Love, the old, old troubler of the world.
Love has reasons, of which reason knows
nothing.
Alas, how easily things go wrong!
A sigh too much, or a kiss too long,
And there follows a mist and a weeping
rain
And life is never the same again.
No sooner was Mrs. Brodie’s
intention known, than all her friends were eager to
help her. There was truly but little time between
Monday morning and Wednesday night; but many hands
make light work, and old and young offered their services
in arranging for what it pleased all to consider as
a kind of national thanksgiving.
The unanimity of this kindness gave
Rahal a slight attack of a certain form of jealousy,
to which she had been subject for many years, and
she asked her husband, as she had done often before,
“Why is it, Coll, that every woman in the town
is eager to help and encourage Barbara if she only
speaks of having a dance or dinner; but if I, thy wife,
am the giver of pleasure, I am left to do all without
help or any show of interest. It troubles me,
Coll.”
And Coll answered as he always did
answer-“It is thy superiority, Rahal.
Is there any woman we know, who would presume to give
thee advice or counsel? And it is well understood
by all of them that thou cannot thole an obligation.
Thou, and thy daughter, and thy servants are sufficient
for all thy social plans; and why should thou be bothered
with a lot of old and young women? Thy sister
Brodie loves a crowd about her, and she says ‘thank
thee’ to all and sundry, as easily as she takes
a drink of water. It chokes thee to say ‘thanks’
to any one.”
So Rahal was satisfied, and went with
the rest to help Mistress Brodie prepare for her dance.
There were women in the kitchen making pies and custards
and jellies, and women in her parlours cleaning and
decorating them, and women in the great hall taking
up carpets because it was a favourite place for reels,
and women washing China and trimming lamps. Thora
was doing the shopping, Ian was carrying the invitations;
and every one who had been favoured with one had not
only said “Yes,” but had also asked if
there was anything they could loan, or do, to help
the impromptu festival. Thus, Mrs. Harold Baikie
sent her best service of China, and the Faes sent several
extra large lamps, and the bride of Luke Serge loaned
her whole supply of glassware, and Rahal took over
her stock of table silver; and Mistress Brodie received
every loan-useful or not-with
the utmost delight and satisfaction.
On Wednesday afternoon, however, she
was faced by a condition she did not know how to manage.
Ian came to her in a hurry, saying, “My friend,
McLeod, is longing for an invitation from you, and
he has asked me to request one. Surely you will
send him the favour! Yes, I know you will.”
“You are knowing too much, Ian.
What can I do? You know well, laddie, he is not
popular with the best set here.”
“I would not mind the ‘best
set’ if I were you. What makes them ’the
best’? Just their own opinion of themselves.
McLeod is of gentle birth, he is handsome and good-hearted,
you will like him as soon as you speak to him.
There is another ‘best set’ beside the
one Adam Vedder leads; I would like some one to take
down that old man’s conceit of himself-there
is nothing wrong with McLeod! Yes, he is Highland
Scotch -”
“There! that is enough, Ian!
Go your ways and bid the young man. Ask him in
your own name.”
“No, Mistress, I will not do
that. The invitation carries neither honour nor
good will without your name.”
“Well then, my name be it.
My name has been so much used lately, I think I will
change it.”
“Take my name then. I will be proud indeed
if you will.”
“You are aye daffing, Ian; I
am o’er busy for nonsense the now. Give
the Mac a hint that tartans are not necessary.”
“But I cannot do that.
I am going to wear the Macrae tartan.”
“You can let that intent go by.”
“No, I can not! A certain
‘yes’ may depend on my wearing the Macrae
tartan.”
“Well, checked cloth is bonnier
than black broadcloth to some people. I don’t
think Thora Ragnor is among that silly crowd.
There is not a more quarrelsome dress than a tartan
kilt-and I’m thinking the Brodies
were ill friends with the Macraes in the old days.”
“The Brodies are not Highlanders.”
“You are a shamefully ignorant man, Ian Macrae.
The Brodies came from
Moray, and are the only true lineal descendants of
Malcolm Thane of
Brodie in the reign of Alexander the Third, lawful
King of Scotland.
What do you think of the Brodies now?”
“The Macrae doffs his bonnet to them; but -”
“If you say another word, the
McLeod will be out of it-sure and final.”
So Ian laughingly left the room, and
Mistress Brodie walked to the window and watched him
speeding towards the town. “He is a wonderful
lad!” she said to herself. “And I
wish he was my lad! Oh why were all my bairns
lasses? They just married common bodies and left
me! Oh for a lad like Ian Macrae!” Then
with a great sigh, she added: “It is all
right. I would doubtless have spoiled and mismanaged
him!”
It is not to be supposed that Sunna
Vedder kept away from all this social stir and preparation.
She was first and foremost in everything during Monday
and Tuesday, but Wednesday she reserved herself altogether
for the evening. No one saw her until the noon
hour; then she came to the dinner table, for she had
an entirely fresh request to make, one which she was
sure would require all her personal influence to compass.
She prefaced it with the intelligence
that Boris had arrived during the night, and that
Elga had met him in the street-“looking
more handsome than any man ought to look, except upon
his wedding day.”
“And on that day,” said
Adam, gloomily, “a man has generally good cause
to look ugly.”
“But if he was going to marry
me, Grandfather, how then?”
“He would doubtless look handsome.
Men usually do when they are on the road of destruction.”
“Grandfather! I have made
up my mind to marry Boris, and lead him the way I
want him to go. That will always be the way thou
chooseth.”
“How comes that?”
“I loved thee first of all.
I shall always love thee first. Boris played
me false, I must pay him back. I must make him
suffer. Those Ragnors-all of them-put
on such airs! They make me sick.”
“What art thou after? What favour art thou
seeking?”
“Thou knows how the girls will
try to outdress each other at this Brodie affair -”
“It is too late for a new dress-what
is it thou wants now?”
“I want thee to go to the bank
and get me my mother’s necklace to wear just
this one night.”
“I will not. I gave thy dead mother a promise.”
“Break it, for a few hours.
My Easter dress is not a dancing dress. I have
no dancing dress but the pretty white silk thou gave
me last Christmas-and I have no ornaments
at all-none whatever, fit to wear with
it.”
“There are always flowers -”
“Flowers! There is not
a flower in Kirkwall. Easter and old Mistress
Brodie have used up every daisy-besides,
white silk ought to have jewels.”
Adam shook his head positively.
“My mother wishes me to have
what I want. Thou ought not to keep it from me.”
“She told me to give thee her
necklace on thy twenty-first birthday-not
before.”
“That is so silly! What
better is my twenty-first birthday than any other
day? Grandfather, I cannot love thee more, because
my love for thee is already a perfect love; but I
will be such a good girl if thou wilt give me what
I want, O so much I want it! I will be so obedient!
I will do everything thou desires! I will even
marry Boris Ragnor.” And this urgent request
was punctuated with kisses and little fondling strokes
of her hand, and Adam finally asked-
“How shall I answer thy mother
when she accuses me of breaking my promise to her?”
“I will answer for thee.
O dear! It is growing late! If thou dost
not hurry, the bank will be closed, and then I shall
be sick with disappointment, and it will be thy fault.”
Then Adam rose and left the house
and Sunna, having seen that he took the proper turn
in the road, called for a cup of tea and having refreshed
herself with it, went upstairs to lay out and prepare
everything for her toilet. And as she went about
this business she continually justified herself:-
“It is only natural I should
have my necklace,” she thought. “Norse
women have always adored gold and silver and gems,
and in the old days their husbands sailed long journeys
and fought battles for what their women wanted.
My great Aunt Christabelle often told me that many
of the old Shetland and Orkney families had gold ornaments
and uncut gems, hundreds of years old, hid away.
I would not wonder if Grandfather has some! I
dare say the bank’s safe is full of them!
I do not care for them but I do want my mother’s
wedding necklace-and I am going to have
it. Right and proper it is, I should have it now.
Mother would say so if she were here. Girls are
women earlier than they were in her day. Twenty-one,
indeed! I expect to be married long before I
am twenty-one.”
In less than an hour she began to
watch the road for her grandfather’s return.
Very soon she saw him coming and he had a small parcel
in his hand. Her heart gave a throb of satisfaction
and she began to unplait her manifold small braids:
“I shall not require to go to bed,” she
murmured. “Grandfather has my necklace.
He will want to take it back to the bank tomorrow-I
shall see about that-I promised-yes,
I know! But there are ways-out of
a promise.”
She was, of course, delightfully grateful
to receive the necklace, and Vedder could not help
noticing how beautiful her loosened hair looked.
Its length and thickness and waves of light colour
gave to her stately, blonde beauty a magical grace,
and Vedder was one of those men who admire the charms
of his own family as something naturally greater than
the same charms in any other family. “The
Vedders carry their beauty with an air,” he said,
and he was right. The Vedders during the course
of a few centuries of social prominence had acquired
that air of superiority which impresses, and also
frequently offends.
Certainly, Sunna Vedder in white silk
and a handsome necklace of rubies and diamonds was
an imposing picture; and Adam Vedder, in spite of
his sixty-two years, was an imposing escort. It
would be difficult to say why, for he was a small
man in comparison with the towering Norsemen by whom
he was surrounded. Yet he dominated and directed
any company he chose to favour with his presence;
and every man in Kirkwall either feared or honoured
him. Sunna had much of his natural temperament,
but she had not the driving power of his cultivated
intellect. She relied on her personal beauty and
the many natural arts with which Nature has made women
a match for any antagonist. Had she not heard
her grandfather frequently say “a beautiful woman
is the best armed creature that God has made!
She is as invincible as a rhinoceros!”
This night he had paid great attention
to his own toilet. He was fashionably attired,
neat as a new pin, and if not amiable, at least exceedingly
polite. He had leaning on his arm what he considered
the most beautiful creature in Scotland, and he assumed
the manners of her guardian with punctilious courtesy.
There was a large company present
when the Vedders reached Mrs. Brodie’s-military
men, a couple of naval officers, gentlemen of influence,
and traders of wealth and enterprise; with a full
complement of women “divinely tall and fair.”
Sunna made the sensation among them she expected to
make. There was a sudden pause in conversation
and every eye filled itself with her beauty. For
just a moment, it seemed as if there was no other
person present.
Then Mrs. Brodie and Colonel Belton
came to meet them, and Sunna was left in the latter’s
charge. “Will you now dance, Miss Vedder?”
he asked.
“Let us first walk about a little,
Colonel. I want to find my friend, Thora Ragnor.”
“I have long desired an introduction
to Miss Ragnor. Is she not lovely?”
“Yes, but now only for one man.
A stranger came here last week, and she was captured
at once.”
“How remarkable! I thought
that kind of irresponsible love had gone quite out
of favour and fashion.”
“Not so! This youth came, saw, and conquered.”
“Is it the youth I see with Ken McLeod?”
“The same. Look! There they are, together
as usual.”
“She is very sweet and attractive.”
Sunna answered this remark by asking
Thora to honour Colonel Belton with her company for
a short time, saying: “In the interval I
will take care of Ian Macrae.” Then Thora
stood up in her innocence and loveliness and she was
like some creature of more ethereal nature than goes
with flesh and blood. For the eye took her in
as a whole, and at first noticed neither her face
nor her dress in particular. Her dress was only
of white tarlatan, a thin, gauze-like material long
out of fashion. It is doubtful if any woman yet
remembers its airy, fairy sway, and graceful folds.
The filmy robe, however, was plentifully trimmed with
white satin ribbon, and the waist was entirely of satin
trimmed with tarlatan. The whole effect was girlish
and simple, and Thora needed no other ornament but
the pink and white daisies at her belt.
However, if Sunna expected Thora’s
manner and conversation to match the simplicity of
her dress, she was disappointed. In Love’s
school women learn with marvellous rapidity, and Thora
astonished her by falling readily into a conversation
of the most up-to-date social character. She
had caught the trick from Ian, a little playful fencing
round the most alluring of subjects, yet it brought
out the simplicity of her character, while it also
revealed its purity and intelligence.
Dancing had commenced when Mrs. Ragnor
entered the room on the arm of her son Boris.
Boris instantly looked around for Sunna and she was
dancing with McLeod. All the evening afterwards
Boris danced, but never once with Sunna, and Adam
Vedder watched the young man with scorn. He was
the most desirable party in the room for any girl and
he quite neglected the handsome Sunna Vedder.
That was not his only annoyance. McLeod was dancing
far too often with Sunna, and even the beautiful youth
Ian Macrae had only asked her hand once; and Adam was
sure that Thora Ragnor had been the suggester of that
act of politeness. Girls far inferior to Sunna
in every respect had received more attention than
his granddaughter. He was greatly offended, but
he appeared to turn his back on the whole affair and
to be entirely occupied in conversation with Conall
Ragnor and Colonel Belton concerning the war with
Russia.
Every way the evening was to Sunna
a great disappointment, in many respects she felt
it to be a great humiliation; and the latter feeling
troubled her more for her grandfather than for herself.
She knew he was mortified, for he did not speak to
her as they walked through the chill, damp midnight
to their home. Mrs. Brodie had urged Adam and
Sunna to put the night past at her house, but Adam
had been proof against all her suggestions, and even
against his own desires. So he satisfied his
temper by walking home and insisting on Sunna doing
likewise.
It was a silent, unhappy walk.
Adam said not a word to Sunna and she would not open
the way for his anger to relieve itself. When
they reached home they found a good fire in the room
full of books which Adam called his own, and there
they went. Then Sunna let her long dress fall
down, and put out her sandalled feet to the warmth
of the fire. Adam glanced into her face and saw
that it was full of trouble.
“Go to thy bed, Sunna,”
he said. “Of this night thou must have had
enough.”
“I have had too much, by far. If only thou
loved me!”
“Who else do I love? There is none but
thee.”
“Then with some one thou ought to be angry.”
“Is it with Boris Ragnor I should be angry?”
“Yes! It is with Boris
Ragnor. Not once did he ask me to dance.
Watching him and me were all the girls. They saw
how he slighted me, and made little nods and laughs
about it.”
“It was thy own fault.
When Boris came into the room, he looked for thee.
With McLeod thou wert dancing. With that Scot
thou wert dancing! The black look on his face,
I saw it, thou should have seen it and have given
him a smile-Pshaw! Women know so much-and
do so little. By storm thou ought to have taken
the whole affair for thy own. I am disappointed
in thee-yes, I am disappointed.”
“Why, Grandfather?”
“An emergency thou had to face,
and thou shirked it. When Boris entered the room,
straight up to him thou should have gone; with an
outstretched hand and a glad smile thou should have
said: ’I am waiting for thee, Boris!’
Then thou had put all straight that was crooked, and
carried the evening in thy own hands.”
“I will pay Boris for this insult.
Yes, I will, and thou must help me.”
“To quarrel with Boris?
To injure him in any way? No! that I will not
do. It would be to quarrel also with my old friend
Conall. Not thee! Not man or woman living,
could make me do that! Sit down and I will tell
thee a better way.”
“No, I will not sit down till
thou say ‘yes’ to what I ask”; for
some womanly instinct told her that while Adam was
cowering over the hearth blaze and she stood in all
her beauty and splendour above him, she controlled
the situation. “Thou must help me!”
“To what or whom?”
“I want to marry Boris.”
“Dost thou love him?”
“Better than might be.
When mine he is all mine, then I will love him.”
“That is little to trust to.”
“Thou art wrong. It is
of reasons one of the best and surest. Not three
months ago, a little dog followed thee home, an ugly,
half-starved little mongrel, not worth a shilling;
but it was determined to have thee for its master,
and thou called it thy dog, and now it is petted and
pampered and lies at thy feet, and barks at every
other dog, and thou says it is the best dog on the
Island. It is the same way with husbands.
Thou hast seen how Mary Minorie goes on about her
bald, scrimpy husband; yet she burst out crying when
he put the ring on her finger. Now she tells
all the girls that marriage is ‘Paradise Regained.’
When Boris is my husband it will be well with me,
and not bad for him. He will be mine, and we love
what is our own.”
“Why wilt thou marry any man? Thou wilt
be rich.”
“One must do as the rest of
the world does-and the world has the fashion
of marrying.”
“Money rules love.”
“No!”
“Yes! Bolon Flett had only
scorn for his poor little wife until her uncle left
her two thousand pounds. Since then, no word is
long enough or good enough for her excellencies.
Money opens the eyes as well as the heart. What
then, if I make Boris rich?”
“Boris is too proud to take
money from thee and I will not be sold to any man!”
“Wilt thou wait until my meaning
is given thee-flying off in a temper like
a foolish woman!”
“I am sorry-speak thy meaning.”
“Sit down. Thou art not begging anything.”
“Not from thee. I have thy love.”
“And thine is mine. This
is my plan. Above all things Boris loves a stirring,
money-making business. I am going to ask him to
take me as his partner. Tired am I of living
on my past. How many boats has Boris?”
“Thou knowest he has but one,
but she is large and swift, and does as much business
as McLeod’s three little sloops.”
“Schooners.”
“Schooners, then-little ones!”
“Well then, there is a new kind
of boat which thou hast never seen. She is driven
by steam, not wind, she goes swiftly, all winds are
fair to her, and she cares little for storms.”
“I saw a ship like that when
I was in Edinburgh. She lay in Leith harbour,
and the whole school went to Leith to see her come
in.”
“If Boris will be my partner,
I will lay my luck to his, and I will buy a steam
ship, a large coaster-dost thou see?”
Then with a laugh she cried:
“I see, I see! Then thou can easily beat
the sloops or schooners, that have nothing but
sails. Good is that, very good!”
“Just so. We can make two
trips for their one. No one can trade against
us.”
“McLeod may buy steam ships.”
“I have learned all about him.
His fortune is in real estate, mostly in Edinburgh.
It takes a lifetime to sell property in Edinburgh.
We shall have got all there is to get before McLeod
could compete with Vedder and Ragnor.”
“That scheme would please Boris, I know.”
“A boat could be built on the
Clyde in about four months, I think. Shall I
speak to Boris?”
“Yes, Boris will not fly in
the face of good fortune; but mind this-it
is easier to begin that reel than it will be to end
it. One thing I do not like-thou wert
angry with Boris, now thou wilt take him for a partner.”
“At any time I can put my anger
under my purse-but my anger was mostly
against thee. Now shall I do as I am minded?”
“That way is more likely than
not! I think this affair will grow with thee-but
thou may change thy mind -”
“I do not call my words back.
Go now to thy bed and forget everything. This
is the time when sleep will be better than either words
or deeds. Of my intent speak to no one.
In thy thoughts let it be still until its hour arrives.”
“In the morning, very early,
I am going to see Thora. When the enlisting ship
sails northward, there will be a crowd to see her off.
Boris and Thora and Macrae will be among it. I
also intend to be there. Dost thou know at what
hour she will leave?”
“At ten o’clock the tide is full.”
“Then at ten, she will sail.”
“Likely enough, is that.
Our talk is now ended. Let it be, as if it had
not been.”
“I have forgotten it.”
Vedder laughed, and added: “Go then to
thy bed, I am tired.”
“Not tired of Sunna?”
“Well then, yes, of thee I have had enough at
present.”
She went away as he spoke, and then
he was worried. “Now I am unhappy!”
he ejaculated. “What provokers to the wrong
way are women! Her mother was like her-my
beloved Adriana!” And his old eyes filled with
sorrowful tears as he recalled the daughter he had
lost in the first days of her motherhood. Very
soon Sunna and Adriana became one and he was fast
asleep in his chair.
In the morning Sunna kept her intention.
She poured out her grandfather’s coffee, and
talked of everything but the thing in her heart and
purpose. After breakfast she said: “I
shall put the day past with Thora Ragnor. Thy
dinner will be served for thee by Elga.”
“Talking thou wilt be -”
“Of nothing that ought to be
kept quiet. Do not come for me if I am late;
I intend that Boris shall bring me home.”
Sunna dressed herself in a pretty
lilac lawn frock, trimmed with the then new and fashionable
Scotch open work, and fresh lilac ribbons. Her
hair was arranged as Boris liked it best, and it was
shielded by one of those fine, large Tuscan hats that
have never, even yet, gone out of fashion.
“Why, Sunna!” cried Thora,
as she hastened to meet her friend, “how glad
am I to see thee!”
“Thou wert in my heart this
morning, and I said to it ’Be content, in an
hour I will take thee to thy desire.’”
And they clasped hands, and walked thus into the house.
“Art thou not tired after the dance?”
“No,” replied Thora, “I
was very happy. Do happy people get tired?”
“Yes-one can only
bear so much happiness, then it is weariness-sometimes
crossness. Too much of any good thing is a bad
thing.”
“How wise thou art, Sunna.”
“I live with wisdom.”
“With Adam Vedder?”
“Yes, and thou hast been living
with Love, with Mr. Macrae. Very handsome and
good-natured he is. I am sure that thou art in
love with him! Is that not the case?”
“Very much in love with me he
is, Sunna. It is a great happiness. I do
not weary of it, no, indeed! To believe in love,
to feel it all around you! It is wonderful!
You know, Sunna-surely you know?”
“Yes, I, too, have been in love.”
“With Boris-I know. And also
Boris is in love with thee.”
“That is wrong. No longer does Boris love
me.”
“But that is impossible.
Love for one hour is love forever. He did love
thee, then he could not forget. Never could he
forget.”
“He did not notice me last night. Thou
must have seen?”
“I did not notice-but
I heard some talk about it. The first time thou
art alone with him, he will tell thee his trouble.
It is only a little cloud-it will pass.”
“I suppose the enlisting ship sails northaway
first?”
“Yes, to Lerwick, though they
may stop at Fair Island on the way. Boris says
they could get many men there-and Boris
knows.”
“Art thou going to the pier
to see them leave? I suppose every one goes.
Shall we go together?”
“Why, Sunna! They left
this morning about four o’clock. Father
went down to the pier with Boris. Boris sailed
with them.”
“Thora! Thora! I thought
Boris was to remain here until the naval party returned
from Shetland?”
“The lieutenant in command thought
Boris could help the enlisting, for in Lerwick Boris
has many friends. Thou knows my sisters Anna and
Nenie live in Lerwick. Boris was fain to go and
see them.”
“But they will return here when
their business is finished in Lerwick?”
“They spoke of doing so, but
mother is not believing they will return. They
took with them all the men enlisted here and the men
are wanted very much. Boris did not bid us a
short ‘good-bye.’ Mother was crying,
and when he kissed me his tears wet my cheeks.”
Sunna did not answer. For a few
minutes she felt as if her heart had suddenly died.
At last she blundered out:
“I suppose the officer was afraid
that-Boris might slip off while he was
away.”
“Well, then, thou supposes what
is wrong. When a fight is the question, Boris
needs no one either to watch him or to egg him on.”
“Is that youngster, Macrae,
going to join? Or has he already taken the Queen’s
shilling? I think I heard such a report.”
“No one could have told that
story. Macrae is bound by a contract to McLeod
for this year and indeed, just yet, he does not wish
to go.”
“He does not wish to leave thee.”
“That is not out of likelihood.”
“Many are saying that England
is in great stress, and my grandfather thinks that
so she is.”
“My father says ‘not so.’
If indeed it were so, my father would have gone with
Boris. Mother is cross about it.”
“About what then is she cross?” asked
Sunna.
“People are saying that England
is in stress. Mother says such words are nothing
but men’s ‘fear talk.’ England’s
sons are many, and if few they were, she has millions
of daughters who would gladly fight for her!”
said Thora.
“Well, then, for heroics there
is no present need! I surely thought Boris loved
his business and would not leave his money-making.”
“Could thou tell me what incalculable
sum of money a man would take for his honour and patriotism?”
asked Thora.
“What has honour to do with it?”
“Everything; a man without honour
is not a man-he is just ‘a body’;
he has no soul. Robert Burns told Andrew Horner
how such men were made!” replied Thora.
“How was that? Tell me!
A Burns’ anecdote will put grandfather in his
finest temper, and I want him in that condition for
I have a great favour to ask from him.”
“The tale tells that when Burns
was beginning to write, he had a rival in a man called
Andrew Horner. One day they met at the same club
dinner, and they were challenged to each write a verse
within five minutes. The gentlemen guests took
out their watches, the poets were furnished with pencils
and paper. When time was up Andrew Horner had
not written the first line but Burns handed to the
chairman his verse complete.”
“Tell me. If you know it, tell me, Thora!”
“Yes, I know it. If you hear it once you
do not forget it.”
“Well then?”
“It runs thus:
“’Once on a time
The Deil gat stuff to mak’ a swine
And put it in a corner;
But afterward he changed his plan
And made it summat like a man,
And ca’ed it Andrew Horner.’”
“That is good! It will delight grandfather.”
“No doubt he already knows it.”
“No, I should have heard it a thousand times,
if he knew it.”
“Well, then, I believe it has
been suppressed. Many think it too ill-natured
for Burns to have written; but my father says it has
the true Burns ring and is Robert Burns’ writing
without doubt.”
“It will give grandfather a
nice long job of investigation. That is one of
his favourite amusements, and all Sunna has to do is
to be sure he is right and everybody else wrong.
Now I will go home.”
“Stay with me today.”
“No. Macrae will be here soon.”
“Uncertain is that.”
“Every hair on thy head, Thora,
every article of thy dress, from the lace at thy throat
to the sandals on thy feet, say to me that this is
a time when my absence will be better than my company.”
“Well, then, do as thou art minded.”
“It is best I do so. A
happy morning to thee! What more is in my heart
shall lie quiet at this time.”
Sunna went away with the air of a
happy, careless girl, but she said many angry words
to herself as she hasted on the homeward road.
“Most of the tales tell how women are made to
suffer by the men they love-but no tale
shall be made about Sunna Vedder! No! No!
It is Boris Ragnor I shall turn into laughter-he
has mocked my very heart-I will never forgive
him-that is the foolish way all women take-all
but Sunna Vedder-she will neither forgive
nor forget-she will follow up this affair-yes!”
By such promises to herself she gradually
regained her usual reasonable poise, and with a smiling
face sought her grandfather. She found him in
his own little room sitting at a table covered with
papers. He looked up as she entered and, in spite
of his intention, answered her smile and greeting
with an equal plentitude of good will and good temper.
“But I thought then, that thou
would stay with thy friend all day, and for that reason
I took out work not to be chattered over.”
“I will go away now. I
came to thee because things have not gone as I wanted
them. Thy counsel at such ill times is the best
that can happen.”
Then Vedder threw down his pencil
and turned to her. “Who has given thee
wrong or despite or put thee out of the way thou wanted
to take?”
“It is Boris Ragnor. He
has sailed north with the recruiting company-without
a word to me he has gone. He has thrown my love
back in my face. Should thy grandchild forgive
him? I am both Vedder and Fae. How can I
forgive?”
Vedder took out his watch and looked
at the time. “We have an hour before dinner.
Sit down and I will talk to thee. First thou shalt
tell me the very truth anent thy quarrel with Boris.
What did thou do, or say, that has so far grieved
him? Now, then, all of it. Then I can judge
if it be Boris or Sunna, that is wrong in this matter.”
“Listen then. Boris heard
some men talking about me-that made his
temper rise-then he heard from these men
that I was dancing at McLeod’s and he went there
to see, and as it happened I was dancing with McLeod
when he entered the room, and he walked up to me in
the dance and said thou wanted me, and he made me
come home with him and scolded me all the time we
were together. I asked him not to tell thee,
and he promised he would not-if I went there
no more. I have not danced with McLeod since,
except at Mrs. Brodie’s. Thou saw me then.”
“Thou should not have entered
McLeod’s house-what excuse hast thou
for that fault?”
“Many have talked of the fault,
none but thou have asked me why or how it came that
I was so foolish. I will tell thee the very truth.
I went to spend the day with Nana Bork-with
thy consent I went-and towards afternoon
there came an invitation from McLeod to Nana to join
an informal dance that night at eight o’clock.
And Nana told me so many pleasant things about these
little dances I could not resist her talk and I thought
if I stayed with Nana all night thou would never know.
I have heard that I stole away out of thy house to
go to McLeod’s. I did not! I went
with Nana Bork whose guest I was.”
“Why did thou not tell me this before?”
“I knew no one in Kirkwall would
dare to say to thee this or that about thy grandchild,
and I hoped thou would never know. I am sorry
for my disobedience; it has always hurt me-if
thou forgive it now, so much happier I will be.”
Then Adam drew her to his side and
kissed her, and words would have been of all things
the most unnecessary. But he moved a chair close
to him, and she sat down in it and laid her hand upon
his knee and he clasped and covered it with his own.
“Very unkindly Boris has treated thee.”
“He has mocked at my love before
all Kirkwall. Well, then, it is Thora Ragnor’s
complacency that affronts me most. If she would
put her boasting into words, I could answer her; but
who can answer looks?”
“She is in the heaven of her
first love. Thou should understand that condition.”
“It is beyond my understanding;
nor would I try to understand such a lover as Ian
Macrae. I believe that he is a hypocrite-Thora
is so easily deceived -”
“And thou?”
“I am not deceived. I see
Boris just as he is, rude and jealous and hateful,
but I think him a far finer man than Ian Macrae ever
has been, or ever will be.”
“Yes! Thou art right.
Now then, let this affair lie still in thy heart.
I think that he will come to see thee when the boats
return from Shetland-if not, then I shall
have something to say in the matter. I shall
want my dinner very soon, and some other thing we will
talk about. Let it go until there is a word to
say or a movement to make.”
“I will be ready for thee at
twelve o’clock.” With a feeling of
content in her heart, Sunna went away. Had she
not the Burns story to tell? Yet she felt quite
capable of restraining the incident until she got
to a point where its relation would serve her purpose
or her desire.