A Changing Land(123)
‘What is it?’ Hamish drew his horse close.
Mungo held up his hand, pointed to his right, indicated a circling motion. Hamish nodded and doubled back in the direction they’d come, Harry and Angus following. Dismounting, Mungo examined the soft imprints they left in the sand and then very carefully flicked dirt across both their entrance to and exit from the clearing. Any reasonable tracker would easily decipher Mungo’s camouflage attempts however the buying of time was a valuable commodity.
‘Well?’ Hamish was waiting near a large coolibah tree, his rifle in his hands. They were close to the edge of the river where the force of previous floods had eroded the bank to a steep-sided drop. Angus stood to one side, his young eyes wide with anticipation. Harry looked wary.
‘Someone track us, Boss,’ Harry stated.
‘Crawford,’ Hamish hissed. He’d not expected the fool of an Englishman to guess at his plan. It was impossible to warn Jasperson.
Mungo disagreed. ‘Not whitefellas, Boss. Blackfellas.’
Hamish looked at his son sitting astride Wallace. ‘You must leave,’ he said in a low voice. ‘You were a young fool to follow.’
Mungo shook his head. ‘The boy is safer with us. Besides his horse is fast and he knows how to find his way back to the crick and help if trouble finds us.’
Hamish considered his options. He wished he had more men. Men like Luke who knew how to move stock and weren’t afraid of a fight. Still he did have Jasperson, McKenzie and Boxer across the river, a unique combination of experience, loyalty and cunning. ‘Keep an eye out.’
They weaved through the trees, the moon shining down through the canopy, illuminating the tree trunks in a ghostly veil. Occasionally they caught glimpses of the river, its black glassy surface paralleling their path. Hamish said nothing of the stretch of water. Boxer’s cautionary reminder of the possibility of more rains up north had eventuated. Rabbits foraging in the quietness scattered as they passed by. Overhead an owl hooted at their approach. Mungo halted. ‘Here.’ The riverbank sloped gradually, allowing easy access to the water’s edge. It was the best place to cross for both man and animal. Mungo frowned. Dismounting, he picked up a small stick and walked quietly down the sandy bank, throwing it into the water. The piece of wood was carried quickly away on the current. Hamish looked at the river and could only guess at the pull of the water under the surface.
The cattle walked slowly across ground made uneven by past flooding. From where Jasperson rode on the wing, there was a clear view of the mob; a couple of hundred head, many of which were cows with half-grown calves. They’d gathered them up from where they wandered beneath the bright night sky as if they were catching butterflies. Jasperson almost considered increasing the numbers they took, though experience taught him otherwise. Once a man got too cocky and diverged one small step away from the original plan, trouble was the only outcome. No, he would stick with Hamish Gordon’s plan and his reward would be success.
Already the moon was past its midpoint. Ahead the cattle continued their onward progression. Their current route was exposed with only a light scattering of timber across an open plain. Jasperson would have preferred to walk the cattle through a more wooded area, instead of the clear, open path they followed which was the best option for getting the cattle across the river and into Wangallon before dawn. Besides, time was getting the better of them. Behind him cows were bellowing for straggling calves. They’d dropped twenty cows and small calves three miles back and some of the old girls left in the mob still bellowed to their young, making sure they were close by. Apart from the noise, which could carry for miles on such a still night, they couldn’t afford the river crossing being marred by cows looking for their offspring. At least Boxer promised the river would be easy to cross, although when they had ridden across the bridge at Widow’s Nest the black had frowned at the moving water and pointed at small bubbles on its surface. Jasperson didn’t need to have the brains of Charles Darwin to realise that it had rained up north. The question was, how much?
Across the mob on the right flank Jasperson made out McKenzie’s slight form. The boy slipped in and out of his vision, obscured by the hovering dust cloud following the mob. He’d proved capable of taking instruction, in more ways than one, Jasperson smirked, and although he wasn’t the most proficient of stockmen, the ability to keep one’s mouth shut was invaluable. Jasperson twisted in his saddle, aware of his space being intruded upon. Boxer was beside him.