by Robert Reed
   point, and Jack’s of two three points, two three; that is to say I used
   a bullet and Jack used shot . We were beginning to be favourites, and
   even Bomero himself liked us, for although he showed at first some
   signs of being jealous, we treated him with such deference that he
   soon forgot his jealousy . Jack had a black leather belt for wearing
   THE GERM GROWERS, by Robert Potter | 463
   round the waist, and we made Bomero a formal present of this . We
   explained its use to him and put it round his kilt . We could see that
   he was nearly overcome with childish delight, and yet the wily fel-
   low was knowing enough to repress all show of this feeling and to
   receive the gift with stolid gravity . He gave us in turn an eagle’s
   feather each, which he took off the kilt just where the belt would
   cover it, and these we received with becoming gratitude .
   A serious misfortune befell us about the eighth day, which was
   the occasion of another compliment to Bomero . Jack’s horse fell
   dead lame, and we were obliged to let him loose in the bush . We
   presented the saddle to our black prince, and made a throne of it
   for him, and one evening that we camped earlier than usual we per-
   suaded him to hold a levee . Jack explained the matter to Gioro, and
   Gioro to Bomero . This was how Jack explained it .
   Gioro . What’s levee?
   Jack . Boss white fellow stands on daïs . No, sits on throne, throne
   all same saddle and stirrups; other white fellows march up, march
   down again, come this way, go that way, all same little stars and red
   star . Bow to boss white fellow . Boss white fellow bows to them .
   Boss black fellow all same boss white fellow .
   Bomero took readily to the proposal . We picked out a fallen tree
   high enough and wide enough. We fixed up the saddle upon it, the
   stirrups touching the ground . Bomero got astride of this with a spear
   in each hand . I passed before him bowing, and Jack followed me .
   All the others followed him . They took to it as if they had been
   born courtiers. They would not be satisfied until every adult man
   had made his bow, and we had something to do to keep them from
   beginning all over again . It was ludicrous to the last degree . The tall,
   bulky black fellow sat on the saddle with the tree under him like a
   hobby-horse, his head was all stuck over with feathers and the tails
   of opossums; his little cloak of skins and kilt of platted leaves were
   fastened with Jack’s belt, and he held his two spears, one in each
   hand, and he looked as sober and solemn as a judge, and the other
   fellows as much in earnest as if they were freemasons in full regalia,
   or doctors of divinity in academic dress . I stole a look at Jack, and
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   the villain replied with one of those winks which never fail to upset
   me . He let the lid of one eye fall completely, the other eye remain-
   ing wide open, and not a wrinkle in his face . A loud laugh would
   have spoiled the fun, and might even have been dangerous, but I
   saved myself with a fit of coughing. After the levee Bomero told
   off two men to have charge of the saddle . And for the next few days
   Jack and I walked, each of us, half the march, and rode the other .
   Once only during these twelve days did I see anything to give me
   any special uneasiness . One evening we camped a little earlier than
   usual and I noticed that Gioro was watched and dogged by two very
   ill-looking fellows whom I had noticed as being in some sort lead-
   ers . They stepped behind a clump of trees as he was passing, and as
   he returned they hid themselves again while he passed . I mentioned
   this to Gioro and he proved to be aware of their hostility . They were
   big men, he said, in the tribe, but Bomero was the biggest of all the
   men, and he was Gioro’s friend .
   About the morning of the twelfth day there was some trouble .
   We had come to a point where it was necessary to leave the course
   of one creek and to strike that of another. But a very destructive fire
   had passed over the place, followed, as it seemed, by heavy rains,
   and the track was quite obliterated . Certain trees also which would
   have served as guides had been entirely destroyed . And to increase
   the confusion the weather was foggy . Dense clouds rested on and
   hid some hills which might have served as landmarks .
   Bomero went out to reconnoitre, and he took Gioro and another
   with him, and when they returned I could see that his mind was made
   up as to the course he would take, but that he was, nevertheless, as
   much perplexed as ever . He gave the word and we struck out a little
   north of west, and after travelling about three times as far as it had
   yet fallen us to get from water to water we struck another creek . We
   marched along the creek for another day, scarce ever losing sight of
   it, and then we camped by the water again . Next morning we left the
   women and children in camp, and about half the men, and Bomero
   with the ablest and quickest of the men marched away in search
   of another creek . Jack and I went with him, and as my horse was
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   in good working condition we took him with us . We struck water
   somewhat sooner than before and camped for the night . I saw that
   Bomero was still perplexed, and I gathered from Gioro that his per-
   plexity was caused by the conviction that he was now considerably
   out of his course, that he had gone too far north and had overshot the
   mark, and that we should have to go a day’s march south and east
   before we could resume the straight course to the place of meeting .
   The horizon was still clouded, and there was no sign at present of
   the clouds lifting soon .
   All this, however, was by no means enough to account for Bome-
   ro’s evident perturbation of mind . He was undoubtedly a clever and
   cool fellow, and one of much resource; there was abundance of water
   and food, we could not be far out of he track, and we had plenty of
   time, for as far as I could judge by the astronomical indications, we
   were a great many days and even weeks too soon; and the weather,
   barring the clouds, was everything that could be wished .
   Jack and I talked it over, and Jack reminded me of Gioro’s tale of
   the “dibble dibble all same white man” that Bomero had seen in the
   far west . “Depend upon it,” said Jack, “he thinks he is coming upon
   them again . The place, as Gioro said, was ‘more far’ than the place
   of meeting for the great Corrobboree, and he thinks that he is now
   getting ‘more far’ than there .”
   “And what of the dibble dibble that he saw there?” said I .
   “Oh, that’s the point,” said Jack . “No doubt they were white men;
   some pioneers from the north coast, perhaps, or maybe the men on
   some outlying station of some western squatter’s run, and if so we
   shall get back to civillsatlon sooner than we think .”
   “I don’t see much in it, Jack,” said I; “we’re not far enough west
   for that; if we were on the head-waters of the western slope we
>   might be on the look-out for white pioneers, but I am afraid we are
   near as far from there as from the telegraph wire . Bomero’s ‘dibble
   dibble’ was either a pure invention or the suggestion of a dream, or
   if he did come across white men he must have been farther west than
   he is here .”
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   On the morning of the fourteenth day Bomero harangued the men
   who were with him; he stood upon a veritable stump, a huge tree
   near the creek had been undermined by the flood waters and had
   fallen and lay along the ground roofs and all . Bomero stood upon it
   and spoke, Jack and I stood by and listened, Gioro stood between us;
   he was in a state of great excitement, and he threw in every now and
   then a word of interpretation for our benefit, but indeed, by this time,
   we were able to follow the speaker fairly enough ourselves . It very
   soon became quite evident that Gioro’s tale of “dibble dibble” was
   at the bottom of our trouble; it was quite evident also that the spirit
   of the prophet was no longer subject to the prophet . Bomero pointed
   westward, where the clouds were now slowly rising from some not
   very distant hills, and what he said was to this effect .
   There was a hill away west where certain doleful creatures dwelt .
   He had once been very near there, and they had tried to take his
   llfe . They had tried to spear him through the air, and he who never
   feared men, feared them . He should know in a few minutes if that
   hill yonder was their hill; and if it was then he and his people must
   run and run till they got well out of sight of that hill . They had
   missed the way to the great Corroboree, but that was no matter; they
   would easily find it again, and there was plenty of time yet before
   the red star and the little stars would be gone . If they saw when the
   clouds rose (and they were now rising) that the hill was not their hill,
   then they would stay where they were to-day, and the witch fellows
   would dance the witch dance until all was clear, and on the next day
   they would go back to where the women were, and then they would
   strike the track, and be the first at the meeting-place. But if when the
   clouds rose, and they were now rising, they saw three peaks, a tall
   one in the middle, a crooked one on one side, and a straight one on
   the other, then Bomero and Bomero’s men must run, run, run, and
   never stop, except to breathe, while any one of the three peaks was
   to be seen . Let the black man knock his brains ou with his waddy,
   or let the white man spear him with his fire spear, but the devils that
   rode through the air on clouds, faster than eagles, were worse than
   any black men or white men .”
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   Bomero was evidently no longer master of himself or of his men .
   Whatever the cause of it was, there was a dreadful panic imminent,
   and no one could tell what was going to happen .
   Just then the clouds lifted quite away from the hill, and there,
   sure enough, were the three peaks, the tall one in the middle, and the
   crooked one and the straight one on either side .
   A low murmur burst from the men, and Bomero uttered a fright-
   ful howl, and plunged away madly round a hill that rose gently from
   the creek, and right on into the forest . All the men ran after him,
   most of them howling and shrieking; and my horse, which hung by
   the bridle to a branch close by, started, and snorted, and broke his
   rein, and rushed away before them at full gallop .
   The catastrophe, was so sudden that our breath seemed to be
   taken away, and I don’t know how many minutes passed before ei-
   ther spoke . I know that every man of the blacks had got clean out of
   sight, and my horse, too, and there was as dead a silence as before
   the world was made, and still there was not a word from either of us .
   Then Jack said in a hollow voice:
   “Why wasn’t the horse hobbled, Bob?”
   “Why, Jack, I had just taken the hobbles off, and made him ready
   for the road .”
   “Never mind, old fellow, I hardly know what I said; Gioro will
   come back .”
   “Yes,” I said, “Gioro will come back .”
   And then, as if our confidence in Gioro’s fidelity cleared the air,
   we sat down and lit our pipes . I don’t know how much time passed,
   it seemed to be hours, but it couldn’t have been near an hour, and
   Jack and I never exchanged a word . Then, sure enough, we saw
   Gioro coming, and he was leading my horse. I saw him first, and I
   jumped up and shouted for joy . Then Jack jumped up, but the shout
   died on his lips, and he said only, “There is something the matter .”
   And so there was . Both Gioro and the horse were wounded, and
   the wounds were deadly, for the spears that inflicted them were poi-
   soned. The horse died first. I took Gioro’s head on my lap, and gave
   him a few drops of water . He told me that he had caught the horse
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   by the bridle in passing, and that then he stopped and returned . He
   had not forgotten us, he said, not for a moment, nor would he have
   started at all if the horse had not started . The horse had stopped sev-
   eral times, and when he had come up with him had gone on again .
   But at last he had secured him and was returning . But several spears
   were flung at him, and many missed him, but the big men who had
   watched and dogged him took better aim, and struck both horse and
   man. At first he thought nothing of it, but presently he knew that the
   spears were poisoned, and now he must die .
   “Take care,” said the poor fellow, almost with his last breath,
   “keep away, kill you too, like Gioro; back, back to the big long wire .”
   He died quite easily, and I felt as he lay in my arms that it would
   be the best thing that could happen us [sic] if the poisoned arrows
   of the blacks had made an end of us as well as of him . The poor
   fellow’s faithfulness would have helped us to face death without
   flinching.
   We found a large hole in the earth where a tree had been uprooted
   by a storm, and there, with the help of his boomerang and our own
   knives, we managed to give him decent burial . We both fell on our
   knees for a few minutes, but no words passcd our lips, although I am
   sure our hearts were full enough .
   Then we stood up, and with one impulse held out a hand each
   to the other . The grip that followed was a silent English grip . But it
   meant that we knew that our case was desperate, and that we would
   stand by one another to the last .
   CHAPTER VI
   LEFT ALONE
   All the events described at the close of the last chapter succeeded
   one another very rapidly . I do not think that four hours in all could
   have passed from the beginning of Bomero’s last harangue until Jack
   and I stood together over Gioro’s grave . The sun had not reached the
   meridian; the atmosphere was perfectly clear; and the triple peak
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   which had been the signal of so much dis
aster stood out clear and
   well-defined in the west.
   What were we to do now? Were we to stay here and die like
   starved handicoots when the first drought should come on? That was
   the question in both our minds, and that was the form in which Jack
   expressed it. “Let us get some food first,” said I, “and then we shall
   see. Thank God it is easy enough still to get food.” We soon lit a fire
   and shot some duck, with the help of some of the wild fruit already
   mentioned and the water of the creek we did well enough . Then we
   talked over the situation, and it soon became clear that only two
   courses were open to us if we were to return to civilisation, or even
   to live . The one course was to push backward by the way we came .
   And if it had not been for the last two days’ journey we should prob-
   ably have chosen that way without hesitation . And even now if we
   could be sure of not meeting the blacks again, I think we might have
   tried it . It was true that we might wait here long enough to make
   sure that the blacks would have gone west-ward, but all the while we
   should wait, the tracks and the other waymarks would be gradually
   becoming obliterated . Besides, it was certain that we could not live
   by snaring birds and spearing fish for food as the blacks could, and
   our powder and shot would soon be done . Our better hope seemed
   to lie in the chance of finding white men somewhere near, and the
   strange proceedings of Bomero seemed surely to indicate the near
   presence of white men . He must have met some pioneers from the
   west coast . Such men were often known to treat the blacks as if
   they were mere wild beasts, and it seemed not unlikely that some
   act of reckless cruelty on the part of the white men might have been
   witnessed by him, or, at least, that he might have heard of such from
   some other blacks .
   Jack had a little pocket telescope, and he examined the hill to
   westward with it . After a careful scrutiny he declared that he saw
   a man in one of the gaps on the top of the hill and that he was a
   white man . “Yes, I see him,” said I, for I thought I observed some-
   thing moving, “but I cannot say whether he is black or white .” Jack
   THE GERM GROWERS, by Robert Potter | 470
   handed me the glass, but I could not now distinguish even with the