'Allan,' said Mrs. Stewart,
coming downstairs, 'your father has to go to Stornwell and will not be back
until to-morrow, so there will be no cricket match this afternoon. I have a note
from Mrs. MacGregor, asking you all to spend the day at Corranmore instead.'
'All right, Mother,' replied Allan; when are we to be
there?'
'Mrs. MacGregor asks you to
come early,' said Mrs. Stewart, consulting the
letter; 'I had better send you in the dog-cart,
as it's rather far to walk. Duncan is
driving your father to the steamer, but he won't be long.'
'Don't bother about the
dog-cart, Mother,' said Allan; 'it would
be much jollier to walk; and we'd like to look
in at Mrs. Macdonnell's cottage on the way and
ask what's the matter with Neil. We haven't seen him for a day or two.'
'I wouldn't go there to-day,
I think,' interposed Mrs. Stewart hurriedly.
'I don't think Neil will be at home.
I'm afraid the walk would be too much for Tricksy,'
she went on quickly, for the young people were looking
surprised.
'Not if we start now, I think, Mother, and give Tricksy a
rest now and again. What do you say, Tricksy?'
'Of course I can walk,'
said Tricksy. 'I shan't be a bit tired, Mother.'
Mrs. Stewart looked at her little daughter with a
smile.
'I am afraid of your overdoing
it, Tricksy; she said. 'You are always
trying to do as much as the others, who are so much
older than yourself. Well, do as you like; I
leave you in Allan's charge, and he will see that you are not made to walk too
fast.'
'All right, Mother,' said
Reggie; 'but won't you come a bit of the way with us?'
Not this morning, dear. I will come with you some other
time.'
'All right, Mother,' said
Reggie; 'but it's a long time since you've
gone anywhere with us. Cut away upstairs, Tricksy,
and get your hat; it's time we started if we are to take rests on the way.'
'Don't you think Mother
is very quiet?' observed Tricksy, as the three
young people, accompanied by Laddie, were crossing
the moor. 'I wonder whether she's sorry about something?'
'I did not notice anything,' said Allan.
Tricksy had almost said, 'No,
boys never do, but checked herself in time.
The road between Ardnavoir and Corranmore
led across the northern part of the island, through
fields and moorland. All the turnings of the
way brought into view fascinating glimpses of the sea,
running inland between brown rocks. Fishing-boats
with white and russet sails lay upon water turned
to a sheet of silver by the sunlight, and grey and
white gulls floated about and screamed.
The breeze was blowing shoreward,
tempering the warmth of the sun and bringing brine
and the odour of seaweed to mingle with the perfume
of bell-heather from the moors.
Laddie stepped lightly beside his
young friends, waving his tail in the air, and now
and again pausing to investigate a rabbit-burrow or
an interesting tuft of heather or cotton-grass.
'Well, Tricksy, getting tired
yet?' said Allan to his little sister after
they had walked between three and four miles.
'Not a bit,' replied Tricksy,
trudging along determinedly, but with a little roll
in her gait which betrayed that she was.
'I think we'll rest awhile,'
said Allan, and the three young folk sat down upon
a patch of fragrant, springy heather, while Laddie,
after looking at them for a minute, surprised at such
an early halt, curled himself up beside them.
'I wish Father would get the
yacht out soon,' said Allan, watching the sea
and the fishing-boats.
'Yes,' said Reggie; he is very late this year.'
'He won't be long now,'
said Allan. 'We are going to have visitors soon. Father has written to ask
Graham major and Graham minor and their Pater to come and stay with us as they
have such long holidays this year, owing to the measles.'
'Who are they?' inquired Reggie.
Fellows from my school. Did you never hear me speak of them?'
'I didn't,' said Tricksy. Are they nice boys?'
Decent enough.'
Big or little?'
'One's a small fellow;
only been at school one term. The other's bigger; not more than eleven, though;
more of an age for Reggie than for me.'
Reggie looked indignant, but said
nothing. There was nothing that annoyed him
so much as to be reminded that he was not yet a very
big boy.
'Well,' said Allan, 'perhaps
we had better be going, if you have rested enough,
Tricksy. Hulloa, there's Euan Macdonnell,
the coastguard, Neil's cousin; we'll stop and ask him if he can come out fishing
with us some day soon.'
'Good day, Euan,' said
the young people, pausing to speak, but the coastguard
only saluted and passed on as though he were in a hurry.
Reggie looked at Allan in surprise.
'Been sent on a message, I suppose,'
said Allan, 'and hasn't time to talk.
The whole island seems to be upset by this affair
at the post-office. I wish they'd hurry
up and catch the fellow and be done with it.
What's the matter with Laddie now?'
The collie, who had been sniffing
about, following up a scent, had suddenly given a
bark and sprang over a dyke, and was now yelping and
baying excitedly as he jumped about on the other side.
'Hamish and Marjorie, I bet,'
said Allan; and sure enough, two heads appeared above
the dyke, a good-natured one and a mischievous one,
the latter crowned by a scarlet cap on the top of
a mass of fair curly hair.
'We thought we'd give
you a surprise,' they said, 'but Laddie
spoilt it for us. Good dog, Laddie, lie down,'
for Laddie's manifestations of delight were
taking the form of a loud baying which drowned all
attempts at conversation.
'Trust, Laddie!' said
Tricksy in her little soft voice; but Laddie took
no notice.
'Laddie, trust!' said
Reggie severely; and Laddie subsided at once, surprised
that his attentions should be so little appreciated.
Tricksy uttered a reproachful sigh,
caused by her dog's inattention to her commands.
'When does your mother expect us?' inquired
Allan.
'Any time before dinner,'
said Hamish. 'That's half-past one,
and it's only eleven now. We've
got any amount of time. What do you say to coming
and looking at the gipsy encampment in the Corrie Wood?
They're breaking up camp and leaving the island to-morrow, so we may not have
another chance of seeing them.'
'All right,' said the
others, and they trooped off to the tiny wood nestling
in a hollow through which a burn trickled, and from
whence a trail of smoke came blowing across the fresh
green foliage of the trees.
All was bustle and stir in the gipsy
encampment. Two carts were standing at the entrance
to the hollow, and upon these the gipsies were piling
their household goods iron pots and kettles,
bundles of rags, some gaudy crockery, and a variety
of miscellaneous articles whose use it would be hard
to determine.
At the sight of the young people the
gipsies smiled a welcome, and the men took off their
hats. Some small black-eyed children toddled
forward, and stood staring, with their fingers in their
mouths.
'Trust, Laddie!' said
Allan; for two mongrel curs had rushed out and barked,
whereupon Laddie had stiffened his back and was growling
defiance.
Laddie was obliged to content himself
with glaring at the other dogs and making a few remarks
to express his contempt for gipsy dogs, and his view
of their impertinence in presuming to look at his young
ladies and gentlemen.
'Tell your fortune, pretty lady,'
said a woman to Marjorie, with a smile which displayed
her white teeth; but Marjorie shook her head.
'You are leaving Inchkerra?'
said Allan to one of the men.
Yes, sir. We start for Ireland to-morrow, in a sailing
boat.'
'You haven't stayed very long,'
observed Marjorie.
Three months, lady. A long time for the gipsies.'
'Will you ever come back again?' inquired
Marjorie.
The man shook his head.
'Can't say, lady.
Maybe yes, maybe no. We never can tell.
Thanks, master; good luck to you,' he said,
touching his straggling forelock as Allan slipped
a few coins into his hand.
'Good-bye, masters; good-bye,
pretty ladies,' cried the gipsies in farewell.
Some distance from the hollow, a tall,
loosely-made youth rose unexpectedly from where he
had been basking in the sun, by the side of a dyke
which screened him from the cold wind.
In the weak, handsome face and roving
eyes the young people recognised Gibbie, the half-witted
gipsy lad. An expression of disappointment crossed
his face as he looked over the group and seemed to
miss some one.
'Neil no with you,' he murmured. Want to see Neil. Was
not at home.'
'Can we give him any message from you?'
inquired Allan.
'Tell Neil, Gibbie go away. Long way; want to see Neil to say
good-bye.'
'Very well,' said Allan.
'When we see him, we'll tell him.'
A crafty smile flitted over the lad's
face, and he lowered his voice to a mysterious whisper.
'Neil will be pleased soon,'
he said. 'Good Neil, good Neil. Neil will be very rich, richer than the Gorjos;
has a piece of paper worth hundreds of pounds. Tell him to look for it. Gibbie
go long way off.'
'Poor fellow,' observed
Allan to Hamish, as the gipsy returned to his lazy
basking on the heather; 'he is quite crazy; can't speak connectedly for two
minutes at a time.'
'There is one good point in
Gibbie's character,' said Hamish; 'he
knows that Neil saved his life, and he is grateful.
I think the island won't be sorry to see the
last of him, though. He hasn't lived with his tribe for weeks. He had a den of
his own in the banks of the burn that flows past our house; a queer place, far
up in the hills.'
'Look,' said Reggie, 'that
must be the gipsies' boat over there, off the south side of the island; and a
little boat is going out to it with some of their things.'
'And there are the carts going
down,' said Allan; 'it won't be long before the camp is broken up.'
'Pity we couldn't go gipsying
for a little while,' observed Marjorie; 'just for the summer. It would be such
fun wandering about from place to place. But look at the tide coming up in
Cateran Bay; the waves are dashing on the shore and making the most beautiful
foam. Would there be time for us to go down to the beach for a little while?'
'Plenty,' said Hamish;
'Mother doesn't expect us before one o'clock.'
'Come along, then,' said
Marjorie; 'let's run;' and they all
raced down to the shore, Laddie with them, the dog
jumping with all four paws off the ground, and barking
in anticipation of sport.
Breeze and tide together were flinging
up little breakers which curled on the shore and then
retreated, only to be sent up again by the next roller.
A fascinating game was to run down to the very edge
of a retreating wave, with one's toes almost
within the line of foam; to wait until it gathered
itself up again, and then fly to avoid being overtaken
by the water which came hissing and bubbling over the
pebbles.
Laddie, after watching the fun for
a minute or two, suddenly rushed off with a bark,
and returned dragging a huge flat stone which he deposited
at Allan's feet; then he stood eagerly waiting,
making a variety of signs to show Allan that he expected
him to do something with it.
'Fetch, Laddie!' said
Allan, throwing the stone as far as he could.
Laddie uttered a joyful yelp and sprang
after it, returning with it in his mouth to ask Allan
to throw it again.
'Laddie, fetch!' cried
Allan, throwing it into the sea this time, and Laddie
plunged into the water and came back dripping.
He laid down the stone and shook himself,
to the great inconvenience of Marjorie; then he jumped
about, baying for Allan to throw the stone once more.
The shouts and laughter and Laddie's
barking were making a tumult which vied with the noise
of wind and waves, when Hamish touched Allan's
arm and pointed to the sky.
'Oh, I say,' said Allan,
'we really ought to go; it's going to pour like anything, and the girls will get
wet.'
'I'm wet enough already,
I think, especially about the feet,' murmured
Tricksy; while Marjorie's lips tightened.
She did not like the boys to show that they thought
her less hardy than themselves.
Some large drops on the stones warned
them to hasten; and they reached the doctor's
house just as the storm burst.
Mrs. MacGregor, a pretty, young-looking
lady, ran down into the hall to meet them.
'My dear Tricksy,' she
cried, as she took the little girl's wet, cold hand, you are soaking! Your feet
are drenched!'
'It's all right, Mrs.
MacGregor,' piped Tricksy; 'we've
been having a fine game. Hamish, you've let Laddie in, and his feet are making
wet marks all over the floor!'
'Never mind Laddie,' said
Mrs. MacGregor; 'take her upstairs and give her dry shoes and stockings,
Marjorie, and then come to dinner, all of you.'
'You know, Marjorie,'
observed Tricksy, as the elder girl somewhat anxiously
assisted her to pull off her wet stockings; 'you
know you are always telling me that we must be plucky
and do all the things they want us to do when we play
with boys, or else they think we're a bore.'
'That's all very well,
Tricksy,' replied Marjorie, 'but what shall we do if you get ill? Your mother
would stop your playing with us altogether if that happened.'
'I get ill with playing
out of doors and having fun,' returned Tricksy
scornfully; 'I'm not such a duffer, Marjorie.'
Just before dinner Dr. MacGregor came
in, 'such a dear of a man,' as Tricksy
had once described him, with bright blue eyes and curly
hair like Marjorie, and a kind expression like Hamish.
'How do you do, Reggie?'
he said. 'How do you do, Allan? Do
you like school as much as ever? My dear,'
turning to his wife, 'I shall have to start immediately after lunch, and here is
a note asking you to '
The remainder of the sentence was
lost, but the boys could see that both Dr. and Mrs.
MacGregor were looking very grave.
'I am sorry that Mrs. MacGregor
and I must leave you,' said the doctor while
the meal was in progress, 'but I daresay you
will manage to amuse yourselves without getting into
mischief; eh, Marjorie?' smiling at his daughter,
whose eyes flashed a saucy answer. 'You can have the boat down if the rain
keeps off.'
But the rain showed no disposition
to keep off, despite the anxious glances which were
directed towards the window. When the clouds
gathered once more in threatening masses, and the rain
came lashing the panes, Dr. and Mrs. MacGregor took
their departure in a closed carriage, warning Hamish
that the boat was not to be used unless the sea went
down.
'Bother!' said Tricksy, looking at the waves, which
were tumbling over each other and whitening with foam; what are we to do while
it rains?'
'Sit round the nursery fire,
of course, and talk,' said Marjorie.
An immense pile of peats was built
up on the hearth of the cosy, untidy room which had
been the MacGregors' nursery; and the young folk
sat round the 'ingle-neuk' and discussed
matters dear to the heart of gamesome youth.
Suddenly Marjorie looked up and said,
'Hurrah! the rain's stopped. What shall we do?'
'Too stormy to get the boat
out,' said Hamish, rising and going to the window;
'it's still very rough, and there will be another squall soon.'
'I know,' said
Marjorie; 'let's play hide-and-seek.
No, not a rubbishy game in the house,' she
said, meeting Allan's look of disapproval; 'a real good game out of doors, in
the garden and the sheds and the ruins. The rain will only make it jollier, and
those who mind getting wet are funks.'
With the wind blowing in gusts, and
sudden showers splashing down from all the roofs,
the game promised some fun. Dr. MacGregor's
was a first-rate place for hide-and-seek, with a number
of outhouses built round a paved court, and the ruins
of an old castle overlooking the garden.
Marjorie and Reggie stayed at 'home'
in the front lobby, where they could hear calls both
from out of doors or within; and the hiders dispersed
themselves quickly.
Soon three shouts were heard, coming
from different directions; and the pursuers ran out
into the rain, which was beginning to fall again.
Hamish was quickly discovered in a
window of the old ruin, for he could not resist the
temptation of grinning good-naturedly down from his
perch; but he escaped along the broken flooring while
they were waiting at the foot of a stairway, and reached
'home' before they were aware.
'You didn't give us enough
of a chase,' cried Marjorie to him through the
streaming pane; then she went off, rather annoyed,
to look for the others.
They hunted for some time among the
outhouses, getting shower-baths of drops from the
eaves; but no one was to be found. At last they
saw a movement among some straw in the byre, and Marjorie
made a dash forward, just too late to catch Allan,
who slipped out and made for the door.
Reggie barred his passage.
'Unfair different
directions!' cried Allan; for it was the rule
among the Stewarts and MacGregors that when two were
chasing one they must both keep to the same route;
and Reggie stood aside.
They were pretty fairly matched, pursuers
and pursued; and for a long time Allan led the two
others a chase among the maze of buildings; but at
last, his foot slipping upon the wet paving-stones,
he was captured by a bold dash from Marjorie.
'Only Tricksy now,' gasped
Marjorie, pushing back her wet hair, which was clinging
about her face; 'we haven't seen a sign of her; where can she be?'
'You have run enough,'
suggested Allan; 'go in and let one of us take your place.'
Marjorie flashed a glance of indignation
at him, annoyed that he should suppose that she was
not going to see the thing out, and after drawing
a few long breaths she and Reggie started off again.
By this time the rain had ceased,
and a pleasant smell was rising from the damp earth
and dripping trees.
No little footprints were to be seen
in the garden; and it was impossible that Tricksy
could have escaped observation had she been in the
ruins or in any of the outhouses.
They hunted all over the house, then
went into the field, and even climbed the dyke which
separated the doctor's grounds from the moorland;
but no Tricksy was to be seen.
'I believe she has gone beyond
bounds,' said Allan, who, with Hamish, had grown tired of waiting and had
wandered out to see what was going on; we said the garden and the field, you
know.'
'Not she,' declared Reggie,
perched outside upon the dyke, with the wind drying
his wet face and clothing; 'we have taught her
to play fair. She is only lying low in some
place that we haven't thought of. Let's shout to her to call cuckoo."'
They raised their voices and cried,
'Call cuckoo, Tricksy;' and Laddie, who
had been shut in the house to keep him from spoiling
sport, but who had made good his escape behind the
boys, pricked up his ears and resolved to be useful.
A muffled voice was heard in response,
and Laddie, with a bark, sprang towards the peat-stack
and stood before it, wagging his tail and trying to
make an entrance with nose and paws.
Some of the peats were tumbled aside,
and Tricksy emerged, looking very indignant.
'A nice way to play,'
she said, 'setting Laddie on to me when you
couldn't find me yourselves.'
They tried to explain, but Tricksy's
eyes were full of contempt, and her small figure seemed
to grow taller with offended dignity.
'Such a nice hiding-place,'
she said; 'and now you've gone and spoilt it all.'
'Don't be a little silly,
Tricksy,' said Reggie to her in an undertone;
and Tricksy allowed her dignity to subside.
Fresh hiding-places were chosen; and
when at last the young people were so tired as to
be disinclined to run any more, Marjorie suggested
going indoors to see whether tea were ready.
The dining-room table was bare, and all faces fell.
'I'll just go into the
kitchen and see what Elspeth is about,' said Marjorie; perhaps the servants are
forgetting us.'
In the stone-floored kitchen, whither
they all trooped after Marjorie, Elspeth was sitting
knitting by the fireside.
'Elspeth, when is tea going
to be ready?' inquired Marjorie, rather impatiently.
The girl looked up at her, then down
again at her knitting with pretended indifference.
'Tea, Miss Marjorie? I wass thinking you would not be wanting
any tea to-day.'
Marjorie's lips tightened, but
she kept down the rising temper with an effort.
'Why not?' she asked.
'Here are Allan and Reggie and Tricksy from Ardnavoir; and we want our tea,
please.'
Elspeth looked up, and seemed to see
the others for the first time.
'Would you ask the young ladies and gentle men to wipe their
feet on the rug, Miss Marjorie if you please? They are spoiling my kitchen
floor.'
This request made the whole troop
feel uncomfortable, and they began shifting from one
foot to the other, conscious that they must have brought
more mud into the house than the authorities were at
all likely to approve of.
'All right,' said Marjorie
impatiently; 'we are not coming in any further; but will you please get tea
ready for us as soon as you can?'
'Get tea ready! And how am I to do that, Miss Marjorie, if
you please, when the girdle hass been taken away out of the kitchen? I cannot be
making scones on the open fire.'
Marjorie turned red and bit her lip.
'Oh, never mind the girdle,'
she said. 'We'll do without scones for one day.'
'Indeed, Miss Marjorie, I never saw tea without scones. That
may be the way in foreign parts, but there never wass tea in the West Highlands
without scones; and I will be thinking you will have to wait till the girdle
comes home again.'
A flash darted out of Marjorie's
eyes; and she remained rooted to the spot for a minute.
Then she took a sudden resolve and turned away, elbowing
the others out of the room.
'Cat!' she muttered; 'I'll
be even with her yet. Never mind, people; if
she won't give us our tea we can get it for ourselves. Get cups and things out
of the pantry, Hamish; and Reggie, you come with me.'
The larder window was rather high
up from the ground and was secured by several iron
bars.
With some difficulty they pushed up
the lower sash a little way; and through the opening
thus made Reggie contrived to wriggle his slight,
thin body.
'Is there anything there worth
carrying away?' said Marjorie, standing on tip-toe
and peering in.
'Here's a cake,' said Reggie; and there are several
pots of jam.'
'All right, hand them out.
There's a pie; we might as well have that;
serve Elspeth right for getting into a temper.
Now let's come in with what we've got.'
Reggie squeezed himself through the
opening, feet foremost, and dropped to the ground.
'Here Hamish Allan;'
said Marjorie, entering the house; 'take these
things to the dining-room. Have you any plates?
No. I'll get them out of the pantry;
and knives and spoons too. Bother, she's
got the teapot in the kitchen; I'll have to go in and get it.'
She strode into the kitchen with flashing
eyes and a haughty step; then stopped short in amazement.
'Elspeth!' she exclaimed; whatever are you crying for?'
There was no answer.
Is it because of the girdle?'
The girl shook her head; the tears
falling upon the knitting which she was holding with
trembling hands.
Is it because we are taking the things out of the larder?'
Not that, Miss Marjorie.'
Then whatever is the matter?'
By this time all the others had crowded
in, looking very much astonished.
'Elspeth, are you ill?'
asked Tricksy, her large dark eyes growing very round
in her little face.
'No, Miss Tricksy; no, Miss Marjorie; it will be none of
that; it will be Neil.'
'Neil!' exclaimed Marjorie,
while the others looked more and more amazed.
'What's the matter with him? Neil
is Elspeth's cousin, you know,' she explained.
'Neil, poor lad; he will hev
been arrested, Miss Marjorie. They will hev
taken him up for robbing the post-office! Eh,
Miss Marjorie, your mother said you weren't
to know, and it iss me that will hev been telling
you. Och! the disgrace to an honest family!'
and the girl threw her apron over her head and moaned
and lamented to herself in Gaelic, while they all
stood around her, speechless.