romance by Morley Roberts. This Lieberbox recording is in the public domain. read by lore. Deliverance They camp that night on a clear little flat, close by the river, and again Kitty found a possum for them to eat. If it hadn't been for you, Kitty,
Starting point is 03:50:50 I believe we should have died of hunger long ago, said Smith. You're a darling. Ain't she just, cried the baker proudly, Kitty, my girl, when we gets into a town and you, as your air trimmed and gets a good dress on you, you'll be the bell of the ball. That's what you'll be. And he explained to her in simpler language that she was very good-looking, which was indeed true, for her figure was magnificent and her walk perfect.
Starting point is 03:51:23 If her hands and feet were rather big, that was nothing to the baker, and her carriage would prevent any male critic from being severe on mine. her details. But I'm sorry for Kitty when she gets among the so-called civilized lot, said Smith. They will be for tearing her in pieces. I'll tell them she carries poison in her fingernails, said the baker, and you'll see they'll be civil. Besides, we'll be a rich, old son, and if Kitty's rolling in gold, she can wear skins and eat lizards if she likes. And Kitty, who is beginning to get curious about the women of her lover's tribe inquired about their manners and customs. The baker got so entangled that Smith fairly screamed.
Starting point is 03:52:12 "'Old your row,' said the baker, "'and you and old Bushmen too, you'd bring black fellows from ten mile, you would.' "'That's true,' said Smith. I forgot. But then to hear the baker distinguishing in terms of the east end between a lady and one who was not a lady, was too exquisitely ridiculous, especially when his pupil in the difficult art of social estimation was one to whom every term he used was blank mystery. For roughly speaking, Baker's definition of a lady amounted to asserting that a woman who could go out on Sunday in a
Starting point is 03:52:52 pony cart was one. And if she or her husband kept a public house, was no doubt of her status. Smith refrained from upsetting any of the Baker's statements, but the notion of Kitty in Whitechapel was not to be endured. You won't take Kitty to London, will you? he asked. Of course, said the Baker. Do you think I'm ashamed of her? She'll bang the old crowd. But she won't be happy, Baker, said Smith. If you want to do her a good turn, you'll buy a big cattle station when we land the rhino. Do you think so? asked the baker i'm sure of it it's not a bad notion said the baker and i'll have a real swell governess from hingland to teach her the tricks and are you going on smith smith nodded i'm not going to do any more mining old man i'll float a company or get a syndicate together to come out at once and take up the mind and baker you keep your mouth shut if we come across anyone pitch them the beastliest yarns about the country, and don't let Kitty give us away. I see, said the baker, and they turned in for the
Starting point is 03:54:07 night. They walked next day along the riverbank without much difficulty, for the country was fairly free of scrub. They camped at noon and made a dinner of smoke, for Kitty could not find them anything but a few grubs, which they were not yet hungry enough to eat. They were hungry enough, however, to lose some of their spirits. It was all very well to talk about London, as if they were out of their troubles. But were they out? They did not know in the least where they were. They might yet be a thousand miles from the mouth of the river. They might be eaten by black fellows any day. And if they were in no immediate danger of thirst, yet hunger fairly walked with them cheek by jowl. No, the end was yet unknown. But as Smith lay on his back, a little apart from the others,
Starting point is 03:54:58 it seemed to him once or twice that he heard a curious noise in the far distance. It was so faint that he could not be sure, and he did not draw the baker's attention to it. Sufficient for the day was the hunger and trouble of it. Still, he did hear something at intervals, and it made him uneasy. Was it like the cry of some distant and strange bird? Or what was it like? It might be some blackfellow's call. He got uneasy. And rising, walked to the river's bank, passing the baker and kitty, who were both asleep in the shade of some tie-tree scrub, which came out on their flat. He laid down where he could get a view of the stream, and hearing nothing, began dreaming about England and the troubles that had sent him to the devil. He had been very weak. He wondered if any
Starting point is 03:55:51 woman was worth it all. He decided that the carry of his dreams was worth it and fell asleep. He woke half an hour later with a strange sound yet ringing in his ears, and as he awoke, he looked across the river and saw a party of black fellows running as if for their lives. They were not coming their way, and in any case the river was between them. So he lay still and watched. As the aboriginals ran and disappeared in the thicker bush, he heard a peculiar and strange throbbing. What could it be? He turned to call the baker, but as he turned his head there was a tremendous whistling scream, which echoed through the bush and woke the others for him. They came running. What is it? said the baker, as he said the baker, as
Starting point is 03:56:42 Kitty clung to him, and Smith tried to speak but could not. He pointed down the river. A steamer was coming round the point. This was then their deliverance and the very seal upon his luck. What is it? cried Kitty. Can you kill it, Baker? But he took her in his arms and hugged her till she cried out. It's all right, Kitty, he said. It's a white man's fire canoe. Don't be scared. And pulling out his revolver, he fired it into the air, dancing like a madman. In 20 minutes, Smith, the baker, and Mrs. Mondabille were on an exploration steamer, which had come from King's Sound and had tried their river. They were received as if they had risen from the dead,
Starting point is 03:57:30 for an account of their probable loss had been published in all the colonial papers. Smith found he knew the engineer, and in five months, minutes they were seated in the stuffy little cabin drinking bottled beer. Kitty, who was the admiration of the whole crew, refused it in terror, but she was glad to eat what they gave her. "'Where did you pick her up?' asked the captain. "'It's a long story,' said Smith, and he gave them a rough outline of their adventures. "'And no other luck?' he asked. "'No,' said Smith, "'and there's no need to go any further. It's not nigh. navigable for more than 30 miles now. He told them the story of the river sink.
Starting point is 03:58:16 Then the gentleman who was the scientific head of the small party tried to interrogate Kitty. She shook her head and referred him to the baker, who spun him a yarn that got into print and was universally and most rightfully disbelieved, for the baker considered that the real yarn was Smith's, and that Smith's injunction to keep the gold dark was a sort of general order to mislead everyone in every possible way. The expedition returned to the sound in about a fortnight, and Smith raised enough money to take them south and to carry him to England on his errand of finance. But before he went, he saw Kitty dressed in the garments usually affected by the women of the tribe, to which her husband belonged. For the baker considered it his duty to marry her,
Starting point is 03:59:09 and he did so, in spite of Kitty's violent remonstrances. The ceremony, which was witnessed by a larger crowd than had ever gathered together on a similar occasion in the whole history of Western Australia, affected her nerves worse than the desert of pits, and to this day she cannot understand why it was necessary, or what good it did her or those who saw it? Among the crowd were Tom, the water carrier, and Hicks. It is possible that Smith's, or rather Archibald Gore's wife, may have explained the meaning of the ceremony to her. For two months after Smith left for England, the baker received a cable from him. Syndicate formed, I'm coming out with wife, sailing today. Smith's coming out, Kitty, said the Baker when he received it.
Starting point is 04:00:03 I'm glad, cried Kitty. He's got a wife, too, said the Baker. I suppose it's bound to happen to a man if he only lives long enough. Yes, said Kitty. And will she like me? The Baker looked at her indignantly. If she don't, she ought to come through what we went through, old girl, and have you alongside to show her what's what.
Starting point is 04:00:28 for the baker was firmly convinced that Mrs. Mondaville, in spite of some eccentricities, was absolutely the best woman in the world, and what she did not know about civilization was compensated for by what she knew of the bush. When he got that governess out, he had great hopes of his wife's taking a prominent position in society. End of Chapter 19. End of the adventure of the broad arrow. Australian romance by Morley Roberts.

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