In a small house, in a side street, on Moore Park, the woman who came to Sydney with Glen Leigh, and the other two, had rooms. It had been decided to call her Clara Benny, as it was necessary she should have a name, and to install her here. Mrs. Dell, who kept the house, was a widow, a respectable woman in reduced circumstances, and she had promised to do what she could for her lodger. Clara could not understand it. She wanted the three to be with her. They had always been together. Why should they leave her alone? It was useless to try and explain, and no attempt was made. Glen said it was necessary because they had to work, and it would be better for her to have a kind motherly woman to look after her; this made her more contented, and one of Bill Bigs succeeded in finding a small hotel to his liking in Castlereagh Street. The seller came into some money, and sailing for England, was glad to find a buyer at a reasonable price. The house was in bad condition, but Bill, with his usual energy, quickly set to work, and in a few weeks it was spick and span, clean and inviting. There was a steady trade, and a fair number of customers frequented the place—many theatrical, sporting and pressmen, with whom he became popular. Jerry Makeshift, of "The Sketch," found The clever journalist was astounded at what he heard, especially about the men on the rabbit-proof fence. In a hazy sort of way he had heard of them before, but when Bill began to talk about them, with intimate knowledge, Jerry opened his eyes. "I'll introduce you to two of 'em," said Bill. "They are staying with me. In fact they came to Sydney with me from the forsaken place. They found the life too much "I'd like to meet them," replied Jerry. "How is it I have not done so before?" "Well, it's this way. They're busy. They've got a scheme in hand that I suggested, and I think it's just the thing for 'em and will pay well," and he explained about the buckjumping exhibition. "By Jove, that's a capital idea," said Jerry, who saw the possibilities at once. "You might be able to give it a lift," suggested Bill cautiously. "Probably. I will if I can, but I must hear more about it," Jerry answered. "Come in to-night, and I'll introduce you to Glen Leigh. He's the chap, a wonderful man, as straight as a die, big, strong, a rough customer, but with the heart of a child when anything appeals to his better nature. Why he went on the fence the Lord only knows. I remember him arriving in Boonara. It caused quite a sensation. No one could make him out then, and no one made him "That will suit me," said Jerry as he went out. "He's a good sort," thought Bill. "He ought to be able to boom the show when it starts." Glen Leigh was averse to talking with strangers, but Bill persuaded him to meet Jerry Makeshift. "It's the fellow who draws those funny things that catch the eye on the front page of 'The Sketch.' They're the cleverest things out, and 'The Sketch' is the best paper of its kind in Australia. It goes all over the place. It even got as far as Boonara," said Bill. "And I've had many a copy in my hut," answered Glen. "I don't mind meeting a man like that. He's out of the common. He can teach you something." "That's settled," said Bill. "He'll be here at seven, and mind you pitch it him strong Jerry Makeshift was punctual. He loved a good dinner and he sniffed appreciatively as he came into the house. Jim Benny was away, so Glen went upstairs with his companion, and they did full justice to Bill's good things, which he laid himself out to supply. Jerry at once saw that Glen Leigh was no ordinary man, and that he would have to be handled in anything but an orthodox fashion. With his usual skill in such matters he set to work to propitiate him, and succeeded so well that at the end of the dinner Glen was talking freely to him. He told him all about the glittering wire, of the awful loneliness of the life, the terrible droughts, the millions of rabbits, how they died in hundreds of thousands from lack of food, and their bones were piled up in great heaps. He told of the losses of sheep and cattle, how squatters were almost ruined, and had to borrow money to go on with. He pictured the thousands Then he went on to describe the life on the fence, the men, their varied characters; some strange stories he told of crime and criminals that he heard when he was one of the keepers. His language was plain and simple so that every word hit home. Jerry Makeshift listened with his eyes fixed intently on Glen Leigh's face. As he talked he seemed to forget where he was; he was back again in his old surroundings, in the hut, in Bill's shanty at Boonara. He stopped suddenly. There must be no mention of Clara Benny, the woman in the hut, or how they came to Sydney. "I never heard such a thrilling, interesting, story before," said Jerry, who knew he had Glen Leigh had made a staunch friend. He did not think he had done anything, or said anything, out of the common. That was where he proved so attractive to Jerry. The practised journalist knew every word he heard was true, that no exaggeration was here. On the contrary the reality must have been ten times worse than it was described. "Tell me about this buckjumping show Bigs mentioned," said Jerry. Glen smiled. "Bill's sanguine, too sanguine, about that." "I don't think he is. There are great possibilities in it," Jerry answered. "Maybe so, but it'll take a lot of working up." "I'll do what I can for you," promised Jerry. "You will! That's good of you. I reckon a few words from you, or a sketch from your pen, goes a long way with the public," replied Glen. Jerry laughed. There was not an atom of conceit about him. "I do my best to amuse the public. I fancy I manage it all right somehow, but heaven knows where the talent I possess comes from, for I never had much education. I'm what they call self-taught." "Then you were a better teacher than hundreds of men who profess to know a heap of things," declared Glen. "Perhaps so. A battle with the world when you're young is a good education in itself," replied Jerry. Glen told him how "The Sketch," and Jerry's drawings, were to be found even on the fence and in Boonara. "I've spent hours over 'em," he said. "The man who can make a keeper of the fence laugh deserves a big pension for life." Jerry pulled "The Sketch" out of his pocket. "That's the latest. Just off the press. I'll leave it you." A paper fell on the floor. Jerry picked it up. "Have you seen this?" he asked. "What is it?" "Tattersalls' Hundred Thousand Pound Sweep on the Melbourne Cup. You ought to try your luck in it," said Jerry. |