That there was some unusual agitation
in the town Gilian could gather as soon as he had
set foot within the Arches in the early morning.
It was in the air, it was mustering many women at
the well. There they stood in loud and lingering
groups, their stoups running over extravagantly while
they kept the tap running, unconscious what they were
about Or they had a furtive aspect as they whispered
in the closes, their aprons wrapping their folded
arms. At the door of the New Inns, Mr. Spencer
was laying forth a theory of abduction. He had
had English experience, he knew life; for the first
time since he had come to this place of poor happenings
he had found something he could speak upon with authority
and an audience to listen with respect What his theory
was, Gilian might have heard fully as he passed; but
he was thinking of other things, and all that came
to him were two or three words, and one of the errant
sentences was seemingly about himself. That attracted
all his attention. He gave a glance at the people
at the door-the inn-keeper, MacGibbon,
with an unusual Kilmarnock bonnet on that seemed to
have been donned in a hurry; Rixa, in a great perturbation,
having just come out of a shandry-dan with which
he had been driving up Glen Shira; Major Paul, and
Wilson the writer. The inn-keeper, who was the
first to see the lad, stopped his speech with confusion
and reddened. They gave him a stare and a curt
acknowledgment of his passage of the time of day as
the saying goes, looked after him as he passed round
Old Islay’s corner, and found no words till
he was out of sight.
“That puts an end to that notion,
at any rate,” said the Sheriff, almost pleased
to find the Londoner in the wrong with his surmises.
And the others smiled at Mr. Spencer as people do
who told you so. Two minutes ago they were half
inclined to give some credit to the plausibility of
his reasoning.
The inn-keeper was visibly disturbed.
“Dear me! I have been doing the lad an
injustice after all; I could have sworn he was the
man in it if it was anybody.”
“Pooh!” said Rixa, “the
Paymaster’s boy! I would as soon expect
it of Gillesbeg Aotram.”
They went into the hostelry, and Gilian,
halfway round the factor’s corner, was well-nigh
ridden down by Turner on a roan horse spattered on
the breast and bridle with the foam of a hard morn’s
labour. He had scoured the countryside on every
outward road, and come early at the dawn to the ferry-house
and rapped wildly on the shutter. But nowhere
were tidings of his daughter. Gilian felt a traitor
to this man as he swept past, seeing nothing, with
a face cruel and vengeful, the flanks of his horse
streaked with crimson. The people shrunk back
in their closes and their shop-doors as he passed
all covered upon with the fighting passion that had
been slumbering up the glen since ever he came home
from the Peninsula.
It was the breakfast hour in the Paymaster’s.
Miss Mary was going in with the Book and had but time
to whisper welcome to her boy on the step of the door,
for the brothers waited and the clock was on the stroke.
Gilian had to follow her without a word of explanation.
He was hungry; he welcomed the little respite the
taking of food would give him from the telling of
a confidence he felt ashamed to share with Miss Mary.
The Paymaster mumbled a blessing upon
the vivours, then fed noisily, looking, when he looked
at Gilian at all, but at the upper buttons of his
coat as if through him, and letting not so little as
the edge of his gaze fall upon his face. That
was a studious contempt, and Gilian knew it, and there
were many considerations that made him feel no injury
at it. But the Cornal’s utter indifference-that
sent his eye roaming unrecognising into Gilian’s
and away again without a spark of recognition-was
painful. It would have been an insufferable meal,
even in his hunger, but for Miss Mary’s presence.
The little lady would be smiling to him across the
table without any provocation whenever her brothers’
eyes were averted, and the faint perfume of a silk
shawl she had about her shoulders endowed the air
with an odour of domesticity, womanhood, maternity.
For a long time nobody spoke, and
the pigeons came boldly to the sill of the open window
and cooed.
At last said the Paymaster, as if
he were resuming a conversation: “I met
him out there on horseback; the hunt is still up, I’m
thinking.”
“Ay?” said the Cornal,
as if he gripped the subject and waited the continuance
of the narrative.
“He’ll have ranged the
country, I’m thinking,” went on his brother.
“I could not but be sorry for the man.”
Miss Mary cast upon him a look he
seldom got from her, of warmth more than kinship,
but she had nothing to say; her voice was long dumb
in that parlour where she loved and feared, a woman
subjugate to a sex far less worthy than her own and
less courageous.
“Humph!” said the Cornal.
He felt with nervous inquiry at his ragged chin, inspired
for a second by old dreads of untidy morning parades.
“I had one consolation for my
bachelordom in him,” went on the younger brother,
and then he paused confused.
“And what might that be?” asked the Cornal.
“It’s that I’m never
like to be in the same scrape with a child of mine,”
he answered, pretending a jocosity that sat ill on
him. Then he looked at Miss Mary a little shamefaced
for a speech so uncommonly confidential.
The Cornal opened his mouth as if
he would laugh, but no sound came.
“I’m minding,” said
he, speaking slowly and in a muffled accent he was
beginning to have always; “I’m minding
when that same, cast in your face by the gentleman
himself, greatly put you about Jock, Jock, I mind you
were angry with Turner on that score! And no child
to have the same sorrows over! Well-well -”
He broke short and for the first time let his eyes
rest with any meaning on Gilian sitting at the indulgence
of a good morning’s appetite.
Miss Mary put about the breakfast
dishes with a great hurry to be finished and out of
this explosive atmosphere.
“There was an odd rumour-”
said the Paymaster. He paused a moment, looking
at the inattentive youth opposite him. He saw
no reason to stay his confidences, and the Cornal
was waiting expectingly on him. “An odd
rumour up the way; I heard it first from that gabbling
man Spencer at the Inns. It was that a young
gentleman of our acquaintance might have had a hand
in the affair. I could not say at the first whether
the notion vexed or pleased me, but I assured him
of the stupidity of it.” He looked his
brother in the eyes, and fixing his attention cunningly
dropped a lid to indicate that the young gentleman
was beside them.
The Cornal laughed, this time with a sound.
“Lord,” he cried.
“As if it was possible! You might go far
in that quarter for anything of dare-deviltry so likeable.
What’s more, is the girl daft? Her mother
had caprice enough, but to give her her due she took
up with men of spirit There was my brother Dugald -
But this one, what did Dugald call him-aye!
on his very death-bed? The dreamer, the dreamer!
It will hold true! Him, indeed!” And he
had no more words for his contempt.
All the time, however, Gilian was
luckily more or less separate from his company by
many miles of fancy, behind the hills among the lochs
watching the uprising of Nan, sharing her loneliness,
seeing her feet brush the dew from the scented gall.
But the Cornal’s allusion brought him to the
parlour of his banishment, away from that dear presence.
He listened now but said nothing. He feared his
very accent would betray his secret.
“I’ll tell you what it
is,” said the Cornal again, “whoever is
with her will rue it; mind, I’m telling you.
It’s like mother like child.”
“I’m glad,” said
the Paymaster, “I had nothing to do with the
sex of them.” He puffed up as he spoke
it; there was an irresistible comedy in the complacence
of a man no woman was ever like to run after at his
best. His sister looked at him; his brother chuckled
noiselessly.
“You-you-you -”
said the elder brother grimly, but again he did not
finish the sentence.
The meal went on for a time without
any speech, finished, and Miss Mary cried at the stair-head
for her maid, who came up and sat demurely at the
chair nearest the door while the Cornal, as hurriedly
as he might, ran over the morning’s sacred exercise
from the Bible Miss Mary laid before him. The
Paymaster took his seat beside the window, looking
out the while and heedless of the Scriptures, watched
the fishermen crowding for their mornings into the
house of Widow Gordon the vintner. Miss Mary
stole glances at her youth, the maid Peggy fidgeted
because she had left the pantry door open and the
cat was in the neighbourhood. As the old man’s
voice monotonously occupied the room, working its way
mumblingly through the end of Exodus, conveying no
meaning to the audience, Gilian heard the moor-fowl
cry beside Little Fox. The dazzle of the sunshine,
the sparkle of the water, the girl inhabiting that
solitary spot, seemed very real before him, and this
dolorous routine of the elderly in a parlour no more
than a dream from which he would waken to find himself
with the girl he loved. Upon his knees beside
his chair while the Cornal gruffly repeated the morning
prayer he learned from his father, he remained the
remote wanderer of fancy, and Miss Mary knew it by
the instinct of affection as she looked at the side
of his face through eyelids discreetly closed but
not utterly fastened.
The worship was no sooner over than
Gilian was for off after Miss Mary to her own room,
but the Paymaster stayed him with some cold business
query about the farm, and handed him a letter from
a low-country wool merchant relative to some old transaction
still unsettled. Gilian read it, and the brothers
standing by the window resumed their talk about the
missing girl: it was the subject inspired by every
glance into the street where each passerby, each loiterer
at a close mouth, was obviously canvassing the latest
news.
“There’s her uncle away
by,” said the Paymaster, straining his head to
follow a figure passing on the other side of the street.
“If they had kept a stricter eye on her from
the first when they had her they might have saved
themselves all this.”
“Stricter eye!” said the
Cornal. “You ken as much about women as
I ken about cattle. The veins of her body were
full of caprice, that’s what ailed her, and
for that is there any remède? I’m asking
you. As if I did not ken the mother of her!
Man, man, man! She was the emblem and type of
all her sex, I’m thinking, wanting all sobriety,
hating the thought of age in herself and unfriendly
to the same in others. A kind of a splash on
a fine day upon the deep sea, laughing over the surface
of great depths. I knew her well, Dugald knew
her -”
“You had every chance,”
said the Paymaster, who nowadays found more courage
to retort when his brother’s shortness and contempt
annoyed him.
“More chance, of course I had,”
said the Cornal. “I’m thinking you
had mighty little from yon lady.”
“Anyway, here’s her daughter
to seek,” said the Paymaster, feeling himself
getting the worst of the encounter; “my own notion
is that she’s on the road to Edinburgh.
They say she had aye a crave for the place; perhaps
there was a pair of breeches there behind her.
Anyway, she’s making an ass of somebody!”
Gilian threw down the letter and stood
to his feet with his face white. “You’re
a liar!” said he.
No shell in any of their foreign battles
more astounded the veterans he was facing with wide
nostril and a face like chalk.
“God bless me, here’s
a marvel!” cried the Cornal when he found voice.
“You-you-you
damned sheep!” blurted the Paymaster. “Do
you dare speak to me like that? For tuppence
I would give you my rattan across the legs.”
His face was purple with anger; the stock that ran
in many folds about his neck seemed like a garotte.
He lifted up his hand as if to strike, but his brother
caught his arm.
“Let the lad alone,” said
he. “If he had a little more of that in
his make I would like him better.”
Together they stood, the old men,
facing Gilian with his hands clenched, for the first
time in his life the mutineer, feeling a curious heady
satisfaction in the passion that braced him like a
sword and astounded the men before him.
“It’s a lie!” he
cried again, somewhat modifying his accusation.
“I know where she is, and she’s not in
Edinburgh nor on her way to it.”
“Very well,” said the
Paymaster, “ye better go and tell Old Islay where
she is; he’s put about at the loss of a daughter-in-law
he paid through the nose for, they’re saying.”
The blow, the last he had expected,
the last he had reason to look for, struck full and
hard. He was blind then to the old men sneering
at him there; his head seemed charged with coiling
vapours; his heart, that had been dancing a second
ago on the wave of passion, swamped and sank.
He had no more to say; he passed them and left the
room and went along the lobby to the stair-head, where
he stood till the vapours had somewhat blown away.