[An Outback Marriage by Andrew Barton Paterson]@TWC D-Link book
An Outback Marriage

CHAPTER VIII
5/11

He told her that the two servants were in the kitchen, but it turned out that she wanted to interview all the station hands, and it had to be explained that the horse-driver was six miles out on the run with his team, drawing in a load of bark to roof the hay shed, and that Harry Warden was down at the drafting yards, putting in a new trough to hold an arsenical solution, through which the sheep had to tramp to cure their feet; and that everybody else was away out on some business or other.

But the young lady stuck to her point, and had the groom and the wood-and-water boy paraded, they being the only two available.

The groom was an English importation, and earned her approval by standing in a rigid and deferential attitude, and saying "Yes, Miss," and "No, Miss," when spoken to; but the wood-and-water boy stood with his arms akimbo and his mouth open, and when she asked him how he liked being on the station he said, "Oh, it's not too bad," accompanying his remark with a sickly grin that nearly earned him summary dismissal.
The young lady returned to the house in rather a sharp temper, and found Hugh standing by a cart, which had just got back with her shipwrecked luggage.
"Well, Miss Grant," he said, "the things are pretty right.

The water went down in an hour or so, and the luggage on the top only got a little wetting--just a wave now and again.

How have you been getting on ?" "Not at all well," she laughed.


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