But the fly of self must always poison this young man’s ointment, and to-night there was some excuse from his degenerate point of view. He must give it up. Stingaree was right; it was only one man in thousands who could do unerringly what he had done that night. Oswald Melvin was not that man. He saw it for himself at last. But it was a bitter hour for him. Life in the music-shop would fall very flat after this; he would be dishonored before his only friends, the unworthy hobbledehoys who were to have joined his gang; he could not tell them what had happened, not at least until he had invented some less inglorious part for himself, and that was a difficulty in view of newspaper reports of the sticking-up. He could scarcely tell them a true word of what had passed between himself and Stingaree. If only he might yet grow more like the master! If only he might still hope to follow so sublime a lead!
Thus aspiring, vainly as now he knew, Oswald Melvin rode slowly back into the excited town, and past the lighted police-barracks, in the innocence of that portion of his heart. But one had flown like the wind ahead of him, and two in uniform, followed by that one, dashed out on Oswald and the old white screw.
“Surrender!” sang out one.
“In the Queen’s name!” added the other.
“Call yourself Stingaree!” panted the runner.
Our egoist was quick enough to grasp their meaning, but quicker still to see and to seize the chance of a crazy lifetime. Always acute where his own vanity was touched, his promptitude was for once on a par with his perceptions.
“Had your eye on me long?” he inquired, delightfully, as he dismounted.
“Long enough,” said one policeman. The other was busy plucking loaded revolvers from the desperado’s pockets. A crowd had formed.
“If you’re looking for the loot,” he went on, raising his voice for the benefit of all, “you may look. I sha’n’t tell you, and it’ll take you all your time!”
But a surprise was in store for prisoner and police alike. Every stolen watch and all the missing money were discovered no later than next morning in the bush quite close to the scene of the outrage. There had been no attempt to hide them; they lay in a heap, dumped from the saddle, with no more depreciation than a broken watch-glass. True to his new character, Oswald learned this development without flinching. His ready comment was in next day’s papers.
“There was nothing worth having,” he had maintained, and did not see the wisdom of the boast until a lawyer called and pointed out that it contained the nucleus of a strong defence.
“I’ll defend myself, thank you,” said the inflated fool.
“Then you’ll make a mess of it, and deserve all you get. And it would be a pity to spoil such a good defence.”
“What is the defence?”
“You did it for a joke, of course!”
Oswald smiled inscrutably, and dismissed his visitor with a lordly promise to consider the proposition and that lawyer’s claims upon the case. Never was such triumph tasted in guilty immunity as was this innocent man’s under cloud of guilt so apparent as to impose on every mind. He had but carried out a notorious intention; for his few friends were the first to betray their captain, albeit his bold bearing and magnanimous smiles won an admiration which they had never before vouchsafed him in their hearts. He was, indeed, a different man. He had lived to see Stingaree in action, and now he modelled himself from the life. The only doubt was as to whether at the last of that business he had actually avowed himself Stingaree or not. There might have been trouble about the horse, but fortunately for the enthusiastic prisoner the man who had been thrown was allowed to proceed on a pressing journey to the Barcoo. There was a plethora of evidence without his; besides, the hide-and-bone mare was called Barmaid, after the original, and it was known that Oswald had tried to teach the old creature tricks; above all, the prisoner had never pretended to deny his guilt. Still, this matter of the horses gave him a certain sense of insecurity in his cosey cell.
He had awakened to find himself not only deliciously notorious, but actually more of a man than in his heart of hearts he had dared to hope. The tenacity and consistency of his pose were alike remarkable. Even in the overweening cause of egoism he had never shown so much character in his life. Yet he shuddered to realize that, given the usual time for reflection before his great moment, that moment might have proved as mean as many another when the spirit had been wine and the flesh water. There was, in fine, but one feature of the affair which even Oswald Melvin, drunk with notoriety and secretly sanguine of a nominal punishment, could not contemplate with absolute satisfaction. But that feature followed the others into the papers which kept him intoxicated. And a bundle of these papers found their adventurous way to the latest fastness of Stingaree in the mallee.
The real villain dropped his eye-glass, clapped it in again, and did his best to crack it with his stare. Student of character as he was, he could not have conceived such a development in such a character. He read on, more enlightened than amused. “To think he had the pluck!” he murmured, as he dropped that Australasian and took up the next week’s. He was filled with admiration, but soon a frown and then an oath came to put an end to it. “The little beast,” he cried, “he’ll kill that woman! He can’t have kept it up.” He sorted the papers for the latest of all — a sinful publican saved them for him — and therein read that Oswald Melvin had been committed for trial, and that his only concern was for the condition of his mother, which was still unchanged, and had seemed latterly to distress the prisoner very much.
“I’ll distress him!” roared Stingaree to the mallee. “I’ll distress him, if we change places for it!”
Riding all night, and as much as he dared by day, it was some hundred hours before he paid his third and last visit to the Melvins’ music-shop. He rode boldly to the door, but he rode a piebald mare not to be confused in the most suspicious mind with the no more conspicuous Barmaid. It is true the brown parts smelt of Condy’s Fluid, and were at once strange and seemingly a little tender to the touch. But Stingaree allowed no meddling with his mount; and only a very sinful publican, very many leagues back, was in the secret.
There were no lighted windows behind the shop to-night. The whole place was in darkness, and Stingaree knocked in vain. A neighbor appeared upon the next veranda.
“Who is it you want?” he asked.
“Mrs. Melvin.”
“It’s no use knocking for her.”
“Is she dead?”
“Not that I know of; but she can’t be long for this world.”
“Where is she now?”
“Bishop’s Lodge; they say Miss Methuen’s with her day and night.”
For it was in the days of the Bishop’s daughter, who had a strong mind but no sense of humor, and a heart only fickle in its own affairs. Miss Methuen made an admirable, if a somewhat too assiduous and dictatorial, nurse. She had, however, a fund of real sympathy with the afflicted, and Mrs. Melvin’s only serious complaint (which she intended to die without uttering) was that she was never left alone with her grief by day or night. It was Miss Methuen who, sitting with rather ostentatious patience in the dark, at the open window, until her patient should fall or pretend to be asleep, saw a man ride a piebald horse in at the gate, and then, half-way up the drive, suspiciously dismount and lead his horse into a tempting shrubbery.
Stingaree did not often change his mind at the last moment, but he knew the man on whose generosity he was about to throw himself, which was to know further that that generosity would be curbed by judgment, and to reflect that he was least likely to be deprived of a horse whose whereabouts was known only to himself. There was but one lighted room when he eventually stole upon the house; it had a veranda to itself; and in the bright frame of the French windows, which stood open, sat the Bishop with his Bible on his knees.
“Yes, I know you,” said he, putting his marker in the place as Stingaree entered, boots in one hand and something else in the other. “I thought we should meet again. Do you mind putting that thing
back in your pocket?”
Stingaree knocked in vain.
“Will you promise not to call a soul?”
“Oh, dear, yes.”
“You weren’t expecting me, were you?” cried Stingaree, suspiciously.
“I’ve been expecting you for months,” returned the Bishop. “You knew my address, but I hadn’t yours. We were bound to meet again.”
Stingaree smiled as he took his revolver by the barrel and carried it across the room to Dr. Methuen.
“What’s that for? I don’t want it; put it in your own pocket. At least I can trust you not to take my life in cold blood.”
The Bishop seemed nettled and annoyed. Stingaree loved him.
“I don’t come to take anything, much less life,” he said. “I come to save it; if it is not too late.”
“To save life — here?”
“In your house.”
“But whom do you know of my household?”
“Mrs. Melvin. I have had the honor of meeting her twice, though each time she was unaware of the dishonor of meeting me. The last time I promised to try to save her unhappy son from himself. I found him waiting to waylay the coach, told him who I was, and had ten minutes to try to cure him in. He wouldn’t listen to reason; insult ran like water off his back. I did my best to show him what a life it was he longed to lead, and how much more there was in it than a loaded revolver. He wouldn’t take my word for it, however, so I put him out of harm’s way, up in a tree; and when the coach came along I gave him as brutal an exhibition of the art of bushranging as I could without spilling blood. I promise you it was for no other reason. What did I want with watches? What were a few pounds to me? I dropped the lot that the lad might know.”
The Bishop started to his gaitered legs.
“And he’s actually innocent all the time?”
“Of the deed, as the babe unborn.”
“Then why in the wide world — —”
Dr. Methuen stood beggared of further speech. His mind was too plain and sane for immediate understanding of such a type as Oswald Melvin. But the bushranger hit off that young man’s character in half-a-dozen trenchant phrases.
“He must be let out, and it may save his mother’s life; but if he were mine,” exclaimed the Bishop, “I would rather he had done the other deed! But what about you?” he added, suddenly, his eyes resting on his sardonic visitor, who had disguised himself far less than his horse. “It will mean giving yourself up.”
“No. You know me. You can spread what I’ve told you.”
The Bishop shifted uneasily on his hearth-rug.
“I may not see my way to that,” said he. “Besides, you must have run a lot of risks to do this good action; how do you know you haven’t been recognized already? I should have known you anywhere.”
“But you have undertaken not to raise an alarm, my lord.”
“I shall not break my promise.”
There was a grim regret in the Bishop’s voice. Stingaree thought he understood it.
“Thank you,” he said.
“Don’t thank me, pray!” Dr. Methuen could be quite testy on occasion. “I have other duties than to you, you know, and I only answer for my actions during the actual period of our interview. There are many things I should like to say to you, my brother,” a gentler voice went on, “but this is hardly the time for me to say them. But there is one question I should like to ask you for the peace of both our souls, and for the maintenance of my own belief in human nature.” He threw up an episcopal hand dramatically. “If you earnestly and honestly wished to save this poor lady’s life, and there were no other way, would you then be man enough to give yourself up — to give your liberty for her life?”
Stingaree took time to think. His eyes were brightly fixed upon the Bishop’s. Yet they saw a little bedroom just as plain, an English lady standing by the empty bed, and at its foot a portrait of himself armed to the teeth.
“For hers?” said he. “Yes, like a shot!”
“I’m thankful to hear it,” replied the Bishop, with most fervent relief. “I only wish you could have the opportunity. But now you never will. My brother, if you look round, you will see why!”
Stingaree looked round without a word. In the Bishop’s eyes at the last instant he had learned what to expect. A firing-party of four stocking-soled constables were drawn across the opened French windows, their levelled rifles poking through.
The bushranger looked over his shoulder with a bitter smile. “You’ve done me, after all!” said he, and stretched out empty hands.
“It was done before I saw you,” the Bishop made answer. “I had already sent for the police.”
One had entered excitedly by an inner door.
“And he didn’t do you at all!” cried the voice of high hysteria. “It was I who saw you — it was I who guessed who it was! Oh, father, why have you been talking so long to such a dreadful man? I made sure he would shoot you, and you’d still be shot if they had to shoot him! Move — move — move!”
Stingaree looked at the strong-minded girl, shrill with her triumph, quite carried away by her excitement, all undaunted by the prospect of bloodshed before her eyes. And it was he who moved, with but a shrug of the shoulders, and gave himself up without another sign.
The Moth and the Star
I
Darlinghurst Jail had never immured a more interesting prisoner than the back-block bandit who was tried and convicted under the strange style and title which he had made his own. Not even in prison was his real name ever known, and the wild speculations of some imaginative officials were nothing else up to the end. There was enough color in their wildness, however, to crown the convict with a certain halo of romance, which his behavior in jail did nothing to dispel. That, of course, was exemplary, since Stingaree had never been a fool; but it was something more and rarer. Not content simply to follow the line of least resistance, he exhibited from the first a spirit and a philosophy unique indeed beneath the broad arrow. And so far from decreasing with the years of his captivity, these attractive qualities won him friend after friend among the officials, and privilege upon privilege at their hands, while amply justifying the romantic interest in his case.
At last there came to Sydney a person more capable of an acute appreciation of the heroic villain than his most ardent admirer on the spot. Lucius Brady was a long-haired Irishman of letters, bard and bookworm, rebel and reviewer; in his ample leisure he was also the most enthusiastic criminologist in London. And as President of an exceedingly esoteric Society for the Cultivation of Criminals, even from London did he come for a prearranged series of interviews with the last and the most distinguished of all the bushrangers.
It was to Lucius Brady, his biographer to be, that Stingaree confided the data of all the misdeeds recounted in these pages; but of his life during the quiet intervals, of his relations with confederates, and his more honest dealings with honest folk (of which many a pretty tale was rife), he was not to be persuaded to speak without an irritating reserve.
“Keep to my points of contact with the world, about which something is known already, and you shall have the whole truth of each matter,” said the convict. “But I don’t intend to give away the altogether unknown, and I doubt if it would interest you if I did. The most interesting thing to me has been the different types with whom I have had what it pleases you to term professional relations, and the very different ways in which they have taken me. You read character by flashlight along the barrel of your revolver. What you should do is to hunt up my various victims and get at their point of view; you really mustn’t press me to hark back to mine. As it is you bring a whiff of the outer world which makes me bruise my wings against the bars.”
The criminologist gloated over such speeches from such lips. It would have touched another to note what an irresistible fascination the bars had for the wings, despite all pain; but Lucius Brady’s interest in Stingaree was exclusively intellectual. His heart never ached for a roving spirit in
confinement; it did not occur to him to suppress a detail of his own days in Sydney, down to the attractions of an Italian restaurant he had discovered near the jail, the flavor of the Chianti and so forth. On the contrary, it was most interesting to note the play of features in the tortured man, who after all brought his torture on himself by asking so many questions. Soon, when his visitor left him, the bondman could follow the free in all but the flesh, through every corridor of the prison and every street outside, to the hotel where you read the English papers on the veranda, or to the little restaurant where the Chianti was corked with oil which the waiter removed with a wisp of tow.
One day, late in the afternoon, as Lucius Brady was beaming on him through his spectacles, and indulging in an incisive criticism on the champagne at Government House, Stingaree quietly garroted him. A gag was in all readiness, likewise strips of coarse sheeting torn up for the purpose in the night. Black in the face, but with breath still in his body, the criminologist was carefully gagged and tied down to the bedstead, while his living image (at a casual glance) strolled with bent head, black sombrero, spectacles and frock-coat, first through the cold corridors and presently along the streets.
The heat of the pavement striking to his soles was the first of a hundred exquisite sensations; but Stingaree did not permit himself to savor one of them. Indeed, he had his work cut out to check the pace his heart dictated; and it was by admirable exercise of the will that he wandered along, deep to all appearance in a Camelot Classic which he had found in the criminologist’s pocket; in reality blinded by the glasses, but all the more vigilant out of the corners of his eyes.
A suburb was the scene of these perambulations; had he but dared to lift his face, Stingaree might have caught a glimpse of the bluest of blue water; and his prison eyes hungered for the sight, but he would not raise his eyes so long as footsteps sounded on the same pavement. By taking judicious turnings, however, he drifted into a quiet road, with gray suburban bungalows on one side and building lots on the other. No step approached. He could look up at last. And the very bungalow that he was passing was shut up, yet furnished; the people had merely gone away, servants and all; he saw it at a glance from the newspapers plastering the windows which caught the sun. In an instant he was in the garden, and in another he had forced a side gate leading by an alley to backyard and kitchen door; but for many minutes he went no further than this gate, behind which he cowered, prepared with excuses in case he had already been observed.
Complete Works of E W Hornung Page 479