[Robbery Under Arms by Thomas Alexander Browne]@TWC D-Link bookRobbery Under Arms CHAPTER 17 3/34
'Anyhow, there isn't a shepherd's hut within miles that he can get to without our knowing it.
The country's rough, but there's word gone for a black tracker to go down.
You'll see him in Bargo before the week's out.' I had a good guess where Jim would make for, and he knew enough to hide his tracks for the last few miles if there was a whole tribe of trackers after him. That night we rode into Bargo.
A long day too we'd had--we were all tired enough when we got in.
I was locked up, of course, and as soon as we were in the cell Goring said, 'Listen to me,' and put on his official face--devilish stern and hard-looking he was then, in spite of all the talking and nonsense we'd had coming along. 'Richard Marston, I charge you with unlawfully taking, stealing, and carrying away, in company with others, one thousand head of mixed cattle, more or less the property of one Walter Hood, of Outer Back, Momberah, in or about the month of June last.' 'All right; why don't you make it a few more while you're about it ?' 'That'll do,' he said, nodding his head, 'you decline to say anything. Well, I can't exactly wish you a merry Christmas--fancy this being Christmas Eve, by Jove!--but you'll be cool enough this deuced hot weather till the sessions in February, which is more than some of us can say.
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