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We of the Never-Never by Jeannie Gunn
page 20 of 289 (06%)
whimsical way.

"He's like the rest of us," he said, with a sly, sidelong look at the
Maluka, "perfectly reconciled to his fate."

Although it was only sixty-five miles to the Katherine it took us exactly
three days to travel the distance. Mac called it a "tip-top record for
the Wet," and the Maluka agreed with him; for in the Territory it is not
the number of miles that counts, but what is met with in those miles.

During the first afternoon we met so many amiable-looking watercourses,
that the Sanguine Scot grew more and hopeful about crossing the Fergusson
that night. "We'll just do it if we push on," he said, after a critical
look at the Cullen, then little more than a sweet, shady stream. "Our
luck's dead in. She's only just moving. Yesterday's rain hasn't come down
the valleys yet."

We pushed on in the moonlight; but when we reached the Fergusson, two
hours later, we found our luck was "dead out," for "she" was up and
running a banker.

Mac's hopes sank below zero. "Now we've done it," he said ruefully,
looking down at the swirling torrent, "It's a case of 'wait-a-while'
after all."

But the Maluka's hopes always died hard. "There's still the Government
yacht," he said, going to a huge iron punt that lay far above high-water
mark. Mac called it a forlorn hope, and it looked it, as it lay deeply
sunk in the muddy bank.

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