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.. meta::
   :PG.Id: 42926
   :PG.Title: The Last of Their Race
   :PG.Released: 2013-06-12
   :PG.Rights: Public Domain
   :PG.Producer: Al Haines
   :DC.Creator: Annie S. Swan
   :DC.Title: The Last of Their Race
   :DC.Language: en
   :DC.Created: 1911
   :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg

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THE LAST OF THEIR RACE
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      THE LAST OF
      THEIR RACE

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      BY
      ANNIE S. SWAN

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      HODDER AND STOUGHTON LIMITED
      LONDON
      1911

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      DONALD AND MARY

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      "For ours beyond the gate,
      The deep things, the untold,
      We only wait."

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      *Made and Printed in Great Britain for Hodder & Stoughton, Limited*
      *By C. Tinling & Co., Ltd., Liverpool, London and Prescot.*

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   CONTENTS

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   CHAPTER I

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   `THE INDIAN MAIL`_


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   CHAPTER II

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   `THE OLD HOME`_


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   CHAPTER III

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   `ISLA TAKES ACTION`_


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   CHAPTER IV

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   `THE AMERICANS`_


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   CHAPTER V

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   `THE BRIDGE BUILDERS`_


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   CHAPTER VI

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   `THE HOPE OF ACHREE`_


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   CHAPTER VII

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   `THE HOME-COMING`_


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   CHAPTER VIII

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   `MALCOLM'S PROSPECTS`_


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   CHAPTER IX

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   `THE MESSENGER`_


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   CHAPTER X

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   `THE HOUSE OF WOE`_


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   CHAPTER XI

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   `VIVIEN`_


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   CHAPTER XII

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   `THE HAND IN THE DARK`_


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   CHAPTER XIII

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   `THE PASSING OF MACKINNON`_


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   CHAPTER XIV

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   `FAMILY COUNSELS`_


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   CHAPTER XV

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   `SETTLING DOWN`_


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   CHAPTER XVI

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   `THE PURPLE LADY`_


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   CHAPTER XVII

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   `HER TRUE FRIENDS`_


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   CHAPTER XVIII

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   `GOOD-BYE TO GLENOGLE`_


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   CHAPTER XIX

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   `IN THE LONDON TRAIN`_


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   CHAPTER XX

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   `THE REALITY OF THINGS`_


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   CHAPTER XXI

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   `THE MARKET PLACE`_


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   CHAPTER XXII

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   `MR. AND MRS. BODLEY-CHARD`_


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   CHAPTER XXIII

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   `AT CROSS PURPOSES`_


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   CHAPTER XXIV

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   `THE CHAMPION`_


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   CHAPTER XXV

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   `THE ARCH-PLOTTERS`_


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   CHAPTER XXVI

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   `THE LURE OF VIVIEN`_


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   CHAPTER XXVII

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   `THE CALL`_


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   CHAPTER XXVIII

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   `WITH HASTENING FEET`_


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   CHAPTER XXIX

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   `THE LAST LEAF ON THE TREE`_

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.. _`THE INDIAN MAIL`:

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   CHAPTER I


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   THE INDIAN MAIL

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Isla Mackinnon came out from the narrow doorway of
the Castle of Achree, and stood for a moment on the
broad step, worn by the feet of generations, while she
thoughtfully drew on a pair of shabby, old leather gloves
with gauntlets which came well up her slender arms.
Hers were small, fine, capable hands, in which at that
moment, though she knew it not, lay the whole destiny
of Achree.  Its very existence was to be threatened that
cool, clear March day, and there was none but Isla to
step into the breach.

She did not look incompetent; nay, about her there
was a fine strength and courage, in her wide grey-blue
eyes an undaunted spirit.

It was a spirit that had had much to try its quality in
her six-and-twenty years of life, for half of which, at
least, she had been the chief buttress and hope of the
house of her fathers.

She looked her age, though her figure was very slender
and straight.  The years that had brought her womanhood
had left her the heart of a child.  It looked out
from the clear eyes under the delicate lashes, it was in
the slightly downward curves of the small sensitive
mouth that had not had sufficient occasion for smiles
to bring out all its sweetness.

Her hair, under the small tweed hat turned up at the
brim with a pheasant's wing, was a clear brown, with
here and there a touch of the sun inclining it to ruddy
gold.  She wore a short skirt of Harris tweed, leather-bound,
and a woollen coat of her own knitting, a pair
of brown brogues well fitted to her shapely feet, and
under her arm she had a shepherd's crook with a whistle
at the end of it.

Presently, when its clear, low call broke the stillness
of the morning, three dogs came bounding from some
region beyond the house, betraying a wild excitement
which even her remonstrance could not keep in check.

"Down, Murdo boy, and don't nip Bruce's ear again,
or back you go to the stable.  Janet, you silly old
woman, at your time of life you ought to have more
sense.  Well then, off you go!"

The big deer-hound, the fat, glossy, sable collie, and
the small, wiry Aberdeen lady who rejoiced in the sober
name of Janet, thus admonished, bounded before her
down the drive between the laurel and the pine trees,
barking joyously as was their wont.

About fifty yards from the house the carriage-way took
a sharp turn, so that the next few steps hid all except
the cold slate roof and the pinnacles of the little round
towers which mark that particular style of architecture
called the Scottish baronial.

The old Castle of Achree was considered one of the
best examples of it in the country, and it certainly was
picturesque, if a little "ill-convenient," as the country-folk
had it.  It was a large mansion of sorts, but totally
unsuited to the needs of a family and almost completely
devoid of all those modern conveniences which, in these
days, every artisan has at his command.

It was so cut up by winding stairs and queer little
passages that there was scarcely a room of decent dimensions
within its walls.  It was full of legend, of tragic
memories, and did not even lack the ghost, a mailed
and headless warrior who haunted the dungeon-room
where he had been done to death.

It was whitewashed or harled, but looked sadly in
need of the washer's brush.  The rains of many a year
had soddened and discoloured it, while, here and there,
at angles specially exposed, there were green patches
where the moss and lichen clung.

Yet it made a picture of indescribable beauty, not
untouched with pathos, as the cradle of every great
race must be, its history woven in with its very stones.
People came from far and near to see it, and many
artists had lingered enchanted over its picturesque
detail.  It stood on a small, green plateau facing south,
sheltered at the back by the pine-clad hill of Creagh,
which stood, like a sentinel, guarding the great moor of
Creagh that stretched away in the distance till it joined
the lands of Breadalbane towards Loch Tay.

With the moor of Creagh the Mackinnon property
ended on that side, but it was still a goodly-sized estate,
with shooting of some value, though it had been cut
down to as narrow dimensions as the extravagance of
some of the Mackinnons had dared to cut it.  But
never, never had Achree been in such dire straits as now.

When Isla left the gateway beside the little lodge and
turned down the beautiful road, she lifted her head and
took a long deep breath.  For the morning air was good,
though there was a nip of frost in it, and the red sun
lay warm and kindly on the clear summit of Ben
Voirlich, of which, at that point, an exquisite view could
be obtained, though it was in the next few steps lost
again.  The ruddy glow was reflected in the clear waters
of Loch Earn, and altogether the scene was one of
incomparable beauty, and it was knit into the very fibre
of Isla Mackinnon's being.  It was her home, and the
people were her own.  She had known none other.

A few rare trips to London when her cousins, the
richer Barras Mackinnons, had had a house for the
season, with occasional visits to them at their home in
one of the islands of the western seas, comprised her
whole knowledge of the world outside her own glen.
But beyond that she had neither asked nor desired
anything else.  The things she most passionately desired
and prayed for--peace for Achree and decent comfort
in which to live--were denied her.  She lived in hope,
however; but this day was to see its utter quenching,
so far as any earthly intelligence could predict.

The dogs, gambolling in front, knew their
destination--the Earn village; that is, if they did not meet David
Bain with the post-gig on the road.

For more than a year now it had been Isla's custom
to meet the postman for the purpose of intercepting any
letters which it might not be wise to let her father see.
In this simple act a great part of the tragedy of Achree
may be apprehended.  For even such innocent deception
was foreign to the soul and heart of Isla Mackinnon,
which was as clear and true as the waters of her
own loch.

She saw the fat, white pony presently, standing
before the dry-stone dyke that shut in the garden of
Darrach farm-house from the road, and she quickened
her steps in order that she might reach it before he
started out again, and might thus save him another
stop on the steep ascent.  That act was natural to her,
if you like; for if at any time by her thought or speech
or act she could help another, then she was happy
indeed.

But David of the grim face and the silent tongue had
got into the gig again, and the fat pony had ambled
off before she could stop him.  Presently they met
where a little water-course merrily crossed the gravelly
road, seeking its way to the Glenogle burn.

"Good-morning, David.  I hope you are quite well.
You had letters for Mrs. Maclure.  Surely you are
earlier than usual."

"It wass only a post-cairt from her niece, Jeanie
Maclure, from the school at Govan sayin' she would
come for the week-end maype," answered David, as if
the matter were of moment to the whole glen.  "Yes--there
pe lots an' lots of letters.  I hope yourself an' the
General are fery well this mornin'."

"Thank you, we are," said Isla as she leaned against
the shaft of the old cart, stroking the fat pony's yellow
eldes, her eyes a little more bright and eager than usual.

David fingered the letters with outward and visible
clumsiness, but he was most careful with them, and in
all the years of his service he had never made a mistake
with one or failed to deliver it to its proper recipient.

"Thank you, David; this is all I want," said Isla as
her fingers closed over the thick letter enclosed in its
foreign envelope.  "Take the rest up to Achree.  My
father will be waiting for them."

"Yes, Miss Isla.  That I will do, and hope it will pe
good news from Maister Malcolm in foreign parts, an'
that he will pe fery well."

"Thank you, David.  He is sure to be well," said Isla,
trying to speak lightly, but her fingers were nervously
closing over the letter, and into her eyes there crept a
strange shadow.

She had sometimes said that she had the gift of
second sight which was so common among the Mackinnons.
Certainly she knew before she opened that
letter, about a hundred yards lower down the road, that
it contained bad news.  It was too thick to be of no
consequence, for her brother Malcolm was no great
letterwriter when times were easy and his credit good.

She nodded good-bye to David Bain and passed on,
hastening more quickly than usual past the farm-house
of Darrach, though there lived one of her best and most
faithful friends in the whole glen--one Elspeth Mackay
married to Donald Maclure, the big crofter who was
respected in the glen, from end to end of it, as a man
of his word.

But Elspeth's tongue was long and her eyes were very
keen, and Isla was not ready for them yet.  Therefore
she hastened past the gate of Darrach, not even smiling
as the rich, fine smell of Elspeth's baking was borne out
through the open door.  Down the hill a little way she
came to the old brig that crossed the Darrach burn; and
there she paused, for there was no one in sight and the
slope hid her from view of Elspeth's windows.

She could never afterwards recall that half-hour by
the Darrach Brig without an inward shudder.

Thus did Malcolm Mackinnon, the ne'er-do-weel, write
airily and lightly, telling the miserable story that well
nigh broke his sister's heart:--

"DEAR ISLA,--Last time you wrote me you hoped I
would have better news to send next time.  I'm sorry I
can't comply.  I seem to have the devil's own luck here in
this beastly country.  In fact, I may as well say at once
that it's all up with me and that I'm coming home.

"I've never been very happy in the Thirty-fifth nor
got on well with old Martindale.  He's a beast, if ever
there was one, a regular martinet, and unless you
practise the whole art of sucking up to him you may as well
give up the ghost, as far as any chance of promotion or
even of fair play is concerned.  Of course, no Mackinnon
can suck up to anybody--we've got too much beastly
pride.  Anyway, I haven't been able to soft-sawder
Martindale enough, and I have been in his black books
ever since I joined.  But it's got a lot worse in the last
nine months.

"When I wrote the governor last year, asking him to
use his influence to get me shifted, I was quite in earnest,
and if he'd done it all this row might have been prevented.
We've been up country a goodish bit since I wrote last,
and there again I didn't get fair play or a bit of a chance.
We've had several brushes with a hostile tribe, but the
other chaps got their innings every time and nothing
but the dirty work was left to me.  We had such a lot
of beastly, unnecessary fag on our marches that most of
the chaps were on the verge of mutiny; but I was the
only one with the courage to speak up.  Whatever garbled
version of the story may get home, you may take it from
me, old girl, that is the bottom truth of it.  Anyhow, I've
got to send in my papers--that's the long and the short
of it.  All the chaps, except the few that suck up to
Martindale, think I've been treated most beastly badly,
and unjustly besides.  But of course nobody listens to a
poor subaltern's defence or excuse.

"By the time you get this I shall have started for
home.  I'm coming by the 'Jumna,' a rotten slow boat,
but I think it better for many reasons--chiefly those of
economy.  I shall be pleased to see the old place again,
and I hope the governor won't cut up too rough.  Try
and get the worst over for me before I come, because
naturally I'm raw enough about the whole bally thing,
and couldn't stand much more.  Fact is, it's all right in
a crack regiment for the chaps who have big allowances.
There's only one word to fit the case of poor, hard-up
beggars like me, and that one I mustn't use.  Poverty
opens the door to all sorts of mischief and misery that a
girl who never needs any money can't begin to understand.

"I'd better make a clean breast of it while I'm at it,
and you'll have time to digest it before I get home.  I'm
in with the money-lenders both in London and in
Calcutta.  I owe about two thousand pounds, and how
it's to be paid is keeping me awake at night.  Of course,
it's been advanced on Achree, so heaven only knows
what will be the upshot.  I'll have to see that old
starched stick Cattanach the minute I get back so that
the old man may not be worried.

"If only I had the place in my own hands I'd make
things hum a bit.  You know, Isla, everything has been
shockingly neglected in the last five years, and a perfect
horde of pensioners have been kept off the poor old
place.  The half of them ought to be chucked; it's
nothing but pauperizing the glen from end to end.  A
bit more could be screwed out of the tenants, as most
of them have their places dirt-cheap.

"Well, old girl, I'm beastly sorry, for you can't be
expected to like this.  But suspend your judgment, for really
I'm not half so bad as I'm painted, and if I had only
half a chance I might prove it to you.  I must try and
get somebody to introduce me to the Stock Exchange.
That seems to be the only way of turning an honest
penny nowadays.  There are hundreds of military men
on it.

"Don't be too downhearted over this.  You are such
a one for taking things seriously, and there's hardly
anything in life worth worrying about, really.  You have
the best of it, for nobody expects anything of a girl, and
she hasn't a chap's temptations.

"Good-bye, old girl.  I shall see you soon, if I don't
fancy on board the 'Jumna' that the easiest way out
would be to drop quietly over the rail some night when
nobody's looking.--Your affectionate, but
down-on-his-luck,

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   "MALCOLM."

Just for the space of five minutes or so the world was
a dark place to Isla Mackinnon.  She had no mother,
and for the last ten years she had borne a double
burden--had experienced both a mother's anxiety and a sister's
shame for the ne'er-do-weel.  The history of Malcolm
Mackinnon's misdeeds in the glen, and out of it, would
fill a book.  But such a book would not be worth the
writing.  Through him evil had fallen on an old and
honourable house--its revenues had been scattered, its
very existence threatened.

While Malcolm was stationed at home, at Colchester,
at Sheerness, and at the Curragh, complaints had been
many and his scrapes innumerable, and Isla had
welcomed with abundant relief the news that his regiment
was ordered to India.  That was three years ago.  And
now the final blow had fallen.  He had been dismissed
the army, in itself a disgrace so overwhelming that Isla
knew there must be some scandalous story behind.

Presently he would be home to loaf about in idleness,
to harry the people, to wring her heart and the heart of
the old man, in so far as he was able to comprehend.
And, with it all, he would smile his wicked and alluring
smile and get off scot-free.  This was the first time
condign punishment had been meted out to him, and he
took it lightly and merely remarked that it was injustice.
Everything was injustice that sought in any way to
hamper the wayward impulses of Malcolm Mackinnon.
It had been so from his youth up.

But what was to be done?  That half-hour of anguish
did its work on the face of Isla Mackinnon.  It ploughed
a few more lines on it and took away the last remnant
of its girlish curve.  She had a woman's work in front of
her, and a man's combined, for the intellect of the old
General was clouded now, and his bodily health frail.
There was no one to act for Achree save her alone.

And she would act.  Presently she threw her head up,
and the pride of her race crept back to sustain her, and
her eye even flashed with the swift strength of her new
resolve.

The dogs, hovering wistfully about her feet, asking
mutely why she lingered and cheated them out of their
scamper down the hill, reminded her of the passage of
time.  She pulled herself together, thrust the letter into
her bosom, and, grasping her stick, walked on with feet
which faltered only at the first step.

She reached the village, gave her order at the little
shop, inquired for a child who was sick in the house
above, passed the time of day with all whom she met,
and even listened patiently to a tinker's tale, told with
the persuasive guile of her tribe.  She felt herself a dual
person that day.  Never had the brain of the inner self
been so active.  Her swift planning was so intense as to
make her head ache.

All her small commissions done, she breasted the hill
again and so came to the gate of Darrach farm-house,
where Elspeth Maclure was looking out for her.

Now it must be explained that Elspeth had been a
nurse-girl at Achree and had had Isla in her absolute
care for the first seven years of her life.  Then she had
married honest Donald Maclure and had flitted to the
house of Darrach, whose chief recommendation, in her
eyes, was that it stood straight on the main road and
that, from its windows, she could see all who passed to
and fro between the village and the old Castle.

The private life of its inmates was not hid from
Elspeth.  She, too, remembered and took anxious note
of the Indian mail-day.  As she came down the path,
wiping the flour of her baking from her hands on the
snow-white of her apron, her deep, dark eyes scanned
the beloved face of her darling with all a mother's solicitude.

Elspeth was now considerably over forty--a comely,
motherly woman with a clear, rosy face and abundant
black hair, a model wife and mother, and the staunchest
friend of Isla Mackinnon's whole life.

When she opened the little gate, she saw that Isla
could not speak, and that her face was wan and dark
under the eyes.  She took her by the two hands and
drew her towards the door of the house.

"It is pad news, whatefer, my lamb.  I knew it wass
comin' at twelve o'clock last night when that thrawn
prute of a cock wouldna stop his crawin'.  I wass for
Donald gettin' up to thraw hiss ill neck, only he
wouldna."

Isla did not speak, and, quite suddenly, when they
got within the house, where the baby, in a queer little
cage of Donald's making, was crowing in the middle of
the floor, she threw herself into Elspeth'e arms and
burst into a storm of weeping.

Now, this was the most terrifying thing that had ever
happened in Elspeth's experience, and it seemed to
presage such woe as she had not dreamed of.

For the Mackinnons were a proud and self-contained
race, and to make parade of their feelings was impossible
for them.  It may be that they, as a family, had erred
in repressing them too much.  There had been but three
in the family--the third being an elder sister who had
married young and died in childbed.  Her death was
the first sorrow that had helped to take the spring out
of the old man's heart.  He had never, perhaps, been
quite just to Isla, because he had loved his first-born
best.

"There, there, my lammie!  God forpid that you
should cry your heart oot like that.  Put there--it will
do ye good!  Oh, the man that invented the post hass
a heap to answer for.  In the old days the trouble had
plown ower, whatefer, afore we got wind of it, especially
when it happened in foreign parts.  What is he sayin'
till it the day, my dear?  It is not impident curiosity
that pids me ask, put I canna pear to see ye like this."

It was all spoken in a crooning voice which had the
effect of soothing the overcharged heart of the girl.  That
outburst of natural tears was the very best thing which
could have happened to her.  Thus relieved, her heart
quickly recovered its strength.  She drew back, smiling
weakly, begged to be forgiven for such an exhibition,
and fumbled inside her blouse for the missive that had
wrought such woe.

She smoothed it out and, for the moment, she thought
to pass it over to her faithful friend, who, though no
scholar, would have had no difficulty in reading that
big, sprawling, crude schoolboy writing.  But again the
shame of it overcame the girl, and sitting down on the
edge of a chair, she lifted her wet eyes to Elspeth's face
and said mournfully:--

"It's the deluge, Eppie.  I've always said it would
come, and it is here."

"What hass happened?  Pe pleased to tell it quickly,
Miss Isla, for I nefer wass a good hand at waitin'."

"Malcolm has been dismissed from the Army, and
he is coming home.  He has sailed by now," she
added, referring to the second page of the letter, "and
his ship, the 'Jumna,' will arrive in about three weeks.
It's a slow boat, but inside a month he'll be at
Achree."

Elspeth bit her lip, and her hands worked nervously
in front of her apron.

"For the good God's sake, Miss Isla, what are we to
do with him here?"

"That's what I want to know.  It will kill my father.
He must never know that Malcolm has been sent home.
He must just think that it is an ordinary leave of
absence.  Poor dear, it is not so hard to bamboozle him
now as it once was!  If he grasped the fact that Malcolm
had been cashiered it would simply kill him.  Now I
shall be hard put to it, watching for other letters from
India or from the War Office.  Oh, Elspeth, I'm so tired
of playing watch-dog!  It's killing me.  Sometimes I
think I shall get up quite early one morning and go
down to the little loch and just walk in, where it is all
silvery with the dawn.  Then everything would be over,
and I should be at peace!"

"God forpid, my lamb, since ye are the one hope and
salvation of Achree," said Elspeth Maclure fervently.

Isla shook her head.

"There is little hope for Achree now, and, so far as
I can see, nothing can save it.  My brother owes so
much money, that, to get him clear, we ought to sell it.
It is what he will do himself, without doubt, whenever
he gets it into his own hands."

Elspeth Maclure stood, thunderstruck and horrified,
staring vaguely in front of her.

"Sell Achree what hass peen the place of the Mackinnons
for efer and efer!" she repeated slowly.  "God
forpid.  He would nefer let it come to pass.  Oh, Miss
Isla, the laws made py men are not good laws.  I'm
only a plain woman, put this I see that, when a man iss
like what Maister Malcolm iss, without the fear of God
or man in hiss heart, he should not haf the power.  I
suppose he hass porrowed the money on the place, put
it iss not him that will haf to pey," she added fiercely.

"No," repeated Isla, with a hard, far-away look on her
face, "it is not he who will have to pay."





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.. _`THE OLD HOME`:

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   CHAPTER II


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   THE OLD HOME

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Isla rose to her feet, and, suddenly, observing the baby
clutching with his chubby hands at the side of his cage
and smiling engagingly into her face, she stretched out
her hands to him.

"Oh, you darling!  Did Isla forget him, then?  What
a shame!"

She lifted him out, and his small chubby hands met
tightly round her neck, and his cheek was laid against
hers with a coo of delight.  Elspeth stood smiling by,
thinking of the wonder and gift of the child that can
charm grief away.

"If only you had a good man of your own, Miss Isla,
and a heap of little pairns, like me, things would pe
easier," she said quaintly.  "It's not for me to say, put
I whiles think that if there had peen ither laddies in
Achree, Maister Malcolm wouldna haf had it all his own
wey, which would haf peen a good thing for him."

"Yes, Elspeth, what you say is true; but I shall
never have a man or any little bairns," she said with a
sigh.  "My life-work is cut out plainly enough--and
has been from the beginning.  I have to save Achree
somehow--and I will."

"That would be a fery good thing, no doubt, put the
ither would pe petter, my lamb," said Elspeth with such
yearning in her eyes that Isla, feeling her composure
shaking again, hastily kissed the child and put him
back in his little enclosure.

"Donald must positively patent this, Eppie--he would
make money by it.  It's the cleverest thing I've ever
seen," she said lightly.

"It does the turn, and I'm not sayin' put that Donald
is clever--clever with hiss hands.  It makes up for the
gift of the gab which he hass not got.  I never saw a
man speak less.  I whiles ask him if his tongue pe not
tired with too little wark."

"Ah, but his heart is of gold, Eppie.  Don't you ever
miscall Donald to me, for I won't listen."

"Wha's misca'in him, whatefer?" asked Elspeth with
a small laugh which hid a tear.  "Good-bye, Miss Isla,
my ponnie dear, and may the good God go wi' ye and
help ye ower this steep pit of the road."

Isla nodded and sped away, not daring to trust herself
to further speech.

Left alone, Eppie Maclure sat down and incontinently
began to cry.  She came from one of the islands of the
western seas, owned by kinsfolk of the Achree Mackinnons,
and her heart was as soft as her speech, which
had the roll of the western seas in its tone.

There were no tears in Isla's eyes as she breasted the
hill bravely, brain and heart so busy that the good mile
seemed but a stone's throw.  It was half-past twelve
when she stopped at the low doorway of the house, and
with a wave of the hand dismissed the dogs, who went
off with hanging heads, as if they were conscious of
having missed something in their walk.  They knew--for
there are few people wiser than the dumb creatures
that love us--that, though the body of their mistress
had accompanied them down the familiar way, her heart
was clean away from them and from all the little homely
happenings that can make a country walk so pleasant.

She lifted the sneck softly and went in, closing the
door behind her.  It was rather a wide low hall, with a
flagged stone floor washed as clean as hands and soft
rain water could make it.  A few deer-skins were
scattered on it, some of them rather worn and bare, as
it was a long time since a Mackinnon had stalked a deer
in the forest of Achree.  Some fine antlered heads stood
out upon the wall between the stout wooden beams that
supported it and were now black with age and shining
with the peatreek.  A fire of peat was burning now in
the wide fireplace, in which there was no grate.  On the
oak mantelpiece there were queer, carved wooden pots,
full of stag's moss and heather that had lost its bloom.

It was a bare, cold place, with very little beauty to
arrest the eye, yet it had a dignity difficult to explain
or to describe.  The stair went up, wide and steep, from
one end of the hall for a few steps, and then it became
a winding one leading to all sorts of nooks and crannies
having small and unexpected landings, with doors
opening abruptly off them--a bewildering house, and
very "ill-convenient" to quote once more the language
of the glen.  But Isla Mackinnon loved every stone and
beam of it, and the heart of her was heavy, because she
saw in the very near future the day approaching when
the Mackinnons would be out of it, root and branch.

"But not before I've done my best to save it, please
God," she said under her breath, as she cast her coat
aside and went to look for her father.

An old serving-man in a shabby kilt emerged from the
faded red-baize door that shut off the servants' quarters,
bearing a tray with glasses in his hand.

"I suppose it is just on lunch time, Diarmid?" she
said.  "Where is the General?"

"I have just put him comfortable with the paper by
the library fire, Miss Isla," said the man, as he scanned
her face almost wistfully.

He, too, knew the day of the Indian mail.  She
motioned him to the dining-room, a long, narrow room
furnished in what the irreverent called spindle-shanks,
but what was in reality genuine and valuable furniture
of the Chippendale period.  Many old and very
discoloured family portraits covered the walls, and the
carpet, once a warm crimson but now almost threadbare,
gave the only touch of colour to the place.  The table
was beautifully set, and the silver on it was fit for a
king's table.

The Mackinnons were very poor, but there were
certain dignities of life which they never ignored or
made light of.  Whatever the fare might be--and on
most occasions it was simple enough--the table was
always so laid that the best in the land could have been
welcomed to it without shame.  The damask was darned,
but yet it had a sheen like satin on it such as they do
not achieve on the looms of the present day.

Isla closed the door and, steadying herself against it,
spoke to the old man who had served them as boy and
man for five-and-forty years.

"There is a letter from Mr. Malcolm, Diarmid.  He
is on his way home."

Diarmid set down his tray rather suddenly, so that
the glasses rang as they touched one another.

"Yes--Miss Isla?" he said almost feverishly.  "But
why will he come home?  Is it leave he is having
already so soon?"

"No, Diarmid.  He is leaving the Army for good.  I
am telling you, because you love us all so much and
understand everything.  This news must be kept from
the General."

"Yes, Miss Isla--but how?  If Mr. Malcolm comes
home he comes home, and the General will see him."

"Oh, yes, but he must think only that he is home on
furlough.  We must make up something that will satisfy
him--for a time, at least."

"Yes, Miss Isla, and if Mr. Malcolm is to come home
what will he do here in the glen, for sure he is a great
big, strong gentleman--glory be to God--and it is not
thinkable that he can be here doing nothing?"

"I haven't got so far as that, Diarmid," said Isla,
wearily.  "My head aches and aches with thinking.  I
sometimes wish I could fall asleep at night and never
waken any more."

"Yes, Miss Isla, but then the sun would go down upon
the glen for efer and efer," said the old man with
twitching lips.

He had carried her as a baby in his arms, he had set
her almost before she could toddle upon the back of the
old sheltie that now lived, a fat pensioner, in the paddock
behind the house; he had watched her grow from sweet
girlhood to womanhood, and his heart had rebelled
against the hardness of her destiny.  She had never had
her due.  Other girls in her position had married well,
had happy homes and devoted husbands, and little children
about their knees, while she, the flower of them all,
remained unplucked.

Diarmid, a religious man--as befitted one who had
lived such an uneventful and happy life--was sometimes
tempted to ask whether the God whom he worshipped
had fallen asleep over the affairs of Achree.  Of late, his
rebellion had become acute.  In the silence of his dingy
pantry he had even been known to shake his fist over
the silver he was polishing and to utter words not
becoming on the lips of so circumspect a servant.

"Say nothing to the others, Diarmid.  Let them think
that Mr. Malcolm is only home on furlough," she
pursued.  "I must make it right with my father somehow.
I'll go to him now and tell him about the letter."

"Yes, Miss Isla.  And Mr. Malcolm, he is quite well,
I hope?"

"Oh, yes, he is always well.  Perhaps, if he were
not--but there, I must guard my tongue.  The days are
very dark over Achree, Diarmid, and it may be that its
sun will soon set for ever."

"God forbid!  He will nefer let that happen--no, nor
anypody else, forby," he said vaguely.  "Keep up your
brave heart, Miss Isla.  I haf seen it fery dark over the
loch of a morning, and again, by midday, it would clear
and the sun come out.  It will be like that now, nefer
fear."

But though brave words were on the old man's tongue,
black despair was in his heart.  He was only a servingman,
but he could read between the lines, and he knew
that this sudden and unexpected home-coming of the
ne'er-do-weel meant something dire for Achree.  His
hands trembled very much as he proceeded with his
table duties, while his young mistress made her way
across the hall again to the library, a queer little octagon
room on the south side of the house, with no view to
speak of from its high, narrow windows that looked out
on the rising slope of a heather hill which made the
beginning of the moor of Creagh.  It was, however, the
snuggest room in the whole house, for which reason it
was used almost entirely by the General as a living place.

He was frail now, going to bed early and rising late,
and seldom caring to ascend the winding stairs to his
bedroom after he had once left it.

Isla entered softly, and his dull ear failed to apprise
him of the opening of the door.  She was thus able to
look at him before he was aware of her presence.  Once
a very tall man, standing six feet two in his stockings
in his prime, his fine figure was now sadly shrunk.  He
sat in a straight, high-backed chair--principally because
there were very few of the other sort in the old Castle of
Achree, and because there was no money to buy them
with, but she could see the droop of the shoulders as
they rested against the small cushion that she had filled
with down to give him a little ease.  He wore a velvet
skullcap, from the edge of which there showed a fringe
of beautiful silvery hair.  His feet, in the big loose
slippers of the old man, were raised on a hassock and he
was holding the newspaper high before his eyes.  Isla
observed, from its continuous flutter, that his hands
were a little more shaky than usual.

His face was very fine.  In his youth Mackinnon of
Achree had been the handsomest man in West Perthshire,
and he was reported to have broken his full
complement of hearts.  Even now the classic outline of his
face was plainly discernible, and he reminded one of
some old war-horse that was past service, but that
retained to the end all the noble characteristics that
had distinguished him in the heyday of his glory.

"What news to-day, father?" asked Isla's fresh, clear
voice.

When he heard it he rose to his feet with that fine
courtesy towards women which had never failed him.

She laid a hand in gentle reprimand on his arm.

"Now, how often have I told you, old dear, that you
are not to be so ceremonious with me?  You can keep
your fine manners for the great ladies who never, never
now come to Achree.  Your little Isla knows that they
are there, and she doesn't need ocular demonstration of
their presence."

He smiled and patted her cheek.  He was an old
man, now in his seventy-fifth year.  He had been so
long on foreign service that he had not married till late
in life, and he had then made a marriage which had
been the one mistake of his life, and into which he had
been led by the softness of his own heart.  Yet in battle,
and in the affairs of men, he had been a terrific person,
to be avoided by those who had offended him.

The fruits of that marriage, unfortunately, had come
out in the son and heir in whose veins ran the wild blood
of the woman who had broken Mackinnon's heart.
There was no fight in the General now.  He was a broken
old man--very gentle, not altogether comprehending, a
mere cypher in his own house, though his honour and
his prestige were more jealously guarded by his household
than they had ever been when he could guard them
himself.

His health was frail, but he suffered apparently from
no disease.  The doctor from Comrie who paid a weekly
visit often assured Isla that, with care, there was no
reason why her father should not live for other ten years.
Only he mustn't have any shock.  He so often insisted
upon this that Isla would ask herself after he had gone
how, as circumstances were with them now, shock could
be avoided.  Apprehension was in the very air, and when
Malcolm came home shock would most certainly be the
order of the day.

"Where have you been, Isla?"

"Down to Lochearn, and I stopped at Darrach to
speak to Eppie.  You know how her tongue wags.  Sit
down, dear, and let me tell you something.  Have you
had any interesting letters?"

"I don't know," he said vaguely.  "I looked at some
of them.  There is one from Cattanach, but I don't
understand it.  You'll explain it to me, Isla, and write
what is necessary."

Cattanach was the family lawyer, the head of a big
legal firm in Glasgow that had administered the affairs
of Achree for many years.

Isla seized upon his letter jealously, and read it even
with a feeling of foreboding.  But as her eyes quickly
covered the typewritten words, lo! a great relief was
hers.  The thing she had dreaded now manifested itself
as a blessing--perhaps even as a way out.

"Father, have you read this letter?" she asked,
drawing her chair to his side and still holding it in her
hand.

"I read it--yes, but I don't think I understand.  He
says something about strange folks coming to Achree.
You can write to him, Isla, and tell him that we are not
in a position to entertain, as we used to be.  We have
not the folk about us to make guests comfortable--nor
perhaps have we the heart."

"No, no; but that is not quite what he means, darling,"
said Isla eagerly.  "Let me read it over to you
quite slowly, then perhaps you will understand."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line

"ST. VINCENT PLACE,
    "GLASGOW, March.

.. vspace:: 1

"DEAR GENERAL MACKINNON,--I hardly like to approach
you on the subject of this letter, but a client of
mine is so insistent that I don't seem to have any
alternative.

"I write on behalf of Mr. Hylton Rosmead, an
American gentleman who is looking for a place in your
neighbourhood to rent for the season.  He wants it for
six months at least--from Easter to October, with the
option of stopping on if agreeable to both parties.

"It seems odd that, with the whole of Scotland to
choose from, he and his family should hit upon Achree
which, as I told him, is not in the market.  They saw it
in course of a motor tour last autumn, and were so
struck with it, it seems, that it is the only place they
would have in the whole of Scotland.

"I may say two things that may help you to a
decision.  They are Americans of the best type, and he
would pay a fancy price for the place.

"I have no alternative but to lay the offer before you
and may I remind you that the letting of places to
people of this type has become so common among the
old families that it is the exception not to let them at
some time or other.

"I shall be glad to hear from you at your very earliest
convenience as Mr. Rosmead is anxious to get settled.
Hoping you feel yourself better with the approach of
spring, and that Miss Mackinnon is quite well,--I am,
dear General, yours faithfully,

.. vspace:: 1

.. class:: noindent 

   "ALEXANDER CATTANACH."

.. vspace:: 2

Long before Isla had reached the close of this letter
the old man's attention had wandered and, though his
eyes had not fixed themselves on the paper again, Isla
saw that he was not in the smallest degree either
interested or comprehending.

"You don't understand, dear, that some one wants to
take Achree from us for a few months and to pay a high
rent--a very high rent--for it.  Why shouldn't we let
it?  Look how often Uncle Tom has let Barras.  He
has told us he couldn't get on without letting it."

"Oh, no, of course not.  Read this account of affairs in
Rhodesia, Isla.  It's the aftermath of the war.  Heavens,
we'll never get to the end of that precious muddle!  I
said so at the time."

Isla laid down the letter quietly, intending to return
to it later.  It was part of the difficulty of her life, part
of the hopelessness of the present acuter stage in it, that
she could not get her father to comprehend facts and
details which were of the utmost importance.  Either
he could not or he would not understand--there were
times when she was at a loss to say which.

As she laid Cattanach's letter down she drew her
brother's from the bosom of her blouse.

"Did you remember that this is mail-day, father?
You know you can't read Malcolm's scrawl, which seems
to grow more illegible with every letter.  Shall I read it
out to you?"

"No.  Tell me what he says.  His letters weary me.
They are full of words I don't understand and have no
use for," he said with a sudden touch of querulousness.
"I can't understand why a boy that has been at Glenalmond
and at Sandhurst wants to fill his letters with
unintelligible jargon.  How is he?"

"He's quite well.  He is coming home, father.  He
will be here very shortly."

"Coming home!  Leave again!  Far too much leave
in the service now.  They have no time to lick them
into shape.  Seventeen years I served in Northern India
without a break--and never a murmur; and I've known
men who served thirty.  Now it's leave every third or
fourth year.  It doesn't look like five since he was last
here, but I suppose it is.  Well, when is he coming?"

"In about a month."

"A bad time of year, too--nothing to kill but a stray
rabbit.  I think I'll write to them at the War Office and
stir them up about this perpetual leave business.  It's
bad for the men, bad for the officers, bad for the service
all through, and accounts for its unpopularity and
inefficiency.  In my day the Army was a man's business--the
serious business of his life.  Now it's his play.
How can a country be kept together on these lines?"

Isla betrayed no weariness, though she knew that he
had started on his interminable theme.  It was the only
one in which he retained any active interest, for
Mackinnon had been born a soldier, and the medals he
had won could not be pinned all at one time on his
breast.  But his failing powers prevented him from
being able to adjust his mind to the new conditions of
things.  In his estimation, the old style of warfare was
best, and all the new methods were fit only to be
criticized and partly abolished.

"He doesn't say anything about the duration of his
leave.  I, too, am rather sorry he is coming home just
now, father, for, as you say, there is nothing to kill and
Malcolm isn't a man of resource.  I think I'll go and see
Cattanach and ask his advice."

"Cattanach?  Oh, yes.  What did he write about,
did you say?  Anything to sign?  Or was he writing only
for his own amusement to earn six-and-eightpence?
Terrible fellows these lawyers--even the best of them
are worth watching."

He laughed gently but quite mirthlessly, and his eyes
glued themselves again to his paper, in which he at
once became completely absorbed.

Isla, knitting her brows slightly, turned away to the
table to glance through her father's letters, which he
had not so much as touched.

Everything was in her hands.  Something whispered
that she, and she alone, must be the saviour of Achree.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`ISLA TAKES ACTION`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER III


.. class:: center medium

   ISLA TAKES ACTION

.. vspace:: 2

Isla, already dressed for a journey, took in her father's
breakfast-tray next morning.

"You are surely early afield, my dear?" he said,
looking at the trim figure with quick approbation.

"Yes, dear.  I am going to Glasgow to see Mr. Cattanach,
because I found when I started out to answer his
letter that I couldn't say half I wanted."

"His letter wasn't very clear, I thought.  Ask him
why he doesn't learn to express himself better.  I thought
that was a lawyer's business.  But it seems a long way
to go to Glasgow to say that to him.  When do you get
your train?"

"Nine-thirty, and Jamie Forbes has come up from the
hotel to drive me to Balquhidder.  So good-bye, dear.
Diarmid will look after you till I come back, and you
may expect me about tea-time."

He did not ask any other question.  His mind was
now curiously detached from all immediate happenings,
and he lived more and more in the past.  Even his
reading of the newspapers was coloured by the tendency
to retrospect.

Isla got away with a considerable sense of relief, and
when she mounted to the side of Jamie Forbes in the
hotel dogcart her eyes even sparkled.  There was now
no horse of any kind, nor was there any carriage in the
stableyard of Achree, though the old people, even
Diarmid himself, could sadly recall the time when it had
been full.

Isla was glad to be doing something.  She had all the
restlessness of an active nature that could not endure a
policy of drift.  They had been drifting so long with the
ebb tide at Achree that she welcomed the crisis which
made it necessary to take an immediate step.

She went ostensibly to ask the lawyer's advice, but
her own mind was made up as to the best course to
pursue.  Her judgment was singularly clear, and she
was not now in the smallest doubt as to the right--nay,
the only--thing to be done in the circumstances.

At Balquhidder Station a few passengers were waiting
for the Oban train, and, slightly to Isla's chagrin, directly
she appeared on the platform a tall young man in a
tweed suit and a covert coat came forward, with evident
signs of satisfaction, to greet her.

"Good morning, Isla.  This is an uncommon bit of
luck.  Are you going to town?"

"To Glasgow," she unwillingly admitted.  "And you?"

"Glasgow too," he answered joyfully.  "I was cursing
my luck as I drove over the hill from Garrion, but if I
had known, I should have driven with a lighter heart."

Isla scarcely smiled.  She liked Neil Drummond very
well as a friend, for they had known each other since
their childhood.  But in the last three years he had
spoiled that friendship by periodically asking her to
marry him.  The expression in his eyes now indicated
that very little provocation would make him ask her
again on the spot, for he was very much in earnest.  He
was two years younger than Isla, and she always treated
him like a young and very inexperienced brother, which
incensed him a good deal.

He had just come into the property from his uncle,
and wanted nothing but a wife to make Garrion complete.
He was a finely-built, good-looking young fellow,
with an honest, kindly face, with not a very high type
of intellect perhaps, but with sufficient common sense
and sound judgment to fill admirably the position to
which he had been called.

He and his sister Kitty, being orphans, had been
brought up by their uncle at Garrion, and had known
no other home.  Kitty and Isla were friends, of course,
though there was not so very much in common between
that dashing, high-spirited, happy-go-lucky girl and the
more staid and placid Isla.

"How's Kitty?  We haven't seen her for a long time,"
she said as they began to pace to and fro on the
platform--objects of much interest of a significant kind to those
who knew them.

"Kitty's alone, but when are you coming to Garrion?
Aunt Betty is always asking why you don't come."

"That's easily answered.  It's five miles to Garrion,
and I haven't either a horse or a bicycle; but tell Lady
Betty I'll walk over one of these days."

"You needn't do that, Isla--and very well you know
it.  All you have to do is to say the word, and the best
bit of horse-flesh in Garrion stables is at your command."

"I haven't much time," she said rather quickly.
"Father seems to need me more of late, and----"

She hesitated, and then came to a stop, deciding that
she would not just yet mention a word about Malcolm's
coming home.  It was not that she could not trust Neil
Drummond, but the shame of that home-coming held
her back from speaking of it even to a friend of such
long standing.

"It is very unusual for you to go to Glasgow, isn't it?"
said Neil, looking down with a slightly rueful expression
at the bonnie, winsome face by his side.

"It is very unusual.  Last night father had a letter
from Mr. Cattanach, which we found rather difficult to
answer, so I came to the conclusion that it might save
further complications if I went up and had a talk with
him about it."

"Well, if that's all, you can come and lunch with me,
can't you?  St. Enoch's Hotel, one sharp.  I'm only
after a horse.  It won't take me more than an hour."

Isla hesitated, but finally promised.

"I must get the two-ten train, and if anything happens
to prevent me from keeping the appointment, don't wait.
I'll be there at one if I'm coming."

"All right," said Drummond joyfully.  "This is a
red-letter day--and no mistake.  Shows that a fellow
never knows when his next bit of good luck is going to
turn up."

He looked so young and boyish at the moment that
Isla suddenly smiled upon him.

"What a boy you are, Neil!  I don't believe anything
will ever make you grow up.  Even being Laird of
Garrion hasn't had the smallest effect.  Here's the train.
Now I warn you I won't speak to you on the journey,
because I have heaps and heaps of things to arrange in
my mind.  Remember, I'm going to a lawyer's office,
and nobody goes there unprepared."

"All right.  So long as I am sitting next to you, and
preventing anybody else from speaking to you, I shan't
grumble," said Neil calmly as he helped her into a corner
of the third-class carriage.

He had a first-class ticket himself, which he carefully
hid from her.  Had he dared he would have paid the
difference for the privilege of having a compartment to
themselves, but Isla would not have permitted that.

Shortly after eleven o'clock they arrived at Glasgow
and, saying that it was necessary for him to have a cab
to take him to his destination at the south-side, he put
Isla in and drove her the short distance to the lawyer's
door.  Then with the prospect of meeting her at lunch
in little more than an hour's time, he departed in the
seventh heaven of delight.

Miss Mackinnon, sending in her name, was not kept
waiting an unnecessary moment.  Indeed, so much was
she respected in the office that Cattanach turned over
a rather important client to his junior partner and at
once went to see Miss Mackinnon, escorting her to his
private room.

"I came in consequence of your letter to papa
yesterday, Mr. Cattanach," said Isla as they shook hands.
"It was of such importance that I thought I would
come and have a talk with you about it."

Cattanach was not an old man, and he bore his fifty
years lightly.  He had a somewhat heavy yet keen face,
was a little stern in repose.  But, when his
genial smile irradiated his face, the sternness was
forgotten.  His reputation in the city was that of being
one of the first lawyers of the day, and business simply
flowed in upon his firm.

His father had been at the helm of Achree affairs
when they were in a more prosperous state, and he had
been a life-long friend and admirer of the General.  He
had managed to communicate his sincere and sympathetic
interest to his son, who had done much more
for the Mackinnons than they could have had the right
to expect from their man of business or than could ever
be repaid.  He had indeed helped young Mackinnon out
of several scrapes for his father's and his sister's sake,
though doing that had been a service very ill to his
liking.  An interview with Isla herself, however, was a
pure pleasure, which, on this occasion, was all the
keener that it was wholly unexpected.

"Yes, thank you, I am quite well and father too,
though he is failing, I think," she said rather sadly.
"I came in answer to your letter and in order to show
you this."

She had a small bag of curiously-wrought Moorish
leather on her arm, from which she produced the letter
that had come yesterday by the Indian mail.  She did
not immediately pass it over, however, or read any
extract from it, but, leaning slightly forward in her chair,
she fixed her clear, grave eyes on the lawyer's face as he
stood in quite characteristic attitude in front of his
desk, leaning one hand slightly on the table.

"Won't you sit down, Mr. Cattanach?  I'm afraid I
must take up quite a lot of your time this morning--an
hour perhaps.  I have to lunch at the St. Enoch's
Hotel at one."

"Then I shall not have the pleasure of taking you to
lunch myself."

"Not to-day, thank you," said Isla, and he imagined
her colour rose slightly.  "It is about your letter I first
want to speak.  My father did not comprehend it, I am
afraid.  He sent the message to you," she added with a
faint, wandering smile, "that he was surprised that a
lawyer did not express himself better.  But of course to
me what you said was perfectly clear.  Tell me about
this man who wishes to take poor old Achree.  Is
he--is he at all a possible person?"

There was just the slightest suggestion of hauteur in
the question, which, at another time, might have
amused Cattanach hugely.  Out in the hard world of
men and business things were called by their right
names, and there would have been small sympathy
expressed for the Mackinnon pride.

But he understood.  This fine creature, product of an
ancient race and embodiment in her own personality of
all that was best in it, appealed to him beyond any power
of his to express.  He was prepared to meet her and to
help her, not only to the best of his ability but even
beyond what his prudence and his better judgment would
have permitted.  And it would not be the first time in
the record of his transactions with Achree that service
had been rendered by Alexander Cattanach from purely
disinterested motives--service that had never found its
way into the columns of any ledger.

"He is a very possible person indeed, Miss Mackinnon,
quite the best type of educated American--and the type
is very good."

"Is it?" asked Isla with a little shiver.  "I have never
encountered it.  The few specimens that come to the glen
are not--are not what one would call the best type.  And
the people who had Edinard for two seasons running!--shall
one ever forget them?  Their flying motors with
screaming hooters, their impossible costumes, their
disregard for our quiet Sabbaths, their noise--all were
indescribable.  I should not like such people as they at Achree.
But, indeed, I don't suppose such people would so much as
look at it.  Lady Eden told me that the first year it cost
her half the rent to put into the house what her tenants
wanted.  They were so mean in regard to trifles that they
would not buy the simplest thing."

Cattanach smiled understandingly.  He also had some
acquaintance with that type.

"I don't think you would find the Rosmeads like that.
I should say myself that they are simple gentlefolks and
that, this summer at least, they would be certain to live
quietly.  They wish the place for retirement on account
of Mrs. Rosmead, who is recovering from a long illness,
and for their elder daughter, who has just had an
unpleasant experience in the Divorce Court--one of those
curious matrimonial entanglements of which America
seems to be full.  She was here on Tuesday with her
brother.  She is one of the most beautiful women I have
ever seen."

"Poor thing--and had she a bad husband?"

"I understand so, but, of course, the subject was not
mentioned.  There is a younger daughter called Sadie,
and there is also a boy at Yale or Harvard, who would
spend only his summer here.  I think you would like
the family, and they would be willing to pay three
hundred for the house, and five with the shooting."

"Five hundred!" murmured Isla, and her eyes had a
sort of hungry look.

Money for its own sake did not exist for her.  She was
naturally of a generous, even of a prodigal mind, and
she was certainly made for the gracious dispensation of
great wealth.  But she had had to count the pence so
long that she had arrived, by many painful processes,
at full appreciation of their market value.

"We could certainly live at Creagh on three hundred;
then two could be laid by, couldn't they, Mr. Cattanach?"

He turned swiftly away, for there was something in
the eager question, almost childishly put, which gripped
him by the throat.

"Yes, of course.  In the country life is simple," he
said at last.  "I gather from what you say that you
would be willing at least to consider the offer of
Mr. Hylton P. Rosmead."

"I haven't any alternative now," she said, as she pulled
the strings of the leather bag again and produced her
brother's letter.  "Please to read that, Mr. Cattanach."

She passed over the thin, and now crumpled sheet
covered with Malcolm's sprawling undignified handwriting,
which the lawyer's eyes quickly scanned.  The
expression of his face as its full significance dawned upon
him quite changed and perceptibly hardened.  When he
refolded it again it was a moment before the suitable
word came to him.  He knew that words of pity or
condolence would be quite out of place, if spoken to Isla
Mackinnon, and that the truest kindness he could show
her would be to accept the situation as a matter of
course and do his utmost to help, as he had opportunity,
or could make it where he had it in his power.

"This makes acceptance of Rosmead's offer imperative,
as you say, Miss Mackinnon.  Perhaps the best thing I
can do is to send him to Achree to see you.  He is in
the city this week.  He has many friends here connected
with the engineering profession.  I believe that in his
own country he is a distinguished engineer, and he
certainly is a very gentlemanly, well-informed man."

He praised the American of a set purpose, deeming it
best to direct Miss Mackinnon's thoughts to the pleasant
side of the inevitable.

"Do you think they would wish a great deal of money
spent on the house?  It is very bare, really, and rather
dilapidated.  But if he wanted even a tithe of the things
that Lady Eden's tenants asked for I'm afraid the bargain
would have to be off.  I could not owe money myself,
even to let Achree."

"I don't think there will be any difficulty.  They are
without doubt very wealthy people, and, further, they
are so anxious for the place that they will take it at
your terms.  You spoke of the Lodge of Creagh a moment
ago.  You would go there to live in the interval?"

"Yes.  It happens to be empty since Mrs. Macdonald
died last autumn, and if it were well fired and aired we
could be quite comfortable there.  Of course, it is small,
but I would give up the dining-room to my father, and,
so long as he is comfortable and does not suffer by the
change, nothing else matters much."

"It is very remote," suggested Cattanach, "and the
road across the moor is nothing to boast of, if I
remember it rightly."

"Of course it is only a shooting-lodge--and a small
one at that; but its remoteness won't matter to me, and,
as for my brother, perhaps it would be a very good thing
for him to be shut off by the moor of Creagh."

Cattanach nodded gravely.

Then she put another question to him of a more
disconcerting kind.

"Mr. Cattanach, why are men usually dismissed from
the Army?  What are the offences, I mean?  They must
be grave, of course, because it is so serious a thing to
cut short a man's career at the very commencement."

"It is a serious thing, and it is not done on trifling
grounds," he answered quietly, not dreaming of evading
her question.  "What your brother says about injustice
is, of course, nonsense.  It exists in small things in the
Army, as elsewhere, but it would never reach the length
of, as you say, cutting short a man's career."

She sighed a little as she rose to her feet.  He had
not specified, but she was answered.

"It is all very dreadful, and it would certainly kill my
father if he knew.  Happily--how strange it is that I
can use the word in relation to what has been such a
sorrow to me, but happily--his failing faculties don't
permit him to grasp the affairs of life.  He understands
that Malcolm is coming home, and he is full of wrath at
the amount of leave allowed in the service in these days.
It will thus be all right for a little while, but if Malcolm
is to live on as a loafer," she said with a sad inflexion
of scorn in her voice, "he will be troubled about it.
Oh, Mr. Cattanach, what is to be done with Malcolm?"

Her brave voice shook, and again there was in her
eyes that agony of appeal which a far less kind-hearted
man than Cattanach could not have resisted.

"Dear Miss Mackinnon, the trouble is very real and
awful, but it is not on us just yet.  Let us get the
question of the tenancy of Achree settled, and then we
shall have time to tackle the other.  The Rosmeads wish
to get settled in the place before Easter.  Would that be
possible?"

"I shall make it so, and I want to be at Creagh before
Malcolm arrives.  He would create all sorts of difficulties,
and it will be far better to get the people into Achree
before then."

"And your father?"

"Ah, that will be difficult, but I have never been
beaten yet, Mr. Cattanach, though sometimes I have
been very near it.  Yesterday I thought I was, but
to-day, when I woke up, I felt quite strong and able, and
now, after your kindness, I am sure we shall get through."

"I shall help to the very best of my ability.  I can
come down to Achree if you think I can be of any use to
you in persuading the General."

"Thank you.  I shall write if I think it necessary for
you to come.  But he is so like a child!  He will be
quite pleased to go to Creagh, I believe, and he will not
understand why we have to leave Achree.  I am glad
that it is so now.  If he had been his old self it would
have been so difficult for him."

"Undoubtedly it would."

"And Malcolm's affair too!  He must not be allowed
to idle about indefinitely in the glen, or I shall never
have a moment's peace.  I'm going to talk very straightly
to him when he comes.  He has always got off too easily.
But this money--how is it to be found?  If they begin
to press for it would they take Achree?"

"We shall prevent that.  You must leave this in my
hands, Miss Mackinnon.  The best thing your brother
could do would be to emigrate to one of the new countries--to
Canada, or the Cape, or even the Argentine.  As you
say, it will not be possible to allow him to loaf about the
glen."

"But he is so difficult, because, you see, he thinks
nothing matters, and his only desire is to have what he
calls a good time.  Even if he has it at other people's
expense he will have it.  About this money he owes?
I will do my utmost to save for it out of the money the
Americans will pay.  They will not do anything drastic
about it, I hope--seize upon Achree or any part of it,"
she repeated wistfully, as if yet unconvinced.

"I can deal with them, Miss Mackinnon.  You must
leave that part of the business for your brother and me
to settle between us.  You may trust me to do what
will be absolutely for the good of yourself and your
brother."

"Oh, I know," she said with eloquent eyes.  "Thank
you so much.  You are always so kind.  Things seem
easier when one has seen you.  Good-bye, then.  And
you will send the American man to view the land soon?
I hope I shall be able to please him."

A clock on the mantelshelf struck, and she made
haste to the door.

"I have to lunch with Mr. Neil Drummond of Garrion
at one.  I must run," she said.

The lawyer himself escorted her to the street door, put
her into a cab, and, as he returned slowly up the stairs,
rubbed his hands together meditatively.

"Drummond of Garrion!  Well, well, perhaps it might
be the best thing she could do.  Poor, poor girl, but
game to the innermost fibre of her being!  Where would
our old families be but for such as she--but for the fine
fibre of their women?  Garrion!  Garrion!  By Gad, I
must look into it and see whether it would be worth her
while."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE AMERICANS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER IV


.. class:: center medium

   THE AMERICANS

.. vspace:: 2

"Did you ever see such a shabby room, Peter?  It
positively reeks of poverty."

Thus did Sadie Rosmead deliver herself to her brother
after the drawing-room door had been shut upon them
at Achree, and Diarmid had gone to seek his mistress.

On the Monday following Isla's visit to Glasgow, and,
in consequence of a letter from Cattanach, the Rosmeads
had made a hurried journey out to Glenogle for the
purpose of making acquaintance with the interior of the
house that they so much admired, and, if possible, of
coming to terms with its owners.

They were a handsome pair.  Rosmead himself, a man
of about thirty-five, well, but quietly, dressed, and
carrying his firmly-knit figure with conscious ease and
strength, had a strong, fine face, lit by pleasant grey
eyes that gave a very fair index to his character.  He
was a man who, by his own effort, by the sheer force of
his ability, which, in his own domain amounted to
genius, had achieved a distinction and a success
manifest in his very bearing.

Once seen, Peter Rosmead would not be readily
forgotten.  He was a man who could not be in any company
without leaving the mark of his personality upon it.

His sister was small, but elegant; dressed with
conspicuous plainness, but in a style which has to be paid
for with considerable cheques.  The feature of her
costume was undoubtedly her veil, which, when worn
by a really elegant American woman such as Sadie
Rosmead certainly was, becomes a thing of distinction.
It was only a long width of blue chiffon attached to a
small felt hat of the same hue, but it made a most
becoming setting to her dark, piquant face.

"Yes--it positively reeks of poverty.  Look at the
darn in the carpet, Peter!" she said severely.  "This is
a house of makeshifts, but it's decent poverty, and I've
never seen anything so clean in the whole of my life.
It would charm mother.  How I wish she could have
come to-day!"

Still Peter did not answer.  There was something
about the room which pained him, but he could not
have explained what it was.  It seemed to him indecent
that two strangers, such as they were, should have come
to view the poverty of the land.  Cattanach had told
Rosmead several things that he had not mentioned to
any of his women folks; therefore, he was very eager and
interested to see Miss Mackinnon.

Sadie babbled on.

"If it were not so clean it would be impossible.  But
there are some awfully pretty things.  Look at that bit
of tapestry on the end wall and at that coat of arms
worked on the banner screen.  It's just too sweet for
anything.  Now, what are you looking at, Peter?--oh,
the miniatures!  Anything good?"

There was a small collection on the mantelpiece,
framed in ebony and standing on little brass tripods--very
exquisite things in their way, and part of the few
remaining treasures of Achree.  Rosmead was studying
them intently, and his sister was examining with interest
the various bits of old needlework in the room, when the
door was opened by rather a quick, nervous hand, and
some one came in.

Rosmead turned back from the mantelpiece, and
Sadie dropped the cushion with the peacock sewn upon
its cover, and turned with a charming smile.

"Don't be angry, Miss Mackinnon.  We are not
sampling anything, but we are Americans--don't you
know--and everything in this lovely old house appeals
to us.  You are Miss Mackinnon, aren't you?  I'm
Sadie Rosmead, and this is my brother Peter."

It was charmingly done, and it brought a slight smile,
in spite of herself, to Isla's parted lips.  She had been
walking very fast, and the colour was high in her cheek.
Her jacket was thrown back to show the neat flannel
shirt belted trimly to her waist, and the black tie held
in its place by the silver brooch, curiously wrought and
displaying the arms of the Mackinnons, the same design
being repeated in the buckle of her belt.

"I am so sorry you have been kept waiting.  I was at
the other side of the wood, seeing a sick woman.
How-do-you-do?"

She shook hands with Sadie, but it was at the brother
that she looked.

And she was well pleased with what she saw.  She
was not concerned at all about the impression she might
be making on them.  The only thing that mattered was
that the people who were coming to Achree should not
be objectionable.

Just for a moment she had been a trifle dismayed by
Miss Rosmead's very obvious nationality--by the twang
in her voice and by the familiarity of her manner.  Isla's
own manner inclined to hauteur.  She fought against it,
for the person who has goods to sell cannot afford to be
too high and mighty in procedure.  Yet she carried
herself, in spite of her efforts to the contrary, like one who
had a favour to bestow.

An intensely good-natured person, overflowing with the
milk of human kindness, Sadie Rosmead did not even
notice this characteristic manner, but not a shade of it
was lost on Rosmead himself.  It did not, however,
either irritate or repel him.  He had an immense gift of
understanding, and he knew what this interview meant
to the girl before them, whose face, now that the little
flush of excitement had died from it, was pale, and even
a little haggard.

"I am sorry you did not let me know, so that you
could have been met at the station and could have come
to luncheon.  Have you had any?"

"Oh, yes," answered Sadie, "a very good snack at the
station buffet at Glasgow, hadn't we, Peter?  We should
like a cup of tea perhaps, by and by, after we have seen
the house.  I have heard of your Scotch scones and
butter and honey.  They have very good imitations of
them at the hotels, but we've been told--haven't we,
Hylton?--that they don't begin to taste like the real
thing."

Isla noticed the change of name, and she decided that
the more dignified one suited the brother better.  "Peter"
was certainly ridiculous, and yet it had a kindly human
sound and she preferred to think of him as kindly to
thinking of him as dignified at the moment.  Achree so
much needed kindness, and she--poor girl!--more than
all, though she was hardly conscious of her own need.

Rosmead was fully conscious of it.  He had never in
the whole course of his experience met with anything
that touched or appealed to him more than the sight of
this tall, slight girl upon whose shoulders rested what
made her life a burden--the whole responsibility of the
house of her fathers.  Cattanach, a discerning man, had
told him just sufficient to arouse his compassionate
interest.  Though he spoke so little, Isla felt comforted by
his presence.  The thing that had been a nightmare
resolved itself, under his kindly touch, into something that
might not only be possible, but might also prove good.

This man, of alien race though he was, would never
harry Achree, nor would he bring to it strange new ways
of life and thought.  He looked strong, generous, and
simple--as the truly strong always are.

While this subtle bond was being established between
these two thus so strangely brought together, Sadie did
the talking.

"Yes, we would like to see the house--every bit of
it--but not to poke.  Only, however, if it is convenient
and only what you are willing to show--eh, Peter?  We
don't want to rush Miss Mackinnon, and we can easily
come out another day and bring Vivien."

"Vivien is your sister?" said Isla inquiringly, as she
laid her jacket down on the end of the high-backed old
sofa.

Sadie nodded.

"She had a headache.  She is not so very strong, and
she can't stand racket.  I'm the untirable, uncrushable,
wholly inextinguishable member of the family.  But not
a bad sort--eh, Peter?"

Peter indulgently smiled.

"I hope General Mackinnon is quite well?" he
inquired.  "I have heard from Mr. Cattanach that his
health has not been good of late."

"No--he is not so very strong.  To-day, because it felt
really like spring, he has gone for a little walk.  I was
with him.  But, yes--he is quite all right.  One of the
men is coming back with him.  If you don't mind, will
you come and see the library before he returns?  It is
the room he sits in chiefly, and I am afraid it will be a
little difficult for him to understand what you are doing
in it if he should see you there.  We can come back
here, of course, for tea."

She led the way down the winding stair and across the
flagged hall, which Sadie mutely pointed out to her
brother as they silently followed their guide.  All the
windows in the library were open, and the cool, fresh air
met them on the threshold.  Again the same note of
shabbiness and painful care was evident, but the room
was well-furnished with books, which completely lined
the walls.

"I suppose they are centuries old," said Sadie in an
awe-struck whisper.  "There--Peter, surely now you
will be able to read your fill."

"Some of them are very old, I believe, and there are
first editions among them," answered Isla, in a matter-of-fact
tone, as if unaware that she talked of treasures which
could be exchanged for gold.  "You see this is quite a
good room, and everyone likes the shape of it.  It is so
warm in winter, and so cool in summer."

It was duly admired, and they made their way from it
again to the dining-room.  They also took a quick glance
at the servants' premises, where Sadie's sharp eyes took
in most of the details.

"Now--upstairs," said Isla with evident relief.  "And
on the first landing, where the little door opens, just here
is the dungeon-room.  It has a trap-door and a stair
going right down from it."

Sadie's eyes grew positively wide with excitement.

"A dungeon-room," she repeated again, in an awe-stricken
whisper.  "And where does this stair lead to?
Can anyone go down?"

"Oh, yes.  It leads to the dungeon, and there used to
be--about the fourteenth century--a passage from it
going both ways, one to Killin and down to the Earn,
but it has not been opened for hundreds of years."

"Do you hear that, Hylton Rosmead?  The fourteenth
century!  Where were we then?  How do you see down?"

"If Mr. Rosmead will be so kind----"

She stooped to pull back the faded strip of home-made
carpet, and so revealed the rusty hinges set level with
the floor.

Rosmead stooped also and, with one swing of his strong
arm, he raised the heavy door, so that they could look
into the depths beneath.  A curious odour met them,
and Sadie, her imagination now wrought to a high
pitch, fancied she heard mysterious sounds ascending
from below.

"I should love to go down, but we can explore later
when we come to live here.  Fancy a place like this
right in the middle of one's house and stairs and passages
leading all over the country!  It's positively creepy,
but most fascinating.  And a room with a bed in it too!
I wonder whether I should get any sleep in it if I took it
for my own?"

"It is rather small, isn't it?" said Isla with a smile.
"It was used as a sentinel's or guard's room chiefly in
the old days, I fancy.  Now, will you come up and see
the bedrooms?"

"I'll take a turn outside if I may," said Rosmead.
"My sister will accompany you, Miss Mackinnon.  I'm
perfectly satisfied with what I have seen."

"Can you find your way?  There are two staircases,
but you can get out by either," said Isla, and they stood
just a moment on the narrow landing till Rosmead had
found his way out.

He passed out into the mellow sunshine of the afternoon
with a sense of relief.  The old house saddened
him.  It seemed to be peopled with dead hopes and with
old memories and to have no kinship with the warm and
happy life of men.

As he stepped on the gravel the sound of wheels broke
the stillness, and a dogcart, in which was a beautiful,
high-stepping chestnut horse, was rapidly driven up to
the door.  It contained two persons--a man and a
woman, both young--who had evidently come to pay a
call at Achree.

Raising his hat slightly, he turned aside to walk round
by the gable-end of the house in order to see it from the
back.

Just beyond the rolled gravel he came upon another
pathetic sight--the old General in his Inverness cloak
and with his bonnet on his thin white hair, leaning
heavily on his stick and watching the antics of a little
brown dog in front of a rabbit-hole.  He was quite alone;
and Rosmead, in whom reverence for the old was a
passion as well as a virtue, involuntarily took off his
hat.

"Come back, you little vixen!" the old man called
with a little chuckle to the brown dog.

And, just at the moment, Janet, conscious of the
approach of a stranger, gave a short, sharp bark and ran
back.

The General looked round and, seeing the stranger,
took his bonnet from his head.  Rosmead had then no
alternative but to introduce himself.

"My name is Rosmead, sir.  I am here owing to
correspondence with Mr. Cattanach."

"Cattanach?  Oh, yes--very decent fellow, Cattanach,
but not a good writer.  Have you seen my daughter,
and has your horse been put up?" he said with all the
fine dignity of the hospitable old laird, always ready to
welcome the stranger within his gates.

"We have only a hired trap, and it is waiting in the
stable-yard.  We have to get back to catch the
four-thirty train."

"Oh, yes.  Well, you will see my daughter, and you
will at least have some tea before you go away.  Can I
direct you back to the house?  I was taking my walk in
the sun.  I am not so strong as I was, and I have to
choose my days.  That is what we have to come to, sir,--we
choose our days, when they are not chosen for us.
Well, if you can find your way back to the house, I shall
continue my walk."

He touched his bonnet and turned away, as if he had
dismissed the man and the incident from his mental
vision.

Rosmead immediately grasped the whole facts.  He
saw that the old man was wholly detached from the
affairs of life, and more and more his heart ached with
compassion for Isla Mackinnon.  He walked right round
the house, admiring its outline, even the huddled little
towers touching his fancy, and he made up his mind on
the spot that this should be his future dwelling-place.
No matter what should be the price, he would pay it,
because something told him that here was a place in
which his money could be of use.

There was something deeper, however--the conviction
that destiny had willed it that his life was somehow to
be bound up with this old house and its inmates.  The
idea appealed to him and gave him a quickened interest
in the place.

When he returned to the drawing-room in about ten
minutes' time he found that it now contained four
persons--his sister and their hostess and the two who
had arrived to call.

"This is Mr. Rosmead, Kitty," said Isla, in whose
face the pink spot of excitement burned again.  "Miss
Drummond, Mr. Neil Drummond, Mr. Rosmead."

Rosmead gravely saluted, but though Kitty beamed
upon the handsome stranger, Neil was hostile.  His face
positively gloomed, and he had hardly a word to say.

His manners did not show to advantage that day.
He seemed a boor beside the smooth, polished man of
the world that Rosmead, by contrast, appeared.  When
tea was brought, it was Rosmead who established himself
by the table, leaving his sister to chatter to the
Drummonds.  He did this of a set purpose, because he
wished to say a word in Isla's private ear, and there did
not seem to be any opportunity--unless he made one--of
saying it.

"Miss Mackinnon, Mr. Cattanach has told you that
we are anxious to get settled soon on account of my
mother's health.  Do you think you could give me a
definite answer as to what you intend to do regarding
the letting of the house to-day?"

"Yes, easily.  If you care for it, now you have seen
it, please take it," she answered without looking up.

The tone of her voice slightly disconcerted him,
because he knew that her depth of feeling must be
occasioning her the greatest pain.

"We would not hurry you--or seem to embarrass you
in any way.  My mother is the kindest and most reasonable
of women, and I hope that you will permit her to
know you if she comes to Achree.  Are you likely to
stay in the neighbourhood?"

"Yes," she answered, and her breath came a little
faster.  "We are going to the lodge at Creagh, at the
other side of the moor."

The information seemed to please him.

"Then, perhaps you will write to Mr. Cattanach when
your arrangements are made."

"Yes, I will do so, but there is something I must say
first.  I tried to say it to your sister, but somehow I
could not," she said, still hurriedly and with her eyes
on her tray.  "I am sure that you will find that the
house needs many things.  We have been so poor that
it has not been replenished, as it would have been in
different circumstances.  That must be taken into
consideration in settling the question of the rent to be paid.
I will tell Mr. Cattanach so.  I hope I make myself
plain?" she said, lifting her eyes to his face when he
gave her no answer.  "I am saying, Mr. Rosmead, that
we can't spend any money on the house, and that whatever
you find it lacks you will supply for yourselves."

"I quite understand that.  Pray, don't speak of
it--it is not worth mentioning.  I understand that it is a
sacrifice for you to let us have the house at all.  I wish
I did not realize that so keenly."

She looked at him again, and the expression in her
eyes wholly changed.  The child-look came back--the
look of trust, of ingenuousness, of innocent sweetness,
and it moved Rosmead profoundly.  A very reticent,
self-contained, observant man, he was interested and
drawn by the tragedy, the unfathomable sadness of this
girl's life.  To possess Achree, and thus to come within
sight and possible touch of Isla Mackinnon, had
suddenly become to him a matter of personal moment.

But it was not so with Isla; she liked him; she was
grateful to him for his reticence and his consideration,
but to her he was simply the man who wanted Achree,
and for whom they must leave it.

"You are very kind, but in a matter of this kind
business must be the basis," she said presently, with a
sudden return of her original hauteur.  "I shall write
to Mr. Cattanach to-night, and ask him to arrange things.
Our removal to Creagh is only a matter of two or three
days for the gathering together of our few personal
belongings--that is all.  I hope there will not be any
difficulties in the way, and that you will be able to
come to Achree, for your mother's sake, at the time you
wish."

His next words arrested her attention, in spite of
herself.

"If there are difficulties I shall do my best to
overcome them.  That has been the business of my life up
till now."

"How do you mean?" she asked with an involuntary
interest.

"I am a builder of bridges," he answered.

At this moment the Laird of Garrion, glowering like
his own moor in a snell winter day, came stalking across
the room, his step and his manner indicating that he
considered that the stranger had already presumed too
much.

Rosmead, in no way perturbed, drew out his watch.

"Sadie, it's time we went if we are to catch that train,"
he said to his sister, who, deep in girlish talk with
Kitty Drummond, rose reluctantly.

The good-byes were quickly made, and, though her
more kindly impulses prompted Isla to go down and
speed the parting guests, she bade them good-bye at the
drawing-room door with the slightest suggestion of
stiffness, and left Diarmid to show them out.

"Who are these people, Isla?" asked Drummond impetuously
the moment the door closed.  "He's insufferable.
Whence these airs of his?  Who is he?"

"A rich American, and they are likely to take Achree
for six months, or perhaps a year," answered Isla quietly,
realizing that the thing could not be any longer hid.

Kitty gave a little exclamation of dismay, but on
Drummond's face the scowl rose again.

"Let Achree!  Heaven forbid!  Isla, you won't do it.
It's unthinkable--it's--it's, I want to say it, only I
mustn't.  Kitty, go down and find the General.  I must
speak to Isla alone."





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.. _`THE BRIDGE BUILDERS`:

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   CHAPTER V


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   THE BRIDGE BUILDERS

.. vspace:: 2

Kitty did not look so surprised as might have been
expected.  She walked with alacrity to the door in spite
of Isla's rather eager protest.

"It's my belief, Isla, that you shut up the poor old
General to prevent people from seeing him.  I should
not be at all surprised to find him in the dungeon-room,"
she said saucily over her shoulder as she disappeared
round the sharp turning of the stair.

Isla reluctantly re-entered the drawing-room, fully
aware of what was coming.

"Don't, Neil," she said, lifting a deprecating hand.
"It has got to be done, so there isn't any use of talking
about it."

"But, Isla!" he groaned, "it can't be done.  Why,
it will kill the General!  Does he know what is in
contemplation?"

"I have tried to tell him, but he can't understand,"
said Isla pitifully.

"He'll understand quickly enough when it comes to
the bit--when you take him away from the old house.
Why, it's the house he was born in, and he can't leave
it now when he is old and frail.  It's worth any sacrifice
to let him have his last days in peace."

"It is; but I have made all the sacrifices possible, and
have reached the end of my tether.  If somebody could
awaken the sense of sacrifice in Malcolm it would be
different."

"Malcolm will be furious!  Have you written and
asked him, for after all he's the heir, you know, and a
step--a big, drastic, horrible step like letting a
property--can't be, or at least ought not to be, taken without
consulting the heir."

Isla smiled drearily as she dropped into a chair.

Her old friend's anger was quite understandable and
natural; but, oh, if people only knew how futile it all was!

"Listen, Neil.  I thought of telling you the other day
when we went to Glasgow together, but it was too new
and raw then.  Of course, that was the business I had
to see Cattanach about.  It is Malcolm who has caused
this--who has wrought the red ruin of Achree."

Drummond was silent before the poignancy of her
tone.  Nor could he say that he was altogether
astonished, since he knew Malcolm Mackinnon, and was
fully aware of part at least of his unspeakable folly and
misdoing.

"I may as well tell you now," went on Isla hotly.
"Soon it will be the common property of the glen.
Malcolm has had to send in his papers."

"My God, Isla, you don't say so!" said Drummond, and
his fresh, kindly face grew a little white under the shock.

She nodded.

"Yes--and he owes over two thousand pounds to
money-lenders, and our account is over-drawn at the
bank.  So now you know why the Americans must come
to Achree."

She leaned back, and a small, very dismal smile just
hovered about the corners of her sad, proud mouth.

Neil Drummond could scarcely have looked more
thunderstruck and overwhelmed had the disaster come
to his own Garrion, nor could he have felt it more acutely.
He took a turn across the floor, and then he came and
stood in front of her, his broad shoulders squared, a
sudden look of strength and determination upon his
kindly face.

"Why didn't you let us know before things got to this
stage, Isla?  What are friends for--that's what I'd like
to know?  Your silence just shows what a poor place,
after all, any of us have in your estimation."

"No, no, Neil.  But don't you see it was such a big,
desperate, hopeless thing that nobody could give any
help in the matter?  And the dearer the friends are, the
more impossible it would be to take money from them.
You must understand that.  You do understand it--only
it pleases you to be denser than I have ever known you
in the whole course of our acquaintance."

"The whole course of our acquaintance!" he repeated,
half-eagerly, half-wistfully.  "It's been spread over a
pretty long period of years now, hasn't it, Isla?"

"Yes, but it looks like centuries.  To-day I feel a
century old myself."

"What you're needing, my dear, is somebody to take
care of you," he said with a great gentleness.  "I must
speak again, though I promised to be silent till you gave
me leave to speak.  Won't you let me step into the
breach, Isla?  Marry me, and I'll do my best to smooth
things over, and the General shall certainly not leave
Achree.  Garrion coffers are not so very full just at
present, but I think there might be enough raised to
prevent that unthinkable catastrophe."

She shook her head.

"I can't, Neil, I can't!  Don't say another word about it."

"I'm not asking anything," he said with the humbleness
born of a really unselfish love--"only the right to take
care of you and shield you and, if need be, fight for you.
Malcolm is your brother, Isla, but I'd like to get into
grips with him just once to punish him for all these lines
that have come on your dear face through him.  And if
he comes back to the glen I'll tell him what I think of
him, even if it should be the last word I speak in this
world!"

"It is easier to have one's men folk killed in wars,
Neil," she said in a low voice.  "Last week Lady Eden
was bewailing Archie's death, even though she had his
little V.C. on the table beside her.  I could have cried
out to her to go down on her knees and thank God
because he is safe from all hurt and evil.  She does not
begin to know the meaning of sorrow, as we know it here.
I have only one consolation--that my father will never
now be able to grasp the real meaning of what has
happened.  You'll have to help me to keep it from him--to
talk and to act as if nothing out of the common had
occurred; and you must promise to come and to bring
Kitty to see us at Creagh."

"At Creagh!" cried Drummond aghast.  "You don't
mean to say that you are going to bury yourselves in
that God-forsaken hole?  Oh, my dear, Garrion may be
bad, but at least it is get-at-able.  Shut up in Creagh,
with the General and with Malcolm when he comes
home!--it will be the death of you, Isla."

"No, no, I take a lot of killing.  Do be a bit more
cheerful, Neil.  I'm sure you must have thought the
Americans quite nice people.  He is charming, I think.
He builds bridges in America, and Cattanach says that
he is a man of genius."

"He may build what he likes, but if he comes to
Achree, whatever the price he pays, he commits the
unpardonable sin," he said sourly.  "Don't let us talk
about him.  I'm waiting for an answer to my question.
It isn't much I ask, Isla.  I promise not to molest you
or to beg for your love, though I'll do my best to win it.
Why is it that you won't believe in me?"

"Oh, I do, Neil.  It is because I like you so much that
I won't marry you," she answered frankly, but a little
wearily.  "You deserve something so much better than
a half-hearted wife."

"I'd rather have the half or the quarter of you than
the whole of any other woman," he made answer in
the reckless way of the lover.  "At least, promise me
that if you should change your mind, that if things
should get desperate, you'll come to me?  A word will
be enough, Isla--even a look.  I'll fly to your bidding
on the wings of the wind."

"Oh, Neil, I wish that all this eloquence and this
devotion could be given to a better woman----"

"She doesn't exist," put in the lover stoutly.  "Now,
tell me about Malcolm.  What is the meaning of this
horrible thing that has happened, and who told you?"

"He told me himself in last week's letter.  Oh, yes--he
minds, of course, but he thinks he has been unjustly
treated.  Somebody is always treating Malcolm unjustly,
you know; and, whatever happens, it is always another
person's fault."

"But it must be very serious, my dear.  Has there
been any other communication--anything from his
Colonel, or the War Office for the General?"

"No--nothing; and when anything comes I shall
intercept it," she replied without the smallest hesitation.
"What is concerning me most is that, in about three
weeks' time, Malcolm will be at home, loafing about idle
in the glen, and I shall never know a moment's ease of
mind.  That's the redeeming feature of Creagh--it's at
least five miles from everywhere.  But, of course, he
can't be permitted to loaf about.  He must find some
occupation.  I wonder----"

She stopped there, however, and Neil was left to
conjecture what it was that she wondered.  He would not
have been so well pleased had he known that her thoughts
had flown with a curious sense of restfulness and hope
to the man who had just left them.  The hated man
had said that the business of his life was to demolish
difficulties and to build bridges where none had been
before.  Could he--or would he--undertake the problem
of Malcolm's life?

Kitty returned while that question was still lingering
in Isla's mind, and, after a little more desultory talk,
the brother and sister took their departure.

"Tell Kitty on the way home, Neil," whispered Isla
as she bade him good-bye, her fingers aching under
his strong, almost painful, pressure which was intended
to convey all the thoughts of which his heart was full.

"Give Aunt Betty my love, and tell her that I will
pay her a visit before I go to Creagh," she added.  "Yes,
of course, tell her about Malcolm too, but don't say too
much about it, and, of course, outside Garrion----"

She laid a significant finger on her lip.

Neil nodded, and, with gloom sitting on his brow,
ascended to his high perch on the dogcart and tucked
the rug about his sister's knees.

The next three weeks passed in a whirl of business
for Isla Mackinnon.

The very next morning after the visit of the Americans
to Achree she had Jimmy Forbes up from Lochearn to
drive her to Creagh.  The sun was shining so brightly
and the air was so soft and balmy that all of a sudden
she decided that the drive might do her father good.

He had only just come down from his bedroom and
was standing in the doorway, enjoying the air, when the
trap drove up, and Isla came down the stairs.

"Where are you for this morning, my dear?"

"I'm going to Creagh.  Will you go with me, dear?
I have some particular business to do at Creagh this
morning, and it's so deliciously sunny and warm and I
think the drive would do you good."

"Yes, I'd like to go," said the old man with the wistful
pleasure of the child, at the same time taking a critical
look at the stout roan cob that had come up from the hotel
stable, well and fit for the rough road over Creagh moor.

It did not take Isla and Diarmid long to wrap the
General up, and off they went through the pleasant
spring sunshine, mounting slowly all the time until they
reached the broad plateau of the moor of Creagh, which
was the one valuable asset of Achree and constituted its
only claim to the dignity of being a sporting estate.

The Lodge stood at the far angle of the moor, about a
mile across from the road--a small, bare, ugly house
which made no pretence to being anything more than a
shelter for sportsmen.  It was well protected by a clump
of sturdy fir trees, and it had even a fertile bit of garden
ground behind, with a small glass-house, and excellent
stables.  It was furnished throughout, and it was in the
care of Margaret Maclaren, an old pensioner of Achree
and widow of a former keeper.

She was a faithful servant who attended well to her
duties whether her employers were there to see her or
not, and she was not at all put out by the unexpected
arrival of the trap from Achree.

Bathed in the glorious noon sunshine, the place looked
its best, and even the interior did not seem at all amiss.
All the windows were open to the sun, and Isla's sharp
eyes noted the complete absence of damp, which was
her chief enemy at Achree.

"Father, isn't it pretty here?" she asked the General
as they stood for a moment in the porch before entering
the house.  "I should like to come up and live the whole
summer here."

"It would not be amiss in the summer, child.  Many
a happy day have I spent in Creagh and many a jolly
night."

She led him into the dining-room--a goodly-sized
square room, not unhandsomely furnished in oak, the
carpet rolled up in the middle of the floor, and faded
chintz covers over the leather chairs.

The open casement windows commanded a splendid
and uninterrupted view of the whole moor which, even
in its bareness and in the wildness of the winter, had a
certain rugged beauty of its own.  A low hill rose
immediately behind the house, from which a glorious
prospect of the whole valley of the Earn could be seen,
with Ben Voirlich rising like a buttress behind all the
lesser hills in the valley below.

The air was like wine, and Isla's spirits rose as she
grasped the possibilities of the simpler life there, in that
remote lodge in a wilderness.

She quickly interviewed Margaret Maclaren, and in
her company she made a rapid survey of the dismantled
house, the result of which showed her that a very few
days would suffice to put it in order for their reception.

"We have let Achree for the season, Margaret," she said
in the most matter-of-fact voice she could command,
"and the new tenants want to come in at Easter.  You
will thoroughly air and fire all the house, but more
especially my father's room above the dining-room.
These two rooms will be most exclusively his.  We shall
eat in the little room at the back, while he has this for
his library and sitting-room."

"Yes, Miss Isla, and hoo mony will come up from
Achree--of the servants, I mean?"

"Only Diarmid, Margaret.  You and he must just
manage.  I will help all I can.  If we find it too much,
your niece, Annie Chisholm, could be got.  Perhaps this
will be necessary when we have Mr. Malcolm at home.
Yes--he is coming soon, and he will be here with us for
a few weeks at least."

Whatever secret wonder may have been in the soul of
Margaret Maclaren, she suffered none of it to be expressed
on her face.

Isla was much pleased with her visit and with the
possibilities of the house, part of which she had forgotten.
She saw that her father, too, was pleased.  He enjoyed
his walk about the place and constantly spoke of the
beautiful view from the front of the house across the
moor and down to Glenogle.

"I'll take the reins down, Jamie," said Isla to the hotel
groom.

When they were fairly out on the road she turned
rather anxiously to her father, talking to him in a low
voice which there was no possible chance of Jamie
overhearing as he was rather deaf at the best of times, and
was almost entirely devoid of curiosity--a trait in his
character worth mentioning.

"Father, I want to tell you something.  Will you mind
very much if we come up to Creagh soon for the whole
summer?"

"No, I think I should like it," he answered, unexpectedly.
"But you would find it very dull, wouldn't you?"

"I'm never dull anywhere.  You saw the folk who
came yesterday--the Americans, didn't you?  I saw
Mr. Rosmead talking to you at the shrubbery."

"I saw them--yes.  Who were they and what brought
them to Achree?  I don't remember having seen him
before."

"You haven't seen him before.  He's a stranger--a
rich American, and I have let Achree to him for six
months."

Her hand trembled a little on the reins, and she
half-expected either a petulant outburst or some other
demonstration of feeling that would vex and alarm her
soul and would harm the old man.  But when, made
anxious by his silence, she turned to look at him, his
face only wore the perplexed expression of a child's.

"I don't know for what reason you want to let the place,
Isla, or why anybody should wish to take it.  But have
it your own way.  I dare say we could be very comfortable
in Creagh unless, indeed, we have a wet summer.
Then we would get very sick of it.  I suppose the new
folk would be willing to go out if we found it not possible
to live up here."

"They would be perfectly reasonable, I'm sure, father,"
said Isla.

Her relief was so great that her features visibly relaxed,
and her eyes began to shine.  She was getting on
famously.  If only the latter part of the sad and sorry
business should prove as easy to arrange as the first had
been--why, then, perhaps she had been torturing herself
needlessly.  She had scarcely had a good night's rest
since the arrival of the Indian mail, and the strain was
beginning to tell on her.

"Well, I think I'll get you settled in Creagh comfortably
with Diarmid as soon as possible.  Then, after you
are feeling quite at home, I think I shall go to Plymouth
to meet Malcolm's boat.  I haven't had a holiday for
four years, father, and in the letter I had from Aunt
Jean the other day she said they were all going up from
Barras this week to Belgrave Square.  So I'll take a few
days of London dissipation before I meet Malcolm."

The old man made no demur.  So great were his faith
and his trust in Isla that he seldom questioned any of her
doings.

During that week the bargain was concluded with the
Rosmeads by Mr. Cattanach, after which a small
correspondence began between Isla and Rosmead concerning
certain minor repairs in the Castle that he wished to
execute at his own expense.

A few days before they removed to Creagh he came
down himself, ostensibly for the purpose of explaining to
her that what he wished to effect was only a few small
improvements with a view to making the home more
comfortable for his mother.

Isla at first had resented the idea.  Her Highland pride
even got the length of tempting her to write and tell the
man that he could either take the house as it was or
leave it.  But she could not afford to do that, so she
relieved her feelings by writing the letter and then
consigning it to the fire.

It was, however, a rather subdued and coldly aggressive
Isla who met him on the occasion of his coming to pay
his second call.  But when she saw him, she was ashamed
that she had written that letter and was glad that she
had had the sense to burn it.

"I thought that I had better come instead of writing in
reply to your last letter, Miss Mackinnon," he said
presently.  "We were getting adrift from the main issue.
I want to explain that I don't propose to make any
structural alterations on the house.  The stove that I
wrote about is an American invention for the heating of
unsatisfactory country houses where, for some reason or
other, the ordinary heating is difficult to arrange.  It
will greatly add to my mother's comfort while she is here,
and it can be taken away when we leave.  It will not
harm the house but, on the contrary, will benefit it by
drying it up.  I think you mentioned to my sister that it
was a little damp."

"It is very damp in parts," said Isla stoutly.  "I am
not seeking to deny it.  I am sorry I wrote like that about
the stove.  You see," she added with her wandering smile
which to him was wholly pathetic, "I am new to the
business of house-letting, and you must be patient with me."

Her brief anger and irritation vanished under his clear,
kind gaze, and the immensity of comfort and strength
that seemed to be created by his very presence.

"You may trust me to do nothing which would alter
the house out of your recognition," he said gently.  "My
mother is an old lady, and her chest is weak.  It is
absolutely necessary that she be kept warm and that no
damp should be allowed to come near her.  We are
charmed with the house and with the kindness which
you showed to us that day we came.  My sister has
never ceased to talk about it, and my mother is looking
forward very much to making your acquaintance."

"Thank you, but at the moor of Creagh we shall be
very much out of the way," said Isla softly.

"A quick and strong car annihilates distance," he
reminded her.

But she made a quick little gesture of dissent.

"I think the moor of silence would beat it," she
answered.  "Well, I am taking my father up to Creagh
next Monday, and when I have settled him in it I am
going to London for a few days.  The house will be quite
empty and ready for you from next Monday, and I hope
that you will not find it disappointing.  At least I
haven't embroidered any of the facts."

"You are going to London?" he said, as if surprised.

"Yes, I have to meet my brother's boat at Plymouth.
He is returning from India."

"A soldier?" he ventured to ask, remembering the
General's rank and wondering at the dull flush that rose
to her face.

"Yes.  But I think he may leave the Army for good.
My father's health is so very frail.  Nothing can be
settled, however, till my brother comes home," she
answered, hating herself for the prevarication that her
clear conscience told her was nothing short of a lie.

But the pride in her burned high, and she would not
demean herself to this man who, with all his pleasant
ways and curious suggestion of power and strength, was
only a rich, new-made American, who could never be
expected to understand any of the feelings that lay
deep in the heart of a Mackinnon of Achree.

As for Rosmead, he only smiled inwardly, attracted
by her moods, which were as changeful as the face of
Loch Earn.  He was a builder of bridges, and the conquering
of obstacles was, as he had told her, his business.

He could bide his time.





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.. _`THE HOPE OF ACHREE`:

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   CHAPTER VI


.. class:: center medium

   THE HOPE OF ACHREE

.. vspace:: 2

When the "Jumna," an old troopship which had been
fitted out for second-rate traffic from India, slowly
approached her mooring in Plymouth Dock, Malcolm
Mackinnon, smoking at the rail, ran his eyes along the
waiting queue of expectant people at the landing-stage
without the remotest expectation of seeing anybody
belonging to him there.  He knew the limitations of life
in Glenogle, and how very little journeying to and fro
on the face of the earth fell to the inmates of Achree.

He did not resemble the Mackinnons in appearance.
He was short and thick-set, with his head set squarely
on his shoulders, and he had a ruddy, sun-burned face,
a pair of light blue eyes, a shifty mouth, and hair with
more than a touch of red in it.  He was very like his
mother who had wrought confusion in Achree.

Isla, of course, did not know the full tragedy of her
father's sad married life.  Only she did know that she
had been often impressed with the feeling and
conviction that Malcolm was alien to Achree.

He might have been a changeling, so much did he
differ in everything from any Mackinnon among them.
Yet he had looks of a kind and a certain way with him
which won people and made them, even against their
better judgment, forgive him.  This is a dangerous
possession for a man who is not endowed with a very high
sense of responsibility.  It may at once be said that on
more than one occasion Malcolm Mackinnon had traded
on this happy-go-lucky, winning way of his.

When he saw Isla waving to him he gave a great start
of surprise, which was almost chagrin.  He had made
several appointments in London, where he had intended
to spend a few pleasant days before his liberty should be
curtailed at Achree.  His sister's presence would make
these days difficult, if not impossible.  Then the wild
thought flashed through him that perhaps it meant that
something had happened to his father.  A month is a
long time in a frail old man's life, and no one knew what
a day might bring forth.

But Isla was not in mourning, and her face was as
serene as usual.  It would be unjust to say that he
wished for his father's death, but certainly had he
arrived in Scotland to find himself Laird of Achree, instead
of merely heir to it, it would have made a material
difference to his immediate comfort as well as to his
prospects.  For his affairs were in a tangle from which
he did not know how he was going to extricate himself.

But now he had to meet the first stage in the coming
of the inevitable Nemesis in the shape of Isla, whose
frank tongue he knew of yore.  He was fond of her in a
way, and admired her greatly.  He even wondered what
all the men were thinking of that she remained
unmarried at twenty-five.  When he got nearer to her he
saw that she had aged but little, while he himself had
grown fat and gross, as will a man of his build who is
fond of drink and of good living.

"Isla, how awfully good of you to do this!  I never
expected to see you or any of our ilk here," he exclaimed
in greeting.  "How on earth did you manage it, and
how is the old man?"

"Father is very well.  I thought I had better come to
meet you, because there are heaps of things to explain;
and besides, I felt that I wanted just a few days' change.
I'm at Belgrave Square."

His face immediately fell.  He did not like his Barras
cousins, nor did they like him.  Nay, they highly
disapproved of him and all his works, and it was, he felt,
positively cruel of Isla to have laid him open to the
cross-questioning of the whole clan at the very moment
of his arrival in England.

"In the circumstances you might have spared me
that lot, Isla," he said with the gloom on his face that
she remembered so well.  "I won't go to Belgrave Square--so
there!" he added positively.  "There is a small
cheap hotel off the Strand will do me--that is, if I don't
go up north to-night."

"I haven't told them anything," said Isla quietly.
"They only know that you are coming home, and,
fortunately for me, they don't seem a bit curious.  Aunt
Jean was the only one who remarked about your getting
leave so soon again.  You can please yourself about
going to the little hotel to sleep, but I promised that you
should dine at Belgrave Square to-night."

"Oh, well, if they don't know anything and won't ask
awkward questions," he said with a breath of relief, "I
don't mind going."

"I had some difficulty in preventing Marjorie and
Sheila from coming down.  If they hadn't had a fitting
for a Court frock they would have insisted on it.  Sheila
is going to be presented at the next drawing-room--on
7 May."

"Oh!" said Malcolm, but his interest was of languid
order.  "Well, I'd better see about my stuff.  I haven't
much.  I sold out all I could before I left.  There are
always hard-up beggars in the regiment willing to buy,
and I knew I shouldn't want much in the glen."

Again he spoke with airy inconsequence, as if nothing
was of any great importance.  Isla was quite conscious
of a vivid and growing resentment.  As she watched his
strong, well-knit figure busy among the few traps which
he was instructing one of the porters to collect, she
wondered how he dared to be so regardless as he was.
A grown man with a man's strength and ability of a
kind--yet nothing but a burden and a care to other folks,
to frail folks like an old man and a young woman.  The
inequality and injustice of it imparted a most unusual
hardness to her face.  She was hardly disappointed,
however, because Malcolm had always held his sins of
omission and commission lightly and feared only their
consequences.

But in his heart of hearts he did feel his latest
disgrace.  A certain dogged dourness, however, would not
permit him to show it.

After his meagre baggage had been collected there
was still no sign of the boat-train leaving, so they paced
the platform from end to end, talking together in low,
eager tones, indicative of the deep interest of the subject
under discussion.

"How long do you intend to stop in London?" he asked.

"I only came down to meet you.  I thought we
might go home on Friday."

"Oh well, if you like," he said, but she saw his face fall.

"I don't like to leave father any longer.  He was very
good about my coming, and Kitty Drummond was to
go over to Creagh every day while I am away."

"To Creagh, you say!  Who's there now, then?"

"We are.  I have let Achree to some rich Americans,
and they went into residence yesterday, I believe, or at
least partly.  They are doing a lot to the house, but
their tenancy dates from Easter."

Malcolm stood still on the wooden pavement and
stared at her in genuine dismay.

"You've let Achree, you say!  In Heaven's name what
for, and who gave you leave?"

"Nobody gave me leave.  I took it; and you are the
last person who ought to ask why," she made answer
rather passionately.

"But--but--" he stuttered, "whatever did the
governor say?"

"He said very little one way or other.  I'm not even
sure if he grasped the fact.  But at least he was quite
pleased to go to Creagh."

"To Creagh--to that little one-horse place!  Do you
mean to say that you propose to live there, then?"

"We are living there," she answered steadily.

"And you did this on your own, Isla?  Well, I think
you had a jolly good cheek.  The decent thing would
have been to wait till I came home at least.  You won't
deny, surely, that I have a say in it."

"I don't know about the say.  What I did know was
that if you came home the bargain would probably
never have been concluded."

"But what was it for, anyway?"

She turned her small proud head to him, and her
clear eyes flashed.

"Malcolm, I do really wonder what you are made of."

"Flesh and blood like other folks, and I can't get
away from this.  How much are they paying?"

"Five hundred a year with the shooting, and we
propose to live on three and to lay bye the other two to
help to pay off those terrible obligations you spoke of in
your letter, which has kept me awake more or less since
ever it came."

He laughed airily.

"Now that's just like a woman--to imagine that the
practice of small and most beastly uncomfortable
economies could do any good!  Have you reckoned
out that it will take ten years at the rate you speak of
to get me clear?  Most of us will be dead by that time."

"The train is going, thank God," said Isla in a high,
clear, outraged voice.  "Let us get in.  I don't want
to talk any more to you, Malcolm--either now or at any
other time.  You--you are outside the pale."

"Now take it easy, old girl.  I made a clean breast of
it all just to show you that I was really penitent; and of
course I wasn't to blame for getting chucked.  Any fool
in the Thirty-fifth will tell you that.  But this little
attempt to pull the financial wires does strike a chap as
rather comical.  What did old Cattanach say?  I
suppose he's still at the helm--worse luck for me."

"Yes, he is.  I gave him your letter, Malcolm."

"The deuce you did!  Then you shouldn't have done
it.  He's a fossil--knows nothing about life.  But
there--don't let us quarrel about such things.  I am jolly
glad to see you, old girl.  And now I'll relieve you of all
these beastly sordid cares.  But Creagh, good Lord!--and
not a bit of horse-flesh on the premises, I could bet
my bottom dollar!  I think I must try and rake up a
motor-bike before I leave town; otherwise it will be like
being buried alive."

The guard was calling London passengers to take their
seats, and they made haste into the nearest compartment,
which quickly filled up so that no further talk of
a private nature was possible.  Isla was glad of it.  She
had had enough.

As she sat opposite to her brother who, immediately
the train started, composed himself in his corner for a
sleep, she had ample time to study his face.  That study
filled her with a great and growing sadness.  He was
just over thirty, and in all these years there were few
well-spent days.  As a boy he had been a care and
trouble to his people and to his schoolmasters, and, in
these respects, the boy had been father to the man.

She thought again with a little, faint, passing sight of
envy of the gallant boy whom the Edens had given to
their country, who had died a hero's death upon the
field.  She told herself that had such a fate been
Malcolm's she could have thanked God for it.  Then
she drew herself up with a little shudder, remembering
sharply certain Bible words which had no uncertain
sound--"Whoso hateth his brother is a murderer."

She did not hate him--only her heart was very tired
and full of fear for the future.

That night, at the hospitable table of his uncle in
Belgrave Square, Malcolm shone with the best of them.
He was on his mettle, and he exerted himself to please,
showing a nice deference to his stately aunt as well as
to his jolly uncle, and he made himself perfectly
adorable to his cousins.

Isla felt herself quite put in the background, but she
did not mind.  It was even a relief not to think, but
just to sit still and let Malcolm's false light shine.
Soon enough they would have to know what had
happened, and then she knew that her Aunt Jean would
never forgive him.

She came into Isla's room that night when the girl
was brushing her hair, and, touched by the expression
on her face, put a kindly question.

"What is it, dear child?  Don't you feel very well?
You haven't looked like yourself all day."

"I'm all right, Aunt Jean," Isla answered, but she
did not meet her aunt's eyes.

"Malcolm is simply splendid!  How improved he is!
What charming manners!  After all, the Army is the
place for boys like Malcolm.  Do you remember what
an anxiety he used to be to your father in the old days?
How proud of him he must be now!"

Isla did not answer--she simply could not.  She felt
as if she must scream out loud.

"Your uncle is delighted.  They've been having a
long talk in the smoking-room.  Must you really hurry
away on Friday, dear?  We should simply love to have
you and Malcolm for another week.  I could get up a
little dance for Malcolm.  That sort of impromptu affair
is often most enjoyable and it really seems a shame to
go and bury him in Achree, or rather in Creagh, for so
long."

"I can't stop, Aunt Jean.  You know how father is.
He is really quite frail, and I should not have an easy
mind after Friday, but Malcolm can stop if he likes."

"I must ask him.  How long has he, do you know?"

"You can ask him that, too, Aunt Jean," answered
Ida very low.

"He isn't at all pleased about the letting of Achree.
From his point of view, it does seem a little hard.  Why
did you do it, Isla, when you knew he was coming home
this year?  Surely it could have waited at least till the
autumn."

"It couldn't wait.  We had no money to go on with,
Aunt Jean," answered Isla.

"Oh but, my dear, your uncle or I would have come
to the rescue.  What are folk for if they can't be made
use of in that direction?" asked Lady Mackinnon
almost playfully.

"It didn't matter about the letting, auntie.  Everybody
does it, and as for Malcolm, he is the very last person
who ought to complain."

The voice was so hard that it slightly wounded the
woman who heard it.  She stepped forward and lifted the
girl's chin in her hand and looked down into her face.

"Don't get hard, Isla.  It is so unbecoming to a
woman.  I know that you have had a lot to think of,
but now that Malcolm has come home roll it off on to
his broad shoulders.  It is what broad shoulders are
given to our menfolk for.  And, above all, don't get
thinking that nobody can do things except yourself.
Don't you think you're just a wee bit inclined that way,
Isla?"

"Yes, I am all that way," answered Isla stolidly.
"I fully admit it.  But don't imagine I like it, Aunt
Jean.  The thing that I most want in this world is peace,
and I can't get it.  Good night, auntie.  I'm sorry that
I'm so disappointing."

Lady Mackinnon kissed her fondly, yet with a little
regret.

"Isla's getting hard, Tom," she said to her husband
when he came up a little later.  "It's very bad for a
girl to lose her mother, though in Isla's case, of course,
it would have been worse if her mother had been spared.
Don't you notice how hard and dull she has got to be
of late?  What a pity she couldn't marry!  She used
to be quite pretty."

"Used to be, Jean!  What are you talking about?"
asked Sir Tom rather irritably.  "She's pretty yet, with
the sort of beauty that a man doesn't tire of, and she's
clever too.  Depend on it, if Isla's hard she has had
something to make her so.  Malcolm's charming, of
course, and much improved, but just once or twice
to-night I felt that he didn't ring true."

"Nonsense, Tom.  We have been out of the world
too long and haven't marched with the times.  I should
like them to stop for a week or two, but Isla won't hear
of it.  She says she must go on Friday."

"Let Isla alone.  She knows her own business best.
As for Malcolm, please yourself, but I haven't got at the
bottom of the meaning of this leave of his yet.  It's
unusual.  I shouldn't wonder to hear that there is
something behind it."

Lady Mackinnon did not take her husband's words at
all seriously.  She had no son, and her heart warmed to
Malcolm, and she fell asleep, thinking how blessed she
would have been among women had he been hers.  Another
of the mistakes this into which poor humanity,
seeing through a glass darkly, is so liable to fall!

Next morning Isla left the house about eleven o'clock
to go to an obscure street on the other side of Bayswater
for the purpose of calling on an old servant at Achree,
who had married a butler, and who now conducted a
small boarding-house off the Edgeware Road.

It was a lovely spring morning, and she said she
would prefer to walk across the Park.  She greatly
enjoyed that walk.  The wide spaces of the Park, the
enchanting glimpses through the trees which, though still
bare, were beautiful with the sun upon their delicate
tracery of branch and bough, seemed to fill her soul.

She did not greatly care for London life, and she often
wondered a little at her cousins' enthusiasm over balls
and routs, and all the treadmill of fashionable society.
They were so excited over their Court frocks that their
dreams were haunted by chiffons and festoons of lace
and Court trains hung from slender shoulders.

Isla indeed was far too grave for her years.  She had
been cheated of her youth.  Even she herself did not
know what possibilities for frivolity and fun her nature
held, nor how gay she could have been had not care, like
a gaunt spectre, walked so long by her side.

Her discomfort about Malcolm was keen this morning.
Even the gracious influence of the sun could not
altogether banish it.  But it helped, and her face looked
very sweet under the brim of her simple hat, and more
than one pair of eyes filled with admiration as she
passed.

She left the park at the Marble Arch, crossed the road,
and made her way along the Edgeware Road to Cromar
Street, where Mrs. Fraser lived.  It was not her first visit,
and Agnes having been apprised of her coming, was on
the doorstep to welcome her.

"There ye are, Miss Isla--a sight for sair een!  I have
been so put about wi' joy all this morning that I have
not been able to do my work.  How are you, and how is
all at dear Achree?"

"So, so, Agnes," answered Isla with a smile as she
grasped the faithful servant's hand and passed across her
hospitable threshold.  "You look wonderfully well.  I
hope that Fraser is too, and the children, and that
everything is going right with you?"

Isla possessed to the full the faculty of binding those
who served her to her with hooks of steel, she was so
sweetly kind and interested in everything concerning
them.  Yet she held their respect, and no servant, even
the least satisfactory, had ever been known to presume
in the smallest degree upon any kindness shown.

She sat down in Agnes Fraser's ugly, heavy dining-room,
which reeked of stale tobacco smoke, but which
represented the greater part of her living, being let, with
bedroom accommodation, to two permanencies who paid
her well.  And there Isla listened to the whole recital of
the good woman's affairs.  It occurred to Agnes only after
Isla had gone, at the end of an hour's time, that she had
really heard very little about Achree.

As Isla had risen to depart, she had said with a
smile: "If you are coming to the glen this summer,
Agnes, you will have a longer walk to get to us.  We
have gone to live at Creagh for the season, and Achree
is let to some Americans."

Agnes looked the dismay she felt, but abstained from
comment and only remarked that she hoped they had
made Creagh comfortable, and that they would not find
it too dull.

But after the door was shut upon her visitor she wept
tears of sorrow because the glory was departed from
Achree.

Her last duty done, Isla's thoughts as she left the
house began to revert with persistent longing to the glen.
She had neither part nor lot in cities, and she could not
understand the craze that people had for this great,
overgrown London, where folk were always in a hurry
and falling over one another in their haste.

Mrs. Fraser's house was well up the street, and Isla,
walking quite fast and wrapped up in her own thoughts,
had no eyes for any of those who passed her.  But
presently she came to the corner house of a little street
near the Marble Arch end of the road.  The door opened
as she passed, and two persons came out, so close upon
her that she could not but notice them.

Then her heart gave a sickly bound, and she sped on
without once looking back.

It was Malcolm who came out of that house, and there
was with him a woman, an impossible woman--that was
the impression Isla carried away--a large, tall person,
with an abundance of yellow hair and an enormous black
hat perched upon it.  Handsome in a way she might be,
and her smile as she had made some jesting remark to
her companion had been dazzling.

But it did not dazzle Isla.  She grew cold all over,
and, without waiting on her better judgment, which
might have urged some quite simple explanation, she
jumped to the conclusion that Malcolm had some
entanglement which was at the bottom of his downfall.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE HOME-COMING`:

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   CHAPTER VII


.. class:: center medium

   THE HOME-COMING

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Having been made free of his aunt's house, Malcolm
arrived at Belgrave Square that afternoon in time for tea.
The room seemed quite full of people, for the young
Mackinnons were a gay crowd, never happier than when
surrounded by their friends.  Somebody had said that
the London season was to be Scottish that year, and there
were heaps of their own immediate friends already settled
in town.

Isla was greatly in request, and it was about twenty
minutes before Malcolm got a chance of having a word
with her.  He came up to her jauntily with an air of the
utmost unconcern, and, as he might have expressed it,
took the bull by the horns.

"Why were you in such a hurry this morning, Isla,
and what were you doing in the purlieus of the Edgeware
Road?  Don't you know that's the wrong side of the Park
altogether?" he said teasingly.

"I might say the same to you," she answered a trifle
tartly, and her eyes, which seemed to have acquired a
distaste for his face, did not meet his gaze.

"I was doing my duty--and a beastly fagging bit of
duty it was too, a little commission for a pal in
India--and, as I'd made up my mind to go north with you
to-morrow if you really are bent on going, this was my only
opportunity."

It sounded a perfectly plausible explanation, and
Isla suffered her somewhat unwilling eyes to dwell for a
moment on his smiling face.  Never did man look more
innocent and ingenuous.  There was not the flicker of a
lid or a tinge of colour to condemn him.  Knowing
perfectly well that her scrutiny was judicial, he met it
without flinching.

"I did not like the look of the woman, Malcolm," was
all she said.  "But please, I don't want to hear any more
about it."

It can hardly be said that she was convinced, but only
that she realized the utter futility of trying to get to the
bottom of Malcolm's mind or of ever reaching his real
self.  What that self would be like when she reached it
she did not ask.

But a little later, watching his matchless manner
with his aunt's guests and the way in which he held his
little court of admiring womenkind about him, she
marvelled at his powers.  So long as he possessed such
faculties of pleasing and could attract those with whom he
came into contact, nobody need wonder at his gay aplomb.
Nothing could greatly matter, for whoever might suffer or
go under, it would not be Malcolm.  He would sail--a
little unsteadily perhaps, but still successfully--on the
crest of the wave, and only those who knew him
intimately and who had suffered through him would ever
probe the depths of his colossal selfishness.

This was the estimate of her brother at which Isla had
now arrived.  The trials and hardships of the last three
years had wrought a great change in her outlook upon
men and things and had made her judgment a little
merciless.  In fact this was a very critical moment in
the history of Isla Mackinnon, and but for the timely
introduction of some fresh forces into her life she might
have become a really hard woman.

Malcolm airily declined his aunt's rather pressing
invitation to stay a week.

"I'll return, dearest aunt, a little later, when the Glen
begins to pall," he whispered with that little air of
personal devotion and interest which even old women found
so charming.  "Behold the gloom on Isla's face!  She
represents my duty.  I shall take her home to-morrow,
Pay my humble respects to the old man, and syne, if you
will have me, I'll be only too glad to come back."

Lady Mackinnon nodded, well pleased.

"Come up in time for the Court.  Marjorie and Sheila
will never be satisfied till you see them in all their
bravery.  And we'll give a ball for you if you do come!"

"All right, my lady," said Malcolm with extreme satisfaction.
"Fix the date and I'll come."

"I'm so sorry about Isla.  I keep telling her not to take
life so seriously," said Lady Mackinnon, her kind eyes
wandering in the direction of her niece.  "As I told her
last night, it is you who ought to bear the burden of
Achree.  It's robbing her of her youth.  She has changed
greatly in the last year, don't you think?"

"Yes, and gone off decidedly, but there----"

He gave his shoulders a little shrug which expressed
much that he did not say.

He dined at Belgrave Square that night and showed
another side of him--the grave, quiet, attentive side,
which pleased his relatives equally, if not even more.

"Why am I distrait?" he asked, when Marjorie twitted
him with his quietude.  "Well, the windbag was pricked
last night.  I couldn't sleep in my hard hotel bed for
thinking of all the gas I had let out.  It was pure
exuberance of joy at again finding myself in such an
atmosphere after hard service and a month on that
beastly boat.  Here's to our next merry meeting!  Uncle
Tom, Aunt Jean--the best of luck and nothing short of
coronets for these fair heads."

Then they all laughed, and the last memory of the
evening was as pleasant as possible.  Next morning the
whole family were at Euston to see the brother and
sister off, and they duly departed in the full odour of
family farewells.

"Well, that's over, thank goodness," said Malcolm as
he dropped into his corner.  A judicious word and a tip
from Uncle Tom had secured them a compartment to
themselves, in which they could talk of their private
affairs.  "Now, it'll be the tug-of-war--eh, Isla?  Don't
look so glum, old girl.  Believe me, there isn't anything
in life worth it."

"I don't want to be glum, but I have felt rather mean
these two days, Malcolm.  Perhaps we ought to have
told Uncle Tom and Aunt Jean.  Didn't you feel that
we were there under false pretences?  They would have
felt differently, I mean, if they had known that you
had sent in your papers."

He shrugged his shoulders, tossed his cap to the rack,
and took out his cigarette case.

"Do you mind if I take a whiff?  I suppose it would
have made a difference, but why intrude unpleasant
topics until one can't avoid them?  That's a pretty good
and safe philosophy of life, Isla--to lie low and keep
dark about what can't be helped."

"They will know before you go back to London again,
that is, if you were serious about going to them in May."

"Anything may happen between now and the month
of May.  The thing is to grease the ropes.  Now, what
earthly good would it have done to have told them the
real state of affairs?  It would only have depressed
them and made us all most beastly uncomfortable.  By
the by, as we are on the subject, may I inquire how
many people in the Glen you have told?"

"Only Neil Drummond."

"That young, unlicked cub!  And why, in Heaven's
name, should you have told him?  Are you engaged to
him--or what?  There must be some reason why he
should be taken into the family's most private counsels."

"I had to tell somebody, and it was in a manner
forced on me," she said rather coldly.  "But you need
not be afraid of Neil telling anyone.  He feels it too
much."

"Very kind of him, I'm sure.  Well now, tell me
something about this American chap.  Is he a bounder,
like the rest of them?"

"No, he's a gentleman, Malcolm."

"It's an elastic term.  Do you mean that he wears
good clothes and that sort of thing?"

"No.  I don't mean that."

"Then, he's a thorough good chap that a fellow might
know?"

Isla, with a vision of Rosmead's calm, strong, fine face
in front of her, sat back suddenly and began to laugh.

"What's the joke?" asked Malcolm, mildly surprised.

But she did not give him any satisfaction.  She felt
tempted to say that very probably had Rosmead known
the facts of the case he might have declined the honour
of Malcolm's acquaintance.  She told herself, however,
that she must try not to break the bruised reed.  Yet
there was not much of the appearance of the bruised
reed about the airy Malcolm, who looked as if he had
not a care in the world.

He was very kind and amusing on the journey, telling
her lots of stories of his Indian experiences.  More than
once she felt herself almost completely succumbing to
his spell and inclined to accept without reservation his
own estimate of himself.

It was dark when they reached the station at Lochearnhead,
where the wagonette from the hotel was waiting
for them.

Malcolm elected to sit on the driver's seat and to take
the reins from Jamie Forbes, and so Isla was left to her
own contemplations in the roomy space behind.  She
was not sorry that it was so.  Once more back in the
Glen, she experienced a return of all her cares, accentuated,
because the biggest one, embodied in the flesh, was
in front, carrying on an animated conversation with
Jamie, from whom, in a few minutes' time, he wrested
the whole gossip of the Glen.

He learned that the hotel business was flourishing
exceedingly, now that the making of the new railway
line was coming near the head of the Loch.  It had
been started only a year when Malcolm last went away,
and now they were at work on the viaduct, which had
just escaped being built on Achree land.

"If only we'd been a mile lower down the Glen, Isla!"
he looked round to say.  "We might have had a haul
off the Railway Companies, but that's just our luck all
through.  We miss it every time by the skin of our
teeth.  Do you mind if I just stop at the hotel and pass
the time of day with Miss Macdougall?"

"Don't stop long, then, Malcolm.  I want to get home
to father as quickly as possible."

She sat with what patience she might for ten minutes
while he was inside the hotel getting a drink, and soon
after he had resumed his seat they began the gradual
ascent of Glenogle.  She was conscious of a quickened
heart-beat as they came near to Achree; and presently
the blaze of its lights could be seen through the trees.

"By Jove, Isla--no stint there!" he called over his
shoulder.  "Achree has never been illuminated like that
within the memory of man.  What are they saying
about the new folk in the Glen, Jamie?"

"They like them not that pad, sir.  They are fery
civil-spoken and kind, forpy peing likely to spend a heap
of money.  They are fery anxious that whoefer hass
things to sell in the Glen shall pring them to Achree.
There are not many like that come now to the Glen,
Maister Malcolm.  The most of them do nothing put
send for big boxes to come from the store.  They will pe
well likit, I'm thinking."

"Oh, yes, it sounds idyllic," said Malcolm drily, the
meaning of which adjective Jamie did not grasp.

"It seems a shame to pass by the old place.  I'm down
to-morrow if I'm a living man, Americans or no
Americans," said Malcolm to Isla.  "Has he any women-folk?"

"I'll tell you about them later," she answered, and her
voice shook a little, for she too felt a qualm as they
passed by the gate and the little lodge.

It was a long cold climb to the Moor of Creagh, and
she was heartily sick of it before they drew up at the
unpretentious white gate from which a straight, short
drive led up to the house.

Diarmid was in the porch to meet and welcome them,
and, though there was an odd shrinking in the old man's
eyes as they travelled with a look of anxious reproach to
the young Laird's face, Malcolm himself seemed quite
unaware of it.  He grasped the old man's hand cordially,
asked for his welfare, and then passed in to where the
old General, holding himself rather erect and proudly,
though leaning hard on his stick, was peering through
the dim light for sight of his son.

There can be no man who is wholly bad, and the sight
of big father--that pathetic and yet noble figure, a brave
soldier who had spent himself for his country, shook
Malcolm Mackinnon as his sister's appealing eyes had
altogether failed to do.  He now realized that if his
father was ever able to grasp the fact of his dismissal
from the Army it would kill him.  He should never know,
Malcolm swore to himself, as he bent low and ashamed
over the outstretched hand and saw the quiver of the
thin, pale face.

"How are you, sir?" faltered Malcolm.

And Isla, seeing his expression and noting the tremor
in his voice, placed that bit of genuine feeling to his
credit and wiped something off the slate.

"Glad to see you home, my boy, though this is a
queer little house you are come to.  Ask Isla about that.
She's the culprit, but it's a very comfortable place, and
I like it well.  We'll have some happy days here, my
son.  Welcome home."

"Glad to see you well, father," answered Malcolm,
though in truth he did not think the old man looked
long for this world.

Then there was a greeting of sheer affection for Isla,
and a look passed between father and daughter which
told of a most perfect understanding.

Malcolm had a sniff of scorn for the cramped little
house and, when presently, with the grime of his journey
washed off and his dinner-jacket on, he came to the
queer little room for the evening meal, he looked round
rather grimly until his significant gaze rested on his
sister's face.

"You'll never be able to stick it, Isla," he said in his
most aggressive tones.  "There isn't room in it to swing
a cat."

The old man was in good form.  The coming of his
son seemed to awaken him for a little space to a fresh
interest in life.

"Was there anything brought up from Achree cellar,
Diarmid?" he asked as the old servant passed the plates.

"Yes, sir," answered Diarmid, not daring to say how
very low the cellar at Achree had fallen and how its
precious store had been diminished without the smallest
hope of replenishment.

They were very abstemious folks at Achree, and the
General, being forbidden all stimulants except a little
whisky when he needed it, had hitherto asked no questions.

"A bottle of Pommery, then, to drink Mr. Malcolm's
health," he said, with the air of old times, when there
had been big parties round the table at Achree and when
the wine had flowed at his bidding.

Diarmid looked desperately--imploringly at his young
mistress, who rose, smiling slightly.

The Pommery had long since disappeared; but, in
anticipation of this reunion, she had laid in one bottle
of champagne in order that her father might not be
disappointed.  So it was brought and duly drawn by
Diarmid, who filled the glasses and then helped his
master to his feet.

"Welcome home, my son.  Long life, good health,
and honourable prosperity to you and to Achree.  God
bless you and make you a blessing.  Isla, my dear, your
best health."

Isla's eyes suddenly swam in tears, and Malcolm had
the good feeling to bend his head in honest shame.  The
General did little more than taste from his glass and
then set it down with a little sigh of disappointment.

"It is bad for good wine to be shifted," he said.
"Never mind, Malcolm.  When we go back to Achree
you shall have your pick of the cellar."

The wine was good.  The change was in his palate,
which had lost its verve.  He was very tired after
dinner, and his rambling thoughts could not be kept in
check.  He babbled a good deal of old days, for which
indeed Isla was thankful, since it kept him from asking
questions about the present ones.

She had dreaded what might happen on the night of
the home-coming, but she now clearly saw that her
father was less and less likely to disturb himself about
any untoward happenings.  He accepted everything--a
circumstance which certainly considerably relieved the
strain.

"He looks jolly bad, poor old chap," said Malcolm,
when Isla came down about ten o'clock from seeing him
safely in bed.  "He can't last long.  It was a pity that
you didn't let him see it out at Achree."

"He has not got any worse in the last six months
that I can see.  Of course the excitement to-night wore
him out.  He will be brighter in the morning."

"I still think it was a beastly shame to bring him up
here.  There isn't even decent comfort.  This is the
only room worth mentioning."

"Well, he has it.  He is quite comfortable," said Isla,
stoutly.  "We must take what is left."

"In wet weather, of which Glenogle has its full share,
we shall fight like Kilkenny cats," said Malcolm with a
grimace.

Isla passed over the vulgarity of the remark in silence,
and, after a moment, said quite straightly.  "But surely
you won't stop long in the Glen, Malcolm.  You'll try to
get an appointment of some kind."

"I'd be glad if you'd mention the sort of appointment
I'd be likely to get," he answered carelessly.  "I
must say it's very cold cheer you have for a chap, Isla,
after three years' absence.  If I weren't the most
unsuspicious of men I might suspect you of having underhand
motives."

Isla, staring hard into the crackling embers of the
peat-fire, answered nothing.

"It strikes me from all I can gather that the place
wants a good deal of looking into.  I'll make that my
first business.  I thought them all slack when I was
home before, and Heaven only knows what they'll be
like now.  Then, I must be on the spot on account of
the way the old man is.  I shouldn't like to be out of
the way if anything should happen."

Isla rose to her feet and bade him good night.  She
had had just about as much as her tired body and
strained mind could stand.

"Dead men's shoes" were the words that beat upon
her brain through the hours of a restless night.





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.. _`MALCOLM'S PROSPECTS`:

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   CHAPTER VIII


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   MALCOLM'S PROSPECTS

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It is the mission of the morning to clear the air, and
next morning things looked brighter.  The sun shone
out gloriously, and the air was soft and balmy as a
child's kiss.

Isla slept late and rather heavily after a restless night,
and she was horrified when she awakened with a start
to find that it was nine o'clock.  She sprang up, threw
her window open to the sun, and leaned over it for a
moment to inhale the delicious breath of the morning.
She had taken one of the attic rooms for her own,
Margaret Maclaren occupying the other one, while
Diarmid had made shift with a bed in his pantry.

The attics had storm-windows on the roof, from which
you could see across the angle of the Moor and get a
glimpse of Glenogle.  Also from that high coign of
vantage there was a fascinating view of Ben Voirlich, on
whose peak still rested the cap of morning mist.  But
all the little hills huddled around and below were clear,
and the day gave promise of being fine.

Margaret, who had been up twice to the door, now
appeared with her hot water.

"So glad you had a good rest, Miss Isla.  I thought
you looked terrible tired last night.  The General is still
sleeping.  Diarmid says he has hardly moved all night."

"Oh, I am glad of that--and Mr. Malcolm?"

"Been out since the back of six and had his porridge
with Diarmid and me," answered Margaret proudly.
"Now he is asking for his breakfast and inquiring when
you are coming down."

"Serve the breakfast.  I'll be as quick as I can,"
said Isla.

She plunged into her dressing with a will.  When she
got down to the dining-room she found Malcolm in a
tweed knicker-bocker suit, discussing the Loch trout
that had been sent up from the hotel with Miss
Macdougall's compliments.

"I'm surprised at you, Isla.  I thought you would
have been down at six anyway, giving us all points," he
said gaily.  "I've been up for two hours and a half and
had a tramp across the Moor.  It was glorious.  Seen
father?"

"Yes, he's just waking up after a good night"

"He doesn't come down to breakfast?"

"No.  Diarmid is taking it to him now."

She passed round to her place at the tray, and Malcolm
admired her trim figure with its slender, well-belted
waist, the poise of her head, the glint of her hair, and
the clear red-and-white of her complexion.

"You look better here than you did in London, Isla.
London doesn't suit you, and that old black frock you
had on at Aunt Jean's in the evening was an unbecoming
rag, if you'll excuse me for saying it.  You could wear
vivid colours.  I'd like to see you in emerald
green--shimmery soft stuff, don't you know?--with trailing
draperies round you?"

Isla laughed outright.

"I'm afraid the chances of that are small.  The old
black rag has been my only evening frock since you
went away, and I believe I've had it on only about half
a dozen times."

"Poor old girl, what a shame that it can't get pretty
clothes!  Now, if I were you I'd have them.  By Jove,
I would, and let pay who will."

"Yes, I know," she answered quietly.  "But I've got
into the habit of paying for my clothes before I wear
them.  Well, what are you going to do to-day?"

"Well, the first thing undoubtedly is to rig up a horse
and trap of some kind.  I'll go down to Lochearn
presently--on my feet, that haven't done much walking of
late, you bet, and see whether Miss Macdougall can fix
me up.  It's quite obvious that Creagh isn't livable in
unless one is provided with some means of escape from
it.  What about the post?  Do the old primitive
arrangements still hold good?--half the day gone before the
bag comes in?"

"It's half-past twelve before the postman gets here.
I generally walk as far as Little Shuan to meet him."

"I'll get farther than that this morning--probably all
the way," he said.  "What are you to be about?  I
suppose you have things to see to in the house after
having been away?"

"Yes," said Isla.  "I want you to be careful about
the letters while you are here, Malcolm.  There are only
some my father cares to see, and even these do not
always interest him.  But he has gleams of comprehension
and of most disconcerting clearness of vision.
Dr. Blair says it is most imperative that he should not
have a shock of any kind, however small, and in the
last year I have been keeping almost everything back
from him.  He grasps one bit of a thing, you see, and
confuses the rest, and so might very easily work himself
up into a state about nothing."

"I understand," said Malcolm.  "So, between us, we
have to keep him in the dark.  That's what it amounts
to, I suppose."

Isla nodded.  "I hate to see it, but it does amount to
that."

"I'll make a note of it.  But, now that I'm home, the
chief cause of anxiety may perhaps be removed," he
said airily.  "Well, I'll go, and don't keep my luncheon
for me.  If I want anything I'll drop in at the hotel.
It's possible that I may call at Achree as I come up.
Of course it is necessary that I meet this American chap
and have a talk with him."

"I suppose so, but you can't do anything, Malcolm,
even if you see things you don't like at Achree.  He has
paid the half of his money."

"And where is it."

"In the Bank at Callander, in my name."

Malcolm whistled.

"Rather high-handed, isn't it, Isla?"

"There wasn't anything else to be done.  Father can
sign cheques, of course, but I banked Mr. Rosmead's
money in my name on Mr. Cattanach's advice."

"But surely now you'll let me take over the business
part of the show, Isla?"

He pushed back his chair and took out his cigarette
case as he put the question.

Isla looked uncomfortable, and her face even paled a
little.  She hated the position in which she was placed,
but past experience had shown her the folly of trusting
Malcolm in money matters.  He had certainly not the
money-sense nor yet the sense of honour where money
was concerned.

"I don't think I can do that, Malcolm.  Remember,
it is all the money that we have to live on until the
rents become due again at Martinmas."

"Don't any of them pay now?"

"One or two--Roderick Duncan and the farmer at
Little Shuan.  But these are crofts, their rent amounting
to only a few pounds."

Having lit his cigarette, Malcolm proceeded to turn
out his pockets.

"A few coppers, some Indian coins, and two
half-sovereigns!" he said ruefully.  "I'm stonybroke, Isla.
Have I to come to you for the few pence that I shall
need in the Glen?  By Gad I can't do that!  I must
speak to the governor about it."

Isla's face reddened where it had been pale before.

"It's a horrible situation," she said almost passionately.
"But don't you see I can't help it?  It isn't my doing.
Since you left we have lived on next to nothing at
Achree.  We haven't bought any butcher's meat hardly, but
have had rabbits and fowls and game of our own killing
and the everlasting trout.  I never get any new clothes,
as you have already observed and remarked upon."

"But now that the American has paid you should be
a little rougher."

"I'm going to save that money to pay off the mortgage
and the--the other money you owe," she said quite
quietly, and he had no idea what fires blazed beneath
that calm exterior.  "You'll have to find something to
do, Malcolm, and that soon.  You must see that for
yourself."

"I see that I'm to have a jolly rotten time here," he
said gloomily.  "I must write to Cattanach and tell him
to look out an agent's place of some kind for me."

"But you don't know anything about land or estate
management, Malcolm."

"I know as much as some of the fellows of my
acquaintance who fill fat billets.  Meanwhile, I simply
must have a fiver, Isla.  I shan't spend it, but a fellow
can't go about with empty pockets."

She rose and, unlocking the old bureau, counted out
five sovereigns from the little cash-box in the secret
drawer.  He took them without shame and even with a
twinkle in his eye.

"Pay Saturday!  Well, good-bye, old girl.  I'll go out
on the hunt and see whether I have any luck.  I don't
mind telling you I'm rather building on this American
chap.  If he's a millionaire I must try and coax him to
disburse a little in this direction.  I'll ask him quite
frankly whether he doesn't want a handyman about the
place.  I could take on that job and fill it to a T."

Isla did not demur, but her pride rose again in revolt
at the thought of what Malcolm might do.  She thought
she did not wish to see anything more of the Americans.
She would keep strictly to the letter of their bargain and
leave them at Achree in peace.  But if her observation
was to any purpose she told herself that Malcolm would
not make very much of Peter Rosmead, who was far too
hard-headed a man to be taken in by his specious ways.

She had a good many uncomfortable moments during
the day, however, while contemplating possible
interviews between Malcolm and Rosmead, all of which fell
short of the actual happening.

Malcolm went up to spend half an hour by his father's
bedside, making himself so charming that the old man
was full of it when Isla came to see how he was getting on.

Then he left the house and set off with a long swinging
step to cover the distance between Creagh and Lochearn.
He did not keep to the road.  There was not a hill-path
or a sheep-track in the district with which he had not
been familiar since his boyhood.  He came out just
below Achree, deciding that he would go on to meet the
post first and take it as he returned.  About a quarter of
a mile from the Lodge he met Donald Maclure driving
some black-faced ewes in front of him, and he stopped
to pass the time of day.

Donald was a large, slow man, with a stolid face and
a shock of red hair sticking out from under his broad
bonnet, and he presented a sharp contrast to his trig and
sonsy wife.  Indeed, many had wondered how Elspeth
had ever come to marry him and, above all, who had
done the courting, Donald being the most silent man in
the whole of the glens.

"Hallo, Donald, how is the world using you?" cried
Malcolm cheerily.

"No sae pad, Maister Malcolm," Donald was forced to
answer.  "I heard ye gae by last nicht--at least Elspeth
did.  She wass oot wavin' her hand."

"I must go in and give her a kiss for that--eh,
Donald?  Where are you taking that nice-looking
herd to?"

"The other side of the little hill," answered Donald
briefly.

"Coining money off the sheep--eh, Donald?  It's you
farmers who haul in the shekels in these days.  What
with taxes and reduced rents and what not, there's little
left for the poor landlord.  You needn't shake your head,
my man.  We'll thrash it out another day, however.
But you can't get away from the fact that we can't afford
to live in our own house."

Donald pulled his forelock and passed on with a
mysterious Gaelic direction to the sheep-dog, which was
attended with magical results.  He was neither convinced
nor deceived by Malcolm's small hints.  He knew
him of yore; also Elspeth, having the most perfect faith
in her big, silent husband, had not failed to confide
to him the true story of the Americans' coming to
Achree.

A few steps further on Malcolm saw in the distance
two ladies, walking together, with shepherds' crooks in
their bare hands and with no hats upon their heads.

Their bearing and carriage at once riveted his keen
interest.  Wherever there was a petticoat Malcolm
Mackinnon was interested, and these ladies were
evidently strangers to the Glen.

One was very tall and slender, the other short in
stature but neatly built, and both wore most workman-like
country attire with a grace that he had never seen
excelled.

As he came nearer the face of the taller of the two
attracted him still more.  It was exquisitely beautiful,
being chiselled on pure classical lines, and the skin was
soft and clear, the colour so pale and delicate, without
giving the smallest suggestion of ill-health, that he had
never seen anything like it.  The abundant dark hair,
slightly waved in front and worn simply parted over her
ears, gave a look of Madonna-like simplicity to the face,
which, to Malcolm's eyes, seemed most alluring.

The other was more ordinary, though her face had a
certain piquant charm.  He wondered who they were
and whether he dared make any remark as they passed,
but they solved the difficulty by bidding him a pleasant
good morning.

Instantly his cap was in his hand, and he would have
stopped, but they immediately passed on, evidently
slightly surprised at his intention to detain them.  He
waited only until they were over the brow of the next
little hill, and then he deliberately entered Donald
Maclure's pasture and crept back after them in shadow
of the few scanty trees and shrubs that lined the
road--and all just to watch where they would go!

From the next hillock he could see the gate of Achree
in the hollow, and, having waited sufficiently long,
smoking another cigarette the while, he had the
satisfaction of seeing them turn in at the Lodge.  Then did
an immense content steal over Malcolm Mackinnon.
With two such charming inmates at Achree, life which
had promised to be like a desert, suddenly began to
blossom like the rose.

He hastened on without stopping at the farm-house to
pass the time of day with Elspeth Maclure, and
presently his attention was diverted by the sight of the
new railway track which had gradually crept up the
side of the Loch, and which was about to culminate in
a big viaduct over the burn at the lower end of Glenogle.
He had not a very keen sense of beauty, but, somehow,
he did not like the ugly scars on the hill-sides and all
the unsightly paraphernalia of the work, though he
knew very well what a boon it would be to them when
all was finished.

He was still contemplating it when the post-gig drove
up, and then there was another stop and an exchange
of greetings with David, while the letters were handed
over.  He glanced at them with a sort of careless keenness,
and, deciding that there was nothing affecting him,
he handed them back and told David to deliver them
at Creagh.

Finally he landed in the Hotel, where he spent a good
hour at the bar, hearing all the gossip of the Glen and,
incidentally, a good deal that he wished to know about
the new folk at Achree.

"I think I met them, Miss Macdougall.  Have they
passed by this morning?"

"Yes.  They have been in here, sir--the two young
ladies, but they do say that the big tall one is a married
woman that has divorced her husband.  I don't know
the story rightly, but that's what they say.  She is very
quiet and seems sad-like.  The other speaks most of
the time and is very lively.  The old lady I have never
seen, but they do say that they are a most superior kind
of folk and not like some of them we get in the Glen in
the shooting season."

"Do you happen to know whether Mr. Rosmead
himself is in the Glen to-day?"

"No, he iss not, sir, for the motor went by with him
for the nine o'clock train and syne came back empty."

"Well, I'm not supposed to know, so I think I'll call
at the place as I go up.  I have a good enough excuse
anyhow, as I have been away so long."

And thus it came about that this bit of information did
not deter Malcolm from doing that which he had in his
mind.

About half-past twelve he passed through the familiar
gateway to Achree and made his way to the house.  His
pulses scarcely stirred as he did so.  The place of his
fathers made no appeal to him.  It was merely stone and
lime, and if it had been in his power he would have sold
it for hard cash to any purchaser.  In fact, the thought
uppermost in his mind as he approached the door was
that, having once caught the millionaire, he might find it
worth while to keep him.  He determined to make
himself, somehow, master of the law of entail in order to
discover whether there was any loophole of escape from
the disability to sell it.  Not in his father's lifetime, of
course.  But when Isla and he should be left, of what use
would this great, rambling, uncomfortable old house and
its attendant acres of hungry moor and hill be?  Far
better convert it into the money with which they could
enjoy life, making choice in the whole wide world of a
place of abode.

A woman-servant opened the door to him, and in
answer to his inquiry, informed him that Mr. Rosmead
was not at home.  Malcolm's sharp eyes noted in the
hall beyond the flutter of a petticoat, and as he turned to
go he purposely raised his voice.

"I am sorry that I've not a card on me.  Will you be
so kind as to tell him that Mr. Malcolm Mackinnon
from Creagh called to see him and that he will call
another day?"

"Yes, sir," said the girl.

But at that moment the figure within came towards the
door.  It was Sadie, who, having heard the name,
advanced with an insatiable curiosity.  She extended a
very frank hand.

"So you are Mr. Mackinnon that was expected home
from India," she said, showing her dazzling teeth in her
smile.  "Won't you come in and have a bit of lunch with
my sister and me?  We shall be alone, as my mother
does not yet come down."

"Thank you, Miss Rosmead.  But that would be
presuming on a very slight acquaintance--in fact, none at
all, wouldn't it?"

"Oh, but we know your sister and that perfectly dear
old father of yours, and, anyway, this is your house and
you must want to have a look at the old place after having
been away so long.  I've no doubt you are hating us for
being here.  Come in.  Oh, Vivien, do come here!  It
was Mr. Mackinnon whom we met on the road, and I
am asking him to lunch."

Malcolm passed into the house, hat in hand, and was
duly introduced to Mrs. Rodney Payne.  Seen at closer
quarters, she was even more beautiful than he had
thought.  The still repose of her manner contrasted
strongly with her sister's vivacity and seemed from the
first to cast a sort of spell over Mackinnon.

"We shall be happy if you will stay to luncheon,
Mr. Mackinnon," she said, obeying the instructions from
Sadie's eyes.  "My brother will be very sorry to have
missed you.  He has gone to the Forth Bridge to-day to
meet the contractors there and have a talk with them.
It seems it is the annual inspection--or something.
Anyway, Peter had an invitation to go.  He won't get back
till quite late, perhaps not even until to-morrow."

Malcolm Mackinnon did not care.  He was in no hurry
to meet Mr. Hylton P. Rosmead so long as there was such
a charming substitute to take his place.  He wouldn't
have hesitated about making this glib compliment to
another woman, but there was something about Vivien
Rosmead which repelled any attempt at even the slightest
familiarity.  She held herself aloof, and her mouth, made
for sweetness, seemed as if it were chiselled in marble.
Malcolm wondered what the experience had been that
had given her that petrified expression, and he longed to
be the man to melt her heart.

Sadie, as usual, did the talking and proved herself an
admirable hostess.  But while he answered her gay
badinage it was Vivien who had his whole admiration.
He noticed how little she ate and that her eyes had in
them a far-away look which seemed to detach her from
the common things of life.  Yet she was not dull.  A
word now and then indicated that she was not by any
means dead to the possibilities of life or to the interests
of everyday.

"We like your sister so much, Mr. Mackinnon," she
said with a sudden warm flash of interest when Sadie
left a moment's breathing space.  "We hope that she is
going to allow us to be friendly with her."

"Oh, yes, of course.  Why not?  She will be only too
pleased, I'm sure," murmured Malcolm eagerly.

"She was so kind about letting us come here in a
hurry that we can never forget it.  And it is so lovely to
see her with your father."

As she spoke of the old General, Vivien's eyes grew
large and pitiful, more and more like those of the
Madonna.

"It's even more lovely to find how adored she is in
the Glen, in all the glens," said Sadie the irrepressible.
"Everywhere you hear nothing but her praises.  Don't
you find it a little hard, Mr. Mackinnon," she added
with just a little malicious flash, "to live up to such
a sister?"

"Sadie, Sadie, do be careful!" said Vivien softly.
"That is not quite kind."

"It's true, Vivien, and I see from Mr. Mackinnon's
face that he admits it.  You and I must be pals,
Mr. Mackinnon, for I'm just like that with my sister.  She's
so frightfully good that she ought to have a halo, and
she makes all common folks who approach her feel
worship in the air."

"I am sure of that," said Malcolm with a queer little
bow in the direction of Vivien who, though she laughed,
was a little vexed.

"Mr. Mackinnon will think us very frivolous, Sadie.
Suppose we change the subject and ask him to tell us
something about India.  Your British rule in India is
so splendid!  It stands, just like a great rock, immune
from the assaults of criticism.  I'm sure all this talk
about sedition and unrest means nothing.  Perhaps you
can tell us about it."

Very little did Malcolm Mackinnon know about British
rule in India--as little indeed as any Tommy in the
ranks.

"Well, you see," he said with rather an awkward
laugh.  "I was only a bit of the system--don't you
know?--a small--very small spoke in the big wheel.
My part was to make forced marches in the night and
keep an open eye after stray bullets, and to be all ready
when occasion rose."

Sadie's eyes positively glowed with excited interest.
She loved the Army, investing it with colour and
romance, and in Malcolm Mackinnon she pictured to
herself a heroic figure--a replica of the fine old father,
of whose valour the Glen had many tales to tell.

But Vivien, the more discriminating of the two, had
already decided in her own clear and quiet mind that
the son of Achree occupied a lower moral plane than the
daughter.  Her instinct was very swift and fine, and
the feeling of distrust born of that first meeting was
never afterwards wholly dispelled.

Sadie, with her elbows on the table, wagged her
unconventional tongue and asked so many questions about
their guest's life in India that he gave her a very highly
coloured version of the same, playing up to her for all
he was worth and deepening her impression of the
soldiery who had upheld Britain's prestige all over the
world.

In the midst of this fascinating talk which proceeded
almost entirely between Malcolm and Sadie, Vivien
merely listening with an odd air of cool detachment
which was almost critical, a servant entered the room
with a message which she delivered to Sadie.  Since
Vivien's return to her mother's house she had taken a
secondary place, and, though she resumed her own
name, it was Sadie to whom were accorded the privileges
of the elder daughter.

"Please, Miss Sadie, Mrs. Rosmead would like very
much to see Mr. Mackinnon before he goes if he will
come to her room."

Malcolm would have declined if he had had any
excuse, but Sadie jumped up immediately, saying that
she would show him the way.

Vivien did not accompany them, and when, after a
brief interview with the beautiful, white-haired old lady
who had Vivien's eyes, Sadie and he returned to the
hall-place, she was nowhere to be seen.

"Must you go, Mr. Mackinnon?  I don't know where
Vivien is.  She's like that, poor dear.  Her troubles
have quite taken the life out of her.  You'll come again,
won't you?  In the name of the whole Rosmead folks I
make you free of your own house."

She was so frankly kind and her eyes so beamed on
him that Malcolm would not have been Malcolm had he
not made quick response.

He bent low over her white, outstretched hand and
murmured certain words which somewhat heightened
Sadie's colour and brought an odd softness to her eyes.

"I like that man, Vivien.  He's perfectly lovely, I
think, and all the things they say about him in the
Glen are lies.  Don't you think so?"

But Vivien, whom sad experience had made wise,
answered not at all.





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.. _`THE MESSENGER`:

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   CHAPTER IX


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   THE MESSENGER

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As Malcolm strode up the Glenogle road a little later,
well pleased with his day's achievement, he was
overtaken by a smart drag and a pair of swift roan horses
handled by Drummond of Garrion, whose sister Kitty
was by his side.

Neil drew up of course, and there was an odd look on
his face as the greeting passed.  Malcolm's manner was
perfectly cool, even a little defiant.  It would certainly
have been better had Isla held her tongue, but he was
not going to eat humble pie before that big, sheep-faced
boy who had nothing but his money to recommend him.

He took off his cap to Kitty, however, who smiled
sweetly upon him.

"We're going to Creagh--no, not to call on you,
Malcolm, so don't think it.  We only wanted to know
whether Isla had come back."

"We returned last night," he answered.  "Well I'll
see you later."

"Nonsense.  You'll get up, Mackinnon," said Drummond
so shortly that Kitty turned reproachful eyes on him.

There were heaps of stories about Malcolm in the
glens, but after all, nothing had been proved against
him.  And, anyhow, it was not the province of friendship
to turn a cold shoulder.

"I'd walk, Malcolm, if I were you.  Wait a moment,
and I'll get down to convoy you."

"No you don't, my lass," said Drummond firmly.
"Get up, Mackinnon.  The brutes won't stand--you see
how fresh they are."

Malcolm did not hesitate longer.  It was three good
miles to Creagh yet, and a man doesn't walk so easily
after a good meal as before it.  He swung himself to the
back seat and settled himself so that he could talk to
both, but chiefly into the ear of Kitty, whose looks, he
decided, had improved.

"Neil's manners, as I dare say you have observed,
have not improved of late," said Kitty airily.  "He has
been such a bear to-day that I am forced to the
conclusion that he must have something on his conscience."

Malcolm laughed.

"If it comes to that we've all got something on our
consciences--more or less," he answered gaily.  "Don't
let it put you down on your luck too much, old chap.
It's good policy to wait till the clouds roll by."

As to what Neil thought of him Malcolm did not care
a fig, but he wished to stand well with Kitty, having
proved that women were generally a man's best friends
and would champion him, often against their better
judgment.  It was a favourite jest with him that he
would prefer a court martial of women to anything in
this world, and that he would never despair of getting off.

Drummond had told his sister only a judicious amount
about Achree affairs, and it is to his credit that he had
kept the fact of Malcolm's dismissal from the Army
entirely to himself even when sometimes tempted to tell
what he knew.

It was for Isla's sake that he had kept silence--Isla,
whom he loved with a dog-like fidelity that was capable
of any sacrifice and any suffering in order to make her
happy.

Malcolm was unaware of Drummond's sentiments towards
his sister, and if he had known them they would
only have amused him.  He despised Neil as a man of
the world might despise and belittle a boy who had seen
nothing of life.  Neil, on his part, had the heartiest
contempt for Malcolm Mackinnon, and cherished such an
honest rage against him that it would have relieved him
to have given him a good thrashing.

"You won't like Creagh, Malcolm," said Kitty
sympathetically.  "I can't help thinking that Isla was in
too big a hurry to rush the Americans in.  They were so
frightfully keen on Achree that they would have waited
your time."

"That's what I think, but I don't grumble," said
Malcolm.  "I've been to lunch with them to-day, and
they're quite decent--upon my word they are."

"Been to lunch already, have you, Malcolm?  You
don't let the grass grow under your feet.  And what do
you think of them?  I really think we must call, Neil.
Why not this afternoon when we go down?"

"No," answered Neil shortly, "I'm not needing any
truck with such folks.  If they must swarm into Scotland,
then, let them, but they'll get no encouragement from me."

"Touch me if ye daur," whispered Malcolm with his
eyes full of laughter.

Kitty laughed out loud.

On the way down she took the opportunity of asking
Neil what had made him so disagreeable to Malcolm all
the afternoon.

"I'm sure he's very nice and has greatly improved.
His manner to his father is beautiful, I think--such a
nice mixture of deference and devotion."

"Fiddlesticks, Kitty!" said Drummond in his grumpiest
tones.  "You don't know what you're talking about."

"Do you?" she asked saucily.

"It takes a man to know a man like Malcolm Mackinnon.
I wonder how he can bear to loaf about idle--great
big hulking fellow that he is!"

"Loaf about?  But he's on leave, Neil, and he has
had a hard year of skirmishing.  You should hear him
tell about it."

"Don't want to--shouldn't believe it if I did," said
Neil, biting his lip and conscious that he had very
nearly let the cat out of the bag.

He had not had an opportunity of private speech with
Isla at Creagh, because he and his sister had found the
Edens in the little drawing-room and had left them still
there when they went away.  The whole afternoon had
been a disappointment, and when, as they neared the
gate of Achree, Kitty had again ventured to suggest that
they should pay a call he refused point-blank.

It seemed as likely as not that Malcolm was to
become a bone of contention in the Glen and that very
soon there would be two factions--one that believed in
him and another that discredited him in everything.

Malcolm himself was the least concerned of them all.

The weather continuing beautiful and spring-like, he
went out early and stayed out late, and they saw very
little indeed of him at Creagh.

Isla now heard less of the news of the Glen, for it was
a long walk down to Lochearn and her father seemed
more than ever reluctant to let her out of his sight.
These were rather trying days for Isla, because her
father talked almost incessantly about Malcolm, praising
him to the skies and predicting a glorious future for him.

As the days went by and no letter or communication
of any kind came from India or from the War Office,
and as no intimation regarding Malcolm's withdrawal
from the Army had been seen in any of the newspapers,
Isla began to cherish the hope that they had heard the
last of it.  Of course Malcolm might have intercepted
any that had been sent, but if he had done so he did
not tell her.  They saw little of each other and there
was not much brotherly or sisterly confidence between
them.  They were indeed working at cross-purposes and,
without knowing it, each was jealous of the other.

Nobody would have been more surprised and indignant
than Isla had anyone told her that she was jealous
of Malcolm's frequent visits to Achree: yet that was
the truth.  Also, she was keenly disappointed that
Rosmead, after all his considerate kindness at the beginning,
had never made the smallest effort to see her again.
She would not go to Achree unless she was specially
invited.  So she remained at Creagh, living out the dull
and narrow days, her heart full of vague discontent and
unrest and forebodings which she could not have put
into words.

Four weeks passed away--certainly the longest four
weeks of Isla's life.  She did not like Creagh though
nothing on earth would have induced her to admit it.
She missed all the cheery, pleasant gossip of the Glen
and the little village, the daily intercourse with her own
folk, the give and take of a social life which, if limited,
was at least very sincere.  Achree and Creagh were
evidently two different places in the estimation of her
circle, for nobody but the Edens and the Drummonds
took the trouble to look her up, and even they did not
come often.  All the fun and all the social life apparently
fell to Malcolm's share.

She was thinking of all this one morning as she
sauntered down to the gate to meet the post-gig.  She
was a little late, she found by the watch-bracelet on her
arm, and wondered as she glanced down the long white
line of the road, on which there was not a single moving
object visible, whether she had missed David Bain.

She had been over at the keeper's house about half a
mile distant, inquiring after a woman who had had a
new baby and, meeting the doctor from Comrie there,
had stopped a little to talk with him.  She had assured
him that he need not call at Creagh, unless indeed he
particularly wanted to see her father--as he had not
been so well for years as he had been since they came
up to live on the Moor.

Presently she saw something in the distance--a man
on horseback, rather a rare spectacle on the moorland
road at that season of the year.  She thought at first
that it must be Neil Drummond, who was the only
horseman that ever came to Creagh.  But a nearer
glance assured her that the figure was a heavier one than
Neil's, and, besides, she did not recognize the horse,
though she could see that it was a good one.

She waited a few minutes longer, and as the horseman
drew rapidly nearer she recognized the figure as that of
Rosmead.  This surprised her very much.  Somehow,
she had never imagined that an American man, though
even a distinguished builder of bridges, would ride a
horse and look so well on it.

Having no doubt that he was coming to Creagh, she
opened the gate and stood by the white post until he
came up.  She admired the ease with which he sat,
proving thereby that he was no novice on a horse's
back.  He looked uncommonly well-pleased to see her,
and before he reached the gate he saluted her and threw
himself to the ground.

Catching the reins over his arm, he took off his hat
and kept it under his arm until she had given him her
hand.

"It's a case of Mahomet coming to the mountain,
Miss Mackinnon.  I am here to-day on my mother's
behalf and with a message from her."

"Yes?" said Isla, and her smile was bright and very
sweet.

She had felt left out in the cold, and that feeling of
neglect accounted for the little glow at her heart which
had been kindled by the sincere cordiality of Rosmead's
greeting.

"Do you know that she feels quite aggrieved," said
he, "to think that she has been a month in Achree and
that you have never called once to inquire or to make
her acquaintance."

"I am very sorry.  I did not think--" replied Isla a
little confusedly.  "And since, as I understand, my
brother has paid many calls at Achree I did not think
it necessary that I should call.  Besides, I am very
much tied here on account of my father's health----"

"I understand that," he said gently.

"And it is a long way to Achree," she continued,
"and we have no horse or trap of any kind.  But I will
come one day very soon and make my apologies.  I
hope that you are pretty comfortable in the house, and
that your mother likes it."

"She loves it.  She has settled down, and from present
signs I don't see that we shall ever get her out of it
again," he answered with a laugh, watching at the game
time the mobile face beside him.

He thought it the sweetest face that he had ever seen
and--almost he could have said--the dearest.  Yet
Hylton Rosmead had seen many fair women, among
whom he might without doubt have made his choice.

"I am so glad," said Isla a little wistfully.  "And
your sisters--do they, too, like it?"

"They do.  Glenogle and Lochearn in such a spring
as this leave little, I think, to be desired in the way of
winsomeness.  I myself feel as if I belonged here, which,
I dare say, you consider great presumption on my part."

"Indeed no," said Isla, with a swift, kind glance.  "I feel
very glad to know that that is how you regard Achree."

"I came with a message from my mother and also,
I must confess, on my own account to tell you that I
have to leave Scotland for a few months."

"Oh!" said Isla, and her face unaccountably fell.

But Rosmead was not yet sufficiently acquainted with
the play of its expression to understand that his news
had disappointed her.  Neither was he vain enough to
imagine that her expression had altered because of his
announcement of his impending departure.

"Where are you going?" she asked a moment later.

"Back to America.  The object for which I came to
this country is accomplished, and I really have no excuse
for remaining longer here."

"Oh!" said Isla again, a little dully.  "Somehow I
imagined that you were going to settle in Scotland,
though of course that was a very absurd supposition on
my part."

"Not so very absurd.  It is what I should like to
do--what I hope to do one day.  But, in the meantime, I
must not forget that I am a partner in an American
business and that I am expected to go back with my
report."

"What report?"

"You have forgotten, of course, that I told you I was
a bridge-builder.  Why should you remember it?" he
asked lightly.  "I came over to meet the engineers and
the contractors who have to do with your splendid
bridges here, and in the fall I shall have to go down
south, where my firm has undertaken to build one of
the biggest cantilever bridges in the world."

"Oh!" said Isla a third time.  "And you will not
come back?"

"I hope that I shall return later in the year--probably
to spend Christmas with my mother and sisters."

"They will remain here, then?  You wish to extend
the term of your tenancy of Achree?  Do you
remember it was to be for six months?"

"With the option of remaining for a year.  That was
made very clear, I think, at the beginning, and, as I
said, my mother will not be easily ousted from Achree.
She is of Scottish parentage, you know.  Her mother
was a Farquharson, so she imagines that she has a
special claim on Scotland.  Happily your brother does
not mind the extension."

A sort of chill fell on Isla at mention of Malcolm's
name, though why she could not have told.  She had
no fear that he had not made himself pleasant or
agreeable at Achree; but, somehow, disaster seemed to
associate itself with his name.  She feared to pursue the
subject.  But Rosmead, quite unaware of her feeling
in the matter, none of the gossip of the Glen having
reached his ears, went on quietly.

"We've had several long talks about it, and practically
it is arranged that we take the place on a two years'
lease."

"You have arranged that with Malcolm!" she said a
little faintly.

"Yes," said Rosmead.  "He has been most kind
about it.  He tells me he has resigned his commission
on account of his father's health but that he intends and
hopes to get some estate management.  I appreciate
his kindness to us all the more on that account."

Isla, who heard all this for the first time, felt a
natural thrill of indignation because she had been kept
in the dark.

"I don't see that there is so very much kindness,"
she said quickly.  "You pay very handsomely for the
house."

"It is worth it," he said heartily.  "The old Rosmead
place in Virginia my mother has lent to her youngest
sister, lately made a widow.  She is looking after all
the servants, and we have not the smallest anxiety
about it, so you see, things have arranged themselves
very nicely for us."

"Your home is in Virginia, then?" said Isla in tones
of deep interest, which flattered Rosmead not a little.

"Yes.  My grandfather was a big planter there, and
had many slaves.  Of course the war changed all that,
but the place remains the same.  I should like you to
see Virginia, Miss Mackinnon, and my old home.  It is
a beautiful place."

"It seems odd that you should be so willing to leave it!"

"It had sad associations for my mother and also for
my sister Vivien, who was married in the neighbourhood
and was--and was--not very happy.  But there--I have
all this time been talking about myself, and not at all
about you.  Your father, I hear, is very well.  I dare say,
your brother's return has helped him greatly."

"Yes, I think it has," said Isla, trying to be cordial
as well as loyal.  "And Creagh suits him.  It is very
high and clear up there, and he is able to potter about
just as he likes.  You will come in and see him?  Even
his mind is much stronger.  Certainly he now grasps
the fact of your residence at Achree, and, I am sure,
he would like to make your acquaintance properly."

"I should like to come in and see him, if I may," said
Rosmead.  "But before we go in will you promise to go
sometimes to see my mother when I am gone?  I don't
know why I should ask this, but I do."

"I shall be sure to go, Mr. Rosmead.  But when do you
leave Scotland?"

"Next Thursday.  My boat sails from Liverpool on
Saturday afternoon, and I have some business in London
on the Friday."

"I shall come before then, of course, and I am very
sorry I have been so rude and unneighbourly," said Isla,
and she meant what she said.  "Do you mind walking
round with me to the stable and putting your horse in?
The accommodation is quite good, but there is no groom,"
she added with a small, pitiful smile which touched him
inexpressibly.

Her whole personality appealed to him.  The grave,
unimpressionable Hylton P. Rosmead, accounted by his
colleagues one of the hardest-headed men of his time,
was so moved by this woman, whom he had seen so few
times, that he could have taken her in his arms there and
then, and asked nothing better than to keep her for the
rest of his life and hers.

She was so sweetly natural and womanly, so altogether
devoid of pretension that she appealed to every fibre in
his being.  He hated the artificiality of the women of his
set--the smart women whom he had met in New York
society and who were ready to make much of the "Bridge-builder,"
as they called him--and to pour the incense of
their flattery upon him.  But the atmosphere had always
impressed him as being insincere, and he had often told
his mother that if he ever married it would be in some
very unexpected place.  He knew now that he had found
the place and the woman.

All unconscious of what was passing in his mind, Isla
led the way to the stables, stood by while he tied up his
horse, and then walked back with him, pointing out the
beauty of the situation and the incomparable view from
the little plateau on which the house was built.

"Now I wonder whether David Bain has ever come.
I suppose you saw nothing of him on the road, Mr. Rosmead?"

"Nothing.  He was ahead of me, I am sure, because
he is the most punctual person I have ever heard tell of.
I have heard that in Glenogle they set their clocks by
David."

Isla passed into the house with a smile on her lips and,
crossing the narrow hall, opened the door of the dining-room
which her father used as a library and sitting-room.

And there she stood just a moment as if frozen upon
the threshold.  Her father was not in his accustomed
chair, but lay on the hearthrug, where he had evidently
fallen with the page of an open letter grasped tightly in
his hand.





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.. _`THE HOUSE OF WOE`:

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   CHAPTER X


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   THE HOUSE OF WOE

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Isla sprang forward and knelt down in a silence that
could be felt.  The old man lay slightly on his side, and
Rosmead, as he too knelt down, saw at once that all was
over.

Isla's white face and terrified eyes turned to him in
swift appeal.

"Will you take your horse and ride quickly for Dr. Blair?
I left him at the keeper's house at Rofallion.
Any of them here will tell you where it is.  And even if
he is gone from there the people will know what direction
he took."

Rosmead rose to his feet, and on his face was a great
and sad gentleness.

"I will go if you wish, my dear, but it is useless.  He
is dead."

Isla sprang up, and her eyes flashed.

"Dead!  How dare you say that?  He can't be dead--it
is impossible.  He was quite well this morning--better
than he has been for years.  I told Dr. Blair
so when he wished to come and see him this very
morning.  Oh, if only I had let him come!"

Her hand on the shabby old bell-pull sent a hundred
echoes through the house and brought Diarmid, shaking
and apprehensive, to the door.

Isla turned to him sharply.

"Come, Diarmid.  The General has had a fit--or
something.  Help to lift him up, and carry him to his
room.  Will you, Mr. Rosmead?  Oh, thank you very
much.  Then if you will ride for the doctor it will be
the greatest service you can render."

As they would have addressed themselves to their
task she stooped and tried to release the sheet of paper
from the fingers that held it like a vice.  But the effort
was useless.  As she knelt there she was able to read
the address on the one side, and, on the other, which
she turned with a shaking finger, the signature of
Colonel Martindale.

Then she knew what had happened.

She left the room and flew up the stairs to see that
the bed was ready, and, as she heard Margaret Maclaren
clucking to her handful of poultry at the kitchen door,
she wondered how all the work and business of their
little world could go on as before, while her life was over.

The bed was straight and the fair linen sheet turned
back when Rosmead and the serving-man appeared with
their burden.  Even then Isla noted the extreme
gentleness and power displayed by Rosmead, and from
that moment he seemed, as it were, to take over her
case and to legislate for her.

They laid the poor old General on his bed, and
Rosmead very gently drew the lids over the staring eyes
that seemed to have a great horror in them.

"Oh, go for the doctor--go quickly, for God's sake!"
cried Isla--"or it will be too late."

"It is too late now," he said.

And, stepping to the toilet-table, he lifted the General's
small shaving-glass that had been carried through many
a campaign and laid it against his lips.  There was not
the faintest sign of a misty breath on it.

"It is the infallible sign, my dear.  God help and
comfort you!  I will send your woman to you and then
go after the doctor.  It will be well that he should be
here even if he can do nothing."

Isla, now almost convinced that her father was indeed
dead, did not cry.  But Rosmead never forgot the despair
of her face.  She bent over the prostrate figure and
once more essayed to remove the letter from the gripping
fingers.

Rosmead stepped forward to help her and, after a
small effort, he succeeded in releasing it.  She smoothed
it out, folded it, and put it inside the bosom of her gown.
Her face seemed to harden then till it became set like
marble.

"I will never forgive Malcolm Mackinnon this!" she
said under her breath, "never while I live."

Rosmead, guessing some tragedy beneath, decently
turned away and went down to get his horse from the
stable.  As he left the house the keeper appeared, having
been instructed by Isla to call for some soup for his wife.

"The doctor, sir?  Yess, he iss at my hoose whatefer.
At least his bicycle iss there, and he iss calling at
another hoose not far away.  I can bring him?--yess,
inside of ten minutes.  I hope there iss nothing wrong
at Creagh whatefer?"

"General Mackinnon has had a seizure of some kind,"
answered Rosmead.  "Can you go as quickly on your
feet as I on my horse?"

"Quicker.  Forby, there iss no need," answered the
man, and he was off like lightning across the moor.

But in less than ten minutes' time he was back to say
that the doctor had gone and that nobody knew the way
he had taken.

Then Rosmead ascended the stairs once more, to find
that they were standing about helplessly, wringing their
hands, while Isla, with the desolation of death on her
face, was looking out of the window.

He motioned the servants from the room, and went
up to her, gently touching her arm.

"My dear," he said, and she did not even notice how
he once more addressed her.  "I am afraid we have
missed the doctor.  I will get him for you soon, but
meanwhile I want you to grasp the fact that, even if he
were here at this moment, there is nothing to be done.
I have some knowledge of such things, and I have seen
many die.  It is all over, and, save for the pain to you,
we ought to be glad that he suffers no more."

"Suffer!" she cried shrilly.  "You don't know--no
one will ever know what he suffered just then."

Unconsciously her hand touched the fold of her blouse
where the letter lay.  "He had a shock--yes, and it was
the one thing to avoid.  Oh, I have watched him all
these years so that nothing came near him!  But I was
powerless against this evil thing that killed him at the
last!"

Rosmead made no answer, understanding that she
was distraught and spoke freely of that which her
normal self would not have so much as mentioned in
his presence.

His one concern was to get her out of the room, so
that the last sad offices might be done and Mackinnon
of Achree composed in the dignity of his last sleep.
He managed it at last, for even with all his gentleness
he was masterful.  Then with his own hands he helped,
guiding the tearful, but anxious and willing servants so
that in a short time the death-chamber was prepared,
the fair linen ready, and all done decently as it ought
to be.

When he got down to the library Isla was sitting by
the table, with her elbows on it, staring into space.  The
expression on her face hurt him.  It was not woebegone,
nor yet was it grief-stricken.  It was only hard like the
nether millstone.  He understood that he had come
within touch of the tragedy of these broken lives, but
not an atom of curiosity stirred in him.  His only
concern was for her.

She looked round with a little shivering breath, and
her lips essayed to move.

"I too seem to be stricken!  I wish only one thing at
this moment, Mr. Rosmead--that I could be lying dead
beside my father."

"Yes, yes, I understand.  I was only fifteen when my
father died--through a gun accident that might have
been averted, and I remember the horror of it yet.  But
yours was an old man and full of years and honours.
You should see him now!  He reminds me of the shock
of corn fully ripe.  You must think of how he was
beloved in all the glens, and how, after his long service,
he has received his crown from the King."

He spoke quite simply, and the hardness on Isla's face
slightly relaxed.

"How kind you are!  I shall never forget it!"

"I have done nothing that the merest stranger might
not have done better," he made answer.  "What I feel
now is that I dare not leave you here alone.  If you could
send some one down to Lochearn--or if you know where
your brother is I will find him for you.  It is imperative
that you should not be left here alone."

"I don't know where he is, and he shall not come in
here!" she cried a little wildly.  "You don't
understand!  Nobody understands except me, but he must
not come in here."

Rosmead did not know what to say, for tragedy was in
the air.

"Come," he said gently, laying a slightly compelling
hand on her arm.  "Let me take you upstairs.  It will
do you good.  He looks so beautiful and so gloriously at
rest.  If only you will let your mind dwell on that, half
the bitterness will be gone--on that and on the fact of
your long and beautiful devotion to him, which has been
the wonder of all the glens."

Rosmead hardly knew himself, and certainly those
who knew only one side of Peter Rosmead would have
been amazed to hear him now.

Isla obeyed him without the smallest demur, and
when she entered the room with the drawn blinds, and
looked at the still figure on the bed with the majesty of
death on the noble face her tears began to flow.  And
for that Rosmead thanked God.

She was like a little child in his hands then, begging
him not to leave her; and his tenderness, his
forethought, his encompassing care were like those of a
kind elder brother.

But that came to an end with the sudden, swift arrival
of some fresh person at the door and with the sound of
Malcolm's loud--somewhat aggressive--voice, calling
his sister by name.

Rosmead stood aside while she walked steadily from
the room, and he very heartily wished that it were
possible for him to escape by some back staircase.  He
had no desire to witness what he felt must come.

Isla sped swiftly down the stairs, and on the downmost
step she paused and pointed an accusing finger at
her brother.

"Murderer!" she said.  "Don't come a step farther.
You have no right in this house, which you have destroyed!"

Malcolm looked thunder-struck, and the sight of
Rosmead a few steps higher up the stair did not help to
lessen the mystery.

"Why, what has happened, and why is Mr. Rosmead
here?  What is it?" he demanded peremptorily.

Rosmead hastened past them and went out by the
door without a word.  He knew that the time had come
for him to go--that with what now passed in the Lodge
of Creagh between the brother and sister no stranger
might intermeddle.  But he left the woman whom he
had learned to love--left her with a pang.

Rosmead was no fool, and he guessed that the letter
that had been in the General's dead hand must, in some
way, have concerned his son, and that, whatever news
it contained, it was the shock of it that had killed him.

This also Isla knew, and Malcolm would have to
answer to his sister, to his own conscience, and to his
Maker for his sin.

Rosmead's heart was heavy as he took his horse from
the queer little stable of Creagh, and, mounting, rode
slowly down Glenogle.  The mystery of life, its awful
suffering--so much of it preventible--oppressed his
healthy mind like a nightmare.  And always it was the
innocent and the good who had to bear the full brunt.

As he rode through the clear beauty of the summer
morning he took a vow that he would do what he could
to make up to Isla Mackinnon--that if she would
permit him he would devote his whole life to making her
happy, to effacing the memory of the bitterness that
her young life had known.

Only he must not be in too much haste, because the
quick pride of her would resent any assumption of right
on his part.  Isla must be slowly and laboriously wooed.
But how well worth the winning!  Rosmead's outlook
upon life had undergone a swift change, and now it was
bounded east, west, north, and south, by the deep quiet
eyes and the beautiful face of one woman.

The love that had come to him late would be the
great passion of his life--a passion such as few men
know.  He had kept himself singularly pure and wholly
detached from women.  His capacity for affection had
never been dissipated by lighter loves.  He brought a
virgin heart to lay at the feet of the woman he loved.
And, in spite of the sorrow and the woe to which he
had been a witness, life promised fair to Peter Rosmead
that summer morning as he rode through Glenogle and
watched the sheen of the sun upon hill and water and
heard the birds singing their heart out in the crystal
clearness of the upper air.

He would go to America and attend with a single
mind to his business there, leaving the dear woman in
peace.  Then, when he returned at Christmas, he would
see.  His heart would tell him then whether it was time
to speak.  Few misgivings were his.  He believed that
Isla Mackinnon was the woman that God had given to
him and that she had been kept for him through all the
years of his strenuous young manhood, and that for her
dear sake he had been able to live without blame and
without reproach.

For that, above all else, he gave God thanks in his
heart.

Meanwhile, in the Lodge on the edge of the Moor of
Creagh the storm rose and raged.  Malcolm, a little
stupefied, kept demanding what had happened.

"He is dead!" cried Isla, in the shrill, hard tone that
had no kinship with that of her usually sweet low voice.
"And the thing that killed him was the letter from
India--Colonel Martindale's version of the story."

"Give it to me!" said Malcolm, with an air almost of
menace as he stepped to her side.

"No, I will not," she answered clearly.  "It is not
yours.  It was father's, and now it is mine.  To think
that after all our watching, it should have fallen into his
hands at last!"

Malcolm, very white and haggard now, moved with a
step that was very unsteady into the library, Isla
following, for it suddenly dawned upon her that it was
unseemly to wrangle there within a step of the chamber
of death.

"Tell me what has happened," he said hoarsely.
"Surely you will not deny me the right to know."

"There it very little to tell," said Isla drearily.  "I
went out early, and before going to meet David Bain, I
went to the keeper's house at Rofallion to ask for
Mrs. Dugid.  Then while I was waiting at the gate for David
Mr. Rosmead came up."

"And David had delivered the letters, I suppose,
while you were at Rofallion?"

"Yes, of course, and father opened that one, and, though
he might have looked at a dozen others without comprehending
their meaning, he knew the meaning of that one
at once," she said.

And her face set again like the nether millstone.

She had no pity for Malcolm, she did not even in that
moment of awful bitterness give him credit for one
spark of decent feeling.  She hardly observed that he
was trembling like an aspen and that his face had
grown haggard about the mouth, like that of an old man.

"Isla, I want that letter.  I must have it," he said in
a low voice.

She heard him as she heard him not, and his tone
became more desperate.

"Did you read it, Isla?"

"No."

"Will you read it?"

"No."

"Then give it to me."

"Oh, what does it matter?  The fire is the place for it--the
very heart of it, where it will be consumed quickly,
now that it has done its deadly work," she said drearily
"Do you understand what has happened, Malcolm?  Our
father is dead, and it is you who have killed him, just
as surely as if you had put a bullet into him."

"For God's sake, hold your tongue, Isla!  You would
drive a man to the edge of despair."

"What about me?" she cried in a kind of frenzy,
throwing her self-control to the winds.  "It is all of self
you speak.  Don't you understand that it is a martyrdom
and nothing else that I have suffered in the last five--no,
in the last ten years, ever since I was able to know
the meaning of the things that happened?  Through you
our souls, our hearts, and sometimes our bodies have
been starved in Achree, and the old place has been
suffered to sink into the dust, and has finally passed into
the hands of strangers.  All this would not have mattered
if only you had been good and brave and a little like
what you ought to have been.  We could have borne
poverty with a smile.  But it was your misdeeds, your
squandering of Achree that poisoned existence for him
until slowly his mind gave way.  And I had to stand by
and see it and be glad of it, because in that way he
suffered less.  But I suffered more.  If there is a God in
heaven He must judge this day between you and me,
Malcolm Mackinnon."

"For God's sake Isla, hold your tongue!" he repeated,
but his voice sounded weak and almost faint.

He was no coward in some directions, but the look on
his sister's face was awful to see and her words seared
themselves upon his brain.  He had no idea until now
of the red-hot fires of passion glowing beneath her quiet
exterior.  But now he knew, and the revelation never
afterwards passed from his remembrance.

"I must speak just this once, for we are going to part,
Malcolm; now the last bond between us is snapped.
I will never forgive you.  You broke my father's heart,
and mine is in the dust, where it will lie till the end.
I hope that you are very proud of your work."

He turned away with a deep groan and covered his
face with his hands.

"Now you are the Laird of Achree," she continued,
"and there is none to hinder you from making its
devastation complete.  As for me, I will pass away from
Glenogle and never come near it any more."

He turned to her then, and his eyes looked for a
moment as hers sometimes had done, full of a most
wistful appeal.

"Hold hard, Isla!  Don't you think I've had enough?
I don't want to justify myself.  I admit that the letter
gave the shock, and that is punishment enough for me.
Don't rub it in.  Far less has sent a man to the
lower-most hell."

She did not seem to comprehend the words--or even
to hear them.

She appeared suddenly to be possessed by a new idea,
and, undoing the pearl button of her blouse, she drew
forth the letter and held it out.

"Take it.  There is no use for me to keep it.  I don't
want to read it.  It is yours."

She opened the door, passed him by, and went,
bare-headed, into the drowsy sunshine, and a lark in the
clear blue of the sky seemed suddenly to mock her with
his wealth of full-throated song.  She walked blindly,
yet her feet guided her away to the great spaces of the
Moor of Creagh, where she could be alone under the
clear canopy of heaven and where the messengers of the
Unseen were free to comfort her.

Malcolm, still shaky and trembling, looked about with
the air of a man who does not know which way to turn.
Then he sat him down and braced himself for the effort
of reading the letter which had fallen like the crack of
doom upon the old man's heart.

It was such a letter as one true friend might write to
another, carefully worded so that it would not inflict
any unnecessary pain.  It was a letter which had cost
its writer several sleepless nights--a letter of duty and
friendship for a man whom he had never met, but
whose name was still honoured in the service that he
had adorned.

Had the Colonel known of the old man's state of health
that letter would never have been written.  But it told
the truth--the whole truth, without varnish or
embroidery, in the simple language which is all that a soldier
has at his command.

Malcolm Mackinnon set his teeth as he read it, and
surely in that awful moment he expiated part at least
of his many sins.

After what seemed a long, long time he picked himself
up heavily, crushed the letter in his hand, and
threw it into the fire, where he watched it caught by a
greedy flame and consumed to the uttermost edge.

Then he left the room, passed by, unseeing, the
doddering Diarmid in the hall, and slowly mounted the
narrow stairs.

He did not pause or falter at the door of the chamber
of death, but opened it swiftly, closed it again, and
walked to the side of the bed.  There, for a moment, he
stood in silence.  Then Diarmid, listening below, heard
a cry which he never forgot.  It was that of a soul in
an anguish which cannot be uttered.

"Forgive!" was the only word that fell brokenly from
his lips as he knelt, sobbing by the bed, and laid his
aching and throbbing head on the snow-white gloss of
the coverlet.

The dead answered not, nor made any sign.  But the
peace upon the beautiful old face was that of one who
has passed over, and who understands.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`VIVIEN`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XI


.. class:: center medium

   VIVIEN

.. vspace:: 2

It was three o'clock of the afternoon before Rosmead got
back to Achree, and he had not eaten any lunch.  In
the stable-yard he met his sister Vivien, who had gone
round to look at some Aberdeen puppies, arrived that
very morning.

"We have been wondering about your absence, Peter,"
she said with her quiet smile.  "Have you had any
lunch?"

"None.  I have been up at the Lodge of Creagh.  The
old General is dead.  Come back to the house, and I will
tell you about it."

A groom came forward to take the horse, and Rosmead,
linking his arm in his sister's, walked her away.  They
were devotedly attached to each other, and the wreckage
of his dear and beautiful sister's life at the hands of an
unprincipled man had cast a deep cloud over Rosmead
which could never wholly be lifted.  For every time he
looked at her face, every time he thought of the possibilities
of her kind nature and of the long years of loneliness
in front of her his soul was filled with a holy rage.  On
such occasions he would have killed his brother-in-law,
and thought this no sin.

Vivien Rosmead, made for love, uniting in her sweet
nature all that is best in womanhood, all that makes for
the precious things of life, had been cheated on its very
threshold.  But why had she been so blind, you ask?
Why had not her finer sense warned her of the risk she
ran?  The answer is the one which has come from the
lips of a vast army of sad women who have believed that
their love could win and keep a man from his evil ways.
In this some few have succeeded but a multitude have
failed.  Vivien had failed, and the irony and the misery
of it had embittered Peter Rosmead beyond all telling.

"The old General dead!" echoed Vivien in astonishment.
"But he was not even ill.  His son has been
here this morning and said he was very well."

"He had a shock, and he died on the spot.  Heart
failure, I suppose.  You are needed up there, Vivien.  I
want you to go to-day."

Vivien looked at him questioningly, and seemed to
shrink.

"But I don't know Miss Mackinnon, Peter.  I've never
even seen her.  She has shown us very plainly that she
does not wish to know us."

"That is of no consequence.  This sorrow lifts the
things above all such considerations.  She is a woman
in need--a woman suffering acutely and terribly, and
she is almost utterly alone.  If mother were able she
would go--you know that.  You must take her place.
May I go back now and order a trap."

"There is plenty of time, Peter," she said, visibly
shrinking yet.  "It is never quite dark in these long,
delightful days.  Tell me what happened.  Were you
there with her when her father died?"

Rosmead briefly explained how the death had occurred.

"And she thinks that it was the letter that killed him?
How strange and sad!  Did she give you no inkling as
to what it contained?"

"No.  But I have my own opinion--or rather suspicions.
It has something to do with her brother.  As
I left the house and he entered it I heard her call him
a murderer."

"Oh, how dreadful and how unlikely!" cried Vivien
in deepening bewilderment.  "Malcolm Mackinnon does
not strike one at all as that sort of person.  He is so
transparent--just like a big, jolly schoolboy.  I like
him so much."

Rosmead was not surprised to hear it.  Malcolm
Mackinnon had paid many visits to Achree, where he had
shown the very best and most lovable side of him.  He
had jested with the gay Sadie, had been serious and
kindly and responsible when talking to Vivien, and had
sat like an attentive son by Mrs. Rosmead's invalid
couch.  To Rosmead himself he had been simply a good
comrade, and, on the whole, the American had no fault
to find with him.  Yet, somehow, these words, falling
from Vivien's lips, disquieted him not a little.

"I'm afraid there's something behind it all.  Probably
Mackinnon has sowed his wild oats, and this is the
aftermath.  Anyway, the old man is dead, and she is in a
dreadful state.  Her eyes haunt me.  It is a woman she
needs--mothering, in fact, and if you could bring her
right down here to mother it would be a Christian act.
Where's Sadie?"

"Miss Drummond came to lunch and has taken her
away to Balquhidder to show her Rob Roy's grave.  Then
they are going to Garrion to tea.  What a bright creature
she is!  She kept us laughing right through lunch."

"I'm rather glad, on the whole, that Sadie is not about.
Well, dear, while you are getting ready I will see mother.
I took a message from her to Creagh.  Would you like
me to go up with you, to drive you and wait outside,
perhaps?"

"Just as you like.  But perhaps, as you've only just
come down, I had better go alone.  We don't want to
overwhelm her with Rosmeads."

He nodded understandingly, and they parted on the
stairs, Rosmead proceeding up one of the winding ways
to his mother's room.

They had not altered the interior of the old house in
any way.  They had only spent money to make it
comfortable, covered bare stairs and passages with rich
carpets of neutral tints, and gathered about them all the
comforts and refinements which are at the command of
wealth.

Mrs. Rosmead occupied the General's chamber, which
had a large dressing-room adjoining, and from its quaint
little windows she could see the Loch and the hills
beyond.

She was a gentle, frail old lady, very small and
delicately built, but her sweet face in its frame of
snow-white hair had great strength.

It was from her undoubtedly that Rosmead had
inherited his decision of character, his deeply-rooted
principles, his inflexible will.  He was very like her
physically, and he worshipped her.  Up till now no
woman had ousted her from the shrine of his heart.
The relation between them was indeed idyllic and did
much to keep the softer side of Rosmead in the
foreground.

Her keen, fine black eyes, so like his own, lifted
themselves inquiringly to his face as he entered.

"Well, as you have taken such a long time to carry
out my behest, I take it that you were well received, my
son."

"Yes, I was, but that is not what delayed me," he
answered as he bent to kiss her.

Then in a few words he made her acquainted with the
tragedy of the morning.  As she listened, full of grief and
sympathy, she, unconsciously to herself, watched her
son keenly.  She saw that he was moved far beyond his
wont, that his voice, when he spoke of Isla Mackinnon,
vibrated with an entirely new note.  And she wondered,
and her desire to see the girl was quickened.

"She is the most desolate creature on God's earth,
mother, and if only I could wrap you up in my arms and
carry you to Creagh you could heal her with a touch, as
you have so often healed your other children."

The expression "your other children" impressed her.
Could it be possible that already Peter's thoughts and
longings had flown as far as the day when he should give
another daughter to her heart?

"You must bring her to me, dear.  It is the only way."

"Vivien is going up.  Next to you, she will be the best
to help her.  It is a woman that she needs.  All her life
long apparently she has been fighting side by side with
men."

"Fighting!" repeated Mrs. Rosmead with a slight
wonderment in her tone.

"Well, you know, she has had to do everything for and
to be everything to the old man."

"But how?  He has a dear son, Peter.  You must not
be unjust to young Mackinnon.  Oh, I have heard that
they say things here in the Glen about him, but when
he comes here and sits by me, I believe none of them.
He only needs a little guiding, and I think I have
gathered from him that his sister has been a little hard
on him at times."

Rosmead with Isla's most bitter cry in his ears,
remained wholly unconvinced.

"The ins and outs of the story we don't know, mother.
Perhaps we shall never know them.  But of this I am
sure--that Isla Mackinnon would be hard on no man
without a cause.  She is a splendid creature, and----"

"Peter, come here."

The sweet voice was peremptory, the swift, humorous
black eyes were compelling.  He came obediently, as of
old, to her side.

"Look straight at me--no, not like that!--very straight,
Peter Rosmead.  Is this to be the woman?"

"Yes, mother," he answered, with the simplicity of a
big child.  "Please God, it is."

"Then bring her to me quickly, my son, that I may
get to know and love her--ay, and to learn whether she
is worthy of Peter Rosmead.  I have never yet seen the
woman who is."

Peter laughed, in no way uplifted by her loving pride.
His nature indeed was singularly unspoiled.

"It can't be done in such a desperate hurry.  She is
cold and fine, and, like her own hills, she is difficult of
approach.  I shall have to walk warily and win her
slowly.  But win her I shall or go unmarried to my grave."

Thus did Peter Rosmead quite quietly dispose of the
biggest thing that had come into his life.  And his
mother, watching the firm set of his square chin, the
invincible light in his eyes, gloried in his strength, and
had not the smallest doubt that he would attain the
desire of his heart.

Was any pang of disappointment hers?  To every
mother the moment when her son takes another woman
to his heart is one of supreme pain.  This is as
inevitable as the law of life.

But Mrs. Rosmead desired her son to marry, and she
had kept him at her side a long time.

"So Vivien will go up?  Is she getting ready now?"

"I think so."

"Well, bring my writing-block and pencil, and I will
write a message for Miss Mackinnon."

He obeyed her, but she did not show him what she
wrote.  Nor was he curious to see it.  He had never in
all his life known her to do the wrong thing or speak
the wrong word.

She was a woman in whom grace was developed to a
very high degree.

Vivien came in presently, her slender, graceful figure
enveloped in its capacious coat of Harris tweed, and a
small neat toque of green velvet crowning her beautiful
head.

"Peter has been telling you, mother.  Do you think
it is the right thing for me to do--to go to Creagh, I
mean?  I confess to a little hesitation.  I am so afraid
of intruding on her.  Even the pride of old Virginia
must pale before that of Glenogle."

"Your heart will dictate the fitting word, my child.
Give this to the poor girl, and if she will come to us here
to rest awhile in the house where she was born we shall
try not to make her feel that we have taken her home
from her."

Rosmead tucked his sister in, and, just as the horse
was about to start, he spoke again.

"You won't be discouraged if it is a little difficult at
first, Vivien?  Try to think only of her desperate need."

"Poor old Peter," she said whimsically.  "I never
saw him so much in earnest about anything.  I do
believe he would like nothing better than to be going back
himself."

Their eyes met in a smile, and she drove off, waving
her hand.

He drifted about the place all the afternoon, conscious
of a growing restlessness that he could not shake off,
his thoughts all the while following Vivien to the Moor
of Creagh.

When she arrived at the small plain house, which she
now saw for the first time, a vast pity filled her heart.
Creagh had beautiful surroundings, but nothing could
make it a home.  It was bare and uninviting--a mere
shelter; and Vivien, who loved beautiful places, and
who had the whole art of the Home Beautiful at her
finger-ends, wondered how Isla could have borne to
exchange the old-world charm of Achree for this.

She had not heard the whole story of the transaction.
Rosmead had preserved a singular reticence regarding
the terms of his tenancy of Achree, and Vivien merely
thought that the Mackinnons either wanted the money
badly or had some other family reason for letting their
ancestral home.

The blinds were all down, but, as she directed the
man to stop outside the gate, she could see the open
door at the end of the short avenue.

"Wait here, Farquhar.  I will not disturb them by
driving up to the door."

She left her heavy coat on the seat, and in her neat,
plain suit of blue serge walked up the short approach to
the open door, where Diarmid, who had heard the rumble
of wheels, stood waiting to receive her.

"Not at home," were the words ready on his lips, but
something in Vivien's face arrested his attention.

"I am Mrs. Rodney Payne, Mr. Rosmead's sister, and
I have come at my brother's request to see Miss
Mackinnon.  Do you think she would see me for a few
minutes?"

Diarmid hesitated for a moment.  Then he was wholly
vanquished by the light in the strange lady's eyes.

"Ma'am, if you'll step inside, I'll see," he said respectfully.
"She's sittin' up there in the room with him, and
we can do naught with her.  Maype, if she would see
you, it might be better for her."

"Where is her brother?"

Diarmid shook his head.

"He hass been out of the house for 'oors, ma'am, and
we are all to pieces here in Creagh, and there's nothing
but dool and woe upon my folk."

Vivien's eyes became moist at this expressive phrase
which, falling pathetically from the old servant's lips,
adequately summed up the whole affairs of the Mackinnons.

"I am afraid," she said very gently, "that if you take
my name to Miss Mackinnon she will not see me.  I
am going to take a great deal upon myself.  If you will
just show me the way I will go to her without
announcement.  She can only send me away."

"Yes, sure, an' that is so, but I do not think, seeing
you, ma'am, that she will do that," said Diarmid earnestly,
and he held open the door for her to pass in as if she
had been a queen.

They trod the narrow stairs very softly.  On the
half-landing Diarmid paused and stood aside while he pointed
with finger that trembled slightly to the closed door of
the room where Mackinnon slept his last sleep.

Vivien braced herself, for the thing she was about to
do was not only unusual, but might very easily be
misconstrued.  She took a little quick breath as her fingers
closed upon the handle of the door.  The next moment
she turned it, slipped in, and closed it behind her again.

The blinds of the front window only were down, but
the sun, now veering westward, shone in at the window
in the gable-end and lay in a soft yellow flood upon the
quiet room.  A shaft of sunshine even lay athwart the
bed, touching as it passed Isla's motionless figure, where
she sat upon a chair by the bed-side, her hands lightly
clasped on her lap, her eyes staring straight in front of
her, unseeing, uncomprehending, a look of almost
hopeless misery upon her face.  At sight of a strange woman
in the doorway, however, she sprang up, quivering with
indignation.  She would have pointed to the door, to
which she tried to hasten, but something in Vivien's
beautiful face--some unimagined quality of rarest
sympathy deterred her.  She stopped with the very words
of dismissal frozen on her lips.

Vivien approached quickly, laid a tender hand on her
shrinking shoulder and spoke.

"My dear, my dear!  I am Vivien Rosmead, I too
have suffered.  Come out into the sunshine and let us
talk.  If even we do not talk we can cry together, and
that will help us both."

Isla was powerless to be angry.  Her brief indignation
at the intrusion of a stranger upon her most sacred
privacy passed as a tale that is told.

"It is very kind of you, but--but--I hardly know you,
and there is nothing to be said or done.  Everything is
over--that is all."

"I too have thought so, dear," said Vivien softly.
"Come, my poor darling.  He does not need you any
more.  Come, and let us talk and think of those who do."

Isla suffered herself to be led away.

Afterwards, looking back upon that incident, she was
amazed at herself, at the quiet compelling power which
Vivien, in common with all the Rosmeads, seemed to
possess, and against which ordinary folk could not stand
for a moment.

Vivien's arm was about her slender body as they
descended the stairs.  She it was who guided her out
into the flood of the sunshine which, meeting them at
the door, seemed to envelop them in a quiet radiance.

Isla, as if dazzled, put up her hands to ward it off.

"It is cruel," she said in a low, difficult voice.  "How
can there be any brightness when I am like this?  It is
very cruel."

"Where shall we go?" asked Vivien softly.  "Shall
we go to some spot where we shall be very, very quiet
and undisturbed?  I should like you to forget who I
am, even what has brought me, and just to be as if I did
not exist.  If you feel like talking, then talk.  But if
you want to be quiet, I can be quiet too.  Oh, my dear,
I can be very, very quiet.  I have been through the
deeps, where there is nothing possible but dumb silence."

Isla then remembered the tragedy of Vivien Rosmead's
life, and her own pity and sympathy which in times past
had never failed any in need, awoke to newness of life.
The frozen springs of her being leaped again with life,
and, with an almost unconscious desire to help, she
slipped her hand through Vivien's arm.

"Why is it that life is so full of hideous suffering for
women?" she asked with a vague passion.  "I used to
believe in God--in all things beautiful and good.  Now
I believe nothing."

"Your faith will come back.  Even I say that," said
Vivien softly.  "I don't want to belittle your suffering,
dear, but it is of an impersonal kind.  The woman who
cannot be blamed if she loses faith is the one who has
been cheated in her own self, whose womanhood has
been flouted and scorned, whose love has been trampled
on and despised.  That is where the silent deeps are.
May I say just what I will?"

"Surely," answered Isla, lifted clean out of herself by
something tragic and mysterious in that other woman's
face.

"Your father was an old man, full of years and
honour.  His life had become a little burdensome to
him, and though I never saw him, I know that his fine
spirit must have fretted at his forced inactivity.  What
you must do now is to dwell upon his rejuvenation.  He
has gone where there is no death, where his powers will
be restored, where once more all things are possible."

Isla's hungry eyes never for a moment left the
speaking face of the woman at her side.

All the time they were moving slowly, but surely,
away from the house up to the wide spaces of the great
moor where the great silence dwelt.

"Tell me more," was the mute question of Isla's eyes
and lips.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE HAND IN THE DARK`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XII


.. class:: center medium

   THE HAND IN THE DARK

.. vspace:: 2

"It is all true--what you say," said Isla with a little
shiver.  "But what is to become of me?  He was my
life, my work, my all.  I have nothing further to do in
the whole wide world.  My life is over."

"There is your brother," Vivien ventured to say.

She immediately saw that she had made a mistake--that
here undoubtedly lay the sting and the crux of the
whole sad situation.

Isla impatiently shook herself, almost as a dog might
shake from him the element of water he dislikes.  She
made no remark, however, except to move her head
in impatient dissent.

"I have no money, no prospects, no friends, I shall
have to go out into the world and earn my bread.
But how?  That is the curse of people in our position--we
are taught nothing, we are trained to take for granted
that the world exists for us, that we are in some sense a
privileged class.  Then there is a crash, and if we go
under is it to be wondered at or are we to be blamed?"

Vivien listened in the sheerest wonder.  She had no
idea that things were at such a low ebb with the
Mackinnons.  Remembering Malcolm's airy inconsequence
and his jokes about his hard-up state, which
seemed to sit lightly enough upon him, she was even
inclined to think Isla must be exaggerating.

It was not easy for Vivien Rosmead to realize poverty.
She had been reared in a luxurious home, and had
married a millionaire, and, though she had never lacked
in sympathy or benevolence towards the poor, she had
not known one ungratified whim.  She knew that poverty
existed, but it was impossible to associate its more
sordid aspects with Isla Mackinnon.

"But, surely out of the estate there must be ample
provision for so small a family?" she ventured to say.
"Achree is not a small place.  The rent of it alone----"

"It is mortgaged to the hilt," interrupted Isla with a
sort of dull scorn.  "I could not and would not take a
penny from it."

"But surely you have relatives.  Is not Sir Thomas
Mackinnon of Barras a relative of yours?  Some friends
of ours had Barras for two seasons running."

"He is my uncle, but I couldn't be dependent on him.
He is not rich, and he has his own family to provide for."

"He cannot be poor.  I saw the account of his
daughters' presentation frocks in the fashion papers last
week," said Vivien with a slight smile.

"Oh, that means nothing!  They got the loan of a
house for the season, and a very clever maid of Aunt
Jean's, married in London, made their frocks.  You are
so rich in America that you haven't an idea of the makeshifts
some of us have to practise here," said Isla, waxing
amazingly eloquent and convincing for Vivien's enlightenment.

Vivien did not care what the theme, so long as it
roused even a passing interest in the girl's mind.

"Well, I am sure that something will happen to provide
a way," she said hopefully.  "It is impossible to imagine
Glenogle or any of the glens without you.  Have you
any idea, I wonder, just how they regard you?  I do not
go about very much, but my sister Sadie, who has made
friends for miles round, is always bringing home some
fresh tales about the devotion of the people to their dear
Miss Isla.  Only yesterday she said quite dolefully, 'We
may as well give up the ghost, Vivien.  If angels and
archangels came to bless Lochearn and Glenogle, they
would have to walk behind Isla Mackinnon.'"

In spite of herself, Isla smiled.

"It does not mean so very much--only that I have
lived all my life among them."

"It means everything," said Vivien clearly.  "It means
that you are in their hearts, that none of them could
bear hurt or sorrow to come near you."

"Oh, but that is the hurt of it all!" cried Isla most
pitifully.  "The more we love people the more it hurts
us to know that we are powerless to keep suffering or
sorrow away from them.  I would have laid down my
life for my father, but I could not prevent Mal----I
could not prevent others from breaking his heart."

"You did what you could, though," said Vivien, again
struck by the bitter allusion to Malcolm.  "Now I want
to give you a message from my mother.  She wishes very
much to see you.  If only she had been able she would
have come to-day instead of me.  What she wishes to
say is that if you would like to take your dear father
down to Achree for the last few days we can go out.  It
seems an odd thing to say--but we should be glad to go
out.  We can go to the hotel, or even back to Glasgow
for a few days, or even weeks.  My mother came down
so comfortably in the motor that it would not be a trouble,
or even a risk for her to return in it.  So, dear, just say
the word, and we shall be gone to-morrow so that you and
your dear ones may come home to your own place.  This
is a note from my mother to you in which she proposes
this!"

Isla took the note with a murmured word of acknowledgment.
She was much moved.  She stood still on the
green tops of the heather, and something indescribable
swept across her face.  She stretched out her arms so
that they fell on Vivien's shoulders, and when she was
drawn into her tender embrace she laid her head down
on her breast.

"Oh, now I know what dear people you are!  God
bless you!  I should like to do that if it would not hurt
or trouble you.  Then all the people he loved and who
loved him can come and see him before they take him
away to Balquhidder.  Oh, thank you, thank you, I want
to come and see your dear mother.  I will go back with
you now if you will take me."

She was like a creature transformed, and while the
sight touched Vivien Rosmead inexpressibly it also filled
her with a great sadness.  For, if this was how Isla
Mackinnon regarded the house of her fathers, what must it
be to her to see strangers in it and to have before her
eyes the prospect of losing it altogether?

"Come, then," said Vivien with alacrity.  "The evenings
are so long and golden now that we can easily bring
you back before dark.  My brother will drive you himself."

"I am thinking," said Isla, and as they turned to go,
it almost seemed as if the spring had come back to her
step, "I am thinking why should you go out?  There is
plenty of room for us all.  If you would only lend us one
or two rooms for a few days and let us have the freedom
of the house----"

"It would not be the same at all," said Vivien decidedly.
"What you want is to shut the door upon the outside
world and forget all about us, to have only your own
people about you and to have to consider nobody but
them.  It is only in this way that my mother will arrange
it.  I am sure that you will find that this is the best
arrangement?"

"It is a great thing for you to do," said Isla breathlessly.
"I have never heard or known of anybody who would
think of a thing so beautiful."

"Oh, nonsense.  There are many far more beautiful
things done in the world every day, and nobody hears of
them.  It will cost us nothing, you see.  And, moreover,
it is the right thing to do.  It would be clearly wrong for
the Chief of the Mackinnons to be carried to his last rest
from this lonely and inaccessible place, beautiful though
it is.  He ought to be--he must be, borne from the house
of his fathers."

"Yes, yes," said Isla, with a little sob in her voice.  "To
think that you feel like that, that--you understand everything!
Now, I'm so very glad that you have Achree."

Her hardness had melted and the desperate hunted
look had gone from her eyes.  Once more she was alert,
full of affairs, thinking of all there was to do and ready
for all emergencies.

As she drove down Glenogle beside the smart groom on
the front seat of the dogcart her face did not once lose
its uplifted look.

Her eyes swam in tears as Vivien and she swept through
the familiar gates of Achree.

"Tell me, dear Mrs. Rodney Payne, was it your mother
her own self, who thought of this--this beautiful thing?"

"No, my dear," answered Vivien quietly, "it was my
brother.  He is like that.  He thinks always of the thing
that will make most people happy and of how to do it in
the happiest way."

"I thought he was like that when he was up at Creagh
with me to-day," said Isla simply.  "What it must be to
have a brother like that--a brother who thinks of others
first!"

But she paused there, and it was as if she rebuked herself.

Peter Rosmead, from the window of his dressing-room,
where he was getting ready for dinner, was thunderstruck
by the vision of Isla Mackinnon driving up to the door.

"Bravo, Vivien!" he said to himself, and his pulses
quickened as he made haste with his black tie, achieving
a bow less pleasing than usual to his fastidious taste.

He had reached the bottom of the stair when his sister
and Isla came in by the hall door; and, seeing him for
the first time in evening dress, Isla was immediately
struck by his air of distinction.

"I have come to see your mother, Mr. Rosmead," she
said simply.  "I can't say any more.  Your sister must
explain and say all that is necessary for me.  Where
shall I find your mother?"

It was Peter who took her to the door of his mother's
room, nay, who entered it with her.  Isla herself saw no
significance in that simple and natural act, but Peter, who
intended it to be significant, felt a high courage, an
indefinable joy at his heart.

"Mother, this is Miss Mackinnon.  Vivien has been so
fortunate as to get her to come down."

Isla stood still just inside the door, looking wistfully--even
questioningly at the small elegant figure on the
couch, at the beautiful, softly-coloured face framed by
its white hair, and her eyes had a yearning look.

She had never known her mother and, though Aunt
Jean had been passing kind, there was little softness
about her.  Certainly she had never sought to mother the
self-reliant, independent Isla, even when she was only
a long-limbed girl, needing guiding and making many
mistakes.

Sweetness and love had been the rule of Mrs. Rosmead's
life.  By these she had won and kept her children so near
and close to her that they kept nothing hidden from her.

Her eyes, too, were full of questioning as they travelled
to the girl's pale pathetic face.  Peter had been no
common son to her, and it was to no common woman
that she could give him up.

"Come here, my dear.  You have no mother.  I have
room for you in my heart," she said.

And Rosmead, with smarting eyes, went out by the door
and closed it very softly behind him.

"God bless her!  God bless them both!" he said very
softly, under his breath, as he went down to Vivien.

"I am all blown to pieces by the winds of the Moor of
Creagh, Peterkin," she said.  "If you are very good you
can come up and sit in my dressing-room while I make
myself decent.  Then I can tell you what happened."

This dear intimacy, so precious to them both, had
never been more precious than on that night.  Half an
hour later Isla sat down to eat with them in the old
familiar room, and by that time the distress, the strain,
the awful hopeless misery had gone from her face.  She
talked quite rationally and naturally of all the affairs of
the Glen, and when she said that she would like to go
home as soon after dinner as they could conveniently
let her away, Peter asked whether he might have the
privilege of driving her.

She thanked him with her eyes.

"Where I have to be grateful for so much there
are not any words left," she said simply.  "I will say
good-bye to your mother, if you please, only until
to-morrow."

"You are coming back to Achree to-morrow, then?"
said Rosmead, when, with exceeding care and gentleness,
he had tucked her into the comfortable cart.

"Yes, to-morrow.  May we talk of it as we go up?
I don't know how to thank you for so kindly driving me
home.  When I think of what otherwise it would have
been like, I am quite speechless."

"So much the better," he answered with a smile.
"Look back, dear Miss Mackinnon.  The girls are
waving to you."

Isla turned round in her seat and blew a kiss on the
wings of the evening breeze.

"Is it Mrs. Hylton P. Rosmead--eh, Vivien?" said
Sadie whimsically.  "Did you ever see anyone more
mightily pleased with himself than our Peterkin?"

Vivien smiled, but said neither yea nor nay.

"What have you arranged with my mother, then?"
asked Rosmead.

"We are to come down to-morrow evening, Mr. Rosmead.
She says you will take her to Glasgow in the
car to-morrow.  Are you quite sure it can be done
comfortably?"

"Quite.  Then, you and your brother will bring him
down to Achree to-morrow?  I suppose Mr. Mackinnon
will make all the necessary arrangements."

Isla was silent, a little chill creeping all over her and
causing her to shiver.  Her companion bent over her
anxiously.

"I had forgotten Malcolm," she said quite frankly.
"I have always been used to arrange things for my
father, you see."

"I understand.  But now your brother is the head of
the house," said Rosmead gently.  "Probably I shall
see him when we get up to Creagh, and can make the
final arrangements with him.  I should like to tell him
that the Achree stables are at his disposal.  We shall
all go to-morrow by the car, and so you will be perfectly
free of the house."

"Thank you very much," said Isla.

But her voice was very low, and the spiritless note
had crept into it again.  Rosmead found the sudden
change difficult to grasp, and it confirmed him in the
opinion that there was some serious breach between
the brother and sister.

"When do you propose that the burial shall take
place, and where will it be?"

"The Mackinnon burying-place is at Balquhidder, of
course," she said, as if surprised at the question.  "I
have not thought about the day, but probably now it
must be Monday."

They became silent then, driving in the track of the
young moon towards the hills and the moor of the great
silence.  Isla felt no need of speech.  A great sense of
peace and comfort was hers as she nestled there by
Rosmead's side, the thick frieze of his driving-coat
making for her a buttress from the wind.  She, who had
so long cared for others was fully conscious of the
sweetness of being cared for.  She was in no haste for the
drive to end.

Up at the Lodge of Creagh there was desolation and
woe--and there also was the brother between whom and
herself there was a great gulf fixed.  She had not seen
him since she had driven him forth from her presence
with hard words, and she had no idea of the dreary vigil
he had kept, wrestling with remorse and shame up there
on the heather of Creagh.

Rosmead was perfectly happy.  He loved this woman
with a great and growing love, and her nearness to him
filled all his being.  To render her the smallest service
was such a joy to him that just then he asked for no
more.  All the chivalry of a singularly chivalrous race,
all the fine gallant tenderness of the best in old Virginia
was uppermost in Rosmead that night, which for both
was a night of remembrance.

"I shall always think of this night," said Isla very
low as they drew near to the gate of Creagh.  "This
afternoon I thought it would close in despair.  It is you
and your dear people who have lifted me out of it, and
God will bless and reward you.  I never can."

Rosmead, greatly daring, took the small gloved hand
which lay outside the rug and raised it to his lips.  But
no word did he speak, good nor bad.

Presently Isla made a little exclamation of surprise.

"There is a machine of some kind at the door,
Mr. Rosmead.  Don't you see the lights?" she said rather
excitedly.  "I wonder who it can be at this time of
night.  It must be nearly nine o'clock.'

"Close on it.  Probably it is some neighbour calling
on your brother."

"It might be Mr. Drummond from Garrion.  I know
of nobody else who would take the trouble," said Isla.

A minute later she proved her surmise to be right.
The high-stepping Garrion roans were champing their bits
and pawing the ground in front of the narrow doorway.

Rosmead sprang down and with great tenderness helped
Isla to alight.

"You will come in of course, as you wish to see my
brother."

"I will come in if you desire it, but I do not forget
that older friends may have the prior right, Miss
Mackinnon."

"I do desire it.  It will be a help to me," she said.

And together they passed over the threshold.  Diarmid
hastened out to meet them, and behind, from the library,
came Malcolm and Neil Drummond.

Rosmead, while apparently observing nothing, took
note of two things--the curious, half-shrinking,
half-defiant expression on Malcolm Mackinnon's face, and the
distinct antagonism that marked the manner of Neil
Drummond towards himself.

"So you have come back, Isla?" said Malcolm awkwardly.
"Neil and I were just discussing whether we
should come to Achree to fetch you."

"Mr. Rosmead was so kind as to bring me up, and I
think he wishes to speak to you, Malcolm," said Isla.
"Good evening, Neil."

Neil came forward with outstretched hand, his honest
eyes full of deepest sympathy and compassion.

"I need not say what I feel about this, Isla.  I heard
it at Strathyre this evening, at six o'clock, and I couldn't
believe it.  I was only on my bicycle, so I went home
straight and got the horses.  My dear, this is a terrible
thing."

Isla nodded and, seeing that Malcolm had disappeared
into the library with Rosmead, she asked Neil to come
to the little dining-room which he and Malcolm had
recently left, and where the remains of Malcolm's
evening meal still stood on the table.

Drummond closed the door, and Isla sat down, as if
very weary.  He was surprised to behold her so calm
and self-possessed.

"What took you away to Achree, Isla?" he asked
jealously.  "Malcolm has been frightfully anxious about
you."

"He needn't have been.  I left a message with
Diarmid," she answered listlessly.

"But it seemed odd for you to go there to these new
people.  They are not your friends, Isla.  We have a
better right."

"Not my friends!" she said in tones of wonderment.
"You say that because you don't understand--because
you don't know what they are.  I think there cannot be
many people like them in the world, Neil.  Do you know
that they are all turning out of Achree to-morrow--even
the frail invalid mother--and going right back to Glasgow
on their motor-car in order that we may have Achree to
ourselves for the funeral?"

Drummond looked the surprise he felt.

"Are they, though?  That is uncommonly good of
them," he admitted, though only half-heartedly.  "Then,
you go back to Achree to-morrow with the poor old
General?"

"Yes.  Mr. Rosmead is arranging the whole matter
with Malcolm now, I expect.  I am very tired, Neil.  I
think I shall have to go to bed soon."

"Yes, of course--poor dear girl, you must be!  Kitty
sent her love.  She would have come over with me, she
said, only she was not sure whether you would be able
to see people.  She will come over to-morrow if you'll
give her leave."

"Very kind," murmured Isla, thinking of the woman
who had not waited for leave--who had come of her own
free will and gathered her to her heart.  "I don't think
she should come to-morrow, Neil," she said, rousing
herself with an effort on perceiving his disappointment.  "I
shall be busy most of the day, you see.  To-morrow
night, perhaps--if you don't mind.  It will not be
so far to come to Achree as up here.  Give her my love."

Drummond shifted rather restlessly from one foot to
the other.

"Isla, I hate to say it, but it is what I feel.  I'm
beastly jealous of these American outsiders.  You must
not let them absorb you.  Of course we know that their
money can do a lot of things.  We can't all afford
thousand pound motors for quick transit, but our hearts
are in the right place and we'd go down on our knees to
serve you--every one of us."

Isla's eyes suddenly filled with tears.

"I know, Neil.  Don't trouble about it.  They have
been very kind.  Of course I know that if you had had
Achree you would have done just the same thing.  Was
that Malcolm calling?  We had better go out."

Neil opened the door, and they passed into the narrow
hall again, where Malcolm and Rosmead stood together.

For just the fraction of a moment nobody spoke.

"Mr. Rosmead has told me of their great, unheard-of
kindness, Isla," said Malcolm in a queer strained voice,
"and we have arranged it all.  To-morrow afternoon--late
about six o'clock we shall take him down to Achree.
Mr. Rosmead is to run his fast motor to Callander in the
morning in order to make the necessary arrangements.
I have told him we can't thank him."

"No," answered Isla very low, "we can't."

"That's all right," said Rosmead cheerily.  "Good
night then, Miss Mackinnon.  Go to bed and have a
good sleep.  Good night, Mr. Drummond."

"Good night," said Neil, and he affected not to see
the outstretched hand.

Rosmead took no offence.  He was too big-hearted,
and perhaps he had an inkling of how it was with the
young man.

"I had better go, too, I suppose," said Neil a little
stiffly, and Isla bade them both good night.

When Malcolm returned from seeing them off he could
not find Isla, and when he went upstairs her door was
shut.

He tapped lightly at it, and she opened it just a few
inches.

"You'll excuse me to-night, won't you, Malcolm?"
she said gently but coldly.  "I am very tired.  I couldn't
discuss anything to-night.  To-morrow we can talk
things over, but I want just to say that I am sorry I
spoke as I did this afternoon.  He would not have liked
it, I am sure."

Malcolm had not a word to say.  He murmured good
night and went downstairs to the lonely hearth, where
he tried to extract some comfort from his pipe.

But his quiet was disturbed by the low sound of his
sister's sobbing from the room above.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE PASSING OF MACKINNON`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XIII


.. class:: center medium

   THE PASSING OF MACKINNON

.. vspace:: 2

A chamber-maid at the St. Enoch's Hotel in Glasgow
brought a sheaf of letters to Rosmead along with
shaving-water on Monday morning at half-past seven.

He glanced over them with quick carelessness, and,
finding one small, square, black-edged envelope,
addressed in a handwriting that he did not know, he
quickly broke the seal, which bore an unfamiliar coat of
arms.  Once more his pulses beat high, for this was the
first time Isla Mackinnon had written to him, and over
a man in love the handwriting of the woman he loves
wields a surprising power.

Thus did Isla write to Rosmead, and the few simple
words meant more from her than whole pages of words
from most women.  She did not possess the gift of
expression, but could only write of real things, and when
these were done with the letter came to an end:--


.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line

   "ACHREE, *Saturday night*.

.. vspace:: 1

"DEAR MR. ROSMEAD,--I am writing to say that I hope--that
we all hope--that you will be able to spare the
time to come out to Lochearnhead on Monday to attend
my father's funeral.

"It is arranged for twelve o'clock from here, and will
arrive at Balquhidder Kirkyard at half-past one, which
suits the trains from both the north and the south.

"Perhaps you do not know the customs of our country,
but it would please me if you would take one of the
cords of the coffin as they lower it into the grave.  These
are taken by relatives and friends only, and, God knows,
you have been a friend.  It is arranged that if you are
there some one will give you your place.

"My uncle, Sir Thomas Mackinnon, arrived from
London to-day.  He is my father's only living relative.

"Perhaps you will find it convenient either to come by
the train or to drive in your motor straight to
Balquhidder, in which case I should not see you.

"Please to tell your mother that by Thursday of this
week I shall have gone back to Creagh or shall have gone
away somewhere else.  What I really mean to say is that
Achree will be ready for her return.  I cannot say more.

.. vspace:: 1

.. class:: noindent white-space-pre-line

"I am, sincerely yours,
   "ISLA MACKINNON."

.. vspace:: 2

Rosmead forgot all about his shaving-water until it
grew cold, and he had to ring for more.

He had longed with a great longing to go out to the
burying of Mackinnon, but he had not contemplated
doing so without invitation.  And, lo! the invitation had
come from Isla herself, couched in warm, friendly terms
which no man--least of all Rosmead--could resist.

There was a glow at his heart as he stood before the
mirror, attending to the duties of his toilet, noticing for
the first time, with a kind of silent rage, the lines on his
face and the evidences of middle-age beginning to creep
about his mouth and temples.  He wanted to be for ever
young for her dear sake.

She had, in the midst of her forlorn grief, taken time
and thought to write to him to offer him what he
understood was a family privilege, and he would go--oh, yes,
there was no car fast enough to take him--right to her
door, to her very feet!

Away with the train or car that would convey him only
to Balquhidder when Isla had expressed even the faintest
desire to see him!  It would be their last meeting until
he could return from America, for on Thursday he must
set out upon the journey which never in all his life had
he been so loth to take.

He pondered on all the details of the day in front of
him, and, by copious use of the telephone in his room,
had arranged them all before he went down to breakfast.
He did not wait for his sisters.  There was nothing to
hurry them in the mornings in Glasgow, and generally
they breakfasted with their mother in her sitting-room.

At nine o'clock, dressed in full motor garb, he tapped
at his mother's door.

"I have had a letter from Miss Mackinnon this
morning, asking me to go out to the funeral at Achree,
and I'm going now.  It will take me quite all my time to
get there by noon."

Mrs. Rosmead smiled upon him, well pleased.  She
did not ask to see the letter.  She only bade him take
care of himself and give her love to Isla, and to assure
her that there was no need to hurry away from Achree.
He felt glad that neither of his sisters had yet appeared.
He left a message for them and went off to the waiting
car, ready for what lay in front of him.

It was not a very pleasant day in the city.  There was
a light fog hanging over it, through which a fine rain
was beginning to filter dismally.  But when they got
away from the river-bed the rain stopped, and, though
the sky remained grey and pensive, it was fair overhead.

No sun shone all the way, and when he came to the
hills Rosmead thought it was an ideal day for a burying--just
typical of the grief which overshadowed a whole
glen.  The sky was grey and very soft, and a mist lay
upon the hills, while the heaviness of unshed tears was
in the soundless air.

About eleven o'clock Rosmead, who had had a splendid
run without mishap or stop, swept by the incomparable
beauty of Loch Lubnaig, through bonnie Strathyre, and
down upon the valley of the Earn.

Long before he reached it he was struck by the signs
of activity on the usually quiet and lonely road.  All
sorts and conditions of vehicles moved towards Glenogle,
containing all sorts and conditions of people.  At the
hotel door there was quite a medley of waiting traps.
Rosmead drew up there and went inside to remove his
motor garb and to put on the decent mourning, safely
stowed at the back of the car.

He looked graver and older in the tall silk hat and
dark overcoat with the black band on the arm, and he
was respectfully recognized by many.

The story of how of their own accord the Americans
had vacated Achree in order that the family might have
it to themselves for such a great occasion had got about
in the glens.  It had filled all who heard it with a sort
of personal gratitude and appreciation that was bound
to have an aftermath.  They did not love the
stranger--especially the American stranger--in these remote
Highland glens, though his money was sometimes necessary
to the comfort of their existence.  They accepted him
as inevitable, like motor-cars, and new railway lines
cutting into their fair hill-sides and ugly viaducts
spanning their wimpling burns--all necessary evils which
must be endured with fortitude.

Driving very slowly towards Achree, Rosmead was
astonished at the increasing number of people both in
vehicles and on foot.  He was unaware that in Scotland
a burying--especially the burying of a great chief--is a
public event, in which every man, woman, and child
of the district takes a personal interest.  Everybody
came as a matter of course to see Mackinnon of Achree
laid to rest, and all were made welcome, though no
invitations, in the ordinary sense, had been sent out.

In some doubt as to whether he should take his car
up to the house, Rosmead addressed himself to a
policeman--a most unusual spectacle in Glenogle--who was
on duty at the gate.

"Mr. Rosmead, sir, I think?" said the man, touching
his hat.

"Yes, my man."

"Then you are to go up, please.  I had my orders
this morning.  They are expecting you at the house."

Rosmead gave the order to drive slowly, and presently
he came within sight of the house where the cortège
stood before the open door.  There were two other cars,
and the Garrion roans were conspicuous at the bend of
the avenue.

Rosmead alighted and walked over to the door where
Diarmid was on the look-out.

"Mr. Rosmead, sir.  I haf a message from Miss Isla
for you, if it pe that she would not see you pefore you
leave."

"Yes, my man."

"She says will you please come pack to the house if
you can spare the time after you haf peen at Balquhidder,
as she would like to speak with you, whatefer."

Rosmead silently nodded.  Had the American boat
sailed that very afternoon it is safe to say that one
passenger at least would have failed to take his berth.

Diarmid, very respectful with a touch of gratitude in
his mien, waited upon Rosmead and finally ushered him
to the library where a small company were already
assembled for the service that was to take place at a
quarter to twelve.

Malcolm, very pale and slightly haggard, came forward
immediately to greet Rosmead, whom he introduced
to his uncle.

"Happy to meet you, sir," said Sir Tom, as his great
hand grasped the American's slender one in a grip of
iron.  "We, as a family, will not readily forget your
kindness at this time to the son and daughter of my
poor brother.  It was a Christian act, sir--a Christian act."

Rosmead asked him not to say more, passing it over
as if ashamed that so much should be made of it.  Then
he stepped back and looked about at the people in the
room.  Some of them he recognized, but Neil Drummond,
sourly resentful of his intimate presence there, unaware,
of course, that he came by Isla's special invitation, did
not suffer his eyes to alight on his face.

Rosmead was impressed by the circumstance that
there were no flowers upon the coffin--only the Union
Jack and the old soldier's sword, to the hilt of which
was tied a bunch of white heather.  All was simple,
severe, and impressive.  The short service was quickly
over.  Then a sudden, weird sound broke upon the
listening ears--the wailing of the pipes, which filled the
soundless air with a melancholy music.

All this time Isla had not appeared, and Rosmead
strained his eyes in vain for a sight of her.  But it was
denied him, and he had not even asked for her welfare.

It was a great burying, the like of which had not been
seen in the glens for many a year.  As the cortège, half
a mile long, slowly defiled through Lochearnhead it was
joined by a score or more of vehicles that waited it there.
And so it was all the way to the Braes of Balquhidder.

Rosmead, who had left his car at Achree and entered
one of the mourning coaches, felt the impressiveness of
the whole scene, and was almost moved to tears when
they turned away from the grave to the sweet haunting
strains of the "Flowers of the Forest".

As the mourners fell away slowly from the grave-side
some one touched his arm.

"I shall be glad if you will drive back to Achree with
me, Mr. Rosmead," said the voice of Sir Thomas Mackinnon.
"I should like to have a little talk with you."

This was noted by the curious, and it was afterwards
said that more attention could not have been paid to
the American if he had been sib to the Mackinnons.
But there was not one who added that the attention was
misplaced.

"A sad affair, isn't it, for those who are left?" said
Sir Thomas as they drove slowly away, "for my niece
especially.  You see, her father was her life-work, so to
speak, and now that it is taken out of her hands she
will feel stranded for a bit."

"Miss Mackinnon is one who will always find something
to occupy her heart and her hands," said Rosmead.

Uncle Tom assented.

"They tell me you have Achree on an option,
Mr. Rosmead," he said--and it was evident that that was
the thing uppermost in his mind.  "I hope that you
like the place, and feel minded to stop on."

"I should like to, but I have not yet had any
conversation about it.  I shall have to see Mr. Mackinnon
to-day, as I leave Scotland on Thursday."

"You leave Scotland?  But I understood that you
were here indefinitely."

"No.  The business which brought me is concluded,
and there is work lying to my hand in America."

"Then, do you leave your ladies here?"

"Yes, for six months.  Our tenancy of Achree does
not expire till the end of October, and nothing, therefore,
need be decided now.  But I think that my mother likes
the place so well that we might take a lease of it--that
is, if Mr. Mackinnon does not wish possession for
himself.  Will the General's death alter nothing?"

"Nothing.  They can't afford to live in Achree--and
that's the plain truth of it, Mr. Rosmead.  In these days
very few of us can afford to live in the place of our
fathers.  Here am I stranded in a London house, like a
bull in a china shop.  I loathe the life, but I haven't
any choice.  A relation of my wife offered the loan of
the house for the season: my girls had to come out, and
we couldn't afford to refuse.  I don't know what's to
become of us now, as our mourning will stop all the
gaiety.  But about the Achree Mackinnons?  It is a
most unfortunate thing that Malcolm resigned his
commission just when he did.  Of course, it was on his
father's account.  The best thing he could do would be
to try and get back to the Army.  I haven't approached
him on the subject--that is, closely.  He seems
uncommonly touchy about it.  So does Isla.  But it stands
to reason and common sense that he can't loaf about
Glenogle."

"No.  I can imagine that would be quite impossible.
But if he does not return to the Army he will probably
seek something else.  There is room in the colonies for
such as he."

"Is there?" inquired Sir Tom with the doubtful air
of a man who would be difficult to convince.  "Well,
they present a problem.  She must come back with me
to her aunt in London.  I don't see what else is to be
done with her.  She can't remain eating her heart out
in that God-forsaken place up at Creagh.  I'll never
believe anything but that the change killed my brother
Donald."

Rosmead recalled the picture of the General's prostrate
figure on the narrow hearthrug at Creagh, the letter
clasped like a vice in the poor dead fingers, and he had
his own thoughts.  Such at least had not been Isla's
opinion, but it was certainly no part of his business to
stir up strife or sow the seeds of suspicion among the
members of the family, who were evidently outside the
real issue of the case.

Sir Tom was very friendly and communicative, talking
to the strange American as if he had been at least an
intimate friend of the family--an attitude which was
largely due to what Isla had said about the vacating of
Achree.

Just a few of the mourners went back to the house
for tea, and perhaps to hear whether there was a will.
But, though Cattanach was present, there was no mention
of a will, and it was speedily whispered about that the
General had left none.  It was quite well known that
for five years at least he had not been capable of
transacting business, and, as he had had practically no
money to dispose of, and the estate had to pass in entail
to his only son, a will would have been superfluous.

But it was of Isla that most of them were thinking,
and when they watched the slender, black-robed figure
so quietly dispensing tea in the drawing-room, assisted
by Kitty Drummond, they wondered what her future was
to be.

Neil Drummond was there also, and had taken up his
position close to the tea-table, with the result that
Rosmead could not get near for a private word.

But his mind was made up that he would not leave
Achree until he had seen Isla by herself to bid her good-bye.

He was in no haste--he never was in any of the affairs
of life--having proved that most things come to the man
who bides his time.  But perhaps just there he made
one mistake, arising from ignorance of the quick Celtic
temperament, which cannot brook slowness or delay.

Isla's eyes met his just once across the room, and
there was quite clearly a message for him in the look.
It bade him wait.

When all the tea had been served, and she had
answered as composedly as she could the remarks made
to her by Neil, she rose and quite deliberately walked
across the room to the place where Rosmead stood
talking to her Uncle Tom.

"You have a long way to go back to Glasgow, Mr. Rosmead.
Are you in haste to leave us?"

"Not in haste to leave you, but I must be going soon.
Can I speak with you for a few minutes?"

"Yes, it is why I have come.  Will you come down
to the library?" she said.

And Neil Drummond, with eyes that had something
of the baleful glow of the watch-fires in them, had the
chagrin of beholding them leave the room together, as if
it were quite a matter of course.

"Don t you think that American bounder has presumed
a lot to-day, Malcolm?" he said gruffly to Mackinnon,
who happened to pass near him at the moment.

Malcolm looked the surprise he felt.

"I don't think so, Neil.  He has been most awfully
kind, don't you know?  I dare say Isla has some message
for his mother about when they can come back to the
house."

Neil tried to accept this perfectly feasible explanation,
but if he had seen the two talking earnestly together at
the library window his mind would undoubtedly have
been most seriously disturbed.

"It was so very kind of you to come to-day and take
all the trouble for us," said Isla, as the door closed upon
them.  "Do you still intend to sail away on Thursday?"

"On Friday.  My boat sails from Liverpool," he corrected
gently.  "I go to London on Thursday."

"And when will you come back?"

"Not before Christmas, I am afraid.  I've had more
than six months' furlough already, you see, and I haven't
the ghost of an excuse for stopping on this side any
longer."

"Except your mother.  You will not like leaving her,
I am sure."

"I don't.  But she is accustomed to my journeyings
to and fro in the earth and up and down in it.  I shall
be very happy, thinking of her here in this house.  She
has never felt so much at home since she left Virginia.
I have had a talk with your brother, and it is practically
settled that we take a two years' lease of Achree.  I was
fortunate in finding Cattanach here to-day also, and so
the thing can be put on a proper basis without delay."

"Yes," said Isla, and her tone had a singularly spiritless
note in it.

He looked steadily into her face, wondering just how
much he might say, or whether he might say anything
at all.  But she was not looking at him.  She was thinking
how strange it would be to realize that this man had
gone away clean out of the Glen, and that soon the ocean
would roll between him and her.  She had never felt so
in her life about any human being outside of her family
circle, and she was disturbed.

"I hope that you will not think I presume if I ask
what is going to become of you in the immediate future,"
said Rosmead presently.  "Will you go back to London
with your uncle, as he seems to expect?"

"No, I shall simply go back to Creagh," she answered
steadily.

Rosmead was silent for a moment, trying to picture
the life she would lead there, alone and without occupation,
in the company of her brother from whom her heart
was estranged.

"To Creagh?  It seems impossible!  I can't bear to
think of you there.  It is unthinkable!"

"Oh, no--nothing is unthinkable, or even impossible.
People can do anything in this world--anything," she
answered.  "I have proved it."

"Then, shall I find you at Creagh when I come back?"
he asked with an odd persistence, his eyes cleaving to
her face.

A tremor ran over it, and had he but known it the
opportunity was his.  Her heart turned--nay, cried out
to him.  Had he spoken the word then she would have
gone away with him without a question or a doubt.

But he blundered on, longing for her mightily, yet
wholly afraid, believing that he dared not begin to woo
her until he had given her heart time to recover from its
present shock.

Some one tapped lightly at the door.

"It is au revoir, then, not good-bye," he said with an
effort, and held out his hand.

She gave hers to his warm, kindly clasp, and her eyes,
over which the veil had already fallen, uplifted
themselves to his.

"I hope it is, but six months is a long time in life.
So many things can happen.  I hope you will have a safe
journey and a successful issue to all your affairs,
and--and that the difficulties you spoke of will all be swept
from your path."

"Some of them are big enough.  But when I come
back I will address myself to the biggest undertaking of
my life, and the dearest."

The door was opened, and Malcolm's voice announced
that the motor was waiting outside.

Rosmead raised her hand to his lips and turned away,
scarcely master of himself.

Isla spoke no more.  But, for once in his life, Peter
Rosmead had erred on the side of caution.  The
incomparable chance had been his, and he had passed it by.

When the door had closed upon them Isla leaned her
head against the black oak of the window shutters, and
a little sobbing breath that was almost a cry, broke from
her lips.

Her last prop had gone, but none knew--least of all
the man whose one desire on earth was to take her to his
heart.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`FAMILY COUNSELS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XIV


.. class:: center medium

   FAMILY COUNSELS

.. vspace:: 2

"And now," said Sir Tom with a large and partially
reproachful cheerfulness, "we had better address ourselves
to the future of you two children and try to find out just
where we are."

He was neither unfeeling nor unsympathetic, but his
opinion was that grief and the lassitude which treads
close upon it should in due season have an end.  The
affairs of life cannot stand still, even when death
intervenes.  They can only be held in abeyance for a little
space.

Now that Mackinnon, full of years and honour and
followed by the lamentations and the love of all his
people, rich and poor, had been carried to his last rest,
he must become a tender memory to those who were left.

They had dined together quite alone, and now they sat
in the library, where pipe and tobacco and cigars were
on the table, as yet, however, untouched.

Sir Tom was getting his pipe ready a trifle absently,
his eyes fixed on his niece's face.  He was troubled about
her.  Her white face and her deep, grief-haunted eyes,
which no man could fathom, disconcerted and disturbed
him.  He loved her dearly, but he did not always
understand her.  Malcolm's apparently simpler nature was
better within his grasp and ken.

It was assuredly Malcolm's place, as the head of the
house, to make some suggestion or statement, but silence
lay upon him heavily, and he seemed ill at ease.

"Has neither of you anything to say?  I must be
going back to London to-morrow, if I have to go alone.
I'll wait till Wednesday, if I am to take Isla.  What do
you say, my dear?"

Isla, a slim, black figure with white, nervous hands
interlaced upon her lap, lifted her eyes to his face from
where she sat at the other side of the fireplace.

"No, thank you, Uncle Tom, I will not go to London
just now."

"But, my dear, your aunt will scold me no end if I
don't bring you.  Her last words were that I was to
bring you back with me.  If she had been well enough
nothing would have kept her from Achree just now--and
you know it.  But I left her in bed, and the doctor
forbade the journey.  It is nothing serious, only requiring
a little care.  Fact is, these monkeys have been running
her off her feet lately.  Three or four o'clock every
morning before she got to her bed after their dancing
and nonsense.  The life of a chaperon in the London
season is not a happy one."

"Give Aunt Jean my love, and tell her I can't come
just now.  Later, perhaps----"

"Later!  Heaven only knows where we may be later.
Your aunt talks of some seaside place on the Brittany or
Normandy coast--some God-forsaken hole, where a man
can't get a decent meal of meat.  Gad, what it is to be
hard-up!  Well, and if you won't come to us may I ask
without impertinence where you do propose to go?"

"Back to the Lodge at Creagh for a few days at least."

"And after the few days--eh, what?" asked Sir Tom,
leaning forward a little, with serious concern in his big,
kindly, rather innocent blue eyes.

She made no answer, though Malcolm from where he
stood leaning against the fireplace seemed to wait a little
eagerly for what she might say.

"Speak to her, Malcolm!  She has aye been a high-handed
miss, doing that which seemed right in her own
eyes.  You are the head of the house now.  Can't you
put your foot down and bid her come with me to your
aunt and your cousins?  It's where she ought to be in
these days, among a lot of kindly, busy women-folk."

"It's what I think, Uncle Tom," said Malcolm in a low
voice.  "But, as you say, nobody can dictate to Isla.
She will go her own way."

"Then, may I ask what you propose to do?" asked
Uncle Tom, suddenly directing his attention to his
nephew.  "Of course, for a few days or weeks there will
be things to see to.  But, with Cattanach at your back,
they should not take very long to wind up.  And with
the American folk coming back to Achree there's nothing
for you to do here.  I don't suppose you'll be long
content, hanging about the Lodge and the Moor of Creagh."

Malcolm had no answer for a moment, and the silence
seemed to grow.

"Why can't you speak--one of you?" asked Uncle
Tom a trifle testily.  "I like folks to show some
common-sense, and you have both seen this coming for long
enough.  It's not to be thought that you haven't had
plans for the future."

"I haven't any plans," Malcolm admitted.

This answer incensed the old man extremely.  He
looked at the strong, well-knit figure of his nephew in
the full prime and strength of his young manhood with
critical displeasure.

"Then the sooner you get some, my man, the better it
will be for you.  It is a thousand pities that you resigned
your commission when you did, and since it is somebody
to make a proposition that you seem to need, mine is
that you apply to the proper authorities and get back to
the army as soon as possible.  It's undoubtedly the very
best thing you can do."

The silence deepened.  It was broken by the falling of
a glowing log from the bars to the hearth, and, under
pretence of restoring it to the grate, Isla moved and bent
towards it.

"I never approved of what you did," went on Sir Tom,
"and if anybody's advice had been asked it would never
have been permitted.  I don't like back-draughts, but I
can't help saying now, as we're discussing family business,
that I'm sure that your father would have been the very
last man to have sanctioned your sending in your papers--that
is to say, if he'd been in his full mind and faculties.
And I think that the best tribute of respect you can show
to his memory is to get back to the army as soon as
possible and try to follow in the steps of the finest fellow
and the bravest soldier that ever earned a sword."

It was a long speech for Sir Tom to make, and at the
end he cleared his throat and dashed something from
his eyes.  He was glad to have got this off his chest--as
he might have expressed it.  It had lain heavily there
for some time; in fact, ever since he had been able to
grasp the full significance of his nephew's action.  To
him it seemed disastrous, unnecessary, and foolish in
the extreme.  For if a man cannot afford to live on his
estate, or if it does not offer him sufficient occupation,
surely it were infinitely better for him to take up some
honourable calling in which he would have a chance to
rise and to distinguish himself.

The Mackinnons, at least the handful that was left,
had all been proud of the gallant old General, and, now
that it was open to his son to carry on the fine traditions
of the race, it seemed incredible and discreditable that
he should not be willing and eager to do it.

"I can't do that, Uncle Tom," said Malcolm, shifting
uneasily from one foot to another.  "I've left the army
for good."

"But that's no reason why you shouldn't go back.  If
representations to the proper quarter were made, I can't
see any insuperable obstacles in the way.  Can you, Isla?"

She made no answer, and he went on.

"I'll do what I can.  I'll go to the Commander-in-Chief
myself, if you're such a baby over it, Malcolm, and
lay the whole facts of the case before him.  No reasonable
man would refuse to make an open door somewhere
for you, and I don't believe he would--eh, Malcolm?"

"I can't go back, Uncle Tom.  Please, say no more
about it."

"I'd like to hear a word from Isla on the subject,"
said Uncle Tom.  "I can't make you out, lassie.  I
have never thought of you as a person without opinions.
You have an opinion about this, of course, and a pretty
strong one, I could take my affidavit.  Let us hear it.
Now's the time, for if you won't travel with me to London,
I must go south to-morrow."

"It is a matter for Malcolm entirely, Uncle Tom," she
said, rising with a sudden sweep to her feet.  "Do you
mind if I say good-night?  I am very tired, and last
night I had no sleep.  I'll be up bright and early for
you to-morrow morning, though, of course, it will only be
the two o'clock train you want to catch at Stirling.  It
will set you down in London before eleven."

"That will do.  You're in a hurry, however--and my
last night, too!  But certainly you look tired, lass," said
the old man, and he kissed her with a very real tenderness.

She nodded to Malcolm, said good-night briefly, and
went to the door, which her uncle opened for her.

When he had closed it he turned full face to Malcolm.

"There's something the matter with the bairn,
Malcolm.  What is there between her and you?  Have
you quarrelled about anything?"

"Nothing special--only we don't hit it off, Uncle
Tom," said Malcolm, turning round with evident relief
and reaching for the cigars.

"Then the sooner you begin to hit it off the better,"
said Sir Tom severely.  "It's not decent to behave as
you are doing.  How do you propose to live together
in the Lodge of Creagh, even for a little while, if you
feel like that?"

"Give it up!" said Malcolm.

And it was as if his whole body and spirit had relaxed
now that some strain was removed.

"There was a dryness between us about the letting of
Achree," resumed Malcolm, seeing that the old man
was still staring intently at him, as if waiting to be
enlightened.  "Of course, I didn't like it.  After all, it
was my business, wasn't it, Uncle Tom?  And Isla took
it all upon herself.  See how it has complicated things
just now!"

"Yes, but the American money is very good," said
Uncle Tom drily.  "Barras would be a howling
wilderness without it."

"I daresay that Isla and I would have pulled through
without it, and I could have occupied myself in looking
after the place.  It wants a lot of pulling together,
Uncle Tom.  Everything is slack, and the tenants don't
pay what they might--not one of them."

"You can't take the breeks off a Hielandman, lad,"
was the dry response.  "But it's about Isla I'm chiefly
concerned.  You can very well fend for yourself.  You'll
have to make proper provision for her, Malcolm.  Whoever
suffers, she must have enough to live upon.  She
isn't one who requires much, but providing for her must
be your first duty.  I don't doubt that you will do it."

"I'll do the fair thing, of course.  We'll have to have
a talk, I suppose.  I do wish she would go with you to
London, if it were only for a few days.  I could come
to fetch her later.  It would clear the air."

"She won't--you can see that in the eyes of her.
There's something back of it all--God knows what--and
I suppose you'll have to fight it out your two selves.
But you'll be very gentle with her, Malcolm, for to-night
she looks the most forlorn creature on the face of God's
earth."

He blew his nose as he said this, and he begged
Malcolm to bring him a peg of whisky.  They waxed
more confidential over their drink, of which, however,
Malcolm partook very abstemiously.  Drink had never
been his besetting sin.

About eleven Sir Tom went off to bed, a little reassured
concerning the affairs of the Achree Mackinnons
and having no doubt whatever but that Malcolm would
do his duty.

Malcolm certainly at this moment wished to do it, if
only he knew how.  He didn't want to leave Glenogle,
still less did he want to live under one roof with his
sister.  If she refused to leave the Glen he would have
no alternative but to go, and what would be the upshot
of it all?

Near to midnight he was still pondering this mighty
and seemingly insoluble problem when the library door
was silently pushed open and Isla in a white
dressing-gown, with her long hair tied lightly back and
hanging loosely on her shoulders, came in.  Her face
looked ghastly pale against the whiteness of her wrap,
and her eyes were shining like stars.

"I heard Uncle Tom go up to bed, Malcolm, and I
thought I'd better come down."

"The fire has gone low," he said, as he sprang up to
vacate the most comfortable chair.  "Here's a log.
We'll get a blaze in a minute.  Sit down here."

She sat down on the extreme edge of the chair and
watched him a little wistfully while he attended to the fire.

"I thought, perhaps, we had better have a little talk
about what we are going to do," she said a trifle unsteadily.
"There is nothing but Creagh.  The question is--Can
it hold us both?"

"Don't speak like that, Isla," he said almost
pleadingly.  "But really Uncle Tom's plan is the best,
considering all things.  Couldn't you make up your mind
even yet to go to London with him, if it were only for a
few days?"

Isla shook her head.

"I couldn't, Malcolm.  Aunt Jean and the girls would
drive me crazy just now.  Don't even mention it again.
I--I just want to ask you whether it wouldn't be better
to tell Uncle Tom the truth about how you left the army
before he goes to-morrow?  You know how impulsive he
is.  He will think nothing of going straight to the War
Office or to the Commander-in-Chief, if he can find him,
the moment he gets back to London."

Malcolm's face fell.

"By Jove, so he might!  I never thought of that.
But, hang it all, Isla, I can't tell him."

"Let me do it, then.  Don't you see anything would
be better in the circumstances than that he should make
a fuss?  It would make you look such a fool, and it
would certainly result in newspaper paragraphs which,
through the great kindness of Colonel Martindale, have
never appeared."

"I'll see in the morning.  I'll be driving him to the
station.  Anyhow, I'll impress on him that the matter
must on no account be opened up again--that nothing
would induce me to go back to the army," said Malcolm,
whose policy all through life had ever been to find the
easiest way out.

Isla dropped the subject.  For the first time since her
father's death she had schooled herself to try to speak
of it naturally.

"As you let Achree to the Rosmeads for the longer
term, what are you going to do?  It's impossible that
you can live at Creagh for an indefinite time and
without an object."

"I want a little while in which to look round, Isla.
I must have at least six months to inquire into things.
I'm going up to Glasgow on Monday to go over everything
with Cattanach.  I must see whether the profits
of the place cannot be increased in some directions.
I can be busy enough for the next six months at least
in getting the whole thing into shape.  After that I
must try to get a berth of some kind.  Rosmead was
recommending the Argentine.  By the time he comes
back I shall be in a position to go thoroughly into the
prospects there."

"And in the meantime, then, you will live at Creagh?"

"I thought of doing so.  I am sorry for your sake
that it isn't Achree.  But I had no hand in that.  You
shut yourself out, so to speak."

She leaned her elbow on her knee, dropped her chin,
which had become sadly sharpened of late, on her hand,
and looked across the space of the fireplace at him with
the same wistful expression in her eyes.

"Malcolm, you'll try and pay off that money?  When
father was able to understand things it worried him
most frightfully whenever he thought about the
mortgage.  For his sake, promise me that you will try to
pay it off."

"Why, of course I will--the whole of the Rosmead
money will go to that," he answered lightly.  "It won't
take much to keep me at Creagh--or both of us, for the
matter of that.  But, of course, a bachelor establishment
could be run more cheaply."

"There couldn't be anything much cheaper than
Creagh with Margaret Maclaren and Diarmid to do the
work," said Isla drily.  "But I won't remain long there
to be a burden on you, Malcolm.  I must go out and
find something to do for myself."

"Oh, nonsense," he said loftily.  "The only condition
on which I should let you leave Creagh would be that
you go either to Barras or abroad with them.  So don't
let us talk any more about that.  And, really, Isla, if
only you'll be a bit reasonable and not too hard on a
fellow, we might have a fairly good time even at Creagh.
The Rosmeads are more than inclined to be kind, and
there isn't any reason why we shouldn't avail ourselves
of what they offer.  Then, of course, there are the
Drummonds.  What ails Neil at Rosmead?  He was
positively savage about him this afternoon when you
went out of the drawing-room with him."

Isla did not smile.

"Neil is rather silly about some things," she answered,
and there was a vague regret in her eyes.

She did not forget that, in a moment of keen loneliness
and desperation, she had told Neil Drummond the
truth about Malcolm's home-coming, and it stood to
reason that Neil would not forget it either.

Her one desire was that that shameful truth should
never come to the ears of the Rosmeads.  She thought
of them in the plural number, but it was Rosmead
himself she meant.  She already knew that his standard was
very high, and that he might harshly judge a man like
Malcolm if he knew him as he really was.

Isla sat very still, looking rather intently at the open,
ruddy face with the smiling eyes and the weak, mobile
mouth, and she wondered whether there was any
ultimate hope of his complete redemption.  He had
evidently been able to forget or to put behind him entirely
the horror and the tragedy of that frightful day at
Creagh and the word with which her accusing voice had
smitten his ears.  His volatile nature took things so
easily and lightly that, in his estimation, practically
nothing but the immediate moment mattered.

Well perhaps, after all, she told herself, his policy was
best.  She had borne the burden and heat of the day,
had lain awake at nights, pondering the problem of
existence, had worn herself to a shadow for the honour of
Achree and of the name she bore, and where was she left?

Stranded, she told herself, and practically without a
friend.  She had proved to the hilt the truism that the
world has neither time nor room for the long face or the
tale of woe, and that he who smiles, even if his heart be
shallow or false, will win through at least cost--ay, and
will grasp most of the good things of life as he floats
airily by.

Isla was fast becoming cynical and inclined to accept
the creed of the fatalist who says "What is to be will be".

"Well, then, if Uncle Tom leaves to-morrow," she
said as she rose to her feet, "we had better go back to
Creagh on Wednesday.  I'd rather be gone before the
Rosmeads come back, and I said Thursday to him."

"Oh, do be sociable, Isla!  It would only be the kind
thing to stop to welcome them decently and thank them
for what they've done.  It's the very least thing we can
do, if you ask me."

Isla, whom the Rosmeads had surprised out of her
usual reserve, in the first overwhelming horror of her
grief, felt inclined to creep back into her shell again,
but she saw the reasonableness of her brother's words.

"Well, then, I must leave it to you to arrange, I
suppose.  I mustn't forget that you are the head of the
house.  I'll be ready to go up to Creagh when you like,
and as long as I remain there I'll try to make you
comfortable and happy."

She said good-night to him immediately and glided
away.  But long after her departure Malcolm sat
pondering on the future, by no means elated at the prospect
of a *tête-à-tête* existence with the sister who knew so
much.  He would have been a happier and a more
easy-minded man had Isla been getting ready to accompany
her Uncle Tom to London.





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.. _`SETTLING DOWN`:

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   CHAPTER XV


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   SETTLING DOWN

.. vspace:: 2

Having, in pursuance of a partially concerted plan of
existence, thus held out the olive branch to her brother,
Isla found the rest easy.

Next morning the breakfast-table was unclouded, and
Sir Tom departed to London, more comfortable in his
mind about his kinsfolk than at any moment since he
had arrived in the Glen.

"I'm glad that you have come to some sort of understanding
with your brother, my dear," he said, as Isla
helped him on with his big travelling-coat in the hall,
while Rosmead's horses were waiting at the door.  "Just
one thing more.  Malcolm can't loaf about here longer
than is necessary.  Your duty now, having been so
faithfully ended where your dear father is concerned, is to
put a bit of your own smeddum into your brother.  What
I'd like--what we'd all like--is to get him back to his
regiment.  It's the only honourable way out of a big
difficulty."

Isla busied herself with smoothing the creases in the
back of the coat and made no answer at all.

"What about his Colonel--Martindale, isn't it?  Your
aunt is intimate with his sister, Lady Chester.  We can
get at him in that way, though I still think that a straight
application from Malcolm couldn't possibly fail of its
purpose.  Eh--what?"

"Don't do anything, Uncle Tom," pleaded Isla, "please,
don't.  There are reasons--other reasons--why it would
be better not, and Malcolm is quite determined.  Anyone
can see that."

"Well, well.  It doesn't seem the right thing, but I
don't want to be officious, and you at least have shown
yourself capable of managing your own affairs up to now.
Take Malcolm in hand now.  The best of us need the
mothering that a good woman can give.  But I hope, my
dear, that my next visit to Achree will be a happier
one--namely, to give you away perhaps to some gallant
bridegroom.  Eh--what?"

He smiled his big, enveloping smile as he lifted her
chin in his hand and kissed her face.

"That isn't likely to happen.  But thank you all the
same, dear Uncle Tom," said Isla gratefully.

"And, if we really are to be buried in the sand dunes
over there and have to subsist on anæmic omelettes and
the everlasting poulet roti, mind you come to us.  And
Barras in the winter is a very good place.  It had a
Riviera temperature up to March this year.  In
November, thank God, we'll make tracks for Barras again."

Again Isla thanked him, and, Malcolm appearing on
the scene, she said no more.  But she was sensible of
relief as she saw them drive away.  So long as Uncle
Tom remained at Achree anything might happen.  His
big, kindly, blundering feet would stray into all sorts of
forbidden paths.

She spent the morning in the house, going slowly and
with a sort of lingering tenderness over every bit of it.
The smart servants of the Rosmeads had managed to
efface themselves in a very wonderful way, and the
magnificent simplicity of the funeral of Mackinnon had left
its deep impression on their minds.

Isla thanked each one of them individually in that
way of hers that could draw out all that was best in a
human being.  She offered nothing, because she had
naught to give, and would not mock them with pretence.
Malcolm, less delicately conscientious, scattered silver
among them--the silver that had come out of Isla's hoard
in the bureau at Creagh.

Malcolm returned to announce that he had engaged
Jamie Forbes to come up from the hotel to drive them to
Creagh at three o'clock of the afternoon.

"I want to go to Darrach first, Malcolm, to see Elspeth
Maclure.  Everything is ready to lift, and I shall get up
by tea-time."

"But how will you get up?"

"Walk, of course--that is nothing."

"But I can make Jamie wait till you are ready.  He
can stop here till four, by which time surely you could
be done with that wind-bag, Elspeth Maclure."

"No, I shall stop to tea with her and come when I'm
ready, Malcolm.  I've neglected her of late, and I have
lots of things to tell her."

Malcolm gave his shoulders a shrug.

"I've never understood your fondness for Elspeth
Maclure, Isla.  Her tongue is a yard long and none too
kindly.  She was as nearly as possible impertinent to me
one day when I stopped at Darrach."

Isla looked unbelieving and wholly unconvinced.

"I can't conceive of Elspeth being impertinent.  You
must have said something to offend her."

"I gave her the truth about Donald and the croft, if
you like.  Darrach is a bit of the best land on Achree,
and if it were joined to Tully and let to a responsible and
capable man it would bring in a good rent.  Maclure's
lazy, and greedy besides.  I'd like to chuck him from
Darrach, and I mean to tell Cattanach that when I go up
to Glasgow to-morrow."

Isla said nothing, though she thought much.  The
Maclures had been in Darrach in direct descent for four
generations, and Donald naturally regarded the place as
his own.  To turn him out and join up the crofts into
bigger holdings would revolutionize the whole life of the
glens and take the bread out of many mouths.

But this was not the time to argue that question.
Above all things, she must try to live at peace with
Malcolm, and find some quiet, persuasive method of
getting him to let well alone.

Isla was a curious mixture.  Her temperament was
active, her judgment quick and shrewd, but she was
bound by the immemorial traditions of her race and
ought to have been born in feudal times.  She looked
upon all the tenants of Achree as the children of the
estate, having as good a right to the land as the
Mackinnons themselves.  The fact that they paid small, in
some cases inadequate, rents for their holdings, thereby
keeping the coffers of Achree sadly empty, altered
nothing.  She would rather have starved herself--and
that cheerfully--than ask them for more.  Besides, she
knew the hunger of the land, the late and scanty
harvests, the long winters, and the difficulty of wresting
a living from the bare hill-sides and the swampy breadths
that lay to the Loch-side.

She knew it to the uttermost.  She had seen the
blackened stocks sodden with November rains and
touched with December snows to such an extent that
the corn was hardly worth the trouble of carrying to the
barn.  She had felt the dank smell of the potatoes rotting
with disease in the furrows when the autumn was wet,
and she knew the poverty of the homes where she was
ever a welcome, and never an intruding, guest.

Malcolm knew none of these things.  He had no
practical acquaintance with the long fight between man
and nature in these high latitudes, and he had exaggerated
ideas of the profits of farming.  Already he was full
of ill-considered and half-digested plans for the entire
regeneration of Achree.  Now that all was over, he was
making all the haste he could to let bygones be bygones.
He was going to begin afresh a new life, which, he
promised himself, might be as interesting and far less
strenuous than the old.

His father's death had altered the whole situation, and,
from his point of view, had occurred at the psychological
moment.  Now, as Laird of Achree and head of his clan,
he occupied a very different niche in the scheme of
things.

Isla left Achree for the second time without any bitter
pang.  Nay, it pleased and comforted her to think that
Peter Rosmead and his folk had it for a home.  That
thought somehow seemed to bring him nearer to her.
In the months to come it would lessen the breadth and
depth of that vast dividing sea.  Yet how she would
have been startled had her own thoughts been mirrored
before her, who had never before taken such interest
in a man!

She thought of him as she walked down the dry, crisp
road to Darrach, and she wondered where he would be
at that moment and whether the telegram she had
dispatched to them at the St. Enoch's Hotel, announcing
their departure to Creagh, would bring him back to
Glenogle before he finally set out on his long journey.
She did not admit even to herself her secret hope that
he would, but it was of him she thought as she
approached Elspeth's hospitable gate, of his deep and
encompassing tenderness, his continuous thought for her,
his earnest eyes looking into hers and assuring her of
his devotion to her cause.

She lingered on these thoughts, fully conscious of
their comforting sweetness and wholly unaware that
they heralded the dawn of love.

She found Elspeth working at her baking board with
a downcast face.  The baby was asleep in the box-bed
by the side of the fire-place, and the rest of the children
were at school, even little Colin, aged three and a half,
having been admitted to the infant room.

"There you are at last, Miss Isla--a sicht for sair een.
I said to Donald this morning that if it should be that
you didna come the day, then I must go and seek for ye
either at Achree or at Creagh.  Where should I have
found you?"

"We are leaving Achree to-day, and it is at Creagh
that you will find me, Elspeth," said Isla as she took the
chair that Elspeth set for her by the well-scrubbed table.

"I've come for my tea, Elspeth, and these scones
smell as they ought.  If the butter is newly churned,
too, then I am in luck, and I will forget all about the
rich meats that the American cook has been setting
before us at Achree."

"But it wass the right thing for you to be there, Miss
Isla, and it was fery, fery good of the folk.  From end to
end of the Glen you'll hear nothing but praise of them
for it."

"It was good," said Isla with quiet conviction.

"And they'll be stoppin' on, at least for a while, at
Achree, I hope?"

"Yes, they will be stopping on indefinitely at Achree."

"The little one--her they call Miss Sadie--comes here
a lot, Miss Isla, and she hass the pairns quite crazy about
her.  The other day--it wass the day before the Laird
died--she wass here drilling them in the yard.  It was
the funniest thing you ever saw in your life--and her so
sweet and winsome wi' them!  There be some that are
all for the other one, but she seems high and proud-like
and hass little to say to the folk."

"She has had a lot of trouble, Elspeth.  Yes--I would
like my tea now, and you to sit down and drink it with me."

"Yes, Miss Isla.  And so you're to be at Creagh, and
Mr. Malcolm--I beg hiss pardon, the Laird--is to pe
there, too, and to pe fery busy in all the glens."

The dry note in Elspeth's voice did not escape Isla's ear.

"He iss not going back to the army, Donald says, but
means to live on the place.  And, oh, it will nefer pe the
same again!  He wass here wan day, and he said a lot
of things that I'm not mindin' to say over again to you.
But iss it true that he will take away most of the crofts
and make big farms and let them to men from the west
country and the Lowlands that haf money in their
pockets and will pey what we canna?"

"My brother talks a good deal, but when he has been
at home a little longer and gets to understand things
better he will change his mind about a lot of them,"
said Isla, trying to comfort Elspeth.

"Look you, Miss Isla, if it should come that my man
had to leave Darrach he will nefer lift up hiss head
again.  He was born in that bed, and his faither and
his grandfaither pefore him, and he wants to dee in it,
as they did.  That is how Donald is feelin' about the
place, Miss Isla, and it iss what the Laird will nefer
understand.  But I said that you would understand and
would speak for us."

Isla was silent, for she could find no words.

"And Donald bein' a silent, quate man, things eat
intil him, and he will pe wanderin' for efer and efer by
hisself, thinkin' on nothing else.  But how to pey more
rent for the place is peyond him and me baith.  We
haf nefer a penny over--we just manage to live and to
pey oor way.  Mr. Malcolm, he talked a lot about breeding
stock and such like, but where iss the money to come
from to buy the stock at the beginnin'?  They haf to be
calves and lambs afore they grow to be bullocks and
sheep.  And that's how it iss wi' us here at Darrach, and
we are feart for the day that will come."

She set the cups down on the table with a kind of
mournful clatter and brought out the plate of oatcakes
and the delicious scones and the cheese kebbuck and
then the firm golden butter-pat from the little dairy.

"You will never leave Darrach while I live and can
prevent it, Elspeth," said Isla.

And she meant what she said.  As she walked up the
road again and plunged into the bridle path that would
bring her by the short cut to the Moor of Creagh she
foresaw that her work was by no means done nor yet
the fight ended.  For if these were the lines Malcolm
intended to pursue with Glenogle folks, then how could
she live at peace with him?  There was bound to be
strife in the Lodge of Creagh.

She felt a little glow of home-like feeling when the
small, ugly, square house, with its smoke curling up,
straight and lazy, to the summer sky, came within range
of her vision.

Margaret Maclaren, with temper considerably ruffled
by certain happenings that day, was busy clearing up
what she called a "clamjamphrey" in one of the upper
rooms when she saw her mistress coming slantwise across
the Moor.  It was now five o'clock, and she immediately
ran down to see whether the kettle was boiling, in case
Miss Isla wanted tea.

Margaret had not been down the Glen at all during
these last days and had not so much as seen the funeral
of the Laird--in itself a serious omission.  Then that
day she had had a quarrel with Diarmid anent certain
household arrangements which they had not been able
to adjust to her satisfaction and which were waiting the
judgment of Miss Isla.

Diarmid, a little puffed up perhaps with the attention
he had received at Achree and the deference the
American servants had paid him, had been a little
high-handed with Margaret on his return.  Hence the
explosion on her part.

The truth was that both were too strong-minded and
quick tempered, and that both wished to assert their
authority, and it was hopeless to think that they would
ever get on together at Achree, where most of the
servants had been younger than Diarmid, who had
lorded it over them all.

But Margaret held him again, as she expressed it, and
they had been almost continuously at loggerheads since
he had come to Creagh.

When Margaret saw him waiting at the door to receive
his mistress she cast her head in the air and went by
him with a small snort that spoke volumes.  Isla just
saw her disappear through the little doorway at the end
of the short passage, and, in answer to Diarmid's anxious
query whether she wanted any tea, she simply said
"No," and asked where her brother was.  But Diarmid
could not tell her more than the brief fact that he had
gone out after tea without saying where he was going.

Isla, with an odd sense of strangeness and detachment
from the interior of the house, climbed the stairs and,
as she reached the door of her own room, she heard a
heavier foot behind her and beheld Margaret, who was
of a substantial build, puffing on the uppermost steps of
the stairs.

"Well, Margaret?" she said kindly.  "We've come
back you see, and have to begin again."

"Yes.  Miss Isla.  Please, can I speak to you for a
minute or so?  There's things in this house that must
be sorted."

"Sorted" was a great word with Margaret.  She
sorted everything from the fire to the hens that she
chased out of the little garden or the keeper's boys whom
she hounded back to the Moor.  Her temper was quick
and her tongue not very reserved, but her heart was of
gold towards the house she served.

"Why, surely.  Come into my room.  What's the
matter with you?  You look angry."

"I hope it's a righteous anger, Miss Isla.  All I want
to ken iss--What are the duties of Diarmid an' what are
mine in this hoose?"

"Dear me, Margaret, what a fuss!  Whatever do you
mean?  Your duties are just what they have always
been.  I've never been asked the question before.  How
has it arisen now?"

"It's that Diarmid.  He thinks himsel' as fine as the
Laird himsel'.  Just come here a minute, Miss Isla, will
you?"

Isla followed her wonderingly across the narrow
landing to the door of the room in which her father had
slept in his lifetime.  It was the best room in the
house, and Margaret, in no doubt that the new Laird
would occupy it on his return, had swept and garnished
it.  But he had refused point-blank, and all his things
lay scattered now upon the floor and on the bed, and
the drawers were open, giving the room a most untidy
aspect.

"Here haf I toiled an' slaved to get the place ready,
an' then Maister Malcolm, he will not sleep in it, he
says."

"Well, Mr. Malcolm must please himself, Margaret,"
said Isla rather quickly.  "It does not in the least
concern you."

"I'm not sayin' that it does.  But what I do want to
know, Miss Isla, iss if I'm to wait on him as well as to
do the cookin' an' look after the whole house.  I brought
down all Maister Malcolm's things from the attic an'
put them in the drawers; an' all the General's things
are in the big kists up the stairs.  Then, when Maister
Malcolm came in he fell into the most fearful rage an'
swore like anything an' turned the drawers out on the
floor an' roared to me to put them all back up the stairs
again.  An' what I want to know iss whether it iss my
duty or Diarmid's to do that.  I haf nefer been in a
hoose where the man-servant did not wait upon the
master; forby, I haf not time, and, unless you pid me,
I will not lift the things up the stairs again.  It is
Diarmid that should pe doin' it."

"Surely Diarmid will do it.  Where is he?  Tell him
to come up."

"In a minute, Miss Isla.  But what I do want to
know iss how it iss to be in Creagh now?  For if Diarmid
iss to stop, then I canna.  I'm not fit to stand his impidence."

The idea of Diarmid's impudence so tickled Isla that
she burst out laughing, which did not please Margaret.

"If it's me you're laughin' at, Miss Isla," she began in
a highly-offended tone----

Then Isla turned about on her with a quick glance
of disapproval.

"Is that a way, Margaret Maclaren, to speak to me this
day of all days?  If you and Diarmid cannot live
peaceably together, then you had better both go.  You are a
silly woman.  What does it matter who puts away
Mr. Malcolm's things?  Go away to your kitchen, and I'll
do it myself.  You ought to be ashamed of yourself at
your age, behaving like a great baby."

Margaret did not take the rebuke in very good part.
Old and faithful, she was likewise privileged; and
undoubtedly all the Mackinnon servants had been more
or less spoiled.

"It's the swearin', Miss Isla.  I haf not been used to
it, an' I will not stand it--not even from Maister
Malcolm, an' Diarmid laughin' in the back, like, when
I wass ordered to put away the things.  Please to tell
me who iss to wait on the Laird--iss it to be me or iss
it to be Diarmid?"

"And, supposing it should be you, eh, Margaret?"
asked Isla, and the smile did not leave her lips.  "Go
away down and see what there is in the larder, for we
shall need something to eat a little later.  And then
come up and help me to clear this room.  If
Mr. Malcolm does not want it I'll take it myself, for it would
be a shame to let it stand empty."

Margaret, a little ashamed perhaps and glad of the
offered opportunity to recover herself, went out of the
room.

The smile still lingering on her lips, Isla began to
look over the things which had been brought down from
the attic room.  The squabble between Margaret and
Diarmid was quite a timely diversion, for it had taken
the edge off what might otherwise have been a painful
moment, and she thought how like children the two
were in their slight knowledge of real care.

Pondering thus, she pulled open the upper drawers of
the tallboys that stood between the windows, and she
saw that they were full of small stuff belonging to
Malcolm--papers and photographs and books and toilet
articles mingled in inextricable confusion.

Margaret had certainly carried the things down, but
she had not made the smallest attempt at putting them
in order.  Isla took out an armful and carried them to
the bed, thinking that when Margaret returned the
simplest way would be to get her to bring a couple of
trays, on which the small things could be laid, ready for
carrying up the attic stair.

As she let a little heap fall loosely on the white
coverlet a bundle of photographs fell apart, and one looked
up at her with an insolent, half-defiant stare.  She grew
hot all over and then cold, recognizing in the bold,
handsome face that of the woman whom she had seen
Malcolm with in the street off the Edgeware Road.  He
had said she was a friend of George Larmer's; if so, why
was her photograph here among Malcolm's most
treasured possessions?





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.. _`THE PURPLE LADY`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XVI


.. class:: center medium

   THE PURPLE LADY

.. vspace:: 2

The little menage on the Moor of Creagh was a mistake
from the beginning, and was bound, in the very nature
of things, to have a quick and disastrous end.

This, it must be at once said, was not altogether the
fault of Malcolm, though Isla thought it was.  Her fine
nature had been soured by her experiences, and the hard
side of her developed by the responsibilities which she
had had to shoulder in her young girlhood, when her
heart ought to have been at play.

She had acquired the habit of legislating for everybody,
and up to a certain point of setting the standard
of conduct.  Her conscience she would make the
universal conscience, forgetting that there were degrees
and differences of temperament.  By an effort of will
she had held out a sort of grudging olive branch to
Malcolm.  But she had done this simply and solely
because she wished to remain in Glenogle and because
there was no place for her except under his roof.  The
injustice of it all ate into her heart.  Malcolm, who had
done nothing for the Glen, and who, in her estimation,
was totally unfitted to have the destinies of so many in
his keeping, had the whole power in his hands, and none
could say him nay.

The sudden change in his position had made a great
difference to Malcolm.

From being a guest on sufferance, disapproved of by
Isla, who was mistress of the situation, he had stepped
into power, which simply reversed their positions.  Isla,
so to speak, was now his guest, and, because there had
been no will and there was nothing except the land to
divide, a pensioner on his bounty.

Love would have laughed at the difficulties with which
the situation bristled.  But the difficulty of existence in
these circumstances became more acute, and, to Isla,
every day more unbearable.  It was not that Malcolm
was rude or actively unkind.  Nay, his gay good humour
never failed.  But he had no use for her advice and he
absolutely ignored anything she said as to his conduct
of affairs.

Take the case of the Maclures, for instance.

"You'll never put Donald Maclure out of Darrach,
Malcolm," she said one day in the autumn, when
Martinmas was looming in sight.  "I met him yesterday,
and he looked like a man under sentence of death.  He
had heard that you have been in communication with a
man in Fife about the croft.  Is that true?"

"It might be, and, again, it might not be," he
answered, though there was not a word of truth in the
report yet.

He had thought of it, but it was characteristic of
Malcolm's nature to postpone most of the serious things
of life till a more convenient season.  And just then his
energies and his hopes were elsewhere engaged.

"But, Malcolm," she said, with a touch of passion,
"it isn't right to treat the folk like that--to torment them
without sense or purpose.  They haven't been used
to it."

"No--they've been used to nothing but having their
own way, to paying when they liked and what they
liked," he answered, with a touch of grimness.  "But I'm
going to alter all that."

They were at breakfast at the moment, and she looked
down the narrow table at him with a feeling of strong
disgust.  There is no bitterness like the bitterness
between those of one blood who persistently misunderstand
and misjudge each other.

Malcolm Mackinnon was not wholly bad.  Nay, at that
very time he was honestly striving to do his duty and to
establish himself in the esteem of those whose esteem
he valued.  But among these he did not include his
dependants.  Towards them he was a bit of a martinet,
as his mother--a creature from the nether world dressed
in a little brief authority--had been before him.

Isla knew nothing about her mother except that she
had been very pretty and that she had died young.  Had
she known more she would have understood that alien
and lawless blood run in Malcolm's veins.  But the old
General had never spoken of the one irretrievable
mistake of his life--a mistake which had left his heart
seared and made his life desolate in the summer of his
days.  Happily perhaps for Isla the brief tragedy had
been enacted in India, and General Mackinnon's wife
had never beheld the place of her husband's birth and
true affection.

"I am sure Mr. Cattanach can't approve of your turning
out the folk like that.  And what will a few shillings
or pounds a year more do for you?  It will make so
little difference that, looking at it even from the sordid
standpoint, it isn't worth while."

Isla spoke thus because she was intensely of opinion
that Malcolm had no feelings, and that this was the
only appeal that would strike home.  He, knowing
perfectly well how she regarded him, was pleased to
play upon her erroneous conceptions.

"It's worth while, my dear," he said, with his ready
and, to her, most aggravating smile, "because these
Highland folk want waking up.  They are like the
Irish--lazy, easy-going, and without independence.  You
should hear George Larmer on the state of things on his
Wicklow place.  He says it is due partly to the rain and
partly to the whisky, but there is not a man of them
who will do a decent day's work."

"We get rain enough here," said Isla with a sigh, for
it had been a very wet summer, and the poor harvest
was to be very late.  "But our people don't drink
whisky.  Even Donald is a teetotaller and wears a blue
ribbon in his buttonhole."

"Which that shrew of his pinned on, doubtless.
Poor devil!--I'm sorry for Donald if that's the set of it,
and I'll stand him a drink next time I meet him at a
handy place."

"Then, what are you going to do about the Maclures?
I wish you would be serious for just a minute, Malcolm.
I really want to know what's in store for them.  I am
almost afraid to go past the door of Darrach now or to
meet Eppie.  She's wearing herself to a shadow over it
all."

"There you are, Isla--you've ruined them, neck and
crop, by listening to their grumblings and pandering to
their lack of independence!  Nobody knows just how
much money there is in Glenogle--or in any of the
glens, for that matter.  It strikes me there are a good
many fat stocking-feet hidden among the thatch."

"Oh, nonsense, Malcolm!  Nobody does that now.
They all use the bank when they have anything to put
away, but I don't think that is often the case."

He cut the top neatly off his third egg and proceeded
to enjoy it.  Malcolm had a healthy appetite, and
Margaret Maclaren, still more or less in a state of grumbling
rebellion, said that he was hard to fill.

"Look here, Isla, I wish you would take a sensible
view of things and leave me to manage my own business.
You won't deny that the management is mine now, I
suppose?  Unfortunately for me, you've been Laird of
Achree for the last five or six years, and you're difficult
to follow.  It's just like what happens in a regiment
when an easy Colonel is followed by a smart one.  Every
unit in it jibs, but they all come into line a little later.
And that's what the tenants--my tenants--are going to
do if you'll let them alone.  But you must let them alone,
do you understand?  I am sick of all this wrangling, and
I won't listen to you any more.  It isn't decent for you
to act as go-between among the tenants.  If they have
a grievance let them come to me.  Next time you see
the Maclures you can tell them it will pay them to
address themselves to me instead of putting up a poor
face to you."

Isla's colour rose, for both the words and the manner
of them were offensive.

"It would be better for yourself, too," he added in a
gentler tone.  "I don't suppose you ever look at
yourself in the glass.  You've gone off most frightfully of
late.  It's the worry and the bearing of loads for other
folk that they are perfectly able to bear themselves that
are to blame for that.  Take me, for instance.  You'd
like to melt me down and drop me into your own mould.
But, my dear, it can't be done.  Leave me to go my own
way.  Maybe it's a blundering bad way, but at least give
me credit for trying to make the best of things.  Once
for all, I won't be dictated to or legislated for.  There
isn't in the whole world a more difficult or impossible
person to live with than the woman who wants to run a
universal conscience."

There was just sufficient truth in the words to make
their sting doubly telling.

"If that is how you feel about me, Malcolm," she said,
rising stiffly, "then the sooner I leave Creagh the better."

"A visit to the Barras Mackinnons would do you a
power of good, I admit, and would give me time to look
round and get my bearings," he said frankly.  "The
quarters are a bit close here, you know, for us in our
present state.  Why not go to Wimereaux to them?
The sea air would do you good, and they've asked you
often enough, in all conscience."

She rolled up her napkin and pushed it all awry into
the ring with the Mackinnon crest on it, and her
downcast eyes were full of strange fires.

"I don't want to be unjust or hard.  Heaven knows
I don't, but you won't do anything," continued Malcolm.
"At Achree they're always asking why you don't come
down, and I must say I think that, after all their
kindness, you've treated them shabbily."

"You go so much," she said sullenly.  "We can't both
live on the American bounty."

It was a speech wholly unworthy of Isla and unjust to
the Rosmeads.  But it was prompted by jealousy alone
and by the distorted view of things prevailing in the mind
of the lonely girl whom nobody now seemed to want.

Her only faithful henchman was Neil Drummond, but
on the last occasion on which he had come with words
of healing and sympathy on his lips she had sent him
away, telling him she would not see him again unless
he promised to talk of ordinary things.

"You've got into a beastly habit of nagging when
you're not curled right up in a hard shell which nobody
can open," said Malcolm, enjoying his opportunity now
that candour was the order of the day.  "You've choked
off nearly everybody, and it's your own fault.  I find
folk very pleasant because I let them alone.  I'm not
for ever telling them to do this or that.  I've enough to
do to look after myself.  I know you think me a
rotter--and all that.  But you might do worse than take a
leaf out of my book.  I've been out in the world, and
I've learned two things--that it's ready to laugh with
you, but that the moment you show the other side of
your face it is bored to extinction.  Your long face bores
folk, Isla.  Nobody has ever told you the truth about
yourself before.  You've arrogated the rôle of
truth-teller to yourself, but that's it----"

Isla walked out of the room with her head held high
in air and fire burning fiercely in her eyes.  She was so
angry that she dared not trust her voice.  Now she
knew exactly what position she occupied at Creagh--that
Malcolm regarded her as an encumbrance and a
nuisance, and that she dwelt there merely on sufferance
and during his good pleasure.  Well, such a situation
being intolerable to a woman of spirit, it must be ended,
and that without delay.

She ascended the stairs to her own room, and when
she was intercepted by Margaret Maclaren with some
inquiry about the meals for the day, she simply told her
to get what she liked, and passed on.

Margaret, no stranger to wrangling, having had a bout
of it that very morning with her arch-enemy Diarmid,
understood that there had been a small storm raging in
the dining-room, and discreetly retired.

New, strange, dreadful elements had crept into the
quiet life on Creagh Moor, and all its sweet harmony
was destroyed.

Isla shut the door of her own room, and dropped for a
moment into her chair, wringing her hands the while
with a sense of utter helplessness.  She was at the end
of her tether.  Nobody wanted her, and the time had
come for her to go away.  Not a soul in the Glen, she
told herself bitterly, would lament her going.  She had
dropped into obscurity, and even if she were never to
come back any more to Glenogle, how many would
mourn her absence or long for her return?

The impulse to go there and then was strong upon
her.  She even opened the door of her wardrobe and
her drawers to take a brief inventory of her belongings
and consider what she would take away.

If only she could walk out as she was!  But travel,
even of the simplest sort, is hampered by the multitude
of our needs, by the things which complicate life.  Then
she looked at her little store of money, counting it out
with careful fingers.  Eighteen pounds in gold and two
handfuls of silver--well, that would keep her until she
could earn more for herself.

She was a forlorn creature, without plan or compass,
proposing to let herself drift upon an unknown sea.  She
had not the smallest intention of going to the Barras
Mackinnons at Wimereaux.  She must get away quite
alone, where she could realize herself, and arrive at
some conclusion regarding her ultimate fate.

Through the open window she heard Malcolm go off
with the dogs, whistling as if he had not a care in the
world.  The things which daunted her and lay like a
nightmare on her white, sensitive soul, had no power
over him.  Frankly selfish, he lived from day to day,
extracting the honey from the hours, and stoically
enduring what he could not evade.  Perhaps, she said to
herself, his was no bad philosophy.  She wished somebody
had taught it to her sooner; now it was a difficult
lesson, baffling her intelligence at every point.

By and by she grew calmer, and her distracted
thoughts began to collect themselves.  It was not
possible to run away in a hurry without telling any one,
and her orderly mind shrank from taking such a foolish
and unnecessary step.  No--whatever she did, she
would not forget herself or the dignity of the Mackinnons.
She would put no occasion for talk into people's mouths.

In an hour's time she had decided what to do, and,
after making a sort of preliminary division of her
possessions, she dressed herself and went out.  Margaret,
having the feeling that Miss Isla wished to be alone, did
not intercept her this time.

It was a fine, clear, hard morning in September, with
a touch of frost in the air after a night's rain.  But the
clouds on the far horizon were still watery, and Isla's
keen eyes decided that the deluge had not spent itself.
She would, however, get fair weather as far as Lochearnhead,
which was her present destination, seeing that she
had to give a certain order to Jamie Forbes concerning
the morrow.

Of a set purpose, she kept to the sheep tracks on the
hills, thus avoiding the vicinity of Achree.  She had
been there very few times since her father's death, and
as Mrs. Rosmead had had a somewhat serious illness in
the interval, her daughters had been too much engaged
in looking after her to pay distant calls.  But Isla knew
that Malcolm was constantly there--if not every day, at
least several times a week.

About half a mile beyond Achree gates, on the
Lochearn side of the Glen, she had to come out on the road
again, because the sheep track ended suddenly with
Donald Maclure's pasture.  The heavy rains had washed
every superfluous particle of earth from the roads, and
left the gravelled bottom bare, while there were
delicious runnels of water here and there, all making
swiftly for the burn, which was swollen far beyond its
ordinary limits.  There had been very little fair weather
in Glenogle or in the valley of the Earn since the
Lammas floods.

Isla paused for a moment on the Darrach Brig to
watch the brown swirl of the water below, which
fascinated her.  Her eyes and ears were ever quick and keen
to note every change in the aspect of the landscape, and
she was more weather-wise than most.  She had fallen
into a kind of brown study, from which she was awakened
very suddenly by the sound of a voice speaking a few
yards away.

It was a woman's voice, and when Isla swung round
upon her with quickly-uplifted head she saw a lady
on the road dressed in garments such as were not often
seen in Glenogle.  She wore a gown which, Isla decided,
was more fitted for an afternoon function than a quiet
country road.  It was of a somewhat vivid purple hue,
trimmed profusely about the bodice with string-coloured
lace.  The skirt was long, but she had it gathered in her
hand, and held high enough to show the froth of white,
lace-trimmed petticoats and a mauve stocking against
the clear, patent leather of the high-heeled shoes.  A
large black hat, surmounted with feathers and swathed
in a veil like a spider's web, through which the vivid
colour of the face appeared somewhat softened,
completed the costume, which was certainly a startling one
in that remote place, though such a common sight in
London streets as to excite no remark.

Isla grew hot and cold, and started back with a little
gesture of aversion, for she recognized the woman whose
face she had seen once in the flesh, and once again in a
photograph in her brother's room.

"Good day," said the stranger quite pleasantly.  "Could
you tell me whether there is a place close by here called
Achree?"

She pronounced the last word without the guttural, so
that it sounded like Akree.

"I asked about it at the hotel," the lady continued.
"and they directed me along this road.  But it seems a
good bit away.  Is it much farther off?"

"The Lodge gates are half a mile farther on," Isla
answered.  "Then there is the avenue to the house
and that is rather long."

"I may as well go on, now I have come so far, but if
I'd known how far off it was I would have hired a trap
of some kind."

She leaned against the parapet of the bridge in a
quite friendly fashion, as if ready to talk; and Isla
hating herself intensely for lingering, yet felt impelled
to do so, and even to put a question to the stranger
concerning her business at Achree.

"I suppose that it is the American tenants you have
come to see?  They have been in Achree for about six
months now."

The lady shook her head.

"No.  I don't know that I've come to see anybody
in particular, but I'm interested in the place through
a friend of mine.  I didn't know there were Americans
in it.  I thought it belonged to a family called
Mackinnon."

"They are the owners, but it is let, as most of the big
places are in these days."

"I see.  And where are the Mackinnons?  Mr. Mackinnon
chiefly?  He is what you call the laird now,
isn't he?  I read about his father's death in the
newspapers, and what a fuss they made about it!  Is he
here just now?"

"He is not at Achree."

"But he lives in this neighbourhood, surely?  He
has not left Scotland?" said the stranger with a quick,
apprehensive note in her voice.

"No, he lives farther up the Glen--oh, a long way.
You could not possibly walk it," said Isla hastily.  "Good
morning.  I must go on."

She was ashamed of herself for having lingered to
parley even a moment with this woman, who, she felt
sure, by her coming presaged more dool and woe to
Achree.  How she longed to get clean away from the
Glen before the name of Mackinnon was dragged in the
mire!  This impossible woman must have a hold of
some kind on Malcolm, else she never would have dared
to come seeking him in his own glen.

As she turned away her soul felt sick within her.

"I'm sorry you are not walking my way," said the
stranger easily.  "I'll walk on a bit farther and take a
look at the place, now I have come so far.  What a
country!  Such hills!  And how dull you must all find
it!  I'm stopping at Strathyre, and when there are not
the hills, there's the water to get on your nerves.  I don't
wonder the Scotch are a melancholy people.  Ta-ta!"

She waved her plump, gloved hand in quite friendly
fashion, and showed her dazzling teeth in a pleasant
smile as she sauntered off.

Isla, with her limbs positively trembling beneath her,
hurried over the bridge, and so on to the hotel, where
she merely left a message, ordering the trap to fetch
her and her luggage from Creagh in the morning.

She had had various plans when she started out.  She
had thought she might possibly hire Jamie Forbes to
take her through Balquhidder to Garrion, or that she
might even on the way home pay a call at Achree.

But after what had just happened, she had only one
desire--to get away out of Glenogle as fast as the fastest
train could take her.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`HER TRUE FRIENDS`:

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   CHAPTER XVII


.. class:: center medium

   HER TRUE FRIENDS

.. vspace:: 2

Fortune did not favour Isla that day.  At any rate her
desire for complete isolation was not gratified.

As she came out of the hotel, after having made her
arrangement for Jamie Forbes to fetch her from Creagh
to Lochearnhead Station in the morning, she encountered
Mrs. Rodney Payne, who hailed her with undisguised
delight.

"Dear Miss Mackinnon, we really thought we should
never, never see you any more!  Why is it that you
have quite deserted Achree?"

"I don't know," answered Isla rather humbly.  "It is
a long way, and--and the days go by."

"But it was not kind.  And the messages we have
sent by your brother!--has he ever delivered them, I
wonder?"

"He has often said to me that you would like me to
come oftener to Achree."

"Well, and so we would.  And what have you to say
for yourself?"

Isla looked at her and smiled.  It was impossible not
to smile at the beautiful creature whose charm could
disarm any hostility.  Isla was not hostile to Achree.
Only there she must be all or nothing.  That was the
truth, scarcely yet admitted to herself.  A very woman,
she could brook no rival, and had stayed high and dry
upon the Moor of Creagh, because she would not share
Achree and the Rosmeads with Malcolm.

"I am a pig," she said with humility, yet with
conviction--a speech which made Vivien laugh.

"Since you know yourself best, I will not presume to
contradict you, my dear," she said as she thrust a small
and confidential hand through Isla's arm.  "Now I have
you fast I will lead you to confession.  What have we
done to offend?"

"Oh, nothing to offend!" said Isla quickly.  "I am not
silly in that way, I hope.  But--but----"

"But what?  I thought that I had you hard and fast,
that day at Creagh and that, hard to win, Isla Mackinnon,
once won, could be kept.  Why have I made such a
disastrous mistake?  I ask everybody, I even write to
Peter and ask him, but he answers not.  It is all a part
of this mysterious life of the glens and of the Scottish
character, which no man or woman from the outside can
ever hope to get to the bottom of."

"Oh, come!" said Isla a little shamefacedly, "we are
not so black as all that."

"Black, but comely!  But back to Achree I march
you to-day, at whatever cost.  Do you know that my
mother has been five weeks ill in bed and that you have
never once called to ask for her?"

"But I have sent messages by Malcolm, and even
written myself once----"

"It is not the same," broke in Vivien.  "To-day you
shall be taken in sackcloth and ashes to beg
forgiveness."

"But you have already had too much of the Mackinnons.
I would not have you sicken of the name."

"We should never sicken of you, Isla.  It is an
ungracious thing to say, and the words come most
ungraciously from your lips."

"But Malcolm does come every day, doesn't he?"

Isla turned her quick, penetrating eyes full on Vivien's
glowing face, and she wondered whether the colour
deepened at the question or whether she merely
imagined that it did.

"He has been most kind.  He does all sorts of 'cute
things for us.  We have scarcely missed Peter since he
went away.  You should hear my mother!  Your brother
has quite won her heart."

"Yes?" said Isla, but her tone was dry.

In the near distance she saw the figure of the stranger
lady in the purple frock coming towards them, and she
wondered what would happen.  Vivien, too, saw it, and
the smile deepened in her eyes.

"Who can this extraordinary female be?  I met her
as I came down, and she put me through a sort of
catechism about the Glen, with special reference to
Achree and the Mackinnons."

"I also met her," said Isla, "and she likewise catechized
me.  Some chance tourist staying at the Strathyre
Hotel and hard up for something to occupy her time, I
suppose."

"It struck me as more than that.  And besides, the
season for tourists is past," said Vivien shrewdly.
"What garments!  And what lack of fitness!  I wonder
now whether she thinks that we are badly dressed and
that she could give us points?  She has a complacent
air, which is at once my despair and my envy."

Isla made no response.  Again the chill premonition
of coming evil crept about her heart--she felt that the
purple-clad stranger was a menace to Achree.

"Now I wonder whether your brother saw her?  I am
sure she would stop him if she met him!"

"Malcolm!--but he is not down the Glen?  I thought
he was going to shoot over the Moor this morning.  He
certainly said something about it at breakfast."

"He was certainly down the Glen, my dear, for I met
him on his grey cob.  But where he is now I don't
know," said Vivien.  "It would have interested her, I
am sure, to have had speech with the actual Laird of
Achree."

"What did she ask you?" asked Isla quickly.

Vivien's colour rose this time without doubt, but she
evaded the question.

"She is greatly concerned about the future of Achree,
anyhow, so let us give her a civil good morning as we
pass."

"We needn't stop--we mustn't stop," said Isla a little
nervously.

And as the purple figure approached Vivien felt the
arm she touched tremble a little.  But the stranger,
who now looked tired and bored, passed them with a
languid bow and then seemed to hasten her steps
towards the hotel.

"I am very glad of this chance of going to Achree to
say good-bye," said Isla, "as to-morrow I am going
away."

Vivien nodded, as if she had heard a bit of news she
fully expected.

"To Wimereaux--to your aunt and uncle?  Your
brother told us about your going."

In spite of herself, Isla's face hardened.  Malcolm,
then, discussed her with the Rosmeads, had even
planned her going and spoken of her transfer to the
Barras Mackinnons as a settled thing.  Yet she had not
once so much as said that she would like to go!

"Did Malcolm tell you that I was going to-morrow?"
she asked in a low voice.

"He said it might happen any day," answered Vivien.
"And, though we would have liked to see more of you.
we all understand that a change would be the very best
thing in the world for you.  I've even had it in my
mind to propose that you and I should take a little trip
to Paris together next month, and that afterwards you
might have gone back to Wimereaux.  I have not been
in Paris since I was a girl at school."

"You were educated in Paris?"

Vivien laughed rather sadly.

"No--I was what they call finished there," she
answered drearily.  "A woman's education is in the
school of life.  Mine has been hard enough, heaven
knows!  I have always hated Paris since, but still I
should like to go there with you.  I still have an
apartment there.  If you could let me know about what time
you wish to come back I could join you or we could
meet on the way, or even in Paris itself."

The idea pleased Isla.  If only there had been no
obstacles in the way!

"I've never been to Paris.  I've seen nothing but
Glenogle except--once in a great while--Barras and
London."

"Barras is lonely, isn't it?  But the Ogden Dresslers
liked it."

"It is an island in the Atlantic.  But loneliness
belongs not so much to places as to persons.  I am never
lonely--in the sense that you mean.  But I think I
could be so in a big city."

"How long are you likely to be at Wimereaux?"

"I don't know.  I have to get there first."

"Will Sir Thomas and Lady Mackinnon stop there all
winter?"

"No.  They will go back to Barras at the end of next
month, I expect.  My uncle is counting the days."

"Ah, I don't wonder at that from what your brother
tells me about him!  We expected Peter home in
November, but his last letter to mother is not very
reassuring.  They are finding the Delaware Bridge more
difficult than they expected.  There is something
puzzling about the river-bed.  Peter seems to be
working night and day."

"But he will like that.  He is never happier than
when fighting obstacles," said Isla with a faint smile of
remembrance.

"That is so--at least it used to be so.  But we thought
from the letter yesterday that he was getting what we
call plumb-tired of it.  He wants to come back to
Scotland--anyone can see that--and, of course, my
mother's illness has made us all anxious.  But he
doesn't say a definite word about coming home."

Isla was interested in these items of information
concerning Peter Rosmead and his family.  She was
naturally sociable.  It was only the habit of life forced
upon her by circumstances that had fostered her reserve.
With Vivien Rosmead, as with Peter, she always felt her
heart expand.

There was no reproach in Mrs. Rosmead's eyes as, from
her bed, she extended two warm hands of welcome to the
desolate girl and drew her down towards her for a kiss.

"My dear, why is it that you have been so long in
coming.  Your dear brother has made every excuse for
you, but we wanted you--we wanted you very much."

Isla's eyes filled with tears.  She told herself that she
had been wise to stop away, seeing that the sight of this
sweet mother of the gentle eyes and heart who, from her
invalid couch, ruled her family with an absolute rule,
was bad for her and filled her with acute unrest, with a
feeling of rebellion against her own motherless state.

"I forgot to tell you," said Vivien cheerfully, "that
Sadie has gone to Garrion for the day.  She and Kitty
are inseparable.  What a dear, bright creature Kitty is!
And Aunt Betty!--oh, Aunt Betty is a type!  I live for
the meeting I hope to arrange between her and my
mother, though they will need an interpreter.  Her
Scotch is lovely, but unintelligible."

Again the swift pang of jealousy tore at Isla's heart.
While she had been alone at Creagh nobody had been
lonely for her sake.  Her point of view was wholly
unreasonable, and it but serves to show how long brooding
on one particular line of thought can distort the mental
vision of the healthiest and sanest person in the world.
It was more than time that Isla left Glenogle--it would
have been disastrous for her to stay much longer.

She remained to luncheon, and thereafter she sat for
another half hour with Mrs. Rosmead, who, while she
tried to get Isla to talk about herself, incidentally talked
a good deal about her children, especially about Peter,
for whom her heart was crying out.  Isla learned more
about Peter Rosmead from that hour's conversation with
his mother than she had yet known, and all that she
learned was to his credit.

"I hope, my dear," said Mrs. Rosmead, "that you
will be back at Christmas at least, for it is our hope
that my son may join us then, and we shall keep it as a
family here.  Your brother has promised to come to us,
and if you are here, too, then we shall be happy indeed.
It is where you ought to be at Christmas--under your
father's roof-tree."

"It is Malcolm's now," said Isla with an effort.  "I
don't know whether I shall have returned by then.  I
have no plans.  I am a bit of drift-wood on the shore
now, liable to be floated away by the tide, dear
Mrs. Rosmead.  But whether I come or whether I don't I
shall think of you, and I shall be glad that you are here
in Achree."

"There is something the matter with that child,
Vivien," the old lady said to her daughter after Isla had
gone--"something that has taken the heart clean out
of her.  It is something more than her father's death.
Let us hope that the change will do her good."

Meanwhile, Isla was nearing home, having been
convoyed on her walk part of the way by Vivien, who, on
parting, had bidden her a most affectionate farewell.

Vivien was distinctly disappointed in Isla Mackinnon--her
persistent coldness had chilled her.  She had
proved that Highland hearts can be very warm and
kindly, and she thought that Isla had not met their
advances with corresponding cordiality.  But, having
herself suffered, she did not judge any man--much less
any woman.  She knew she must leave Isla to realize
herself and to work out her own destiny.

It was tea-time when Isla got back, and Malcolm was
about the house.

His face was serene and undisturbed.  Isla therefore
surmised that he had not encountered the lady of the
purple gown.  Should she enlighten him?  Was it her
duty to warn him that the woman, with whom he
undoubtedly had some slight acquaintance--even if nothing
more--was in the vicinity making inquiries about him?
Though he had happened to miss her that day, she was
haunting the neighbourhood, and Strathyre was, so to
speak, but a stone's throw from Glenogle.

"I've been trysting Jamie Forbes for the morning,
Malcolm," she said quietly.  "I'm going with the
nine-thirty."

"Going where?" he asked with a start.

"To Glasgow, first.  I will have just a word with
Mr. Cattanach.  Then I will take the two o'clock train."

"For London?"

She nodded.  There was no reason why she should
hide the first step of her journey from him--no reason
at all.

"And will you go on to Dieppe by the night boat, then?"

She shook her head.

"There is no need for such haste," she answered.
"And I am not a stranger in London.  I can find my
way about.  I'll stop the night at the Euston Hotel."

"Have you money?" he asked, trying hard to hide
his relief.

"I have twenty pounds."

"Oh, you are in clover.  It is not a dear fare to
Wimereaux, even if you travel first class.  And, of
course, it will cost you nothing while you are there.
They seem to be living at heck and manger for next to
nothing, but how Uncle Tom does loathe it!  I suppose
you'll come back with them as far as Glasgow when
they come north next month?"

"I suppose so," she answered listlessly.

There was no reason why she should either affirm or
deny, because she herself did not know what she might
do.  Everything would depend.  It might even be on
the knees of the gods that she would drift to Wimereaux
in the end.

"I've been to lunch at Achree," she said suddenly.
"I met Miss Rosmead on the road, and she made me go
in.  Mrs. Rosmead looks very ill, I think."

"Nothing to what she did look.  And they are so
accustomed to snatching her back from the jaws of
death," said Malcolm grimly, "that they are quite
satisfied about her."

"Oh!" said Isla.  "You go there a great deal,
Malcolm.  They seem to think you a splendid sort of
fellow."

It was a curious speech and did not sound quite
kindly.  Malcolm, however, took it well, though there
was a touch of bitterness in his reply.

"It's the people's way of looking at it, Isla--they are
lovely people.  They bring out all that is best in a chap
and make him hate the worst.  I'll tell you what.  If I
had been thrown with that sort at one time of my life I
should have been a different man."

"We did our best," she answered with a wounded air.
"Father and I were as good as we knew how, though, of
course, we could not hope to reach the Rosmead
standard."

"I don't mean that, Isla.  Gad, how quick and hard
you are on a fellow!  Your tongue's like a two-edged
sword.  I only mean that there's a time in a chap's
life--don't you know?--when, if he gets into a good woman's
hands, she shapes him for good.  If he gets into the
hands of the other sort, then God help him!--he hasn't
much chance else."

A fleeting pity crossed Isla's face.  It was a passionate
human appeal.  She began dimly to glimpse the fact of
the frightful war between good and evil which ravages
the souls of some, making life a battle-ground from the
cradle to the grave.

She put out a timid hand and touched his arm.

"I'm sorry if I have been hard, Malcolm.  I--I didn't
understand.  But now----"

"Now I mean to win Vivien Rosmead when I'm clean
enough to ask her," he answered in a voice that gripped.

Isla remembered the heightened colour in Vivien's
cheek, the tones and terms in which Malcolm was
spoken of at Achree, and she had no doubt of the issue.
But the woman in the purple frock!  Something gripped
her by the throat.  She did not know what she wished
or hoped for.  She did passionately feel, however, that
if Vivien made another venture upon the sea of matrimony
she ought to be very sure of the seaworthiness of
her barque.

"I suppose she divorced her husband.  Have you
ever heard anything about the story, Malcolm?"

"Nothing.  They never speak of it.  Why should
they?  That sort of thing is best forgotten."

"She will never forget it.  I can't forget how she
spoke that day she came to me--the day when father
died.  Her eyes are very wide open, Malcolm.  She will
take no risks next time."

"But she isn't hard," he said eagerly.  "And a woman
who has lived--who has seen life--can make allowances
for a man.  It's that I'm building on."

Isla shook her head and rose to her feet with a heavy sigh.

"Life is a most frightful tangle, Malcolm.  Sometimes
I get so tired of it!"

"We all do, but we've got to make the best of it.  You
don't want any money, then," he added cheerfully.
"It's just as well, because I have hardly a red cent to
bless myself with, and I'm counting the days till the
Martinmas audit and till Rosmead sends his cheque.
When I get that I'll send you along something to
Wimereaux."

"I'll write if I need it or want it," she said quickly.

Then, as if in spite of herself, the other matter would
out.

"Malcolm, did you meet anybody on the road this
morning, either in going or in coming home?"

"I met different folks--Donald Maclure and Long
Sandy and Drummond seeking you.  Only he didn't
come up when I told him that I thought you were about
Lochearn.  Did you see him?"

"No.  I suppose I was in Achree at the time.  This
was a lady--an extraordinary person in a purple frock.
She spoke to me at the Darrach Bridge, and she had
stopped Vivien Rosmead, too, and asked her questions
about Achree."

She saw Malcolm's colour change and his eyes shift.

"What did she say to you, Isla?  I suppose she was
one of these stray visitors at the hotel.  Miss Macdougall
has had some queer specimens this summer."

"She said she was living at Strathyre, and she asked
questions about the Mackinnons and Achree, as if she
knew about them."

"And did she say where she came from or what she
wanted here?" asked Malcolm, and by this time he had
walked away beyond the range of Isla's eyes.

"No.  But I knew, Malcolm," said Isla clearly.  "I
don't know whether I ought to tell you, but perhaps it
will be better that you should know.  She was the
woman I met you with that day in the Edgeware
Road--the woman you said you were seeking for Captain
Larmer."





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.. _`GOOD-BYE TO GLENOGLE`:

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   CHAPTER XVIII


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   GOODBYE TO GLENOGLE

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Half an hour later, from the window of the room where
she was doing her packing, Isla saw Malcolm ride out to
the road upon his bicycle.  She did not need to watch
the turn he took.  She knew just as well as if she had
been told that he was bound for Strathyre.  It was
beginning to grow dusk, but the September evenings are
long in Glenogle, and it would be a night of full moon.

Isla's thoughts were rather bitter as she made busy
with her scanty wardrobe, laying aside every superfluous
article, because she did not wish her movements to be
hampered with too much baggage.

Busy with purely mechanical things as she was, her
thoughts were free to tarry with the affairs of Achree.
Had Malcolm been as other men--had there been no
shadow on his past, no complications in his present, she
could have wished for no better issue out of the tangle
of their troubles than to see him win Vivien Rosmead.
She was a sweet, gracious woman, a true gentlewoman,
beautiful and rich--a combination not easily found in a
wife.  How Isla would have rejoiced to see her mistress
of Achree, rearing bonnie children who would have
loved her and called her Auntie Isla.

It was what ought to have been, she said with a little
passionate stamp of her foot upon the floor.  And now
that Malcolm was in deadly earnest she did not doubt
for a moment that he desired to be worthy for Vivien's
sake, but spectres blocked the way.  The most imminent
and the most terrifying was the woman in the purple
frock.

Could anything on earth ever explain her away?

She contrasted the woman and Vivien as she had seen
them together on the Glenogle road, and she conjured
up the supreme contempt that would gather in Vivien's
eyes were she pitted against her.  She would absolutely
disdain such humiliation.  Isla felt sure that the man
who would win Vivien Rosmead from her disillusionment,
who aspired to heal her hurts, must have a clean record.
How dared Malcolm, with what was behind and before
him, aspire to her?

Isla wondered at the audacity of men.  Yet her heart
was also stirred with pity for him in that he must reap
the bitter harvest of his folly and his sin.  Her heart
was passing weary, the burden had not been lightened
with her father's death, but seemed to have waxed
heavier.  And she must get away.  She felt herself a
coward in view of what might come.  She could not
breast anew scandal in the Glen and she must get away.
Such weakness and weariness crept over her that she could
have laid her head down and slept for ever.  She held
on bravely with her preparations, however, and when they
were finished she rang the bell for Margaret Maclaren.

"The dinner iss ready, Miss Isla.  Am I to send it
in?" asked that competent domestic with just a touch
of aggressiveness in her mien and manner.

"I don't know where Mr. Malcolm is or when he will
come back.  But, yes--send it in if it will make you
any happier, Margaret, and lift that dour cloud from
your face," she added hastily.  "I know I can trust you
to keep something hot for Mr. Malcolm."

"Oh, as to that, it can be done.  But I'm gettin' tired
of it, Miss Isla.  I nefer saw such a man, or such a
hoose--beggin' your pardin for my plain speech.  He
takes less account of times and seasons than anybody
I have ever seen or heard tell of.  I don't know what he
thinks happens in a kitchen, or whether he knows how
food is made, but he expects it to be ready when he iss,
whatefer the hour of the day.  It iss not in my power,
Miss Isla.  I'm gettin' to be an old woman and not fit
for my job."

"Nonsense, Margaret.  You never were fitter, and you
must warstle through with it a little longer anyhow,
because I am going away to-morrow for some weeks,
and you must simply look after Creagh till I come back."

"Where are you goin', Miss Isla?  To her Ladyship,
iss it?  Well, it will do you good, and it iss there you
ought to haf gone long since.  I will stop, then, till you
come back.  And I hope the change will do you good,
for it iss fery thin and white-like you are gettin', my
dear, and it iss time something wass done.  I will do
my best for Maister Malcolm, and if it should pe that
we fall out peyond making up while you are away I'll
write and let ye know."

Isla had not expected sympathy from Margaret, who,
between Diarmid and his master, was now kept in a
state of continual agitation which had a very bad effect
on a temper that was not placid at the best of times.

Isla thanked her, and, with a mind considerably eased,
went down to eat her solitary meal.  After dinner she
busied herself writing a few notes of farewell--one of
them to Kitty Drummond and one to Elspeth Maclure,
regarding whom her conscience was troubling her not a
little.  But she afterwards tore up Elspeth's, deciding
that if Jamie Forbes came to Creagh in good time she
would make him stop at Darrach on the way down so
that she might say good-bye in a proper manner.

The evening wore on--eight, nine, ten o'clock--and
still no word of Malcolm.  Isla looked out again and
again, and once she even walked out to the gate to see
whether the twinkling light of the bicycle lamp was
visible down the long vista of the road.  When it was
half-past ten she went to bed, for she had walked
many miles that day, and her packing exertions--to say
nothing of the strain of things on her mind--had left her
very tired.

She was awakened long after by the banging of a door,
she thought; but, listening intently, she heard nothing
further, and so she fell asleep and did not wake till
morning.

Breakfast had been ordered half an hour earlier than
usual to give her time to catch the train, and she had
nearly finished before Malcolm made his appearance.
She looked at him rather keenly as he entered, and was
immediately struck by his haggard looks.  He appeared
like one who had either not slept or had spent the night
in some doubtful place.

"Good morning, dear.  I owe you an apology, of
course.  I had a burst tyre other side of Lochearn last
night, and it was near midnight when I got home.  I
hardly expected that you would sit up.  At what time
do you start?"

"Jamie ought to be here any moment.  I trysted him
for half-past eight, and it's twenty past now.  I hear the
wheel, I think.  Yes--there he is.  Aren't you going to
eat anything, Malcolm?"

"No.  Isn't there any coffee?  Oh, I forgot--she can't
make coffee.  It's a cup of black coffee I'd like this
morning.  Is the tea strong?  I'm coming down with
you, of course, Isla.  What else did you think?  Don't
wait here if you want to go upstairs or to be seeing after
your stuff, though we've plenty of time, really."

Isla gladly escaped.  She gathered from the general
appearance of her brother that care sat heavily upon
him.  But she had not the smallest desire to question
him.  Nay, her longing to get away from the increasingly
sordid conditions of her life had now become a
positive fever in her veins.

Rest was what she craved--rest from haunting
thoughts, from phantoms of dread, from the menacing
sword which seemed to be suspended over Achree and
all bearing the name of Mackinnon.

But she was to prove before another twenty-four hours
were over that there are things in this world from which
it is impossible to get away--crosses that have to be
endured--heroically if possible, but certainly endured.

Malcolm was in the back seat of the dogcart, and did
not speak a single word on the way down.  They halted
at Darrach, where a slight disappointment was Isla's--she
did not see Elspeth.  Donald himself, who seemed
to be minding the house--at any rate, he had the second
youngest child in his arms--came out of the gate to
explain that his wife had gone to Govan to see their
niece Jeanie Maclure, who was down with pneumonia.
She had taken the baby with her.

Isla sent many messages to her, and passed on with a
little sense of relief.

When they got to Lochearnhead Station the signal
was down for the Oban train, which could be seen
gliding swiftly round the curve of the hill.  At the last
moment the drag from Garrion, with the familiar pair
of roans in the shafts, drove up rapidly, and Neil
Drummond came bounding up to the platform.  When
he saw Malcolm Mackinnon handing his sister into the
train he went forward eagerly, though the man whom
he had come to meet--a visitor from Oban--had already
alighted, and was on the outlook for him.

"Good day, Isla.  Are you travelling?" he asked;
and, seeing the dressing-bag, the rug, the strapped
articles on the rack, he looked a trifle blank.

"She's going to Aunt Jean and Uncle Tom at
Wimereaux," answered Malcolm when Isla said nothing.
"Don't you think the change will do her good?"

"Yes.  But how long is she to be away?" inquired Neil.

And his tone was so imploring, that Malcolm,
understanding perfectly how it was, good-naturedly
stepped back to give him a chance.

"Why this sudden journey, Isla?" Neil demanded
with an imperious air, which showed how much he
cared about the whole affair.  "Last time I saw you
you said nothing on earth would induce you to go
Wimereaux."

"It was Malcolm who said I was going there," said
Isla demurely.

The answer puzzled Neil, and filled him with lively
forebodings.

"Isla," he said a trifle hoarsely, "you're not going
do anything foolish?  What has happened?  Have you
had a quarrel with Malcolm?"

"Not at all.  I only want a change, Neil.  Don't worry
about me.  Nothing can possibly happen to a strong
young woman, with her head screwed pretty firmly on
her shoulders."

Neil swung himself on the footboard of the train, quite
heedless of the fact that his guest was looking about for
him on the platform in hopeless disappointment.

"Isla, you are going to your uncle and aunt?  Unless
I am assured on that point, I'll step into the train and
go with you."

Isla laughed at that.

"Why should you care, Neil?  I'm only going a little
journey on my own.  I'll probably be back before
anyone has had time to miss me."

"That can't happen.  It'll be a long day for me till
you come back to Glenogle.  And, further, I'm not happy
in my mind about you.  In fact, I'm most unhappy."

"Don't be, then, Neil.  I'm not worth it."

"That's my business, my dear," he said, and never
had he looked more manly or more attractive.  "Somehow,
we all seem to have lost you lately.  They all say
that--Kitty, Aunt Betty, even the Rosmeads.  They
were speaking of you the other day.  You haven't
treated us well, Isla, whatever you may think.  And
now, this beats everything."

"The train is moving, Neil.  Get down, or you will be
hurt," she cried nervously.

But he still hung persistently to the half-open door.

"You'll write, Isla.  Promise at least that you will
write either to Kitty or to me?"

"I'll write to Kitty.  Give her my love and tell her
she'll hear from me without fail in a week or two."

"And if you want a friend, Isla, if there's anything I
can do for you, promise you'll send for me or let me
know.  There isn't anything I won't do.  No journey
would be too long or too difficult if I had the prospect
of serving you at the end of it, and--and well, you know
the rest, don't you?  I daren't say all I want."

A strong hand behind him took him by the coat-tails
and dragged him from the now swiftly moving train, and
the last Isla saw of Lochearn was Neil Drummond's face
and the appeal in his eyes.

Malcolm was too late for the final good-bye, but Isla,
on the whole, was rather glad that she had escaped it.
She pulled up the open window-sash and flung herself
back in the corner with a quick, heaving sigh.

It was all over, then.  The cords had been cut, and
she was adrift from Glenogle and all the trammels of
the old life.  What would the new bring, she wondered?
A little sob broke from between her trembling lips as
her eyes looked through the window at the wide Glen of
Balquhidder to the misty hills beyond, where the glory
of the heather was beginning to be dimmed.  When
should she see it all again, and in what mood?

At Strathyre her eyes were too red to permit her to
look out, and happily no passenger sought to disturb
her.  By the time the train reached Callander she was
calm again, and she arrived at Glasgow, quite composed.
She left her luggage in the cloak-room and walked, since
she had plenty of time, to the lawyer's office in
St. Vincent Place.

Mr. Cattanach was able to see her at once, and he
received her with his usual kindness of manner.  He
had thought a good deal about her of late and had
wondered how she was getting on at Creagh with
Malcolm, with whom he had had several rather stormy
interviews.

"I'm on my way to London, Mr. Cattanach, and as I
had an hour to spare before my train starts I thought
I should like to see you."

"Surely.  On your way to London, are you?  For a
long visit?"

"Yes.  I think so."

"Sir Thomas and Lady Mackinnon are still across the
Channel, I think.  I saw in the News one night lately
that they are not expected at Barras till November?"

"That's right, I believe," said Isla.

"Are you joining them?"

"Not just yet."

Cattanach scrutinized her rather closely.  He did
not know how far she might stand questioning, but he
gathered from a certain quiet determination in her
manner that she had some quite definite plan in her
mind.

"Mr. Cattanach," said Isla clearly, "you have always
been kind to me and have understood things right
through.  I can never forget how kind you were just
before my brother came home.  I can't go on living at
Creagh with him any longer."

"I'm not surprised.  I've been expecting to hear this
for some time."

"I'm a dependent on his bounty.  I ought not to have
been left like that, but I don't want to grumble about
it.  He thinks I'm going to Wimereaux to my aunt and
uncle.  But I have no such intention."

"Indeed!  I hope that you have at least some satisfactory
haven in view, Miss Mackinnon," he said, with
distinct anxiety in his voice.

"I have several very clear ideas.  To-night I shall
stay at the Euston Hotel and to-morrow I shall go to an
old servant of Achree who is married in the West End of
London.  She keeps a boarding-house.  From her house
it is my intention to seek some employment."

Cattanach looked the surprise he felt.  His disapproval,
he decided, he had better keep to himself.

"I am honoured by this conference, Miss Mackinnon,
and since you have told me so much I am encouraged
to ask more.  What sort of employment, may I ask,
does Miss Mackinnon of Achree think she will find in
London?"

Her eyes flashed a little mournfully.

"I belong to the great sad army of the partially
equipped, Mr. Cattanach, but I know my limitations and
I shall keep within them.  Also I shall be able to earn
my daily bread.  I have come to you, because,--for
reasons which I don't think I could really explain, even
if I tried--I feel that I should like at least one
responsible person to know where I am and precisely what I
am doing.  But I require that, unless circumstances
arise which render it absolutely necessary that it should
be known, you will not give that information to anybody
in Glenogle or at Balquhidder," she added as an
after-thought.

"You forget.  I have no communication with Glenogle
or Balquhidder now except through your brother.  He
is not likely to ask me your whereabouts.  Will you give
me your address?"

"I'll send it," she said diplomatically.  "I want to get
clean away from everything for a while, Mr. Cattanach,
for really I don't quite know where I am standing.  I
even feel as if I were some strange, new sort of person
with whom I have to get freshly acquainted.  Can you
understand that?"

"I understand that life has been very hard for you,
my dear," he said involuntarily.  "And I have often
prayed that your day of brightness would come."

"It won't come," she said with a little nod.  "I'm
one of those predestined to gloom.  Tell me,
Mr. Cattanach, before I go," she added with a little touch
of wistful tenderness that wholly became her, "how
do you think it is with my brother now?  You have
seen him several times.  Is--is he doing well?  You
wonder perhaps that I should ask.  But my judgment,
where he is concerned, has become entirely distorted.
That is one of the reasons why I want to get away,
because I am seeing nothing clearly, fairly, or justly,
especially in relation to him."

"I think he means well.  But he is not fitted for the
life of a country laird.  He would have made a better
soldier.  It is a thousand pities that he had to leave the
Army."

"It is.  Don't you think," she added after a moment's
hesitation, "don't you think it a very wonderful thing
that the true story of his leaving the Army has never
got about?"

"I think it more than wonderful.  There must have
been somebody very high in power, manipulating the
strings in the background.  But it is a very good thing
for you that the story was hushed up."

"But I don't think that Malcolm realizes how he has
been spared.  He is not so grateful as he ought to be,"
she said.

And then she bit her lip, as if she regretted the
condemnatory words and as if she wished to recall them.

"I can take you out to lunch to-day, I hope?" said
the lawyer, pulling out his watch.  "Unless Mr. Drummond
is waiting somewhere round the corner?" he added
with a smile.

"No, I am quite alone, and I shall be very pleased to
go to lunch with you," said Isla.

She found the next hour quite pleasant.  Cattanach
took her to the station, transferred her luggage, and
secured for her a comfortable seat in the London train.
He could not wait until its departure, however, as he
had a West-End appointment at two o'clock.  They
parted cordially and Isla repeated her promise to send
him her London address as soon as she herself was
quite sure of it.

She spread her things about and then, tucking her rug
about her, began to glance over some of the illustrated
papers.  So far, no one had interfered with her privacy
by entering the compartment.  She had no expectation,
however, that she would be allowed to retain it all the
way.

About three minutes before the train started there
was a great bustle and talking outside the carriage
window, and presently a porter, laden with sundry small
packages, most of them rolled up in brown paper,
entered the compartment, followed by a large woman in
a brown tweed travelling coat of ample dimensions.

Isla looked over the rim of her paper in mild curiosity
and then quite suddenly she paled a little and hastily
withdrew behind her screen.

It was the lady of the purple gown.





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.. _`IN THE LONDON TRAIN`:

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   CHAPTER XIX


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   IN THE LONDON TRAIN

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The train had started before Isla's travelling
companion caught a glimpse of her face.  She rose up with
a sudden bang from her seat, with the result that, in spite
of herself, Isla lowered her paper a little to see what was
going to happen.  What she did see was only the purple
lady removing her large and unsuitable headgear, which
seemed to interfere with her comfort.

"Hats are gettin' worse every day," she said with a
pleasant smile as she jabbed two immense pins with
imitation moonstone tops into the stuffing of the
cushions behind her.  "Soon they'll need to get us
hat-compartments.  Eh--what?  Now, where have I seen
you before?"

She took some hairpins from her abundant and really
pretty hair, and with a back-comb began to do her
toilet.

Isla was saved the difficulty of answering by a sudden
gleam of recognition wandering across the lady's face.

"Oh, I know--on the road right down there in
Glenogle yesterday!  Now, ain't you jolly glad to be
gettin' away from that God-forsaken hole?"

"Just at the present moment I am," Isla admitted.

She wondered what means she should take to ensure
for herself quiet and privacy.  She was incapable of
any act of studied rudeness, but the prospect of listening
to the woman's talk appalled her.  Should she call the
guard and ask to be given another seat in another
compartment, or should she politely inform her
fellow-traveller that she did not care to talk.

The lady flopped upon her seat, shook her head to
see whether the coils of her hair were firmer, and then
settled herself back among the cushions, smoothing out
the creases of her cheap blanket-coat with a plump
white hand.

She had now a black frock on, but, in contrast with
Isla's neat, trim, well-fitting suit of home-spun, it
looked badly cut, badly worn, altogether unsuitable for
a journey.  There were quantities of white net--not too
clean--about her neck, and many brooches and a long
chain, on which hung a lorgnette, while a double
eyeglass was pinned to her bosom.  She wore a great many
rings of sorts and a wedding one.

Isla's eyes were quick enough to detect that.

"Goin' all the way?" she asked with an engaging smile.

Isla nodded.

"So am I, and jolly glad I'll be to hear the noise and
smell the good old smells of the Euston Road.  How
they live up there!  But there--it ain't livin', is it now?
Would you call it livin'--eh?"

"Well," said Isla, diverted in spite of herself, and
feeling no longer the appalling dread that pursued her
in Glenogle regarding this very woman, "it depends on
what you call living."

"Just so.  Well, I like a bit of fun myself--a night
out occasionally and a bit of stir in the daytime.  Them
hills, and big, dark locks get on my nerves.  I was
four days at the little hotel at Strathyre, and I had just
about enough of it."

"Visiting friends in the neighbourhood?"

"No," snapped the woman.  "It was a bit of business
I was on, and it was last night before I saw the party I
had to see.  Not but what I was comfortable there, and
they do make good food.  Ever stopped there?  They
tell me they hadn't an empty bed from Easter till
now--full up with fishermen and that sort.  Can't
understand it--don't pretend to.  It's the silence--the big
empty silence that gets at me.  It would drive me crazy
in a month, and I'd be gettin' up in my sleep and
wanderin' into that water."

"You would get used to Strathyre," said Isla, smiling a
little as she raised her paper, and hoping that there
might now be a reprieve.

Her passionate hope was that the woman, who had
all the unreserve of her class, would not be seized with
a sudden desire to confide the nature of her business to
her fellow-traveller.  She did not want to hear the
truth from these lips.  If necessary she would have to
tell her somehow that she did not wish to go on talking.

"I doubt it very much!  I've been about too much
and seen too much life to settle down in the country.
I may have to, perhaps, later on, when I get older and
not so fond of racket.  Nothing to hurt--don't you
know?--only a night at one of the halls and a good old
canter down Regent Street and Oxford Street."

"I never saw anybody riding there," said Isla in a
startled voice.

"I don't mean that, of course!" laughed the stranger;
"not but what I could do it and make the traffic sit up
for me too.  When I was in India I had me own horse
every mornin' and them grinnin' black men to hold it
for me till I was ready to mount.  I had a figure then
as slim as yours, and they all said I looked better in me
habit than in anything else."

"What part of India were you in?" asked Isla,
fascinated in spite of herself.

"Pretty well all over, but latterly I was in the north.  My
husband was in the Fighting Fifth.  Ever heard of them?"

"Yes, of course.  They were through the Afghan
campaign.  My father was a soldier, and he used to
show us as children their marches on the map."

"Oh, indeed!  Then you know something about the
service?  Any brother in it?"

"I had one," said Isla, and the colour rose hotly in
her face.

"I love it.  Even when I was a little nipper I always said
I'd never marry anybody but a soldier.  And I didn't."

"Is your husband alive still?"

"No--dead.  Killed in action he was, a-savin' of his
Colonel.  I've got the little brown cross at home
somewhere.  These were the days!  There never was a
braver chap than Joe Bisley ever shouldered a musket.
Ah, poor Joe!"

Isla, perceiving that her companion was now in the
throes of reminiscence, shrank back nervously in her
corner.

"Doesn't it make your head ache to talk in the train?"
she asked rather hastily.  "There are heaps of papers here
if you like to read.  You are welcome to any of them.
The gentleman who saw me off bought a great many."

"Ah, I don't wonder!" said the other with an
admiring glance of approval.  "You are just the sort that
they would buy everything for if they got the chance.
A little standoffish, too--ain't that what they like?
Oh, I know them through and through!"

In spite of herself, Isla laughed out loud.

"Oh, it was a very old friend of my family who was
seeing me off to-day!  My father's lawyer in fact."

"Ah, then, he knew what side his bread was buttered
on.  And are you goin' to London, may I ask?"

"Yes."

"What particular part?"

"I shall stay the night at the Euston Hotel.  I may
go abroad.  My plans are a little indefinite at present."

"Same as mine.  It ain't an easy thing for a lone
woman to make up her mind, and, as I told the party I
spoke of, last night, I'm gettin' tired of uncertainty.
I want to know where I am.  That's what for I took that
long journey and stopped at that queer little hotel.  I
wanted to see a party and get my bearings."

"And did you get them?" asked Isla desperately.

"Yes, I think so.  But, bless you, you never know
where you are with them.  They're as slippery as eels.
If you weren't so pretty, my dear, I'd warn you to steer
clear of them for the rest of your mortal life.  But it
ain't in reason that you'll be allowed.  There must be
dozens after you."

Isla shook her head and then pointed suggestively to
the illustrated papers, even making a remark about one
of the pictures on the cover.

But the lady did not accept the hint.

"I don't read much," she confessed.  "And men and
women are much more interesting than books.  When
you've seen a bit of life, as I have, what's written in a
book doesn't count for much.  It's like a stuffed sawdust
man beside a real flesh-and-blood one.  Yes, they're a
slippery crew, but they makes life--don't they, my dear?"

"They make its dispeace, anyhow," said Isla,
surprised into an expression of opinion that she
immediately regretted.

Her companion's face brightened, and she sat forward
eagerly.

"Fancy you thinkin' that!  Well, as you've had reason
to say that, I don't mind tellin' you I agree.  They're
worth watchin', they need watchin' all the time, though
most of them are like babies, with no more thought of
what's goin' to happen.  Now there's me!  When I was
in India I was pretty and slim as you are, though you
wouldn't think it, and I was a toast in the station and
could have had me pick after Joe died.  There was the
Sergeant--a splendid figure of a man with four medals
and pay saved.  He would have married me right off,
and so would the little Corporal, and even one of the
subs. that had an Earl for his grandfather; but I passed
by them all and took up with one that nobody could be
sure of.  He's here to-day and gone to-morrow, so to
speak, and even his wife couldn't keep him on the
string."

Isla jumped up with her colour fluttering and threw
down her paper.

"It's very hot in here, isn't it?  Excuse me, but I
must go out into the corridor for a little fresh air.  I
can't stand the heat any longer."

"Oh, poor dear, have a drop of brandy!  They do
have uncommon good spirits at Strathyre, but then, it's
the dew of their own mountains, isn't it?  Do have a
drop, dearie.  It'll buck you up at once."

"No, no, thank you!" cried Isla over her shoulder
from the corridor.  "I never touch spirits.  I only want
to be quiet and not talk for the rest of the journey."

Mrs. Bisley looked disappointed, but she comforted
herself with a drop of the dew of the mountains and then
sat down to have a look at the papers.

Once Isla glanced back at her and, in spite of herself,
had to admit the prettiness of her face.  She looked
about thirty-five, and had she been properly dressed she
could have been made to look much more attractive.
There was something winning about her, too, but--oh,
the irony of fate that should have brought them together
in that narrow space, from which it was impossible to
escape!

Isla's abnormally quick perception had easily filled
in the lines of the story.  She had no doubt that the
party referred to by her fellow-traveller was Malcolm.
And that the woman believed that she had a right to
him there could be no doubt.  He had not admitted her
claim, Isla concluded, else surely he could never have
been so base as lift his eyes to Vivien Rosmead.

She felt sick as she pressed her throbbing head against
the cold glass of the corridor window, enjoying the swish
of the wind on her cheek.

Should she never get away from the shadows which
had darkened her life?  Was it ordained that she
should be pursued, far beyond the limits of Glenogle,
by the sordid phantoms of Malcolm's past and present?
Was fate wholly inexorable--were poor human beings
but puppets, liable to be rudely moved hither and
thither upon the boards of the stage of life?  If it were
so she might as well go back and fight it out on the
Moor of Creagh.

"Feelin' better, my dear?" said Mrs. Bisley kindly,
when she presently turned her head.  "The first lunch
will be comin' along immediately, and that'll make you
feel better."

"I don't take it," said Isla, seeing a probable
respite for an hour or so, during which she might
either escape or rearrange her plans.  "I have a few
sandwiches in my dressing-bag and, later, I shall get a
cup of tea.  I never eat much when I am travelling."

"A mistake, my dear.  Take it from me that has
travelled a lot both by land and sea.  If you don't eat
you get so low that you can't bear yourself.  Do say two
for luncheon when the waiter comes along; then we'll
go in together."

Isla shook her head.

"No, thank you."

The attendant came at the moment to inform them
that the first luncheon would be served in about twenty
minutes.  Isla crept back again to her corner under the
sympathetic scrutiny of her companion.

"What a colour you have, to be sure!  Sorry you
don't feel up to luncheon," she said cheerfully.  "It's
all use.  When you've knocked about as much as I have
you'll get more experiences.  I'm up to all travelling
dodges."

Isla had no doubt of it.  She opened out another
paper and let her eyes fall languidly on it, praying
fervidly for the quick passage of the next twenty minutes.
At another time she would have most thoroughly
enjoyed such a travelling-companion and would
undoubtedly have elicited her whole family history.  But
now her whole desire and aim was to stem the avalanche.

"Queer--wasn't it?--that we should meet like this,"
pursued her wholly unconscious tormentor.  "I took
to you that day when I met you on the road far more
than to that other one you was with when you came
back.  She's a haughty piece, if you like.  They told
me at the hotel at Strathyre that it's expected she'll
maybe be Lady of Achree some day, but we don't think!"

"Nobody pays any attention to the gossip of the
Glen," said Isla, the desperate look stealing to her face
again.

"Well, you may take it from me that that won't
come orf," said Mrs. Bisley with cheerful emphasis, at
the same time picking up a paper and beginning a
languid inspection of the pictures it contained.

For about ten minutes there was a blessed silence,
and then the restaurant attendant appeared to ask
them to take seats for the first luncheon.  Mrs. Bisley,
full of pleasurable anticipation, jumped up and
proceeded to arrange her hair and pin on her hat at the
most becoming angle.  Then she grasped her hand-bag
and came out into the corridor, nodding delightedly.

"Sure you won't come, Miss?  It would do you no
end of good.  Do be persuaded."

"Oh, no, thank you.  I couldn't eat."

"Then, I leave you to keep our seats.  Hope we don't
have anyone else put in with us at Carlisle.  Then we
can have a nice chat all the afternoon."

"Heaven forbid!" said Isla in her inmost soul.

A few minutes after her companion had disappeared,
and when the corridor was quite empty, she rang the
bell.  It was a long time before anyone answered it.
Then, indeed, it was only the conductor who came.
He had not even heard the bell--he merely came through
by chance.

"Will you be so kind as to get me another seat at
once and have my things moved?" she said, with that
single touch of hauteur mingled with appeal which,
somehow, always commanded immediate service.

The man touched his hat, looked inquiringly into the
compartment, and, seeing no one, put a question.

"The train is rather full, ma'am.  Are you not comfortable
here?  I don't believe there is another compartment
in it with only two passengers."

"I don't mind.  I want to move," said Isla desperately.
"I--I don't care for my fellow-traveller.  No--she isn't in
the least objectionable, but I want to move right to the
other end of the train, if possible, and if there is no other
accommodation I'll pay for a first-class seat."

"Very well, Miss.  I'll see what I can do," he said
obligingly enough as he moved on through the doorway
of the corridor.

Isla feverishly began at once to gather her things
together, and she had her dressing-bag in her hand and
her rug over her arm when, in about eight minutes' time,
the guard returned.

"There is one corner seat in the front of the train--two
gentlemen and a lady in the compartment.  One of
them is going out at Crewe.  So if you'd care to wait till
then----"

"No, thank you.  I'll go now," she said.

The man, still further puzzled, made up his mind to
come through later and take a look at the other occupant
of the compartment, now absent.  He gathered up Isla's
things and led the way to the front portion of the train.
Isla felt that she was not particularly welcome in her
new quarters.  A woman, eating oranges, glared at her
disagreeably, but at least she was left severely alone.
She felt weak and limp after the strain of the morning,
and all the afternoon every footfall in the corridor made
her start, fully expecting to behold in pursuit of her the
companion whom she had deserted.  But she neither
saw nor heard any more of her until they arrived at
Euston and rubbed shoulders at the luggage barriers.

Isla did not perceive her at first, and had just called
out to the man that Mackinnon was the name on her box.

At the sound of it Mrs. Bisley started back as if she
had been shot, her vivid colour paled, and she put her
hand to her side as if she felt some spasm.

"Well, I'm blest!" she whispered inly to herself.
"So that's it!  I might have known.  Oh, Winnie Bisley,
once more your long tongue has got you into trouble."

She had the delicacy of feeling to wish to efface
herself from Isla Mackinnon's eyes, and yet she had a most
insatiable desire to find out her destination.  Remembering,
however, that she had said she would sleep the
night at the Euston Hotel she gave up the idea of
discovery as impracticable.

As Isla's porter shouldered her trunk and she turned
to follow him towards the hotel entrance she saw the
woman again, and their eyes met.

Mrs. Bisley did not even smile, but Isla, as she passed
by her, paused for the fraction of a second.

"I did not mean to be so rude as you may have
thought, but my head ached dreadfully and I felt that I
must get away to where it was not necessary to talk."

"I quite understand," replied Mrs. Bisley.  "Don't
apologize.  I don't take offence easily.  I'm not that sort.
You're Miss Mackinnon, aren't you?"

"Yes."

"It might have saved a lot of talk if you had told me
your name at the beginning," she said a trifle drily.
"But, after all, perhaps there isn't any great harm done."

"I hope not.  You meant to be kind, I'm sure.  Good
night, Mrs. Bisley."

"Bisley was my name," she said grimly.  "Good
night, Miss Mackinnon.  If it should be that you ever
want to see me again--and stranger things have
happened--you'll find me at 21 Henrietta Street, off the
Edgeware Road--fourth turning on your left from the
Marble Arch."

"I'll remember it," said Isla hastily.  "Good night."

She was glad once more to escape.  She had got much
fresh food for thought, and she was at a loss to know
how to act in a matter which seemed to concern her, and
yet with which she was loth to intermeddle.

On one point, however, her mind was absolutely made
up.  Malcolm should not win Vivien Rosmead under
false pretences.  Not for the second time should the
peace and happiness of that dear woman be imperilled.

But she did not yet know how she was going to prevent
the crowning act of the tragedy of Malcolm's life.

"Tragedy" was the word Isla used to herself as the
whole story beat upon her brain where she lay, tossing
sleepless in her noisy bedroom, disturbed by the shriek
of the trains, the long dull roar of life in the Euston
Road, and, above all, by the phantoms of her own sad
heart.

How easily, by putting a few adroit questions, could
she have wiled the whole story from her fellow-traveller's
lips!  It was not her pride alone that had prevented her
from asking these questions.  She was afraid.

She fell asleep with one last haunting thought in her
mind--how much happier than she were the Mackinnons
who slept their last dreamless sleep on the Braes of
Balquhidder.





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.. _`THE REALITY OF THINGS`:

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   CHAPTER XX


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   THE REALITY OF THINGS

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Towards the morning Isla fell into a heavy, dreamless
sleep, from which she did not awake till half-past ten
o'clock.

A sense of confusion and dismay swept over her when
she realized how late it was, until she remembered that,
in her scheme of things, time just then was of no
consequence.

Certainly she had things to do, but the hour of their
doing mattered to no man or woman.  She was alone,
she was free, this day and other days were in front of her
to do with what she willed.

She sprang up, rang for hot water, and, pulling up the
blind a little way, looked out upon streets bathed in a
flood of glorious autumn sunshine.  Somehow, it
comforted her that London did not weep at her coming.  It
seemed an augury of good will.  She had not known how
physically tired she was until she had stretched herself
on her bed.  And now, her strength fully restored by
sleep, her spirit became less craven.

She was still joyous over her escape.  Things might
happen in the Glen and she would never know.  She,
whose interest in the smallest event there had ever been
of the warm and proprietary kind, had by one drastic
step cut herself off from her old life.  And for the
moment she had room for little else in her mind but a
sense of lively relief that she had gotten clean away.

As she dressed leisurely she reviewed the events of
yesterday, among which the meeting and conversation
with Joe Bisley's widow stood out in odd relief.

Isla was not without a latent sense of humour.  In
happier circumstances she could have extracted a great
deal of amusement from the passing show of life, and
she was able to smile at the situation of yesterday.  It
had been Gilbertian to the last degree, and might have
been culled from the pages of the latest comic opera.

What surprised her most was that she had no feeling
of indignation or resentment against this woman who
had stepped from the unknown into the Mackinnon
scheme of things.  Nay, she felt kindly towards her--she
felt that somewhere, deep down in that undisciplined
nature, there was gold.  It was not the woman's fault
that she had been born in another sphere, that she was
so far from comprehending Isla's own points of view.

She had other qualities which are common to the
whole of humanity--good feeling, honesty, kind-heartedness,
and sympathy.  Isla was womanly enough and
just enough to concede the possession of all these to
Winifred Bisley.  Her own innate goodness convinced
her that this woman was not, and could not be, wholly
bad.  And no doubt--and here her thoughts again
became tinged with bitterness--in this case also Malcolm
had been to blame.

She preferred to leave the unfinished story, however,
to try to banish from her mind the problem of the loose
threads which wanted weaving together.  As for the day
of unravelling, that was hid in the womb of time, but
from past experience Isla had no doubt that that day
would surely come.

In her mind's eye this morning Glenogle was shadowy,
and even her passionate championship of Vivien
Rosmead seemed to suffer some chill.  She was concerned
altogether with herself.  And perhaps just then that
was no bad thing for Isla Mackinnon, seeing that she
had arrogated to herself so long the rôle of general
burden-bearer to the community.

She felt fit and strong and hopeful as she belted her
trim waist and fastened the Mackinnon badge into her
black tie and set her hat firmly on her pretty hair.  The
memory of the nodding plumes and the moonstone
hat-pins evoked a smile as she turned away from the
mirror.

With that smile still lingering on her lips she went
forth to conquer London!

She was the very last arrival in the breakfast-room,
and she apologized for her lateness.

"I was very tired after my long journey," she said to
the head waiter.  "If it is too late for breakfast I must
take something else.

"Too late, madam!  It is never too late here for anything,"
he said magnificently as he directed her gallantly
to a small table set comfortably near to the cheerful fire,
and placed the menu card before her.

When Isla had made her choice one of the satellites
was instructed to fulfil her order with dispatch, and the
head waiter stood near in case that the charming lady
should desire further speech with him.

"No, I don't think I shall require my room another
night," she answered, when he ventured on a polite
inquiry.  "I have had to come up rather unexpectedly,
and, immediately after breakfast, I shall go out and see
the friend with whom I expect to stay while I am in
London.  I may leave my things here, I suppose?"

"Certainly, madam.  The room's yours until the evening."

"Thank you.  Have you been having good weather
in London?  It is lovely this morning.  And please, can
you tell me the best way to get from here to the
Edgeware Road?"

"Underground, madam, from King's Cross.  It will
take you in about ten minutes."

Isla thanked him again, and when he laid the morning
paper before her she felt that a hotel could be a very
comfortable place.  She was glad to hear about the
Underground, because her riches were not great, and she
must be careful about small expenses.

About noon she sallied forth on foot to find the
Metropolitan station at King's Cross.  She was an
absolute stranger to that part of London.  True, she had
frequently arrived at the great termini, but on these
occasions she had simply got into a cab or carriage and
been quickly conveyed westward.

She enjoyed the new experience--she was in the mood
at the moment to enjoy everything and to put the best
face even on her difficulties.

At the Edgeware Road station she felt confused by the
frightful congestion in the streets until, in answer to an
inquiry, a friendly policeman told her that the street
she wished to find was near the Park end of the wide
thoroughfare.

"About ten minutes' walk, Miss," he assured her.

And, though a policeman's ten minutes is an elastic
measure, Isla was not unduly tired by the time she
reached Agnes Fraser's door.

Before she rang the bell she looked critically up and
down Cromer Street, contemplating the fact that for
some time to come it would limit her horizon.  It was
eminently respectable but dull, and some of the houses
had a dingy look.  Even Mrs. Fraser's, Isla thought,
was less bright and cheerful than usual.  The brass
furnishings on the doors looked as if they had not been
polished for several days, and the raindrops had dried
upon the "Apartments" plate which, the last time Isla
had seen it, had shone like gold.

An exceedingly untidy slip of a girl about sixteen, in
response to her ring, opened the door just a few inches.
She had a squint in one eye, which perhaps accounted
for her cap being set awry on her unkempt hair.

"Is Mrs. Fraser at home?" asked Isla imperiously.

"Yus, Miss, but she ain't well, she's in bed.  You
can't see her."

This dashed Isla's fine spirits for a moment.

"In bed is she?  What is the matter--anything serious?"

"She's 'ad newmonier, been mortial bad, Miss, but
she's gettin' better.  Only if it's apartments yer after,
there ain't any."

She delivered herself of this statement wholly on her
own initiative, and in order to get rid as quickly as
possible of her questioner.

"Is Mrs. Fraser very ill?  Has she been able to see
anyone just lately?"

"Yus, Miss, she's bin up at midday since Monday.
She's settin' up now in 'er room."

"I'll come inside," said Isla decidedly.  "Go upstairs
and tell her that Miss Mackinnon from Achree has
called and would like very much to see her."

"Yus, Miss," said the girl stolidly, and, opening the
door a little more widely, permitted Isla to step into
the hall.

"There ain't anywheer but Mr. Carswell's room.  The
drorin'-room lidy ain't out this mornin'.  Yus--yer can
sit 'ere if yer likes.  But Missis Fraser, she don't like me
leavin' folks in the hall since a werry decent-looking
man took away three umbrellas and Mister Carswell's
best greatcoat."

Isla sat down on one of the rush-bottomed chairs and
asked the girl to make haste to convey her message.
Very soon she heard the quick shutting of various doors,
the rushing about of feet upstairs, and, after about five
minutes, the damsel appeared out of breath and with
her cap more awry than ever.

"Yer can come up," she said laconically.

Isla proceeded to ascend the somewhat dark staircase,
which received all the light it possessed from a dome in
the roof three floors up.  All these stairs had Isla to
ascend, for Mrs. Fraser was fully let, and she had had to
retire to one of the attics when she was laid aside.

It was a very bare room, but a bright fire made it
fairly cheerful, and Agnes herself in a red flannelette
dressing-gown, blushing all over her face, was in the
middle of the room to welcome Isla when she reached
the door.

"I'm very sorry, dear Miss Isla, to bring you up all
this way.  But could I help it?  Oh, what I have
suffered bein' shut up here, an' the hoose at the mercy
o' thae rubbitch in the kitchen!  Hoo mony times had
ye to ring?--three or fewer, I'll be bound."

"No, only once--and don't worry yourself, dear soul,"
said Isla, whose joy at sight of Mrs. Fraser's homely and
welcoming face could not be dimmed by the recital
of sordid details.  "I hope you are really getting
better."

"Oh ay.  I'm to get doon the morn.  I'm very sorry
I'm no doon the day for ye.  If ye had written I wad
hae been doon.  Noo I canna offer ye onything--no
even a cup o' tea.  I wad never be sure hoo it wad come up."

"I don't need anything," said Isla, as she closed the
door and put Agnes back in her chair.  "I've only just
come out from my breakfast at the Euston Hotel."

"You're not stoppin' wi' Lady Mackinnon, then?"

"No.  They are still abroad.  They will not come
back, I think, for about two months yet."

Agnes looked a trifle puzzled, but sat waiting
respectfully for further enlightenment.

"Your little maid told me downstairs that you are
full up when she supposed I was looking for accommodation,"
said Isla presently.  "I hope she only said that
to get rid of me.  I want a room here, Agnes."

Mrs. Fraser's face flushed again with the quick nervous
flush of the invalid who is not yet quite able to cope
with everyday affairs.

"Oh, Miss Isla, this is not the place for you--and
very well ye ken it.  I can gie ye another address.
Ye mind Lady Eden's own maid Martin?  She's in
Seymour Street, and doin' well.  Ye should go and see
her.  She wad be very prood to get ye, I am sure."

Isla shook her head, drew her chair a little nearer that
of Agnes, and looked at her very straightly.

"I can't afford to go to Martin, even if I liked
her--which I never did.  Things have not been going very
well with me lately, Agnes, and--and it became imperative
that I should get away.  I can't explain it to you
this morning, and I know you will never ask questions."

"I hope I ken my place a little better than that, Miss
Isla," said Mrs. Fraser.

But her tone was sad.

"I'm not at all well off, and, in fact, I must look about
immediately for something to do."

At this strange announcement Mrs. Fraser fell back
in her chair, as if overcome.

"Oh, Miss Isla, ye don't say so!  It's awful, my dear!
You to be seekin' something to do!  It's no richt--it
canna be richt.  Oh, my dear, what is the meanin'
o' it?"

Isla dashed away a sudden moisture from her eyes.

"It's difficult to explain.  You must have known that
things were not going well at Achree for a long time,
not even in my father's lifetime.  Since he died and
my brother has become the Laird affairs have got all
muddled, and the outlook is hopeless.  Further, we don't
get on, Agnes.  You knew Malcolm as a boy of seven
years.  So perhaps I needn't say much more."

"No.  But to let you go out into the world like
this--it's a cryin' shame!  You--a Mackinnon o' Achree!  It
shouldna be," said Agnes desperately.

"Oh, he did not actually send me out, you know,
Agnes.  In fact, he thinks I am on my way to France--to
my aunt and uncle."

"And surely he is richt.  That is where ye should be,
Miss Isla.  Oh, tak' my advice and go now.  London's
a cauld, cruel place for them that has to get their livin'.
It's me and Fraser that kens that.  And for you to
be oot in it!  It minds me on naething but a lamb that
has wandered frae its mither amang the little hills and
wi' the snaw comin' doon like to blind it.  Ye canna do
it, Miss Isla.  Tak' it frae me that kens--ye canna
do it!"

"I must, Agnes, and if you can't encourage me you
must hold your tongue, dear soul," said Isla bravely.
"Let us get back to the point.  Can you let me have a
room?  In fact, you must let me have a room--quite
cheap, though at its market-value and not a penny less.
All I want to make sure of is that I am under your roof.
Nothing else matters."

Agnes, still flushed and nervous, gave the matter rapid
consideration.

"The drawing-room floor is what ye ocht to hae, Miss Isla."

"But I couldn't pay for it.  So, what comes next?"

"There's the floor below this--the back room.  It's
big and very quiet, but it doesna get much sun.  There
has been a French artist in it, and he painted things on
the doors and on the mantelpiece.  Some thinks them
very bonnie.  He gaed oot only last week awa' back to
his ain country, and he was apparently very sorry to
leave.  He was a very decent man for a Frenchman."

"That sounds more like it," said Isla cheerfully.
"How much, Agnes?  Honest Indian, now--how much
did the Frenchman pay?"

"Twelve shillings a week, and he had his breakfast
for that.  But it was a French breakfast--naething but
coffee and rolls.  I would never charge you that, though.
Miss Isla; if ye would just tak' the room it's a prood
woman I'd be, and as for Fraser, he would be neither to
haud nor bind aboot it."

"That I can't do, Agnes, even to see the expansion of
Fraser.  If you like to give me the room and a French
breakfast, with a very occasional egg when they are
good and cheap, for twelve shillings a week--why, then,
I'll take it gladly and pay a week in advance if I can
come in to-day."

"Oh, but, Miss Isla, I am not able yet to see properly
to things, and, as I say, I've naething but rubbitch in
the kitchen.  Even at the very best, my hoose is not
what you hae been accustomed to, and I should never
hae an easy or a happy mind aboot ye."

"That's sad, for I am going to be very easy and happy
about myself, dear soul.  So, do say I may come in this
very afternoon.  My things are all at the Euston Hotel,
and, of course, staying there is beyond my means altogether."

Mrs. Fraser sat back in her chair, and her face was
troubled.

"Come, of course, and welcome, my dear.  But I am
wae for ye.  And what is it ye think of tryin' to do?
Is it to go as a companion to an old leddy--or what?
There is so very little a leddy like you can do."

"I read an advertisement in the 'Morning Post' this
morning for a young person to take pet dogs for an airing
in the Park.  My physical powers would be equal to
that, I believe, and it would not need much brain power
at least."

Agnes hardly even laughed at the suggestion.

"I ken what I'm speakin' aboot, Miss Isla.  I have
not kept an apartment hoose in London for seven years
for naething.  The things I hae seen, they would fill a
book."

"I have no doubt of it, but I'm not going to add to
your tragic reminiscences, Agnes.  Fortune is now going
to begin to smile on me.  Don't let us meet trouble
half-way, anyhow.  We'll change the subject.  Haven't you
anything to ask about your old friends and neighbours
in the Glen?"

"I dinna hear frae ony o' them noo, Miss Isla.  Oot
o' sicht oot o' mind.  Hoo's Elspeth Maclure, and has
she ony mair bairns?"

"None since the last," laughed Isla.

"And is her tongue ony quater?  Eh, that lassie!
When we were neibours at Achree I tell ye she fair
deaved a body.  You'll no mind--ye were young at the
time--that I had to ask the hoosekeeper to let me
sleep in anither room.  Naebody could sleep wi' Elspeth.
She wud speak even in her sleep.  We were a' sorry for
Maclure.  But, of course, he was a quate man, or there
wad hae been ructions."

Isla retailed a few items of Glenogle and Lochearn
gossip for Mrs. Fraser's benefit, and finally returned to
the subject of the room.

"I can tak' ye doon to see it, Miss Isla.  I was as far
as the dining-room yesterday."

Isla thanked her, and together they went down one
flight of stairs and entered a large, wide room with two
long windows looking out upon a microscopic back-yard,
in which was a solitary tree.  Though it was little more
than noon the room was rather gloomy, and Agnes
pointed out that it was the projecting portions of the
neighbouring houses that darkened the windows.

"If I get employment I shall be out most of the day,
and in the evenings I shall have a fire, and then it will
be quite cosy.  So these are the Frenchman's pictures!
Why, some of them are very pretty."

He had done some sketches in water colour on the
panels of the door and also on the sides of the
mantel-piece; and, though the furniture was a little hopeless
and rather suggestive of the cheaper end of the Tottenham
Court Road, Isla was thankful to get it.

But Agnes Fraser felt a little despondent about it all
the afternoon, and when Fraser, who was steward at a
West-End club, came home at tea-time to see how she
was, he found that she had been crying.

He also took a gloomy view of Miss Mackinnon's
venture into the unknown.

"It's only her fad, Nance.  And afore she has had
time to get tired o't or even to get a grup o' the rael
thing she'll rue it, or some o' them will come and tak'
her away.  So let her come, and dinna you fash your
heid aboot her.  Eh, woman, I'm gled to see ye in a
frock at last!"

About six o'clock that evening a four-wheeler trundled
up to Mrs. Fraser's house in Cromer Street, and Isla
with all her belongings was admitted to her new quarters.

She slept soundly that night, secure in the haven
found under the roof of an old friend.

But Agnes herself, who knew the hardships of London
life and had very special knowledge of the extreme
difficulty the indigent gentlewoman experienced in
finding employment, never closed an eye.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE MARKET PLACE`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXI


.. class:: center medium

   THE MARKET PLACE

.. vspace:: 2

That evening, over her fire in the room which Andrew
Fraser had christened "The Pictur Gallery," Isla took
stock of her marketable accomplishments with the
advertizing columns of the "Morning Post" and the "Daily
Telegraph" spread on the table in front of her.

She had to confess that they were meagre both in
quality and quantity.  She had been imperfectly
educated by a wholly incompetent woman, who had had to
combine in one the offices of governess, housekeeper,
and chaperon, and over whom for five years of the
General's absence in India there had been none to
exercise the slightest control.

Aunt Jean had offered to take the child to Barras to
bring her up with her own, but she had altogether
declined to have Malcolm even in the holidays.  This had
so angered the General that he had answered in the
hot-headed Highland fashion that he would see to the
upbringing of both his children himself and would be
beholden to none.

That Isla had emerged from the process even as well
equipped as she was said a good deal for her intelligence
and native common sense.  Her gifts of observation and
her love of books had helped her to bridge the gaps in
her educational training, but of the skilled attainments
that fetch money in the market place she possessed none
except the power to keep house with a good appearance
on very slender means.

She decided, as her eyes wandered restlessly down
those weary "Want" columns, that the only post she
was fit for was that of a housekeeper, for which there
was a limited demand.  Many seemed to be in need of
skilled and highly-trained governesses at substantial
salaries, but against the unskilled all doors seemed to
be shut.

Once more she perused the advertisement for a young
person to give pet dogs an airing, and she resolved that,
out of curiosity and as a preliminary canter into the
unknown, she would call at the address given.  It was in
Westbourne Terrace, which, from inquiry, she learned was
in her own neighbourhood and could be reached on foot.

She was a little subdued when she arose next morning
to find "The Pictur Gallery" at eight o'clock in a sort of
twilight gloom consequent upon the rain and the fog
outside.  After the glorious airs, the limitless freedom
of the Moor of Creagh it was an experience calculated
to damp the bravest spirit.

She had to ring three times before receiving the
smallest attention from the squint-eyed maid, and
Agnes, tired with the unexpected excitement of the
previous day, had not felt herself well enough to get up
before breakfast, as she had fully intended.

Much ringing of bells, some altercations in the
passages, and a variety of odours were the outstanding
characteristics of the Cromer Street house in the early
morning hours.

At a quarter past nine Isla's French breakfast was
brought up on a slatternly tray, and, finding it impossible
to drink the coffee, she had to ask--and she did so
in quite humble tones--for a fresh pot of tea.

"I ain't 'ad no borders about brekfus for 'The Pitcsher
Gallery,' Miss," quoth Arabella in a rather high and
mighty voice.  "But I'll get the tea.  It ain't all beer
and skittles 'ere of a mornin', I kin tell yer, wiv hall the
bells in the 'ouse a-ringin' at onct, the missus in 'er
bed, and ole Flatfeet on the warpath in the kitching."

When the door had closed Isla sat down on the front
of her bed and laughed till the tears rolled down her
cheeks.  The dreariness of the place in which she sat,
the dead ashes on the cold hearth, the indescribable
lack of the comforts--even of the decencies--of life
appalled her.

Yet just in such conditions, and in others infinitely
worse, must thousands of Londoners awake to the duty
of each new day.  She wondered that the multitude had
any heart for the day's work.

She could not start to clean her room or light a fire,
and she had been reared in the belief that a bed required
a thorough airing before it could be made.

After she had partaken of her meagre breakfast therefore
she opened the window and, donning her mackintosh
and heavy boots, prepared to sally forth.  Even the
streets would be preferable to her present surroundings.

She decided not to go up to see Agnes, who probably
felt the situation more acutely than she herself did.
Perhaps, after all, it might be better, if it was not indeed
absolutely necessary, that she should find some other
lodging in a smaller house, where she could have a
sitting-room and a bedroom.  The prospect of unlimited
hours spent in "The Pictur Gallery" was a little
dismaying.

The rain was falling heavily when she left the house,
but the clean, sharp patter on the pavements,
somehow, cheered her.  It was clean, it was wholesome, it
would help to wash away some of the impurity from
the streets.  The rain, rolling in over the hills upon the
Moor of Creagh and sweeping down Glenogle--how often
had she welcomed its pure sting on her cheek and revelled
in it!  But here all was depressing, dark, dismal, and
soul-crushing.

In such mood did Isla arrive at the address in Westbourne
Terrace, which, in conjunction with three others,
she had written on a small piece of paper and placed in
her purse.

A man-servant, in a blue coat with brass buttons and
a striped waistcoat, opened the door and stood, obligingly
waiting to take her message.

"I have called in reference to the advertisement in
the 'Morning Post' this morning.  Please, can I see the
lady of the house?"

The man looked doubtful, but said politely in imperfect
English with a very German accent that if she would
come in and sit down in the hall he would inquire.

At the moment the door of the breakfast-room at the
end of the hall was opened and a lady in a very elaborate
morning robe much trimmed with lace and with two
black-and-white Japanese spaniels in her arms, looked out.

"Who is that, Fritz?" she asked in a high and rather
fretful voice.

"Pleas'm, a young lady about the advertisement in
the paper."

"Oh, she can come in here."

She re-entered the breakfast-room, and Isla, in some
inward amusement, followed.  She felt like a person in
a play, but it said something for her courage and
determination that, on the second morning of her London life,
she should seek such an experience.

She closed the door behind her and said good morning
to the lady, altogether unconscious that, instead of
looking like a suppliant, she had the air of one about to
bestow a favour.

Her possible employer was a woman of about her own
age, with a kind of artificial prettiness which depended
a good deal on art for its preservation.  She had a
pleasant enough manner, however, and was quite civil
to her visitor.

"You have called?" she said inquiringly, with her
head on one side like a bird and her cheek against the
glossy coat of one of the spaniels.

"I have called in reference to the advertisement in the
'Morning Post,'" said Isla with difficulty, for the reality,
instead of being amusing, was distinctly trying.  "But
I don't think it will be any use.  I am sure I would not
be suitable."

"Oh, sit down, and let us talk it over now that you are
here," said the lady affably.  "I am Madame Schultze.
Yes--I am English.  My husband is a Viennese.  He is
on the Stock Exchange.  He had only just left the house
as you entered.  Perhaps you saw him?"

Isla said she had not seen anybody resembling Mr. Schultze.

"I am not strong, and almost immediately I am going
off with my husband to Schwalbach.  It is very late in
the year for Schwalbach, but he has not been able to get
away before now.  It is about my little darlings!  Look
at them!  Aren't they sweet loves?  This is Koshimo,
and this is Sada, and this is Tito, and the little one, who
was born here, is Babs.  Did you ever see anything so
perfectly sweet?"

Isla was at a loss what to say.  She knew nothing of
the cult of pet dogs, or of how enslaved an idle woman
can become by them, and she thought the adoration
visible in Madame Schultze's eyes was rather foolish.

There were four separate baskets lined with padded
wool, with little rugs over them, and other comforts such
as many a poor baby lacked.  To Isla the creatures
looked stolid, overfed, unintelligent, and uninteresting.
But she could not say so.

"I suppose they are very valuable?" was all she
could bring herself to say.

"I should say so.  Koshimo, as a puppy, cost a
hundred and fifty guineas.  My Karl gave him to me
on the anniversary of our wedding.  We can't take
them to Schwalbach with us, and the other person I had
to look after them was a wretch.  Behind my back she
used to pinch Koshimo, and the poor darling's spirit is
quite broken."

"Yet you are going to leave them behind in the care
of--of the person you engage?"

"That is what I thought of doing.  I have no
alternative.  They don't permit dogs at the Cure Hotel."

"Then would she be required to live in the house?"

"Oh, no--only to come for a half-day every morning.
Sundays included, to bathe the darlings, make their
toilets, and take them for a walk in the Park.  After
that they will be in the care of Fritz, the house-boy,
who is quite good.  Only he has not a woman's
delicacy of touch and sympathy.  They need sympathy
quite as much as a human being does, if not more so."

Isla repressed an almost overpowering desire to laugh
aloud, and she politely inquired what would be the
remuneration for this occupation.

"Seven-and-sixpence a week and luncheon.  I reckoned
that by the time you had returned from the Park it
would be one or half-past one, and the servants' dinner
would be going on, so that your luncheon would never
be missed," said Madame Schultze with an engaging
frankness.  "Of course, the work is not hard, and it is
delightful, besides.  You don't know what a privilege
it is to have the care of such pets.  They are so dainty
and so very, very human."

Isla thanked her and said that she was afraid the post
would not suit her.

"Oh, but why not come for a few days and try it?"
said the odd woman, who had taken a fancy to Isla.
"You look different from the creatures who usually call
when one wants anybody.  You look even as if you
might have had pet dogs of your own."

Something caught at Isla's throat as she remembered.

"I have had them.  But, thank you, I'm sorry I can't
come.  The--the money is much too small.  I shall
have to find something to do which will keep me.  I am
not well off.  Good morning, Madame Schultze."

"You won't leave your name?  I might find you
something.  My husband has a large acquaintance on
the Stock Exchange, and we move in very good society,"
said Madame Schultze with a kind of indolent good-humour.

But Isla, with another hasty word of thanks, withdrew.
She felt almost hysterical as the door was politely closed
upon her by the foreign butler, and she dashed something
like a tear from her eye.

"Serves you right, Isla Mackinnon, for all the airs
you give yourself!  Seven-and-six a week and the
servants' luncheon!  What would they say at home?"

She said "they," but it was the face of Peter Rosmead
that came persistently before her--of Peter the
Bridge-builder, with thousands in his pocket that he could not
spend!  Would Peter, if he met her in the park airing
pet dogs for a livelihood, pass by, like a Levite, on the
other side?

Her lip curled whimsically at the thought.  She did
not welcome the memory of Rosmead, which had come
unsought.  In her secret heart she felt disappointed
that he had not written.  True, he had not promised to
do so, nor had he even asked whether he might.  But
other men did not wait for permission.  Neil Drummond
never lost an opportunity of speaking or writing to her,
and often she did not trouble to read his letters through.

She was brought back from her reveries sharply by
finding herself once more in the Bayswater Road with
the rest of the day in front of her.

"I do want a good breakfast," she said to herself
dolefully, for a few mouthfuls of the doubtful bread and
butter provided by Arabella had more than satisfied her
in "The Pictur Gallery".

Looking down the road towards Kensington, she saw
that shops seemed to abound, and she proceeded to
walk on.  At length she came to a tea-shop, which she
entered.  There she ordered tea and a couple of poached
eggs.  These she consumed at a small round table drawn
invitingly near a bright fire, where she was able to dry
her boots and where she passed a very comfortable half-hour.

But it was all unreal.  Once more she had the weird
feeling that she was a character in a play and that she
would soon awaken to the reality of things.

After her experience in Westbourne Terrace she
decided that, instead of calling at any more private
addresses, she would go to some of the employment agents,
who, judging from their advertisements, seemed to
possess particulars of every conceivable kind of opening.
She would there give a true account of her meagre
accomplishments and candidly inquire what was their
market value.

She did not shrink from doing this, because all her
life long she had been facing things and making the
best of untoward circumstances.  But, somehow, it was
difficult here in London.  In Glenogle all was familiar
and most dear.  Besides, whatever the state of the
exchequer, Miss Mackinnon of Achree had an unassailable
position.

Her name counted for nothing here, however.  Nay,
it were better perhaps that she should exchange it for
one less pretentious and betraying.

The rain having ceased, she rode on the top of an
omnibus the whole length of the Bayswater Road to
Oxford Street, where she presented herself in the office
of one of the well-known employment agencies that
advertise extensively in all the newspapers.

She had to wait some little time among others, and
when her turn came she was again in thrall to the odd
feeling of unreality which had possessed her for most of
the day.

"What kind of post, madam, and what experience?"
said the very middle-aged lady who sat, pen in hand,
ready to take the particulars.

Isla explained as clearly as possible what she wanted,
and she did not fail to observe that while she was
speaking the face of her questioner fell.  While she was
listening she was, however, observing Isla keenly, and
she very quickly came to the conclusion that she was
not one of the ordinary applicants, but rather was one
who had been driven into the ranks of the workers by
stress of circumstances.

"Of course, madam," she said kindly but with great
brevity and decision, "you are not unaware that you are
handicapped?  Our books"--here she patted an
immense ledger lying on the table beside her--"our
books are full of names of ladies requiring employment,
and most of these are very thoroughly equipped.
But, even with all the resources at our command, we
would never be able to supply all their wants, for the
very simple reason that the necessary vacancies do not
exist."

"There are so many thousands seeking situations,
then?" said Isla hesitatingly.

"Thousands.  We have no difficulty with our skilled
workers.  There is always a demand for them, but for
the gentlewoman class--to which you evidently
belong--for whom the earning of a living has become a sad
necessity, we have practically no demand.  You are a
good housekeeper, you say, but you would not care to
take a working-housekeeper's place?"

"I could not.  At least, I should not care to do actual
housework, and I can only cook theoretically.  I could
order a lady's house, and order it well.  I've been used
until quite lately to superintend a fairly large
establishment."

"In your father's house?" said the agent with an
understanding nod.

"Yes."

"I thought as much.  Well, I have only one post on
my books at present which would seem to come
anywhere near your requirements, and I tell you quite
frankly that I have already sent at least half a dozen
ladies after it."

"Where is it?" asked Isla interestedly, "and what sort
of a place is it?"

"It is to be a sort of companion-housekeeper to a lady
who is not strong.  The duties, I think, are not very
arduous, but I consider it only right to tell you that this
is the fourth time in twelve months that this post has
become vacant."

"Why has it been like that?"

"I prefer not to enter into reasons.  There have
always been faults on both sides, of course.  I have
myself interviewed Mrs. Bodley-Chard here when she was
able to drive out.  Latterly, I think, she has not been
able.  I have always liked her.  I'm afraid that the
trouble is with Mr. Bodley-Chard."

"Oh, I shouldn't mind him," said Isla quietly.  "And,
after all, his wife's housekeeper need not see much of
him."

The agent smiled.

"I can give you the address if you like.  You will
be the third who has gone to-day.  But that, I think,
does not matter.  Mrs. Chard, I know, intends to be
very, very particular this time."

"What is the salary?"

"Twenty-five pounds a year."

"And to live in the house?"

"Why, of course."

"She would not engage a person who wished to lodge
outside?"

"My dear madam, picture a companion-housekeeper
who arrived with the milk--shall we say?--and left with
the last post at night!  It's unpractical, to say the least."

Isla smiled and sighed a little as she rose.

"I see that beggars can't be choosers and that one
must give up something in order to earn one's living.
I wish, however, that it was not one's freedom.  May I
have the address, if you really think there is the
smallest use in my calling?"

"I am sure that it is worth your while calling.  I
have even a sort of odd feeling that Mrs. Chard's choice
might fall on you.  You see, you are just a little
different from the average run of reduced ladies who come
here."

"Thank you," said Isla, not knowing whether to take
the words as a compliment or the reverse.

The agent wrote the name and address on one of the
office cards and then noted Isla's in her book.

"And what happens if I am engaged?" she asked
with a little humorous smile about her mouth.  "Is it
like a servants' registry office?  Do I come back and
pay a fee, or do I pay it now?"

"The fee would be half a sovereign in this case--that
is if you are engaged.  There is no charge otherwise.
I hope you will be successful, Miss Mackinnon."

"I don't know whether I hope so or not," answered Isla.

Her ease of manner, so different from the usual bearing
of the agent's clients, made a strong impression on her
listener.

"I shall be pleased to see you in any case.  And
perhaps something else may turn up, if you are not
successful," she said with a cordiality which surprised
even herself.

Usually the seekers after employment were merely
units of the system to be dismissed as soon as possible.
But this applicant had drawn out her interest and her
sympathy in a very strong degree, principally because
she had not proffered a single plea for special
consideration, and because she had been so candid about her
capabilities.

When Isla got outside she stopped on the stairs and
read the name and address on the agent's
card--Mrs. Bodley-Chard, Hans Crescent, S.W.

A look of satisfaction crossed her face just for a
moment, because this locality was within that part of
the area of London with which she was perfectly familiar.
As Malcolm might have said, it was on the right side of
the Park.  But again, that had its disadvantages, one
of them being that she might be more easily discovered
and recognized.

But some instinct made her decide to go, and to go
as quickly as possible.  She hailed a passing hansom
and got in, calculating that she would reach Hans
Crescent in time to catch Mrs. Bodley-Chard immediately
after luncheon.





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.. _`MR. AND MRS. BODLEY-CHARD`:

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   CHAPTER XXII


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   MR. AND MRS. BODLEY-CHARD

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Isla was familiar with the outward aspect of the pretty
houses in Hans Crescent, and she had on more than
one occasion, in the company of her aunt, made
acquaintance with the interior of one.

The town house of the Murdoch-Graemes of Baltasound
was in Hans Crescent, but they, too, were poor and, until
their daughter married a rich financier, had not been
able to occupy their London house in the season.

But there is a vast difference between fashionable
London in May or June and in October.  More than the half
of the houses are shut up in the late autumn, and Isla
had no fear of meeting anyone who would recognize her.

Her hansom drew up, jingling, at the door of one of
the most important houses, beautifully appointed
outside, with real lace curtains at the windows and with
everything indicating ample means.  A sedate,
middle-aged manservant of irreproachable mien noiselessly
opened the door and stood at attention to hear Isla's
message.

"Mrs. Bodley-Chard is at home, Miss, but she only
sees callers by appointment," he said civilly, but firmly.

"Please to take my name," said Isla quietly, "and tell
her I have come from Madame Vibert in Oxford Street."

The man shook his head.

"There have been three already this morning, and
my mistress has told me she will not see any more.
She lies down after luncheon.  Still, Miss, I can tell her
you are here if you will kindly step in."

Isla was grateful, and the respectful manner of the
man was like balm to her perturbed spirit.  Here she
felt at home, and beyond doubt the man knew--for the
preceptions of his class are very keen in certain
directions--that she differed in almost every essential from
those who had come before her.

He placed a chair for her by the fireplace in the pretty
lounge-hall and departed upstairs.  Isla glanced round
her interestedly.  The house was very bright, painted in
white with warm crimson walls, and full of pretty things.
It was all very modern, however, and a trifle fantastic.
A very large brown bear, mounted on a pedestal and
standing up with a pole between his forepaws, struck
rather a grotesque note.  It was neither a useful nor an
ornamental object, and it was instantly banned by Isla's
simple, correct taste.  The pictures, of which there were
many, all struck the same bold note of bizarre taste, and
the effect was neither restful nor pleasing.

Isla was not kept waiting long.

"Mrs. Bodley-Chard will see you," said the man when
he re-appeared.

She followed him up the white and crimson staircase,
her feet giving forth no sound in the deep, luxurious
tread of the Axminster carpet.  The house seemed to
widen out on the upper landing and gave an impression
of roominess.

The servant opened a door a little way along the
corridor and announced Isla by name.  She was ushered
into a room in semi-darkness--a sort of boudoir, luxuriously
furnished, whose atmosphere was laden with perfume
and with the heavy odour of many cut flowers.

A smart French maid with a most coquettish cap
moved back from the side of a large couch when the
door opened, and as she stepped out of the room she
took a very keen look at Isla.

A voice came out of the gloom--a somewhat thin,
fretful voice.

"Come forward, please, to where I can see you.  You
have called at a very awkward hour.  I expressly wrote
to Madame Vibert that I would not see anyone after
lunch."

"I can easily go away, madam, and call at a more
convenient season," said Isla quietly.

Her eyes, becoming accustomed to the half-light, now
discerned quite clearly on the couch the figure of a
middle-aged woman, half-sitting, with a silk shawl about
her shoulders, and a trifle of lace--a so-called boudoir
cap--resting on her elaborately dressed hair.

"Bring a chair forward and sit down.  I'm not strong.
I am obliged to lie down all the afternoon.  Did Madame
Vibert tell you what I really required?  She keeps
sending me the most tiresome and impossible people--fools,
in fact.  Are you a fool?  Come and tell me."

Isla carried over one of the gilt-brocade chairs,
thinking at the same time that it was a little service the
French maid ought to have rendered to a caller before
she left the room.

"I don't see you very well.  Will you ring for Fifine
to draw up one of the blinds a little?"

"I can do it myself," said Isla promptly, "if you will
tell me which one."

Mrs. Bodley-Chard indicated the window at the end of
the room, and Isla very quickly caused a little light to
shine in the darkness.  The trim lines of her figure
were silhouetted against the clear glass of the window,
and Mrs. Bodley-Chard looked keenly at her face, when
she came back, to see whether it corresponded with the
distinction of the figure.

"You are different.  Sit down and tell me what that
viper, Madame Vibert, told you about me."

"She told me very, very little indeed, Mrs. Chard.
Only that you wished a sort of companion-housekeeper.
I could act as that, I think, though Madame Vibert as
good as told me this morning I had no market value."

Isla had no hesitation in making this damaging
statement.  As yet she was only at play.  In her purse she
had sixteen pounds of good money, which, she had
calculated, would keep her in modest comfort at Agnes
Fraser's for at least two months.  And surely in the
course of two months among all the teeming millions of
London she would find something to do.

Mrs. Chard gave a small, hard laugh.  She had a
large, uninteresting face with the unhealthy colour of
the woman who takes very little outdoor exercise, and
there was a lassitude about her which seemed to Isla to
arise from lack of will-power rather than from lack of
physical health.

"It is what I do want--a common-sense woman in
the house who can hold her tongue and keep her eyes
on two places at once.  I'm being robbed on every side.
The only decent person in the house is the butler
Robbins.  Madame Vibert has sent me nothing but fools,
who were either afraid of the servants or in league with
them.  Have you been out before?"

"No."

"Where did you come from?"

"From Scotland.  My father died a few months ago,
and I have been left without resources."

"What was he?"

"My father?--oh, he was a soldier."

"What rank?"

Isla hesitated a moment.

"He was a General," she said in a low voice then, as
if afraid the fact would militate against her chance.

"I'm not surprised.  You look as if you might be a
General's daughter.  Well, then, you don't need to have
your duties defined to you.  You will have to keep the
house--to run it, in fact--pay the servants' wages and
prevent them from worrying me.  You will write any
letters I want, and you will drive out with me when I
do go out, but that won't be often now that the winter
is coming on.  Then, you will have to dine with
Mr. Bodley-Chard in the evening and keep him amused
when he is in the house."

"Oh!" said Isla with a small gasp, "will you tell
me quite what that means?"

"It means just what it says," answered Mrs. Chard
with her wandering, somewhat stupid smile.  "It is
slow for him at home, of course, for I am hardly ever
able to be down."

"Have you been out of health a long while?"

"Yes--about two years now.  I have got worse in the
last six months.  Perhaps I shall not live long.  I don't
mind.  I haven't had much happiness.  People soon
get tired of a dull old woman, don't they?"

"But why be dull?" asked Isla cheerfully.  "You
have the means of making life pleasant."

"But there is nobody to care, you see."

Isla wondered about Mr. Bodley-Chard, but she did
not ask any questions.

She felt sorry for the woman who, in the midst of her
luxurious surroundings, looked like a person from whom
all the zest for life had departed, leaving her with a
withered heart.

One thing interested her--she felt that she would like
to see Mr. Bodley-Chard, possibly because in him might
be found a partial solution of the problem of the
heaviness of his wife's life.

"Well, will you come?  No--I don't want to ask any
questions.  Either you're the right person or the wrong
one.  All the others I've ever engaged have been the
wrong ones, and, somehow, I knew it before they began
their duties.  I believe you are going to be the right
one.  Will you take it on?"

"Yes, if you think I can do what you require."

"I'm sure you can.  It ought not to be hard.  When
I was able to be about I had no difficulty in managing
my house.  But a fool can't manage servants.  That's
the chief difficulty--to keep them in their place.  And
you look as if you could do that.  Can you come to-day?"

"Not to-day.  To-morrow I might.  May I ask you
another question?  It is about dress.  I have only one
evening frock.  It is old and very shabby.  Should I
be expected to go down to dinner every night in an
evening frock?  That is the only thing I can't be happy
about.  If I could only have my evenings free!"

"You'll have a good many of them free, because
Mr. Bodley-Chard is a club-man and is fond of the
theatre.  Most of them have complained of the deadly
dulness.  I go to sleep early, you see."

"I shall come to-morrow afternoon, then," said Isla,
rising.

She did so, for she saw that a drowsiness was creeping
over Mrs. Chard and that the heavy white lids were
drooping over the dull eyes.

The impression Isla carried away was one of hopelessness,
of absolute lack of interest in life on the part of her
future employer.  She was not attractive physically, yet
there was something kindly and pitiful about her.

As she left the room Isla registered a vow that she
would do what she could to arouse her and to give her
some fresh interest in life.  Probably Mrs. Chard had a
doctor--that kind of woman always had a fashionable
physician in close attendance.  Perhaps he and she
could consult together and devise some remedial
measure.  The prospect of grappling with a fresh
difficulty exhilarated her.

When she closed the door she was surprised to see
Fifine, the French maid, unconcernedly walk away from
it as though she had been listening.  She turned quite
coolly to Isla, and put her head on one side, while her
small, pretty hands met in front of her dainty person.

"Have you got ze job, Mees?" she asked pertly.

Isla coloured, looked very straightly and haughtily at
her, and passed her by.

An English servant would have fully understood the
rebuke, and even Fifine knew that she had been put in her
proper place.  She shook her small fist after the retreating
figure on the stairs, and from that moment Isla had
an enemy in the house.

It was about three o'clock in the afternoon when she
got back to Cromer Street, where she found Agnes Fraser
in some perturbation regarding her long absence.

Agnes was now fully dressed in her neat black frock
with the little Puritan collar, and the whole house
looked more comfortable and better cared for.  Isla
forgot the abomination of desolation that had reigned
in the morning, and she greeted Agnes with a gay smile
as she came out of the dining-room to meet her.

"I'm so glad to see you down, Agnes.  Where have I
been?  Oh, in search of adventure.  Where can we sit
down till I tell you all about it?"

The Frasers chiefly occupied a very small
breakfast-room at the back--a place which seldom got the sun,
but which looked cosy enough on a dull afternoon, with
a cheerful fire in the grate and a tea-tray on the end of
the table.

"Eh, but I'm tired, Miss Isla.  I've been in the
kitchen since eleven o'clock.  What a place!  But I've
set them to clean up and, now that I'll be up in the
mornin's mysel' things will get a' richt.  I was fair upset
when I heard ye had gane oot so early this mornin' and
withoot a proper breakfast.  Hae ye had onything to
eat since?"

Isla explained so gaily that Agnes concluded that she
must have had some good luck.  When she heard the
story of the morning she uplifted her hands in sheer
astonishment.

"The thing that beats me is that ye should hae got
something so quick, Miss Isla.  I've had them here
lookin' for weeks, and weeks, and weeks.  It's a sad
business, but I hope thae folk wi' the queer name will
be a' richt."

"They interest me, and I'm not in the least afraid.
No, there aren't any dark mysteries, I'm sure."

"Eh, but London's a michty queer place, Miss Isla,
and ye never ken wha's your next-door neibour.  But ye
can aye--day or nicht--tak' a hansom and come ower
to me, if onything gangs wrang.  I'll no let 'The Pictur
Gallery' the noo.  Very likely I'll no hae the chance
till after Christmas.  So if ye like to leave onything in
it ye can."

They had a long cosy chat over their tea.  Then Isla
retired to "The Pictur Gallery" to make a fresh
inventory of her clothes.

She found that the room had been swept and garnished,
and a cheerful fire relieved its gloom, with the result
that all things, even "The Pictur Gallery," contributed
to her hopeful mood.  She was promising herself no
end of amusement and interest in her new environment.

She felt very much as a child might who is about to
be taken to a pantomime for the first time; and certainly
she was quite lifted up beyond all the more sordid and
disagreeable aspects of her own private life.

But the good Agnes was conscious of sundry misgivings
when she bade Isla good-bye about four o'clock
next afternoon and saw the cab roll away.

"You'll promise noo, Miss Isla, that if there's
onything wrang, or onything even that ye dinna like, that
ye'll come richt back.  I canna say I'm as comfortable
in my mind aboot ye as I micht be.  I wakened Andra
up in the nicht-time to tell him I wasna."

"Nonsense, Agnes.  It's just because you've grown
accustomed to thinking of me in different circumstances
that you are anxious about me.  I'm going to enjoy
myself immensely and see a bit of life."

"And you'll write to them, Miss Isla--either to
Mr. Malcolm or to Lady Mackinnon?  I want them to ken
where you are."

"But I don't.  I'll write and give them your address,
but I forbid you to breathe the name of Hans Crescent.
Besides, I should certainly be dismissed if a horde of
my folk appeared at Mrs. Bodley-Chard's," she added
with a little whimsical smile.  "I didn't ask, but I feel
sure that no followers would be allowed."

Agnes was left with a smile on her face, but it faded
before she had watched the four-wheeler out at the end
of the street.

"Puir thing!  She disna ken a thing aboot life!  I
hope the Lord will look after her.  Naebody else can."

Isla had no misgivings when she arrived at her
destination.  She was received with respectful
consideration by Robbins, who passed her on to a
house-maid who, with a polite but distant air showed her
to her room.  It was on the third floor, but it was a
large and beautiful chamber, with which even the most
fastidious person could not have found a single fault.

"Mrs. Bodley-Chard has waited tea for you in the
boudoir, Miss," said the girl.

"Thank you; and may I ask your name?  We shall
probably have to see a good deal of each other, so we
may as well be friendly.  I am Miss Mackinnon."

"I'm Cecilia Owen.  I'm called Owen upstairs and
Cissy in the kitchen," answered the girl, surprised into
cordiality of tone.

"And which do you prefer?"

"I don't mind.  I shall like whatever you call me, Miss."

"Then we shall say Cissy.  In the country--where
I come from--we don't call our women-servants by their
surnames," said Isla pleasantly as she laid her gloves
down and poured out some water.

"I'll get you some hot, Miss, and if you like I'll
unpack after tea downstairs.  I'd like to help you."

So, in spite of much warning, Cissy capitulated to the
newcomer's undoubted personal charm, and from that
moment she was Isla's faithful ally and friend.

As she descended the stair Isla met the French maid,
and wished her a cool good-afternoon.

"They're waiting tea now, mees; please to hurry,"
she said pertly, and Isla passed on.

She found the door without mistake, tapped lightly,
and entered by invitation of Mrs. Bodley-Chard's thin,
reedy voice, which seemed very weak to proceed from
such a substantial body.

To her chagrin there was some one else in the room--a
youngish man, dressed in a lounge suit of blue serge.
He had a slim figure, very dark hair and eyes, and a
rather florid complexion.  A large moustache, very
carefully trimmed, was evidently his pride.  He was
good-looking after his type, but that was a type which
Isla did not admire.  He had a gardenia in his button-hole,
and the impression created was that of a dandy
who gave much consideration to his clothes.

She concluded he was some privileged caller who had
dropped in, and, without noticing him, she made her
way to Mrs. Chard's couch.

"So you have arrived?  Glad to see you, Miss
Mackinnon.  Let me introduce my husband.  Gerald,
this is Miss Mackinnon."

Isla gave a start of extreme surprise as she hastily
turned to receive Mr. Bodley-Chard's greeting.  It was
a painful surprise, because the man looked almost
young enough to be the son of the woman on the sofa,
and the disparity between them in almost every respect
seemed in her eyes almost insurmountable.

Mr. Bodley-Chard was most affable, even complimentary,
and in that first interview Isla conceived a
dislike of him, which was destined to increase with every
opportunity she had of seeing more of him.

"Miss Mackinnon will pour out the tea, Edgar," said
his wife.  "She may as well start right now.  Come
here, and sit by me."

"Right you are, old lady.  See how I am kept in
leading-strings, Miss Mackinnon," he said, smiling all
over his smooth-featured face.  "I came home from
business an hour earlier than usual this afternoon just
on purpose to receive you."

"It was unnecessary," said Isla quite coolly.  "Can
I get you another cushion, Mrs. Chard?  You don't
seem to sit very comfortably.  I have been used to
waiting on an invalid.  Do let me help you before I
make tea."

Her deft and willing left arm went round Mrs. Chard's
shoulders and raised her up a bit.  She then shook the
cushions, and made her as comfortable as she could,
Mr. Chard looking on approvingly the while.

"You're in luck this time, Jenny.  Among all the
fools you have had there wasn't one who had the art of
making you really comfortable--eh?"

Mrs. Chard smiled, and her eyes gratefully followed
the girl's slim figure back to the tea-table.  The
discontented, uneasy expression had died out of her eyes,
giving place to one of peace, which imparted an
unexpected charm to her face.

Isla, quite unconscious of the favourable impression
she was creating, and only wishing with all her heart
that Mr. Chard would make himself scarce, busied
herself about her new duties, and, when there was likely to
be silence, made small talk with an ease that surprised
herself.

Mr. Chard was evidently extremely anxious to hear
her talk, and it was he who put the questions.  But
Isla only answered such as she chose, and, at the end
of twenty minutes, she left him very much where he
was at the beginning.

Her coolness and cleverness piqued him.  He had
been accustomed to see his wife's companions shrink
before him and efface themselves in his presence.

"The old lady doesn't allow me a whiff here, Miss
Mackinnon.  Hard lines, don't you think?  Much as I
should like to stop, I must tear myself away.  We shall
meet at dinner later on, I hope, and resume our
interesting conversation."

Isla bowed slightly, and when the door closed she
rose and came over to the side of the couch, where
Mrs. Chard sat smiling happily.

"You can't think how glad I am that you have come,"
she said, putting out an impulsive hand.  "I woke up
this morning wondering what pleasant thing was going
to happen, and then I remembered that it was your coming."

"You are very kind to speak like that.  I hope I may
be going to be of use to you.  That is the only excuse
for my presence here."

"Well that is a speech!  Most of them have come to
serve their own ends, and--would you believe it, Miss
Mackinnon?--though this is my house, and all that it
contains is mine, I have sometimes felt among them all
that I hadn't a single friend."

"I shall be your friend while I am here," said Isla
quite simply, and without the smallest intention of
gushing or flattering.

To her surprise a small sob suddenly broke from the
lips of the woman on the couch.

"I don't pray much or often to God, my dear, but I
do believe that He has sent you to me this time.  There
is a clear light about you--it shines in your eyes.
I am sure that you are true and good."

"I try to be.  But now you must rest a little, and
later on I'll come and get you ready to go down to
dinner."

"Oh, but, my dear, I don't go down.  They haven't
laid a place for me for months."

"But they'll lay one for you to-night, or I shall dine
here with you," said Isla quite quietly.

She did not add that nothing on earth would induce
her to dine *tête-à-tête* with Mr. Bodley-Chard.





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.. _`AT CROSS PURPOSES`:

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   CHAPTER XXIII


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   AT CROSS PURPOSES

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Isla did not see her employer till ten o'clock next
morning, by which time she had breakfasted *tête-à-tête*
with Mr. Bodley-Chard.  When she was asked to go to
Mrs. Chard's room the expression of her face indicated
that she had not had a pleasant morning.

Mrs. Chard was not yet out of her bedroom, which
communicated with the boudoir by folding-doors.  She
was lying down, but her pale face brightened at sight
of Isla.

"Good morning, dear.  I wanted to see you ever so
long ago, but Edgar said you had not time to come."

"Oh," said Isla stiffly, "I did not know you wanted
me, or I should have been here sooner.  I hope you
slept well and feel better this morning?"

"I sleep too much, I think," she said with a weary
yawn.  "I was asleep by half-past nine last night, and
I'm not long awake.  Yes--I've had breakfast, all I ever
do take.  Sit down, and tell me what you have been
about.  Did you have a comfortable night, and did they
get you all you wanted?"

"Everything.  My wants are simple, and I can
help myself.  The housemaid is very kind and
attentive."

"And you gave Edgar his breakfast?  I hope you
enjoyed that.  Isn't he charming?  And I must tell you
a great secret.  He is charmed with you.  I am so glad,
because I've had such trouble with my lady-housekeepers.
Either they could not get on with my husband,
or they wanted to be with him too much.  Women are
so tiresome and so catty to one another."

Isla repressed an inordinate desire to laugh.

"Tell me what you talked about, won't you?" Mrs. Chard
continued.  "It's being kept in the dark in my
own house that I hate so much.  It isn't fair--do you
think it is?  For, after all, though I am not strong I do
take an interest in things."

"I didn't say much.  Mr. Chard talked a good
deal--principally about you."

"Oh, indeed; and what did he say?  Told you all
sorts of naughty things, I suppose?"

The spectacle of this elderly woman waxing coquettish
on the subject of her husband filled Isla with a curious
mixture of pity and amusement.

"No.  He was chiefly trying to impress on me the
fact that you are very ill and that you require to be
kept quiet and not worried in the least."

"Dear Edgar! he is most considerate!  He quite
spoils me."

"I was very much surprised to hear that you had no
doctor in attendance, Mrs. Bodley-Chard.  Wouldn't
it be better for you to see some one?"

Mrs. Bodley-Chard uplifted her hands in mute protest.

"Doctors!  I've spent fortunes on them, and they've
never done me the smallest good.  The last one I
had--a man from Mount Street, a very new broom who
was going to sweep the West End quite clean--quarrelled
with Edgar.  What do you think?  He actually had
the audacity to say that there was nothing whatever
the matter with me and that, if I were a poor woman
who had to get my living, I should be going about
quite well."

Isla privately wished she knew that doctor.  She felt
sure that she should like him.

"But perhaps, though he need not have put it so
harshly, there was a grain of truth in what he said, and
at least it was an honest expression of opinion."

"Edgar was furious and kicked him out of the house--not
actually, you know, but he told him very plainly
what he thought of him.  They had a frightful row,
and he said all sorts of things to Edgar--impertinent,
even libellous things.  Poor dear, he was very good
about it, and, for my sake, took no further steps against
Dr. Stephens, because he did not wish me to be
worried."

"And since then?"

"Since then I haven't had anybody, and I'm just as
well without anybody.  Edgar is very clever.  He
studied medicine for a time before he went on the Stock
Exchange, and I believe that it was because Stephens
found that he knew a little too much that they quarrelled
as they did.  Edgar gives me all the medicine I need,
which isn't much--chiefly, sleeping-draughts.  I used
to have such dreadful nights before he took me in hand.
Fancy!  Dr. Stephens wanted to stop the sleeping-draughts."

"I don't wonder at that," said Isla quickly.  "I
should like to stop them, too."

"You'd never be so cruel.  Nobody would.  Why, they
are my greatest comfort.  I suffer so with my head."

"But it is very dangerous to use them, as you do,
without proper medical supervision."

"But, you see, I have medical supervision.  My
husband quite understands all about them."

"It is very dangerous," asserted Isla firmly, "and I
am surprised that Mr. Bodley-Chard does not see it."

"Ah, now you are going to be cross and horrid, just
as my first husband used to be.  He hated ill-health.
He was one of those great big, overpowering sort of men
who never have a day's illness in their lives.  But he
dropped down dead suddenly one day when we were
lunching in the city together.  Oh, it was dreadful!  I
can never forget Edgar's kindness at that time.  He was
Mr. Bodley's chief clerk and understood all his business.
So, you see, when I married him it made everything
very easy.  I have not the smallest trouble about money
now."

Isla listened to all this with very mixed feelings, and
she tried to be just in her judgment of Mr. Bodley-Chard.
But she found that the most difficult of all the tasks set
her at Hans Crescent.

She tried to change the subject.

"It's a beautiful morning, Mrs. Chard.  Won't you
let me help you to dress so that we may get out in the
sunshine?  Have you a carriage?"

"Not now.  We simply job one at Burdett's.  But I
don't want to go out, thank you.  Edgar is so afraid of
a chill for me.  We are very happy, Miss Mackinnon,"
she said with a small touch of dull defiance in her
heavy eyes.  "In spite of the ten years' difference in
our ages, I could not have a more devoted husband.
Mr. Bodley was so different!  He was the sort of man
who makes people run about for him, and he used to
shout at the servants dreadfully.  Not but what he was
kind enough and generous enough, too, in his way.  But
he had not dear Edgar's delicacy of feeling.  He is never
cross, however put out he may be.  He says that a
gentleman's first duty is to control his temper."

Isla listened to this eulogy wholly unmoved.  She had
by this time arrived at the conclusion that Mrs. Bodley-Chard's
mental faculties were impaired by bodily weakness
and by indulgence in some form of narcotic.  She
made up her mind very quietly to do what she could
to combat the unwholesome forces which surrounded
this woman's life, and already she had vague ideas of
her plan of campaign.  If only she could persuade
Mrs. Chard to call in that Mount Street doctor, between
them they might manage to bring her back to the plane
of active, healthy life.

Isla's practised eye told her that there was no actual
disease, but that her hypochondriacal weakness had
been so pandered to that she had completely lost her
will-power.  It was a sad spectacle, and Isla rose with
courage to the idea of working some improvement.

She must go warily, however, realizing the fact that
she had much prejudice to overcome.  With Mr. Bodley-Chard's
opinion or attitude in the matter she did not
concern herself.  She was his wife's servant, and she
would do her duty by her.

Isla's introduction to this domestic drama was the
very best thing that could have happened to her just
then.  She threw herself heart and soul into it with all
the ardour of her Celtic temperament; only she was
liable to err in the haste and impulsiveness with which
she desired to act.

"Then you won't go out to-day?" she said coaxingly--"not
even after I have been out and reported on the
sunshine?"

"Not to-day--another day perhaps, and if Edgar
likes the idea we could all have a little drive together.
I'm going to sleep again now.  Did you ever see such a
sleepy-head?"

Isla had her own thoughts as she left the room to
interview the cook and to take up her position definitely
in the household.  That part of her business presented
no difficulties whatever.  The one thing that filled her
with misgiving was the physical and mental condition
of Mrs. Bodley-Chard.

Her dislike of the husband had increased after her
conversation with him at the breakfast table.  He had
started by being complimentary and charming, but,
finding Isla unresponsive, had then spoken rather
disagreeably about her position in the household, warning
her quite pointedly that Mrs. Bodley-Chard was in the
hands of a capable maid who understood her temperament
and who would not brook any interference from
outside.  Isla listened in silence, and, remembering her
impression of Fifine, felt her pity for Mrs. Chard
increase.

Having reduced the new inmate of the house to silence
and--as he thought--submission, Mr. Bodley-Chard
departed airily to the city to forget all about his wife.
For the first time, however, since he had become a
pensioner on a rich woman's bounty he was to find himself
weighed in the balance and found wanting.  Isla's eyes
had a disconcerting clearness, and her recent experiences
had made her suspicious and critical of all mankind.

She found that her duties in the house were by no
means heavy.

There was a sufficient staff of servants to do the work
properly, though they wanted careful handling.  Isla's
gift in that direction was a special one.  She had that
nice mixture of friendliness and hauteur which made
its due impression on the women of a household which
had never had a proper mistress.  When they found
that Miss Mackinnon knew her business, and that she
intended that they should know theirs, too, they
submitted with a very fair grace.

There were five servants in the house besides the
French maid.  Fifine was Isla's only failure, and before
she had been a week in the house she was obliged to
conclude that the Frenchwoman was Mr. Bodley-Chard's
ally, working with him to keep his wife in a state of
bodily helplessness and mental confusion.

On Sunday afternoon she walked across the Park in
the cool autumn wind to tell Agnes Fraser some of her
experiences.  She found that good lady much perturbed
by a letter which she had received from Elspeth
Maclure.

"Read that, Miss Isla, and tell me what to say when
I write back.  It's maistly aboot you."

Isla sat down and took out Elspeth's rather badly
written sheet, while Agnes critically regarded her and
was obliged to admit that she looked better than when
she had left her house four days before.

Elspeth wrote without embroidery to her old neighbour
of her own concerns and of the things that were
happening in the Glen:--

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent

   "DARRACH, LOCHEARNHEAD, 18 *October*.

.. vspace:: 1

"DEAR NANCE,--It's ages since onybody has heard
from you, but I must write, for things are that queer
here that you would hardly ken the Glen.  I suppose
you have heard about the American folk in Achree.
There's naething the matter with them, and some of us
wish that they were there for good and that we had no
other Laird.  We were to leave at Martinmas, but
Donald has gotten round the Laird to let him stop
another year at a higher rent.  That will give us time
to look about.  But, as I said to Miss Isla, my man will
never leave Darrach and live.  He'll be found in the
Loch afore the day comes, or else dee of a broken hert
in the bed where he was born.  Miss Isla has gone
away from the Glen, but maybe you have seen her.
She seemed to forget all about us lately, but the poor
lassie's head must be near turned with all the trouble
of Achree.  They're saying in the Glen that her and the
Laird had words before she left and even that he doesn't
know now where she is.  Some say she has gone away
to foreign parts to Lady Mackinnon, and then, again,
there's some say naebody kens where she is.  It's a
terible business anyway, and if you have seen or heard
tell of her I wish you would write and let us know, for
there's a heap of folk in the glens that are not easy in
their minds about it.  They're saying, to, that the Laird
is after one of the Miss Rosmeads--the one that
divorced her man in America, but that there's
somebody else has a grip of him.  There was a woman
stopping at the Strathyre Hotel.  William Thorn that is
the Boots there told Donald about her the other day.
And it seems that she talked a lot about the Laird and
about what would happen if he sought to marry Mrs. Rodney
Payne.  Then, quite suddenly--I believe it was
the very night before Miss Isla went away--he went to
Strathyre and saw her.  They went out for a walk
together, and the next morning she left with the train.
Sic ongauns, Nance--very different from the auld days
at Achree when we wass all happy together!  Write
soon to your auld neibour and say what you think about
all this, and mind you tell me if you've see Miss Isla.
That's the chief thing.  Only don't send a postcard,
Nance, for David Bain reads every wan of them and the
Glen hass all the news afore a body gets it themselves.
Love from your auld neibour,

.. vspace:: 1

.. class:: noindent

   "ELSPETH MACLURE".

.. vspace:: 2

Isla laid down the closely-written sheet, and a little
quiver ran across her face.

Agnes Fraser sat forward, her questioning eyes very
eager and bright.

"What am I to say, then, Miss Isla?"

"Say, Agnes, that you have seen me and that I am
quite well.  But I forbid you to give any particulars.
Do you understand?"

"I understand, of course, but I dinna see, Miss Isla,
how it is possible for ye to live long like this.  Some o'
your folk will come seekin' ye--that's a sure thing.  If
Mr. Malcolm believes that ye have gane to Lady Mackinnon
he will soon be hearin' frae them that you are
not there.  It's a dreadfu' business a'thegither, and I
hate the idea of where ye are now.  It doesn't sound richt
at a'.  Leave it the morn, Miss Isla, and come back
here."

"No, no.  I am very comfortable.  I am well paid,
and I am interested in what's going on in the house.
I had no idea that there were such exciting incidents
in real life.  I feel really as if I were a sort of Sherlock
Holmes, and I don't worry half as much as I used to do
about my own affairs."

Isla spoke as she felt at the moment, but the time
came when she realized that there had been more truth
and foresight in Agnes Fraser's point of view than she
had admitted.

After four days' close observation in the household of
Mrs. Bodley-Chard she arrived at an absolute conviction
as to what was actually happening.  Mrs. Chard was
being kept continuously under the influence of drugs
that were gradually destroying her will-power and
leaving her ever weaker and weaker and more utterly in
the hands of her unscrupulous husband.

That he was unscrupulous Isla had not had the
smallest doubt from the moment she entered the house.
Also, she had satisfied herself that the French maid
carried out all his instructions regarding her mistress,
and, as she was in close attendance on her, while Isla
was only an occasional visitor to her room, she had
everything in her power.

Finding that Isla kept him at arm's length and that
she had not the smallest intention of being friendly
with him, Mr. Bodley-Chard abandoned all his efforts to
attract her and treated her in a very off-hand manner.
Without being positively rude, his manner was most
offensive.

Isla, however, entrenched herself behind her natural
reserve and did not mind.  One day she made so bold
as to put a very straight question to Mr. Chard.

"Mrs. Chard is very unwell to-day," she said quietly
and politely.  "She is quite unable to give her mind to
any of her ordinary affairs."

"There is no occasion for her to give her mind to
anything.  People are paid to do the work of the house,"
he said pointedly.

"That is not what I mean.  Her mind seems to
wander.  May I call in a doctor?  It distresses me to
see her like that."

A cold, almost baleful light came into his eyes, and
his mouth, under the carefully-trimmed moustache,
became very ugly.

"You are my wife's housekeeper--not her nurse."

"Pardon.  I was engaged as a housekeeper-companion,"
said Isla quite clearly.  "And I can't see her growing worse
every day without being troubled about it.  Hasn't she
any relations or friends who could come and take her
in hand, then?  It does not seem right to leave her so
much in the hands of a flighty French maid."

"Are you aware that your words are offensive and
that they cast an imputation upon me?  When I think
my wife requires other attention or supervision it will
be time to get it.  She has the most implicit confidence
in me--or had until you sought to undermine it."

Isla did not even take the trouble to deny the false
charge, but merely left the room, seriously troubled
about what was her duty in the matter.

A week later, she left the house one morning to do
her ordinary shopping and, in the course of her outing,
walked the whole length of Mount Street, looking for the
house of Dr. Stephens.  When she found it she hesitated
a moment or two before she rang the bell.  She was
only encouraged to take this step by the reflection that
a doctor's consulting-room is the grave of many secrets
and that nothing she could say there would be used
against her.

A motor-car was in waiting, and when the door of the
house was opened she saw the doctor coming out to
start upon his rounds.

"I am just going out, but I can see you, of course,"
he said cordially enough, leading the way to his
consulting-room.

Isla's first look at him pleased her.  He was tall and
thin and clean-shaven with a clever, serious face--a
man to whom it would be possible to explain the
situation in a very few words.

"You don't know me, Dr. Stephens, and I hardly
know how to explain my call this morning.  I come
from the house of Mrs. Bodley-Chard in Hans Crescent."

"Oh, indeed!" he said interestedly.  "And how is
Mrs. Chard?"

"She is very unwell," said Isla in a low, quick voice.
"I am her housekeeper-companion.  My name is Mackinnon."

"Yes?" said the doctor still interestedly.  "Mrs. Bodley-Chard
has had a good many, I think."

"I have been there only three weeks, and I am
seriously concerned about her.  It is because she told
me you were once her medical attendant that I am here
to-day."

"Yes.  But as I have ceased attendance upon the
lady I hardly know why you should have called."

"I simply had to come.  Mrs. Chard has no doctor
attending her at present.  I understand that she has
had none since you left.  And it is quite time that
somebody was on the spot to--to look after her.
Otherwise I believe she will die."

"Why do you think that?"

"Because she is being kept almost continuously under
the influence of drugs, administered by her husband
and her French maid," said Isla quite clearly and
unhesitatingly.  "I believe myself there is nothing the
matter with her except that, and if she were removed
from it all she would get quite well."

Dr. Stephens took a turn across the floor, and when
he came back to Isla's side his face was even graver
than it had been.

"Miss Mackinnon, I don't for a moment doubt the
truth of what you are saying.  On the contrary, I know
it to be perfectly true.  But we are quite powerless."

"Oh, how can you say that!  It is terrible if two
responsible persons know that this wicked thing is going
on and take no steps to stop it!  I can't be a party to
it, and I was in hopes that you would help me."

"I was kicked out of the house by that unspeakable
cad, Chard, and I can't go back again.  We have no
possible way of getting at him, except one--to lodge a
complaint with the police.  Are you prepared to do
that?  Frightful responsibility is incurred by taking
that step, of course--to say nothing of the publicity
attending it."

Isla sank back.

"Oh, Dr. Stephens, I couldn't do that!  But surely
you, an influential medical man, knowing the facts, can
do something--ought to do something----"

He shook his head.

"I'm not so well up in medical jurisprudence as I
used to be," he said with a slight smile.  "But I'll take
expert opinion to-day.  Could you possibly come and
see me to-morrow?"

"I could, of course.  What I am trying to do is to
persuade Mrs. Chard to let you resume personal
attendance on her.  If she consents will you come?"

"I don't know.  It is a very awkward case.  Don't
forget that Chard put me out of the house because I
told him quite plainly--well, just what you have told
me to-day."

Isla saw the difficulties of the position and, after
a little more conversation with the doctor which
strengthened her determination to get him back to
the house, she bade him good-morning.

When she reached Hans Crescent it was almost
lunch-time, and Robbins, the butler, was waiting for her with
a note.

"This has come by hand from the city for you, Miss.
It is from Mr. Chard."

Isla turned aside to open the letter, and when she
broke the seal she saw a pink slip that looked like a
cheque.

Within, there were written a few curt words, dismissing
her from her position in the house and requesting
that she would leave before four o'clock.

With reddening cheeks she passed up the stairs and
tapped lightly at the door of Mrs. Chard's room.  There
was no answer, and, after repeated knocks, she tried to
open the door and found it locked.

At the moment Fifine appeared at the other end of
the corridor with a small, satisfied smirk on her lips.

"Mrs. Chard can't see you, Mees.  She particularly
said I was not to let you in.  She's asleep now.  She
told me to say that she will write to you in the evening
if you will be good enough to leave your address."

Isla turned on her heel, her quick Highland temper
flashing in her eyes.  She was very sorry for the poor
woman, but she could not be ordered from her house a
second time.

She walked to her own room and began to gather her
belongings together.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE CHAMPION`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXIV


.. class:: center medium

   THE CHAMPION

.. vspace:: 2

Malcolm Mackinnon, busy with his own concerns, had
no qualms about his sister even when the weeks went by,
bringing no line or sign from her.  The Barras
Mackinnons did not write either, but when Malcolm thought
of the matter at all he concluded that she was safe with
them.  Obviously there could be no other explanation
of the silence.

Towards the end of November, however, a somewhat
disturbing note from Lady Mackinnon arrived at Creagh.

"As Isla has not chosen to answer any of our letters
I am writing to ask what is the matter with her.  We
kept on expecting her at Wimereaux up to the last, and
Uncle Tom was much disappointed that she did not
come.  I am writing to say that we shall be in Glasgow
on Thursday night, en route for Barras, and that if you
and she will come up for the night to St. Enoch's we
can talk things over.  If Isla likes to bring her things
and go on with us to Barras we shall only be too glad."

Malcolm stood, staring stupidly at the letter, and, for
the moment, he was at his wits' end.  Isla had not gone
to Wimereaux, their folk knew nothing of her!--where,
then, was she?  Had Malcolm lived in close intimacy
with the folk in the Glen, as Isla had done, he would
have heard by now from Elspeth Maclure that she had
gone no farther than London and was there still.

Truth to tell, he had been so relieved by his sister's
departure that he had not troubled his head about her
or noticed the quick flight of time.  Things were going
well with him, and the spectre in the background was
giving no unnecessary trouble.  He was a great believer
in luck, as many ignorant persons are, and he believed
that his had turned.  His chief business in life just then
was the wooing of Vivien Rosmead, and he was now
anticipating the day, not far distant, when he intended
to ask her to be his wife.

He hoped to arrange the matter quietly when Rosmead
returned to Scotland, and to have his marriage an
accomplished fact as soon thereafter as possible.  Then
he could snap his fingers at all the phantoms of the past.

Malcolm, however, did not reckon with certain forces
that are stronger than the poor planning of the human
brain, and so he marched on unconcernedly to the crisis
of his fate.

He received his aunt's letter one day at Lochearn
when he was on his way to Glasgow to see Cattanach.
At the station he met Neil Drummond, who was going
up to Callander to see a man at the Dreadnought Hotel,
and, being full of the news that had just come, he
blurted it out to Neil, who had seemed of late disposed
to be more friendly to him.

"Look here, Drummond.  Has your sister ever heard
from Isla since she left Glenogle?" he asked as he
offered Neil his cigarette-case.

"No, she hasn't, and Kitty has wondered, of course.
I suppose she's still with your uncle and aunt at
Wimereaux?"

Garrion folks, in common with others, had frequently
made inquiries about Isla's welfare, and Malcolm had
invariably answered that she was all right.  None of
them had any doubt but that she had been with the
Barras Mackinnons for the last two months.

"They've left the place.  They're going back to Barras
on Friday, but Isla isn't with them.  She never has
been."

"Never has been!  Then, where is she?" asked Neil
blankly.

"Well, old chap, to tell you the truth, I don't know.
When she left she certainly said that she was going to
them."

"But haven't you had any letters?"

"Not a blessed one."

Neil looked him all over with a sudden, sharp
scrutiny that, to another man, would have been, to say
the least of it, unpleasant.

"You say you haven't known all this time where
she is?"

"I haven't known.  I tell you she hasn't written to
me.  That's why I asked whether your sister had
heard."

"And you haven't made the smallest effort to find
out?"

"Why should I?" inquired Malcolm coolly.  "She's
of age, she knows her own mind, she had plenty of
money, and she doesn't want to be harried about her
private business.  You don't know Isla, Neil, though
you think you do, and the man who marries her will
have a hard row to hoe.  I can tell you that."

Drummond crushed back the desire to take Malcolm
Mackinnon by the throat.  He was not normal where
Isla was concerned, and he took a far more serious view
of the situation than there was any need to do.

"Do you mean to say that you haven't the shadow of
a clue as to where she is or what she is doing?  Haven't
you any other friends in London to whom she could
have gone?"

"None--except an old servant of Achree who lives
somewhere about the Edgeware Road," said Malcolm
with a sudden flash of remembrance.  "Don't wear such
a worried look, old chap, and don't forget that Isla is
twenty-six years of age and more capable than either
of us of looking after herself."

"But, hang it all, she's a woman, Malcolm, and--and
your sister ought not to be adrift like that!"

"She isn't adrift," said Malcolm cheerily.  "And,
anyway, what can we do?  If she chooses to hide herself,
as she seems to be doing, who is to prevent her?  She
has her reasons for doing so, no doubt."

Neil Drummond was conscious of a growing indignation,
of a swift return of his old rage against Malcolm,
and of scorn of that careless, irresponsible being who
had made life such a burden to the woman whom Neil
himself loved.  He withdrew with a snort into his own
corner and jumped out at Callander with a very curt
good-bye.

He put through his business there very quickly and
returned to Lochearnhead by the earliest possible train.
During the whole journey he was racking his brains as
to how and where he could discover the address of the
old servant of whom Malcolm had spoken.  He knew
Isla's ways, and he was aware that it had always been
her delight when in London to look up any of her own
folk who were settled there.  He ran over in his memory
the servants at Achree with whom he had been familiar,
but he could not fix his mind on anyone in particular.
Diarmid, however, who had been with the Mackinnons
for nearly thirty years, would surely be able to help him.
He would go to Diarmid.

His bicycle had been left at the station, because the
train had offered a quicker way of getting over the
heavy roads to Callander.  He now took it out and rode
swiftly down the hill to Lochearn and up Glenogle
towards Creagh.

Neil had all the swift impetuosity of the Celt in his
blood, and he did not let the grass grow under his feet.

He was fortunate, however, in obtaining the information
he desired about half way up, at the farm-house of
Darrach, where he came upon Elspeth Maclure taking
her washing down off the lines in the front garden.

He swung himself off his machine, set it against the
drystone dyke, and pushed open the little gate.

Elspeth, surprised and pleased by this little attention,
hastened to ask him into the house.

He thanked her, but declined.

"I am seeking information, Mrs. Maclure.  I was on
my way to Creagh to see Diarmid, but perhaps you will
do.  Do you remember the name of an old servant of
the Mackinnons who married in London and settled
somewhere in the neighbourhood of the Edgeware Road?"

A curious flicker crossed Elspeth's eager face.

"You mean Agnes Fraser that was under housemaid
at Achree when I was upper of three, do ye, Maister
Drummond?"

"I suppose I do if the description answers," he said
with a laugh.  "But I don't know her name."

"She lives at 18 Cromer Street, Edgeware Road, sir,"
answered Elspeth.  "If ye'll just come intil the hoose
I'll write it doon."

"Here you are," said Neil, drawing out a notebook
and a pencil.  "18 Cromer Street, Edgeware Road.
Thank you very much.  That saves me that stiff pull
to Creagh, and the roads are heavy to-day.  I was glad
to leave my machine at the station and take a handy
train to Callander.  Maclure and all the young folks
well, I hope?"

"Yes, sir, thank you," said Elspeth, but the odd,
eager expression did not leave her face as she followed
the Laird of Garrion to the gate.  "I had a letter from
Mrs. Fraser not so long ago, Maister Drummond."

"You had--eh?  And what was her news?"

"She said she had had Miss Mackinnon stoppin'
at her hoose.  That was aboot a month ago."

"Do you think she is there still?" asked Neil with
apparent carelessness, though his hand as he stooped to
his bicycle trembled a little.

"I'm no sure, but I think, Maister Drummond, that
Agnes wass troubled apoot her.  I haf been troubled
mysel'.  For, look you, it iss an awfu' thing for the Glen
that Miss Isla should haf peen spirited away like this.
It iss not the same at all.  And nopody efer speakin'
her naame or tryin' to get her pack--that iss the worst
thing of all.  If you please.  Maister Drummond, askin'
your pardon for my free speech----"

Drummond sprang to his machine and waved his
hand in parting.

"Good-bye, Mrs. Maclure.  I'll bring Miss Isla back
if it can be done.  But keep a quiet tongue in your
head--not a word to a soul."

He rode off at break-neck speed and, to the great
astonishment of his folk, announced that he had to
leave Garrion that very night for London, having
business there.

Drummond slept soundly in the train, for he was
young and strong, and he had had a tiring and exciting
day.

Arrived at Euston, he entered the hotel and made
himself fit for his great quest.  But after he had finished
his toilet and gone through the whole menu of the table
d'hote breakfast it was only half-past eight.  Even an
old friend may not presume to call on a lady at such an
unholy hour of the morning.

London had no bright welcome for the Laird of
Garrion.  One of the worst fogs of a particularly foggy
November lay like a thick yellow pall over everything,
and through its impenetrable folds weird shapes and
shadows loomed, and strange, half-stifled cries troubled
the air as if there were some invisible and ghostly
warfare waged in the streets.

"How long do you suppose it will take me to get to the
Edgeware Road in this--eh?" he asked the big porter in
the hall.

"Ten minutes by the underground, sir," he answered.
"After that, I don't know!"

Neil took the risks.  About half-past ten o'clock he
emerged from the underground fastness of the Edgeware
Road Station and began to grope his way about for his
ultimate destination.  But it was a sorry business.  He
seemed to be wandering round in a circle, and by noon
he did not know which end of the Road he was at.

Then a sudden miracle, often seen in the case of a
London fog, was wrought by some invisible force in the
upper air.  The thick veil was drawn back as if by
unseen hands, a few feeble rays of wintry sunshine filtered
through the gloom, and London became free and visible
once more.

Neil then found that he had wandered into Maida
Vale, where he was totally stranded.  He hailed a passing
hansom and, giving the address, sat back comfortably
with his cigarette, all unconscious, until he took a peep
into the little mirror at the side of the cab, that his face
was exceedingly grimy and that there were various
smudges on his collar.

Neil was not vain, but a man likes to look his best
when he goes to see the girl he loves.  He did what he
could to remedy the defects, and was fairly satisfied with
the results when the cab set him down at his destination.

The jingling cab bells reached Agnes Fraser's ears in
the dining-room, where, with a polishing cloth, she was
trying to remove the traces of the fog from her furniture.

She herself opened the door and had no doubt when
she saw a tall young man alighting from the hansom
that he was only some fresh seeker after "accommodation,"
which is the word used in her business.  She had
of course, seen the Laird of Garrion when he was a boy
but she did not recognize him now.

He paid the man and came smilingly to the door.

"Mrs. Fraser?  You don't know me, I can see, though
you must have seen me sometimes at Achree--Drummond
of Garrion."

Agnes's face flushed warmly.

"Oh, sir, I beg your pardon.  I micht hae kent; but
there--of course ye are cheenged.  Will you come inside,
sir?  It's a prood woman I am to bid ye to my hoose."

He entered the house, and, with his hat in his hand,
put the one straight question on his lips.

"Is Miss Mackinnon here?"

A great light broke over Agnes Fraser's mind.  She
nodded silently, pointing to the dining-room, and
followed him in.

"This is God-sent, Mr. Drummond.  I wad hae written
to the Glen the day if ye hadna come."

"But what is wrong?  I hope Miss Mackinnon is not
ill?" he said with eager apprehension.

"Not ill in her body, though she has got very thin.
But will you not sit down, and I will tell you?  She is
not in the hoose at this very meenit, though I think I
can tell ye whaur to find her."

Neil took the chair and waited for all that he might
hear.

"She has been in this hoose, sir--let me see--ten
weeks a'thegither, coontin' frae the time she cam' first.
Three weeks of that time she was at that queer hoose in
Hans Crescent."

"What queer house?"

Agnes then grasped the fact that nobody in Glenogle
or Balquhidder knew aught of Isla's movements since
she had come to London, and she proceeded in her own
terse and graphic way to describe them.

"Weel, ye see, she cam' here--for why, I dinna ken.
Them that's left in the Glen are the wans that should
ken that bit of it.  But she cam', not intendin' at a' to
go to foreign places to Lady Mackinnon, but jist to live
by hersel' and get her ain livin'."

Neil started in his chair.  The thing was
unthinkable--intolerable.  It could not be Isla of whom the woman
was talking, yet her broad, comely face was so full of
honest concern and her voice rang so true that he could
not doubt a word.

"I was wae for her, for I ken London through and
through, and what a hole it is--bar for them that hae
money and heaps o' folk.  In the Glen, see, ye can live
withoot onybody and no be that ill aff, but London
is--is fair hell unless ye hae folk; I'm sayin' that, that
kens.  I telt her weel, though I was a prood woman to
hae her in my hoose, and wad hae dune ony mortal thing
for her.  But it was not the hoose for her that had been
brocht up in the Castle o' Achree wi' servants at her ca'.
Her idea was to lodge wi' me and work in the day-time,
but she could get naething like that to do."

Agnes paused, breathless, and dashed away something
from her eye.

"When I tell ye ye'll maybe lauch, and maybe ye'll
greet.  It's what I felt mair like.  The first place she
gaed to was to a woman that wantit somebody to tak' oot
her pet dogs for an airin' in the Park.  Yes, she went
after that--Miss Mackinnon of Achree!--she did!  And
that'll show ye far better than I can tell ye what London
is for the woman-body that has neither money nor folk."

Drummond was silent, but the veins began to rise on
his ruddy forehead, and his kind eyes flashed fire.

"She didna think she wad tak' that at seevin-an'-saxpence
a week," pursued Agnes with merciless candour,
"and syne she gaed to the Hans Crescent place to
be a kind o' companion-hoosekeeper to a leddy.  O' a'
the traps there is set in London for a woman-body--that's
the warst, for, look ye, Maister Drummond, a
servant-lass kens what she is and what she has to dae,
but when you're that," she said, with a scornful snap of
her fingers, "you're neither fish nor flesh nor guid red
herrin'.  But gang she would.  It seems that
Mrs. Bodley-Chard--sic a name to begin wi'--but they're a'
daft wi' their double-barrelled names here!--was an
auld wife married to a young man that had been her
first man's clerk.  It was her money he was efter, and
Miss Isla thocht he was tryin' to get rid o' her wi' some
pooshonous drug.  Ye ken Miss Isla.  Nae joukery-pawkery
can live near whaur she is, and she began to
fecht the scoondrel quietly-like, daein' what she could
for the puir woman.  But at the end o' three weeks she
was dismissed at a moment's notice, her money flung at
her--like.  She didna tak' that, and she cam' back here,
whaur she's been ever since.  And she's got naething
to dae sin syne, and her money's near dune, and--and
she's--weel, if ye see her, ye'll ken what wey I was
gaun to write to the Glen this very day."

Drummond rose up from his chair, and he was like
a man ready to fight the whole of London for Isla's sake.

"But what did she mean by it?" he said a little
hoarsely.  "There was no need----"

"She seemed to think there was.  Forby, she was not
pu'in' in the same boat wi' Maister Malcolm--the Laird,
I mean--and she has never written to him or heard frae
him since she cam'.  That I do ken."

"Well, and where is she?  I must see her and, if
possible, take her back with me to the Glen."

"When the fog lifted she gaed oot for a walk in the
Park.  She hasna been gane twenty minutes or so.  Ye
can easy follow her.  Do ye ken London, sir?"

"Not this part of it, I am afraid."

"But ye canna go wrang.  Gang oot into the Edgeware
Road, and turn to your left, and gang on till ye
come to the Marble Arch.  Syne you're in the Park.
She's very fond o' walkin' roond by the Serpentine.
Ony bobby will tell ye which wey to tak' when you're
inside the gates."

Drummond departed without further parley, and
Agnes, with a big sigh of relief, returned to her polishing.

She had given the entire story away without ever
having paused to inquire whether the Laird of Garrion
had the right to hear it.  He had certainly assumed
some such right, and, anyhow, the time had come when
something had to be done.

The desperate look in Isla's eyes that morning had
haunted and terrified her.  Each week Isla had insisted
on scrupulously paying the full amount for "The
Picture Gallery" and for such food as she ate in the
house, and now her little store was well-nigh exhausted.

It was a very searching and cruel experience for Isla,
the memory of which never afterwards wholly faded
from her remembrance, though she always said she
could never regret the period of "Sturm und Drang"
which had given her such insight into the lives of
thousands of women battling with adverse circumstances
from the cradle to the grave.

Garrion's temper worked itself into fever-heat as his
great, swinging stride took him through the swirl of the
traffic at the Marble Arch and into the cool, wide spaces
of the Park.  Against Malcolm Mackinnon his anger
burned with an unholy fire.  He would never forgive
him for this--for his callous indifference to his sister's
fate, for his absolute failure to make the smallest
inquiry on her behalf.  In future she should be removed
from her brother's jurisdiction altogether, and he would
have to answer to him.

Such was Neil's mighty resolve as he strode along,
his restless eyes, sweeping from side to side in search
of the dear, slim figure of the woman he loved.  There
was very little alloy of self in his thoughts that winter
morning as he swept round by the windy Serpentine in
search of Isla.  It was all of her he thought with a vast,
encompassing tenderness which equalled Rosmead's,
and was less cautious and deliberate in its operations.

He did not doubt in the least that he would find her,
but he had to walk a little farther than he expected.
At the end of the beautiful sheet of water there is a
winding path, and, passing there, he looked up and saw,
sitting on one of the seats, a solitary figure which he
thought looked like Isla.  Only at the distance he could
not be quite certain.  It did not take him long to cover
it.  Dashing past the smart nursemaids and the bonnie
bairns, whose sweet freshness even London fogs could
not dim, he came presently to her side.  And Isla,
sitting with her head slightly turned away, was not
aware of his presence till the gravel crunched under his
impetuous foot and her name was spoken in the quick
accents of apprehensive love.

She rose up a little wildly, stretched out her hands,
essayed to speak, then went white all over, and collapsed,
a little heap of unconscious humanity, on the seat.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE ARCH-PLOTTERS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXV


.. class:: center medium

   THE ARCH-PLOTTERS

.. vspace:: 2

Lady Betty Neil, the aunt of the Drummonds, who lived
with them at Garrion, was a Highland lady of the old
school.  She loved the Gaelic and deplored its increasing
disuse in the Glen, she had all the lore of the North
country at her finger-ends, and was, moreover, gifted with
the second-sight.

Certainly, when she received a peremptory telegram
from her nephew on the second day after his departure
for London, she evinced neither perturbation nor surprise.

"You go to London, Aunt Betty!" cried Kitty,
open-mouthed.  "What does he mean?  How dare he?  Let
me see the telegram."

Lady Betty, leaning on her ebony stick with her left
hand, produced from her reticule the crumpled piece of
pink paper bearing the summons.

"I need you in London.  Will meet you to-morrow
night.  Euston, half-past six."

Kitty looked from the telegram to her aunt's face and
back again in sheer amaze.  Never had Lady Betty
looked more like "an ancestor," which was Sadie
Rosmead's name for her.

She was a picturesque old lady of great height and
commanding mien, her hair and eyes still as black as
sloes, her face beautiful still, in spite of its
wrinkles--the face that had once been the toast of a county.  She
was the Drummonds' nearest relative, their mother's
sister, in fact, and, though immensely wealthy, she had
no fixed habitation of her own, and she had agreed to
live at Garrion, at any rate until Neil brought home a wife.

That he had found one now she did not doubt, and she
hoped that he had.  Isla Mackinnon was a woman after
her own heart.  Neil had confided to her the nature of
the business that had taken him to London, but he had
enjoined silence.

"Kitty can't hold her tongue, as you know, Aunt
Betty.  Besides, she's too thick at Achree at present, and
I don't want them to get wind of it.  This is a business
that has to be done on the quiet."

"Aunt Betty, what took Neil to London?" quoth
Kitty with a severe expression on her piquant face.  "You
and he are keeping me in the dark.  It isn't fair."

"Neil has his reasons, my dear, and they are good
ones, depend on it."

"But you can't go to London by yourself, auntie!  The
thing's outrageous!  It can't be contemplated for a
moment.  I must go with you to take care of you."

"No, I'll take Lisbeth, and I must go and arrange
matters with her now."

Lady Betty was now seventy-four, but she was as
straight and supple as a young birch tree.  She carried
a stick--not because she needed it, but because it was
her whim to do so and because it had been given to her
by an old sweetheart for a wager.  She had never parted
with it.  It was her faithful companion by day, and at
night it stood in a handy corner by her bed.  Lady Betty
had never married.  But had any married wife a life so
full of romance?  This is not Lady Betty's story, however.

She sniffed a love story afar off and rose to it with the
keen scent of a war-horse for the fray.  There she would
be in her element--keen, shrewd, sympathetic, and full
of common-sense.  Neil had made no mistake in sending
that telegram.  He knew the hour had come, and the
woman.

Aunt Betty was as gay as a young girl over her preparations,
which were so elaborate that Kitty felt called
upon to remonstrate.

"Mind your own business, my dear.  I know mine.
A lassie like you can afford to rise and run.  A woman
like me must uphold the dignity of her age and position.
Neil has not said what he wants me for.  I must be
prepared for any emergency."

Kitty was speechless, consumed with curiosity and
inordinately jealous.  She travelled to Stirling, however,
to put her aunt on the London train, and on the way
back drove to Achree to acquaint the inmates with the
astounding news of Lady Betty's departure for London,
that gave her one hour's rare enjoyment and partly
consoled her for being left behind.

Lady Betty arrived at Euston as fresh and gay as when
she had left Garrion in the raw of the winter morning,
driving down Balquhidder in a blast of half-frozen rain.

And Neil was on the platform to greet her, overjoyed
at sight of her clever old face.

"You are a brick, Aunt Betty.  But I knew you
would come.  How did you get rid of Kitty?"

"Not easily, my lad.  But I did manage it.  Lisbeth
is here.  Where are we going, and where can she ride?
We want to talk together in the cab, you and I."

"I have a brougham waiting.  It's quite fair, and
Lisbeth can go on the box.  We are going to Brown's Hotel."

Lady Betty nodded an approval.  She was known at
Brown's.  In the old days, when she had been a figure in
London society, she had often spent a season there.

"It's Isla Mackinnon, of course.  Where is she?"

"She's with an old servant of Achree living in a place
off the Edgeware Road, from which you will fetch her
to-morrow," said Neil quietly.

"And do what with her?"

"That's for you to say."

"Tell me about her.--everything you can or will.  I
must know how I stand, and where.  It's not for nothing
that an old woman of seventy-four rises and runs at a young
man's bidding."

Neil nodded comprehendingly, and in his quickest and
most graphic way he put her in possession of the facts.

"It's an unco story," she said, folding her slender
hands with an unusual grip on the ebony stick.  "It's
not a story that Donald Mackinnon would have liked to
bear in connexion with his one ewe lamb.  I'm glad
he's in Balquhidder," she said brusquely.  "But the
spunk of the lassie!  There's grit there Neil
Drummond!  She'll fight--ay, and starve, but nobody shall
know of it.  That's the true spirit that has made
Scotland great!  It's in the women yet, Neil, but it's
scarce, very scarce among the men."

Neil had no time for platitudes.  His head was a
whirl of plans.

"Does Isla know I'm coming?" asked the old lady then.

"Yes.  She expects you to-morrow."

"Has she left herself in your hands, then, lad?"
asked Lady Betty with a curious straight glance under
which Neil reddened.

"So far.  She's run down, body and spirit, Aunt Betty.
I want you to realize that before you see her.  She--she
has lost grip.  My God, to see Isla Mackinnon like that!
It makes me itch to get with my two hands at Mackinnon's
throat!"

"Leave him out of the count, Neil.  His Maker will
deal with him, I dinna doubt," said the old lady quietly.
"Then, she's to be turned over to me to do with what
I think fit."

"Yes, and what she will agree to."

"But this is a big thing, Neil.  Does it mean that one
day she will come to Garrion?"

"Please God, it does mean that.  But only a brute
would think of himself at such a time.  She must first
be made well in body and spirit, Auntie Betty.  I'll come
in later."

"But if she's let you do all this she must like you,
Neil.  Isla Mackinnon is not the woman to take favours
of this kind from frem folk."

"Wait till you see her," he pleaded, and she said no
more.

She ate an astonishingly big dinner, insisting on going
down to the restaurant, dressed in an elegant gown of
rich black satin, with priceless lace on the bodice and
a diamond star glistening among its filmy folds.  Many
looked in the direction of the handsome young man and
the still handsomer old lady and wondered who they
were.

Aunt Betty slept like a tired child the whole night
long and rose at eight o'clock when Lisbeth brought her
morning tea, every faculty alert and braced for the day's
work.

At half-past ten the brougham came again, and Neil
drove with her to the end of the Edgeware Road, where
he got down, saying that he would meet her at lunch at
Brown's, whither she was to bring Isla if she could
persuade her to come.

Agnes Fraser herself joyfully opened the door to Lady
Betty Neil.  She was graciously recognized, and her
welfare was asked for before Isla's name was even
mentioned.

"Miss Isla is in her own room, my lady.  Will you
come up?  A very dark mornin', isn't it?  I hope you
are not very tired wi' your journey."

Lady Betty suitably replied, and, with the aid of the
ebony stick, she climbed to "The Pictur Gallery," where
Isla was sitting over the fire, very white and spent, but
with a more restful look on her face than it had worn
for many a day.

She sprang up at the opening of the door.

"Lady Betty, Lady Betty!  You came all this way to
see me!" she cried breathlessly, holding out both her
hands.

"Wheesht, my dear--that's nothing.  I loved your
father well.  I just missed being your mother: and if
I had been there would have been none of this
gallivanting.  Where can I sit?"

Isla drew in the most comfortable chair she could
find, and the old lady sat down and assumed her most
characteristic attitude, in which the ebony stick played
a prominent part.

"We're not going to talk about what's past, Isla, nor
even about what's to come.  Our concern is with the
present moment.  Now I have plumed my feathers and
flown from Balquhidder, I've no mind to go back until
the sun begins to shine again.  Will you go with me
to-morrow to the south of France?  I've not been there
for eleven years.  We'll go to Monty, my dear, and
have a fling with the bravest of them.  It stands to
reason that I can't go alone.  Will ye go?"

Isla sat very still, and from the expression of her face
her thoughts could not have been gathered.  Perhaps
the old lady partly guessed them.  The gift of second-sight
brings in its train a sort of sixth sense that enables
its possessor to be sure about things that other
people only wonder about.

"But I have no money, Lady Betty, and it is Kitty
that you ought to take."

"Kitty can come by and by.  Besides, she has been
so many times there that she is not caring about going
any more.  As for the money, I have plenty, and soon
I shall not need it.  We don't take it with us when we
lie down in Balquhidder, my dear.  And to spend a
little here and there while we have it--why, that's a
big pleasure, and it is one that you ought not to deny
an auld wife."

It was delicately done.  Isla raised her swimming
eyes and capitulated in a moment.  The prospect allured
her beyond any power of hers to tell, and no feeling of
obligation to Lady Betty troubled her.  One fine nature
responds to another.  It was what Isla herself would
have done in similar circumstances--what, indeed, she
had often done on a small scale in the glens when she
had the chance.  The kinship of good deeds was
between them, and there is none closer.

An immense satisfaction shone in the old lady's eyes
at this unexpectedly easy capture of the fort.  They
positively glowed with her inward triumph, and, without
so much as alluding to the odd circumstances that had
brought them together, she proceeded to expatiate on
what they would do when they got away to the sunshine.
This was the crowning touch of the wisdom that comes
from the second-sight.

Isla was sick to death of herself and of the sordid
problems of her life.  What she wanted was to get away
from everything that would remind her of them, and,
above all, from the people that would talk about them.

"I have no smart clothes for the Riviera, Lady Betty.
But take me as your maid."

"Lisbeth is here," was the grim answer.  "I can get a
maid for the hiring, but companions and friends have to
be won.  I suppose you have things to cover you, and,
if I mind rightly, the shops at Nice were not that bad,
though they put it on for the English.  But you and me
will get the better of them.  Come then, my dear, and
we'll go back to Brown's to lunch and talk about all our
plans."

Then an odd shyness seemed to come over the girl.

"Neil will be there, Lady Betty?"

"Yes, I suppose that he will."

"Then, will you excuse me?  I--I haven't got over
things yet.  Did he tell you how he found me?"

"In a general way he did, but Neil has not his sister's
gift of the gab.  You have to fill in with him.  Of this
you may be sure, Isla--that Neil Drummond will not tell
to me, or to anybody a thing that would vex or humble
you.  He has set you up there!" she added with a slight
upward inflection of her eyebrows as well as of her voice.
"So come, and remember that you and I are not women
with a past, but only with a future."

Cackling at her own joke, she carried off Isla, who
met Neil in the luncheon-room of the restaurant in a
way which commanded Lady Betty's highest admiration.
Isla Mackinnon was no fool.  She was neither hysterical
nor emotional.  Lady Betty knew that in what the girl
had done her reason had fully justified her, though her
method perhaps had been at fault.  She guessed that in
the sunny days to come she would hear the full story,
or at least enough of it to enable her to fill in all the gaps.

Neil's manner was also admirable, and they appeared
just like a happy little family party, of which the old
lady was the life and soul.

That evening after dinner, over the fire in Lady Betty's
sitting-room, she indicated to her nephew his course of
action.

"It will not be a good thing for you to come with us
just now, Neil.  We can make the journey by ourselves
and get settled.  Then I'll write."

Disappointment immediately wrote itself large upon his
face.  He had already wired to Garrion for another trunk
to be sent and he had looked forward to being the director
of the little travelling party to the south.

"I am understanding Isla better than you, my dear,
and just at the present moment the sight of you humiliates
her just a wee bit.  She canna forget how you found
her and the weakness she thought she betrayed.  She
has to get over that, and she will do it all the quicker if
you are not on the spot."

"But, hang it all, Aunt Betty, to go back to Garrion--and
Christmas without you, too!  I won't do it!"

"I didn't lay down the law as to times and seasons.
What is at the back of my mind is that you will bring
Kitty to Nice, or to Monte Carlo, or to wherever we have
settled ourselves, and spend Christmas with us.  Then
folk will not have any talk about us, because I, of course,
can do as I like and nobody dare say a word."

Neil's face brightened as he consulted his pocket-diary.

"This is the fifth, so we shall come inside of three
weeks."

"You will come when I bid ye--not a moment sooner
or later," she said severely.  "Don't forget how you
hauled the old wife from the Garrion fastnesses to the
gay world again.  Now she must have her revenge."

When Neil did not answer she leaned forward on the
ebony stick, and her eyes grew soft and luminous.

"Listen, lad.  Ye may trust your Aunt Betty.  She is
not without knowledge of a woman's heart.  If Isla is to
be won it will take time and some skill.  Her heart is
asleep, but if I can waken it it shall be done.  Do you
think I am to be idle in these three weeks?  I think ye
may safely leave her in my hands.  I will be true to your
cause, for I would dearly like to see her in the house of
Garrion for all our sakes as well as for her own."

It was Neil's turn to capitulate, which he did with all
the grace he could muster.

Next day at two o'clock of the afternoon he saw his
aunt and Isla off by the boat-train at Charing Cross, and
thereafter he got ready for his own return at night to
Scotland.  There was nothing to keep him in London
now, and he had left certain loose ends of his affairs at
home which would be none the worse of his handling.

At the station Isla had broken down, trying to thank
him with a faint, wavering smile on her pathetic lips.

"Don't, Isla, for God's sake, don't!  It's down on my
knees I'd go to serve you, and besides, we made the
pact--didn't we?--that day long ago when we went to Glasgow
together and lunched at St. Enoch's.  I've lived on
the memory of that day all these months.  Don't grudge
me what I've been able to do now.  Besides, it's nothing
but what Highland folk are doing for one another every day."

Lady Betty, observing the emotional moment, frowned
upon him warningly from the background, and he tried
to restrain himself.  When the train fairly moved out
Isla leaned out of the window to wave to him, and when
she drew back to her seat her eyes were still wet.

"I've a job with that laddie, Isla.  He's very thrawn.
I'm often thinking I'll wash my hands of him and Kate.
What with his dour temper and her tongue, my life is
not as peaceful as a woman of my years has the right to
expect."

"Neil--a dour temper, Lady Betty!" cried Isla
spiritedly.  "This is the first I have heard of it, and I
don't believe it now!"

"It's there, my dear.  And forby, in some things he
hasna the sense of a paitrick on the moor.  I'm tired of
them both, I tell ye, and glad to get away."

Oh, the wily old plotter!  Isla would have argued the
point with her and was only restrained from doing so by
her sense of decency.  But this was the line of diplomacy
Lady Betty started on--belittling Neil up to a certain
point and voicing her relief at being rid of his company
until Isla waxed furious and championed him both by
spoken word and in her secret thoughts all the way south.

Lady Betty, a real diplomatist in her way, took care,
however, not to overact her part.  She would throw in at
intervals a judicious word which had the odd effect in
casting a full glare of sunshine on all that was best of
Neil and so giving unexpected glimpses of his fine young
manhood.  Then, after a time, she left the subject in
order that her words might filter down to the bed-rock
of Isla's heart.

Very grey and dour seemed Balquhidder and the
Garrion hills when Drummond drove up in the snell
winter morning, meeting a bitter wind that seemed to
skin his face.

"All right at home, Hamish?" he asked the groom,
and, being answered in the affirmative, he spoke no
further word until they turned in at the Garrion gate.

"Miss Kitty is at Achree, sir.  They came and fetched
her away the day you left," observed Hamish stolidly.

"Why didn't you tell me that at the station?" inquired
Neil rather hotly, to which question the man answered
never a word.

"I took the telegram over last nicht, sir, and she will
come back to-day," he said after a moment in the same
stolid fashion, wondering what had happened in London
to shorten his master's usually placid temper.

Kitty arrived in the Achree motor, alone, about
luncheon-time.

"I want to hear all about Isla, Neil," she cried.  "I
thought I should find her here.  What have you done
with her and Aunt Betty?"

"They have gone to the South of France."

"Oh!" said Kitty, and her piquant face fell.  "I don't
call that fair of Aunt Betty.  She might have taken me."

"If you're a good girl and don't talk too much between
now and Christmas," said Neil provokingly, "I'll take you
myself to be there in time for Christmas."

Kitty danced in ecstasy.

"Oh, I shall be glad.  It's going to be a frightfully
dismal Christmas here this year, and nobody is going
to do any entertaining.  The Rosmeads are all down in
the mouth because their brother can't get away for
Christmas, and now it may be Easter, or even later,
before they see him.  Bridge-building seems to be a very
unsatisfactory business, though you make so much money
at it.  Peter Rosmead has to work like a navvy.  He goes
down into caissons--and things in diver's clothes to
the bottom of the river.  That's where the difficulty is.
Things are always happening--silting, and queer things
like that.  Then the work has to be done all over again.
He seems annoyed about it, but he'll keep on at it.  He
hasn't got that square jaw for nothing," cried Kitty
breathlessly.  "Well, tell me all about Isla Mackinnon.  What
has she been doing all this time?"

"Nothing particular.  There isn't any romance or
tragedy--or anything.  She was simply living with an old
servant of Achree and getting very sick of it.  She would
have come home soon, anyway."

"Did she seem glad to see you?"

"Isla doesn't say much at any time.  But, yes--I
think she was glad.  Have you seen anything of
Mackinnon at Achree, Kitty?"

"Why, yes.  I've seen him every day.  He spends
the most of his time there, and I think it's going to be a
match between him and Vivien."

The colour rose a little in Drummond's cheeks.

"I should have thought that she would have had
enough of matrimony after her experience," he observed
drily.

"I should have thought so, too, Neil.  And at first I
was angry at Malcolm, thinking he was only after her
money.  But now anybody can see that he cares.  I
wonder how long it will be before we hear the news, and
what Isla will say."

Drummond had got fresh food for reflection.  Knowing
what he did of Malcolm Mackinnon, he wondered just
how much or how little the Rosmeads guessed.  It was
a certain fact that had they known the whole truth about
Malcolm Mackinnon he never would have been permitted
so much intimacy at Achree.

But the thought uppermost in Neil's mind was an unholy
joy that caissons, and silt, and other queer things, as
Kitty put it, were keeping Peter Rosmead safely out of
the way at the bottom of the Delaware River.  He would
not have minded much though he had never come up again.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE LURE OF VIVIEN`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXVI


.. class:: center medium

   THE LURE OF VIVIEN

.. vspace:: 2

Six weeks later, on a snowy January day, Neil Drummond
rode one of his big roans to the Lodge of Creagh,
where he had a luncheon appointment with Malcolm
Mackinnon.  It was one o'clock when he breasted the
last bit of rising ground and beheld in front of him the
little house standing sheer on the edge of the Moor of
Silence, its bleak outline silhouetted against the clear
grey of the sky.

The smell of Margaret Maclaren's baked meats was in
his nostrils as he turned in at the gate, whetting the
appetite he had gained in his long ride from Garrion.

Neil never looked better than when astride a horse,
and he was the best judge of horse-flesh in all the Glen.
In fact, that was his one extravagance.  He was looking
particularly well that day.  There was an air of
buoyancy about him which would not be repressed.  He had
whistled and sung all the way from Balquhidder and had
given Pride of Garrion her head in a way which that
damsel particularly liked and in which she had seldom
before been indulged.  Her sleek sides were wet with
foam as she ran quivering to the door, tossing her pretty
head, the breath coming fast in her delicate nostrils,
life brimming over in every pore and muscle.

Malcolm, who had been watching, opened the door
immediately, bade him good day, and in a word
expressed his pleasure at sight of him.

They walked together to the stable, where Neil
himself rubbed down his horse, saw that she had a modest
drink, covered her up, and then turned, ready to
accompany his host back to the house.

"Had a good time abroad--eh?" asked Malcolm with
a somewhat covert glance at Neil as they walked.

Neil threw his head up with a joyous air.

"Ripping.  It's a bit thick coming back to the grey
silence of the glens.  It's a white silence with us.  We've
heavy drifts from Balquhidder up.  You're pretty free
here."

"It's coming, though," said Malcolm, with an upward
glance at the snell skies.  "Come inside.  The house is
small, but it's easily warmed.  That's one comfort."

When Neil had washed his hands and brushed his
clothes they passed into the little snuggery, where
Malcolm sat and smoked of an evening.  He had made
some little alteration in the arrangement of the house,
and the room which the General had used as his library
and sitting-room was now converted into a dining-room,
which it had originally been.  It was a man's house
now, the few tokens of Isla's presence having long since
disappeared.

Whether Malcolm was able to keep the peace between
his two elderly and contentious servants nobody knew.
Truth to tell, he never bothered his head about them,
and many a storm rose and raged in the kitchen and
was followed by many a dead and ominous calm, but of
these he seemed to be totally unaware.  He had none
of those finer shades of feeling which had rendered
Isla immediately conscious of any rift in the domestic
lute.

Drummond stretched himself in the lounge-chair before
the blazing peat with a sigh of content.  He was in
the mood to be at peace with the whole world and to
give every man more than his due.  It occurred to him
as he looked at Malcolm, on whose face the full light
from the window fell where he sat, that he had improved
in looks of late.  The coarseness had disappeared from
his features, and there was an expression of refinement
and delicacy which had been at one time wholly absent.

It was such an improvement that Drummond decided
that Mackinnon's looks had been underrated.  The keen,
hard, simple life, in conjunction with the pursuit of a
certain lofty ideal, had wrought its saving grace in
Malcolm Mackinnon, as it will in any man who gives it
fair play.

"Surely you didn't stop away as long as you intended,"
said Malcolm as he lit up his pipe, while waiting for
Diarmid's summons to eat.

"I was there three weeks--long enough to idle about,
though I could have stopped three years," said
Drummond significantly.

"Your sister didn't come home with you?"

"No.  They haven't any plans just yet.  Aunt Betty
talks about staying over Easter, and if they stop as long
of course I'll go back."

"Nice, is it, or Monte Carlo?"

"Their headquarters are at Nice.  My aunt has taken
a villa.  The old lady is going strong, and she is looking
younger every day.  What a warrior she is!  She could
give points to most of the girls one sees.  She knows
how to enjoy life at seventy-five.  She had her birthday
when I was there, and she had a dinner party of twelve.
She has unearthed all sorts of old friends on the Riviera,
and more are turning up every day.  The latest is a
Russian princess, whose mother was a Scotswoman
somewhere away back in the dark ages.  They're all
having the time of their lives."

Neil was making talk, and they both knew it.  It was
not to rehearse these trivial items that he had come up
that day to the Moor of Creagh.

Just then Diarmid made timely diversion by
announcing that luncheon was served.  His manner was
irreproachable and dignified, and it could not have been
excelled in the most distinguished establishment.

It was a great day for Diarmid, and he waited behind
his young master's chair with a secret pride, for the
Laird of Garrion was a guest worthy of honour.

The luncheon, though simple, was excellent, and they
both enjoyed it to the full.  A modest bottle of claret
with the cheese just unloosed their tongues, and when
Diarmid had left them Neil looked across the table very
earnestly at Mackinnon's face.

"I don't suppose it will come as a very great surprise
to you, Malcolm."

"What?" asked Malcolm with a start.

"About Isla."

"What about her?  You saw her, of course.  I didn't
like to harry you with questions, but I suppose she's all
right with Lady Betty.  She has never written.  I have
managed, somehow, to commit the unpardonable sin
where Isla is concerned.  I'm sorry, but there isn't
anything I can do now but wait her pleasure.  You see it
was she who cut the knot, so to speak."

Neil nodded as he crumbled the biscuit on his plate.

"I don't know whether you know, Malcolm, that I have
always wanted Isla.  I've asked her to marry me on the
average about twice a year for the last three or four
years.  Last year, I believe, I asked her six times."

"Such persistence deserves its reward, and I hope
you've got it, old chap," said Malcolm, but his tone lacked
warmth.

He could not understand the man who wanted Isla.
To him she seemed lacking in most, if not all, of the
qualities which make a woman desirable.

"She has said 'Yes' at last, Malcolm, and that's why
I am here to-day," said Neil.

And his hand trembled ever so slightly as it rested on
the sheer white of the tablecloth.

"Well, and what's going to happen next?" said
Malcolm with a curious dry note in his voice.  "I'm glad,
of course.  It--it's a mighty relief to me to hear that
anything is likely to anchor Isla or settle her.  Though
nobody may have given me credit for it, Neil, I've had
many a bad hour--ay, and day--about her up here."

"I suppose you have," said Neil.  "But, all the same,
I can't help saying that I don't think you ought to have
left her as long as you did--in London, I mean.  That's
all past, however, and there isn't any use of going back
on it now.  It's the future, thank God, that concerns us.
I hope ours is going to be very bright."

"She has agreed to marry you, then?  Is it likely to
be soon?"

"What I should like, and what I'm hoping for, is that
it may take place at Nice.  I've had to leave the details
to Aunt Betty, and they're safe with her.  She's the most
ripping General on earth.  I owe this happiness to her,
I don't doubt.  There's a Scotch church there, and we
could go south a bit for the honeymoon and get back to
Garrion for the summer."

"It sounds all right, and in that way you would
escape all the fuss and talk of the glens," said Malcolm
musingly.

"I wanted to see you, Malcolm, because you're the
head of the house, and I must lay the position before
you."

"Oh, but there isn't any need, Neil,--between you and
me, I mean.  I haven't the right.  Isla has always
managed her own affairs, and she wouldn't like my
interference now, I'm sure.  Of course, anything I can do I
should like to do if I'm permitted.  I'd go out to Nice to
give her away if she asked me."

"We'll come to that later.  I want to tell you that
after I'm married we'll have Garrion to ourselves.  My
aunt will get a place for herself somewhere and take away
Kitty.  I'm not a very rich man, and you know what
Highland estates are in these times.  But--again it's
Aunt Betty to the rescue.  She says she'll give us ten
thousand pounds as a wedding gift and that there will
be more to come later on.  So you see you needn't have
any anxiety about Isla's financial position."

"I couldn't have any in any case if she was in your
hands," said Malcolm with difficulty.  "Ten thousand
pounds and Garrion clear!  By Gad, Neil, you're a lucky
beggar!  Try to put yourself in my place for a moment
and see whether you wouldn't have some crumbs of pity
for a poor devil who can't make ends meet and who is
just as anxious to have a home as you can possibly be."

A something swept over Malcolm's face--a spasm of
infinite yearning which oddly moved Neil Drummond.
Happiness brings out all that is best in a man.  He
forgot all his doubts of Malcolm Mackinnon, all his secret
and open blame of him, and he was able even to bury his
anger against him for his treatment of Isla as he stretched
his hand across the table to grasp Malcolm's.

"Never mind, old chap.  The luck will turn.  It's
bound to sooner or later, you know.  No man goes
through the hards from first to last."

Malcolm shook his head.

"I suppose most men get the luck they deserve," he
said a little heavily.

Later, these words recurred with poignancy to
Drummond's mind.

They smoked another pipe of peace together in the den
afterwards, and about half-past three Drummond took
his horse once more and rode through the fine powder of
the newly-fallen snow towards the home that was now
illumined by so many stars of promise.

A strange restlessness was upon Malcolm Mackinnon
when he was left alone, and, after a little deliberation,
he took to his horse--the poor common cob that had so
often filled Drummond with compassion for the man who
had to mount it--and rode slowly down Glenogle.

Though not bred in any of the glens, the cob had
learned the way to Achree and needed no guiding when
he came to the gate.  Achree, with the delicate powder
of the snow lying upon it and lightly touching the
exquisite tracery of the trees, was a dream-place that
looked the fit cradle for a thousand lovely hopes.

Malcolm took his horse to the stables, and when he
presented himself at the door asked for Mrs. Rodney
Payne.

"She has gone to the village, to the post, sir," the man
answered.

This information caused Malcolm to turn about and
walk away without another word.  What he had to
say were perhaps better said in the open, where none
could hear and where there would be room to breathe
and to think.  He had a die to cast that day which
would make or mar the rest of his life.

It was below the Darrach Brig he met Vivien walking
alone with step a little fleet, the snow sprinkled over her
long coat and lightly powdering her beautiful hair.  She
was pleased to see him, but her colour did not rise, nor
were there about her any of the signs the impatient lover
can interpret to his own joy.

That was the lure of Vivien.  She was so still, like
the waters of Loch Earn on the quiet autumn days or in
the hush of the early morning when the dawn was
waking upon its breast.

"It is not a day for you to be out in.  We are going
to have a great storm.  At Creagh, Diarmid predicts the
drift of the year.  You must be more careful of yourself."

"Oh, but I love it!" she cried, her eyes lighting up.
"There is something ethereal in it all.  I should like to
walk on and on in it to the limit of the world.  Have
you been at the house, and is there nobody at home?"

"I asked only for you," he made answer, greatly daring.

But still the clear paleness of her face had no touch of
flame upon it.

"I had Drummond to lunch.  Perhaps you met him?
He went down the Glen in front of me.  I didn't ride
with him, because I couldn't pit my sorry old hack
against his fine bit of horse-flesh."

"He does have lovely horses, and he loves them--and
don't they know it!" said Vivien musingly.  "Even a
horse thrives best in an atmosphere of appreciation and
of kindly care."

"And that's a true word, Mrs. Payne.  May I tell you
about Drummond and what was his business with me
to-day?  It was a bit of family business, but I hope you
will do me the honour to be interested in it."

"Surely, if you care to tell me I shall be interested,"
she answered without a moment's hesitation.

"You know, of course, that he has just come back
from Nice?"

"I knew he had gone anyhow, because Sadie has had
budgets from Kitty."

"And you know, too, that my sister is there with Lady
Betty Neil?"

"Yes," she answered quietly, "I knew that, too."

"She is going to marry Drummond," said Malcolm
then, not looking at her.

It did not occur to him that she could have any acute
personal interest in the news.  As for Rosmead, in his
absence he had in more senses than one dropped out of
the count.

"She is going to marry Neil Drummond!" said
Vivien after a while, and her voice was a little faint as
if the news staggered her.  "How very extraordinary
and unexpected!"

"Why do you say that?" he asked anxiously.

"Well, because, somehow, one never expected to hear
that in this world.  Did you?"

"I wasn't surprised.  He has been in love with her
since they were children.  He told me he had asked her
six times last year."

"Oh!" said Vivien with a little gasp.  "Then one
can only hope that they will be very happy," she added,
as if recovering herself by an effort of the will.

But her reception of the news was all very half-hearted,
and Malcolm was deeply disappointed.

"I thought you would be pleased."

"I am, if you are.  I suppose you would like
Mr. Drummond for a brother-in-law."

"Drummond is a very good sort.  But what chiefly
pleases me is that Isla will have a proper home at
Garrion and the position she ought to have.  It's a fine
old place, and Drummond will be a rich man one day
when Lady Betty Neil is done with her money.  She is to
give them ten thousand pounds as a wedding present."

"'The Ancestor' has come up to expectation," said
Vivien with a little smile.  "Have you heard from your
sister?  Is she very happy?"

"I haven't heard from her," he answered lamely.
"I'll be writing this evening.  May I send her a message
from you?"

"If you like.  But I shall write myself--unless she is
coming home soon."

"That is unlikely.  Drummond talks of a marriage at
the Scotch church at Nice.  In that case I, of course,
would have to go there.  But nothing can be arranged
till I have heard from Isla."

"Don't you feel a little sore because she did not write
to tell you herself?" asked Vivien straightly and in a
puzzled voice.

The relations between Mackinnon and his sister had
always puzzled and saddened Vivien, and in her heart
of hearts she had sometimes blamed Isla.  At other
times, recalling the glimpse of the real woman she had
obtained on that never-to-be-forgotten day at the Lodge
of Creagh, she wondered whether there was not
something in the background which, if known, would have
explained everything and justified Isla.

"Well, you see, we are not a writing family, and I was
so long abroad that we got a little out of touch," said
Malcolm lamely again.

Vivien was fully conscious that there was evasion in
the answer, but it was not her business to probe into
depths with which she had no personal concern.

Quite suddenly Malcolm stood still on the road and
looked at her straightly with a kind of dull fire in his
eyes.

"Vivien, I must speak!  I haven't the right, for there
is very little I have to offer you.  But I love you as my
own soul--no, as some higher thing, for my soul is a poor
thing to mate with yours.  Will you--will you--be my
wife?"

He had often anticipated this hour and had conned in
secret the phrases in which he would plead with this
woman for his very life.

But all the fine, set phrases fell away from him and
left him bare, so that he could only blurt out his immense
desire in words that had no grace of diction to commend
them.  Yet they were warmed by an honest passion, and
they reached the heart of the woman to whom they were
spoken and awoke some response in her eyes.

But she put up her hand as if she would ward off that
which she feared.

"Oh, don't!" she said rather brokenly.  "I don't want
to hear it.  I--I am afraid!"

"Afraid of what?" he asked.

And a new-born tenderness enveloped him and lifted
him up from base depths to the full height of the
manhood that ought to have been his had he not trailed his
heritage in the dust.  "Not afraid of me, my--my--darling?"
he said, and it was as if the torrent was let loose.
"Listen.  This once will I speak, and then be silent, if
you bid me, for ever.  I am not worthy of you.  No man
could be--but I am less worthy than most.  Yet if you
would stoop and give the chance to prove what a man
might be and could be for your sake I should worship you
to the last day of my life and make your happiness, and
that only, my chiefest care.  For God's sake, don't send
me away!  At least give me a crumb of comfort.  If I
had but known there was a woman like you somewhere
in the world--my God, if I had only known!"

The anguish of his voice appealed to the very woman
in her, and, though her face was very white, she stretched
out a trembling hand and touched his arm.

"Don't speak like that.  It--it hurts me," she said, and
her whole body seemed to quiver as if all the springs of
being were stirred.  "You have never heard my story.
You can't know that I, too, have been down in the
depths.  I have suffered all, I think, that a woman
can suffer.  And now, I am afraid!  It is--it is so terrible
a thing when one is bound and there is no hope."

It was all she could permit herself to say, but the
unstudied intensity of her words was more self-revealing
than any deliberate account of her unhappy married life
could have been.

Malcolm stood awed before it, and knew for the first
time in his life what a white thing the soul of a good
woman can be, and how great are the sufferings that can
rend it.

And in that moment he knew that he had not the right
to take her life into his; that there were no floods deep
enough to wash him clean enough to mate with this
woman who had been down in the depths--and who knew.

"Don't you see I am so afraid!  I could not live
through it a second time.  I don't know you well.  And
I am afraid!  Let us put it away now, and let us be
friends, as we have been."

"It can't be," said Malcolm simply.  "If that is your
final answer, I will go away out of the Glen and never set
foot in it again."

"Oh, but that would be terrible!  It is I who can go,
for what does it matter where I live now?  This is your
place.  These are your people.  You can't leave them.
You ought to be proud that you were born here and that
Achree is yours.  It is a place that grows into one's heart.
I love it more than any place I have ever seen."

"Then keep it, stay in it!  Come to me, Vivien, and
bless it and me," he said, moved to an eloquence which
amazed even himself.  "I make no pretensions.  I have
not been what a man should be.  But there is nothing I
would not try to be and to do for your sake."

She shivered slightly, but there was wavering in her
eyes.

"I vowed I would never marry again.  I have been
often asked," she said simply.  "But I have always given
the same answer.  It is a little harder to-day--that is all."

She suffered her eyes to meet his, and the next moment
his arms were round about her, and he knew that he had
won.

It was a strange wooing, and when Vivien crept back
to the house, knowing that she had pledged herself to
another venture on the sea of matrimony, her eyes had
unfathomed depths in them.

Yet when she went to her mother's side she said never
a word about her own story, but with a little accent of
sad wonder in her voice asked, "Mother, Isla Mackinnon
is going to marry Drummond of Garrion and who is going
to tell Peter?"





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE CALL`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXVII


.. class:: center medium

   THE CALL

.. vspace:: 2

Isla Mackinnon was sitting in the stone balustrade of the
loggia in front of Lady Betty's villa at Nice, reading a
letter that had been written three days before in the
small hours of the morning at the Lodge of Creagh in
Glenogle.

The sun was upon her hair and on her face, but her
eyes were full of a wide and mute astonishment.

Lady Betty, attending to her own voluminous
correspondence at the ormolu desk which stood across the
open window of the drawing-room, saw that expression
and wondered at it.

It was now a fortnight since Neil Drummond had left
Nice, carrying Isla's promise with him, and this was
Malcolm's first letter.  It had cost him much travail,
and as Isla read it through she felt its note of sincerity.

"I dare say you have heard from Drummond about
his visit to me the other day.  I have tried to write lots
of times, but I haven't got the gift of the pen and I
found it difficult to get words.

"Of course, I am glad, Isla, for Drummond is a ripping
good chap and his prospects are rather splendid.  You
who are living with Lady Betty know what sort of fairy
godmother she is to them.  What I like best of all to
think of is you as mistress at Garrion with plenty of
money at your command.  It will suit you down to the
ground.  There is no doubt that, as a family, we
Mackinnons have been cursed through lack of money.  It is
easy to be good when one has plenty and nothing to
worry about.

"I have waited, half hoping you would write first.
But as you haven't, will you take this letter as an
expression of my affectionate good will?  We haven't
quite understood each other up till now, but things are
going to be better in future.

"I also have a bit of news for you, and I am wondering
whether or not it will be a great surprise.  Vivien
Rosmead has promised to marry me, and we are not
going to wait long--only until her brother comes home,
which may be any day now.  The last letters say that
the initial difficulties of his bridge-building have been
overcome and that he can be spared--at least for a few
weeks.

"I hardly know how or what to write about this, Isla,
because it is a thing that a man has a natural diffidence
in speaking of.  You know what Vivien is--how good,
how far above me.  I will try honestly to be worthy of
her.  I think I have convinced her of my sincerity.

"Of course she has a large private fortune, which will
lift all the burdens off the old place and make it possible
for us to start the new life unencumbered.  The luck of
the Mackinnons has turned at last and, after all our
troubles, we may surely look forward to a little run of
prosperity and peace.  I hope you'll write to Vivien,
even if you don't to me.  I'm sure she expects it."

Isla dropped the sheet on her lap, and her eyes swept
the blue line of the sea a little wildly.  The colour
which the soft southern air and the restful life had
wooed back to her face receded and left it a little grey.
The old terror, the vague, haunting dread crept over
her once more, and so insistent was it that she could
not push it away.

Had the luck of the Mackinnons really turned?  She
was pledged to marry Neil Drummond, perhaps in two
months' time, and there was not an atom of joyful
anticipation in her heart.  Malcolm was engaged to
Vivien Rosmead, and what would be the end?

In the whole of Malcolm's letter there was not one
reference to the past.  She knew him too well to hope
for a moment that he had laid it bare to Vivien
Rosmead--nay, rather was she certain that he had trusted
to luck.  The purple lady!--the vision of her arose
before Isla's eyes and shut out the incomparable view of
the terraced garden, the blossoming trees, the wide blue
sweep of the southern sea.

A quick tap on the window pane attracted her attention,
and, looking up, she beheld Lady Betty beckoning
to her sharply.  She rose slowly, picked up the
letter, and went in through the open window.

"What ails ye, lass?" asked the old lady brusquely.
"You look as if ye had the wail of the pibroch in your
ears."

"I've had a letter from Malcolm, Lady Betty."

"Well?  And is he ill pleased about you and Neil?"

"Oh, no.  He tells me he is engaged to Mrs. Rodney
Payne.  I want to go home, Lady Betty."

Lady Betty sat back in her chair, set her eyeglass
more firmly on her aristocratic old nose, and looked Isla
straight in the face.

"What for do ye want to go home?"

"If I could tell you I would," she answered simply.
"You have the gift, and you know that when the call
comes one does not question, but just rises up to obey.
That is how it is with me.  The Glen is calling me.
There is something for me to do at the Lodge of Creagh."

Isla spoke quite quietly, and the old lady neither flouted
nor rebuked her.

"It's very unfortunate.  Do you know that every day
for the next month is filled up?  And you have been
such a success here and so many wish to know you that
we need not have an idle hour."

"I shall have to go," was all that Isla said.

"And what will become of me?  What will be the end
of it?  I have the house till Easter.  Will you come back
after you have answered the call?  Neil could bring you."

"I can't promise anything," answered Isla.  "Will you
mind very much if I go to-day?"

Lady Betty did mind, but she knew that to throw
obstacles in the way was useless.  She might delay Isla's
departure, but she could not altogether prevent it.
Besides, there was the call.  When it came clear and swift,
as it had done to Isla, everything else had to give way.

"You would travel by yourself?  You are not afraid?"
she said kindly.

"Oh, I am afraid of nothing, dear Lady Betty, but the
forces that work in the dark--the things we can't grapple
with."

Lady Betty once or twice slowly inclined her head.

"I understand.  Well, then, make your arrangements.
The train-de-luxe to-night, I suppose, and London the
day after to-morrow?  Oh, Isla, ye mind me on nothing
but a petrel that has no rest night or day from the storm.
God go with ye, my dear, and at the long last give ye
peace."

The words were very solemnly, very tenderly spoken,
and Isla with a swift movement knelt beside the old lady's
chair.

"Dearest Lady Betty!  How can I thank you?  I
won't even try.  You know--don't you?--oh, you must
know how full my heart is!----"

Lady Betty dropped her fine white hand with its
sparkling rings on the girl's bent head.

"I know nothing but good of you, Isla Mackinnon, and
I love ye as ye were my own.  But, oh, lass, my heart is
heavy, and I would fain rise up and away to the hills
with ye!  My one consolation is that you are going back
to Neil.  I will wire to him this evening."

"No, don't, dear Lady Betty.  It would be certain to
bring him to London.  I want no one to meet me there.
If I have to sleep the night I will go to Agnes Fraser's.
I--I would rather be alone."

Then something smote hard and cold on Lady Betty's
heart, and she knew by the inward vision of her soul that
the thing on which she had built high her pride and her
hope would never take place.  She did not know what
was going to happen to prevent it, but she felt that Neil's
cause was lost from that hour!

She suffered no depression to manifest itself, however.
She undertook to still Kitty's garrulous questioning, and
she herself saw Isla off at the station by the night train.
But she did not close an eye all that night, being
haunted by a sense of the futility of earthly planning
and of the vanity of human hopes.

Isla arrived at Charing Cross Station at five o'clock in
the afternoon of one of the loveliest of spring days.  By
that time she had a quite clear idea of what she wished
to do.  Speaking of it afterwards, she declared that each
step of the way seemed to have been planned out for her,
leaving her in no doubt whatever about the next.

She had her luggage transferred to the Charing Cross
Hotel, engaged a room for the night, and, having enjoyed
a very excellent cup of tea, sallied forth to take an
omnibus for the West End.

Those weeks spent under Agnes Fraser's roof, and the
long days she had utilized in traversing the length and
breadth of London in search of impossible employment,
had given her an intimate knowledge of the best and
quickest and most economical means of transit.

But on a pleasant spring evening the omnibus was the
most enjoyable.  She had bought a copy of the
"Morning Post" at the station, and she unfolded it in
her seat with a view to taking a glance through the
pages.  There two items of intelligence which were of
the deepest interest to her met her eyes.  The first was
purely personal and occurred a little way down the page,
below the Court Circular.

"A marriage has been arranged, and will take place
before the end of the season, between Malcolm John
Mackinnon, Esq. of Achree and Glenogle, and
Mrs. Rodney Payne of Carleton, Virginia, and 31 Avenue
Castellare, Champs Elysees, Paris."

Her face flushed as she read these significant words
and for the moment she felt as if all her fellow-travellers
had read them with her and were aware of their
meaning.

She sat a long time pondering, surprised beyond
measure at the announcement, which seemed premature.
She wondered who was responsible for its appearance,
but decided that it was probably Malcolm who had sent
it to the newspaper for the purpose of establishing his
credit and consolidating his position.  As yet Isla was
disposed to be hard on him and to credit him with
merely sordid motives.

Turning over the page she discovered the second item
of intelligence, which riveted her attention immediately
and sent her thoughts flying in another direction.  It
was under the heading of Wills and Bequests, and
merely stated that the will of Mrs. Jane Bodley-Chard
had been proved at seventy-five thousand pounds, the
greater part of which passed to her husband, who was
her sole executor.

By the time Isla had come out of the reverie induced
by the reading of these paragraphs the omnibus had
rolled her to her destination.

She alighted at the Marble Arch, crossed the way, and
proceeded quickly along the Edgeware Road until she
reached the end of the street where she had first seen
Malcolm with the purple lady.  She had not made a
note of the address, but she remembered it vividly, and
she made no mistake about the number.

Her slightly hesitating ring was answered by a person
who seemed to be a charwoman, and who, in reply to
her inquiry for Mrs. Bisley, shook her head.

"She ain't 'ere, Miss."

"But can't you tell me where she is, or at least how
long she has been gone?"

"Oh, she ain't bin gone long--only since this mornin'.
Are you a friend of 'ers?" she asked, peering rather
inquisitively into Isla's face.

"At least I can claim to know her, and I particularly
wished to see her to-day."

"Well, you carn't.  She's gone to Scotland.  She was
orful upset this mornin' by sumfink she saw in the
papers, and she went orf all of a 'eap, like, not even
takin' proper luggage wiv 'er.  Said she didn't know
w'en she'd be back."

Isla turned away, so sick at heart that her dismay
was visible on her face.

"I don't know nothink, but it's got summat to do wiv
that military gent. she knew in India.  A toff, 'e was,
and she expected to marry 'im, don't you see?  And
'e'es given 'er the slip--leastways that's wot I think.
But, of course, I don't know nothink for certing, and
you needn't say as I said anythink.  I didn't hev no call
fer to say anythink, reely."

Isla thanked her and turned away.

She was just one day too late.  What could she do
now?  Even if she were to hasten by the night train to
Glenogle, what could she do there?  A meeting between
Vivien and this woman seemed inevitable.  At least
Malcolm would have to explain his position and, if
possible, justify himself.

Just for one brief moment she regretted having acted
on the swift impulse to leave the pleasant sanctuary
she had found by the Mediterranean Sea.  What good
had she done, or could she do?  She had only once
more committed the mistake of thinking that she could
arbitrate in the destiny of others--she, who had so
sadly mismanaged her own!

She crept dejectedly along the street, still clutching
the paper in her hand, and when she reached the wider
thoroughfare crossed it in a slanting direction and, as if
through force of habit, turned in at Cromer Street and
made her way to Agnes Fraser's familiar door.

It was the busiest hour of that good woman's day,
because her first floor came in to dinner at half-past
seven and it was now half-past six.  But when she heard
who it was that had asked for her she ran up the kitchen
stairs, several steps at a time.

"Oh, Miss Isla, excuse my apron and the flour on my
hands.  But I couldna wait.  I'm terribly busy jist for
a meenit or twa.  Can you come in and wait till I get
the denners fairly on the road?  It'll no tak' me mair nor
a quarter o' an 'oor."

"I can't wait, dear woman--at least not now.  I
didn't mean to see you to-night, really, but I had business
in this neighbourhood, and I just ran in for a look at
you.  I shall be in Glenogle to-morrow night."

"Yes," said Agnes breathlessly.  "And it is true that
ye are going to marry Mr. Drummond?  I've aye been
expeckin' to hear from yoursel' aboot it.  But Elspeth
Maclure says that it's quite true and that everybody is
pleased I am, I'm sure.  I jist sat doon and had a guid
greet when Elspeth's letter cam'.  And Andra lauched
at me and said it wasna a thing to greet ower.  But that
wass hoo I felt."

Isla nodded, and her proud mouth trembled.

"You're lookin' fine--quite like yersel'," resumed
Agnes.  "And when is it to be, Miss Isla?  Oh, hang
their denners!  Come in here and let me hear ye speak."

But Isla, laughing a little hysterically, shook her
head, and began to move towards the door.

"It was very bad of me not to write, but I've been
passing through all sorts of phases, Agnes, and even now
I don't know quite where I am.  When I get home I'll
sit down and write you a very long letter.  Have you
seen the 'Morning Post' to-day with the announcement
of my brother's engagement to Mrs. Rodney Payne?"

"No, but that news was in Elspeth's letter, too, and
so Achree is on the mend again, thank God.  Are ye
awa'?  Oh, I am sorry, Miss Isla!  I would have liked
to keep you for the nicht.  Can ye not come back?"

"Not to-night.  But probably I shall be in London
again soon.  Good night, dear soul, and thank you very
much.  Whatever the future may hold for me, Agnes
Fraser will have a warm place in it.  I hope that some
day I shall be able to thank you properly for all you did
for me."

Agnes was able to give only a very divided attention
to the cooking when she returned to the gloom of her
underground kitchen, while Isla rode back the way she
had come, singularly out of love with life.

She had done no good by her impetuous journey--none
at all.  She was half minded to take the night
mail to Calais again and throw herself once more on the
tender mercies of Lady Betty.  Her uppermost feeling
was one of shrinking from Glenogle and all that might
happen there.

The dusk was falling when she got down at Trafalgar
Square, where she crossed to the hotel entrance at
Charing Cross.  It is always busy there, arrivals and
departures taking place at all hours of the day and
night.  A four-wheeler, piled high with luggage, stood
before the door, and a tall man in a long travelling-coat
with a fur collar was directing the hotel porter what he
wished to be done with the larger boxes.

He turned his head as Isla was about to pass in, and
he found herself face to face with Peter Rosmead.

It was a supreme moment for them both.  All Rosmead's
heart leaped to his eyes, he dropped his dispatch-case,
and grasped both her hands while his gaze covered
her with an overmastering and encompassing tenderness.

"This is a bit of God's own luck!" he said, and his
voice was thick with the passion of his soul.  "How
is it you are here?"

"I came from Nice only to-day.  I am going home
to Glenogle to-morrow," she answered, and her voice had
a faint, far-away sound in it, as if she suddenly felt very
tired.  "And you?"

"Just arrived by the Norddeutscher-Lloyd steamer at
Southampton at noon to-day.  Are you here alone for
the night?"

She inclined her head.

"It's God's own luck," he repeated.  "You'll dine with
me, then--in half an hour or an hour, or at any time
that you choose to name?"

She hesitated just a moment.  Should she refuse?
But why?  In another day it would be all over.  Only
the present hour was hers.  She nodded and sped from
him quickly, ascending to her room on the third floor
by the lift.

When she entered it she turned the key and looked
round a little wildly, working her hands in front of her
nervously.  Then, with a sob, she threw herself face
downwards on the bed and buried her face.

She wanted to weep, but a song was in her heart,
because, though she was pledged to marry Neil
Drummond and was bound to him by every tie of gratitude
and honour, she belonged to Peter Rosmead and he to
her, and nothing could alter it.  For the moment she,
who had had so little of the joy of life, gave herself up
to the vision of the might-have-been.  And it was so
glorious that it transformed the bleak hotel bedroom
into a heavenly place.

After a long time, when she had risen and was making
her toilet, there came a quick tap at the door.  When
she opened it a chambermaid stood without, smiling.

"Please, Miss, can I help you?  The gentleman is
waiting, and dinner is served in eighty-nine."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`WITH HASTENING FEET`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXVIII


.. class:: center medium

   WITH HASTENING FEET

.. vspace:: 2

Because this was her hour and to-morrow all would be
over, Isla did not disdain a woman's art.  She wished to
look beautiful for once in the eyes of the man who loved
her, even though she should henceforth disappear from
them for ever.

She put on a wonderful frock that had come from the
hands of a clever *couturière* at Nice--a simple black
thing, fashioned with such consummate art that it
seemed moulded to her figure, showing all its grace.
As Riviera fashion dictates, it was high to the neck,
with a yoke of clear net through which her white skin
shone, while a string of pearls about her stately throat
made her sole adornment.

"Oh, Miss, you do look nice!" said the chambermaid
as she stepped back from fastening the skirt.

Isla smiled into her eyes.  Then she asked where she
could find eighty-nine.  The girl took her down to the
next floor and to the door of the room where Rosmead,
in evening dress, was waiting.

"Come," he said with a smile.

He drew her in, and the door was shut.

The warmth of the cheerful fire and the fragrance of
flowers met her on the threshold of the private room,
where Rosmead had ordered the meal to be served.
This was no night for them to dine in a public
restaurant--they must be immune from prying eyes.

"You don't look so tired now!  And to think I was
cursing the luck that would keep me here for another
twenty-four hours!  I have an appointment at the
Colonial Office to-morrow and can't go north till Friday.
But I never in my wildest dreams anticipated this."

She smiled as she took the chair he offered.  Her eyes
had a far-away look, her cheeks were softly flushed, she
seemed like a dream-woman, and she was so beautiful
that Rosmead blamed himself that the vision of her he
had carried with him so long had fallen so far short of
the reality.

The waiter came in with the soup presently and
waited upon them deftly.  But Isla ate little.  While
the small, daintily-appointed, and exquisite meal was
being served they talked of commonplace things--of the
Riviera in the season, of Rosmead's business in America,
of the bridge whose foundations had taken so long to lay.

"But it is accomplished, isn't it?" she asked with
her swift glance across the table.  "Of course I always
knew it would be.  I remember that you said that in
your estimation difficulties existed only to be
demolished."

"That was a very high and mighty utterance," said
Rosmead a little shyly.  "But this time I thought I
was going to get beaten.  Do you know that I left the
very day after the thing had passed the bar of my own
judgment, just five days after the other experts had
pronounced it unassailable."

"You always trust yourself last?" she said inquiringly.

"It is I who have to pay the price of failure, and so
I leave nothing to chance," he answered.  "Will you
take nothing to drink?  I am a teetotaller myself.
Some day I will tell you why.  But you are tired, and
wine will do you good."

She shook her head.

"No.  It is delightful to think that one can dine
without it.  I do believe that you are the first man I
have ever met who could."

"Oh, come!" said Rosmead, laughing.  "Where I
come from there are many."

Isla laughed a little and shrugged her shoulders.  She
was feeling so warm and comforted and happy that she
wished the hour to last for ever.

"How kind of you to think of this room!  As I was
dressing I thought how horrid it would be in the
restaurant to-night."

"I knew it would be.  I grudged it.  This was the
thing," he said.

And his pulses thrilled as he thought of all the days
that were coming when they should dine together alone.

It came to an end at last, and Rosmead showed haste
in getting the table cleared and the coffee-tray brought
in.

Then he wheeled a big easy chair towards the fire for
her, and he himself stood against the end of the
mantel-shelf, while an odd silence fell between them.

"I am sure you want to smoke.  I should like it,"
she said a little nervously, fearing what she saw in his
eyes.

He shook his head.

"That would be desecration.  By and by, perhaps,
but not yet.  I wonder if you know just what it meant
to me to see you to-night downstairs, just what it means
to have you here like this, alone?"

She made no answer, and the veil dropped over her
eyes, but her lips trembled, and she worked with her
fingers in the fringes of the delicate white scarf which
had fallen from her shoulders across her arms.

"You must know that I love you," he said.  Then
in a low voice which vibrated keenly with intense
feeling he added, "I have lived for this hour during
all these interminable months.  I have risen up each new
day, thinking it brought me a day nearer to it and to
you.  I know all you have suffered.  Let me try to
make you forget.  Give your precious life into my
keeping, Isla.  You are the only woman I have ever
cared for.  The knowledge that you were waiting
somewhere for me has kept me a boy in heart for your sake.
Will you give yourself to me?"

There was terror, anguish, hopelessness in her eyes.
She gave a small shuddering sigh and buried her face
in her hands.  Instantly he was on his knees beside
her, trying with a very gentle force to take her hands
away.

Suddenly she drew back, rose to her feet, and faced
him--very pale, very stricken, but wholly calm.

"Oh, please don't say any more.  I--I must not
listen.  It was even wicked of me to come here when I
knew--when I knew--and even hoped that you would
speak.  I--I am not free.  I am the promised wife of
another man."

Rosmead's face became set like a stone.

"But you are the woman God has given to me," he
said quietly.  "Who is the man?"

"Neil Drummond," she answered feverishly.  "Don't
look at me like that!  Let me sit down again, and you
stand where you were before and I will tell you how it
came about.  You said that you knew all I have
suffered.  But you don't.  I want to tell you everything.
Then you will understand."

He obeyed her to the letter, and with the breadth of
the hearth between them she began her recital.

She went back a long way, even to the days of her
troubled girlhood, keeping nothing back, telling him in
simple language all the story of her life.

All unconscious was she of its complete self-revelation.
Peter Rosmead, listening, with only a brief word interjected
here and there, was filled with a pity so vast that
he did not know how to contain himself.  He saw this
young woman-creature, at the time when she ought to
have been enjoying girlhood, doing not only a woman's
work in the world but also forced to act the man's part--to
face abnormal difficulties, to solve the problems of
existence in loneliness and without help.

And when she came to the end and related simply,
yet with a sort of bald power, the story of her London
experiences, he could bear no more.

"My God, Isla, you must cease!  I tell you I can't
hear any more."

"You must," she said clearly, "because this is the
part which explains--which explains--why I am not free.
You see, I had got so very tired and hopeless, and my
money was all done, and I had no more heart left to
fight.  And just then Neil Drummond came, and he was
like a brother to me, and--and he had loved me all my
life, and I thought I, too, could care a little, and that we
might be happy together."

He put his hand up to his forehead with a sudden
gesture and kept it there until he felt the flash of Isla's
mournful reproach on his face.

"If only you had written a single line!" she said
almost piteously.  "If I had ever known or guessed that
you remembered my existence I could have held out.
But I was so tired, so tired!"

She who had been strong so long, whom trouble had
never daunted, gave way before the insistent clamour of
her woman's heart.  For the moment she could not
forgo the real heritage of her womanhood--could not
make the final renunciation.  For she was not old yet,
and life can be very long to the sad.

Rosmead was as one who took swift and decisive
counsel with himself.

He lifted a chair to the hearth in front of her and sat
down so that he could the better see her face.

"Listen to me, my dear," he said in his quiet,
compelling voice.  "We must face this thing together, try
to grasp exactly what it means, and decide what is
to be done.  Let us do it quietly, try to deal with it as
if we were not the chief actors in it."

Isla sat back and folded her hands on her lap.  She
was willing to listen--nay, listen she must.  And,
somehow, she did not seem to care.  She had rolled
away the stone from the door of her heart.  Peter
Rosmead knew that she loved him, just as she knew
that he loved her.  Well, he was strong and good, he
would decide and act for her.  Hence the peace upon
her face, at which Rosmead, himself torn with conflict,
wondered.

"It does not mean only a disappointment to me--a
lifelong disappointment, the overthrow of everything
that I have been waiting for," he began slowly.  "It
means the shipwreck of three lives.  If you don't care
for Drummond how can you be a good wife to him or
make him happy?"

"There are many women who are married to men they
do not care very much for.  I have seen them, and they
seem to get along," was all she said.

"What other women might do with impunity you
couldn't.  You are the soul of truth, and, moreover, you
cannot hide what you think and feel.  If you could have
done it better, dear woman, life might perhaps have
been a little less hard for you."

"But after a while," she said in a low voice, "it
might be possible.  I should try very hard.  And, after
all, it is not happiness we are here for.  One has only
to look around to see how very little of it there is in
this world."

"By heaven, Isla, I can't accept that--no, I can't!
God means us to be happy.  It is what He has created
us for.  Only we do wrong things.  It is we who make
the shipwreck, and I believe that if you go on with this
marriage you will ruin three lives."

She only shook her head.

"Is Drummond the man--do you think?--to be contented
with what you purpose to give him--wifely duty,
without wifely love?"

"He is very good," she said wearily.  "His kindness
and his patience never fail."

"That may be true.  But afterwards would come
the crucial test.  You can't do it, Isla--you can't!
There is--there must be a way out, and we must find it
together.  Will you leave it to me?"

"I'll leave everything!  I am so tired!  I can do
nothing more.  But I will be true to Neil Drummond.
I may tell him, but I will keep my promise if he holds
me to it, and if you will let me go now I will say good
night.  It is nearly ten o'clock.  I have been travelling
for two days, and I feel as if I could not bear any
more."

He instantly forgot his own sore disappointment and
was concerned only for her with that great and tender
concern which belongs to the strong and which the tired
woman felt so perilously sweet.

"Just a moment; what about to-morrow?  Can't you
wait until Friday?  If I could get away I would travel
with you to-morrow, but it is impossible to do so without
giving offence in quarters where it is important not to
give offence.  Will you wait till Friday?  You are not
fit to travel alone."

She looked up at him, and her eyes wavered.

"I should like to, but I can't stay here.  Let us meet
in the morning and decide.  At least, I need not travel
until the two o'clock train."

He suffered her to go then, merely touching her hand
at parting, because of the barrier that was between.

Rosmead had boasted that difficulties in his way
existed only for the purpose of being demolished, but
he was now in front of one that taxed his boasted
powers.

Isla slept the dreamless sleep of complete exhaustion,
but he fought with the problem the night through, and
in the morning he was no nearer its solution.  They did
not meet at breakfast, but at ten o'clock she sent him a
message that she would see him in the drawing-room.

She met him, tranquil and calm-eyed, a little pale,
but without trace of stress or strain.  Rosmead himself
had a slightly haggard look.

"Good morning," she said quietly.  "I think I shall
wait until to-morrow.  To-day I shall go back to my old
quarters in Cromer Street, Bayswater, and I shall meet
you to-morrow at the station."

"And am I not to see you to-day at all?" he asked,
and his eyes travelled hungrily over her face.

She shook her head.

"I don't think so.  If there is any more to be said
there will be time to say it to-morrow.  You will help
me to do the right thing, won't you?  It is--it is what
I look for in you."

The words were a rebuke to Peter Rosmead, but he
took it well.

"I will do the right thing--yes," he answered humbly,
"but only until we get back to Glenogle.  Then, I warn
you, I'm going to fight for you with all the powers I
possess.  I don't know how it is going to be done, but
win you I shall.  You have not come into my life only
to go out of it again."

She smiled as she turned away, and a strange, deep
contentment, gathered in her eyes.  She asked no
questions, troubled herself not at all about what was
coming.  So far as she was concerned the fight was over,
and the issue lay with Peter Rosmead.  Her trust in
him was so large and fine a thing that she was content
to leave herself and her cause in his strong, tender
hands and to let him undertake for her.

They parted then, and they met no more until they
entered the train together at Euston next morning.  But
during the hours of that interminable day there was no
sense of distance or of separation between them.  The
same sky covered them, they breathed the same air,
they were within call of each other; it sufficed.

Rosmead went early to the station, and he had made
his full arrangements for Isla's comfort by the time she
arrived.  She smiled when she saw a first-class
compartment marked "reserved," but she made neither
remark nor demur.  She had left him to legislate for her
and would not cavil at trifles.  That she was happy for
the moment there was no need to ask.

Many times that day when Rosmead looked at her
dear face he registered a mighty vow that the man did
not live who would be able to keep her from him.
Drummond must take his defeat like a man.  He was
young, and there were others to choose from.  In all his
life Rosmead had not, until now, met a woman who
could stir his pulses or make him long to lay his freedom
at her feet as a thing for which he had no further use.

The train glided out of the station, and the sunshine
was upon their faces and in their hearts.  Rosmead, an
accomplished traveller, had left nothing undone to
secure the comfort of his fellow-traveller, but all
his love and care were powerless to save her from the
last bomb flung by fate.

She did not care for papers, she said, but she begged
him to look at his, while she watched the swift retreat
of London roofs before the speeding train.

He unfolded the pages of the "Daily Telegraph," and
had Isla happened to glance round at the moment she
must have discovered that something fresh and terrible
had happened.

On the first page this paragraph confronted Rosmead's
eyes under large head-lines:--

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   "TRAGEDY IN SCOTTISH HIGHLANDS.

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"A sad occurrence took place yesterday on Loch Earn
in Western Perthshire--one of those deplorable accidents
which show what care should be taken in handling small
boats on these treacherous inland seas.  Full particulars
are not to hand, but it seems that late last evening
Mr. Malcolm Mackinnon of Achree and Glenogle, who had
been in Lochearnhead earlier in the day, left there,
ostensibly to go to his home at the Lodge of Creagh, four
miles distant.  That he had not done so was clearly
evidenced by the fact that his body was found by a
boatman, washed up on the shores of Loch Earn at a
point about two miles from its head.  The boat, bottom
upwards, was floating near.  The day had been one of
the very stormiest of the season, with blinding showers and
a squally wind.  Mr. Mackinnon was a skilled oarsman,
but it is supposed that he had been caught by one of
the sudden squalls which so frequently rise on these
Highland lochs and constitute a danger that it is
necessary to guard against.  It is not known why
Mr. Mackinnon should have gone on the loch late in the
afternoon, and he had no fishing gear with him.  The
occurrence has cast a gloom over the whole Glen, where
the family are so well known and so beloved.  The
tragedy is accentuated by the fact that Mr. Mackinnon
had only recently become engaged to Mrs. Rodney Payne,
whose family are the present tenants of Achree.  We
understand that Mr. Mackinnon's only sister is at present
abroad.  Much sympathy is felt and expressed for her."

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Rosmead, with the paper held high in front of him.
stared steadily at it, his face very white and set, his lips
twitching.  It was a full minute before he obtained
complete control of himself and dared to glance over the
edge of the paper at his companion.

But she apparently had forgotten him.  Her chin was
resting on her hand, and her eyes were fixed upon the
landscape, bathed in sunshine, which was speeding past
them.  She did not even look round when he carefully
folded the paper and put it well under his travelling-rug
in the tar corner of the rack.  Then he lifted the
"Times" and glanced through it, only to find on the
second page the same item of intelligence considerably
condensed.  That also he removed, and took up one of
the magazines.

He was totally unaware that he was holding it upside
down.  He had to find some way out of this awful
difficulty--to coin words which would acquaint Isla with
what seemed to be the final tragedy of her life.  He was
scarcely alive to the fact that he now learned for the
first time of Mackinnon's engagement to Vivien, the
letter informing him of it having only reached America
the day after he had left it.

He had concern only for one at the moment, and his
sole consideration was how to break the news to her.
One moment he thought of giving her the newspaper
casually, and thus getting over it; the next he thought
he would keep it from her to the last moment.  But
they were speeding towards Glenogle, where the last act
of Malcolm Mackinnon's tragic life had been played.

Presently Isla turned to him with a smile.

"It is very pleasant to be going home, don't you think?
I was just counting how many weeks I had been out of
Glenogle and thinking how glad I shall be to see it again.
When I left it I never thought I should wish to come
back any more."

"I am glad you feel like that," he said with an odd
note of strain in his voice.  "I have ordered the car to
meet us at Stirling, so that we shall get home ahead of
the train."

Her eyes sparkled with a child-like enjoyment.

"Oh, that will be delightful!  I wrote to Malcolm
yesterday.  He will probably be waiting at Lochearnhead
Station.  I must wire to him at Crewe."

"I'll see to it," said Rosmead heavily, and his tongue
felt as if it were cleaving to the roof of his mouth.

He took her to lunch, and she enjoyed it all, though
it concerned her that he ate so little.  She was not
troubling herself that the other matter seemed to have
disappeared into the background, and that he made not
the smallest allusion to it.  She was grateful to him for
his consideration, but she was not surprised.  From
Peter Rosmead she would expect only the best.  He
would neither say nor do that which would vex the
heart of a woman or increase by a hairsbreadth her
perplexities.

Oh, she had made no mistake! she thought as she
glanced confidently across at his grave, strong face,
when she left him to act for her.

After carefully observing that the papers were out of
the way, he got out at Crewe and made his way hastily
to the telegraph office to send an explanatory message
to his mother.  By that time he had arrived at a quite
clear estimate of what was in front and at a decision as
to the right thing to do.

He would tell Isla after they were in the car, and
prepare her as best he might for what she had to meet.

But he was spared the need.  All his carefully concerted
plan for saving her was rendered unavailing by the shrill
tones of a newsboy's voice.  The passing of the smallest
coin of the realm in exchange for the first edition of an
evening paper, and Rosmead got back to the compartment
to discover that Isla knew the truth.





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.. _`THE LAST LEAF ON THE TREE`:

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   CHAPTER XXIX


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   THE LAST LEAF ON THE TREE

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Once more the burying-place of the Mackinnons in
Balquhidder kirkyard was opened to receive a Laird of
Achree.  While a small band of mourners stood by it in
the soft spring sunshine Isla sat with her Aunt Jean in
the library of the Lodge of Creagh, staring in front of
her with a far-away expression on her face.  Lady
Mackinnon, who had not yet recovered from the effects of
the hurried journey from Barras, was talking in subdued
tones about the future.  But Isla heard her as she heard
her not.

"Of course you will just come to Barras, my dear, and
we'll do our best.  It is a very fortunate thing that the
Rosmeads have Achree for another year and more.  It
will give us time to turn round.  Don't look like that,
Isla.  It is all very terrible, of course, but it is not the
end of everything."

At the moment there was a tap at the door, and Diarmid's
grey head appeared, his lace looking old and worn,
his eyes tired with weeping.

"Please, Miss Isla, it's a leddy.  She will not go away,
whatefer, and I have putten her in the little pack room
till I ask whether you will see her."

"No, of course not.  I will," said Lady Mackinnon,
bustling up.  "A lady!  Don't you know her, Diarmid?
Hasn't she given you a name?"

"No, my Leddy, I don't ken her.  She's frem to
Glenogle, and she says Miss Isla would not ken her name,
forby."

Isla was already at the door.

"No, Aunt Jean.  Thank you very much, but I must
see her.  I think I know who it is."

Rather disappointed--for anything would have served
to break the dreary monotony of this awful house--Lady
Mackinnon sank back into her chair, but a moment after,
acting on a sudden impulse, she rose and swiftly drew
up the blind.  She then saw that a hired trap was
waiting outside the gate, the man nodding on the
box-seat, while the reins lay loosely across the horse's
neck.

She knew nothing of the tragedy at the back of
Malcolm's life, and, though it had been more than
whispered in the Glen that there had been no accident
on Loch Earn, but that Mackinnon had gone forth,
meaning to take his own life in the way that seemed
easiest and would occasion least remark, these rumours
had not been permitted to reach Creagh.

But Isla, in her heart, had knowledge and confirmation
of these things, though she had not heard of them.

How surprised, then, would Lady Mackinnon have
been could she have heard what passed in the little
room behind.

Isla entered quietly, closed the door, and faced the
woman with whom she had already spoken twice and
who, in some strange way, was mixed up with the
tragedy of Malcolm's life and death.

"You're not surprised to see me, I can see," she
said without preliminary.  "Did you know I was in
Scotland?"

"Yes," answered Isla clearly.  "Please to sit down
and tell me all that you wish to tell me and that it is
necessary I should hear.  But first, let me ask one
question--Are you, were you, my brother's wife?"

She shook her head.

"I ought to have been, but I wasn't.  That was the
beginning and the end of the trouble.  I waited for him
so long, and he promised me faithful and true that if
I would only wait quietly till he got out of his sea of
troubles he would marry me."

"I understand," said Isla rather faintly.  "Please say
no more now, but tell me as quickly as you can what
you know about it all."

Neither sat down.  Isla stood by the table with her
white, frail hand on the red baize of the tablecover, her
shadowed eyes looking forth with a strange sad pity on
the woman's face.

All her high colour had faded, her eyes were dimmed
with weeping, she had forgotten to take a pride in her
beautiful hair, she looked what she was--a dishevelled
and broken creature on whom even a hard heart must
needs have had compassion.  And Isla's heart was not
hard any more.

"Well, you see, Miss Mackinnon," she said, wiping
her eyes with her sodden handkerchief, "you don't want
to hear the whole story as to how we got to know each
other in India and how fond he was of me and I of him.
So I'll hurry on to where I met you first.  I came to
Scotland then, because he hadn't written to me for such
a long time and because, when I learned that his father
had died and that he had come into the property, I
thought it was time I looked after myself.  He spoke
very fair then--explained how hard up he was and what
a tangle everything was in, and he promised that if only
I'd wait other six months he'd make everything straight
and right.  He told me all that right down by the water
at Strathyre that night when he rode down from here to
see me--the night before you and I met on the London
train.  Well, I went back to London, because he asked
me to trust him a little longer.  But I was not very easy
in my mind.  I kept quiet, living on my little bit of
money and doing a bit of needlework and going out
occasionally with a friend, but never forgetting that
some day I was to be lady here and wife to the man I
loved.  Then I saw the thing in the paper--that he was
going to marry the American woman, and I think that
I went mad for a bit.  I don't know quite where I was
or what I did.  I only know that I rose and went to
Scotland straight to the hotel at Lochearnhead, and in
the afternoon I walked up to Achree and asked for
Mrs. Rodney Payne."

"Oh!" said Isla with a little gasp, and she pressed
her hand to her heart.

"You feel for her.  Perhaps she's a friend of yours,
but it had to be done.  You don't know what it is to see
another woman get hold of the man you care for and
who belongs to you.  I like you, and I pray God you may
never know what it's like.  Well, I told her just the
whole story--the story I haven't told you, though you're
sharp enough and can fill it all up.

"What did she say?--not much, but I could see that
it finished him in that quarter, which was all I cared
about.

"Well, then I sent for him.  When he came he
had seen her.  I could tell it by the white despair on
his face, and then I knew that it was not her money he
wanted at all, but that he cared about her as he had
never cared about me, that she was his own kind--the
sort that would lift him right up and make the best of him.

"Something seemed to snap inside of me.  I believe
it was my heart that broke.  I didn't reproach him.  He
did all the reproaching--there, in the dark, by that
God-forsaken loch.  We seemed to walk for hours, and I
don't know where we were when he left me.  He said
his life was over, but I never thought or believed he
would take it away.  To tell you the truth, Miss, I didn't
believe he had the courage to do it."

"You think he did it, then?" said Isla in a low, tense
whisper.

"I know it.  He simply went out in that boat, never
meaning to come back.  You and I know it, but we
needn't tell.  And anyway, perhaps it's better; only
I wish it had been me--I wish it had been me!"

Her voice broke into a little wail, and she covered her
face with her hands.  Isla went to her side and laid her
hand, which trembled very much, on her shoulder.

"I am very sorry for you.  If I knew how to help or
comfort you I would."

She caught Isla's hand, laid her cheek a moment
against it, and then began to walk unsteadily towards
the door.

"You're a good woman--one of the best," she said,
pausing a moment.  "I hope you'll be happy yet.  You'll
never hear of me again.  I'm going away to-night back
to my own place.  But I thought I'd like to see you
before I went and tell you the truth.  Good-bye."

But even after Isla's hand was on the door she
lingered, as if something still remained unsaid.

"When you see her tell her that I loved him and that
I could never have been so hard on him as she was.  If
he had really cared, tell her, she would have forgiven
even me."

"Oh, hush!" cried Isla in distress.  "You don't know
all she has suffered.  But it is no good to talk.  Life is
an awful thing.  Thank you for coming.  I shall often
think of you, and, though I have no right, for I, too, have
been hard, I'll--I'll pray for you."

A kiss passed between them, and they parted--never
to meet again in this world.

Isla went through the house and out by the kitchen
door to the hill beyond.  She was so long gone that when
she came back the Garrion carriage was at the door, and
Sir Tom with Neil Drummond was in the drawing-room
with her aunt.

Isla's face went a little white when she saw Neil, and
she stood by the tea table with her back to him for a
moment.  Even Sir Tom's genial personality could not
relieve the great strain.  When Isla after a time, in
response to a certain question in Drummond's eyes, left
the room with him, Sir Tom turned eagerly to his wife.

"We must positively get away in the morning, Jean.
Another day in this house would finish me.  There seems
to be a curse on Achree.  Have you spoken to Isla, and
is she going back with us?"

"I don't know.  She hardly speaks at all, but of course
she must go.  There isn't anything else to do, and the
sooner Neil Drummond follows her and we have a quiet
wedding at Barras the better it will be.  It is the only
solution of the problem of Isla's life.  I'm more tired of
that problem than of anything else in this world, Tom."

He took a turn across the floor.

"The American chap was at the funeral.  There's
something uncommon taking about him.  He and
Drummond were talking together for a good half-hour
after we had left the churchyard, and, judging from their
faces, I'm sure it was some matter in which they had
a life-and-death interest that they were talking about.
Then Drummond, looking a little white about the gills,
came up to me and said he was coming over to see Isla,
and asked if I would drive with him."

"It was quite natural for him to come and see Isla, of
course, and probably he was only discussing the situation
with Mr. Rosmead.  Neil will have to act for Isla now."

Lady Mackinnon had very little imagination, but Sir
Tom was not easy in his mind.

Isla went out of doors with Neil Drummond, and they
climbed up the slope to the edge of the Moor, and there
they stood still.  They were very near the house, but
nobody could see them, and Isla waited--for what she
did not know.

"I've seen Rosmead, Isla.  I suppose the thing he has
told me is true?"

"What did he tell you?"

"That you and he--that you and he care for each
other."

"Yes, that is true.  But I will keep my promise to
you, Neil.  A little suffering more or less--what does it
matter?  There is nothing else in the world."

He smiled a little hardly.

"I've cared a long time, and a lot, Isla.  But I haven't
sunk so low----" he made answer.  "I give you back
your freedom."

"But even if you do, it does not follow that I will
marry him."

"If you care about him it is what you must do," he
said quietly.  "Tell me, Isla--Are you sure about this?
If I thought there was any chance I wouldn't give you
up.  Are you sure?"

She was silent for a moment, her unfathomable eyes
following the flight of a wild bird on the wing until it
was lost in illimitable distance.

Neil Drummond had no great gifts.  He was only a
simple, honest soul who did his duty according to his
lights, but in that moment he tasted to the full at once
the anguish and the high joy of renunciation.  Such
clear understanding of a woman's heart came to him
that for a moment he forgot the intolerable ache of his
own.

Isla's gaze came back and fell upon his face as she
answered simply, "I am sure.  I would follow him to the
end of the world without a question or a doubt, and I
would not have a wish apart from his will.  That is how
I care, Neil.  If I could feel like that for you I would
give the best years of my life.  I didn't seek this thing,"
she went on when he made no answer.  "It came to me,
and I think when it is like that we----we cannot help
ourselves, Neil.  It is part of the mystery of life.  I am
so tired with it all that I would wish to-day that I could
lie down in Balquhidder beside them."

"Your life is only beginning," he said slowly and with
difficulty.  "I will say good-bye, and I will ask you to
believe that there is nothing in the world I want so much
as your happiness.  You have had none, and, though I
am not the man who can give it to you, I ask you to take
it--and to take it soon--from the man who can."

Thus did Neil Drummond, a commonplace, everyday
man such as we meet so often upon the highway, rise to
the height of renunciation and prove himself a hero.

Isla's eyes swam in a strange tenderness as she turned
to him, trying to thank him.  But even while she would
have spoken he had left her, and soon she heard the
rumble of the wheels on the road--the wheels which
took him back to Garrion--never more, in obedience to a
lover's quest, to speed across the rough road to the Moor
of Creagh.

After a time Isla went back very quietly and soberly
to the house to astonish her relatives by another vagary.

"I am ready to go to Barras to-morrow, Aunt Jean,
and to stop as long as you like."

"And will Neil come with us or after us, my dear?"
asked Lady Mackinnon, her shrewd eyes lighting up
cheerfully.  "You know there is room and to spare in
the house."

"No, Aunt Jean, Neil will not come.  I am not going
to marry him now--nor any man," she answered.

And she sped away to make her preparations for the
journey which, an hour before, she thought nothing on
earth would induce her to undertake.

A strange peace seemed to brood that night upon the
Lodge of Creagh and the Moor of Silence.  Sleep was
very far from Isla's eyes as she sat before her
uncurtained window, looking out upon the limitless space on
which the white moonlight lay.

The end of all things had come, so far as human
judgment could determine.  The last Mackinnon of
Achree slept with his forefathers, and she, a poor weak
woman of no account, was left to tie up the broken
threads.  Her thoughts of Malcolm were very tender,
nor had she any misgiving, thinking of where he might be.

"It is better to fall into the hands of the living God
than into the hands of men," she might have said, had
she been called upon for an expression of her state of
mind.

Upon her knees, with her chin upon the sill of the
open window and her eyes upon the great silence where
the moonlight lay, she asked to be forgiven for her
hardness of heart, for her swift condemnation, for her
poor, puny, disastrous efforts to set the world right.
She knew now, in that moment of clear vision, that no
man or woman is called to so great a task, but that
what is asked of us all is merely and only the simple
performance of each day's homely duty, by the doing of
which, nevertheless, the whole fabric of human life and
human achievement is ennobled and perfected.

With her chin resting upon the window-sill and her
eyes, uplifted to the kindly, but impenetrable skies,
Isla prayed.  And then, leaving herself and her destiny
for ever in the Hand which alone is capable of unravelling
and setting in fair order human affairs, she crept to her
bed to sleep off the overwhelming fatigue of the day.

Next morning there were many leave-takings in the
Lodge of Creagh, and Diarmid and Margaret, whom the
sorrows of their folk had drawn together in a touching
unity, stood side by side on the step to watch Isla drive
away with her uncle and aunt.

The young, small, frail woman, to whom their fealty
was still due and who represented all that was left of
the Glenogle Mackinnons, waved to them smilingly,
bidding them be of good cheer until she should come back.

And when the last bend of the road was taken and the
rumble of the departing wheels had died upon the air,
the two old servants looked at each other a little pitifully,
while tears rose in Margaret's eyes.

"She nefer will come pack, Diarmid, and you and me
maype will grow old man and woman here in Creagh till
they come to lay us in Balquhidder."

Diarmid answered never a word, but, later in the day,
he delivered himself to Rosmead, who came on the swift
feet of impatience to seek Isla.

"She hass gone away, sir, to Barras with Sir Thomas
Mackinnon and his leddy, but whether it pe a long time
or a short time afore she comes back I am not able to
say."

"To Barras!" said Rosmead with musing in his eyes.
"Tell me how she is, Diarmid.  Did she seem sad?"

"Not so fery sad, considering sir," answered Diarmid,
compelled, he knew not why, to lay bare his innermost
thought to the man before him.  "Me and Marget stood
here, watchin' them, and she smiled as she went, and
her face seemed to shine.  But it iss a fery peetifu'
thing, Maister Rosmead, for me and Marget to ken
that soon the Mackinnons will be swept from the Glen,
root and branch, and their fery name forgot."

"As long as she lives, Diarmid, that can never be,"
said Rosmead with the conviction of a man who knew.
"Good-day, my man.  Keep up your heart.  There are
new days coming for Achree and the name you love."

Before he turned away from the Lodge of Creagh,
Rosmead climbed to the edge of the Moor of Silence and
stood still for a moment on the very spot, though he
knew it not, where Isla had stood with Neil Drummond
but yesterday.

From where he stood he commanded a vast view, the
Moor behind and beyond, and the winding road down
Glenogle, with all the little hills huddling on its flanks,
and widening out to the glory of Loch Earn.

Achree he could not see, but his eyes, as they ranged
towards it, were filled with that vast tenderness which
proclaims that the deeps of being are stirred.

Isla had gone away without message or sign, but that
neither grieved nor troubled him.  Some day, from out
the silence, the sign would come, or he would himself
know the day and the hour of her need of him.

And as he turned, with the westering light upon his
face, he made his vow that if God should give him a son,
Donald Rosmead Mackinnon he should be called, so that
the name should not die for ever out of Glenogle and the
Moor of Silence.

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   THE END

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.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 4

.. class:: center medium

   Novels and Stories by

.. class:: center large

   ANNIE S. SWAN

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: noindent medium white-space-pre-line

Between the Tides
Young Blood
The Fairweathers
The Last of Their Race
The Ivory God
Rhona Keith
The Forerunners
Nancy Nicholson
Meg Hamilton
Mary Garth
The Magic of Love
Love Unlocks the Door
Love's Miracle
The Bridge Builders
The Stepmother
Christian's Cross
Maid of the Isles
MacLeod's Wife
Love the Master Key
Mask of Gold
Shore Beyond
Woven of the Wind

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.. class:: center medium white-space-pre-line

   HODDER AND STOUGHTON LIMITED
   LONDON

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.. pgfooter::
