The Cattle Baron's Bride Read online




  The Cattle Baron's Bride

  Margaret Way

  CHAPTER ONE

  BY THE light of the stars alone in a situation fraught with difficulties and dangers Sunderland and his tracker Joe Goolatta led a traumatised jackeroo missing since late afternoon the previous day back through dense tropical jungle to the safety of the savannah. The forest floor was alive with activity. All sorts of nocturnal creatures, some with malevolent eyes, pounced on prey or scuttled under foot hunting for food. Forest debris crashed to the ground as the countless legions of possums with their thick pelts ripped up leaves and twigs or made their prodigious leaps from tree to tree sending down a hailstorm of edible berries and nuts. Huge bats hung upside down assuming the appearance of vampires. Other dark forms flapped over head. Monstrous amethyst pythons growing to twenty feet long wrapped themselves around branches close over head, while the brown snakes and their brothers the deadly black snakes moved slowly, sinuously through the trees guided not by sight but smell as they stalked sleeping birds. Now and again a night bird shrieked an alarm at their presence as they trekked through the forest galleries. Giant epiphytes clung to the buttresses of the rain forest trees, staghorns and elkhorns; all kinds of climbing orchids glimmered in the starlight. Now and again Sunderland slashed at something. Probably the Stinging Tree. Brushing up against the leaves could inflict extreme pain. Sunderland and the tracker scarcely made a sound. They might have spent their whole lives living in this overwhelming stronghold of Nature among the community of rain forest animals. Ben Rankin, the jackeroo, seventeen years old moaned and groaned, his every movement jerky and slow as he stumbled over thick woody prop roots and fallen branches, vines that grew in wild tangles, letting out high pitched nervous cries to rival the shrieks of the night bird.

  "Get a hold there, Rankin," Sunderland clipped off, not impressed by the lad's behaviour. He grasped the boy's arm for perhaps the hundredth time giving him a helping hand. "We're nearly there."

  How could he possibly know? Ben marvelled. The Boss's night vision was awesome.

  Finally they emerged into a clearing having walked unerringly to the very spot where a station jeep was parked. Who would believe it?

  "Made it!" The old aboriginal stockman spoke with satisfaction. "Must be four, thereabouts," he growled, looking up at the lightening sky. "Not far off sunrise. '

  "Almost time to start work again," Sunderland said wryly, pushing the hapless jackeroo into the back seat of the jeep where the youngster collapsed into a heap. Ben's whole body was shuddering. He was physically and mentally spent now his ordeal was over. "Oh God, oh God!" he sobbed, covering his head with his hands. "I'm such a fool."

  "Too right, little buddy!" the old aboriginal said, making his disgust clear.

  Sunderland showed no emotion at all as though it were a sheer waste of time. He put light pressure on the boy's shoulder. "You've had a bad experience. Learn from it."

  "Yes, sir." Ben's breath came out like a hiss his jaw was clamped so tight. "Kept thinking a bloody great croc would get me."

  Goolatta snorted.

  "We're nowhere near the river. Or a billabong for that matter," Sunderland pointed out matter-offactly, not having a lot of time for the boy's distress either. Rankin like all the other recruits had been obliged to sit in on lectures regarding station safety. He had been warned many times never to hare off on his own. Most had the sense to listen. Territory cattle stations were vast. Some as big as European countries. It was dead easy to get lost in the relatively featureless wilderness. Obeying the rules made the difference between living and dying. A few over the years had disappeared without trace.

  "When you realised you were lost you should have stayed put instead of venturing further into the jungle," Sunderland told him. "We would have found you a whole lot quicker."

  "I'm sorry. Sorry," the jackeroo moaned, appalled now at his own foolhardiness. "What a savage place this is. Paradise until you step off the track."

  "Remember it next time you fell like pulling another daredevil stunt." Sunderland told him bluntly. "Joe and I won't have the time to come after you. You'll have to find your own way home." Sunderland raked a hand through his hair, looked up at the sky. "Let's move on," he sighed, listening carefully to something crashing through the undergrowth. A wild boar? "You can rest up this morning, Rankin. Back to work this afternoon. That's if you want to hold onto your job."

  The jackeroo tried desperately to get a grip on himself. To date he had never found anyone better. Action. Adventure. A fantastic guy for a boss. A real life Indiana Jones. Sunderland never showed fear not even in the middle of a stampede that could well have been Ben's fault though no one blamed him. Well maybe Pete Lowell, the overseer. Not too many chances left he thought, his heart quaking. "Yes, sir. Thank you, sir," he muttered. The last thing he wanted was for Sunderland to get rid of him. All the same it had been terrifying his endless hours all alone in the jungle. The ominous weight of the silence that was somehow filled with sound. He had actually felt the presence of the mimi spirits greatly feared by the aboriginals in this part of the world. Not that he was ever going to tell anyone about his brush with psychic terror. It had seemed so real. All that whispering and gibbering, ghostly fingers on his cheek. He would never be such a fool again. He just hoped Sunderland would never find out about the bet he'd had with his fellow jackeroo Chris Pearce.

  "Want me to drive, boss?" Joe asked quietly, as always looking out for the splendid young man he had watched grow to manhood.

  Sunderland shook his head. "Grab forty winks if you can, Joe," he advised, slinging his lean powerful frame behind the wheel. "It's going to be one helluva day and I have an appointment in Darwin tonight."

  "The photographer guy? Big shot."

  "That's the one. A showing of his work. I've actually seen some at a gallery in Cairns. Wonderful stuff. Very impressive and very expensive. The asking price for many of the prints was thousands. He was getting it too. Photography is supposedly so easy especially these days but I've never seen images quite so extraordinary or insightful. It must have been difficult trying to get the photographs he did. Difficult and dangerous in untouched parts of the world, waiting around for the precise time and conditions, hoping the weather will stay fine."

  "So what's he want to do now? The Top End?"

  "Why not? The Top End is undoubtedly the most exotic part of Australia. It is even to other Australians a remote and wild world, frontier country, a stepping stone away from Asia. The Territory is the place to wonder at the marvels of nature. Kakadu alone would keep him busy. It's a world heritage area, of international significance as are the cultural artworks of your people, Joe. I don't know if he wants to get down to the Red Centre, Uluru, Kata Tjuta and the Alice but if it's

  the whole Territory he intends to cover then the Wild Heart is on his itinerary.'

  "Nobody could be that good they'd capture my country," Joe Goolatta said, fiercely proud and protective of his heritage.

  "I guess you're right, Joe," Sunderland said.

  They swept across the rugged terrain the jeep houncing over the rough tracks heading towards North Star homestead. The first streaks of light lay along the horizon, lemon, pink and indigo prefacing dawn. Soon the little Spinifex doves would start to call to one another, music from thousands of tiny throats and the great flights of birds would take to the skies.

  "Think you'll help him out?" Joe asked, after a pause of some ten minutes. He was leaning his head, covered in the snow white curls that contrasted so starkly with his skin, against the headrest. He was bone tired, but well into his sixties he was still hard at it.

  "Don't know yet," Sunderland muttered, still toying with the idea. "His first choice for a guide w
as Cy: " Sunderland referred to his good friend Cyrus Bannerman of Mokhani Station. "But Cy is still in the honeymoon phase. He can't bear to be away from his Jessica. Can't say I blame him." He saluted his friend's choice. "It was Cy who suggested me."

  "Couldn't be anyone better," Joe grunted. "However good Cy is and he is I reckon you're even better."

  "Prejudiced, Joe." A beam from the head lights picked up a pair of kangaroos who shot up abruptly from behind a grassy mound, turning curious faces. Sunderland swerved to avoid them muttering a mild curse. Kangaroos knew nothing about road rules.

  "Thing is whether you've got the time," Joe said, totally unable to fall asleep like the kid in the back who was snoring so loudly he wished he had ear plugs.

  "If I did go I'd take you with me," Sunderland said glancing at his old friend and childhood mentor.

  "Yah kiddin' ?" Joe sat up straight, an expression of surprise on his dignified face.

  "Who else will take care of me?" Sunderland asked.

  Joe's big white grin showed his delight. "I was afraid you might be thinkin' I'm getting too old."

  "Never!" Sunderland dropped down a gear for a few hundred metres. "You're better on your feet than a seventeen-year-old. Besides, no one knows this ancient land like you do, Joe. Your people are the custodians of all this."

  "Didn't I teach you all I know?" Joe asked gently, thrilled their friendship was so deep.

  "It would take a dozen lifetimes," Sunderland said, his eyes on a flight of magpie geese winging from one lagoon to another. "But we're learning. This land was hostile to my people when we first came here. Sunderlands came to the wild bush but managed to survive. As cattle men we recognize the debt we owe your people. North Star has always relied on its aboriginal stockmen, bush men and trackers. Elders like you, Joe, have skills we're still learning. I only half know what you do and I'm quite happy to admit it. In the beginning my people feared this land as much as it drew us. Now we love it increasingly in the way you do. We draw closer and closer with every generation. There's no question we all occupy a sacred landscape."

  "That we do," Joe answered, deeply moved. "So you think you could go then?" Now that he knew he might accompany the young man he worshipped he was excited by the idea.

  Sunderland's smile slipped. "I'm a bit worried about leaving Belle at home. She's had a rotten time of it. I can't just abandon her, even if it's only for a couple of weeks."

  "Take her along," Joe urged. "Miss Isabelle is as good in the bush as anyone I've seen. She could be an asset."

  Sunderland shook his dark head. "I don't see Belle laughing and happy any more, Joe. Neither do you. I know your heart aches for her as well. My sister is a woman who feels very deeply. It'll take her a long time to get over Blair's death. She's punishing herself because his family, his mother in particular, appeared to blame her for his fatal accident."

  "Cruel, cruel woman," Joe said. "I disliked that woman from day one." He stopped short of saying he hadn't taken to Miss Isabelle's husband either. Good-looking guy-nothing beside Miss Isabelle's splendid big brother-but as big a snob as his mother-aboriginal man too primitive to look at much less to speak to. No, Joe hadn't taken to Miss Isabelle's dead husband who had died in a car crash after some big society party. Miss Isabelle should have been with him but the awful truth was they had had a well publicised argument at the party before Blair Hartmann had stormed out to his death.

  "Dad and I never took to her either," Sunderland sighed. "Incredibly pretentious woman. But Blair was Belle's choice. You know what she was like. As headstrong as they come. Blair was such a change from most guys she knew. A smooth sophisticated city guy, high flyer, establishment family, glamorous life style, family mansion on Sydney Harbour."

  "Dazzled her for a while," Joe grunted. "But that wasn't really Miss Isabelle: "

  "No," Sunderland agreed with a heavy heart. "I expect she was acting out a fantasy. She was too young and inexperienced and he was crazy about her. So crazy he practically railroaded her into it. I somehow think she'd never choose someone like Blair Hartmann again though she won't hear a word against him. I don't think I could convince her to go although I know she can handle herself. Hell she was born to it but on principle I don't like women along on those kind of trips. Most of them are trouble. They can't handle the rough. They put themselves and consequently others at risk. It makes it harder for the men."

  It took another few minutes before he came out with what was really bothering him. "If Langdon suggests his sister comes along I'm walking."

  "Langdon? That's the photographer right? And the sister was the bridesmaid at Cy Bannerman's wedding?" Joe flashed him a shrewd glance. Joe had never met the young lady but unlike everyone else Joe found it easy to read the man he had known from infancy. "I thought you took a real shine to her?" He chuckled and stretched but Sunderland refused to bite.

  "How would you know?"

  "I know." Joe smiled.

  "Pretty weird the way you read my mind. You're a sorcerer, Joe Goolatta: "

  Joe nodded. "Been one in my time."

  "Think I don't know that." Joe closed his eyes.

  The memory was seared into his brain like a brand.

  The first time he laid eyes on Samantha Langdon she was running down the divided staircase at Mokhani homestead one hand holding up the glistening satin folds of the bridesmaid dress she had just tried on. He and Cy had picked that precise moment to walk in the front door after a long back breaking day. He'd been helping Cy out with a difficult muster, riding shot gun from the helicopter to frighten a stubborn herd of cleanskins out of the heavy scrub. That's what friends were for. He and Cy went back to the toddler stage. He was Cy's best man. Cy would be his if he ever got around to getting married. The floating apparition-that was the only way he could describe her-was a close friend of Cy's bride to be, Jessica, a beautiful young woman, clever, funny with something real to say. Samantha Iangdon was the chief bridesmaid. One of four. They were to have a rehearsal later on after the men had washed up and had time to catch a cold beer...

  The vision laughed, spoke, the words tumbling out as if she were unable to help herself.

  "Oh goodness, we didn't think you'd be back so soon! "

  She spoke the words at Cy, but rather looked at him as though he possessed some kind of uncommon magnetism. He remembered he just stood there, in turn, mesmerized. In the space of a I'cw seconds he was overcome by feelings he had never experienced before. Hot, hard, fierce. They swirled around him like plumes of smoke. The sweat on his body sizzled his skin. It wasn't just her beauty, so bright he felt he had to shield his eyes; i t was the way she moved. Grace appropriate to a I)rincess and something more. Something that arrested the eye. He supposed ballerinas had it. He wanted to reach for this gilded creature. Close his arms around her. Find her mouth, discover the nectar within.

  Then all at once he pulled himself together, regaining his habitual tight control, shocked and wary at her impact. Lightning strikes didn't feature in his emotional life. Why would they? He knew what sorrow a man's obsession bred. He couldn't trust a creature as fascinating as this. The lovely laugh. The teasing voice. The grace and femininity she used to marvellous effect. Not after what had happened to his family. He and Belle had been devastated by their parents' divorce. Their much loved and revered father had never recovered. The wrong woman could destroy a man. He had long assured himself it would never happen to him.

  The vision came towards them in her lovely luminous gown, the power to captivate men probably born in her, a creature of air and fire. Her shoulders were bare, her hair a glorious shade of copper streamed down her back. She had beautiful creamy skin, the high cheekbones tinted with apricot almost the colour of her heavy satin gown. He had to tear his eyes away from the slope of her breasts revealed above the low cut bodice. This was a powerful sexual encounter. Nothing more.

  "It's Ross, isn't it?"

  Not content to hold him spellbound her charm and breeding was about to reduce hi
m to an oaf.

  Cy smiling, started to introduce them with his engaging manner. He on the other hand must have appeared an ill mannered boor by contrast, stiff and standoffish. A consequence he knew of his strong reaction. A man could drown in a woman's eyes. Large, meltingly soft velvety brown eyes with gold chips in the iris. He knew the colour in her cheeks deepened when he looked down at her. Stared probably, not doing a good job of covering h i s innate hostility. He remembered he made some excuse about not taking her hand, standing well hick so the dust and grime off his work gear wouldn't come into contact with her beautiful gown. He knew he looked and felt like a savage. He found out later there was a dried smear of blood on his cheek bone.

  She had endured his severity well. Right through that evening and the great day of the wedding. It was all so damned disturbing. He wasn't usually like that. Looking back on his behaviour he cringed, cursing himself for his own susceptibility. It was a weakness and it pricked his pride. Maybe the Sunderlands weren't fated to have happy emotional lives. His dad, then Belle. The very last thing he needed was to be enslaved by a woman. The secret lie was convinced was never to lose sight of himself.