The rest of the week seemed at least
a month long to the lonely twins. Sandy came
to see them, to be sure, but with the passing of the
Chief, the flavor seemed gone from the play, and the
Clan made no further expeditions after Angus Niel.
“He can just kill all the game
he wants to,” said Jean. “It’s
the worse for the Auld Laird, I doubt, but who cares
for that, so long as he leaves Tam alone and keeps
away from here? It’s nothing to me.”
Their father had been so taken up
with his work and with turning over in his mind plans
for the future, when they should be “walking
the world,” that he paid little attention to
their punishment of Angus Niel, about which he knew
little and cared less. He was absorbed in planning
the best market for his sheep and in getting as much
from his garden as he could, hoping to sell what he
was unable to use himself, when the time came to leave.
His usually cheerful face had grown more and more troubled
as the summer wore on, and it was seldom now that his
bagpipes woke the mountain echoes, and whenever he
did while away a rainy evening with music, the melodies
were as wild and mournful as his own sad thoughts.
Angus Niel’s barometer now rose
again. Finding himself no longer pursued by his
unseen foes, his waning self-confidence returned, and
it was only a week or two after Alan’s departure
that wonderful stories began to go about the village
concerning his prowess in ridding the woods of thieves
and marauders single-handed.
“I’ve even found my boat,”
he announced one evening to a group of men lounging
about the village store, “and it was no human
hands that put it where I found it either! It
was below the falls, if you’ll believe me, safe
and sound and tight as ever. Any man that is
easily scared would better not be walking the woods
in that direction, I’m telling you, or likely
he’d be whisked away by the little people and
shut up in some cave in the hills. I felt the
drawing myself once, but I knew how to manage.
I was just gey firm with them, and they knew I wasna
fearful and let me go. It’s none so easy
being a gamekeeper. It takes a bold man, and a
canny one, and well the poacher gang knew that.
They’re gone and good riddance. It’s
taken me all summer to bring it about.”
“Oh,” murmured Jock to
Jean, when this was repeated to them by Sandy the
following Sabbath, “wouldn’t Alan like
to hear that?” It was on that very Sabbath,
too, that they learned the Dominie had recovered and
that school was to reopen on the following day.
This was good news to the Twins, for like all Scotch
children they longed for an education, and the next
morning, bright and early, they were on the road to
the village, carrying some scones and hard-boiled
eggs for their luncheon, in a little tin pail.
The days passed swiftly after that,
for, with the house to care for, lessons to get, and
the walk of five miles to school and back, there was
little time for moping or even dreading the day when
they must leave their highland home.
It was late August when they came
rushing home one afternoon, bursting with a great
piece of news, which they had learned in the village.
Never had they covered the five miles of the homeward
journey more quickly, but when they reached the little
gray house, their father had not yet returned from
the pastures, though it was after his time. The
two children ran back of the house to the cow byre,
and there in the distance they saw him coming across
the barren moor. He was walking slowly, with his
head bent as though he were tired and discouraged,
and Tam, limping along beside him, looked discouraged
too. The Twins gave a wild whoop and raced across
the moor to meet them. Jock got there first,
but was too out of breath to speak for an instant.
“Dear, dear! What can the
matter be?” said their father, looking from
one excited face to the other.
“Oh, Father,” gasped Jean,
finding her tongue first, “you never can guess,
so I’ll tell you. The Auld Laird’s
dead.”
The Shepherd stood still in his tracks,
too stunned for words.
“Aye!” cried Jock, wishing
to share in the glory of such an exciting revelation.
“He’s as dead as a salt herring.”
“Oh, Father!” cried Jean,
“aren’t you glad? Now we won’t
have to leave the wee bit hoosie and the Glen.”
“I’m none so sure of that,”
said the Shepherd slowly, when he had recovered from
the first shock of surprise. “The new Laird
may be worse than the old. Be that as it may,
I’m not one to rejoice at the death of any man.
Death is a solemn thing, my dawtie, but the Lord’s
will be done, and I’m not pretending to mourn.”
“We went to the village,”
cried Jean, “to get a bit of meat for the pot,
and there was a whole crowd of people around the post-office
door. ’T was the post-master gave us the
news, and Mr. Craigie and Angus Niel have put weeds
on their hats and look as mournful as Tam when he’s
scolded. We saw them out of the school-house window
not two hours gone.”
“They have reason to mourn,”
said the Shepherd grimly, “not for the Auld
Laird’s death only, but for their own lives as
well. Aye, that’s a subject for grief.”
He shook his head dubiously, and, seeming to feel
it was an occasion for a moral lesson, he added, “’Mark
the perfect man and behold the upright, for the end
of that man is peace.’”
“What has that to do with the
Auld Laird?” asked Jock, much mystified.
“Nothing at all, maybe,”
answered the Shepherd, “but it’s a wise
word to remember against our own time.”
“I wish Angus Niel would remember
it,” exclaimed Jean.
“And Mr. Craigie no less,” added Jock.
“Well, well,” said the
Shepherd, “heard ye anything more in the village?”
“Aye, that we did,” said
Jean, who loved to prolong the excitement of news.
“Let me tell that,” said
Jock. “You told about the Auld Laird.
Well, then, Father, there’s all kinds of tales
about the new Laird. It’s said he’s
a wee bit of a laddie, not more than four years old,
and not the son of the Auld Laird at all, but a cousin
or something. It’s said he’s weak
and sickly-like and not long for this world.”
“Sandy’s mother was in
the village and walked with us to the bridge,”
interrupted Jean, “and she heard that the heir
is a young man living in Edinburgh, and not even known
to the Auld Laird, who had no near kin. She had
it from the minister’s wife, so it must be true.”
“Didn’t Mr. Craigie say
anything? He ought to know more about it than
any one. He’s the Auld Laird’s factor
to carry out his will while he was living. It’s
likely he’d know more than any other about his
will, now he’s dead,” said the Shepherd.
“Mrs. Crumpet says he goes about
with his mouth shut up as tight as an egg, as though
he knew a great deal more than other folk, being so
intimate-like with the Laird,” said Jean.
“Aye!” added Jock, “but
she said she believed there was a muckle he did not
know at all, and he was keeping his mouth shut to make
folks think he knew but wasna telling.”
Jean now took up the tale. “Mrs.
Crumpet had all the news in town,” she said,
“and she told us that Angus Niel said he hoped
the new Laird was fond of the hunting and would appreciate
his work in preserving the game and driving poachers
from the forests of Glen Cairn. He said he had
done the work of ten men, and it was well that people
should know it and be able to tell the new Laird,
when he comes into his own!”
Even the Shepherd couldn’t help
smiling at that, and as for Jean and Jock, they shouted
with laughter. In spite of themselves, the children
and their father felt such relief from anxiety that
they walked back to the little gray house with lighter
hearts than they had felt for some time. Whoever
the new Laird might be, it would take time to settle
the estate and find out the will of its new owner,
and meanwhile they could live on in their old home.
Beyond that, they could even hope that they might not
have to go at all.
That night Jean cooked the first of
their early potatoes from the garden for supper and
a bit of ham to eat with them, by way of celebrating
their reprieve, and after supper the Shepherd got out
his bagpipes and played “The Blue Bells of Scotland”
until the rafters rang again. Jean stepped busily
about the kitchen in tune to the music, humming the
words to herself.
“Oh where, tell me where is
your Highland laddie gone?
He’s gone with streaming
banners where noble deeds are done,
And it’s oh! in my heart,
I wish him safe at home.”
And she thought of Alan as she sang.
Afterward, when Jock and Jean were safely stowed away
for the night, the Shepherd went over and brought
from the table in the room his well-worn copy of Robert
Burns’s “Poems,” and the last view
Jean had of him before she went to sleep, he was reading
“The Cotter’s Saturday Night” aloud
to himself by the light of a flickering candle.