to pay heavily for his obstinacy. But, on the
other hand, the lessons which he learned he learned
thoroughly. And he was kept right in his trade
by his own indefatigable industry. That trade
was the growth of wool. He was a breeder of sheep
on a Queensland sheep-run, and his flocks ran far
afield over a vast territory of which he was the only
lord. His house was near the river Mary, and
beyond the river his domain did not extend; but around
him on his own side of the river he could ride for
ten miles in each direction without getting off his
own pastures. He was master, as far as his mastership
went, of 120,000 acres—almost an English
county—and it was the pride of his heart
to put his foot off his own territory as seldom as
possible. He sent his wool annually down to Brisbane,
and received his stores, tea and sugar, flour and
brandy, boots, clothes, tobacco,
etc., once or
twice a year from thence. But the traffic did
not require his own presence at the city. So
self-contained was the working of the establishment
that he was never called away by his business, unless
he went to see some lot of highly bred sheep which
he might feel disposed to buy; and as for pleasure,
it had come to be altogether beyond the purpose of
his life to go in quest of that. When the work
of the day was over, he would lie at his length upon
rugs in the veranda, with a pipe in his mouth, while
his wife sat over him reading a play of Shakspeare
or the last novel that had come to them from England.
He had married a fair girl, the orphan daughter of
a bankrupt squatter whom be had met in Sydney, and
had brought her and her sister into the Queensland
bush with him. His wife idolized him. His
sister-in-law, Kate Daly, loved him dearly—as
she had cause to do, for he had proved himself to
be a very brother to her; but she feared him also
somewhat. The people about the Mary said that
she was fairer and sweeter to look at even than the
elder sister. Mrs. Heathcote was the taller of
the two, and the larger-featured. She certainly
was the higher in intellect, and the fittest to be
the mistress of such an establishment as that at Gangoil.
When he had washed his hands and face, and had swallowed
the very copious but weak allowance of brandy-and-water
which his wife mixed for him, he took the eldest boy
on his lap and fondled him. “By George!”
he said, “old fellow, you sha’n’t
be a squatter.”
“Why not, Harry?” asked his wife.
“Because I don’t want him to break his
heart every day of his life.”
“Are you always breaking yours? I thought
your heart was pretty well hardened now.”
“When a man talks of his heart, you and Kate
are thinking of loves and doves, of course.”
“I wasn’t thinking of loves and doves,
Harry,” said Kate.” I was thinking
how very hot it must have been to-day. We could
only bear it in the veranda by keeping the blinds
always wet. I don’t wonder that you were
troubled.”