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<h1> A LITTLE BUSH MAID </h1>
<h2> By Mary Grant Bruce </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I. BILLABONG </h2>
<p>Norah's home was on a big station in the north of Victoria—so large
that you could almost, in her own phrase, "ride all day and never see any
one you didn't want to see"; which was a great advantage in Norah's eyes.
Not that Billabong Station ever seemed to the little girl a place that you
needed to praise in any way. It occupied so very modest a position as the
loveliest part of the world!</p>
<p>The homestead was built on a gentle rise that sloped gradually away on
every side; in front to the wide plain, dotted with huge gum trees and
great grey box groves, and at the back, after you had passed through the
well-kept vegetable garden and orchard, to a long lagoon, bordered with
trees and fringed with tall bulrushes and waving reeds.</p>
<p>The house itself was old and quaint and rambling, part of the old wattle
and dab walls yet remaining in some of the outhouses, as well as the grey
shingle roof. There was a more modern part, for the house had been added
to from time to time by different owners, though no additions had been
made since Norah's father brought home his young wife, fifteen years
before this story opens. Then he had built a large new wing with wide and
lofty rooms, and round all had put a very broad, tiled verandah. The
creepers had had time to twine round the massive posts in those fifteen
years, and some even lay in great masses on the verandah roof; tecoma,
pink and salmon-coloured; purple bougainvillea, and the snowy mandevillea
clusters. Hard-headed people said this was not good for the building—but
Norah's mother had planted them, and because she had loved them they were
never touched.</p>
<p>There was a huge front garden, not at all a proper kind of garden, but a
great stretch of smooth buffalo grass, dotted with all kinds of trees,
amongst which flower beds cropped up in most unexpected and unlikely
places, just as if some giant had flung them out on the grass like a
handful of pebbles that scattered as they flew. They were always trim and
tidy, and the gardener, Hogg, was terribly strict, and woe betide the
author of any small footmarks that he found on one of the freshly raked
surfaces. Nothing annoyed him more than the odd bulbs that used to come up
in the midst of his precious buffalo grass; impertinent crocuses and
daffodils and hyacinths, that certainly had no right there. "Blest if I
know how they ever gets there!" Hogg would say, scratching his head.
Whereat Norah was wont to retire behind a pyramid tree for purposes of
mirth.</p>
<p>Hogg's sworn foe was Lee Wing, the Chinese gardener, who reigned supreme
in the orchard and the kingdom of vegetables—not quite the same
thing as the vegetable kingdom, by the way! Lee Wing was very fat, his
broad, yellow face generally wearing a cheerful grin—unless he
happened to catch sight of Hogg. His long pigtail was always concealed
under his flapping straw hat. Once Jim, who was Norah's big brother, had
found him asleep in his hut with the pigtail drooping over the edge of the
bunk. Jim thought the opportunity too good to lose and, with such deftness
that the Celestial never stirred, he tied the end of the pigtail to the
back of a chair—with rather startling results when Lee Wing awoke
with a sudden sense of being late, and made a spring from the bunk. The
chair of course followed him, and the loud yell of fear and pain raised by
the victim brought half the homestead to the scene of the catastrophe. Jim
was the only one who did not wait for developments. He found business at
the lagoon.</p>
<p>The queerest part of it was that Lee Wing firmly believed Hogg to be the
author of his woe. Nothing moved him from this view, not even when Jim,
finding how matters stood, owned up like a man. "You allee same goo' boy,"
said the pigtailed one, proffering him a succulent raw turnip. "Me know.
You tellee fine large crammee. Hogg, he tellee crammee, too. So dly up!"
And Jim, finding expostulation useless, "dried up" accordingly and ate the
turnip, which was better than the leek.</p>
<p>To the right of the homestead at Billabong a clump of box trees sheltered
the stables that were the unspoken pride of Mr. Linton's heart.</p>
<p>Before his time the stables had been a conglomerate mass, bark-roofed,
slab-sided, falling to decay; added to as each successive owner had
thought fit, with a final mixture of old and new that was neither
convenient nor beautiful. Mr. Linton had apologised to his horses during
his first week of occupancy and, in the second, turning them out to grass
with less apology, had pulled down the rickety old sheds, replacing them
with a compact and handsome building of red brick, with room for half a
dozen buggies, men's quarters, harness and feed rooms, many loose boxes
and a loft where a ball could have been held—and where, indeed, many
a one was held, when all the young farmers and stockmen and shearers from
far and near brought each his lass and tripped it from early night to
early dawn, to the strains of old Andy Ferguson's fiddle and young Dave
Boone's concertina. Norah had been allowed to look on at one or two of
these gatherings. She thought them the height of human bliss, and was only
sorry that sheer inability to dance prevented her from "taking the floor"
with Mick Shanahan, the horse breaker, who had paid her the compliment of
asking her first. It was a great compliment, too, Norah felt, seeing what
a man of agility and splendid accomplishments was Mick—and that she
was only nine at the time.</p>
<p>There was one loose box which was Norah's very own property, and without
her permission no horse was ever put in it except its rightful occupant—Bobs,
whose name was proudly displayed over the door in Jim's best carving.</p>
<p>Bobs had always belonged to Norah, He had been given to her as a foal,
when Norah used to ride a round little black sheltie, as easy to fall off
as to mount. He was a beauty even then, Norah thought; and her father had
looked approvingly at the long-legged baby, with his fine, well-bred head.
"You will have something worth riding when that fellow is fit to break in,
my girlie," he had said, and his prophecy had been amply fulfilled. Mick
Shanahan said he'd never put a leg over a finer pony. Norah knew there
never had been a finer anywhere. He was a big pony, very dark bay in
colour, and "as handsome as paint," and with the kindest disposition; full
of life and "go," but without the smallest particle of vice. It was an
even question which loved the other best, Bobs or Norah. No one ever rode
him except his little mistress. The pair were hard to beat—so the
men said.</p>
<p>To Norah the stables were the heart of Billabong. The house was all very
well—of course she loved it; and she loved her own little room, with
its red carpet and dainty white furniture, and the two long windows that
looked out over the green plain. That was all right; so were the garden
and the big orchard, especially in summer time! The only part that was not
"all right" was the drawing-room—an apartment of gloomy, seldom-used
splendour that Norah hated with her whole heart.</p>
<p>But the stables were an abiding refuge. She was never dull there. Apart
from the never-failing welcome in Bobs' loose box, there was the dim,
fragrant loft, where the sunbeams only managed to send dusty rays of light
across the gloom. Here Norah used to lie on the sweet hay and think
tremendous thoughts; here also she laid deep plans for catching rats—and
caught scores in traps of her own devising. Norah hated rats, but nothing
could induce her to wage war against the mice. "Poor little chaps!" she
said; "they're so little—and—and soft!" And she was quite
saddened if by chance she found a stray mouse in any of her
shrewdly-designed traps for the benefit of the larger game which infested
the stables and had even the hardihood to annoy Bobs!</p>
<p>Norah had never known her mother. She was only a tiny baby when that gay
little mother died—a sudden, terrible blow, that changed her father
in a night from a young man to an old one. It was nearly twelve years ago,
now, but no one ever dared to speak to David Linton of his wife. Sometimes
Norah used to ask Jim about mother—for Jim was fifteen, and could
remember just a little; but his memories were so vague and misty that his
information was unsatisfactory. And, after all, Norah did not trouble
much. She had always been so happy that she could not imagine that to have
had a mother would have made any particular difference to her happiness.
You see, she did not know.</p>
<p>She had grown just as the bush wild flowers grow—hardy, unchecked,
almost untended; for, though old nurse had always been there, her
nurseling had gone her own way from the time she could toddle. She was
everybody's pet and plaything; the only being who had power to make her
stern, silent father smile—almost the only one who ever saw the
softer side of his character. He was fond and proud of Jim—glad that
the boy was growing up straight and strong and manly, able to make his way
in the world. But Norah was his heart's desire.</p>
<p>Of course she was spoilt—if spoiling consists in rarely checking an
impulse. All her life Norah had done pretty well whatever she wanted—which
meant that she had lived out of doors, followed in Jim's footsteps
wherever practicable (and in a good many ways most people would have
thought distinctly impracticable), and spent about two-thirds of her
waking time on horseback. But the spoiling was not of a very harmful kind.
Her chosen pursuits brought her under the unspoken discipline of the work
of the station, wherein ordinary instinct taught her to do as others did,
and conform to their ways. She had all the dread of being thought "silly"
that marks the girl who imitates boyish ways. Jim's rare growl, "Have a
little sense!" went farther home than a whole volume of admonitions of a
more ordinarily genuine feminine type.</p>
<p>She had no little girl friends, for none was nearer than the nearest
township—Cunjee, seventeen miles away. Moreover, little girls bored
Norah frightfully. They seemed a species quite distinct from herself. They
prattled of dolls; they loved to skip, to dress up and "play ladies"; and
when Norah spoke of the superior joys of cutting out cattle or coursing
hares over the Long Plain, they stared at her with blank lack of
understanding. With boys she got on much better. Jim and she were
tremendous chums, and she had moped sadly when he went to Melbourne to
school. Holidays then became the shining events of the year, and the boys
whom Jim brought home with him, at first prone to look down on the small
girl with lofty condescension, generally ended by voting her "no end of a
jolly kid," and according her the respect due to a person who could teach
them more of bush life than they had dreamed of.</p>
<p>But Norah's principal mate was her father. Day after day they were
together, riding over the run, working the cattle, walking through the
thick scrub of the backwater, driving young, half-broken horses in the
high dog-cart to Cunjee—they were rarely apart. David Linton seldom
made a plan that did not naturally include Norah. She was a wise little
companion, too; ready enough to chatter like a magpie if her father were
in the mood, but quick to note if he were not, and then quite content to
be silently beside him, perhaps for hours. They understood each other
perfectly. Norah never could make out the people who pitied her for having
no friends of her own age. How could she possibly be bothered with
children, she reflected, when she had Daddy?</p>
<p>As for Norah's education, that was of the kind best defined as a minus
quantity.</p>
<p>"I won't have her bothered with books too early," Mr. Linton had said when
nurse hinted, on Norah's eight birthday, that it was time she began the
rudiments of learning. "Time enough yet—we don't want to make a
bookworm of her!"</p>
<p>Whereat nurse smiled demurely, knowing that that was the last thing to be
afraid of in connexion with her child. But she worried in her responsible
old soul all the same; and when a wet day or the occasional absence of Mr.
Linton left Norah without occupation, she induced her to begin a few
elementary lessons. The child was quick enough, and soon learned to read
fairly well and to write laboriously; but there nurse's teaching from
books ended.</p>
<p>Of other and practical teaching, however, she had a greater store. Mr.
Linton had a strong leaning towards the old-fashioned virtues, and it was
at a word from him that Norah had gone to the kitchen and asked Mrs. Brown
to teach her to cook. Mrs. Brown—fat, good-natured and adoring—was
all acquiescence, and by the time Norah was eleven she knew more of
cooking and general housekeeping than many girls grown up and fancying
themselves ready to undertake houses of their own. Moreover, she could sew
rather well, though she frankly detested the accomplishment. The one form
of work she cared for was knitting, and it was her boast that her father
wore only the socks she manufactured for him.</p>
<p>Norah's one gentle passion was music. Never taught, she inherited from her
mother a natural instinct and an absolutely true ear, and before she was
seven she could strum on the old piano in a way very satisfying to herself
and awe-inspiring to the admiring nurse. Her talent increased yearly, and
at ten she could play anything she heard—from ear, for she had never
been taught a note of music. It was, indeed, her growing capabilities in
this respect that forced upon her father the need for proper tuition for
the child. However, a stopgap was found in the person of the book-keeper,
a young Englishman, who knew more of music than accounts. He readily
undertook Norah's instruction, and the lessons bore moderately good effect—the
moderation being due to a not unnatural disinclination on the pupil's part
to walk where she had been accustomed to run, and to a fixed loathing to
practice. As the latter necessary, if uninteresting, pursuit was left
entirely to her own discretion—for no one ever dreamed of ordering
Norah to the piano—it is small wonder if it suffered beside the
superior attractions of riding Bobs, rat trapping, "shinning up" trees,
fishing in the lagoon and generally disporting herself as a maiden may
whom conventional restrictions have never trammelled.</p>
<p>It follows that the music lessons, twice a week, were times of woe for Mr.
Groom, the teacher. He was an earnest young man, with a sincere desire for
his pupil's improvement, and it was certainly disheartening to find on
Friday that the words of Tuesday had apparently gone in at one ear and out
at the other simultaneously. Sometimes he would remonstrate.</p>
<p>"You haven't got on with that piece a bit!"</p>
<p>"What's the good?" the pupil would remark, twisting round on the music
stool; "I can play nearly all of it from ear!"</p>
<p>"That's not the same"—severely—"that's only frivolling. I'm
not here to teach you to strum."</p>
<p>"No" Norah would agree abstractedly. "Mr. Groom, you know that poley
bullock down in the far end paddock—"</p>
<p>"No, I don't," severely. "This is a music lesson, Norah; you're not after
cattle now!"</p>
<p>"Wish I were!" sighed the pupil. "Well, will you come out with the dogs
this afternoon?"</p>
<p>"Can't; I'm wanted in the office. Now, Norah—"</p>
<p>"But if I asked father to spare you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I'd like to right enough." Mr. Groom was young, and the temptress, if
younger, was skilled in wiles.</p>
<p>"But your father—"</p>
<p>"Oh, I can manage Dad. I'll go and see him now." She would be at the door
before her teacher perceived that his opportunity was vanishing.</p>
<p>"Norah, come back! If I'm to go out, you must play this first—and
get it right."</p>
<p>Mr. Groom could be firm on occasions. "Come along, you little shirker!"
and Norah would unwillingly return to the music stool, and worry
laboriously though a page of the hated Czerny.</p>
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