THE LOST BRIDE
This unforeseen and unhappy meeting
forced a climax in Sophy’s love affairs, which
she had hitherto not dared to face. In fact,
circumstances tending that way had arisen about a week
previously; and it was in consequence of them, that
she was publicly riding with Braelands when Andrew
met them. For a long time she had insisted on
secrecy in her intercourse with her “friend.”
She was afraid of Andrew; she was afraid of her aunt;
she was afraid of being made a talk and a speculation
to the gossips of the little town. And though
Miss Kilgour had begun to suspect somewhat, she was
not inclined to verify her suspicions. Madame
Braelands was a good customer, therefore she did not
wish to know anything about a matter which she was
sure would be a great annoyance to that lady.
But Madame herself forced the knowledge
on her. Some friend had called at Braelands and
thought it right to let her know what a dangerous
affair her son was engaged in. “For the
girl is beautiful,” she said, “there is
no denying that; and she comes of fisher-folk, who
have simply no idea but that love words and love-kisses
must lead to marrying and housekeeping, and who will
bitterly resent and avenge a wrong done to any woman
of their class, as you well know, Madame.”
Madame did know this very well; and
apart from her terror of a mésalliance for
the heir of Braelands, there was the fact that his
family had always had great political influence, and
looked to a public recognition of it. The fisher
vote was an important factor in the return of any
aspirant for Parliamentary honour; and she felt keenly
that Archie was endangering his whole future career
by his attentions to a girl whom it was impossible
he should marry, but who would have the power to arouse
against him a bitter antagonism, if he did not marry
her.
She affected to her friend a total
indifference to the subject of her son’s amusements,
and she said “she was moreover sure that Archibald
Braelands would never do anything to prejudice his
own honour, or the honour of the humblest fisher-girl
in Fifeshire.” But all the same, her heart
was sick with fear and anxiety; and as soon as her
informant had gone, she ordered her carriage, dressed
herself in all her braveries, and drove hastily to
Mistress Kilgour’s.
At that very hour, this lady was fussing
and fuming angrily at her niece. Sophy had insisted
on going for a walk, and in the altercation attending
this resolve, Mistress Kilgour had unadvisably given
speech to her suspicions about Sophy’s companion
in these frequent walks, and threatened her with a
revelation of these doubts to Andrew Binnie. But
in spite of all, Sophy had left the house; and her
aunt was nursing her wrath against her when Madame
Braeland’s carriage clattered up to her shop
door.
Now if Madame had been a prudent woman,
and kept the rein on her prideful temper, she would
have found Mistress Kilgour in the very mood suitable
for an ally. But Madame had also been nursing
her wrath, and as soon as Mistress Kilgour had appeared,
she asked angrily:—
“Where is that niece of yours,
Mistress Kilgour? I should very much like to
know.”
The tone of the question irritated
the dressmaker, and instantly her sympathies flew
toward her own kith, and kin, and class. Also,
her caution was at once aroused, and she answered
the question, Scotch-wise, by another question:—
“What for are you requiring to see Sophy, Madame?”
“Is she in the house?”
“Shall I go and see?”
“Go and see, indeed! You
know well she is not. You know she is away somewhere,
walking or driving with my son—with the
heir of Braelands. Oh, I have heard all about
their shameful carryings-on.”
“You’ll not need to use
the word ‘shameful’ with regard to my niece,
Sophy Traill, Madame Braelands. She has never
earned such a like word, and she never will.
You may take my say-so for that.”
“It is not anybody’s say-so
in this case. Seeing is believing, and they have
been seen together, walking in Fernie wood, and down
among the rocks on the Elie coast, and in many other
places.”
“Well and good, Madame.
What by that? Young things will be young things.”
“What by that? Do you,
a woman of your age, ask me such a question?
When a gentleman of good blood and family, as well
as great wealth, goes walking and driving with a poor
girl of no family at all, do you ask what by that?
Nothing but disgrace and trouble can be looked for.”
“Speak for your own kin and
side, Madame. And I should think a woman of your
age—being at least twenty years older than
myself—would know that true love never
asks for a girl’s pedigree. And as for ‘disgrace,’
Sophy Traill will never call anything like ‘disgrace’
to herself. I will allow that Sophy is poor,
but as for family, the Traills are of the best Norse
strain. They were sea-fighters, hundreds of years
before they were sea-fishers; and they had been ‘at
home’ on the North Sea, and in all the lands
about it, centuries before the like of the Braelands
were thought or heard tell of.”
Mistress Kilgour was rapidly becoming
angry, and Madame would have been wise to have noted
the circumstance; but she herself was now past all
prudence, and with an air of contempt she took out
her jewelled watch, and beginning to slowly wind it,
said:—
“My good woman, Sophy’s
father was a common fisherman. We have no call
to go back to the time when her people were pirates
and sea-robbers.”
“I am my own woman, Madame.
And I will take my oath I am not your woman,
anyhow. And ‘common’ or uncommon,
the fishermen of Fife call no man master but the Lord
God Almighty, from whose hands they take their food,
summer and winter. And I will make free to say,
moreover, that if Braelands loves Sophy Traill and
she loves him, worse might befall him than Sophy for
a wife. For if God thinks fit to mate them, it
is not Griselda Kilgour that will take upon herself
to contradict the Will of Heaven.”
“Don’t talk rubbish, Mistress
Kilgour. People who live in society have to regard
what society thinks and says.”
“It is no ways obligatory, Madame,
the voice of God and Nature has more weight, I’m
thinking, and if God links two together, you will find
it gey and hard to separate them.”
“I heard the girl was promised
since her babyhood to a fisherman called Andrew Binnie.”
“For once you have heard the
truth, Madame. But you know yourself that babyhood
and womanhood are two different things; and the woman
has just set at naught the baby. That is all.”
“No, it is not all. This
Andrew Binnie is a man of great influence among the
fishers, and my son cannot afford to make enemies among
that class. It will be highly prejudicial to
him.”
“I cannot help that Madame.
Braelands is well able to row his own boat. At
any rate, I am not called to take an oar in it.”
“Yes, you are. I have been
a good customer to you, Mistress Kilgour.”
“I am not denying it; at the
same time I have been a good dress and bonnet maker
to you, and earned every penny-bit you have paid me.
The obligation is mutual, I’m thinking.”
“I can be a still better customer
if you will prevent this gentle-shepherding and love-making.
I would not even scruple at a twenty pound note, or
perhaps two of them.”
“Straa! If you were
Queen of England, Madame, I would call you an insolent
dastard, to try and bribe me against my own flesh and
blood. You are a very Judas, to think of such
a thing. Good blood! fine family! indeed!
If your son is like yourself, I’m not caring
for him coming into my family at all.”
“Mistress Kilgour, you may close
my account with you. I shall employ you no more.”
“Pay me the sixteen pounds odd
you owe me, and then I will shut my books forever
against Braelands. Accounts are not closed till
outstanding money is paid in.”
“I shall send the money.”
“The sight of the money would
be better than the promise of it, Madame; for some
of it is owing more than a twelvemonth;” and
Mistress Kilgour hastily turned over to the Braelands
page of her ledger, while Madame, with an air of affront
and indignation, hastily left the shop.
Following this wordy battle with her
dressmaker, Madame had an equally stubborn one with
her son, the immediate consequence of which was that
very interview whose close was witnessed by Andrew
Binnie. In this conference Braelands acknowledged
his devotion to Sophy, and earnestly pleaded for Mistress
Kilgour’s favour for his suit. She was now
quite inclined to favour him. Her own niece,
as mistress of Braelands, would be not only a great
social success, but also a great financial one.
Madame Braelands’s capacity for bonnets was two
every year; Sophy’s capacity was unlimited.
Madame considered four dresses annually quite extravagant;
Sophy’s ideas on the same subject were constantly
enlarging. And then there would be the satisfaction
of overcoming Madame. So she yielded easily and
gracefully to Archie Braelands’s petition, and
thus Sophy suddenly found herself able to do openly
what she had hitherto done secretly, and the question
of her marriage with Braelands accepted as an understood
conclusion.
At this sudden culmination of her
hardly acknowledged desires, the girl was for a short
tune distracted. She felt that Andrew must now
be definitely resigned, and a strangely sad feeling
of pity and reluctance assailed her. There were
moments she knew not which lover was dearest to her.
The habit of loving Andrew had grown through long years
in her heart; she trusted him as she trusted no other
mortal, she was not prepared to give up absolutely
all rights in a heart so purely and so devotedly her
own. For if she knew anything, she knew right
well that no other man would ever give her the same
unfaltering, unselfish affection.
And when she dared to consider truthfully
her estimate of Archie Braelands, she judged his love,
passionate as it was, did not ring true through all
its depths. There were times when her little gaucheries
fretted him; when her dress did not suit him; when
he put aside an engagement with her for a sail with
a lord, or a dinner party with friends, or a social
function at his own home. Andrew put no one before
her; and even the business that kept him from her side
was all for her future happiness. Every object
and every aim of his life had reference to her.
It was hard to give up such a perfect love, and she
felt that she could not see Andrew face to face and
do it. Hence her refusals to meet him, and her
shyness and silence when a meeting was unavoidable.
Hence, also, came a very peculiar attitude of Andrew’s
friends and mates; for they could not conceive how
Andrew’s implicit faith in his love should prevent
him from finding out what was so evident to every
man and woman in Largo.
Alas! the knowledge had now come to
him. That it could have come in any harder way,
it is difficult to believe. There was only one
palliation to its misery—it was quite unpremeditated—but
even this mitigation of the affront hardly brought
him any comfort as yet Braelands was certainly deeply
grieved at the miserable outcome of the meeting.
He knew the pride of the fisher race, and he had himself
a manly instinct, strong enough to understand the
undeserved humiliation of Andrew’s position.
Honestly, as a gentleman, he was sorry the quarrel
had taken place; as a lover, he was anxious to turn
it to his own advantage. For he saw that, in
spite of all her coldness and apparent apathy, Sophy
was affected and wounded by Andrew’s bitter imploration
and its wretched and sorrowful ending. If the
man should gain her ear and sympathy, Braelands feared
for the result. He therefore urged her to an
immediate marriage; and when Mistress Kilgour was taken
into counsel, she encouraged the idea, because of
the talk which was sure to follow such a flagrant
breach of the courtesies of life.
But even at this juncture, Sophy’s
vanity must have its showing; and she refused to marry,
until at least two or three suitable dresses should
have been prepared; so the uttermost favour that could
be obtained from the stubborn little bride was a date
somewhere within two weeks away.
During these two weeks there was an
unspeakable unhappiness in the Binnie household.
For oh, how dreary are those wastes of life, left by
the loved who have deserted us! These are the
vacant places we water with our bitterest tears.
Had Sophy died, Andrew would have said, “It
is the Lord; let him do what seemeth right in his sight.”
But the manner and the means of his loss filled him
with a dumb sorrow and rage; for in spite of his mother’s
and sister’s urging, he would do nothing to
right his own self-respect at the price of giving Sophy
the slightest trouble or notoriety. Suffer!
Yes, he suffered at home, where Janet and Christina
continually reminded him of the insult he ought to
avenge; and he suffered also abroad, where his mates
looked at him with eyes full of surprise and angry
inquiries.
But though the village was ringing
with gossip about Sophy and young Braelands, never
a man or woman in it ventured to openly question the
stern, sullen, irritable man who had been so long recognised
as her accepted lover. And whether he was in
the boats or out of them, no one dared to speak Sophy’s
name in his presence. Indeed, upon the whole,
he was during these days what Janet Binnie called
“an ill man to live with—a man out
of his senses, and falling away from his meat and his
clothes.”
This misery continued for about two
weeks without any abatement, and Janet’s and
Christina’s sympathy was beginning to be tinged
with resentment. It seems so unnatural and unjust,
that a girl who had already done them so much wrong,
and who was so far outside their daily life, should
have the power to still darken their home, and infuse
a bitter drop into their peculiar joys and hopes.
“I am glad the wicked lass isn’t
near by me,” said Janet one morning, when Andrew
had declared himself unable to eat his breakfast and
gone out of the cottage to escape his mother’s
pleadings and reproofs. “I’m glad
she isn’t near me. If she was here, I could
not keep my tongue from her. She should hear
the truth for once, if she never heard it again.
They should be words as sharp as the birch rod she
ought to have had, when she first began her nonsense,
and her airs and graces.”
“She is a bad girl; but we must
remember that she was left much to herself—no
mother to guide her, no sister or brother either.”
“It would have been a pity if
there had been more of them. One scone of that
baking is enough. The way she has treated our
Andrew is abominable. Flesh and blood can’t
bear such doings.”
As Janet made this assertion, a cousin
of Sophy’s came into the cottage, and answered
her. “I know you are talking of Sophy,”
she said, “and I am not wondering at the terrivee
you are making. As for me, though she is my cousin,
I’ll never exchange the Queen’s language
with her again as long as I live in this world.
But all bad things come to an end, as well as good
ones, and I am bringing what will put a stop at last
to all this clishmaclaver about that wearisome lassie,”—and
with these words she handed Janet two shining white
cards, tied together with a bit of silver wire.
They were Sophy’s wedding cards;
and she had also sent from Edinburgh a newspaper containing
a notice of her marriage to Archibald Braelands.
The news was very satisfactory to Janet. She held
the bits of cardboard with her fingertips, looking
grimly at the names upon them. Then she laughed,
not very pleasantly, at the difference in the size
of the cards. “He has the wee card now,”
she said, “and Sophy the big one; but I’m
thinking the wee one will grow big, and the big one
grow little before long. I will take them to
Andrew myself; the sight of them will be a bitter
medicine, but it will do him good. Folks may count
it great gain when they get rid of a false hope.”
Andrew was walking moodily about the
bit of bare turf in front of the cottage door, stopping
now and then to look over the sea, where the brown
sails of some of the fishing boats still caught the
lazy south wind. He was thinking that the sea
was cloudy, and that there was an evil-looking sky
to the eastward; and then, as his mind took in at the
same moment the dangers to the fishers who people the
grey waters and his own sorrowful wrong, he turned
and began to walk about muttering—“Lord
help us! We must bear what is sent.”
Then Janet called him, and he watched
for her approach. She put the cards into his
hand saying, “Sophy’s cousin, Isobel Murray,
brought them.” Her voice was full of resentment;
and Andrew, not at the moment realising a custom so
unfamiliar in a fishing-village, looked wonderingly
in his mother’s face, and then at the fateful
white messengers.
“Read the names on them, Andrew
man, and you’ll know then why they are sent
to Pittendurie.”
Then he looked steadily at the inscription,
and the struggle of the inner man shook the outward
man visibly. It was like a shot in the backbone.
But it was only for a moment he staggered; though he
had few resources, his faith in the Cross and his
confidence in himself made him a match for his hard
fate. It is in such critical moments the soul
reveals if it be selfish or generous, and Andrew, with
a quick upward fling of the head, regained absolutely
that self-control, which he had voluntarily abdicated.
“You will tell Isobel,”
he said, “that I wish Mistress Braelands every
good thing, both for this life and the next.”
Then he stepped closer to his mother and kissed her;
and Janet was so touched and amazed that she could
not speak. But the look of loving wonder on her
face was far better than words. And as she stood
looking at him, Andrew put the cards in his pocket,
and went down to the sea; and Janet returned to the
cottage and gave Isobel the message he had sent.
But this information, so scanty and
yet so conclusive, by no means satisfied the curiosity
of the women. A great deal of indignation was
expressed by Sophy’s kindred and friends in the
village at her total ignoring of their claims.
They did not expect to be invited to a house like
Braelands; but they did think Sophy ought to have visited
them and told them all about her preparations and
future plans. They were her own flesh and blood,
and they deeply resented her non-recognition of the
claims of kindred. Isobel, as the central figure
of this dissatisfaction, was a very important person.
She at least had received “cards,” and
the rest of the cousins to the sixth degree felt that
they had been grossly slighted in the omission.
So Isobel, for the sake of her own popularity, was
compelled to make common cause, and to assert positively
that “she thought little of the compliment.”
Sophy only wanted her folk to know she was now Mistress
Braelands, and she had picked her out to carry the
news—good or bad news, none yet could say.
Janet was not inclined to discuss
the matter with her. She was so cold about it,
that Isobel quickly discovered she had ’work
to finish at her own house,’ for she recollected
that if the Binnies were not inclined to talk over
the affair there were plenty of wives and maids in
Pittendurie who were eager to do so. So Janet
and Christina were quickly left to their own opinions
on the marriage, the first of which was, that “Sophy
had behaved very badly to them.”
“But I wasn’t going to
say bad words for Isobel to clash round the village,”
said Janet “and I am gey glad Andrew took the
news so man-like and so Christian-like. They
can’t make any speculations about Andrew now,
and that will be a sore disappointment to the hussies,
for some of them are but ill willy creatures.”
“I am glad Andrew kept a brave
heart, and could bring good words out of it.”
“What else would you expect
from Andrew? Do you think Andrew Binnie will
fret himself one moment about a wife that is not his
wife? He would not give the de’il such
a laugh over him. You may take my word, that
he will break no commandment for any lass; and Sophy
Braelands will now have to vacate his very thoughts.”
“I am glad she is married then.
If her marriage cures Andrew of that never-ending
fret about her, it will be a comfort.”
“It is a cure, sure as death,
as far as your brother is concerned. Fancy Andrew
Binnie pining and worrying about Archie Braelands’s
wife! The thing would be sinful, and therefore
fairly impossible to him! I’m as glad as
you are that no worse than marriage has come to the
lass; she is done with now, and I am wishing her no
more ill than she has called to herself.”
“She has brought sorrow enough
to our house,” said Christina. “All
the days of my own courting have been saddened and
darkened with the worry and the care of her.
Andrew was always either that set up or that knocked
down about her, that he could not give a thought to
Jamie’s and my affairs. It was only when
you talked about Sophy, or his wedding with Sophy,
that he looked as if the world was worth living in.
He was fast growing into a real selfish man.”
“Toots! Every one in
love—men or women—are as selfish
as they can be. The whole round world only holds
two folk: their own self, and another. I
would like to have a bit of chat before long, that
did not set itself to love-making and marrying.”
“Goodness, Mother! You
have not chatted much with me lately about love-making
and marrying. Andrew’s trouble has filled
the house, and you have hardly said a word about poor
Jamie, who never gave either of us a heartache.
I wonder where he is to-day!”
Janet thought a moment and then answered:
“He would leave New York for Scotland, last
Saturday. ’T is Wednesday morning now, and
he will maybe reach Glasgow next Tuesday. Then
it will not take him many hours to find himself in
Pittendurie.”
“I doubt it. He will not
be let come and go as he wants to. It would not
be reasonable. He will have to obey orders.
And when he gets off, it will be a kind of favour.
A steamboat and a fishing-boat are two different things,
Mother, forbye, Jamie is but a new hand, and will
have his way to win.”
“What are you talking about,
you silly, fearful lassie? It would be a poor-like,
heartless captain, that had not a fellow-feeling for
a lad in love. Jamie will just have to tell him
about yourself, and he will send the lad off with
a laugh, or maybe a charge not to forget the ship’s
sailing-day. Hope well, and have well, lassie.”
“You’ll be far mistaken,
Mother. I am not expecting Jamie for more than
two or three trips—but he’ll be thinking
of me, and I can not help thinking of him.”
“Think away, Christina.
Loving thoughts keep out others, not as good.
I wonder how it would do to walk as far as Largo,
and find out all about the marriage from Griselda
Kilgour. Then I would have the essentials,
and something worth telling and talking about.”
“I would go, Mother. Griselda
will be thirsty to tell all she knows, and just distracted
with the glory of her niece. She will hold herself
very high, no doubt.”
“Griselda and her niece are
two born fools, and I am not to be put to the wall
by the like of them. And it is not beyond hoping,
that I’ll be able to give the woman a mouthful
of sound advice. She’s a set-up body, but
I shall disapprove of all she says.”
“You may disapprove till you
are black in the face, Mother, but Griselda will hold
her own; she is neither flightersome, nor easy frightened.
I’m feared it is going to rain. I see the
glass has fallen.”
“I’m not minding the ‘glass’.
The sky is clear, and I think far more of the sky,
and the look of it, than I do of the ‘glass’.
I wonder at Andrew hanging it in our house; it is
just sinful and unlucky to be taking the change of
the weather out of His hands. But rain or fine,
I am going to Largo.”
As she spoke, she was taking out of
her kist a fine Paisley shawl and a bonnet, and with
Christina’s help she was soon dressed to her
own satisfaction. Fortunately one of the fishers
was going with his cart to Largo, so she got a lift
over the road, and reached Griselda Kilgour’s
early in the afternoon. There were no bonnets
and caps in the window of the shop, and when Janet
entered, the place had a covered-up, Sabbath-day look
that kindled her curiosity. The ringing of the
bell quickly brought Mistress Kilgour forward, and
she also had an unusual look. But she seemed
pleased to see Janet, and very heartily asked her
into the little parlour behind.
“I’m just home,”
she said, “and I’m making myself a cup
of tea ere I sort up the shop and get to my day’s
work again. Sit down, Janet, and take off your
things, and have a cup with me. Strange days and
strange doings in them lately!”
“You may well lift up your eyes
and your hands, Griselda. I never heard tell
of the like. The whole village is in a flustration;
and I just came o’er-by, to find out from you
the long and the short of everything. I’m
feared you have been sorely put about with the wilful
lass.”
“Mistress Braelands had no one
to lippen to but me. I had everything to look
after. The Master of Braelands was that far gone
in love, he wasn’t to be trusted with anything.
But my niece has done a good job for herself.”
“It is well some one
has got good out of her treachery. She brought
sorrow enough to my house. But I’m glad
it is all over, and that Braelands has got her.
She wouldn’t have suited my son at all, Griselda.”
“Not in the least,” answered
the dressmaker with an air of offence. “How
many lumps of sugar, Janet?”
“I’m not taking sugar. Where was
the lass married?”
“In Edinburgh.” We
didn’t want any talk and fuss about the wedding,
and Braelands he said to me, ’Mistress Kilgour,
if you will take a little holiday, and go with Sophy
to Edinburgh, and give her your help about the things
she requires, we shall both of us be your life-long
debtors.’ And I thought Edinburgh was the
proper place, and so I went with Sophy—putting
up a notice on the shop door that I had gone to look
at the winter fashions and would be back to-day—and
here I am for I like to keep my word.
“You didn’t keep it with
my Andrew, for you promised to help him with Sophy,
you promised that more than once or twice.”
“No one can help a man who fights
against himself, and Andrew never did prize Sophy
as Braelands did, the way that man ran after the lass,
and coaxed and courted and pleaded with her!
And the bonnie things he gave her! And the stone
blind infatuation of the creature! Well I never
saw the like. He was that far gone in love, there
was nothing for him but standing up before the minister.”
“What minister?”
“Dr. Beith of St. Andrews.
Braelands sits in St. Andrews, when he is in Edinburgh
for the winter season and Dr. Beith is knowing him
well. I wish you could have seen the dresses
and the mantillas, the bonnets and the fineries of
every sort I had to buy Sophy, not to speak of the
rings and gold chains and bracelets and such things,
that Braelands just laid down at her feet.”
“What kind of dresses?”
“Silks and satins—white
for the wedding-dress—and pink, and blue
and tartan and what not! I tell you McFinlay
and Co. were kept busy day and night for Sophy Braelands.”
Then Mistress Kilgour entered into
a minute description of all Sophy’s beautiful
things, and Janet listened attentively, not only for
her own gratification, but also for that of every
woman in Pittendurie. Indeed she appeared so
interested that her entertainer never suspected the
anger she was restraining with difficulty until her
curiosity had been satisfied. But when every
point had been gone over, when the last thing about
Sophy’s dress and appearance had been told and
discussed, Janet suddenly inquired, “Have they
come back to Largo yet?”
“Indeed nothing so common,”
answered Griselda, proudly. “They have gone
to foreign lands—to France, and Italy, and
Germany,”—and then with a daring
imagination she added, “and it’s like they
won’t stop short of Asia and America.”
“Well, Jamie Logan, my Christina’s
promised man is on the American line. I dare
say he will be seeing her on his ship, and no doubt
he will do all he can to pleasure her.”
“Jamie Logan! Sophy would
not think of noticing him now. It would not be
proper.”
“What for not? He is as
good a man as Archie Braelands, and if all reports
be true, a good deal better.”
“Archie indeed!
I’m thinking ‘Master Braelands’ would
be more as it should be.”
“I’ll never ‘master’
him. He is no ‘master’ of mine.
What for does he have a Christian name, if he is not
to be called by it?”
“Well, Janet, you need not show
your temper. Goodness knows, it is as short as
a cat’s hair. And Braelands is beyond your
tongue, anyhow.”
“I’m not giving him a
word. Sophy will pay every debt he is owing me
and mine. The lassie has been badly guided all
her life, and as she would not be ruled by the rudder,
she must be ruled by the rocks.”
“Think shame of yourself!
For speaking ill to a new-made bride! How would
you like me to say such words to Christina?”
“Christina would never give
occasion for them. She is as true as steel to
her own lad.”
“Maybe she has no temptation
to be false. That makes a deal of differ.
Anyway, Sophy is a woman now in the married state,
and answerable to none but her husband. I hope
Andrew is not fretting more than might be expected.”
“Andrew! Andrew fretting!
Not he! Not a minute! As soon as he knew
she was a wife, he cast her out of his very thoughts.
You don’t catch Andrew Binnie putting a light-of-love
lassie before a command of God.”
“I won’t hear you talk
of my niece—of the mistress of Braelands—in
that kind of a way, Janet. She’s our betters
now, and we be to take notice of the fact”
“She’ll have to learn
and unlearn a good lot before she is to be spoke of
as any one’s ‘betters.’ I hope
while she is seeing the world she will get her eyes
opened to her own faults; they will give her plenty
to think of.”
“Keep me, woman! Such a
way to go on about your own kin.”
“She is no kin to the Binnies.
I have cast her out of my reckoning.”
“She is Christina’s sixth cousin.”
“She is nothing at all to us.
I never did set any store by those Orkney folks—a
bad lot! A very selfish, false, bad lot!”
“You are speaking of my people, Janet.”
“I am quite aware of it, Griselda.”
“Then keep your tongue in bounds.”
“My tongue is my own.”
“My house is my own. And
if you can’t be civil, I’ll be necessitated
to ask you to leave it.”
“I’m going as soon as
I have told you that you have the most gun-powdery
temper I ever came across; forbye, you are fairly drunk
with the conceit and vanity of Sophy’s grand
marriage. You are full as the Baltic with the
pride of it, woman!”
“Temper! It is you, that are in a temper.”
“That’s neither here nor there. I
have my reasons.”
“Reasons, indeed! I’d like to see
you reasonable for once.”
“Yes, I have my reasons.
How was my lad Andrew used by the both of you?
And what do you think of his last meeting with that
heartless limmer and her fine sweetheart?”
“Andrew should have kept himself
out of their way. As soon as Braelands came round
Sophy, Andrew got the very de’il in him.
I was aye feared there would be murder laid to his
name.”
“You needn’t have been
feared for the like of that. Andrew Binnie has
enough of the devil in him to keep the devil out of
him. Do you think he would put blood on his soul
for Sophy Traill? No, not for twenty lasses better
than her! You needn’t look at me as if your
eyes were cocked pistols. I have heard all I
wanted to hear, and said all I wanted to say, and
now I’ll be stepping homeward.”
“I’ll be obligated to
you to go at once—the sooner the better.”
“And I’ll never speak
to you again in this world, Griselda; nor in the next
world either, unless you mend your manners. Mind
that!”
“You are just full of envy,
and all uncharitableness, and evil speaking, Janet
Binnie. But I trust I have more of the grace of
God about me than to return your ill words.”
“That may be. It only shows
folk that the grace of God will bide with an old woman
that no one else can bide with.”
“Old woman! I am twenty years younger—”
But Janet had passed out of the room
and clashed the shop door behind her with a pealing
ring; so Griselda’s little scream of indignation
never reached her. It is likely, however, she
anticipated the words that followed her, for she went
down the street, folding her shawl over her ample
chest, and smiling the smile of those who have thrown
the last word of offence.
She did not reach home until quite
dark, for she was stopped frequently by little groups
of the wives and maids of Pittendurie, who wanted to
hear the news about Sophy. It pleased Janet, for
some reason, to magnify the girl’s position
and all the fine things it had brought her. Perhaps,
because she felt dimly that it placed Andrew’s
defeat in a better Tight. No one could expect
a mere fisherman to have any chance against a man
able to shower silks and satins and gold and jewels
upon his bride, and who could take her to France and
Italy and Germany, not to speak of Asia and America.
But if this was her motive, it was
a bit of motherhood thrown away. Andrew had sources
of comfort and vindication which looked far beyond
all petty social opinion. He was on the sea alone
till nearly dark; then he came home, with the old
grave smile on his face, saying, as he entered the
house, “There will be a heavy blow from the northeast
to-night, Christina. I see the boats are all at
anchor, and no prospect of a fishing.”
“Ay, and I saw the birds, who
know more than we do, making for the rocks. I
wish mother would come,”—and she opened
the door and looked out into the dark vacancy.
“There is a voice in the sea to-night, Andrew,
and I don’t like the wail of it.”
But Andrew had gone to his room, and
so she left the door open until Janet returned.
And the first question Janet asked was concerning
Andrew. “Has he come home yet, Christina?
I’m feared for a boat on the sea to-night.”
“He is home, and I think he
has fallen asleep. He looked very tired.”
“How is he taking his trouble?”
“Like a man. Like himself.
He has had his wrestle out on the sea, and has come
out with a victory.”
“The Lord be thanked! Now,
Christina, I have heard everything about that wicked
lassie. Let us have a cup of tea and a herring—for
it is little good I had of Griselda’s wishy-washy
brew—and then I’ll tell you the news
of the wedding, the beginning and the end of it.”