THE RIGHTING OF A WRONG
So Andrew sailed for New York, and
life resumed its long forgotten happy tenor in the
Binnie cottage. Janet sang about her spotless
houseplace, feeling almost as if it was a new gift
of God to her; and Christina regarded their small
and simple belongings with that tender and excessive
affection which we are apt to give to whatever has
been all but lost and then unexpectedly recovered.
Both women involuntarily showed this feeling in the
extra care they took of everything. Never had
the floors and chairs and tables been scrubbed and
rubbed to such spotless beauty; and every cup and
platter and small ornament was washed and dusted with
such care as could only spring from heart-felt gratitude
in its possession. Naturally they had much spare
time, for as Janet said, ’having no man to cook
and wash for lifted half the work from their hands,’
but they were busy women for all that. Janet began
a patch-work quilt of a wonderful design as a wedding
present for Christina; and as the whole village contributed
“pieces” for its construction, the whole
village felt an interest in its progress. It
was a delightful excuse for Janet’s resumption
of her old friendly, gossipy ways; and every afternoon
saw her in some crony’s house, spreading out
her work, and explaining her design, and receiving
the praises and sometimes the advice of her acquaintances.
Christina also, quietly but yet hopefully,
began again her preparations for her marriage; for
Janet laughed at her fears and doubts. “Andrew
was sure to find Jamie, and Jamie was sure to be glad
to come home again. It stands to reason,”
she said confidently. “The very sight of
Andrew will be a cordial of gladness to him; for he
will know, as soon as he sees the face of him, that
the brother will mean the sister and the wedding ring.
If you get the spindle and distaff ready, my lass,
God is sure to send the flax; and by the same token,
if you get your plenishing made and marked, and your
bride-clothes finished, God will certainly send the
husband.”
“Jamie said in his last letter—the
one in which he bid me farewell—’I
will never come back to Scotland.’”
“Toots! Havers!
‘I will’ is for the Lord God Almighty
to say. A sailor-man’s ‘I will’
is just breath, that any wind may blow away. When
Andrew gives him the letter you sent, Jamie will not
be able to wait for the next boat for Scotland.”
“He may have taken a fancy to
America and want to stop there.”
“What are you talking about,
Christina Binnie? There is nothing but scant
and want in them foreign countries. Oh! my lass,
he will come home, and be glad to come home; and you
will have the hank in your own hand. See that
you spin it cannily and happily.”
“I hope Andrew will not make
himself sick again looking for the lost.”
“I shall have little pity for
him, if he does. I told him to make good days
for himself; why not? He is about his duty; the
law of kindness is in his heart, and the purpose of
putting right what he put wrong is the wind that drives
him. Well then, his journey—be it short
or long—ought to be a holiday to him, and
a body does not deserve a holiday if he cannot take
advantage of one. Them were my last words to
Andrew.”
“Jamie may have seen another
lass. I have heard say the lassies in America
are gey bonnie.”
“I’ll just be stepping
if you have nothing but frets and fears to say.
When things go wrong, it is mostly because folks will
have them wrong and no other way.”
“In this world, Mother, the giffs and the gaffs—”
“In this world, Christina, the
giffs and the gaffs generally balance one another.
And if they don’t,—mind what I say,—it
is because there is a moral defect on the failing
side. Oh! but women are flightersome and easy
frighted.”
“Whyles you have fears yourself, Mother.”
“Ay, I am that foolish whyles;
but I shall be a sick, weak body, when I can’t
outmarch the worst of them.”
“You are just an oracle, Mother.”
“Not I; but if I was a very
saint, I would say every morning of my life:
‘Now then, Soul, hope for good and have good.’
Many a sad heart folks get they have no need to have.
Take out your needle and thimble and go to your wedding
clothes, lassie; you will need them before the summer
is over. You may take my word for that.”
“If Jamie should still love me.”
“Love you! He will be that
far gone in love with you that there will be no help
for him but standing up before the minister. That
will be seen and heard tell of. Lift your white
seam, and be busy at it; there is nothing else to
do till tea time, and I am away for an hour or two
to Maggie Buchans. Her man went to Edinburgh
this morning. What for, I don’t know yet,
but I’ll maybe find out.”
It was on this very afternoon that
Janet first heard that there was trouble and a sound
of more trouble at Braelands. Sophy had driven
down in her carriage the previous day to see her cousin
Isobel Murray, and some old friends who had gone into
Isobel’s had found the little Mistress of Braelands
weeping bitterly in her cousin’s arms. After
this news Janet did not stay long at Maggie Buchans;
she carried her patch-work to Isobel Murray’s,
and as Isobel did not voluntarily name the subject,
Janet boldly introduced it herself.
“I heard tell that Sophy Braelands was here
yesterday.”
“Aye, she was.”
“A grand thing for you, Isobel,
to have the Braelands’s yellow coach and pair
standing before the Murray cottage all of two or three
hours.”
“It did not stand before my
cottage, Janet. The man went to the public house
and gave the horses a drink, and himself one too, or
I am much mistaken, for I had to send little Pete
Galloway after him.”
“I think Sophy might have called on me.”
“No doubt she would have done
so, had she known that Andrew was away, but I never
thought to tell her until the last moment.”
“Is she well? I was hearing that she looked
but poorly.”
“You were hearing the truth. She looks
bad enough.”
“Is she happy, Isobel?”
“I never asked her that question.”
“You have eyes and observation. Didn’t
you ask yourself that question?”
“Maybe I did.”
“What then?”
“I have nothing to say anent it.”
“What was she talking about?
You know, Isobel, that Sophy is kin of mine, and I
loved her mother like my own sister. So I be to
feel anxious about the little body. I’m
feared things are not going as well as they might
do. Madame Braelands is but a hard-grained woman.”
“She is as cruel a woman and
as bad a woman as there is between this and wherever
she may be.”
“Isn’t she at Braelands?”
“Not for a week or two.
She’s away to Acker Castle, and her son with
her.”
“And why not Sophy also?”
“The poor lassie would not go—she
says she could not. Well, Janet, I may as good
confess that there is something wrong that she does
not like to speak of yet. She is just at the
crying point now, the reason why and wherefore will
come anon.”
“But she be to say something to you.”
“I’ll tell you. She
said she was worn out with learning this and that,
and she was humbled to death to find out how ignorant
and full of faults she was. Madame Braelands
is both schoolmistress and mother-in-law, and there
does not seem to be a minute of the day in which the
poor child isn’t checked and corrected.
She has lost all her pretty ways, and she says she
cannot learn Madame’s ways; and she is feared
for herself, and shamed for herself. And when
the invitation came for Acker Castle, Madame told
her she must not accept it for her husband’s
sake, because all his great friends were to be there,
and they were to discuss his going to Parliament,
and she would only shame and disgrace him. And
you may well conceive that Sophy turned obstinate
and said she would bide in her own home. And,
someway, her husband did not urge her to go and this
hurt her worst of all; and she felt lonely and broken-hearted,
and so came to see me. That is everything about
it, but keep it to yourself, Janet, it isn’t
for common clash.”
“I know that. But did Madame
Braelands and her son really go away and leave Sophy
her lone?”
“They left her with two or three
teachers to worry the life out of her. They went
away two days ago; and Madame was in full feather and
glory, with her son at her beck and call, and all
her grand airs and manners about her. Sophy says
she watched them away from her bedroom window, and
then she cried her heart out. And she couldn’t
learn her lessons, and so sent the man teacher and
the woman teacher about their business. She says
she will not try the weary books again to please anybody;
they make her head ache so that she is like to swoon
away.”
“Sophy was never fond of books;
but I thought she would like the music.”
“Aye, if they would let her
have her own way about it. She has her father’s
little fiddle, and when she was but a bare-footed lassie,
she played on it wonderful.”
“I remember. You would
have thought there was a linnet living inside of it.”
“Well, she wanted to have some
lessons on it, and her husband was willing enough,
but Madame went into hysterics about the idea of anything
so vulgar. There is a constant bitter little quarrel
between the two women, and Sophy says she cannot go
to her husband with every slight and cruelty.
Madame laughs at her, or pretends to pet her, or else
gets into passions at what she calls Sophy’s
unreasonableness; and Archie Braelands is weary to
death of complaining, and just turns sulky or goes
out of the house. Oh, Janet, I can see and feel
the bitter, cruel task-woman over the poor, foolish
child! She is killing her, and Archie Braelands
does not see the right and the wrong of it all.”
“I’ll make him see it.”
“You will hold your tongue,
Janet. They who stir in muddy water only make
it worse.”
“But Archie Braelands loved
her, or he would not have married her; and if he knew
the right and the wrong of poor Sophy’s position—”
“I tell you, that is nothing to it, Janet.”
“It is everything to it. Right is right,
in the devil’s teeth.”
“I’m sorry I said a word
to you; it is a dangerous thing to get between a man
and his wife. I would not do it, not even for
Sophy; for reason here or reason there, folks be to
take care of themselves; and my man gets siller from
Braelands, more than we can afford to lose.”
“You are taken with a fit of
the prudentials, Isobel; and it is just extraordinary
how selfish they make folk.”
And yet Janet herself, when going
over the conversation with Christina, was quite inclined
on second thoughts not to interfere in Sophy’s
affairs, though both were anxious and sorrowful about
the motherless little woman.
“She ought to be with her husband
wherever he is, court or castle,” said Christina.
“She is a foolish woman to let him go away with
her enemy, and such a clever enemy as Madame Braelands
is. I think, Mother, you ought to call on Sophy,
and give her a word of love and a bit of good advice.
Her mother was very close to you.”
“I know, Christina; but Isobel
was right about the folly of coming between a man
and his wife. I would just get the wyte of it.
Many a sore heart I have had for meddling with what
I could not mend.”
Yet Janet carried the lonely, sorrowful
little wife on her heart continually; though, after
a week or two had passed and nothing new was heard
from Braelands, every one began to give their sympathy
to Christina and her affairs. Janet was ready
to talk of them. There were some things she wished
to explain, though she was too proud to do so until
her friends felt interest enough to ask for explanations.
And as soon as it was discovered that Andrew had gone
to America, the interest and curiosity was sufficiently
keen and eager to satisfy even Janet.
“It fairly took the breath from
me,” said Sabrina Roy, “when I was told
the like of that. I cannot think there is a word
of truth in such a report.”
Mistress Roy was sitting at Janet’s
fireside, and so had the privilege of a guest; but,
apart from this, it gave Janet a profound satisfaction
to answer: “Ay, well, Sabrina, the clash
is true for once in a lifetime. Andrew has gone
to America, and the Lord knows where else beside.”
“Preserve us all! I wouldn’t
believe it, only from your own lips, Janet. Whatever
would be the matter that sent him stravaging round
the world, with no ship of his own beneath his feet
or above his head?”
“A matter of right and wrong,
Sabrina. My Andrew has a strict conscience and
a sense of right that would be ornamental in a very
saint. Not to make a long story of it, he and
Jamie Logan had a quarrel. It was the night Andrew
took his inflammation, and it is very sure his brain
was on fire and off its judgment at the time.
But we were none of us thinking of the like of that;
and so the bad words came, and stirred up the bad
blood, and if I hadn’t been there myself, there
might have been spilled blood to end all with, for
they were both black angry.”
“Guide us, woman! What was it all about?”
“Well, Sabrina, it was about
siller; that is all I am free to say. Andrew
was sure he was right, and Jamie was sure he was wrong;
and they were going fairly to one another’s
throats, when I stepped in and flung them apart.”
“And poor Christina had the
buff and the buffet to take and to bear for their
tempers?”
“Not just that. Jamie begged
her to go away with him, and the lassie would have
gone if I hadn’t got between her and the door.
I had a hard few minutes, I can tell you, Sabrina;
for when men are beside themselves with passion, they
are in the devil’s employ, and it’s no
easy work to take a job out of his hands.
But I sent Jamie flying down the cliff, and I locked
the door and put the key in my pocket, and ordered
Andrew and Christina off to their beds, and thought
I would leave the rest of the business till the next
day; but before midnight Andrew was raving, and the
affair was out of my hands altogether.”
“It is a wonder Christina did not go after her
lad.”
“What are you talking about,
Sabrina? It would have been a world’s wonder
and a black, burning shame if my girl had gone after
her lad in such a calamitous time. No, no, Christina
Binnie isn’t the kind of girl that shrinks in
the wetting. When her time of trial came, she
did the whole of her duty, showing herself day by
day a witness and a testimony to her decent, kirk-going
forefathers.”
“And so Andrew has found out
he was wrong and Jamie Logan right?”
“Aye, he has. And the very
minute he did so, he made up his mind to seek the
lad far and near and confess his fault.”
“And bring him back to Christina?”
“Just so. What for not?
He parted them, and he has the right and duty to bring
them together again, though it take the best years
of his life and the last bawbee of his money.”
“Folks were saying his money was all spent.”
“Folks are far wrong then.
Andrew has all the money he ever had. Andrew
isn’t a bragger, and his money has been silent
so far, but it will speak ere long.”
“With money to the fore, you
shouldn’t have been so scrimpit with yourselves
in such a time of work and trouble. Folks noticed
it.”
“I don’t believe in wasting
anything, Sabrina, even grief. I did not spend
a penny, nor a tear, nor a bit of strength, that was
useless. What for should I? And if folks
noticed we were scrimpit, why didn’t they think
about helping us? No, thank God! We have
enough and a good bit to spare, for all that has come
and gone, and if it pleases the Maker of Happiness
to bring Jamie Logan back again, we will have a bridal
that will make a monumental year in Pittendurie.”
“I am glad to hear tell o’
that. I never did approve of two or three at
a wedding. The more the merrier.”
“That is a very sound observe.
My Christina will have a wedding to be seen and heard
tell of from one sacramental occasion to another.”
“Well, then, good luck to Andrew
Binnie, and may he come soon home and well home, and
sorrow of all kinds keep a day’s sail behind
him. And surely he will go back to the boats
when he has saved his conscience, for there is never
a better sailor and fisher on the North Sea. The
men were all saying that when he was so ill.”
“It is the very truth.
Andrew can read the sea as well as the minister can
read the Book. He never turns his back on it;
his boat is always ready to kiss the wind in its teeth.
I have been with him when rip! rip! rip! went
her canvas; but I hadn’t a single fear, I knew
the lad at the helm. I knew he would bring her
to her bearings beautifully. He always did, and
then how the gallant bit of a creature would shake
herself and away like a sea-gull. My Andrew is
a son of the sea as all his forbears were. Its
salt is in his blood, and when the tide is going with
a race and a roar, and the break of the waves and the
howl of the wind is like a thousand guns, then Andrew
Binnie is in the element he likes best; aye, though
his boat be spinning round like a laddie’s top.”
“Well, Janet, I will be going.”
“Mind this, Sabrina, I have
told you all to my heart’s keel; and if folks
are saying to you that Jamie has given Christina the
slip, or that the Binnies are scrimpit for poverty’s
sake, or the like of any other ill-natured thing,
you will be knowing how to answer them.”
“’Deed, I will! And
I am real glad things are so well with you all, Janet.”
“Well, and like to be better,
thank God, as soon as Andrew gets back from foreign
parts.”
In the meantime, Andrew, after a pleasant
sail, had reached New York. He made many friends
on the ship, and in the few days of bad weather usually
encountered came to the front, as he always did when
winds were blowing and sailor-men had to wear oil
skins. The first sight of the New World made
him silent. He was too prudent to hazard an opinion
about any place so remote and so strange, though he
cautiously admitted “the lift was as blue as
in Scotland and the sunshine not to speak ill of.”
But as his ideas of large towns had been formed upon
Edinburgh and Glasgow, he could hardly admire New
York. “It looks,” he said to an acquaintance
who was showing him the city, “it looks as if
it had been built in a hurry;” for he was thinking
of the granite streets and piers of Glasgow.
“Besides,” he added, “there is no
romance or beauty about it; it is all straight lines
and squares. Man alive! you should see Edinburgh
the sel of it, the castle, and the links, and the bonnie
terraces, and the Highland men parading the streets,
it is just a bit of poetry made out of builders stones.”
With the information he had received
from the mate of the “Circassia,” and
his advice and directions, Andrew had little difficulty
in locating Jamie Logan. He found his name in
the list of seamen sailing a steamer between New York
and New Orleans; and this steamer was then lying at
her pier on the North River. It was not very hard
to obtain permission to interview Jamie, and armed
with this authority, he went to the ship one very
hot afternoon about four o’clock.
Jamie was at the hold, attending to
the unshipping of cargo; and as he lifted himself
from the stooping attitude which his work demanded,
he saw Andrew Binnie approaching him. He pretended,
however, not to see him, and became suddenly very
deeply interested in the removal of a certain case
of goods. Andrew was quite conscious of the affectation,
but he did not blame Jamie; it only made him the more
anxious to atone for the wrong he had done. He
stepped rapidly forward, and with extended hands said:—
“Jamie Logan, I have come all
the way from Scotland to ask you to forgive me.
I thought wrong of you, and I said wrong to you, and
I am sorry for it. Can you pass it by for Christ’s
sake?”
Jamie looked into the speaker’s
face, frankly and gravely, but with the air of a man
who has found something he thought lost. He took
Andrew’s hands in his own hands and answered:—
“Aye, I can forgive you with
all my heart. I knew you would come to yourself
some day, Andrew; but it has seemed a long time waiting.
I have not a word against you now. A man that
can come three thousand miles to own up to a wrong
is worth forgiving. How is Christina?”
“Christina is well, but tired-like
with the care of me through my long sickness.
She has sent you a letter, and here it is. The
poor lass has suffered more than either of us; but
never a word of complaining from her. Jamie,
I have promised her to bring you back with me.
Can you come?”
“I will go back to Scotland
with you gladly, if it can be managed. I am fair
sick for the soft gray skies, and the keen, salt wind
of the North Sea. Last Sabbath Day I was in New
Orleans—fairly baking with the heat of
the place—and I thought I heard the kirk
bells across the sands, and saw Christina stepping
down the cliff with the Book in her hands and her
sweet smile making all hearts but mine happy.
Andrew man, I could not keep the tears out of my een,
and my heart was away down to my feet, and I was fairly
sick with longing.”
They left the ship together and spent
the night in each other’s company. Their
room was a small one, in a small river-side hotel,
hot and close smelling; but the two men created their
own atmosphere. For as they talked of their old
life, the clean, sharp breezes of Pittendurie swept
through the stifling room; they tasted the brine on
the wind’s wings, and felt the wet, firm sands
under their feet. Or they talked of the fishing
boats, until they could see their sails bellying out,
as they lay down just enough to show they felt the
fresh wind tossing the spray from their bows and lifting
themselves over the great waves as if they stepped
over them.
Before they slept, they had talked
themselves into a fever of home sickness, and the
first work of the next day was to make arrangements
for Jamie’s release from his obligations.
There was some delay and difficulty about this matter,
but it was finally completed to the satisfaction of
all parties, and Andrew and Jamie took the next Anchor
Line steamer for Glasgow.
On the voyage home, the two men got
very close to each other, not in any accidental mood
of confidence, but out of a thoughtful and assured
conviction of respect. Andrew told Jamie all about
his lost money and the plans for his future which
had been dependent on it, and Jamie said—
“No wonder you went off your
health and senses with the thought of your loss, Andrew
I would have been less sensible than you. It was
an awful experience, man, I cannot tell how you tholed
it at all.”
“Well, I didn’t thole
it, Jamie. I just broke down under it, and God
Almighty and my mother and sister had to carry me through
the ill time; but all is right now. I shall have
the boat I was promised, and at the long last be Captain
Binnie of the Red-White Fleet. And what for shouldn’t
you take a berth with me? I shall have the choosing
of my officers, and we will strike hands together,
if you like it, and you shall be my second mate to
start with.”
“I should like nothing better
than to sail with you and under you, Andrew.
I couldn’t find a captain more to my liking.”
“Nor I a better second mate.
We both know our business, and we shall manage it
cleverly and brotherly.”
So Jamie’s future was settled
before the men reached Pittendurie, and the new arrangement
well talked over, and Andrew and his proposed brother-in-law
were finger and thumb about it. This was a good
thing for Andrew, for his secretive, self-contained
disposition was his weak point, and had been the cause
of all his sorrow and loss of time and suffering.
They had written a letter in New York
and posted it the day they left, advising Janet and
Christina of the happy home-coming; but both men forgot,
or else did not know, that the letter came on the very
same ship with themselves, and might therefore or
might not reach home before them. It depended
entirely on the postal authority in Pittendurie.
If she happened to be in a mood to sort the letters
as soon as they arrived, and then if she happened
to see any one passing who could carry a letter to
Janet Binnie, the chances were that Janet would receive
the intelligence of her son’s arrival in time
to make some preparation for it.
As it happened, these favourable circumstances
occurred, and about four o’clock one afternoon,
as Janet was returning up the cliff from Isobel Murray’s,
she met little Tim Galloway with the letter in his
hand.
“It is from America,”
said the laddie, “and my mother told me to hurry
myself with it. Maybe there is folk coming after
it.”
“I’ll give you a bawbee
for the sense of your words, Tim,” answered
Janet; and she hastened herself and flung the letter
into Christina’s lap, saying:—
“Open it, lassie, it will be
full of good news. I shouldn’t wonder if
both lads were on their way home again.”
“Mother, Mother, they are
home; they will be here anon, they will be here this
very night. Oh, Mother, I must put on my best
gown and my gold ear-rings and brush my hair, and
you’ll be setting forward the tea and making
a white pudding; for Jamie, you know, was always saying
none but you could mix the meal and salt and pepper,
and toast it as it should be done.”
“I shall look after the men’s
eating, Christina, and you make yourself as braw as
you like to. Jamie has been long away, and he
must have a full welcome home again.”
They were both as excited as two happy
children; perhaps Janet was most evidently so, for
she had never lost her child-heart, and everything
pleasant that happened was a joy and a wonder to her.
She took out her best damask table-cloth, and opened
her bride chest for the real china kept there so carefully;
and she made the white pudding with her own hands,
and ran down the cliff for fresh fish and the lamb
chops which were Andrew’s special luxury.
And Christina made the curds and cream, and swept
the hearth, and set the door wide open for the home-comers.
And as good fortune comes where it
is looked for, Andrew and Jamie entered the cottage
just as everything was ready for them. There was
no waiting, no cooled welcome, no spoiled dainties,
no disappointment of any kind. Life was taken
up where it had been most pleasantly dropped; all
the interval of doubt and suffering was put out of
remembrance, and when the joyful meal had been eaten,
as Janet washed her cups and saucers and tidied her
house, they talked of the happy future before them.
“And I’ll tell you what,
bairnies,” said the dear old woman as she stood
folding her real china in the tissue paper devoted
to that purpose, “I’ll tell you what,
bairnies, good will asks for good deeds, and I’ll
show my good will by giving Christina the acre of land
next my own. If Jamie is to go with you, Andrew,
and your home is to be with me, lad—”
“Where else would it be, Mother?”
“Well, then, where else need
Jamie’s home be but in Pittendurie? I’ll
give the land for his house, and what will you do,
Andrew? Speak for your best self, my lad.”
“I will give my sister Christina
one hundred gold sovereigns and the silk wedding-gown
I promised her.”
“Oh, Andrew, my dear brother,
how will I ever thank you as I ought to?”
“I owe you more, Christina, than I can count.”
“No, no, Andrew,” said
Janet. “What has Christina done that siller
can pay for? You can’t buy love with money,
and gold isn’t in exchange for it. Your
gift is a good-will gift. It isn’t a paid
debt, God be thanked!”
The very next day the little family
went into Largo, and the acre was legally transferred,
and Jamie made arrangements for the building of his
cottage. But the marriage did not wait on the
building; it was delayed no longer than was necessary
for the making of the silk wedding-gown. This
office Griselda Kilgour undertook with much readiness
and an entire oblivion of Janet’s unadvised allusions
to her age. And more than this, Griselda dressed
the bride with her own hands, adding to her costume
a bonnet of white tulle and orange blossoms that was
the admiration of the whole village, and which certainly
had a bewitching effect above Christina’s waving
black hair, and shining eyes, and marvellous colouring.
And, as Janet desired, the wedding
was a holiday for the whole of Pittendurie. Old
and young were bid to it, and for two days the dance,
the feast, and the song went gayly on, and for two
days not a single fishing boat left the little port
of Pittendurie. Then the men went out to sea
again, and the women paid their bride visits, and the
children finished all the dainties that were else
like to be wasted, and life gradually settled back
into its usual grooves.
But though Jamie went to the fishing,
pending Andrew’s appointment to his steamboat,
Janet and Christina had a never-ceasing interest in
the building and plenishing of Christina’s new
home. It was not fashionable, nor indeed hardly
permissible, for any one to build a house on a plan
grander than the traditional fisher cottage; but Christina’s,
though no larger than her neighbours’, had the
modern convenience of many little closets and presses,
and these Janet filled with homespun napery, linseys,
and patch-work, so that never a young lass in Pittendurie
began life under such full and happy circumstances.
In the fall of the year the new fire
was lit on the new hearth, and Christina moved into
her own home. It was only divided from her mother’s
by a strip of garden and a low fence, and the two women
could stand in their open doors and talk to each other.
And during the summer all had gone well. Jamie
had been fortunate and made money, and Andrew had
perfected all his arrangements, so that one morning
in early September, the whole village saw “The
Falcon” come to anchor in the bay, and Captain
Binnie, in his gold-buttoned coat and gold-banded cap,
take his place on her bridge, with Jamie, less conspicuously
attired, attending him.
It was a proud day for Janet and Christina,
though Janet, guided by some fine instinct, remained
in her own home, and made no afternoon calls.
“I don’t want to force folk to say either
kind or unkind things to me,” she said to her
daughter. “You know, Christina, it is a
deal harder to rejoice with them that rejoice than
to weep with them that weep. Sabrina Roy, as
soon as she got her eyes on Andrew in his trimmings,
perfectly changed colours with envy; and we have been
a speculation to far and near, more than one body
saying we were going fairly to the mischief with out
extravagance. They thought poverty had us under
her black thumb, and they did not think of the hand
of God, which was our surety.”
However, that afternoon Janet had
a great many callers, and not a few came up the cliff
out of real kindness, for, doubt as we will, there
is a constant inflowing of God into human affairs.
And Janet, in her heart, did not doubt her neighbours
readily; she took the homage rendered in a very pleased
and gracious manner, and she made a cup of tea and
a little feast for her company, and the clash and clatter
in the Binnie cottage that afternoon was exceedingly
full of good wishes and compliments. Indeed,
as Janet reviewed them afterwards, they provoked from
her a broad smile, and she said with a touch of good-natured
criticism:—
“If we could make compliments
into silk gowns, Christina, you and I would be bonnily
clad for the rest of our lives. Nobody said a
nattering word but poor Bella McLean, and she has been
soured and sore kept down in the world by a ne’er-do-weel
of a husband.”
“She should try and guide him
better,” said Christina. “If he was
my man, I would put him through his facings.”
“Toots, Christina.
You are over young in the marriage state to offer
opinions about men folk. As far as I can see,
every woman can guide a bad husband but the poor soul
that has the ill-luck to have one. Open the Book
now, and let us thank God for the good day He has given
us.”