"No, Mr. Morris, he did not," she answered, with emphasis on the name Morris.
"I notice you had a letter from him," said Hal, quietly.
"I never had--" She got no further for, turning round, she found the envelope facing her. "You"ve been reading my letters while I was away,"
she called out, in a fury; then, noticing it was an envelope alone, she cooled down, and said:
"This was from my brother at Port Augusta."
"It"s a pity all the Colonies do not adopt the same colour for their stamps, for, while Victoria is puce, South Australia is yellow," said Hal, carelessly pointing to the puce stamp, but the girl s.n.a.t.c.hed it up, gave him an evil glance, and sat down to write a note.
The saloon was very tastefully arranged, and Gussy had forgotten that the wall at her back was covered with mirrors, otherwise she would not have been so hasty as to write on a telegraph form in a manner that was easily to be distinguished by both Hal and Reg.
"Come, Reg. We must go," said Hal, rising.
"Good-bye, Miss Wallace, I"m awfully sorry you are offended."
"She"s going to send a telegram to him. We must try and get a look at the address," said Hal, as they once more found themselves in the street.
"How is that to be done?"
"Well, I don"t know if you have noticed the way a messenger generally carries a telegram to the office."
"Can"t say I have."
"Well, I amuse myself frequently by noticing these things, and I have observed that he invariably carries it in his hand, and reads it twice before sending it."
"Well, what of that?"
"In the first place it will enable us to see who the messenger is, and in the second we may be able to read the telegram as well as he,"
answered Hal, as he took up his position in a deep doorway on the side of the street opposite to the hotel.
Shortly afterwards they saw Gussy appear at the door, and look about her to see all was clear. A few minutes later a boy appeared carrying a telegram in his hand.
Walking on the opposite side of the street as far as King William Street, they shadowed him, and crossing the road walked close in his rear. As the lad stopped at the office, he opened the telegram, and looked at it. Hal at the same time glanced over his shoulder, and read:
V. Wyckliffe, Great Australian Palace, Melbourne. Morris and another called for you to-day. Going Melbourne. Look out. G----y.
"Hal, you"re a wonder," said Reg when he became acquainted with the contents of the telegram.
"I reckon we"re getting close on him now. He will only have three days"
start of us," said Hal, complacently. "The guide says--"Express to Melbourne at 3.30., arriving at 10.30 next morning: boudoir car attached.""
"Let"s fill up the time by going to a music-hall," suggested Reg.
"Don"t keep them here, my boy."
"What, no music-halls!"
"Well there is a small one run by Tommy Hudson, but it is used as a theatre. Adelaide people don"t believe in leg-shows and ballets."
"But I thought they had the Gaiety people out here, and did a big business."
"Quite true, but it caused such an extra-ordinary number of divorce and breach of promise cases that they have not repeated it."
"Have they a decent theatre, then?"
"Yes, a capital one, run by good old Wybert Reeve, and as the Governor goes there to-night, there will be an extra crush."
"Does he influence the public?"
"Rather, my boy. I have seen the stalls and dress-circle quite empty one night and crowded the next to overflowing, all on account of the presence of the Governor and his wife."
"Then we had better not rob them of their enjoyment," said Reg, emphatically.
They spent the following morning in visiting the sights of Adelaide, that picturesquely placed and beautifully laid-out city, nestling by the _broad waters_ (_!_) of the Torrens, beneath its background of lofty blue mountains; and took the afternoon express to Melbourne.
CHAPTER IX.
MELBOURNE.
After pa.s.sing a somewhat restless night in the boudoir car they arrived at Melbourne. Boudoir cars are very comfortable and pleasant places in their way, but on this particular occasion they did not find it overwhelmingly pleasant, for their fellow-pa.s.sengers had their own peculiar way of amusing themselves. For instance, a Melbournite and a Sydneyite had to share the same compartment, and any man who has travelled in Australia knows what that will lead to. It was a new experience to Reg. Hal, however, found himself fully occupied in closing his ears to the snores coming from a pa.s.senger in the next compartment.
"Talk about Sydney! Why, what have you got to talk about? You"ve a decent harbour through no fault of your own, and that"s about all you can boast of," said the man from Melbourne.
"And what have you got? Just open the window, and everybody will know.
_Smellbourne_ is your proper t.i.tle. I always have to carry disinfectants with me when I come here. Say, guard, see that those windows are closed," sang out the man from Sydney.
"Ha! ha! ha!" laughed the other, in retort. "We certainly have not your natural resources, but what we have we have made ourselves. Look at our splendid buildings, our streets, our cable tramcars, our prosperous country."
"Yes, look at them. Where are the men that built them? In gaol. How was the money to build them obtained? By robbing English capitalists. And what"s the consequences? Why, they are all empty. Fancy, ten thousand empty houses in a small town like yours."
"And how about your empty houses? Your Parliament House? Bah! It"s a bauble shop. While your members are fighting amongst themselves like cats and dogs, the country is going to the deuce."
"Guard, please separate those gentlemen," screamed a shrill voice from the lady"s compartment.
"Stop your row, there," shouted the man who had been snoring so loudly, imagining their quarrel had woke him up, whereas, a kick from Hal had done it.
"Go to sleep, you fellows, blowing about Sydney and Melbourne. Why, our little town of Brisbane licks you both hollow," roared a tall man in pyjamas, jumping on the floor.
"Yes; before the flood," shouted the Sydney man.
"Look here, gentlemen. You will have to make less noise," said the collector, now appearing on the scene.
Thus it was that they were disturbed all night long and, on the following morning, things nearly approached a crisis, owing to the Sydney man ostentatiously producing camphor and eucalyptus and preparing to scatter them about to kill the noxious germs of Melbourne.