For the next two days it rained incessantly,
and Margot sat in the little parlour of the inn talking
to Mrs Macalister, or rather listening while Mrs Macalister
talked, and playing draughts with Mr Macalister, who
had relapsed into hopeless gloom of mind, and was with
difficulty prevented from rushing home by the first
train.
“The doctor said we were to
keep him from the office for a good month at least,
and there’s not three weeks of the time gone
by. If he goes back now, what will be the use
of spending all this money on travelling and keep,
and what not? It will be all clean waste,”
sighed the poor dame sadly. “He’s
a bit fratchety and irritable, I’m free to admit,
but you should not judge a man when his nerves are
upset. There’s not a better man on earth
than Mr Macalister when he has his health. It’s
dull for a man-body to be shut up in an inn, without
the comforts of home, and feeling all the time that
there’s money going out. It is different
when he can be out and about with his fishing and
what not.-If you could just manage to amuse
him a bit, like a good lassie!...”
The good lassie nodded reassuringly
into the troubled, kindly face.
“I’ll do my best.
I have an old father of my own, who has nerves too,
and I am used to amusing him. I’ll take
Mr Macalister in hand till the weather clears.”
It was not a congenial task, for,
truth to tell, Mr Macalister was not a beguiling object,
with his lugubrious face, lack-lustre eyes, and sandy,
outstanding whiskers; nor did he in the first instance
betray any gratitude for the attention bestowed upon
him. A stolid glance over his spectacles was
his first response to Margot’s overtures; his
next, a series of grunts and sniffs, and when at last
he condescended to words it was invariably to deride
or throw doubt on her statements.
“Tut, nonsense! Who told
you that? I would think so, indeed!” followed
by another and more determined retreat behind the Glasgow
Herald.
In the corner of the room Mrs Macalister
sat meekly knitting, never venturing a look upwards
so long as her spouse was in view, but urging Margot
onward by nods and winks and noiseless mouthings, the
moment that she was safe from observation.
It had its comic side, but it was
also somewhat pathetic. These two good commonplace
souls had travelled through life together side by side
for over thirty years, and, despite age, infirmity,
and “nearves”, were still lovers at heart.
Before the wife’s eyes the figure of “Mr
Macalister” loomed so large that it blocked out
the entire world; to him, even in this hour of depression,
“the wife” was the one supreme authority.
Fortunately for herself and her friends,
Margot was gifted with sufficient insight to grasp
the poetry behind the prose, and it gave her patience
to persevere. Solution came at last, in the shape
of the wheezy old piano in the corner, opened in a
moment of aimless wandering to and fro. Margot
was no great performer, but what she could play she
played by heart, and Nature had provided her with a
sweet, thrush-like voice, with that true musical thrill
which no teaching can impart. At the first few
bars of a Chopin nocturne Mr Macalister’s newspaper
wavered, and fell to his knee. Margot heard the
rustle of it, slid gradually into a simpler melody,
and was conscious of a heavy hand waving steadily
to and fro.
“Ha-ha!” murmured Mr Macalister,
at the end of the strain. “Hum-hum!
The piano wants tuning, I’m thinking!”
It was foreign to his nature to express any gratification,
but that he had deigned to speak at all was a distinct
advance, and equal to a whole volume of compliments
from another man.
“Maybe,” he added, after
a pause, “if ye were to sing us a ballad it
would be less obsearved!”
So Margot sang, and, finding a book
of Scotch selections, could gratify the old man by
selecting his favourite airs, and providing him with
an excuse to hum a gentle accompaniment. Music,
it appeared, was Mr Macalister’s passion in
life. As a young man he had been quite a celebrated
performer at Penny Readings and Church Soirees, and
had been told by a lady who had heard Sims Reeves
that she preferred his rendering of “Tom Bowling”
to that of the famous tenor. This anecdote was
proudly related by his wife, and though Mr Macalister
cried, “Hoots!” and rustled his paper
in protest, it was easy to see that he was gratified
by the remembrance.
Margot essayed one Scotch air after
another, and was instructed in the proper pronunciation
of the words; feigning, it is to be feared, an extra
amount of incapacity to pronounce the soft “ch,”
for the sake of giving her patient a better opportunity
of displaying his superior adroitness.
Comparatively speaking, Mr Macalister
became quite genial and agreeable in the course of
that musical hour, and when Margot finished her performance
by singing “The Oak and the Ash,” he waxed,
for him, positively enthusiastic.
“It’s a small organ,”
he pronounced judicially, “a ve-ry small
organ. Ye would make a poor show on a concert
platform, but for all that, I’m not saying that
it might not have been worse. Ye can keep in
tune, and that’s a mearcy!”
“Indeed, Alexander, I call it
a bonnie voice! There’s no call for squallings
and squakings in a bit of a room like this. I
love to hear a lassie’s voice sound sweet and
clear, and happy like herself, and that’s just
the truth about Miss Vane’s singing. Thank
ye, my dear. It’s been a treat to hear
you.”
The broad, beaming smile, the sly
little nod behind Mr Macalister’s back, proclaiming
triumph and delighted gratitude-these sent
Margot up to her room heartened and revived in spirits,
for there is nothing on earth so invigorating as to
feel that we have helped a fellow-creature. The
sunshine came back to her own heart, even as it was
slowly breaking its way through the clouds overhead.
She thrust her head out of the window, and opening
her mouth, drank in great gulps of the fresh damp
air, so sweet and reviving after the mouldy atmosphere
of “the parlour.” Over the mountain
tops in the direction from which the wind was blowing
the clouds were slowly drifting aside, leaving broader
and broader patches of blue. Blue! After
the long grey hours of rain and mist. The rapture
of it was almost beyond belief! A few minutes
more, and the glen would be alight with sunshine.
She would put on boots, cap, and cape, and hurry
out to enjoy every moment that remained.
The strong-soled little boots were
lifted from their corner behind the door, and down
sat Margot on the floor, school-girl fashion, and began
to thread the laces in and out, and tie them securely
into place. Then the deerstalker cap was pinned
on top of the chestnut locks, and the straps of the
grey cape crossed over the white flannel blouse.
Now she was ready, and the sunshine was already calling
to her from without, dancing across the floor, and
bringing a delicious warmth into the atmosphere.
Margot threw open the door and was
about to descend the narrow staircase, when she stopped
short, arrested by an unexpected sound. Some
one was singing softly in a room near at hand, repeating
the refrain of the ballad which she had taken last
on her list. The deep bass tones lingered softly
on the words-
“And the lad who marries me,
Must carry me hame to my North Coun-tree!”
George Elgood was echoing her song
in the seclusion of his own room! He had been
indoors all the time, then, listening to her while
she sang! Margot’s cheeks grew hot with
embarrassment, yet in the repeated strain there was
a suggestion of appreciation, of lingering enjoyment
which did away with the idea of adverse criticism.
“Oh, the Oak and the Ash,”-the
strain seemed to swell in volume, growing ever nearer
and nearer. “And the lad who marries me-”
The door flew open, and they stood
facing one another, each framed as in a picture in
the lintel of the doorways, divided only by a few yards
of boarded passage. The strain came to an abrupt
conclusion, frozen upon his lips by the shock of surprise
and embarrassment. For the third time in their
short acquaintance Margot looked straight into his
eyes; for the third time recognised in their depths
something that in mysterious fashion seemed to respond
to a want in her own nature; for the third time saw
the lids drop, heard an unintelligible murmur of apology,
and watched a hasty retreat.
For a moment Margot stood motionless,
an expression of wounded pride clouding the young
rounded face, then very slowly descended the staircase,
traversed the length of the “lobby,” and
stood outside the door, looking anxiously to right
and left.
There he was, a strong, well-built
figure in knickerbockers and Norfolk coat striding
rapidly up the hill path to the right,-trying,
no doubt, to put as much distance as possible between
himself and the objectionable girl who seemed ever
to be appearing when she was not wanted. For
a long minute Margot stood gazing miserably ahead,
then turning resolutely to the left, came face to
face with the Chieftain returning from the village
with his pockets bulging with papers.
His sudden appearance at this moment
of depression had a peculiar significance to the girl’s
mind. Doubt crystallised into resolution; with
a rapid beating of the heart she determined to grasp
her courage in both hands, and boldly make the plunge
which she had been meditating for some days past.