ONE WRONG STEP - CHAPTER III.
It was a Saturday night in the beginning
of August, and John was at home until the following
Monday. He dressed himself and went out towards
Brogar, and Christine watched him far over the western
moor, and blessed him as he went. He had not
seen Margaret for many days, but he had a feeling
to-night that she would be able to keep her tryst.
And there, standing amid the rushes on the lakeside,
he found her. They had so much to say to each
other that Margaret forgot her father’s return,
and delayed so long that she thought it best to go
straight home, instead of walking down the beach to
meet him.
He generally left Stromness about
half-past eight, and his supper was laid for nine
o’clock. But this night nine passed, and
he did not come; and though the delay could be accounted
for in various ways, she had a dim but anxious forecasting
of calamity in her heart. The atmosphere of the
little parlor grew sorrowful and heavy, the lamp did
not seem to light it, her father’s chair had
a deserted, lonely aspect, the house was strangely
silent; in fifteen minutes she had forgotten how happy
she had been, and wandered to and from the door like
some soul in an uneasy dream.
All at once she heard the far-away
shouting of angry and alarmed voices, and to her sensitive
ears her lover’s and her father’s names
were mingled. It was her nature to act slowly;
for a few moments she could not decide what was to
be done. The first thought was the servants.
There were only two, Hacon Flett and Gerda Vedder.
Gerda had gone to bed, Hacon was not on the place.
As she gathered her energies together she began to
walk rapidly over the springy heath towards the white
sands of the beach. Her father, if he was coming,
would come that way. She was angry with herself
for the if. Of course he was coming.
What was there to prevent it? She told herself,
Nothing, and the next moment looked up and saw two
men coming towards her, and in their arms a figure
which she knew instinctively was her father’s.
She slowly retraced her steps, set
open the gate and the door, and waited for the grief
that was coming to her. But however slow her
reasoning faculties, her soul knew in a moment what
it needed. It was but a little prayer said with
trembling lips and fainting heart; but no prayer loses
its way. Straight to the heart of Christ it went.
And the answer was there and the strength waiting
when Ragon and Hacon brought in the bleeding, dying
old man, and laid him down upon his parlor floor.
Ragon said but one word, “Stabbed!”
and then, turning to Hacon, bid him ride for life
and death into Stromness for a doctor. Most sailors
of these islands know a little rude surgery, and Ragon
stayed beside his friend, doing what he could to relieve
the worst symptoms. Margaret, white and still,
went hither and thither, bringing whatever Ragon wanted,
and fearing, she knew not why, to ask any questions.
With the doctor came the dominie and
two of the town bailies. There was little need
of the doctor; Peter Fae’s life was ebbing rapidly
away with every moment of time. There was but
little time now for whatever had yet to be done.
The dominie stooped first to his ear, and in a few
solemn words bid him lay himself at the foot of the
cross. “Thou’lt never perish there,
Peter,” he said; and the dying man seemed to
catch something of the comfort of such an assurance.
Then Bailie Inkster said, “Peter
Fae, before God an’ his minister-before
twa o’ the town bailies an’ thy ain daughter
Margaret, an’ thy friend Ragon Torr, an’
thy servants Hacon Flett an’ Gerda Vedder, thou
art now to say what man stabbed thee.”
Peter made one desperate effort, a
wild, passionate gleam shot from the suddenly-opened
eyes, and he cried out in a voice terrible in its
despairing anger, “John Sabay! John Sabay-stabb-ed-me!
Indeed-he-did!”
“Oh, forgive him, man! forgive
him! Dinna think o’ that now, Peter!
Cling to the cross-cling to the cross, man!
Nane ever perished that only won to the foot o’
it.” Then the pleading words were whispered
down into fast-sealing ears, and the doctor quietly
led away a poor heart-stricken girl, who was too shocked
to weep and too humbled and wretched to tell her sorrow
to any one but God.