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'With the micaceous crystals,' corrected Fergus. 'It was off the top
of that very cliff that fell down, so I am sure there must be more in
it; and some one else will get them if they won't let me go and see
for them.' 'And Alexis White gave you leave to take it?' 'Oh yes, I always ask him.' 'Were you at the place when you asked him, Fergus?' 'At the place on the cliff? No. For I couldn't find him for a long
time, and I carried it all the way down the steps.' 'And you did not tell him where it came from?' 'He didn't ask. Indeed, Aunt Jane, I always did show him what I
took, and he would have let me in now, only he was not at the office;
and the man at the gate, Big Blake, was as savage as a bear, and
slammed the door on me, and said they wouldn't have no idle boys
loafing about there. And when I said I wasn't an idle boy but a
scientific mineralogist, and that Mr. Alexis White always let me in,
he laughed in my face, and said Mr. Alexis had better look out for
himself. I shall tell Stebbing how cheeky he was.' 'My dear Fergus, there was good reason for keeping you out. You did
not know it, nor Alexis; but those stones were put to show that the
cliff was getting dangerous, and to mark where to put an iron fence;
and it was the greatest of mercies that Rotherwood's life was saved.' The boy looked a little sobered, but his aunt had rather that his
next question had not been: 'Do you think they will let me go there
again!' However, she knew very well that conviction must slowly soak in, and
that nothing would be gained by frightening him, so that all she did
that night was to send a note by Mysie to her cousin, explaining her
discovery; and she made up her mind to take Fergus to the inquest the
next day, since his evidence would exonerate Alexis from the most
culpable form of carelessness. Only, however, in the morning, when she had ascertained the hour of
the inquest, did she write a note to Mrs. Edgar to explain Fergus's
absence from school, or inform the boy of what she intended. On the
whole he was rather elated at being so important as to be able to
defend Alexis White, and he was quite above believing that scientific
research could be reckoned by any one as mischief. Just as Miss Mohun had gone up to get ready, Mysie ran in to say that
Cousin Rotherwood would be at the door in a moment to take Fergus
down. 'Lady Rotherwood can't bear his going,' said Mysie, 'and Mr. White
and Mr. Stebbing say that he need not; but he is quite determined,
though he has got his arm in a sling, for he says it was all his
fault for going where he ought not. And he won't have the carriage,
for he says it would shake his bones ever so much more than Shank's
mare.' 'Just like him,' said Aunt Jane. 'Has Dr. Dagger given him leave?' 'Yes; he said it wouldn't hurt him; but Lady Rotherwood told Miss
Elbury she was sure he persuaded him.' Mysie's confused pronouns were cut short by Lord Rotherwood's own
appearance. 'You need not go, Jane,' he said. 'I can take care of this little
chap. They'll not chop off his head in the presence of one of the
Legislature.'
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