第30章
This she further protected by her father's handkerchief, which she helped herself to and finally stopped the blood with.
Jim kept looking at her small white hands all the time she was doing it.
Neither of us had ever seen such before -- the dainty skin, the pink nails, the glittering rings.
`There,' she said, `I don't think you ought to shear any more to-day;it might bring on inflammation.I'll send to know how it gets on to-morrow.'
`No, miss; my grateful thanks, miss,' said Jim, opening his eyes and looking as if he'd like to drop down on his knees and pray to her.
`I shall never forget your goodness, Miss Falkland, if I live till I'm a hundred.' Then Jim bent his head a bit -- I don't suppose he ever made a bow in his life before -- and then drew himself up as straight as a soldier, and Miss Falkland made a kind of bow and smile to us all and passed out.
Jim did shear all the same that afternoon, though the tally wasn't any great things.`I can't go and lie down in a bunk in the men's hut,' he said;`I must chance it,' and he did.Next day it was worse and very painful, but Jim stuck to the shears, though he used to turn white with the pain at times, and I thought he'd faint.However, it gradually got better, and, except a scar, Jim's hand was as good as ever.
Jim sent back Mr.Falkland's handkerchief after getting the cook to wash it and iron it out with a bit of a broken axletree;but the strips of white handkerchief -- one had C.F.in the corner --he put away in his swag, and made some foolish excuse when I laughed at him about it.
She sent down a boy from the house next day to ask how Jim's hand was, and the day after that, but she never came to the shed any more.
So we didn't see her again.
So it was this young lady that we saw coming tearing down the back road, as they called it, that led over the Pretty Plain.A good way behind we saw Mr.Falkland, but he had as much chance of coming up with her as a cattle dog of catching a `brush flyer'.
The stable boy, Billy Donnellan, had told us (of course, like all those sort of youngsters, he was fond of getting among the men and listening to them talk) all about Miss Falkland's new mare.
She was a great beauty and thoroughbred.The stud groom had bought her out of a travelling mob from New England when she was dog-poor and hardly able to drag herself along.Everybody thought she was going to be the best lady's horse in the district; but though she was as quiet as a lamb at first she had begun to show a nasty temper lately, and to get very touchy.`I don't care about chestnuts myself,'
says Master Billy, smoking a short pipe as if he was thirty;`they've a deal of temper, and she's got too much white in her eye for my money.I'm afeard she'll do some mischief afore we've done with her;and Miss Falkland's that game as she won't have nothing done to her.
I'd ride the tail off her but what I'd bring her to, if I had my way.'
So this was the brute that had got away with Miss Falkland, the day we were coming back from Bundah.Some horses, and a good many men and women, are all pretty right as long as they're well kept under and starved a bit at odd times.
But give them an easy life and four feeds of corn a day, and they're troublesome brutes, and mischievous too.
It seems this mare came of a strain that had turned out more devils and killed more grooms and breakers than any other in the country.