Authors: Nicole Alexander
âLuke.' Mungo called out loudly as his horse trotted from the direction of the creek. âWhere have you been?' His blue shirt flapped about his waist where it had come loose from his trousers, a curled stockwhip hung from his shoulder.
âI'm hoping you don't need a description.' Luke reined in Joseph on his friend's approach as Angus cantered away, scowling.
âAh,' Mungo raised his eyebrows knowingly and grinned. âSame girl?'
âSame girl for the last time,' Luke replied, watching as Angus entered the Wangallon Homestead yard. âEventually they all become a problem. How's your mob?' He dipped his chin towards the camp on the creek.
âBoxer is a bit old now.'
It was true. Those that were at the founding of Wangallon nearly fifty years ago had long left their youth behind. âLike Hamish.'
âThe Boss? I don't call him old. I call him the fox.'
Luke laughed. Joseph moved his hoofs restlessly in the dirt. âAnd your woman?'
âShe becomes my father's cousin's woman.'
He'd hoped that as Boxer's son, Mungo would be the recipient of greater consideration. âI'm sorry.'
Mungo looked ahead to the homestead. âIt is the second time in her life. She doesn't go to him until the next full moon. Until then she works in the big house.'
Luke smiled. âThe big house, eh?'
Mungo pointed at Luke's shoulder. âIt is good now, I think.'
Luke moved his arm up and down slowly. âI owe you.'
Mungo grinned. âI know.' He flicked his reins, turning his horse away. âI must catch her between old men.' With a swish of his hat Mungo galloped off, riding to a stand of box trees where a slight figure in a pale dress waited. The girl's long black hair swayed as he helped her up to sit behind him on his horse. Luke lifted his hat in salute.
Sarah took special care with the evening meal. The old family dining table, the scene of Gordon mealtimes since the 1860s, was set for two people. Solid silver cutlery shimmered amid the turn of the century English dinnerware and the cut crystal stemware. She moved the heavy silver candelabra to the opposite end of the table and gave the five-foot-long gleaming mahogany sideboard, with its glass decanters, silver salvers and ancient punch-bowl, a quick polish. Then she boiled potatoes, mashing them up with butter and full-cream milk, and added a teaspoon of honey to the freshly steamed carrots.
âSmells great.'
Anthony's hands gripped her shoulders as he kissed her lightly. He waited as she plated up the juicy T-bone steaks.
âWant me to set the table?'
âI thought we would eat inside.' She sensed his frown, knowing his preference would be a can of beer in front of the television.
âWhat's the occasion?' Anthony followed her into the dining room.
âDo we need one?' For a moment Sarah considered forgetting her concerns. âI helped Matt and Jack muster the steers this morning.' She sat the plates on the table. Anthony pulled out her chair so she could sit. âYou should have seen Bullet. He was the star, after Moses, of course.'
Anthony rolled his eyes. âMoses isn't the wonder dog Matt likes to think he is.'
âI met Toby Williams, our drover.'
âToby Williams? Now there's a name I haven't heard for a while.' He poured red wine into both their glasses. âHe's a bit of a ladies' man, but a damn good drover.' He raised his glass. âTo us.'
âTo us.' Sarah took a large sip before cutting into her steak. âHow do you know Toby?'
âHe's been around for a while. Actually he did quite a lot of work for Angus in the seventies. There was talk of him being a descendent of someone who worked here on Wangallon in the early 1900s.'
âHow intriguing. I wonder who?'
âDon't know. I mentioned it to Angus one day and he told me not to listen to gossip. Anyway we'll have to be on the lookout when we start mustering. Toby's a bit of a tear-arse. You know, move the stock by the quickest route and if that happens to be through a few fences, tough. Angus always said he was a good stockman but reckoned you needed a clean-up crew after he'd been on a property and he's a bugger for leaving gates open.'
Sarah took a sip of wine. âSo where were you today?'
âI had a few things happening early,' Anthony said evasively. âI did come back for smoko and lunch. I wondered where you were? I thought there were enough men to handle that job.'
âI like working outside, Anthony. I do it because I want to.' She gave a weak smile, acknowledging how defensive she sounded.
Swallowing her mouthful, her eyes came to rest on the formidable oil portrait of her great-grandfather, Hamish, hanging above the sideboard. He was depicted sitting, his fine dark suit and waistcoat failing to detract from his barrel chest and uncompromising violet-eyed gaze.
âFair enough. It's just that we do have staff and I thought you had enough to do already, what with the book work and the garden.'
âActually I'm considering rehiring our old bookkeeper. I'll still do the basic stuff.'
âWhy?' Anthony took a sip of wine.
âI would rather be outdoors.'
âBut your time is better utilised doing the things we don't need to employ more staff for.'
Sarah sighed. âThen you take over the book work and the garden.' He didn't answer her. Great, she thought. Did she treat this as a stalemate or go ahead and rehire the bookkeeper? It struck her that perhaps there lay part of the problem. Had she been deferring to Anthony a little too much? âYou've made some purchases,' she began, uncomfortably aware that either way, she was about to ruin the evening.
Anthony nodded, his jaw finishing off a mouthful of tasty home-grown beef. âThe panels of course and the new loading ramps we discussed. This is great.'
Sarah took a sip of wine, her eyes straying to her great-grandfather. âWe didn't.'
Anthony paused, his fork midway between his plate and mouth. âI'm sorry?'
âWe didn't discuss the purchase of the panels, cattle truck or the ramps.' Her fork mounded her serving of potato into an Everest-type sculpture.
âSorry, thought we did.' His eyes met hers.
âThere's nothing in the station diary either.'
Anthony put his knife and fork down and took a large sip of wine. âAnd?'
Sarah gave the mashed potato one final stroke before destroying its peak with the flat of her fork. âWell, I've noticed that you seem to be forgetting to tell me things, important things.'
âThey're only panels and ramps, Sarah.'
âTwenty-eight thousand dollars worth.'
âSo you're concerned about the cost?' He looked relieved. âI have been too. These couple of dry seasons have knocked us about a bit, although I've been doing the budget projections on a project that will pretty much pull Wangallon out of debt.'
âWhat project?' Sarah asked dismissively.
Anthony pushed his chair back, his hand straying to his partially drunk glass of wine. He sipped at the glass, his eyes peering at her from over the rim. âWhat's bothering you?'
âDon't get angry. It's just that you seem to be making major financial decisions without consulting me.'
âI didn't realise I had to.'
With precision-like movements Sarah cut a piece of steak, added a sliver of carrot and chewed thoughtfully. The last thing she needed was for Anthony to become defensive. âEven our weekly meetings have descended into you talking over the top of me.'
âThat's not true. Actually I seem to recall you and Matt bonding over coffee and pretty much ignoring my suggestions.' Anthony finished his wine and looked irritably at his congealing steak.
âWhat's the matter?' she finally asked.
âI don't like my decisions being questioned like I'm the hired help.'
âAnd I don't like being left out of the loop when I'm the bloody Gordon.'
So there it was. The two things that neither of them had any control over. In Anthony's mind part of him would forever be the
jackeroo. âMaybe,' she suggested slowly, âwe could look at this a different way.'
âWhat way? Would you like me to report to you every morning now that you suddenly have decided to become fully involved in the running of Wangallon?'
âBloody hell.' Sarah banged the top of the table with her hand, before taking a deep breath. âLook, I don't like change, okay? You of all people should know that. There has been too much of it in this family. I don't want to move bedrooms or put awnings on the main verandah. I don't want Matt Schipp disgruntled because you want him to be more than the head stockman and I don't want things purchased or Wangallon's management style changed without us discussing it first, jointly. I'm entitled to have an equal say in the management of Wangallon.'
âFair enough. It's just that since Angus's death you have holed yourself up in the office a fair bit. I thought you were happy with the way things were going.'
Sarah ignored the tight line of annoyance between his eyes. âIt was important for me to get the feel for things. You know cashflow and budget forecasting. And yes, I've been really upset. Angus's death is the like the passing of an era on Wangallon.'
Anthony rolled his eyes. âIt's nearly two years, Sarah, time to let go and move on.' He cleared his throat. âWe should be discussing the one thing you've been avoiding since Angus's death. You can't keep burying your head in the dirt. Jim Macken was left a thirty per cent share and â'
Sarah held her hand up. âI don't want to talk about it. Not tonight.'
âYou can't ignore it. Angus stipulated that Jim had two years to be informed of his will. And fair enough. They have a lot to come to terms with.'
â
They
have a lot to come to terms with?' Sarah's knuckles whitened.
âSarah.' Anthony leant forward in his chair. âAll I'm saying is that the two years are nearly up. You have to prepare yourself. Jim Macken has rights.'
âThe illegitimate son of my father has rights?'
They ate silently for some minutes, although Sarah's appetite was gone. âIt was great to see Shelley so happy.' Sarah knew her words sounded double-edged.
Anthony pushed his chair out abruptly and stood. âYes, it was. Is that going to be us, Sarah? Two years is a hell of a long time to be engaged.'
Sarah closed her eyes briefly. âAren't you happy?'
âIt's not the same.'
âNor is saying you're willing to work as a team and then running off and buying expensive stuff without consulting me. There are other people involved in the running of this property. And in case you've forgotten, we actually do work to a budget.'
âPersonally I think the main problem here, Sarah, is that my surname isn't Gordon and you want to make sure yours stays that way.'
How on earth did a conversation about his attitude morph into the personal? Sarah wondered.
âEvery argument we have invariably involves Wangallon and your heritage. You don't have anything to prove, and I'm not trying to supersede you as far as the running of the property is concerned. How can I possibly do that when you are the fourth generation Gordon? Yes, I was left a thirty per cent share in the property as you were, but you forget; I've been here for eight years. During that time you moved to Sydney, became a photographer, fell in love with someone else and got engaged. It was your grandfather and me running Wangallon. Now after holing yourself up in the station office for months, you seem to have decided that I've taken on too much responsibility and you feel threatened by it. Well I know what has to be done and how to do it. So bloody well let me.'
He left her sitting alone with the remains of their unfinished dinner. Sarah glanced up at her great-grandfather, finishing her wine in two long sips. This was one argument that she couldn't see being won by either of them. In a way she guessed she should have known this would happen. From Anthony's viewpoint he was the one who had put in the hard yards on the place. Yet having both received a thirty per cent share in the property from her grandfather did not make them equal in his eyes, for in the end she was the surviving Gordon, both by name and birthright. She may well have been the second choice following her brother's untimely death, but the mantle was hers.
Sarah cleared the dining room table. She stacked the plates and left them on the kitchen sink and then poured herself another glass of wine. Glass in hand, she walked outside and sat on the top step. The air was cold and crisp; the dome of the sky bright with stars. A slight scuffle announced Bullet as he struggled out from beneath the elevated rainwater tank. He stopped to look over his shoulder at Ferret, the one dog he appeared agreeable to sharing his special camping spot with, and ambled slowly down the cracked cement path towards her. He took up position on the cement step, his head in her lap. Sarah stroked him, examined the dried blood on his nose. He wriggled, wagged his tail, and then opened his eyes briefly to look up at her. He smelled of cow manure and dirt. She ruffled the dog's back and leant against the door. Surely Anthony could see that for their relationship to work he had to let her be totally involved in the running of Wangallon. Even the knowledge that her father intended to leave his ten per cent share in the property to her on his passing didn't really change things. The two of them had to live, love and work as a team. There was no other way, for things weren't perfect and she had a feeling that time was running out. Anthony was right, although Sarah hated to admit it. Jim did have the right to claim a share in Wangallon. It's just that no one knew if he planned to.
Two days later Sarah was back in the office reconciling the previous month's accounts. The mail would have been delivered by now and it would take Anthony only ten minutes or so to drive down to the boundary gate and collect it. The last few days had been difficult. Their conversation was still limited to only the very necessary. At least her mother's condition had stabilised, although Sarah was unsure as to whether that was positive or negative. It was hard to feel much for a woman who'd barely tolerated her when she was growing up and then conveniently slipped into mental oblivion after her son's death. Sarah almost succumbed to discussing her mother with Anthony, but they'd never been friendly and Sarah was still angry enough not to want to admit to needing his support. Instead she reconciled herself to a trip north at some future stage, if only for her father's sake.
In the office Sarah flipped open the paddock book, her fingers running along each line as she checked the stock moved to various paddocks during the last two weeks. The steers had been moved to an oat crop, 6,000 ewes due to lamb in September had been walked 15 kilometres south to the black wattle paddocks, the bulls were on oats taking a well deserved holiday from their breeding duties and ⦠Something was wrong. Sarah flipped back through the pages of the paddock book: Stumpy, Ridge, Back, Stud, Corner, all recent paddocks involved in stock movements. She checked and rechecked dates, mobs of sheep and herds of cattle. Boxer's Plain was overstocked with both sheep and cattle. Well it was pretty clear which mob would be first out on the stock route. Boxer's was prime grazing country. A good third of it was comprised of a flat expanse of grassland. That was the last block she wanted to see eaten out. It took too long for the grasses to regenerate when the rain finally did come.