The dressing-bell broke up the council, and Harold snatched up his hat to rush out and stretch his legs, but I could not help detaining him to say:
“Oh, Harry, I am so sorry!”
“Why?” he said.
“What does it leave you, Harry?”
“Half the capital stock farm, twelve thousand sheep, and a tidy sum in the Sydney bank,” said Harold readily.
“Then I am afraid we shall lose you.”
“That depends. I shall set Eustace in the way of doing what our fathers meant; and there’s Prometesky—I shall not go till I have done his business.”
I hardly knew what this meant, and could not keep Harold, whose long legs were eager for a rush in the fresh air; and the next person I met was Eustace.
“Aunt Lucy,” he said, “that old fellow says you are going away. You can’t be?”
I answered, truly enough, that I had not thought what to do, and he persisted that I had promised to stay.
“But that was with Harry,” I said.
“I don’t see why you should not stay as much with me,” he said. “I’m your nephew all the same, and Dora is your niece; and she must be made a proper sister for me, who have been, &c.”
I don’t know that this form of invitation was exactly the thing that would have kept me; but I had a general feeling that to leave these young men and my old home would be utter banishment, that there was nothing I so cared for as seeing how they got on, and that it was worth anything to me to be wanted anywhere and by anyone; so I gave Eustace to understand that I meant to stay. I rather wished Harold to have pressed me; but I believe the dear good fellow honestly thought everyone must prefer Eustace to himself; and it was good to see the pat he gave his cousin’s shoulder when that young gentleman, nothing loath, exultingly settled down in the master’s place.
Before long I found out what Harold meant about Prometesky’s business; for we had scarcely begun dinner before he began to consult Mr. Prosser about the ways and means of obtaining a pardon for Prometesky. This considerably startled Mr. Prosser. Some cabinets, he said, were very lenient to past political offences, but Prometesky seemed to him to have exceeded all bounds of mercy.
“You never knew the true facts, then?” said Harold.
“I know the facts that satisfied the jury.”
“You never saw my father’s statement?”
No, Mr. Prosser had been elsewhere, and had not been employed in my brother’s trial; he had only inherited the connection with our family affairs when the matter had passed into comparative oblivion.
My brothers had never ceased to affirm that he had only started for the farm that had been Lewthwayte’s on hearing that an attack was to be made on it, in hopes of preventing it, and that the witness, borne against him on the trial by a fellow who had turned king’s evidence, had been false; but they had been unheeded, or rather Prometesky was regarded as the most truly mischievous of all, as perhaps he really had been, since he had certainly drawn them into the affair, and his life had barely been saved in consideration of his having rescued a child from the fire at great personal peril.