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CHAPTER II. HOME AGAIN

Four years passed before Falconer returned to his native country, during which period Dr. Anderson had visited him twice, and shown himself well satisfied with his condition and pursuits. The doctor had likewise visited Rothieden, and had comforted the heart of the grandmother with regard to her Robert. From what he learned upon this visit, he had arrived at a true conjecture, I believe, as to the cause of the great change which had suddenly taken place in the youth. But he never asked Robert a question leading in the direction of the grief which he saw the healthy and earnest nature of the youth gradually assimilating into his life. He had too much respect for sorrow to approach it with curiosity. He had learned to put off his shoes when he drew nigh the burning bush of human pain.

Robert had not settled at any of the universities, but had moved from one to the other as he saw fit, report guiding him to the men who spoke with authority. The time of doubt and anxious questioning was far from over, but the time was long gone by—if in his case it had ever been—when he could be like a wave of the sea, driven of the wind and tossed. He had ever one anchor of the soul, and he found that it held—the faith of Jesus (I say the faith of Jesus, not his own faith in Jesus), the truth of Jesus, the life of Jesus. However his intellect might be tossed on the waves of speculation and criticism, he found that the word the Lord had spoken remained steadfast; for in doing righteously, in loving mercy, in walking humbly, the conviction increased that Jesus knew the very secret of human life. Now and then some great vision gleamed across his soul of the working of all things towards a far-off goal of simple obedience to a law of life, which God knew, and which his son had justified through sorrow and pain. Again and again the words of the Master gave him a peep into a region where all was explicable, where all that was crooked might be made straight, where every mountain of wrong might be made low, and every valley of suffering exalted. Ever and again some one of the dark perplexities of humanity began to glimmer with light in its inmost depth. Nor was he without those moments of communion when the creature is lifted into the secret place of the Creator.

Looking back to the time when it seemed that he cried and was not heard, he saw that God had been hearing, had been answering, all the time; had been making him capable of receiving the gift for which he prayed. He saw that intellectual difficulty encompassing the highest operations of harmonizing truth, can no more affect their reality than the dulness of chaos disprove the motions of the wind of God over the face of its waters. He saw that any true revelation must come out of the unknown in God through the unknown in man. He saw that its truths must rise in the man as powers of life, and that only as that life grows and unfolds can the ever-lagging intellect gain glimpses of partial outlines fading away into the infinite—that, indeed, only in material things and the laws that belong to them, are outlines possible—even there, only in the picture of them which the mind that analyzes them makes for itself, not in the things themselves.

At the close of these four years, with his spirit calm and hopeful, truth his passion, and music, which again he had resumed and diligently cultivated, his pleasure, Falconer returned to Aberdeen. He was received by Dr. Anderson as if he had in truth been his own son. In the room stood a tall figure, with its back towards them, pocketing its handkerchief. The next moment the figure turned, and—could it be?—yes, it was Shargar. Doubt lingered only until he opened his mouth, and said ‘Eh, Robert!’ with which exclamation he threw himself upon him, and after a very undignified fashion began crying heartily. Tall as he was, Robert’s great black head towered above him, and his shoulders were like a rock against which Shargar’s slight figure leaned. He looked down like a compassionate mastiff upon a distressed Italian grayhound. His eyes shimmered with feeling, but Robert’s tears, if he ever shed any, were kept for very solemn occasions. He was more likely to weep for awful joy than for any sufferings either in himself or others. ‘Shargar!’ pronounced in a tone full of a thousand memories, was all the greeting he returned; but his great manly hand pressed Shargar’s delicate long-fingered one with a grasp which must have satisfied his friend that everything was as it had been between them, and that their friendship from henceforth would take a new start. For with all that Robert had seen, thought, and learned, now that the bitterness of loss had gone by, the old times and the old friends were dearer. If there was any truth in the religion of God’s will, in which he was a disciple, every moment of life’s history which had brought soul in contact with soul, must be sacred as a voice from behind the veil. Therefore he could not now rest until he had gone to see his grandmother.

‘Will you come to Rothieden with me, Shargar? I beg your pardon—I oughtn’t to keep up an old nickname,’ said Robert, as they sat that evening with the doctor, over a tumbler of toddy.

‘If you call me anything else, I’ll cut my throat, Robert, as I told you before. If any one else does,’ he added, laughing, ‘I’ll cut his throat.’

‘Can he go with me, doctor?’ asked Robert, turning to their host.

‘Certainly. He has not been to Rothieden since he took his degree. He’s an A.M. now, and has distinguished himself besides. You’ll see him in his uniform soon, I hope. Let’s drink his health, Robert. Fill your glass.’

The doctor filled his glass slowly and solemnly. He seldom drank even wine, but this was a rare occasion. He then rose, and with equal slowness, and a tremor in his voice which rendered it impossible to imagine the presence of anything but seriousness, said,

‘Robert, my son, let’s drink the health of George Moray, Gentleman. Stand up.’

Robert rose, and in his confusion Shargar rose too, and sat down again, blushing till his red hair looked yellow beside his cheeks. The men repeated the words, ‘George Moray, Gentleman,’ emptied their glasses, and resumed their seats. Shargar rose trembling, and tried in vain to speak. The reason in part was, that he sought to utter himself in English.

‘Hoots! Damn English!’ he broke out at last. ‘Gin I be a gentleman, Dr. Anderson and Robert Falconer, it’s you twa ‘at’s made me ane, an’ God bless ye, an’ I’m yer hoomble servant to a’ etairnity.’

So saying, Shargar resumed his seat, filled his glass with trembling hand, emptied it to hide his feelings, but without success, rose once more, and retreated to the hall for a space.

The next morning Robert and Shargar got on the coach and went to Rothieden. Robert turned his head aside as they came near the bridge and the old house of Bogbonnie. But, ashamed of his weakness, he turned again and looked at the house. There it stood, all the same,—a thing for the night winds to howl in, and follow each other in mad gambols through its long passages and rooms, so empty from the first that not even a ghost had any reason for going there—a place almost without a history—dreary emblem of so many empty souls that have hidden their talent in a napkin, and have nothing to return for it when the Master calls them. Having looked this one in the face, he felt stronger to meet those other places before which his heart quailed yet more. He knew that Miss St. John had left soon after Ericson’s death: whether he was sorry or glad that he should not see her he could not tell. He thought Rothieden would look like Pompeii, a city buried and disinterred; but when the coach drove into the long straggling street, he found the old love revive, and although the blood rushed back to his heart when Captain Forsyth’s house came in view, he did not turn away, but made his eyes, and through them his heart, familiar with its desolation. He got down at the corner, and leaving Shargar to go on to The Boar’s Head and look after the luggage, walked into his grandmother’s house and straight into her little parlour. She rose with her old stateliness when she saw a stranger enter the room, and stood waiting his address.

‘Weel, grannie,’ said Robert, and took her in his arms.

‘The Lord’s name be praised!’ faltered she. ‘He’s ower guid to the likes o’ me.’

And she lifted up her voice and wept.

She had been informed of his coming, but she had not expected him till the evening; he was much altered, and old age is slow.

He had hardly placed her in her chair, when Betty came in. If she had shown him respect before, it was reverence now.

‘Eh, sir!’ she said, ‘I didna ken it was you, or I wadna hae come into the room ohn chappit at the door. I’ll awa’ back to my kitchie.’

So saying, she turned to leave the room.

‘Hoots! Betty,’ cried Robert, ‘dinna be a gowk. Gie ‘s a grip o yer han’.’

Betty stood staring and irresolute, overcome at sight of the manly bulk before her.

‘Gin ye dinna behave yersel’, Betty, I’ll jist awa’ ower to Muckledrum, an’ hae a caw (drive) throu the sessions-buik.’

Betty laughed for the first time at the awful threat, and the ice once broken, things returned to somewhat of their old footing.

I must not linger on these days. The next morning Robert paid a visit to Bodyfauld, and found that time had there flowed so gently that it had left but few wrinkles and fewer gray hairs. The fields, too, had little change to show; and the hill was all the same, save that its pines had grown. His chief mission was to John Hewson and his wife. When he left for the continent, he was not so utterly absorbed in his own griefs as to forget Jessie. He told her story to Dr. Anderson, and the good man had gone to see her the same day.

In the evening, when he knew he should find them both at home, he walked into the cottage. They were seated by the fire, with the same pot hanging on the same crook for their supper. They rose, and asked him to sit down, but did not know him. When he told them who he was, they greeted him warmly, and John Hewson smiled something of the old smile, but only like it, for it had no ‘rays proportionately delivered’ from his mouth over his face.

After a little indifferent chat, Robert said,

‘I came through Aberdeen yesterday, John.’

At the very mention of Aberdeen, John’s head sunk. He gave no answer, but sat looking in the fire. His wife rose and went to the other end of the room, busying herself quietly about the supper. Robert thought it best to plunge into the matter at once.

‘I saw Jessie last nicht,’ he said.

Still there was no reply. John’s face had grown hard as a stone face, but Robert thought rather from the determination to govern his feelings than from resentment.

‘She’s been doin’ weel ever sin’ syne,’ he added.

Still no word from either; and Robert fearing some outburst of indignation ere he had said his say, now made haste.

‘She’s been a servant wi’ Dr. Anderson for four year noo, an’ he’s sair pleased wi’ her. She’s a fine woman. But her bairnie’s deid, an’ that was a sair blow till her.’

He heard a sob from the mother, but still John made no sign.

‘It was a bonnie bairnie as ever ye saw. It luikit in her face, she says, as gin it kent a’ aboot it, and had only come to help her throu the warst o’ ‘t; for it gaed hame ‘maist as sune’s ever she was richt able to thank God for sen’in’ her sic an angel to lead her to repentance.’

‘John,’ said his wife, coming behind his chair, and laying her hand on his shoulder, ‘what for dinna ye speyk? Ye hear what Maister Faukner says.—Ye dinna think a thing’s clean useless ‘cause there may be a spot upo’ ‘t?’ she added, wiping her eyes with her apron.

‘A spot upo’ ‘t?’ cried John, starting to his feet. ‘What ca’ ye a spot?—Wuman, dinna drive me mad to hear ye lichtlie the glory o’ virginity.’

‘That’s a’ verra weel, John,’ interposed Robert quietly; ‘but there was ane thocht as muckle o’ ‘t as ye do, an’ wad hae been ashamed to hear ye speak that gait aboot yer ain dauchter.’

‘I dinna unnerstan’ ye,’ returned Hewson, looking raised-like at him.

‘Dinna ye ken, man, that amo’ them ‘at kent the Lord best whan he cam frae haiven to luik efter his ain—to seek and to save, ye ken—amo’ them ‘at cam roon aboot him to hearken till ‘im, was lasses ‘at had gane the wrang gait a’thegither,—no like your bonnie Jessie ‘at fell but ance. Man, ye’re jist like Simon the Pharisee, ‘at was sae scunnert at oor Lord ‘cause he loot the wuman ‘at was a sinner tak her wull o’ ‘s feet—the feet ‘at they war gaein’ to tak their wull o’ efter anither fashion afore lang. He wad hae shawn her the door—Simon wad—like you, John; but the Lord tuik her pairt. An’ lat me tell you, John—an’ I winna beg yer pardon for sayin’ ‘t, for it’s God’s trowth—lat me tell you, ‘at gin ye gang on that gait ye’ll be sidin’ wi’ the Pharisee, an’ no wi’ oor Lord. Ye may lippen to yer wife, ay, an’ to Jessie hersel’, that kens better nor eyther o’ ye, no to mak little o’ virginity. Faith! they think mair o’ ‘t than ye do, I’m thinkin’, efter a’; only it’s no a thing to say muckle aboot. An’ it’s no to stan’ for a’thing, efter a’.’

Silence followed. John sat down again, and buried his face in his hands. At length he murmured from between them,

‘The lassie’s weel?’

‘Ay,’ answered Robert; and silence followed again.

‘What wad ye hae me do?’ asked John, lifting his head a little.

‘I wad hae ye sen’ a kin’ word till her. The lassie’s hert’s jist longin’ efter ye. That’s a’. And that’s no ower muckle.’

‘’Deed no,’ assented the mother.

John said nothing. But when his visitor rose he bade him a warm good-night.

When Robert returned to Aberdeen he was the bearer of such a message as made poor Jessie glad at heart. This was his first experience of the sort.

When he left the cottage, he did not return to the house, but threaded the little forest of pines, climbing the hill till he came out on its bare crown, where nothing grew but heather and blaeberries. There he threw himself down, and gazed into the heavens. The sun was below the horizon; all the dazzle was gone out of the gold, and the roses were fast fading; the downy blue of the sky was trembling into stars over his head; the brown dusk was gathering in the air; and a wind full of gentleness and peace came to him from the west. He let his thoughts go where they would, and they went up into the abyss over his head.

‘Lord, come to me,’ he cried in his heart, ‘for I cannot go to thee. If I were to go up and up through that awful space for ages and ages, I should never find thee. Yet there thou art. The tenderness of thy infinitude looks upon me from those heavens. Thou art in them and in me. Because thou thinkest, I think. I am thine—all thine. I abandon myself to thee. Fill me with thyself. When I am full of thee, my griefs themselves will grow golden in thy sunlight. Thou holdest them and their cause, and wilt find some nobler atonement between them than vile forgetfulness and the death of love. Lord, let me help those that are wretched because they do not know thee. Let me tell them that thou, the Life, must needs suffer for and with them, that they may be partakers of thy ineffable peace. My life is hid in thine: take me in thy hand as Gideon bore the pitcher to the battle. Let me be broken if need be, that thy light may shine upon the lies which men tell them in thy name, and which eat away their hearts.’

Having persuaded Shargar to remain with Mrs. Falconer for a few days, and thus remove the feeling of offence she still cherished because of his ‘munelicht flittin’,’ he returned to Dr. Anderson, who now unfolded his plans for him. These were, that he should attend the medical classes common to the two universities, and at the same time accompany him in his visits to the poor. He did not at all mean, he said, to determine Robert’s life as that of a medical man, but from what he had learned of his feelings, he was confident that a knowledge of medicine would be invaluable to him. I think the good doctor must have foreseen the kind of life which Falconer would at length choose to lead, and with true and admirable wisdom, sought to prepare him for it. However this may be, Robert entertained the proposal gladly, went into the scheme with his whole heart, and began to widen that knowledge of and sympathy with the poor which were the foundation of all his influence over them.

For a time, therefore, he gave a diligent and careful attendance upon lectures, read sufficiently, took his rounds with Dr. Anderson, and performed such duties as he delegated to his greater strength. Had the healing art been far less of an enjoyment to him than it was, he could yet hardly have failed of great progress therein; but seeing that it accorded with his best feelings, profoundest theories, and loftiest hopes, and that he received it as a work given him to do, it is not surprising that a certain faculty of cure, almost partaking of the instinctive, should have been rapidly developed in him, to the wonder and delight of his friend and master.

In this labour he again spent about four years, during which time he gathered much knowledge of human nature, learning especially to judge it from no stand-point of his own, but in every individual case to take a new position whence the nature and history of the man should appear in true relation to the yet uncompleted result. He who cannot feel the humanity of his neighbour because he is different from himself in education, habits, opinions, morals, circumstances, objects, is unfit, if not unworthy, to aid him.

Within this period Shargar had gone out to India, where he had distinguished himself particularly on a certain harassing march. Towards the close of the four years he had leave of absence, and was on his way home. About the same time Robert, in consequence of a fever brought on by over-fatigue, was in much need of a holiday; and Dr. Anderson proposed that he should meet Moray at Southampton.

Shargar had no expectation of seeing him, and his delight, not greater on that account, broke out more wildly. No thinnest film had grown over his heart, though in all else he was considerably changed. The army had done everything that was wanted for his outward show of man. The drawling walk had vanished, and a firm step and soldierly stride had taken its place; his bearing was free, yet dignified; his high descent came out in the ease of his carriage and manners: there could be no doubt that at last Shargar was a gentleman. His hair had changed to a kind of red chestnut. His complexion was much darkened with the Indian sun. His eyes, too, were darker, and no longer rolled slowly from one object to another, but indicated by their quick glances a mind ready to observe and as ready to resolve. His whole appearance was more than prepossessing—it was even striking.

Robert was greatly delighted with the improvement in him, and far more when he found that his mind’s growth had at least kept pace with his body’s change. It would be more correct to say that it had preceded and occasioned it; for however much the army may be able to do in that way, it had certainly, in Moray’s case, only seconded the law of inward growth working outward show.

The young men went up to London together, and great was the pleasure they had in each other’s society, after so long a separation in which their hearts had remained unchanged while their natures had grown both worthy and capable of more honour and affection. They had both much to tell; for Robert was naturally open save in regard to his grief; and Shargar was proud of being able to communicate with Robert from a nearer level, in virtue of now knowing many things that Robert could not know. They went together to a hotel in St. Paul’s Churchyard.

CHAPTER III. A MERE GLIMPSE

At the close of a fortnight, Falconer thought it time to return to his duties in Aberdeen. The day before the steamer sailed, they found themselves, about six o’clock, in Gracechurch Street. It was a fine summer evening. The street was less crowded than earlier in the afternoon, although there was a continuous stream of waggons, omnibuses, and cabs both ways. As they stood on the curbstone, a little way north of Lombard Street, waiting to cross—

‘You see, Shargar,’ said Robert, ‘Nature will have her way. Not all the hurry and confusion and roar can keep the shadows out. Look: wherever a space is for a moment vacant, there falls a shadow, as grotesque, as strange, as full of unutterable things as any shadow on a field of grass and daisies.’

‘I remember feeling the same kind of thing in India,’ returned Shargar, ‘where nothing looked as if it belonged to the world I was born in, but my own shadow. In such a street as this, however, all the shadows look as if they belonged to another world, and had no business here.’

‘I quite feel that,’ returned Falconer. ‘They come like angels from the lovely west and the pure air, to show that London cannot hurt them, for it too is within the Kingdom of God—to teach the lovers of nature, like the old orthodox Jew, St. Peter, that they must not call anything common or unclean.’

Shargar made no reply, and Robert glanced round at him. He was staring with wide eyes into, not at the crowd of vehicles that filled the street. His face was pale, and strangely like the Shargar of old days.

‘What’s the matter with you?’ Robert asked in some bewilderment.

Receiving no answer, he followed Shargar’s gaze, and saw a strange sight for London city.

In the middle of the crowd of vehicles, with an omnibus before them, and a brewer’s dray behind them, came a line of three donkey-carts, heaped high with bundles and articles of gipsy-gear. The foremost was conducted by a middle-aged woman of tall, commanding aspect, and expression both cunning and fierce. She walked by the donkey’s head carrying a short stick, with which she struck him now and then, but which she oftener waved over his head like the truncheon of an excited marshal on the battle-field, accompanying its movements now with loud cries to the animal, now with loud response to the chaff of the omnibus conductor, the dray driver, and the tradesmen in carts about her. She was followed by a very handsome, olive-complexioned, wild-looking young woman, with her black hair done up in a red handkerchief, who conducted her donkey more quietly. Both seemed as much at home in the roar of Gracechurch Street as if they had been crossing a wild common. A loutish-looking young man brought up the rear with the third donkey. From the bundles on the foremost cart peeped a lovely, fair-haired, English-looking child.

Robert took all this in in a moment. The same moment Shargar’s spell was broken.

‘Lord, it is my mither!’ he cried, and darted under a horse’s neck into the middle of the ruck.

He needled his way through till he reached the woman. She was swearing at a cabman whose wheel had caught the point of her donkey’s shaft, and was hauling him round. Heedless of everything, Shargar threw his arms about her, crying,

‘Mither! mither!’

‘Nane o’ yer blastit humbug!’ she exclaimed, as, with a vigorous throw and a wriggle, she freed herself from his embrace and pushed him away.

The moment she had him at arm’s length, however, her hand closed upon his arm, and her other hand went up to her brow. From underneath it her eyes shot up and down him from head to foot, and he could feel her hand closing and relaxing and closing again, as if she were trying to force her long nails into his flesh. He stood motionless, waiting the result of her scrutiny, utterly unconscious that he caused a congestion in the veins of London, for every vehicle within sight of the pair had stopped. Falconer said a strange silence fell upon the street, as if all the things in it had been turned into shadows.

A rough voice, which sounded as if all London must have heard it, broke the silence. It was the voice of the cabman who had been in altercation with the woman. Bursting into an insulting laugh, he used words with regard to her which it is better to leave unrecorded. The same instant Shargar freed himself from her grasp, and stood by the fore wheel of the cab.

‘Get down!’ he said, in a voice that was not the less impressive that it was low and hoarse.

The fellow saw what he meant, and whipped his horse. Shargar sprung on the box, and dragged him down all but headlong.

‘Now,’ he said, ‘beg my mother’s pardon.’

‘Be damned if I do, &c., &c.,’ said the cabman.

‘Then defend yourself,’ said Shargar. ‘Robert.’

Falconer was watching it all, and was by his side in a moment.

‘Come on, you, &c., &c.,’ cried the cabman, plucking up heart and putting himself in fighting shape. He looked one of those insolent fellows whom none see discomfited more gladly than the honest men of his own class. The same moment he lay between his horse’s feet.

Shargar turned to Robert, and saying only, ‘There, Robert!’ turned again towards the woman. The cabman rose bleeding, and, desiring no more of the same, climbed on his box, and went off, belabouring his horse, and pursued by a roar from the street, for the spectators were delighted at his punishment.

‘Now, mother,’ said Shargar, panting with excitement.

‘What ca’ they ye?’ she asked, still doubtful, but as proud of being defended as if the coarse words of her assailant had had no truth in them. ‘Ye canna be my lang-leggit Geordie.’

‘What for no?’

‘Ye’re a gentleman, faith!’

‘An’ what for no, again?’ returned Shargar, beginning to smile.

‘Weel, it’s weel speired. Yer father was ane ony gait—gin sae be ‘at ye are as ye say.’

Moray put his head close to hers, and whispered some words that nobody heard but herself.

‘It’s ower lang syne to min’ upo’ that,’ she said in reply, with a look of cunning consciousness ill settled upon her fine features. ‘But ye can be naebody but my Geordie. Haith, man!’ she went on, regarding him once more from head to foot, ‘but ye’re a credit to me, I maun alloo. Weel, gie me a sovereign, an’ I s’ never come near ye.’

Poor Shargar in his despair turned half mechanically towards Robert. He felt that it was time to interfere.

‘You forget, mother,’ said Shargar, turning again to her, and speaking English now, ‘it was I that claimed you, and not you that claimed me.’

She seemed to have no idea of what he meant.

‘Come up the road here, to oor public, an’ tak a glaiss, wuman,’ said Falconer. ‘Dinna haud the fowk luikin’ at ye.’

The temptation of a glass of something strong, and the hope of getting money out of them, caused an instant acquiescence. She said a few words to the young woman, who proceeded at once to tie her donkey’s head to the tail of the other cart.

‘Shaw the gait than,’ said the elder, turning again to Falconer.

Shargar and he led the way to St. Paul’s Churchyard, and the woman followed faithfully. The waiter stared when they entered.

‘Bring a glass of whisky,’ said Falconer, as he passed on to their private room. When the whisky arrived, she tossed it off, and looked as if she would like another glass.

‘Yer father ‘ill hae ta’en ye up, I’m thinkin’, laddie?’ she said, turning to her son.

‘No,’ answered Shargar, gloomily. ‘There’s the man that took me up.’

‘An’ wha may ye be?’ she asked, turning to Falconer.

‘Mr. Falconer,’ said Shargar.

‘No a son o’ Anerew Faukner?’ she asked again, with evident interest.

‘The same,’ answered Robert.

‘Well, Geordie,’ she said, turning once more to her son, ‘it’s like mither, like father to the twa o’ ye.’

‘Did you know my father?’ asked Robert, eagerly.

Instead of answering him she made another remark to her son.

‘He needna be ashamed o’ your company, ony gait—queer kin’ o’ a mither ‘at I am.’

‘He never was ashamed of my company,’ said Shargar, still gloomily.

‘Ay, I kent yer father weel eneuch,’ she said, now answering Robert—‘mair by token ‘at I saw him last nicht. He was luikin’ nae that ill.’

Robert sprung from his seat, and caught her by the arm.

‘Ow! ye needna gang into sic a flurry. He’ll no come near ye, I s’ warran’.’

‘Tell me where he is,’ said Robert. ‘Where did you see him? I’ll gie ye a’ ‘at I hae gin ye’ll tak me till him.’

‘Hooly! hooly! Wha’s to gang luikin’ for a thrum in a hay-sow?’ returned she, coolly. ‘I only said ‘at I saw him.’

‘But are ye sure it was him?’ asked Falconer.

‘Ay, sure eneuch,’ she answered.

‘What maks ye sae sure?’

‘’Cause I never was vrang yet. Set a man ance atween my twa een, an’ that ‘ll be twa ‘at kens him whan ‘s ain mither ‘s forgotten ‘im.’

‘Did you speak to him?’

‘Maybe ay, an’ maybe no. I didna come here to be hecklet afore a jury.’

‘Tell me what he’s like,’ said Robert, agitated with eager hope.

‘Gin ye dinna ken what he’s like, what for suld ye tak the trouble to speir? But ‘deed ye’ll ken what he’s like whan ye fa’ in wi’ him,’ she added, with a vindictive laugh—vindictive because he had given her only one glass of strong drink.

With the laugh she rose, and made for the door. They rose at the same moment to detain her. Like one who knew at once to fight and flee, she turned and stunned them as with a blow.

‘She’s a fine yoong thing, yon sister o’ yours, Geordie. She’ll be worth siller by the time she’s had a while at the schuil.’

The men looked at each other aghast. When they turned their eyes she had vanished. They rushed to the door, and, parting, searched in both directions. But they were soon satisfied that it was of no use. Probably she had found a back way into Paternoster Row, whence the outlets are numerous.

Yaş sınırı:
12+
Litres'teki yayın tarihi:
03 ağustos 2018
Hacim:
710 s. 1 illüstrasyon
Telif hakkı:
Public Domain
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