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"Well! I didn't think to see you under a roof of mine again."
"Just the welcome I expected," thought Robinson bitterly. He answered coldly: "Well, as soon as you are well you can turn me out of your house, but I should say you are not strong enough to do it just now."
"No, I am weak enough, but I am better--I could eat something."
"Oh, you could do that! what! even if I cooked it? Here goes, then."
Tom lit the fire and warmed some beef soup. George ate some, but very little; however he drank a great jugful of water--then dozed and fell into a fine perspiration. It was a favorable crisis, and from that moment youth and a sound const.i.tution began to pull him through; moreover no a.s.sa.s.sin had been there with his lancet.
Behold the thief turned nurse! The next day as he pottered about clearing the room, opening or shutting the windows, cooking and serving, he noticed George's eye following him everywhere with a placid wonder which at last broke into words:
"You take a deal of trouble about me."
"I do," was the dry answer.
"It is very good of you, but--"
"You would as lieve it was anybody else; but your other friends have left you to die like a dog," said Robinson sarcastically. "Well, they left you when you were sick--I'll leave you when you are well."
"What for? Seems to me that you have earned a right to stay as long as you are minded. The man that stands by me in trouble I won't bid him go when the sun shines again."
And at this precise point in his sentence, without the least warning, Mr. Fielding ignited himself--and inquired with fury whether it came within Robinson's individual experience that George Fielding was of an ungrateful turn, or whether such was the general voice of fame. "Now, don't you get in a rage and burst your boiler," said Robinson. "Well, George--without joking, though--I have been kind to you. Not for nursing you--what Christian would not do that for his countryman and his old landlord sick in a desert?--but what would you think of me if I told you I had come a hundred and sixty miles to bring you a letter? I wouldn't show it you before, for they say exciting them is bad for fever, but I think I may venture now; here it is." And Robinson tore off one by one the twelve envelopes, to George's astonishment and curiosity. "There."
"I don't know the hand," said George. But opening the inclosure he caught a glance of a hand he did know, and let everything else drop on the bed, while he held this and gazed at it, and the color flushed into his white cheek. "Oh!" cried he, and worshipped it in silence again; then opened it and devoured it. First came some precious words of affection and encouragement. He kissed the letter. "You are a good fellow to bring me such a treasure; and I'll never forget it as long as I live!"
Then he went back to the letter. "There is something about you, Tom!"
"About me?"
"She tells me you never had a father, not to say a father--"
"She says true."
"Susan says that is a great disadvantage to any man, and so it is--and--poor fellow--"
"What?"
"She says they came between your sweetheart and you--Oh! poor Tom!"
"What?"
"You lost your sweetheart; no wonder you went astray after that. What would become of me if I lost my Susan? And--ay, you were always better than me, Susan. She says she and I have never been sore tempted like you."
"Bless her little heart for making excuses for a poor fellow; but she was always a charitable, kind-hearted young lady."
"Wasn't she, Tom?"
"And what sweet eyes!"
"Ain't they, Tom? brimful of heaven I call them."
"And when she used to smile on you, Master George, oh! the ivories."
"Now you take my hand this minute. How foolish I am. I can't see--now you shall read it on to me because you brought it."
"'And you, George, that are as honest a man as ever lived, do keep him by you a while, and keep him in the right way. He is well-disposed but weak--do it to oblige me.'"
"Will you stay with me, Tom?" inquired George, cheerful and business-like. "I am not a lucky man, but while I have a shilling there's sixpence for the man that brought me this--dew in the desert I call it. And to think you have seen her since I have; how was she looking; had she her beautiful color; what did she say to you with her own mouth?"
Then Robinson had to recall every word Susan had said to him; this done, George took the inclosure. "Stop, here is something for you: 'George Fielding is requested to give this to Robinson for the use of Thomas Sinclair.' There you are, Tom--well!--what is the matter?"
"Nothing. It is a name I have not heard a while. I did not know any creature but me knew it; is it glamour, or what?"
"Why, Tom! what is the matter? don't look like that. Open it, and let us see what there is inside."
Robinson opened it, and there was the five-pound note for him, with this line: "If you have regained the name of Sinclair, keep it."
Robinson ran out of the house, and walked to and fro in a state of exaltation. "I'm well paid for my journey; I'm well paid for not fingering that note! Who would not be honest if they knew the sweets?
How could he know my name? is he really more than man? Keep it? Will I not!"
CHAPTER LII.
THE old attachment was revived. Robinson had always a great regard for George, and after nursing and bringing him through a dangerous illness this feeling doubled. And as for George, the man who had brought him a letter from Susan one hundred and sixty miles became such a benefactor in his eyes that he thought nothing good enough for him.
In a very few days George was about again and on his pony, and he and Robinson and Carlo went a shepherding. One or two bullocks had gone to Jericho while George lay ill, and the poor fellow's heart was sore when he looked at his diminished substance and lost time. Robinson threw himself heart and soul into the business, and was of great service to George; but after a bit he found it a dull life.
George saw this, and said to him: "You would do better in a town. I should be sorry to lose you, but if you take my advice you will turn your back on unlucky George, and try the paint-brush in Bathurst."
For Robinson had told him all about it--and painted his front door.
"Can't afford to part from Honesty," was the firm reply.
George breathed again. Robinson was a great comfort to the weak, solitary, and now desponding man. One day for a change they had a thirty-mile walk, to see a farmer that had some beasts to sell a great bargain; he was going to boil them down if he could not find a customer.
They found them all just sold. "Just my luck," said George.
They came home another way. Returning home, George was silent and depressed.
Robinson was silent, but appeared to be swelling with some grand idea.
Every now and then he shot ahead under its influence. When they got home and were seated at supper, he suddenly put this question to George, "Did you ever hear of any gold being found in these parts?"
"No! never!"
"What, not in any part of the country?"
"No! never!"
"Well, that is odd!"