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<h2> CHAPTER II. PETS AND PLAYTHINGS </h2>
<p>After her father, Norah's chief companions were her pets.</p>
<p>These were a numerous and varied band, and required no small amount of
attention. Bobs, of course, came first—no other animal could
possibly approach him in favour. But after Bobs came a long procession,
beginning with Tait, the collie, and ending with the last brood of fluffy
Orpington chicks, or perhaps the newest thing in disabled birds, picked
up, fluttering and helpless, in the yard or orchard. There was room in
Norah's heart for them all.</p>
<p>Tait was a beauty—a rough-haired collie, with a splendid head, and
big, faithful brown eyes, that spoke more eloquently than many persons'
tongues. He was, like most of the breed, ready to be friends with any one;
but his little mistress was dearest of all, and he worshipped her with
abject devotion. Norah never went anywhere without him; Tait saw to that.
He seemed always on the watch for her coming, and she was never more than
a few yards from the house before the big dog was silently brushing the
grass by her side. His greatest joy was to follow her on long rides into
the bush, putting up an occasional hare and scurrying after it in the
futile way of collies, barking at the swallows overhead, and keeping pace
with Bobs' long, easy canter.</p>
<p>Puck used to come on these excursions too. He was the only being for whom
it was suspected that Tait felt a mild dislike—an impudent Irish
terrier, full of fun and mischief, yet with a somewhat unfriendly and
suspicious temperament that made him, perhaps, a better guardian for Norah
than the benevolently disposed Tait. Puck had a nasty, inquiring mind—an
unpleasant way of sniffing round the legs of tramps that generally induced
those gentry to find the top rail of a fence a more calm and more
desirable spot than the level of the ground. Indian hawkers feared him and
hated him in equal measure. He could bite, and occasionally did bite, his
victims being always selected with judgment and discretion, generally
vagrants emboldened to insolence by seeing no men about the kitchen when
all hands were out mustering or busy on the run. When Puck bit, it was
with no uncertain tooth. He was suspected of a desire to taste the blood
of every one who went near Norah, though his cannibalistic propensities
were curbed by stern discipline.</p>
<p>Only once had he had anything like a free hand—or a free tooth.</p>
<p>Norah was out riding, a good way from the homestead, when a particularly
unpleasant-looking fellow accosted her, and asked for money. Norah stared.</p>
<p>"I haven't got any," she said. "Anyhow, father doesn't let us give away
money to travellers—only tucker."</p>
<p>"Oh, doesn't he?" the fellow said unpleasantly. "Well, I want money, not
grub." He laid a compelling hand on Bobs' bridle as Norah tried to pass
him. "Come," he said—"that bracelet'll do!"</p>
<p>It was a pretty little gold watch set in a leather bangle—father's
birthday present, only a few weeks old. Norah simply laughed—she
scarcely comprehended so amazing a thing as that this man should really
intend to rob her.</p>
<p>"Get out of my way," she said—"you can't have that!"</p>
<p>"Can't I!" He caught her wrist. "Give it quietly now, or I'll—"</p>
<p>The sentence was not completed. A yellow streak hurled itself though the
air, as Puck, who had been investigating a tussock for lizards, awoke to
the situation. Something like a vice gripped the swagman by the leg, and
he dropped Norah's wrist and bridle and roared like any bull. The
"something" hung on fiercely, silently, and the victim hopped and raved
and begged for mercy.</p>
<p>Norah had ridden a little way on. She called softly to Puck.</p>
<p>"Here, boy!"</p>
<p>Puck did not relinquish his grip. He looked pleadingly at his little
mistress across the swagman's trouser-leg. Norah struck her saddle sharply
with her whip.</p>
<p>"Here, sir!—drop it!"</p>
<p>Puck dropped it reluctantly, and came across to Bobs, his head hanging.
The swagman sat down on the ground and nursed his leg.</p>
<p>"That served you right," Norah said, with judicial severity. "You hadn't
any business to grab my watch. Now, if you'll go up to the house they'll
give you some tucker and a rag for your leg!"</p>
<p>She rode off, whistling to Puck. The swagman gaped and muttered various
remarks. He did not call at the house.</p>
<p>Norah was supposed to manage the fowls, but her management was almost
entirely ornamental, and it is to be feared that the poultry yard would
have fared but poorly had it depended upon her alone. All the fowls were
hers. She said so, and no one contradicted her. Still, whenever one was
wanted for the table, it was ruthlessly slain. And it was black Billy who
fed them night and morning, and Mrs. Brown who gathered the eggs, and saw
that the houses were safely shut against the foxes every evening. Norah's
chief part in the management lay in looking after the setting hens. At
first she firmly checked the broody instincts by shutting them callously
under boxes despite pecks and loud protests. Later, when their mood
refused to change, she loved to prepare them soft nests in boxes, and to
imprison them there until they took kindly to their seclusion. Then it was
hard work to wait three weeks until the first fluffy heads peeped out from
the angry mother's wing, after which Norah was a blissfully adoring
caretaker until the downy balls began to get ragged, as the first wing and
tail feathers showed. Then the chicks became uninteresting, and were
handed over to Black Billy.</p>
<p>Besides her own pets there were Jim's.</p>
<p>"Mind, they're in your care," Jim had said sternly, on the evening before
his departure for school. They were making a tour of the place—Jim
outwardly very cheerful and unconcerned; Norah plunged in woe. She did not
attempt to conceal it. She had taken Jim's arm, and it was sufficient
proof of his state of mind that he did not shake it off. Indeed, the
indications were that he was glad of the loving little hand tucked into
the bend of his arm.</p>
<p>"Yes, Jim; I'll look after them."</p>
<p>"I don't want you to bother feeding them yourself," Jim said
magnanimously; "that 'ud be rather too much of a contract for a kid,
wouldn't it? Only keep an eye on 'em, and round up Billy if he doesn't do
his work. He's a terror if he shirks, and unless you watch him like a cat
he'll never change the water in the tins every morning. Lots of times I've
had to do it myself!"</p>
<p>"I'd do it myself sooner'n let them go without, Jim, dear," said the small
voice, with a suspicion of a choke.</p>
<p>"Don't you do it," said Jim; "slang Billy. What's he here for, I'd like to
know! I only want you to go round 'em every day, and see that they're all
right."</p>
<p>So daily Norah used to make her pilgrimage round Jim's pets. There were
the guinea pigs—a rapidly increasing band, in an enclosure specially
built for them by Jim—a light frame, netted carefully everywhere,
and so constructed that it could be moved from place to place, giving them
a fresh grass run continually. Then there were two young wallabies and a
little brush kangaroo, which lived in a little paddock all their own, and
were as tame as kittens. Norah loved this trio especially, and always had
a game with them on her daily visit. There was a shy gentleman which Norah
called a turloise, because she never could remember if he were a turtle or
a tortoise. He lived in a small enclosure, with a tiny water hole, and his
disposition was extremely retiring. In private Norah did not feel drawn to
this member of her charge, but she paid him double attention, from an
inward feeling of guilt, and because Jim set a high value upon him.</p>
<p>"He's such a wise old chap," Jim would say; "nobody knows what he's
thinking of!"</p>
<p>In her heart of hearts Norah did not believe that mattered very much.</p>
<p>But when the stables had been visited and Bobs and Sirdar (Jim's neglected
pony) interviewed; when Tait and Puck had had their breakfast bones; when
wallabies and kangaroo had been inspected (with a critical eye to their
water tins), and the turtle had impassively received a praiseworthy
attempt to draw him out; when the chicks had all been fed, and the guinea
pigs (unlike the leopard) had changed their spot for the day—there
still remained the birds.</p>
<p>The birds were a colony in themselves. There was a big aviary, large
enough for little trees and big shrubs to grow in, where a happy family
lived whose members included several kinds of honey-eaters, Queensland
finches, blackbirds and a dozen other tiny shy things which flitted
quickly from bush to bush all day. They knew Norah and, when she entered
their home, would flutter down and perch on her head and shoulders, and
look inquisitively for the flowers she always brought them. Sometimes
Norah would wear some artificial flowers, by way of a joke. It was funny
to see the little honey-eaters thrusting in their long beaks again and
again in search of the sweet drops they had learned to expect in flowers,
and funnier still to watch the air of disgust with which they would give
up the attempt.</p>
<p>There were doves everywhere—not in cages, for they never tried to
escape. Their soft "coo" murmured drowsily all around. There were pigeons,
too, in a most elaborate pigeon cote—another effort of Jim's
carpentering skill. These were as tame as the smaller birds, and on
Norah's appearance would swoop down upon her in a cloud. They had done so
once when she was mounted on Bobs, to the pony's very great alarm and
disgust. He took to his heels promptly. "I don't think he stopped for two
miles!" Norah said. Since then, however, Bobs had grown used to the
pigeons fluttering and circling round him. It was a pretty sight to watch
them all together, child and pony half hidden beneath their load of birds.</p>
<p>The canaries had a cage to themselves—a very smart one, with every
device for making canary life endurable in captivity. Certainly Norah's
birds seemed happy enough, and the sweet songs of the canaries were
delightful. I think they were Norah's favourites amongst her feathered
flock.</p>
<p>Finally there were two talkative members—Fudge the parrot, and old
Caesar, a very fine white cockatoo. Fudge had been caught young, and his
education had been of a liberal order. An apt pupil, he had picked up
various items of knowledge, and had blended them into a whole that was
scarcely harmonious. Bits of slang learned from Jim and the stockmen were
mingled with fragments of hymns warbled by Mrs. Brown and sharp curt
orders delivered to dogs. A French swag-man, who had hurt his foot and
been obliged to camp for a few days at the homestead, supplied Fudge with
several Parisian remarks that were very effective. Every member of the
household had tried to teach him to whistle some special tune.
Unfortunately, the lessons had been delivered at the same time, and the
result was the most amazing jumble of melody, which Fudge delivered with
an air of deepest satisfaction. As Jim said, "You never know if he's
whistling 'God Save the King,' 'Pop Goes the Weasel,' or 'The Wearin' o'
the Green,' but it doesn't make any difference to Fudge's enjoyment!"</p>
<p>Caesar was a giant among cockatoos, and had a full sense of his own
importance.</p>
<p>He had been shot when very young, some stray pellets having found their
way into his wing. Norah had found him fluttering helplessly along the
ground, and had picked him up, sustaining a severe peck in doing so. It
was, however, the first and last peck he ever gave Norah. From that moment
he seemed to recognize her as a friend, and to adopt her as an intimate—marks
of esteem he accorded to very few others. Norah had handed him to Jim on
arriving at the house, a change which the bird resented by a savage attack
on Jim's thumb. Jim was no hero—at the age of eleven, he dropped the
cockatoo like a hot coal. "Great Caesar!" he exclaimed, sucking his thumb,
and Caesar he was christened in that moment.</p>
<p>After his recovery, which was a long and tedious process, Caesar showed no
inclination to leave the homestead. He used to strut about the back yard,
and frequent the kitchen door, very much after the fashion of a house-dog.
He was, indeed, as valuable as a watch-dog, for the appearance of any
stranger was the signal for a volley of shrieks and chatter, sufficient to
alarm any household. However, Caesar's liberty had to be restricted, for
he became somewhat of a menace to all he did not choose to care for, and
his attacks on the ankles were no joking matter.</p>
<p>To the dogs he was a constant terror. He hated all alike, and would "go
for" big Tait as readily as for cheerful little Puck, and not a dog on the
place would face him. So at last a stand and a chain were bought for
Caesar, and on his perch he lived in solitary splendour, while his enemies
took good care to keep beyond his reach. Norah he always loved, and those
whom he had managed to bite—their number was large—used to
experience thrills on seeing the little girl hold him close to her face
while he rubbed his beak up and down her cheek. He tolerated black Billy,
who fed him, and was respectful to Mr. Linton; but he worshipped Mrs.
Brown, the cook, and her appearance at the kitchen door, which he could
see from his stand, caused an instant outbreak of cheers and chatter,
varied by touching appeals to "scratch Cocky." His chief foe was Mrs.
Brown's big yellow cat, who not only dared to share the adored one's
affections, but was openly aggressive at times, and loved to steal the
cockatoo's food.</p>
<p>Caesar, on his perch, apparently wrapped in dreamless slumber, would in
reality be watching the stealthy movements of Tim, the cat, who would come
scouting through the grass towards the tin of food. Just out of reach, Tim
would lie down and feign sleep as deep as Caesar's, though every muscle in
his body was tense with readiness for the sudden spring. So they would
remain, perhaps many minutes. Tim's patience never gave out. Sometimes
Caesar's would, and he would open his eyes and flap round on his perch,
shouting much bad bird language at the retreating Tim. But more often both
remained motionless until the cat sprang suddenly at the food tin. More
often than not he was too quick for Caesar, and would drag the tin beyond
reach of the chain before the bird could defend it, in which case the
wrath of the defeated was awful to behold. But sometimes Caesar managed to
anticipate the leap, and Tim did not readily forget those distressful
moments when the cockatoo had him by the fur with beak and claw. He would
escape, showing several patches where his coat had been torn, and remained
in a state of dejection for two or three days, during which battles were
discontinued. It took Caesar almost as long to recover from the wild state
of triumph into which his rare victories threw him.</p>
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