<h2 class="c4"><SPAN name="CHAPTER17" id="CHAPTER17">CHAPTER XVIII</SPAN></h2>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">TOO LATE</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It was doubtless the camp-fire picture which filled the
lone Wolfhound's mind with thoughts of the Master; but, while there is no
suggestion of telepathy about it, it was none the less an odd coincidence that,
at the very hour of Finn's approach to a camp-fire in the bush, a dozen miles
and more to the south-east of Tinnaburra, the Master should have been
approaching the big house by the harbour outside the capital city, three
hundred miles away, with a mind full of Finn. Yet so it was. And at that moment
the Master's reminiscent thoughts of the Wolfhound were to the full as
affectionate as were Finn's thoughts of him.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The Mistress of the Kennels had more than justified the
doctor's prophecies. Less than a month of life in the mountains had given her
back her old energy and strength. The third week there had given her also the
acquaintance, soon to ripen into friendship, of a certain squatter's wife, who
was spending a few weeks in the hills with her husband and three children.
Before the acquaintance was a week old the Mistress of the Kennels had been
pressingly invited to make her home with the squatter and his wife at their
station, for a time at all events, in order that she might supervise the
education of the three youngsters, and, also, give the squatter's wife the
benefit of some of her experience in the rearing of dogs. The Master could have
found a minor opening on the same station, but decided that he could not afford
to take up a life which offered no particular prospect of advancement, and was
confirmed in his decision by an offer that was made to him at this time to
join, in a working capacity, a small prospecting party which was setting out
for a tract of back-block country said to be extremely rich in gold, copper,
and silver. And so, for a time, the Master and the Mistress had parted
company.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Now, while there are many prospectors in Australia who,
during a lifetime of adventurous toil, have never made much more than a
labourer's wage, there are others who have made and lost many fortunes, to
whose credit may be placed a score or more of rich discoveries, and much wealth
enjoyed by other people. The leader of the Master's party was of this latter
class, and less than three weeks after the outsetting of this particular
expedition, the party had pegged out a considerable number of rich claims. Some
of these claims had been of a kind which admitted of good deal of highly
profitable alluvial working but the majority called for the use of machinery
and the outlay of capital. Accordingly, the party gathered to themselves such
surface gold as was obtainable--the Master's share came to £260--and then,
laden with samples of ore, returned townward, with a view to selling their
claims to mining capitalists, before starting out upon a second and more
protracted journey. The fascination of the prospector's calling had gripped the
Master strongly, and he gladly agreed to remain a member of the party. But, in
the meantime, having reached the city, he had determined to pay a visit to Mr.
Sandbrook's house, first, that he might have the satisfaction of seeing Finn
again and, secondly, in order that he might try the effect of a substantial
money offer in the matter of regaining possession of his Wolfhound. And so now
while Finn was thinking of him, in the heart of the wildest part of the
Tinnaburra country, three hundred miles away, the Master strode up the hill
overlooking the city and the harbour, strongly hopeful that he might soon have
the great hound he had bred trotting by his side.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Mr. and Mrs. Sandbrook were both away from home, but one
of the daughters of the house explained to the Master how, after "sulking
desperately for two whole days," the Wolfhound had basely deserted his
luxurious new home, and never been heard of since. She showed the Master an
advertisement offering a reward of five-and-twenty pounds for Finn's recovery,
and was at some pains to make clear the indubitable fact that her father had
paid very dearly indeed for the doubtful privilege of possessing for two days a
Wolfhound who had "treated everybody as if they were dirt under his feet." The
Master expressed sympathy in sentences which were meant to be loyal excuses for
Finn; and then he turned and walked back to the city, heavy at heart for the
loss of the great Wolfhound whom he had loved, and feeling vaguely that the
money he had made was not such a very precious thing after all. He placed the
greater part of it at the disposal of the Mistress of the Kennels, and went
back to his fellow-prospectors.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p></p>
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