“Perhaps it would be better if we did,” replied Fred, with no expression of astonishment on his face at the proposal.
“Then I will get you an audience to-morrow afternoon, and mind, don’t be afraid to speak to the governor when you see him.”
“Have no fear on that point,” I replied, with a smile.
“Then good-by until to-morrow; I’ll send Murden for you when the governor is ready.”
The captain so far forgot his aristocracy that he actually extended his hand at parting, and shook our fists with a right good will.
We joined Smith, who was standing a short distance from us, and had listened to every word that had been uttered with a face of scarlet, but as we turned away, I heard the captain remark,—
“Those are singular young fellows, and somehow I begin to like them.”
“Well, Smith,” I said, as he drove his team from the yard, “we are to have a hearing to-morrow, and perhaps in the evening may be able to celebrate your liberation.”
“It will hardly be of use to me,” he replied, bitterly. “Let a man do ever so well, the charge of once having been a convict will be repeated in his ears until he is no longer able to hear it. God knows I have repented of my crime, and only ask an opportunity to commence a new life; and I heard the very man who should have shielded me, say, ’he’s only a convict,’ and wonders that you dare trust your lives with me.”
“He don’t know you, Smith,” replied Fred, consolingly. “Wait until he hears of your bravery, and knows what you have done, and then you’ll see how quickly he will shake you by the hand, and congratulate you.”
“Do you think so?” asked Smith, musing over Fred’s words.
“I know it will be so; but be you ever so exalted or humble, Smith, there’s no man on the island we would sooner call friend.”
“Then let them call me convict—if I but possess the esteem of two honest men, who know me thoroughly, hard epithets will fall harmless.”
Not another word was spoken during our walk through the streets of the city to the suburbs, where stood the rough board house of Smith, exactly as we had left it a month before. A dozen or twenty buildings had been thrown together in the vicinity during our absence, and were occupied by respectable looking people, who were engaged in business in Melbourne.
A number of fresh, rosy-faced women, true models of English wives, came to their doors as we stopped, and apparently wondered who we were.
We unlocked the door, and found every thing undisturbed; and while Smith drove off his team for the purpose of taking his oxen to pasture, I started a fire in the old stove, and Fred went after water, and to get the materials of a good supper together, which, by long fasting, we keenly felt the need of.
By the time we had eaten our meal it was past sunset, when, recollecting the business which was laid out for the morrow, we pressed Smith into service, and started towards Collins Street for the purpose of buying clothing suitable to wear when ushered into the presence of the lieutenant-governor, who, we were given to understand, did not relish flannel shirts and heavy boots, even if they did cover valued colonists.