Breakfast was the easiest meal to prepare. The mornings were still chill enough to make porridge-stirring a most popular job, and for the same reason everyone was eager to toast their own ration of damper-bread at the fire. Cherry had usually spared cream for the porridge from the pans setting for butter, and honey was allowed instead of sugar. It became the fashion to carry this meal to the mouth of the cave and eat it, sitting on rolls of bedding, where the weather could be studied and plans laid for the day. Weather was becoming ever more important, and it was usual for someone to scan the sky at breakfast time and read off the results as from a newspaper.
Thus Brick this morning, spooning porridge from a bowl stolen from the Homestead, announced to the world in general: âI make it half-past seven. Rain in the night, but the rocks are nearly dry now so it couldn't have been much. No wind; Tas reckons it blew itself out in the night and will stay fine now. Ought to see the moon tonight if it stays as clear as this.'
âYes, what about a
raid
tonight, blokes?' Tas invited them. âI sorta fancy the green peas he made me hoe, and the lettuce and young carrots should be ready, too. A couple of hours after sundown would be the time to start.'
âHurray! An earth raid!' shouted Nippy, while the rest agreed with Tas that the Pinners, owing to pressure of other business, had been left unmolested far too long, or at least Jandie's possessions had, which were in their charge.
âWe'll see good-oh, if there's not too many clouds around,' Tas continued. âI bin watching this moon and waiting till the weather took up. Aw! Sharpen your knives, boys. What we want's a bit of
MEAT
.'
âGosh! Does he mean the Pinners? They're much too tough.'
âAha! I know what he means,' yelled Nippy. âHe's fed up with this pappy food, Cherry. He told me so. Porridge and all that! What he likes for breakfast is just chopsânice, red, raw, juicy, underdone
chops.
He saysâ' but Tas's large hand prevented more of Nippy's confidences, while with a red face he hastily explained that what he meant was, why shouldn't Jandie provide them with a nice hen now and then? There were so many scratching round and Ma would never miss a few.
âShe'd only think it was foxes had got 'em,' Brick added helpfully.
âFoxes? What are they?' asked Tas. âOh, I know. Them things you Pommies chase about with a lot of dogs.'
âDon't you have foxes in Australia?'
âIn Australia? Oh, yes. Uncle of mine in South Australia said he was always shooting foxes what ate his grapes. We don't have them things in little Tassie, though, no fear we don't.'
Â
That evening Cherry fetched her goats in early, and had everything ready for âraiding' before dark fell. When the meal was finished they sat talking round the fire, waiting for what Nigel called the âzero hour'.
Tas told tales of the bush. He told of a man who was lost on their very ranges. He had quarrelled with his brother, Tas said, and gone dashing off with nothing to eat, thinking he knew the bush like the palm of his hand. He was never seen alive again, but his body was found.
âTell us about the old Tasmanian Blackfellows,' Cherry said hastily. She felt if Tas told more grim tales of real people she would never have the courage to go with them on the raid. It was different about Blacks, since they had all died out long ago. Already she rather regretted saying she would come with the big ones, leaving Brick and Nippy to guard the cave. It would have been nicer to tumble into bed, but Nigel's remark about being an âold woman' still rankled.
Tas began to tell of a pile of oyster shells he and his friend Mad Dad had found once, with some stone weapons close beside. Mad Dad was all worked up over the Tasmanian abo's, he said, but Tas reckoned they were plain stupid. Look, they could count up to five on one hand, but didn't have enough sense to cross on to the other and make ten.
âI read somewhere,' said Nigel, âthat they could make fire, and knew how to fire the bush so that the grass came, and that brought the kangaroo, that was their meat, along. That wasn't stupid, Tas.'
â'Course they weren't silly,' cried Nippy, who had listened with the greatest attention. âIf they brought oysters all this way to have a feast they were real clever. I had some oyster soup once so I know. It was lovely.'
âReckon they were though, Nippy. Look, they didn't even make clothes out of the fur of the animals they killed and they must have been real cold sometimes.'
âNo! I bet those Blacks had snug caves like ours in the winter.'
âThey didn't then. Least, they might have sheltered in a cave when they found one, but Mad Dad told me the shelter they built was nothing but a bit of skin and a couple of branches against the wind.'
âI bet he's wrong. I'd like to meet your old Mad Dad and ask him how he knows all this, if it's true they all died out sixty years after the first whites came.'
âStop arguing, you two. Come and see the moon rise!'
They hurried over, leaning out to watch the big yellow coin draw itself above the hard line of the hills. The night changed with its light; there was mystery in the dark places, but no stumbling now to dread down the rough track. Even Cherry grew excited about the coming adventure and was eager to leave the cave.
The night air touched with a cold hand the cheeks of the three who left the warmth of the fire. As they set off the moon cleared the entangling trees and swung free in the starry sky. They felt it exciting and glorious to be roaming free themselves at such a time, when the whole world seemed their own property.
With eyes shining in the moonlight, one behind the other, like goats, they followed the vague track their feet were forming down to the Homestead.
Â
It proved to be a very good raid. Before the first bird-cries of dawn, a tired but jubilant party returned to the cave and decided on breakfast before sleep. Brick and Nippy were already awake and running round to inspect the bags of spoil. They had been roused by a song Nigel had composed on the way up, in honour of the occasion of their first night raid. It had been sung rather breathlessly to the only tune which Tas would admit he knewââWaltzing Matilda'âand these were the words:
Â
âOnce a jolly cave-man, tired of drinking milky dope
Drawn in a bucket from his goats' cave-pen,
Said (as he threw his dinner at his sister), “Nope!
Who'll come a-raiding, a-raiding the hen?”'
Â
At this point Brick and Nippy, having caught the words, shrieked delightedly from above:
Â
âAnd he said, as he threw his dinner at his sister, “Nope!
I'll come a-raiding, a-raiding the hen.”
Â
May we go, too, next time?'
âThe goats have gone! I can't find them anywhere.'
âBother you, Cherry. Why can't you look after them better?' Nigel emerged grumbling from the cave; his bare arms were covered in dusty cement and his hands were plastered greyly. All day the men of the cave had been absorbed in the building of a low wall across the cave mouth, to give some protection against bad weather, and to provide seats for breakfast in the sun when it shone. With a bag of cement stolen from an outhouse, rocks, sand, and water from the tarn, they had almost finished the work when Cherry's call disturbed them.
âI think they must have gone downhill for a change,' she explained.
Nigel turned abruptly and fetched the others, for this was serious news. It was now full spring, with the wattle a smother of ripe lemon flowers in every gully, and all the past weeks the âlittle ladies' had filed in punctually each sundown to the milking cave. Never before had they delayed as late as this, when the top rocks were already colouring up their peculiar salmon shade from the reflection of the setting sun.
âHave you tried Tarn's End and High Crag?' Brick enquired, using some of the names that were becoming fastened to various parts of their domain.
âYes, and Rocky Creek. I can't think what's the matter; I used to say they were a better clock than the sun, but I can't hear a tinkle anywhere up there now.'
Tas came hurrying out. âWait while I wash my hands. You finish the job with Brick, Nig. I reckon we'll find them, Cherry and me. You and Nippy try the slope again, will you, Cherry? And I'll go over the ridge and find their tracks if they
have
gone downhill towards the Homestead,' he called.
Cherry turned rather wearily and plodded off in the old direction. After the warm day, birds, bees and animals of various kinds showed by little sounds that they were intensely alive, but nowhere was the busy hum increased by the tinkle of a goat bell. She only half listened to Nippy's chatter about how he could mix concrete with his hands for Nigel. âJust with my bare hands, Cherry, and Old Nig said it was lots better than Brick's; at least, he didn't say so, but it
was
, because Brick tipped half the tarn into his mixture, the silly coot, thinking it would be easier to stir, see? Which just shows a manâ'
âShut up a minute and
listen.
I'm sure I heard something just then.'
They stood poised on a shelf of rock and looked round. Tas had disappeared from sight and half the tarn was in shadow. Above was a thicket of gum saplings from which came, unmistakably, the noise of bells. One by one the goats filed into view, pausing behind their leader to take a snatch at a bough of pale gold wattle buds which pricked the sombre scrub with colour.
âThe goats! Ha ha! You must have looked hard, Cherry. You going blind as well as deaf? They must have been there all the time.'
âThey've never come in from this side before,' she protested, running to them without waiting for the rest of Nippy's remarks. Lily came up and nuzzled her hand and Cherry saw that her sides were heaving.
âGo and find Tas,' she called back. âTell him they're all here, but they have been chased by something; they're panting and upset. Hurry up and tell him they're found. I'll go down with them and milk.'
There was no need to drive her flock, for the deer-like Lily trotted after her and the others followed, only pausing at their usual corner for a drink of tarn water. Inside the cave she found Nigel placing his last stones more by feel than by sight, and whistling cheerfully.
âGood,' he said, âI heard you coming along with them.'
âIt looks an awful mess in here,' she grumbled, for sand lay everywhere in sugar-bags and upon the floor, and Brick was collecting up odd stones, and trying to clean up a pool of water.
âWho cares?' Nigel stood up to ease his aching back and looked proudly at his work.
When Cherry returned with the milk he had one foot on the wall and was making a speech. âLadies and, erâcave-woman and cave-men! In spite of drinking too much goat's milk at the Special Luncheon you held in my honour today I am still able to declare this Wall OpenâI mean Closed! And every stone well and truly laid except the ones Brick did.'
âShut up! No one asked you to make a speech, anyway. Ah, here they come. No, it's only Nippy.'
âHullo, Nippy! (I'll finish my speech later, dear friends.) Didn't you find Tas?'
âNo. I looked and called everywhere. He must've gone right right down, so I came back as it was getting dark.'
âYou
would.
Why didn't you shout?'
âI did a bit. He didn't answer, though.'
âWell, to conclude our brief address: let your Pa Pinners do their worst! Naught shall make us rue, if cave-men to their cave remain but true. Did I hear loud applause?'
âYou did not.'
âNow lift your toothmugs and sing this touching tribute (and chuck some wet bags over it, Brick, or it will dry out in cracks), the tune is “Pop Goes the Weasel” (and what about something to eat, Cherry? And throw us over that towel, someone).
Â
âHalf a ton of pinched cement,
Half a pail of water,
Mix 'em up and make 'em nice
Andâ
Â
âHullo!' He stopped so abruptly that they all looked at him, not certain whether this was some new fooling or not. Nigel was standing tense and listening intently. They listened too, until they heard something which made them also rigid.
For there were voices coming up the track, voices in quiet conversation.
In a moment they found themselves along the new wall, heedless of the fresh cement, and peering into the half-dark bush to see who was coming.
There was Tas, of course, but the other figure emerging from the shadows and keeping close behind himâwho was he?
âIt'sâPa Pinner!'
âIt's notâit
can
'
t
be.'
âIs Tas mad? To bring him so nearâ¦'
âThey've stopped! LookâTas is coming on alone. What on earth does he want?'
Tas came on until he stood beneath the cave. Then he called with his special whistle and looked up. Seeing their faces dimly as they leaned out, he asked quite loudly, âD'you blokes mind if I bring a friend along?'
There was a stupefied silence till Nigel broke it. âWould he be safe, Tas? I mean safe not to tell anyone?' he whispered.
â'Course he is! Did the goats come in all right?'
âYes,' Cherry whispered down urgently, âbut they were frightened, as though they'd been chased, Tas.'
âThat's all right, they only saw my friend, I reckon. I'll bring him up then.' Turning, he left them to their astonished guessing.
Bush and shadows merged into a curtain to conceal the track, and the last primrose streaks of light in the west were too far away to help them learn more about this friend that Tas was leading up the Giant Steps.
âI'll slip out and get an eyeful as they come over the ridge,' Nippy cried excitedly, but Nigel would allow no such spying.