An Outback Marriage - Page 129/145

The surface of the plain was level enough, but frightfully bad

going; the sun had baked the black soil till great gaping cracks,

a couple of feet wide and ten feet deep, were opened in the ground. The

buffaloes had wallowed in the wet season and made round well-like

holes that were now hard, dry pitfalls. Here and there a treacherous,

slimy watercourse wound its slinking way along, making a bog in

which a horse would sink to his shoulders; and over all these traps

and pitfalls the long waving jungle-grass drew a veil. Every now

and then belts of small bamboo were crossed, into which the horses

dashed blindly, forcing their way through by their weight. When

they started the buffaloes had a lead of a quarter of a mile, and

judging by their slogging, laboured gallop, it looked as though

the horses would run into them in half a mile; but on that ground

the buffaloes could go nearly as fast as the horses, and it was

only after a mile and a quarter of hard riding that they closed

in on the mob, which at once split into several detachments. A

magnificent old bull, whose horns measured ten feet from tip

to tip, dashed away to the right with six or seven cows lumbering

after him. Hugh and one of the shooters followed this lot. Another

mob went away to the left, pursued by the other shooter and Considine;

while one old cow, having had enough running, suddenly wheeled in

her tracks, and charged straight at Tommy Prince, whose horse at

once whipped round and carried his rider, with the old cow at his

tail, into a clump of bamboos. Hugh followed his mate as hard as

he could, both horses feeling the pace, and pecking and blundering

every now and again in the broken ground. Once Hugh saw a buffalo-wallow

suddenly appear right under his horse's nose, and half-flinched,

expecting a certain fall; but old "Close Up" strode over it,

apparently having a leg to spare for emergencies of the sort.

Just ahead of him the shooter, sitting down in his saddle, lifted

his horse with a drive of the spurs, and came right alongside the

hindmost animal, a fat blue cow, which at once swerved at right

angles; but the horse followed her every movement, and drew up till

horse and buffalo were racing side by side. Then without fuss or

hurry, up went the elbow of the rider and bang! the buffalo fell

as if paralysed, shot through the lions. The horse swung away from

the falling animal as it crashed to the ground; and the shooter,

still going at full gallop, methodically ejected the used cartridge

and put in another without losing his place at the tail of the

flying mob. The noise of the carbine made the mob divide, and Hugh

found himself going full speed after three that came his way. Wild

with excitement, he drove Close Up after the nearest, and made

ready to fire at the right moment. The long gallop had winded him;

his arm was almost numbed with the strain of carrying the carbine,

which now seemed to weigh a ton.