[On Our Selection by Steele Rudd]@TWC D-Link book
On Our Selection

CHAPTER VII
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"Perhaps it's just as well," he said, "to let him be to-night." Of course, Dad was n't afraid; he SAID he was n't, but he drove the pegs in the doors and windows before going to bed that night.
Next morning, Dad said to Dave and Joe, "Come 'long, and we'll see where he's got to." In a gully at the back of the grass-paddock they found him.

He was ploughing--sitting astride the highest limb of a fallen tree, and, in a hoarse voice and strange, calling out--"Gee, Captain!--come here, Tidy!--WA-AY!" "Blowed if I know," Dad muttered, coming to a standstill.

"Wonder if he is clean mad ?" Dave was speechless, and Joe began to tremble.
They listened.

And as the man's voice rang out in the quiet gully and the echoes rumbled round the ridge and the affrighted birds flew up, the place felt eerie somehow.
"It's no use bein' afraid of him," Dad went on.

"We must go and bounce him, that's all." But there was a tremor in Dad's voice which Dave did n't like.
"See if he knows us, anyway."-- and Dad shouted, "HEY-Y!" Jack looked up and immediately scrambled from the limb.


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