The Shadow of a Man. Hornung Ernest William
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"A man-hunt!"
And there were volumes of past boredom and of present zest in the sergeant's tone.
"That so?" said Rigden. "And who's the man?"
The sergeant glanced at the young lady. Rigden did the same. Their wishes with respect to her were only too obvious. Moya took the fiercer joy in disregarding them.
"I'd like to have a word with you in the store," said the sergeant.
"No, no!" said Rigden hastily. "Sergeant Harkness – Miss Bethune."
It was a cold little bow, despite this triumph.
"Miss Bethune will be interested," added Rigden grimly. "And she won't give anything away."
"Thank you," said Moya. And her tone made him stare.
Harkness touched his horse with the spurs, and rode up close to the verandah, on which Rigden himself now stood.
"Fact is," said he, "it oughtn't to get about among your men, or it's a guinea to a gooseberry they'll go harbouring him. But it's a joker who escaped from Darlinghurst a few days ago. And we've tracked him to your boundary – through your horse-paddock – to your home-paddock gate!"
Rigden glanced at Moya. Her eyes were on him. He knew it before he looked.
"Seen anything of him?" asked the sergeant inevitably.
"Not to my knowledge. What's he like?"
"Oldish. Stubby beard. Cropped head, of course. Grey as a coot."
"Height 5 ft. 11 in.," supplemented the trooper, reading from a paper; "'hair iron-grey, brown eyes, large thin nose, sallow complexion, very fierce-looking, slight build, but is a well-made man.'"
A dead silence followed; then Rigden spoke. Moya's eyes were still upon him, burning him, but he spoke without tremor, and with no more hesitation than was natural in the circumstances.
"No," he said, "I have seen no such man. No such man has been to me!"
"I was afraid of it," said Harkness. "Yet we tracked him to the boundary, every yard, and we got on his tracks again just now near the home-paddock gate. I bet he's camping somewhere within a couple of miles; we must have another look while it's light. Beastly lot of sand you have from the home-paddock gate right up to the house!"
"We're built upon a sandhill, you see," said Rigden, with a wry look into the heavy yellow yard: "one track's pretty much like another in here, eh, Billy?"
The black tracker shook a woolly pate.
"Too muchee damn allasame," said he. "Try again longa gate."
"Yes," said the sergeant, "and we'll bring him here for the night when we catch him. You could lend us your travellers' hut, I suppose?"
"Oh, yes."
"So long then, Mr. Rigden. Don't be surprised if you see us back to supper. I feel pretty warm."
And the sergeant used his spurs again, only to reign up suddenly and swing round in his saddle.
"Been about the place most of the afternoon?" he shouted.
"All the afternoon," replied Rigden; "between the store and this verandah."
"And you've had no travellers at all?"
"Not one."
"Well, never mind," cried the sergeant. "You shall have four for the night."
And the puggarees fluttered, and the stirrup irons jingled, out of sight and earshot, through the dark still pines, and so into a blood-red sunset.
III
INSULT
Rigden remained a minute at least (Moya knew it was five) gazing through the black trees into the red light beyond. That was so characteristic of him and his behaviour! Moya caught up the Australasian (at hand but untouched all this time) and pretended she could see to read. The rustle brought Rigden to the right about at last. Moya was deep in illegible advertisements. But the red light reached to her face.
Rigden came slowly to her side. She took no notice of him. His chair was as he had pushed it back an age ago; he drew it nearer than before, and sat down. Nor was this the end of his effrontery.
"Don't touch my hand, please!"
She would not even look at him. In a flash his face was slashed with lines, so deep you might have looked for them to fill with blood. There was plenty of blood beneath the skin. But he obeyed her promptly.
"I am sorry you were present just now," he remarked, as though nothing very tragical had happened. There was none the less an underlying note of tragedy which Moya entirely misconstrued.
"So am I," said she; and her voice nipped like a black frost.
"I wanted you to go, you know!" he reminded her.
"Do you really think it necessary to tell me that?"
All this time she was back in her now invisible advertisements. And her tone was becoming more and more worthy of a Bethune.
"I naturally didn't want you to hear me tell a lie," explained Rigden, with inconsistent honesty.
"On the contrary, I'm very glad to have heard it," rejoined Moya. "It's instructive, to say the least."
"It was necessary," said Rigden quietly.
"No doubt!"
"A lie sometimes is," he continued calmly. "You will probably agree with me there."
"Thank you," said Moya promptly; but no insinuation had been intended, no apology was offered, and Rigden proceeded as though no interruption had occurred.
"I am not good at them as a general rule," he confessed. "But just now I was determined to do my best. I suppose you would call it my worst!"
Moya elected not to call it anything.
"That poor fellow in the store – "
"I really don't care to know anything about him."
" – I simply couldn't do it," concluded Rigden expressively.
"Is he the man they want or not?"
The question came in one breath with the interruption, but with a change of tone so unguardedly complete that Rigden smiled openly. There was no answering smile from Moya. Her sense of humour, that saving grace of the Bethunes as a family, had deserted her as utterly as other graces of which she had more or less of a monopoly.
"Of course he's the man," said Rigden at once; but again there was the deeper trouble in his tone, the intrinsic trouble which mere results could not aggravate.
And this time Moya's perceptions were more acute. But by now pride had the upper hand of her. There was some extraordinary and mysterious reason for Rigden's conduct from beginning to end of this incident, or rather from the beginning to this present point, which