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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14133 ***
+
+DAVID BALFOUR
+
+Being Memoirs of his Adventures at home
+and Abroad
+
+THE SECOND PART: _In which are set forth his Misfortunes
+anent the_ APPIN _Murder; his Troubles with Lord Advocate_
+GRANT; _Captivity on the Bass Rock; Journey into Holland
+and France; and Singular Relations with_ JAMES MORE
+DRUMMOND _or_ MACGREGOR, _a Son of the notorious_ ROB
+ROY, _and his Daughter_ CATRIONA
+
+WRITTEN BY HIMSELF
+AND NOW SET FORTH BY
+ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
+
+_ILLUSTRATED_
+
+
+NEW YORK
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+1905
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1893, BY
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION TO CHARLES BAXTER, _WRITER TO THE SIGNET_.
+
+MY DEAR CHARLES,
+
+It is the fate of sequels to disappoint those who have waited for them;
+and, my David having been left to kick his heels for more than a lustre
+in the British Linen Company's office, must expect his late reappearance
+to be greeted with hoots, if not with missiles. Yet, when I remember the
+days of our explorations, I am not without hope. There should be left in
+our native city some seed of the elect; some long-legged, hot-headed
+youth must repeat to-day our dreams and wanderings of so many years ago;
+he will relish the pleasure, which should have been ours, to follow
+among named streets and numbered houses the country walks of David
+Balfour, to identify Dean, and Silvermills, and Broughton, and Hope Park
+and Pilrig, and poor old Lochend--if it still be standing, and the
+Figgate Whins--if there be any of them left; or to push (on a long
+holiday) so far afield as Gillane or the Bass. So, perhaps, his eye
+shall be opened to behold the series of the generations, and he shall
+weigh with surprise his momentous and nugatory gift of life.
+
+You are still--as when first I saw, as when I last addressed you--in the
+venerable city which I must always think of as my home. And I have come
+so far; and the sights and thoughts of my youth pursue me; and I see
+like a vision the youth of my father, and of his father, and the whole
+stream of lives flowing down there, far in the north, with the sound of
+laughter and tears, to cast me out in the end, as by a sudden freshet,
+on those ultimate islands. And I admire and bow my head before the
+romance of destiny.
+
+ R.L.S.
+
+ VAILIMA,
+ UPOLU,
+ SAMOA,
+ 1902.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Part I
+
+ _THE LORD ADVOCATE_
+
+ I. A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK
+ II. THE HIGHLAND WRITER
+ III. I GO TO PILRIG
+ IV. LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE
+ V. IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE
+ VI. UMQHILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT
+ VII. I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOUR
+ VIII. THE BRAVO
+ IX. THE HEATHER ON FIRE
+ X. THE RED-HEADED MAN
+ XI. THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS
+ XII. ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN
+ XIII. GILLANE SANDS
+ XIV. THE BASS
+ XV. BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+ XVI. THE MISSING WITNESS
+ XVII. THE MEMORIAL
+ XVIII. THE TEE'D BALL
+ XIX. I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES
+ XX. I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY
+
+ Part II
+
+ _FATHER AND DAUGHTER_
+
+ XXI. THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND
+ XXII. HELVOETSLUYS
+ XXIII. TRAVELS IN HOLLAND
+ XXIV. FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS
+ XXV. THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE
+ XXVI. THE THREESOME
+ XXVII. A TWOSOME
+ XXVIII. IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE
+ XXIX. WE MEET IN DUNKIRK
+ XXX. THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP
+ XXXI. CONCLUSION
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+THE LORD ADVOCATE
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK
+
+
+The 25th day of August, 1751, about two in the afternoon, I, David
+Balfour, came forth of the British Linen Company, a porter attending me
+with a bag of money, and some of the chief of these merchants bowing me
+from their doors. Two days before, and even so late as yestermorning, I
+was like a beggarman by the wayside, clad in rags, brought down to my
+last shillings, my companion a condemned traitor, a price set on my own
+head for a crime with the news of which the country rang. To-day I was
+served heir to my position in life, a landed laird, a bank porter by me
+carrying my gold, recommendations in my pocket, and (in the words of the
+saying) the ball directly at my foot.
+
+There were two circumstances that served me as ballast to so much sail.
+The first was the very difficult and deadly business I had still to
+handle; the second, the place that I was in. The tall, black city, and
+the numbers and movement and noise of so many folk, made a new world for
+me, after the moorland braes, the sea-sands, and the still country-sides
+that I had frequented up to then. The throng of the citizens in
+particular abashed me. Rankeillor's son was short and small in the
+girth; his clothes scarce held on me; and it was plain I was ill
+qualified to strut in the front of a bank-porter. It was plain, if I did
+so, I should but set folk laughing, and (what was worse in my case) set
+them asking questions. So that I behooved to come by some clothes of my
+own, and in the meanwhile to walk by the porter's side, and put my hand
+on his arm as though we were a pair of friends.
+
+At a merchant's in the Luckenbooths, I had myself fitted out: none too
+fine, for I had no idea to appear like a beggar on horseback; but comely
+and responsible, so that servants should respect me. Thence to an
+armourer's, where I got a plain sword, to suit with my degree in life. I
+felt safer with the weapon, though (for one so ignorant of defence) it
+might be called an added danger. The porter, who was naturally a man of
+some experience, judged my accoutrement to be well chosen.
+
+"Naething kenspeckle,"[1] said he, "plain, dacent claes. As for the
+rapier, nae doubt it sits wi' your degree; but an I had been you, I
+would hae waired my siller better-gates than that." And proposed I
+should buy winter-hosen from a wife in the Cowgate-back, that was a
+cousin of his own, and made them "extraordinar endurable."
+
+But I had other matters on my hand more pressing. Here I was in this
+old, black city, which was for all the world like a rabbit-warren, not
+only by the number of its indwellers, but the complication of its
+passages and holes. It was indeed a place where no stranger had a chance
+to find a friend, let be another stranger. Suppose him even to hit on
+the right close, people dwelt so thronged in these tall houses, he might
+very well seek a day before he chanced on the right door. The ordinary
+course was to hire a lad they called a _caddie_, who was like a guide or
+pilot, led you where you had occasion, and (your errands being done)
+brought you again where you were lodging. But these caddies, being
+always employed in the same sort of services, and having it for
+obligation to be well informed of every house and person in the city,
+had grown to form a brotherhood of spies; and I knew from tales of Mr.
+Campbell's how they communicated one with another, what a rage of
+curiosity they conceived as to their employer's business, and how they
+were like eyes and fingers to the police. It would be a piece of little
+wisdom, the way I was now placed, to tack such a ferret to my tails. I
+had three visits to make, all immediately needful: to my kinsman Mr.
+Balfour of Pilrig, to Stewart the Writer that was Appin's agent, and to
+William Grant Esquire of Prestongrange, Lord Advocate of Scotland. Mr.
+Balfour's was a non-committal visit; and besides (Pilrig being in the
+country) I made bold to find way to it myself, with the help of my two
+legs and a Scots tongue. But the rest were in a different case. Not only
+was the visit to Appin's agent, in the midst of the cry about the Appin
+murder, dangerous in itself, but it was highly inconsistent with the
+other. I was like to have a bad enough time of it with my Lord Advocate
+Grant, the best of ways; but to go to him hot-foot from Appin's agent,
+was little likely to mend my own affairs, and might prove the mere ruin
+of friend Alan's. The whole thing, besides, gave me a look of running
+with the hare and hunting with the hounds that was little to my fancy. I
+determined, therefore, to be done at once with Mr. Stewart and the whole
+Jacobitical side of my business, and to profit for that purpose by the
+guidance of the porter at my side. But it chanced I had scarce given him
+the address, when there came a sprinkle of rain--nothing to hurt, only
+for my new clothes--and we took shelter under a pend at the head of a
+close or alley.
+
+Being strange to what I saw, I stepped a little farther in. The narrow
+paved way descended swiftly. Prodigious tall houses sprang upon each
+side and bulged out, one story beyond another, as they rose. At the top
+only a ribbon of sky showed in. By what I could spy in the windows, and
+by the respectable persons that passed out and in, I saw the houses to
+be very well occupied; and the whole appearance of the place interested
+me like a tale.
+
+I was still gazing, when there came a sudden brisk tramp of feet in time
+and clash of steel behind me. Turning quickly, I was aware of a party of
+armed soldiers, and, in their midst, a tall man in a great-coat. He
+walked with a stoop that was like a piece of courtesy, genteel and
+insinuating: he waved his hands plausibly as he went, and his face was
+sly and handsome. I thought his eye took me in, but could not meet it.
+This procession went by to a door in the close, which a serving-man in a
+fine livery set open; and two of the soldier-lads carried the prisoner
+within, the rest lingering with their firelocks by the door.
+
+There can nothing pass in the streets of a city without some following
+of idle folk and children. It was so now; but the more part melted away
+incontinent until but three were left. One was a girl; she was dressed
+like a lady, and had a screen of the Drummond colours on her head; but
+her comrades or (I should say) followers were ragged gillies, such as I
+had seen the matches of by the dozen in my Highland journey. They all
+spoke together earnestly in Gaelic, the sound of which was pleasant in
+my ears for the sake of Alan; and though the rain was by again, and my
+porter plucked at me to be going, I even drew nearer where they were, to
+listen. The lady scolded sharply, the others making apologies and
+cringeing before her, so that I made sure she was come of a chief's
+house. All the while the three of them sought in their pockets, and by
+what I could make out, they had the matter of half a farthing among the
+party; which made me smile a little to see all Highland folk alike for
+fine obeisances and empty sporrans.
+
+It chanced the girl turned suddenly about, so that I saw her face for
+the first time. There is no greater wonder than the way the face of a
+young woman fits in a man's mind, and stays there, and he could never
+tell you why; it just seems it was the thing he wanted. She had
+wonderful bright eyes like stars, and I daresay the eyes had a part in
+it; but what I remember the most clearly was the way her lips were a
+trifle open as she turned. And whatever was the cause, I stood there
+staring like a fool. On her side, as she had not known there was anyone
+so near, she looked at me a little longer, and perhaps with more
+surprise, than was entirely civil.
+
+It went through my country head she might be wondering at my new
+clothes; with that, I blushed to my hair, and at the sight of my
+colouring it's to be supposed she drew her own conclusions, for she
+moved her gillies farther down the close, and they fell again to this
+dispute where I could hear no more of it.
+
+I had often admired a lassie before then, if scarce so sudden and
+strong; and it was rather my disposition to withdraw than to come
+forward, for I was much in fear of mockery from the womenkind. You would
+have thought I had now all the more reason to pursue my common practice,
+since I had met this young lady in the city street, seemingly following
+a prisoner, and accompanied with two very ragged, indecent-like
+Highlandmen. But there was here a different ingredient; it was plain the
+girl thought I had been prying in her secrets; and with my new clothes
+and sword, and at the top of my new fortunes, this was more than I could
+swallow. The beggar on horseback could not bear to be thrust down so
+low, or at the least of it, not by this young lady.
+
+I followed, accordingly, and took off my new hat to her, the best that I
+was able.
+
+"Madam," said I, "I think it only fair to myself to let you understand I
+have no Gaelic. It is true I was listening, for I have friends of my own
+across the Highland line, and the sound of that tongue comes friendly;
+but for your private affairs, if you had spoken Greek, I might have had
+more guess at them."
+
+She made me a little, distant curtsey. "There is no harm done," said
+she, with a pretty accent, most like the English (but more agreeable).
+"A cat may look at a king."
+
+"I do not mean to offend," said I. "I have no skill of city manners; I
+never before this day set foot inside the doors of Edinburgh. Take me
+for a country lad--it's what I am; and I would rather I told you than
+you found it out."
+
+"Indeed, it will be a very unusual thing for strangers to be speaking to
+each other on the causeway," she replied. "But if you are landward[2]
+bred it will be different. I am as landward as yourself; I am Highland
+as you see, and think myself the farther from my home."
+
+"It is not yet a week since I passed the line," said I. "Less than a
+week ago I was on the Braes of Balwhidder."
+
+"Balwhither?" she cries; "come ye from Balwhither? The name of it makes
+all there is of me rejoice. You will not have been long there, and not
+known some of our friends or family?"
+
+"I lived with a very honest, kind man called Duncan Dhu Maclaren," I
+replied.
+
+"Well I know Duncan, and you give him the true name!" she said; "and if
+he is an honest man, his wife is honest indeed."
+
+"Ay," said I, "they are fine people, and the place is a bonny place."
+
+"Where in the great world is such another?" she cries; "I am loving the
+smell of that place and the roots that grew there."
+
+I was infinitely taken with the spirit of the maid. "I could be wishing
+I had brought you a spray of that heather," says I. "And though I did
+ill to speak with you at the first, now it seems we have common
+acquaintance, I make it my petition you will not forget me. David
+Balfour is the name I am known by. This is my lucky day when I have just
+come into a landed estate and am not very long out of a deadly peril. I
+wish you would keep my name in mind for the sake of Balquidder," said I,
+"and I will yours for the sake of my lucky day."
+
+"My name is not spoken," she replied, with a great deal of haughtiness.
+"More than a hundred years it has not gone upon men's tongues, save for
+a blink. I am nameless like the Folk of Peace.[3] Catriona Drummond is
+the one I use."
+
+Now indeed I knew where I was standing. In all broad Scotland there was
+but the one name proscribed, and that was the name of the Macgregors.
+Yet so far from fleeing this undesirable acquaintancy, I plunged the
+deeper in.
+
+"I have been sitting with one who was in the same case with yourself,"
+said I, "and I think he will be one of your friends. They called him
+Robin Oig."
+
+"Did ye so?" cries she. "Ye met Rob?"
+
+"I passed the night with him," said I.
+
+"He is a fowl of the night," said she.
+
+"There was a set of pipes there," I went on, "so you may judge if the
+time passed."
+
+"You should be no enemy, at all events," said she. "That was his brother
+there a moment since, with the red soldiers round him. It is him that I
+call father."
+
+"Is it so?" cried I. "Are you a daughter of James More's?"
+
+"All the daughter that he has," says she: "the daughter of a prisoner;
+that I should forget it so, even for one hour, to talk with strangers!"
+
+Here one of the gillies addressed her in what he had of English, to know
+what "she" (meaning by that himself) was to do about "ta sneeshin." I
+took some note of him for a short, bandy-legged, red-haired, big-headed
+man, that I was to know more of to my cost.
+
+"There can be none the day, Neil," she replied. "How will you get
+'sneeshin,' wanting siller? It will teach you another time to be more
+careful; and I think James More will not be very well pleased with Neil
+of the Tom."
+
+"Miss Drummond," I said, "I told you I was in my lucky day. Here I am,
+and a bank-porter at my tail. And remember I have had the hospitality of
+your own country of Balwhidder."
+
+"It was not one of my people gave it," said she.
+
+"Ah, well," said I, "but I am owing your uncle at least for some springs
+upon the pipes. Besides which, I have offered myself to be your friend,
+and you have been so forgetful that you did not refuse me in the proper
+time."
+
+"If it had been a great sum, it might have done you honour," said she.
+"But I will tell you what this is. James More lies shackled in prison;
+but this time past, they will be bringing him down here daily to the
+Advocate's..."
+
+"The Advocate's?" I cried. "Is that...?"
+
+"It is the house of the Lord Advocate, Grant of Prestongrange," said
+she. "There they bring my father one time and another, for what purpose
+I have no thought in my mind; but it seems there is some hope dawned for
+him. All this same time they will not let me be seeing him, nor yet him
+write; and we wait upon the King's street to catch him; and now we give
+him his snuff as he goes by, and now something else. And here is this
+son of trouble, Neil, son of Duncan, has lost my fourpenny-piece that
+was to buy that snuff, and James More must go wanting, and will think
+his daughter has forgotten him."
+
+I took sixpence from my pocket, gave it to Neil, and bade him go about
+his errand. Then to her, "That sixpence came with me by Balwhidder,"
+said I.
+
+"Ah!" she said, "you are a friend to the Gregara!"
+
+"I would not like to deceive you either," said I. "I know very little of
+the Gregara and less of James More and his doings; but since the while I
+have been standing in this close, I seem to know something of yourself;
+and if you will just say 'a friend to Miss Catriona' I will see you are
+the less cheated."
+
+"The one cannot be without the other," said she.
+
+"I will even try," said I.
+
+"And what will you be thinking of myself?" she cried, "to be holding my
+hand to the first stranger!"
+
+"I am thinking nothing but that you are a good daughter," said I.
+
+"I must not be without repaying it," she said; "where is it you stop?"
+
+"To tell the truth, I am stopping nowhere yet," said I, "being not full
+three hours in the city; but if you will give me your direction, I will
+be so bold as come seeking my sixpence for myself."
+
+"Will I can trust you for that?" she asked.
+
+"You have little fear," said I.
+
+"James More could not bear it else," said she. "I stop beyond the
+village of Dean, on the north side of the water, with Mrs.
+Drummond-Ogilvy of Allardyce, who is my near friend and will be glad to
+thank you."
+
+"You are to see me then, so soon as what I have to do permits," said I;
+and the remembrance of Alan rolling in again upon my mind, I made haste
+to say farewell.
+
+I could not but think, even as I did so, that we had made extraordinary
+free upon short acquaintance, and that a really wise young lady would
+have shown herself more backward. I think it was the bank-porter that
+put me from this ungallant train of thought.
+
+"I thoucht ye had been a lad of some kind o' sense," he began, shooting
+out his lips. "Ye're no likely to gang far this gate. A fule and his
+siller's shune parted. Eh, but ye're a green callant!" he cried, "an' a
+veecious, tae! Cleikin' up wi' baubee-joes!"
+
+"If you dare to speak of the young lady ..." I began.
+
+"Leddy!" he cried. "Haud us and safe us, whatten leddy? Ca' _thon_ a
+leddy? The toun's fu' o' them. Leddies! Man, it's weel seen ye're no
+very acquant in Embro'!"
+
+A clap of anger took me.
+
+"Here," said I, "lead me where I told you, and keep your foul mouth
+shut!"
+
+He did not wholly obey me, for though he no more addressed me directly,
+he sang at me as he went in a very impudent manner of innuendo, and with
+an exceedingly ill voice and ear--
+
+ "As Mally Lee cam doun the street, her capuchin did flee.
+ She cuist a look ahint her to see her negligee,
+ And we're a' gaun east and wast, we're a' gaun ajee,
+ We're a' gaun east and wast courtin' Mally Lee."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HIGHLAND WRITER
+
+
+Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer dwelt at the top of the longest stair
+that ever mason set a hand to; fifteen flights of it, no less; and when
+I had come to his door, and a clerk had opened it, and told me his
+master was within, I had scarce breath enough to send my porter packing.
+
+"Awa' east and wast wi' ye!" said I, took the money bag out of his
+hands, and followed the clerk in.
+
+The outer room was an office with the clerk's chair at a table spread
+with law papers. In the inner chamber, which opened from it, a little
+brisk man sat poring on a deed, from which he scarce raised his eyes
+upon my entrance; indeed, he still kept his finger in the place, as
+though prepared to show me out and fall again to his studies. This
+pleased me little enough; and what pleased me less, I thought the clerk
+was in a good posture to overhear what should pass between us.
+
+I asked if he was Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer.
+
+"The same," says he; "and if the question is equally fair, who may you
+be yourself?"
+
+"You never heard tell of my name nor of me either," said I, "but I bring
+you a token from a friend that you know well. That you know well," I
+repeated, lowering my voice, "but maybe are not just so keen to hear
+from at this present being. And the bits of business that I have to
+propone to you are rather in the nature of being confidential. In short,
+I would like to think we were quite private."
+
+He rose without more words, casting down his paper like a man
+ill-pleased, sent forth his clerk of an errand, and shut to the
+house-door behind him.
+
+"Now, sir," said he, returning, "speak out your mind and fear nothing;
+though before you begin," he cries out, "I tell you mine misgives me! I
+tell you beforehand, ye're either a Stewart or a Stewart sent ye. A good
+name it is, and one it would ill-become my father's son to lightly. But
+I begin to grue at the sound of it."
+
+"My name is called Balfour," said I, "David Balfour of Shaws. As for him
+that sent me, I will let his token speak." And I showed the silver
+button.
+
+"Put it in your pocket, sir!" cries he, "Ye need name no names. The
+deevil's buckie, I ken the button of him! And de'il hae't! Where is he
+now?"
+
+I told him I knew not where Alan was, but he had some sure place (or
+thought he had) about the north side, where he was to lie until a ship
+was found for him; and how and where he had appointed to be spoken with.
+
+"It's been always my opinion that I would hang in a tow for this family
+of mine," he cried, "and, dod! I believe the day's come now! Get a ship
+for him, quot' he! And who's to pay for it? The man's daft!"
+
+"That is my part of the affair, Mr. Stewart," said I. "Here is a bag of
+good money, and if more be wanted, more is to be had where it came
+from."
+
+"I needn't ask your politics," said he.
+
+"Ye need not," said I, smiling, "for I'm as big a Whig as grows."
+
+"Stop a bit, stop a bit," says Mr. Stewart. "What's all this? A Whig?
+Then why are you here with Alan's button? and what kind of a black-foot
+traffic is this that I find ye out in, Mr. Whig? Here is a forfeited
+rebel and an accused murderer, with two hundred pounds on his life, and
+ye ask me to meddle in his business, and then tell me ye're a Whig! I
+have no mind of any such Whigs before, though I've kent plenty of them."
+
+"He's a forfeited rebel, the more's the pity," said I, "for the man's my
+friend." I can only wish he had been better guided. And an accused
+murderer, that he is too, for his misfortune; but wrongfully accused."
+
+"I hear you say so," said Stewart.
+
+"More than you are to hear me say so, before long," said I. "Alan Breck
+is innocent, and so is James."
+
+"Oh!" says he, "the two cases hang together. If Alan is out, James can
+never be in."
+
+Hereupon I told him briefly of my acquaintance with Alan, of the
+accident that brought me present at the Appin murder, and the various
+passages of our escape among the heather, and my recovery of my estate.
+"So, sir, you have now the whole train of these events," I went on, "and
+can see for yourself how I come to be so much mingled up with the
+affairs of your family and friends, which (for all of our sakes) I wish
+had been plainer and less bloody. You can see for yourself, too, that I
+have certain pieces of business depending, which were scarcely fit to
+lay before a lawyer chosen at random. No more remains, but to ask if you
+will undertake my service?"
+
+"I have no great mind to it; but coming as you do with Alan's button,
+the choice is scarcely left me," said he. "What are your instructions?"
+he added, and took up his pen.
+
+"The first point is to smuggle Alan forth of this country," said I, "but
+I need not be repeating that."
+
+"I am little likely to forget it," said Stewart.
+
+"The next thing is the bit money I am owing to Cluny," I went on. "It
+would be ill for me to find a conveyance, but that should be no stick to
+you. It was two pounds five shillings and three-halfpence farthing
+sterling."
+
+He noted it.
+
+"Then," said I, "there's a Mr. Henderland, a licensed preacher and
+missionary in Ardgour, that I would like well to get some snuff into the
+hands of; and as I daresay you keep touch with your friends in Appin (so
+near by), it's a job you could doubtless overtake with the other."
+
+"How much snuff are we to say?" he asked.
+
+"I was thinking of two pounds," said I.
+
+"Two," said he.
+
+"Then there's the lass Alison Hastie, in Limekilns," said I. "Her that
+helped Alan and me across the Forth. I was thinking if I could get her a
+good Sunday gown, such as she could wear with decency in her degree, it
+would be an ease to my conscience: for the mere truth is, we owe her our
+two lives."
+
+"I am glad to see you are thrifty, Mr. Balfour," says he, making his
+notes.
+
+"I would think shame to be otherwise the first day of my fortune," said
+I. "And now, if you will compute the outlay and your own proper charges,
+I would be glad to know if I could get some spending-money back. It's
+not that I grudge the whole of it to get Alan safe; it's not that I lack
+more; but having drawn so much the one day, I think it would have a very
+ill appearance if I was back again seeking, the next. Only be sure you
+have enough," I added, "for I am very undesirous to meet with you
+again."
+
+"Well, and I'm pleased to see you're cautious too," said the Writer.
+"But I think ye take a risk to lay so considerable a sum at my
+discretion."
+
+He said this with a plain sneer.
+
+"I'll have to run the hazard," I replied. "O, and there's another
+service I would ask, and that's to direct me to a lodging, for I have no
+roof to my head. But it must be a lodging I may seem to have hit upon by
+accident, for it would never do if the Lord Advocate were to get any
+jealousy of our acquaintance."
+
+"Ye may set your weary spirit at rest," said he. "I will never name your
+name, sir; and it's my belief the Advocate is still so much to be
+sympathised with that he doesnae ken of your existence."
+
+I saw I had got to the wrong side of the man.
+
+"There's a braw day coming for him, then," said I, "for he'll have to
+learn of it on the deaf side of his head no later than to-morrow, when I
+call on him."
+
+"When ye _call_ on him!" repeated Mr. Stewart. "Am I daft, or are you?
+What takes ye near the Advocate?"
+
+"O, just to give myself up," said I.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," he cried, "are ye making a mock of me?"
+
+"No, sir," said I, "though I think you have allowed yourself some such
+freedom with myself. But I give you to understand once and for all that
+I am in no jesting spirit."
+
+"Nor yet me," says Stewart. "And I give you to understand (if that's to
+be the word) that I like the looks of your behaviour less and less. You
+come here to me with all sorts of propositions, which will put me in a
+train of very doubtful acts and bring me among very undesirable persons
+this many a day to come. And then you tell me you're going straight out
+of my office to make your peace with the Advocate! Alan's button here or
+Alan's button there, the four quarters of Alan wouldnae bribe me further
+in."
+
+"I would take it with a little more temper," said I, "and perhaps we can
+avoid what you object to. I can see no way for it but to give myself up,
+but perhaps you can see another; and if you could, I could never deny
+but what I would be rather relieved. For I think my traffic with his
+lordship is little likely to agree with my health. There's just the one
+thing clear, that I have to give my evidence; for I hope it'll save
+Alan's character (what's left of it), and James's neck, which is the
+more immediate."
+
+He was silent for a breathing-space, and then, "My man," said he,
+"you'll never be allowed to give such evidence."
+
+"We'll have to see about that," said I; "I'm stiff-necked when I like."
+
+"Ye muckle ass!" cried Stewart, "it's James they want; James has got to
+hang--Alan too, if they could catch him--but James whatever! Go near the
+Advocate with any such business, and you'll see! he'll find a way to
+muzzle ye."
+
+"I think better of the Advocate than that," said I.
+
+"The Advocate be damned!" cries he. "It's the Campbells, man! You'll
+have the whole clanjamfry of them on your back; and so will the Advocate
+too, poor body! It's extraordinar ye cannot see where ye stand! If
+there's no fair way to stop your gab, there's a foul one gaping. They
+can put ye in the dock, do ye no see that?" he cried, and stabbed me
+with one finger in the leg.
+
+"Ay," said I, "I was told that same no further back than this morning by
+another lawyer."
+
+"And who was he?" asked Stewart. "He spoke sense at least."
+
+I told I must be excused from naming him, for he was a decent stout old
+Whig, and had little mind to be mixed up in such affairs.
+
+"I think all the world seems to be mixed up in it!" cries Stewart. "But
+what said you?"
+
+I told him what had passed between Rankeillor and myself before the
+house of Shaws.
+
+"Well, and so ye will hang!" said he. "Ye'll hang beside James Stewart.
+There's your fortune told."
+
+"I hope better of it yet than that," said I; "but I could never deny
+there was a risk."
+
+"Risk!" says he, and then sat silent again. "I ought to thank you for
+your staunchness to my friends, to whom you show a very good spirit," he
+says, "if you have the strength to stand by it. But I warn you that
+you're wading deep. I wouldn't put myself in your place (me that's a
+Stewart born!) for all the Stewarts that ever there were since Noah.
+Risk? ay, I take over-many, but to be tried in court before a Campbell
+jury and a Campbell judge, and that in a Campbell country and upon a
+Campbell quarrel--think what you like of me, Balfour, it's beyond me."
+
+"It's a different way of thinking, I suppose," said I; "I was brought up
+to this one by my father before me."
+
+"Glory to his bones! he has left a decent son to his name," says he.
+"Yet I would not have you judge me over-sorely. My case is dooms hard.
+See, sir! ye tell me ye're a Whig: I wonder what I am. No Whig to be
+sure; I couldnae be just that. But--laigh in your ear, man--I'm maybe no
+very keen on the other side."
+
+"Is that a fact?" cried I. "It's what I would think of a man of your
+intelligence."
+
+"Hut! none of your whillywhas!"[4] cries he. "There's intelligence upon
+both sides. But for my private part I have no particular desire to harm
+King George; and as for King James, God bless him! he does very well for
+me across the water. I'm a lawyer, ye see: fond of my books and my
+bottle, a good plea, a well-drawn deed, a crack in the Parliament House
+with other lawyer bodies, and perhaps a turn at the golf on a Saturday
+at e'en. Where do ye come in with your Hieland plaids and claymores?"
+
+"Well," said I, "it's a fact ye have little of the wild Highlandman."
+
+"Little?" quoth he. "Nothing, man! And yet I'm Hieland born, and when
+the clan pipes, who but me has to dance? The clan and the name, that
+goes by all. It's just what you said yourself; my father learned it to
+me, and a bonny trade I have of it. Treason and traitors, and the
+smuggling of them out and in; and the French recruiting, weary fall it!
+and the smuggling through of the recruits; and their pleas--a sorrow of
+their pleas! Here haye I been moving one for young Ardshiel, my cousin;
+claimed the estate under the marriage contract--a forfeited estate! I
+told them it was nonsense: muckle they cared! And there was I cocking
+behind a yadvocate that liked the business as little as myself, for it
+was fair ruin to the pair of us--a black mark, _disaffected_, branded on
+our hurdies, like folk's names upon their kye! And what can I do? I'm a
+Stewart, ye see, and must fend for my clan and family. Then no later by
+than yesterday there was one of our Stewart lads carried to the Castle.
+What for? I ken fine: Act of 1736: recruiting for King Lewie. And you'll
+see, he'll whistle me in to be his lawyer, and there'll be another black
+mark on my chara'ter! I tell you fair: if I but kent the heid of a
+Hebrew word from the hurdies of it be dammed but I would fling the whole
+thing up and turn minister!"
+
+"It's rather a hard position," said I.
+
+"Dooms hard!" cries he. "And that's what makes me think so much of
+ye--you that's no Stewart--to stick your head so deep in Stewart
+business. And for what, I do not know; unless it was the sense of duty."
+
+"I hope it will be that," said I.
+
+"Well," says he, "it's a grand quality. But here is my clerk back; and,
+by your leave, we'll pick a bit of dinner, all the three of us. When
+that's done, I'll give you the direction of a very decent man, that'll
+be very fain to have you for a lodger. And I'll fill your pockets to ye,
+forbye, out of your ain bag. For this business'll not be near as dear as
+ye suppose--not even the ship part of it."
+
+I made him a sign that his clerk was within hearing.
+
+"Hoot, ye neednae mind for Robbie," cries he. "A Stewart too, puir
+deevil! and has smuggled out more French recruits and trafficking
+Papists than what he has hairs upon his face. Why, it's Robin that
+manages that branch of my affairs. Who will we have now, Rob, for across
+the water?"
+
+"There'll be Andie Scougal, in the _Thristle_," replied Rob. "I saw
+Hoseason the other day, but it seems he's wanting the ship. Then
+there'll be Tarn Stobo; but I'm none so sure of Tam. I've seen him
+colloguing with some gey queer acquaintances; and if it was anybody
+important, I would give Tam the go-by."
+
+"The head's worth two hundred pounds, Robin," said Stewart.
+
+"Gosh, that'll no be Alan Breck?" cried the clerk.
+
+"Just Alan," said his master.
+
+"Weary winds! that's sayrious," cried Robin. "I'll try Andie then;
+Andie'll be the best."
+
+"It seems it's quite a big business," I observed.
+
+"Mr. Balfour, there's no end to it," said Stewart.
+
+"There was a name your clerk mentioned," I went on: "Hoseason. That must
+be my man, I think: Hoseason, of the brig _Covenant_. Would you set your
+trust on him?"
+
+"He didnae behave very well to you and Alan," said Mr. Stewart; "but my
+mind of the man in general is rather otherwise. If he had taken Alan on
+board his ship on an agreement, it's my notion he would have proved a
+just dealer. How say ye, Rob?"
+
+"No more honest skipper in the trade than Eli," said the clerk. "I would
+lippen to[5] Eli's word--ay, if it was the Chevalier, or Appin himsel',"
+he added.
+
+"And it was him that brought the doctor, wasnae't?" asked the master.
+
+"He was the very man," said the clerk.
+
+"And I think he took the doctor back?" says Stewart.
+
+"Ay, with his sporran full!" cried Robin. "And Eli kent of that!"[6]
+
+"Well, it seems it's hard to ken folk rightly," said I.
+
+"That was just what I forgot when ye came in, Mr. Balfour!" says the
+Writer.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+I GO TO PILRIG
+
+
+The next morning, I was no sooner awake in my new lodging than I was up
+and into my new clothes; and no sooner the breakfast swallowed, than I
+was forth on my adventures. Alan, I could hope, was fended for; James
+was like to be a more difficult affair, and I could not but think that
+enterprise might cost me dear, even as everybody said to whom I had
+opened my opinion. It seemed I was come to the top of the mountain only
+to cast myself down; that I had clambered up, through so many and hard
+trials, to be rich, to be recognised, to wear city clothes and a sword
+to my side, all to commit mere suicide at the last end of it, and the
+worst kind of suicide besides, which is to get hanged at the King's
+charges.
+
+What was I doing it for? I asked, as I went down the High Street and out
+north by Leith Wynd. First I said it was to save James Stewart, and no
+doubt the memory of his distress, and his wife's cries, and a word or so
+I had let drop on that occasion worked upon me strongly. At the same
+time I reflected that it was (or ought to be) the most indifferent
+matter to my father's son, whether James died in his bed or from a
+scaffold. He was Alan's cousin, to be sure; but so far as regarded Alan,
+the best thing would be to lie low, and let the King, and his Grace of
+Argyll, and the corbie crows, pick the bones of his kinsman their own
+way. Nor could I forget that, while we were all in the pot together,
+James had shown no such particular anxiety whether for Alan or me.
+
+Next it came upon me I was acting for the sake of justice: and I thought
+that a fine word, and reasoned it out that (since we dwelt in polities,
+at some discomfort to each one of us) the main thing of all must still
+be justice, and the death of any innocent man a wound upon the whole
+community. Next, again, it was the Accuser of the Brethren that gave me
+a turn of his argument; bid me think shame for pretending myself
+concerned in these high matters, and told me I was but a prating vain
+child, who had spoken big words to Rankeillor and to Stewart, and held
+myself bound upon my vanity to make good that boastfulness. Nay, and he
+hit me with the other end of the stick; for he accused me of a kind of
+artful cowardice, going about at the expense of a little risk to
+purchase greater safety. No doubt, until I had declared and cleared
+myself, I might any day encounter Mungo Campbell or the sheriff's
+officer, and be recognised, and dragged into the Appin murder by the
+heels; and, no doubt, in case I could manage my declaration with
+success, I should breathe more free for ever after. But when I looked
+this argument full in the face I could see nothing to be ashamed of. As
+for the rest, "Here are the two roads," I thought, "and both go to the
+same place. It's unjust that James should hang if I can save him; and it
+would be ridiculous in me to have talked so much and then do nothing.
+It's lucky for James of the Glens that I have boasted beforehand; and
+none so unlucky for myself, because now I'm committed to do right. I
+have the name of a gentleman and the means of one; it would be a poor
+discovery that I was wanting in the essence." And then I thought this
+was a Pagan spirit, and said a prayer in to myself, asking for what
+courage I might lack, and that I might go straight to my duty like a
+soldier to battle, and come off again scatheless as so many do.
+
+This train of reasoning brought me to a more resolved complexion; though
+it was far from closing up my sense of the dangers that surrounded me,
+nor of how very apt I was (if I went on) to stumble on the ladder of the
+gallows. It was a plain, fair morning, but the wind in the east. The
+little chill of it sang in my blood, and gave me a feeling of the
+autumn, and the dead leaves, and dead folks' bodies in their graves. It
+seemed the devil was in it, if I was to die in that tide of my fortunes
+and for other folks' affairs. On the top of the Calton Hill, though it
+was not the customary time of year for that diversion, some children
+were crying and running with their kites. These toys appeared very plain
+against the sky; I remarked a great one soar on the wind to a high
+altitude and then plump among the whins; and I thought to myself at
+sight of it, "There goes Davie."
+
+My way lay over Mouter's Hill, and through an end of a clachan on the
+braeside among fields. There was a whirr of looms in it went from house
+to house; bees bummed in the gardens; the neighbours that I saw at the
+doorsteps talked in a strange tongue; and I found out later that this
+was Picardy, a village where the French weavers wrought for the Linen
+Company. Here I got a fresh direction for Pilrig, my destination; and a
+little beyond, on the wayside, came by a gibbet and two men hanged in
+chains. They were dipped in tar, as the manner is; the wind span them,
+the chains clattered, and the birds hung about the uncanny jumping-jacks
+and cried. The sight coming on me suddenly, like an illustration of my
+fears, I could scarce be done with examining it and drinking in
+discomfort. And as I thus turned and turned about the gibbet, what
+should I strike on, but a weird old wife, that sat behind a leg of it,
+and nodded, and talked aloud to herself with becks and courtesies.
+
+"Who are these two, mother?" I asked, and pointed to the corpses.
+
+"A blessing on your precious face!" she cried. "Twa joes[7] o' mine:
+just twa o' my old joes, my hinny dear."
+
+"What did they suffer for?" I asked.
+
+"Ou, just for the guid cause," said she. "Aften I spaed to them the way
+that it would end. Twa shillin' Scots; no pickle mair; and there are twa
+bonny callants hingin' for 't! They took it frae a wean[8] belanged to
+Brouchton."
+
+"Ay!" said I to myself, and not to the daft limmer, "and did they come
+to such a figure for so poor a business? This is to lose all indeed."
+
+"Gie's your loof,[9] hinny," says she, "and let me spae your weird to
+ye."
+
+"No, mother," said I, "I see far enough the way I am. It's an unco thing
+to see too far in front."
+
+"I read it in your bree," she said. "There's a bonnie lassie that has
+bricht een, and there's a wee man in a braw coat, and a big man in a
+pouthered wig, and there's the shadow of the wuddy,[10] joe, that lies
+braid across your path. Gie's your loof, hinny, and let Auld Merren spae
+it to ye bonny."
+
+The two chance shots that seemed to point at Alan and the daughter of
+James More, struck me hard; and I fled from the eldritch creature,
+casting her a baubee, which she continued to sit and play with under the
+moving shadows of the hanged.
+
+My way down the causeway of Leith Walk would have been more pleasant to
+me but for this encounter. The old rampart ran among fields, the like of
+them I had never seen for artfulness of agriculture; I was pleased,
+besides, to be so far in the still countryside; but the shackles of the
+gibbet clattered in my head; and the mops and mows of the old witch, and
+the thought of the dead men, hag-rode my spirits. To hang on a gallows,
+that seemed a hard case; and whether a man came to hang there for two
+shillings Scots, or (as Mr. Stewart had it) from the sense of duty, once
+he was tarred and shackled and hung up, the difference seemed small.
+There might David Balfour hang, and other lads pass on their errands and
+think light of him; and old daft limmers sit at leg-foot and spae their
+fortunes; and the clean genty maids go by, and look to the other side,
+and hold a nose. I saw them plain, and they had grey eyes, and their
+screens upon their heads were of the Drummond colours.
+
+I was thus in the poorest of spirits, though still pretty resolved, when
+I came in view of Pilrig, a pleasant gabled house set by the walkside
+among some brave young woods. The laird's horse was standing saddled at
+the door as I came up, but himself was in the study, where he received
+me in the midst of learned works and musical instruments, for he was not
+only a deep philosopher but much of a musician. He greeted me at first
+pretty well, and when he had read Rankeillor's letter, placed himself
+obligingly at my disposal.
+
+"And what is it, cousin David?" says he--"since it appears that we are
+cousins--what is this that I can do for you? A word to Prestongrange?
+Doubtless that is easily given. But what should be the word?"
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said I, "if I were to tell you my whole story the way it
+fell out, it's my opinion (and it was Rankeillor's before me) that you
+would be very little made up with it."
+
+"I am sorry to hear this of you, kinsman," says he.
+
+"I must not take that at your hands, Mr. Balfour," said I; "I have
+nothing to my charge to make me sorry, or you for me, but just the
+common infirmities of mankind. 'The guilt of Adam's first sin, the want
+of original righteousness, and the corruption of my whole nature,' so
+much I must answer for, and I hope I have been taught where to look for
+help," I said; for I judged from the look of the man he would think the
+better of me if I knew my questions.[11] "But in the way of worldly
+honour I have no great stumble to reproach myself with; and my
+difficulties have befallen me very much against my will and (by all that
+I can see) without my fault. My trouble is to have become dipped in a
+political complication, which it is judged you would be blythe to avoid
+a knowledge of."
+
+"Why, very well, Mr. David," he replied, "I am pleased to see you are
+all that Rankeillor represented. And for what you say of political
+complications, you do me no more than justice. It is my study to be
+beyond suspicion, and indeed outside the field of it. The question is,"
+says he, "how, if I am to know nothing of the matter, I can very well
+assist you?"
+
+"Why, sir," said I, "I propose you should write to his lordship, that I
+am a young man of reasonable good family and of good means: both of
+which I believe to be the case."
+
+"I have Rankeillor's word for it," said Mr. Balfour, "and I count that a
+warrandice against all deadly."
+
+"To which you might add (if you will take my word for so much) that I am
+a good churchman, loyal to King George, and so brought up," I went on.
+
+"None of which will do you any harm," said Mr. Balfour.
+
+"Then you might go on to say that I sought his lordship on a matter of
+great moment, connected with His Majesty's service and the
+administration of justice," I suggested.
+
+"As I am not to hear the matter," says the laird, "I will not take upon
+myself to qualify its weight. 'Great moment' therefore falls, and
+'moment' along with it. For the rest, I might express myself much as you
+propose."
+
+"And then, sir," said I, and rubbed my neck a little with my thumb,
+"then I would be very desirous if you could slip in a word that might
+perhaps tell for my protection."
+
+"Protection?" says he. "For your protection? Here is a phrase that
+somewhat dampens me. If the matter be so dangerous, I own I would be a
+little loath to move in it blindfold."
+
+"I believe I could indicate in two words where the thing sticks," said
+I.
+
+"Perhaps that would be the best," said he.
+
+"Well, it's the Appin murder," said I.
+
+He held up both the hands. "Sirs! sirs!" cried he.
+
+I thought by the expression of his face and voice that I had lost my
+helper.
+
+"Let me explain ..." I began.
+
+"I thank you kindly, I will hear no more of it," says he. "I decline _in
+toto_ to hear more of it. For your name's sake and Rankeillor's, and
+perhaps a little for your own, I will do what I can to help you; but I
+will hear no more upon the facts. And it is my first clear duty to warn
+you. These are deep waters, Mr. David, and you are a young man. Be
+cautious and think twice."
+
+"It is to be supposed I will have thought oftener than that, Mr.
+Balfour," said I, "and I will direct your attention again to
+Rankeillor's letter, where (I hope and believe) he has registered his
+approval of that which I design."
+
+"Well, well," said he; and then again, "Well, well! I will do what I can
+for you." Therewith he took a pen and paper, sat awhile in thought, and
+began to write with much consideration. "I understand that Rankeillor
+approves of what you have in mind?" he asked presently.
+
+"After some discussion, sir, he bade me to go forward in God's name,"
+said I.
+
+"That is the name to go in," said Mr. Balfour, and resumed his writing.
+Presently, he signed, re-read what he had written, and addressed me
+again. "Now here, Mr. David," said he, "is a letter of introduction,
+which I will seal without closing, and give into your hands open, as the
+form requires. But since I am acting in the dark, I will just read it to
+you, so that you may see if it will secure your end--
+
+
+ "PILRIG, _August 26th_, 1751.
+
+ "MY LORD,--This is to bring to your notice my namesake and
+ cousin, David Balfour Esquire of Shaws, a young gentleman
+ of unblemished descent and good estate. He has enjoyed besides
+ the more valuable advantages of a godly training, and his
+ political
+ principles are all that your lordship can desire. I am not in
+ Mr. Balfour's confidence, but I understand him to have a
+ matter
+ to declare, touching His Majesty's service and the
+ administration
+ of justice: purposes for which your lordship's zeal is known.
+ I should add that the young gentleman's intention is known to
+ and approved by some of his friends, who will watch with
+ hopeful
+ anxiety the event of his success or failure.'
+
+
+"Whereupon," continued Mr. Balfour, "I have subscribed myself with the
+usual compliments. You observe I have said 'some of your friends;' I
+hope you can justify my plural?"
+
+"Perfectly, sir; my purpose is known and approved by more than one,"
+said I. "And your letter, which I take a pleasure to thank you for, is
+all I could have hoped."
+
+"It was all I could squeeze out," said he; "and from what I know of the
+matter you design to meddle in, I can only pray God that it may prove
+sufficient."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE
+
+
+My kinsman kept me to a meal, "for the honour of the roof," he said; and
+I believe I made the better speed on my return. I had no thought but to
+be done with the next stage, and have myself fully committed; to a
+person circumstanced as I was, the appearance of closing a door on
+hesitation and temptation was itself extremely tempting; and I was the
+more disappointed, when I came to Prestongrange's house, to be informed
+he was abroad. I believe it was true at the moment, and for some hours
+after; and then I have no doubt the Advocate came home again, and
+enjoyed himself in a neighbouring chamber among friends, while perhaps
+the very fact of my arrival was forgotten. I would have gone away a
+dozen times, only for this strong drawing to have done with my
+declaration out of hand and be able to lay me down to sleep with a free
+conscience. At first I read, for the little cabinet where I was left
+contained a variety of books. But I fear I read with little profit; and
+the weather falling cloudy, the dusk coming up earlier than usual, and
+my cabinet being lighted with but a loophole of a window, I was at last
+obliged to desist from this diversion (such as it was), and pass the
+rest of my time of waiting in a very burthensome vacuity. The sound of
+people talking in a naer chamber, the pleasant note of a harpsichord,
+and once the voice of a lady singing, bore me a kind of company.
+
+I do not know the hour, but the darkness was long come, when the door of
+the cabinet opened, and I was aware, by the light behind him, of a tall
+figure of a man upon the threshold. I rose at once.
+
+"Is anybody there?" he asked. "Who is that?"
+
+"I am bearer of a letter from the laird of Pilrig to the Lord Advocate,"
+said I.
+
+"Have you been here long?" he asked.
+
+"I would not like to hazard an estimate of how many hours," said I.
+
+"It is the first I hear of it," he replied, with a chuckle. "The lads
+must have forgotten you. But you are in the bit at last, for I am
+Prestongrange."
+
+So saying, he passed before me into the next room, whither (upon his
+sign) I followed him, and where he lit a candle and took his place
+before a business-table. It was a long room, of a good proportion,
+wholly lined with books. That small spark of light in a corner struck
+out the man's handsome person and strong face. He was flushed, his eye
+watered and sparkled, and before he sat down I observed him to sway back
+and forth. No doubt he had been supping liberally; but his mind and
+tongue were under full control.
+
+"Well, sir, sit ye down," said he, "and let us see Pilrig's letter."
+
+He glanced it through in the beginning carelessly, looking up and bowing
+when he came to my name; but at the last words I thought I observed his
+attention to redouble, and I made sure he read them twice. All this
+while you are to suppose my heart was beating, for I had now crossed my
+Rubicon and was come fairly on the field of battle.
+
+"I am pleased to make your acquaintance, Mr. Balfour," he said, when he
+had done. "Let me offer you a glass of claret."
+
+"Under your favour, my lord, I think it would scarce be fair on me,"
+said I. "I have come here, as the letter will have mentioned, on a
+business of some gravity to myself; and as I am little used with wine, I
+might be the sooner affected."
+
+"You shall be the judge," said he. "But if you will permit, I believe I
+will even have the bottle in myself."
+
+He touched a bell, and the footman came, as at a signal, bringing wine
+and glasses.
+
+"You are sure you will not join me?" asked the Advocate. "Well, here is
+to our better acquaintance! In what way can I serve you?"
+
+"I should perhaps begin by telling you, my lord, that I am here at your
+own pressing invitation," said I.
+
+"You have the advantage of me somewhere," said he, "for I profess I
+think I never heard of you before this evening."
+
+"Right, my lord; the name is indeed new to you," said I. "And yet you
+have been for some time extremely wishful to make my acquaintance, and
+have declared the same in public."
+
+"I wish you would afford me a clue," says he. "I am no Daniel."
+
+"It will perhaps serve for such," said I, "that if I was in a jesting
+humour--which is far from the case--I believe I might lay a claim on
+your lordship for two hundred pounds."
+
+"In what sense?" he inquired.
+
+"In the sense of rewards offered for my person," said I.
+
+He thrust away his glass once and for all, and sat straight up in the
+chair where he had been previously lolling. "What am I to understand?"
+said he.
+
+"_A tall strong lad of about eighteen_," I quoted, "_speaks like a
+Lowlander, and has no beard_."
+
+"I recognise those words," said he, "which, if you have come here with
+any ill-judged intention of amusing yourself, are like to prove
+extremely prejudicial to your safety."
+
+"My purpose in this," I replied, "is just entirely as serious as life
+and death, and you have understood me perfectly. I am the boy who was
+speaking with Glenure when he was shot."
+
+"I can only suppose (seeing you here) that you claim to be innocent,"
+said he.
+
+"The inference is clear," I said. "I am a very loyal subject to King
+George, but if I had anything to reproach myself with, I would have had
+more discretion than to walk into your den."
+
+"I am glad of that," said he. "This horrid crime, Mr. Balfour, is of a
+dye which cannot permit any clemency. Blood has been barbarously shed.
+It has been shed in direct opposition to his Majesty and our whole frame
+of laws, by those who are their known and public oppugnants. I take a
+very high sense of this. I will not deny that I consider the crime as
+directly personal to his Majesty."
+
+"And unfortunately, my lord," I added a little drily, "directly personal
+to another great personage who may be nameless."
+
+"If you mean anything by those words, I must tell you I consider them
+unfit for a good subject; and were they spoke publicly I should make it
+my business to take note of them," said he. "You do not appear to me to
+recognise the gravity of your situation, or you would be more careful
+not to pejorate the same by words which glance upon the purity of
+justice. Justice, in this country, and in my poor hands, is no respecter
+of persons."
+
+"You give me too great a share in my own speech, my lord," said I. "I
+did but repeat the common talk of the country, which I have heard
+everywhere, and from men of all opinions as I came along."
+
+"When you are come to more discretion you will understand such talk is
+not to be listened to, how much less repeated," says the Advocate. "But
+I acquit you of an ill intention. That nobleman, whom we all honour and
+who has indeed been wounded in a near place by the late barbarity, sits
+too high to be reached by these aspersions. The Duke of Argyle--you see
+that I deal plainly with you--takes it to heart as I do, and as we are
+both bound to do by our judicial functions and the service of his
+Majesty; and I could wish that all hands, in this ill age, were equally
+clean of family rancour. But from the accident that this is a Campbell
+who has fallen martyr to his duty--as who else but the Campbells have
+ever put themselves foremost on that path? I may say it, who am no
+Campbell--and that the chief of that great house happens (for all our
+advantages) to be the present head of the College of Justice, small
+minds and disaffected tongues are set agog in every changehouse in the
+country; and I find a young gentleman like Mr. Balfour so ill-advised as
+to make himself their echo." So much he spoke with a very oratorical
+delivery, as if in court, and then declined again upon the manner of a
+gentleman. "All this apart," said he. "It now remains that I should
+learn what I am to do with you."
+
+"I had thought it was rather I that should learn the same from your
+lordship," said I.
+
+"Ay, true," says the Advocate. "But, you see, you come to me well
+recommended. There is a good honest Whig name to this letter," says he,
+picking it up a moment from the table. "And--extra-judicially, Mr.
+Balfour--there is always the possibility of some arrangement. I tell
+you, and I tell you beforehand that you may be the more upon your guard,
+your fate lies with me singly. In such a matter (be it said with
+reverence) I am more powerful than the king's Majesty; and should you
+please me--and of course satisfy my conscience--in what remains to be
+held of our interview, I tell you it may remain between ourselves."
+
+"Meaning how?" I asked.
+
+"Why, I mean it thus, Mr. Balfour," said he, "that if you give
+satisfaction, no soul need know so much as that you visited my house;
+and you may observe that I do not even call my clerk."
+
+I saw what way he was driving. "I suppose it is needless anyone should
+be informed upon my visit," said I, "though the precise nature of my
+gains by that I cannot see. I am not at all ashamed of coming here."
+
+"And have no cause to be," says he, encouragingly. "Nor yet (if you are
+careful) to fear the consequences."
+
+"My lord," said I, "speaking under your correction, I am not very easy
+to be frightened."
+
+"And I am sure I do not seek to frighten you," says he. "But to the
+interrogation; and let me warn you to volunteer nothing beyond the
+questions I shall ask you. It may consist very immediately with your
+safety. I have a great discretion, it is true, but there are bounds to
+it."
+
+"I shall try to follow your lordship's advice," said I.
+
+He spread a sheet of paper on the table and wrote a heading. "It appears
+you were present, by the way, in the wood of Lettermore at the moment of
+the fatal shot," he began. "Was this by accident?"
+
+"By accident," said I.
+
+"How came you in speech with Colin Campbell?" he asked.
+
+"I was inquiring my way of him to Aucharn," I replied.
+
+I observed he did not write this answer down.
+
+"H'm, true," said he, "I had forgotten that. And do you know, Mr.
+Balfour, I would dwell, if I were you, as little as might be on your
+relations with these Stewarts? It might be found to complicate our
+business. I am not yet inclined to regard these matters as essential."
+
+"I had thought, my lord, that all points of fact were equally material
+in such a case," said I.
+
+"You forget we are now trying these Stewarts," he replied, with great
+significance. "If we should ever come to be trying you, it will be very
+different; and I shall press these very questions that I am now willing
+to glide upon. But to resume: I have it here in Mr. Mungo Campbell's
+precognition that you ran immediately up the brae. How came that?"
+
+"Not immediately, my lord, and the cause was my seeing of the murderer."
+
+"You saw him, then?"
+
+"As plain as I see your lordship, though not so near hand."
+
+"You know him?"
+
+"I should know him again."
+
+"In your pursuit you were not so fortunate, then, as to overtake him?"
+
+"I was not."
+
+"Was he alone?"
+
+"He was alone."
+
+"There was no one else in that neighbourhood?"
+
+"Alan Breck Stewart was not far off, in a piece of a wood."
+
+The Advocate laid his pen down. "I think we are playing at cross
+purposes," said he, "which you will find to prove a very ill amusement
+for yourself."
+
+"I content myself with following your lordship's advice, and answering
+what I am asked," said I.
+
+"Be so wise as to bethink yourself in time," said he. "I use you with
+the most anxious tenderness, which you scarce seem to appreciate, and
+which (unless you be more careful) may prove to be in vain."
+
+"I do appreciate your tenderness, but conceive it to be mistaken," I
+replied, with something of a falter, for I saw we were come to grips at
+last. "I am here to lay before you certain information, by which I shall
+convince you Alan had no hand whatever in the killing of Glenure."
+
+The Advocate appeared for a moment at a stick, sitting with pursed lips,
+and blinking his eyes upon me like an angry cat. "Mr. Balfour," he said
+at last, "I tell you pointedly you go an ill way for your own
+interests."
+
+"My lord," I said, "I am as free of the charge of considering my own
+interests in this matter as your lordship. As God judges me, I have but
+the one design, and that is to see justice executed and the innocent go
+clear. If in pursuit of that I come to fall under your lordship's
+displeasure, I must bear it as I may."
+
+At this he rose from his chair, lit a second candle, and for a while
+gazed upon me steadily. I was surprised to see a great change of gravity
+fallen upon his face, and I could have almost thought he was a little
+pale.
+
+"You are either very simple, or extremely the reverse, and I see that I
+must deal with you more confidentially," says he. "This is a political
+case--ah, yes, Mr. Balfour! whether we like it or no, the case is
+political--and I tremble when I think what issues may depend from it. To
+a political case, I need scarce tell a young man of your education, we
+approach with very different thoughts from one which is criminal only.
+_Salus populi suprema lex_ is a maxim susceptible of great abuse, but it
+has that force which we find elsewhere only in the laws of nature: I
+mean it has the force of necessity. I will open this out to you, if you
+will allow me, at more length. You would have me believe--"
+
+"Under your pardon, my lord, I would have you to believe nothing but
+that which I can prove," said I.
+
+"Tut! tut! young gentleman," says he, "be not so pragmatical, and suffer
+a man who might be your father (if it was nothing more) to employ his
+own imperfect language, and express his own poor thoughts, even when
+they have the misfortune not to coincide with Mr. Balfour's. You would
+have me to believe Breck innocent. I would think this of little account,
+the more so as we cannot catch our man. But the matter of Breck's
+innocence shoots beyond itself. Once admitted, it would destroy the
+whole presumptions of our case against another and a very different
+criminal; a man grown old in treason, already twice in arms against his
+king and already twice forgiven; a fomenter of discontent, and (whoever
+may have fired the shot) the unmistakable original of the deed in
+question. I need not tell you that I mean James Stewart."
+
+"And I can just say plainly that the innocence of Alan and of James is
+what I am here to declare in private to your lordship, and what I am
+prepared to establish at the trial by my testimony," said I.
+
+"To which I can only answer by an equal plainness, Mr. Balfour," said
+he, "that (in that case) your testimony will not be called by me, and I
+desire you to withhold it altogether."
+
+"You are at the head of Justice in this country," I cried, "and you
+propose to me a crime!"
+
+"I am a man nursing with both hands the interests of this country," he
+replied, "and I press on you a political necessity. Patriotism is not
+always moral in the formal sense. You might be glad of it, I think: it
+is your own protection; the facts are heavy against you; and if I am
+still trying to except you from a very dangerous place, it is in part of
+course because I am not insensible to your honesty in coming here; in
+part because of Pilrig's letter; but in part, and in chief part, because
+I regard in this matter my political duty first and my judicial duty
+only second. For the same reason--I repeat it to you in the same frank
+words--I do not want your testimony."
+
+"I desire not to be thought to make a repartee, when I express only the
+plain sense of our position," said I. "But if your lordship has no need
+of my testimony, I believe the other side would be extremely blythe to
+get it."
+
+Prestongrange arose and began to pace to and fro in the room. "You are
+not so young," he said, "but what you must remember very clearly the
+year '45 and the shock that went about the country. I read in Pilrig's
+letter that you are sound in Kirk and State. Who saved them in that
+fatal year? I do not refer to his Royal Highness and his ramrods, which
+were extremely useful in their day; but the country had been saved and
+the field won before ever Cumberland came upon Drummossie. Who saved it?
+I repeat; who saved the Protestant religion and the whole frame of our
+civil institutions? The late Lord President Culloden, for one; he played
+a man's part, and small thanks he got for it--even as I, whom you see
+before you, straining every nerve in the same service, look for no
+reward beyond the conscience of my duties done. After the President, who
+else? You know the answer as well as I do; 'tis partly a scandal, and
+you glanced at it yourself, and I reproved you for it, when you first
+came in. It was the Duke and the great clan of Campbell. Now here is a
+Campbell foully murdered, and that in the King's service. The Duke and I
+are Highlanders. But we are Highlanders civilised, and it is not so with
+the great mass of our clans and families. They have still savage virtues
+and defects. They are still barbarians, like these Stewarts; only the
+Campbells were barbarians on the right side, and the Stewarts were
+barbarians on the wrong. Now be you the judge. The Campbells expect
+vengeance. If they do not get it--if this man James escape--there will
+be trouble with the Campbells. That means disturbance in the Highlands,
+which are uneasy and very far from being disarmed: the disarming is a
+farce...."
+
+"I can bear you out in that," said I.
+
+"Disturbance in the Highlands makes the hour of our old watchful enemy,"
+pursued his lordship, holding out a finger as he paced; "and I give you
+my word we may have a '45 again with the Campbells on the other side. To
+protect the life of this man Stewart--which is forfeit already on
+half-a-dozen different counts if not on this--do you propose to plunge
+your country in war, to jeopardise the faith of your fathers, and to
+expose the lives and fortunes of how many thousand innocent persons? . . .
+These are considerations that weigh with me, and that I hope will weigh
+no less with yourself, Mr. Balfour, as a lover of your country, good
+government, and religious truth."
+
+"You deal with me very frankly, and I thank you for it," said I. "I will
+try on my side to be no less honest. I believe your policy to be sound.
+I believe these deep duties may lie upon your lordship; I believe you
+may have laid them on your conscience when you took the oaths of the
+high office which you hold. But for me, who am just a plain man--or
+scarce a man yet--the plain duties must suffice. I can think but of two
+things, of a poor soul in the immediate and unjust danger of a shameful
+death, and of the cries and tears of his wife that still tingle in my
+head. I cannot see beyond, my lord. It's the way that I am made. If the
+country has to fall, it has to fall. And I pray God, if this be wilful
+blindness, that he may enlighten me before too late."
+
+He had heard me motionless, and stood so a while longer.
+
+"This is an unexpected obstacle," says he, aloud, but to himself.
+
+"And how is your lordship to dispose of me?" I asked.
+
+"If I wished," said he, "you know that you might sleep in gaol?"
+
+"My lord," says I, "I have slept in worse places."
+
+"Well, my boy," said he, "there is one thing appears very plainly from
+our interview, that I may rely on your pledged word. Give me your honour
+that you will be wholly secret, not only on what has passed to-night,
+but in the matter of the Appin case, and I let you go free."
+
+"I will give it till to-morrow or any other near day that you may please
+to set," said I. "I would not be thought too wily; but if I gave the
+promise without qualification, your lordship would have attained his
+end."
+
+"I had no thought to entrap you," said he.
+
+"I am sure of that," said I.
+
+"Let me see," he continued. "To-morrow is the Sabbath. Come to me on
+Monday by eight in the morning, and give me your promise until then."
+
+"Freely given, my lord," said I. "And with regard to what has fallen
+from yourself, I will give it for as long as it shall please God to
+spare your days."
+
+"You will observe," he said next, "that I have made no employment of
+menaces."
+
+"It was like your lordship's nobility," said I. "Yet I am not altogether
+so dull but what I can perceive the nature of those you have not
+uttered."
+
+"Well," said he, "good-night to you. May you sleep well, for I think it
+is more than I am like to do."
+
+With that he sighed, took up a candle, and gave me his conveyance as far
+as the street door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE
+
+
+The next day, Sabbath, August 27th, I had the occasion I had long looked
+forward to, to hear some of the famous Edinburgh preachers, all well
+known to me already by the report of Mr. Campbell. Alas! and I might
+just as well have been at Essendean, and sitting under Mr. Campbell's
+worthy self! the turmoil of my thoughts, which dwelt continually on the
+interview with Prestongrange, inhibiting me from all attention. I was
+indeed much less impressed by the reasoning of the divines than by the
+spectacle of the thronged congregation in the churches, like what I
+imagined of a theatre or (in my then disposition) of an assize of trial;
+above all at the West Kirk, with its three tiers of galleries, where I
+went in the vain hope that I might see Miss Drummond.
+
+On the Monday I betook me for the first time to a barber's, and was very
+well pleased with the result. Thence to the Advocate's, where the red
+coats of the soldiers showed again about his door, making a bright place
+in the close. I looked about for the young lady and her gillies; there
+was never a sign of them. But I was no sooner shown into the cabinet or
+antechamber, where I had spent so wearyful a time upon the Saturday,
+than I was aware of the tall figure of James More in a corner. He seemed
+a prey to a painful uneasiness, reaching forth his feet and hands, and
+his eyes speeding here and there without rest about the walls of the
+small chamber, which recalled to me with a sense of pity the man's
+wretched situation. I suppose it was partly this, and partly my strong
+continuing interest in his daughter, that moved me to accost him.
+
+"Give you a good-morning, sir," said I.
+
+"And a good-morning to you, sir," said he.
+
+"You bide tryst with Prestongrange?" I asked.
+
+"I do, sir, and I pray your business with that gentleman be more
+agreeable than mine," was his reply.
+
+"I hope at least that yours will be brief, for I suppose you pass before
+me," said I.
+
+"All pass before me," he said, with a shrug and a gesture upward of the
+open hands. "It was not always so, sir, but times change. It was not so
+when the sword was in the scale, young gentleman, and the virtues of the
+soldier might sustain themselves."
+
+There came a kind of Highland snuffle out of the man that raised my
+dander strangely.
+
+"Well, Mr. Macgregor," said I, "I understand the main thing for a
+soldier is to be silent, and the first of his virtues never to
+complain."
+
+"You have my name, I perceive"--he bowed to me with his arms
+crossed--"though it's one I must not use myself. Well, there is a
+publicity--I have shown my face and told my name too often in the beards
+of my enemies. I must not wonder if both should be known to many that I
+know not."
+
+"That you know not in the least, sir," said I, "nor yet anybody else;
+but the name I am called, if you care to hear it, is Balfour."
+
+"It is a good name," he replied, civilly; "there are many decent folk
+that use it. And now that I call to mind, there was a young gentleman,
+your namesake, that marched surgeon in the year '45 with my battalion."
+
+"I believe that would be a brother to Balfour of Baith," said I, for I
+was ready for the surgeon now.
+
+"The same, sir," said James More. "And since I have been fellow-soldier
+with your kinsman, you must suffer me to grasp your hand."
+
+He shook hands with me long and tenderly, beaming on me the while as
+though he had found a brother.
+
+"Ah!" says he, "these are changed days since your cousin and I heard the
+balls whistle in our lugs."
+
+"I think he was a very far-away cousin," said I, drily, "and I ought to
+tell you that I never clapped eyes upon the man."
+
+"Well, well," said he, "it makes no change. And you--I do not think you
+were out yourself, sir--I have no clear mind of your face, which is one
+not probable to be forgotten."
+
+"In the year you refer to, Mr. Macgregor, I was getting skelped in the
+parish school," said I.
+
+"So young!" cries he. "Ah, then you will never be able to think what
+this meeting is to me. In the hour of my adversity, and in the house of
+my enemy, to meet in with the blood of an old brother-in-arms--it
+heartens me, Mr. Balfour, like the skirling of the Highland pipes! Sir,
+this is a sad look-back that many of us have to make: some with falling
+tears. I have lived in my own country like a king; my sword, my
+mountains, and the faith of my friends and kinsmen sufficed for me. Now
+I lie in a stinking dungeon; and do you know, Mr. Balfour," he went on,
+taking my arm and beginning to lead me about, "do you know, sir, that I
+lack mere necessaries? The malice of my foes has quite sequestered my
+resources. I lie, as you know, sir, on a trumped-up charge, of which I
+am as innocent as yourself. They dare not bring me to my trial, and in
+the meanwhile I am held naked in my prison. I could have wished it was
+your cousin I had met, or his brother Baith himself. Either would, I
+know, have been rejoiced to help me; while a comparative stranger like
+yourself--"
+
+I would be ashamed to set down all he poured out to me in this beggarly
+vein, or the very short and grudging answers that I made to him. There
+were times when I was tempted to stop his mouth with some small change;
+but whether it was from shame or pride--whether it was for my own sake
+or Catriona's--whether it was because I thought him no fit father for
+his daughter, or because I resented that grossness of immediate falsity
+that clung about the man himself--the thing was clean beyond me. And I
+was still being wheedled and preached to, and still being marched to and
+fro, three steps and a turn, in that small chamber, and had already, by
+some very short replies, highly incensed, although not finally
+discouraged, my beggar, when Prestongrange appeared in the doorway and
+bade me eagerly into his big chamber.
+
+"I have a moment's engagement," said he; "and that you may not sit
+empty-handed I am going to present you to my three braw daughters, of
+whom perhaps you may have heard, for I think they are more famous than
+papa. This way."
+
+He led me into another long room above, where a dry old lady sat at a
+frame of embroidery, and the three handsomest young women (I suppose) in
+Scotland stood together by a window.
+
+"This is my new friend, Mr. Balfour," said he, presenting me by the arm.
+"David, here is my sister, Miss Grant, who is so good as keep my house
+for me, and will be very pleased if she can help you. And here," says
+he, turning to the three younger ladies, "here are my _three braw
+dauchters_. A fair question to ye, Mr. Davie: which of the three is the
+best favoured? And I wager he will never have the impudence to propound
+honest Alan Ramsay's answer!"
+
+Hereupon all three, and the old Miss Grant as well, cried out against
+this sally, which (as I was acquainted with the verses he referred to)
+brought shame into my own cheek. It seemed to me a citation unpardonable
+in a father, and I was amazed that these ladies could laugh even while
+they reproved, or made believe to.
+
+Under cover of this mirth, Prestongrange got forth of the chamber, and I
+was left, like a fish upon dry land, in that very unsuitable society. I
+could never deny, in looking back upon what followed, that I was
+eminently stockish; and I must say the ladies were well drilled to have
+so long a patience with me. The aunt indeed sat close at her embroidery,
+only looking now and again and smiling; but the misses, and especially
+the eldest, who was besides the most handsome, paid me a score of
+attentions which I was very ill able to repay. It was all in vain to
+tell myself I was a young fellow of some worth as well as good estate,
+and had no call to feel abashed before these lasses, the eldest not so
+much older than myself, and no one of them by any probability half as
+learned. Reasoning would not change the fact; and there were times when
+the colour came into my face to think I was shaved that day for the
+first time.
+
+The talk going, with all their endeavours, very heavily, the eldest took
+pity on my awkwardness, sat down to her instrument, of which she was a
+passed mistress, and entertained me for a while with playing and
+singing, both in the Scots and in the Italian manners; this put me more
+at my ease, and being reminded of Alan's air that he had taught me in
+the hole near Carriden, I made so bold as to whistle a bar or two, and
+ask if she knew that.
+
+She shook her head. "I never heard a note of it," said she. "Whistle it
+all through. And now once again," she added, after I had done so.
+
+Then she picked it out upon the keyboard, and (to my surprise) instantly
+enriched the same with well-sounding chords, and sang, as she played,
+with a very droll expression and broad accent:
+
+ "Haenae I got just the lilt of it?
+ Isnae this the tune that ye whustled?"
+
+"You see," she says, "I can do the poetry too, only it won't rhyme." And
+then again:
+
+ "I am Miss Grant, sib to the Advocate:
+ You, I believe, are Dauvit Balfour."
+
+I told her how much astonished I was by her genius.
+
+"And what do you call the name of it?" she asked.
+
+"I do not know the real name," said I. "I just call it _Alan's air_."
+
+She looked at me directly in the face. "I shall call it _David's air_,"
+said she; "though if it's the least like what your namesake of Israel
+played to Saul I would never wonder that the king got little good by it,
+for it's but melancholy music. Your other name I do not like; so, if you
+was ever wishing to hear your tune again you are to ask for it by mine."
+
+This was said with a significance that gave my heart a jog. "Why that,
+Miss Grant?" I asked.
+
+"Why," says she, "if ever you should come to get hanged, I will set your
+last dying speech and confession to that tune and sing it."
+
+This put it beyond a doubt that she was partly informed of my story and
+peril. How, or just how much, it was more difficult to guess. It was
+plain she knew there was something of danger in the name of Alan, and
+thus warned me to leave it out of reference; and plain she knew that I
+stood under some criminal suspicion. I judged besides that the harshness
+of her last speech (which besides she had followed up immediately with a
+very noisy piece of music) was to put an end to the present
+conversation. I stood beside her, affecting to listen and admire, but
+truly whirled away by my own thoughts. I have always found this young
+lady to be a lover of the mysterious; and certainly this first interview
+made a mystery that was beyond my plummet. One thing I learned long
+after, the hours of the Sunday had been well employed, the bank porter
+had been found and examined, my visit to Charles Stewart was discovered,
+and the deduction made that I was pretty deep with James and Alan, and
+most likely in a continued correspondence with the last. Hence this
+broad hint that was given me across the harpsichord.
+
+In the midst of the piece of music, one of the younger misses, who was
+at a window over the close, cried on her sisters to come quick, for
+there was "_Grey eyes_ again." The whole family trooped there at once,
+and crowded one another for a look. The window whither they ran was in
+an odd corner of that room, gave above the entrance door, and flanked up
+the close.
+
+"Come, Mr. Balfour," they cried, "come and see. She is the most
+beautiful creature! She hangs round the close-head these last days,
+always with some wretched-like gillies, and yet seems quite a lady."
+
+I had no need to look; neither did I look twice, or long. I was afraid
+she might have seen me there, looking down upon her from that chamber of
+music, and she without, and her father in the same house, perhaps
+begging for his life with tears, and myself come but newly from
+rejecting his petitions. But even that glance set me in a better conceit
+of myself, and much less awe of the young ladies. They were beautiful,
+that was beyond question, but Catriona was beautiful too, and had a kind
+of brightness in her like a coal of fire. As much as the others cast me
+down, she lifted me up. I remembered I had talked easily with her. If I
+could make no hand of it with these fine maids, it was perhaps something
+their own fault. My embarrassment began to be a little mingled and
+lightened with a sense of fun; and when the aunt smiled at me from her
+embroidery, and the three daughters unbent to me like a baby, all with
+"papa's orders" written on their faces, there were times when I could
+have found it in my heart to smile myself.
+
+Presently papa returned, the same kind, happy-like, pleasant-spoken man.
+
+"Now, girls," said he, "I must take Mr. Balfour away again; but I hope
+you have been able to persuade him to return where I shall be always
+gratified to find him."
+
+So they each made me a little farthing compliment, and I was led away.
+
+If this visit to the family had been meant to soften my resistance, it
+was the worst of failures. I was no such ass but what I understood how
+poor a figure I had made, and that the girls would be yawning their jaws
+off as soon as my stiff back was turned. I felt I had shown how little I
+had in me of what was soft and graceful; and I longed for a chance to
+prove that I had something of the other stuff, the stern and dangerous.
+
+Well, I was to be served to my desire, for the scene to which he was
+conducting me was of a different character.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+UMQUILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT
+
+
+There was a man waiting us in Prestongrange's study, whom I distasted at
+the first look, as we distaste a ferret or an earwig. He was bitter
+ugly, but seemed very much of a gentleman; had still manners, but
+capable of sudden leaps and violences; and a small voice, which could
+ring out shrill and dangerous when he so desired.
+
+The Advocate presented us in a familiar, friendly way.
+
+"Here, Fraser," said he, "here is Mr. Balfour whom we talked about. Mr.
+David, this is Mr. Symon Fraser, whom we used to call by another title,
+but that is an old song. Mr. Fraser has an errand to you."
+
+With that he stepped aside to his book-shelves, and made believe to
+consult a quarto volume in the far end.
+
+I was thus left (in a sense) alone with perhaps the last person in the
+world I had expected. There was no doubt upon the terms of introduction;
+this could be no other than the forfeited Master of Lovat and chief of
+the great clan Fraser. I knew he had led his men in the Rebellion; I
+knew his father's head--my old lord's, that grey fox of the
+mountains--to have fallen on the block for that offence, the lands of
+the family to have been seized, and their nobility attainted. I could
+not conceive what he should be doing in Grant's house; I could not
+conceive that he had been called to the bar, had eaten all his
+principles, and was now currying favour with the Government even to the
+extent of acting Advocate-Depute in the Appin murder.
+
+"Well, Mr. Balfour," said he, "what is all this I hear of ye?"
+
+"It would not become me to prejudge," said I, "but if the Advocate was
+your authority he is fully possessed of my opinions."
+
+"I may tell you I am engaged in the Appin case," he went on; "I am to
+appear under Prestongrange; and from my study of the precognitions I can
+assure you your opinions are erroneous. The guilt of Breck is manifest;
+and your testimony, in which you admit you saw him on the hill at the
+very moment, will certify his hanging."
+
+"It will be rather ill to hang him till you catch him," I observed. "And
+for other matters I very willingly leave you to your own impressions."
+
+"The Duke has been informed," he went on. "I have just come from his
+Grace, and he expressed himself before me with an honest freedom like
+the great nobleman he is. He spoke of you by name, Mr. Balfour, and
+declared his gratitude beforehand in case you would be led by those who
+understand your own interests and those of the country so much better
+than yourself. Gratitude is no empty expression in that mouth: _experto
+crede_. I daresay you know something of my name and clan, and the
+damnable example and lamented end of my late father, to say nothing of
+my own errata. Well, I have made my peace with that good Duke; he has
+intervened for me with our friend Prestongrange; and here I am with my
+foot in the stirrup again and some of the responsibility shared into my
+hand of prosecuting King George's enemies and avenging the late daring
+and barefaced insult to his Majesty."
+
+"Doubtless a proud position for your father's son," says I.
+
+He wagged his bald eyebrows at me. "You are pleased to make experiments
+in the ironical, I think," said he. "But I am here upon duty, I am here
+to discharge my errand in good faith, it is in vain you think to divert
+me. And let me tell you, for a young fellow of spirit and ambition like
+yourself, a good shove in the beginning will do more than ten years'
+drudgery. The shove is now at your command; choose what you will to be
+advanced in, the Duke will watch upon you with the affectionate
+disposition of a father."
+
+"I am thinking that I lack the docility of the son," says I.
+
+"And do you really suppose, sir, that the whole policy of this country
+is to be suffered to trip up and tumble down for an ill-mannered colt of
+a boy?" he cried. "This has been made a test case, all who would prosper
+in the future must put a shoulder to the wheel. Look at me! Do you
+suppose it is for my pleasure that I put myself in the highly invidious
+position of prosecuting a man that I have drawn the sword alongside of?
+The choice is not left me."
+
+"But I think, sir, that you forfeited your choice when you mixed in with
+that unnatural rebellion," I remarked. "My case is happily otherwise; I
+am a true man, and can look either the Duke or King George in the face
+without concern."
+
+"Is it so the wind sits?" says he. "I protest you are fallen in the
+worst sort of error. Prestongrange has been hitherto so civil (he tells
+me) as not to combat your allegations; but you must not think they are
+not looked upon with strong suspicion. You say you are innocent. My dear
+sir, the facts declare you guilty."
+
+"I was waiting for you there," said I.
+
+"The evidence of Mungo Campbell; your flight after the completion of the
+murder; your long course of secresy--my good young man!" said Mr. Symon,
+"here is enough evidence to hang a bullock, let be a David Balfour! I
+shall be upon that trial; my voice shall be raised; I shall then speak
+much otherwise from what I do to-day, and far less to your
+gratification, little as you like it now! Ah, you look white!" cries he.
+"I have found the key of your impudent heart. You look pale, your eyes
+waver, Mr. David! You see the grave and the gallows nearer by than you
+had fancied."
+
+"I own to a natural weakness," said I. "I think no shame for that. Shame
+. . ." I was going on.
+
+"Shame waits for you on the gibbet," he broke in.
+
+"Where I shall but be even'd with my lord your father," said I.
+
+"Aha, but not so!" he cried, "and you do not yet see to the bottom of
+this business. My father suffered in a great cause, and for dealing in
+the affairs of kings. You are to hang for a dirty murder about
+boddle-pieces. Your personal part in it, the treacherous one of holding
+the poor wretch in talk, your accomplices a pack of ragged Highland
+gillies. And it can be shown, my great Mr. Balfour--it can be shown, and
+it _will_ be shown, trust _me_ that has a finger in the pie--it can be
+shown, and shall be shown, that you were paid to do it. I think I can
+see the looks go round the court when I adduce my evidence, and it shall
+appear that you, a young man of education, let yourself be corrupted to
+this shocking act for a suit of cast clothes, a bottle of Highland
+spirits, and three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in copper money."
+
+There was a touch of the truth in these words that knocked
+me like a blow: clothes, a bottle of _usquebaugh_, and
+three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in change made up, indeed, the most of what
+Alan and I had carried from Aucharn; and I saw that some of James's
+people had been blabbing in their dungeons.
+
+"You see I know more than you fancied," he resumed in triumph. "And as
+for giving it this turn, great Mr. David, you must not suppose the
+Government of Great Britain and Ireland will ever be stuck for want of
+evidence. We have men here in prison who will swear out their lives as
+we direct them; as I direct, if you prefer the phrase. So now you are to
+guess your part of glory if you choose to die. On the one hand, life,
+wine, women, and a duke to be your hand-gun; on the other, a rope to
+your craig, and a gibbet to clatter your bones on, and the lousiest,
+lowest story to hand down to your namesakes in the future that was ever
+told about a hired assassin. And see here!" he cried, with a formidable
+shrill voice, "see this paper that I pull out of my pocket. Look at the
+name there: it is the name of the great David, I believe, the ink scarce
+dry yet. Can you guess its nature? It is the warrant for your arrest,
+which I have but to touch this bell beside me to have executed on the
+spot. Once in the Tolbooth upon this paper, may God help you, for the
+die is cast!"
+
+I must never deny that I was greatly horrified by so much baseness, and
+much unmanned by the immediacy and ugliness of my danger. Mr. Symon had
+already gloried in the changes of my hue; I make no doubt I was now no
+ruddier than my shirt; my speech besides trembled.
+
+"There is a gentleman in this room," cried I. "I appeal to him. I put my
+life and credit in his hands."
+
+Prestongrange shut his book with a snap. "I told you so, Symon," said
+he; "you have played your hand for all it was worth, and you have lost.
+Mr. David," he went on, "I wish you to believe it was by no choice of
+mine you were subjected to this proof. I wish you could understand how
+glad I am you should come forth from it with so much credit. You may not
+quite see how, but it is a little of a service to myself. For had our
+friend here been more successful than I was last night, it might have
+appeared that he was a better judge of men than I; it might have
+appeared we were altogether in the wrong situations, Mr. Symon and
+myself. And I know our friend Symon to be ambitious," says he, striking
+lightly on Fraser's shoulder. "As for this stage play, it is over; my
+sentiments are very much engaged in your behalf; and whatever issue we
+can find to this unfortunate affair, I shall make it my business to see
+it is adopted with tenderness to you."
+
+These were very good words, and I could see besides that there was
+little love, and perhaps a spice of genuine ill-will, between those two
+who were opposed to me. For all that, it was unmistakable this interview
+had been designed, perhaps rehearsed, with the consent of both; it was
+plain my adversaries were in earnest to try me by all methods; and now
+(persuasion, flattery, and menaces having been tried in vain) I could
+not but wonder what would be their next expedient. My eyes besides were
+still troubled, and my knees loose under me, with the distress of the
+late ordeal; and I could do no more than stammer the same form of words:
+"I put my life and credit in your hands."
+
+"Well, well," says he, "we must try to save them. And in the meanwhile
+let us return to gentler methods. You must not bear any grudge upon my
+friend, Mr. Symon, who did but speak by his brief. And even if you did
+conceive some malice against myself, who stood by and seemed rather to
+hold a candle, I must not let that extend to innocent members of my
+family. These are greatly engaged to see more of you, and I cannot
+consent to have my young women-folk disappointed. To-morrow they will be
+going to Hope Park, where I think it very proper you should make your
+bow. Call for me first, when I may possibly have something for your
+private hearing; then you shall be turned abroad again under the conduct
+of my misses; and until that time repeat to me your promise of secrecy."
+
+I had done better to have instantly refused, but in truth I was beside
+the power of reasoning; did as I was bid; took my leave I know not how;
+and when I was forth again in the close, and the door had shut behind
+me, was glad to lean on a house wall and wipe my face. That horrid
+apparition (as I may call it) of Mr. Symon rang in my memory, as a
+sudden noise rings after it is over on the ear. Tales of the man's
+father, of his falseness, of his manifold perpetual treacheries, rose
+before me from all that I had heard and read, and joined on with what I
+had just experienced of himself. Each time it occurred to me, the
+ingenious foulness of that calumny he had proposed to nail upon my
+character startled me afresh. The case of the man upon the gibbet by
+Leith Walk appeared scarce distinguishable from that I was now to
+consider as my own. To rob a child of so little more than nothing was
+certainly a paltry enterprise for two grown men; but my own tale, as it
+was to be represented in a court by Symon Fraser, appeared a fair second
+in every possible point of view of sordidness and cowardice.
+
+The voices of two of Prestongrange's liveried men upon his doorstep
+recalled me to myself.
+
+"Ha'e," said the one, "this billet as fast as ye can link to the
+captain."
+
+"Is that for the cateran back again?" asked the other.
+
+"It would seem sae," returned the first. "Him and Symon are seeking
+him."
+
+"I think Prestongrange is gane gyte," says the second. "He'll have James
+More in bed with him next."
+
+"Weel, it's neither your affair nor mine's," says the first.
+
+And they parted, the one upon his errand, and the other back into the
+house.
+
+This looked as ill as possible. I was scarce gone and they were sending
+already for James More, to whom I thought Mr. Symon must have pointed
+when he spoke of men in prison and ready to redeem their lives by all
+extremities. My scalp curdled among my hair, and the next moment the
+blood leaped in me to remember Catriona. Poor lass! her father stood to
+be hanged for pretty indefensible misconduct. What was yet more
+unpalatable, it now seemed he was prepared to save his four quarters by
+the worst of shame and the most foul of cowardly murders--murder by the
+false oath; and to complete our misfortunes, it seemed myself was picked
+out to be the victim.
+
+I began to walk swiftly and at random, conscious only of a desire for
+movement, air, and the open country.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOR
+
+
+I came forth, I vow I know not how, on the _Lang Dykes_.[12] This is a
+rural road which runs on the north side over against the city. Thence I
+could see the whole black length of it tail down, from where the castle
+stands upon its crags above the loch in a long line of spires and gable
+ends, and smoking chimneys, and at the sight my heart swelled in my
+bosom. My youth, as I have told, was already inured to dangers; but such
+danger as I had seen the face of but that morning, in the midst of what
+they call the safety of a town, shook me beyond experience. Peril of
+slavery, peril of shipwreck, peril of sword and shot, I had stood all of
+these without discredit; but the peril there was in the sharp voice and
+the fat face of Symon, properly Lord Lovat, daunted me wholly.
+
+I sat by the lake side in a place where the rushes went down into the
+water, and there steeped my wrists and laved my temples. If I could have
+done so with any remains of self-esteem I would now have fled from my
+foolhardy enterprise. But (call it courage or cowardice, and I believe
+it was both the one and the other) I decided I was ventured out beyond
+the possibility of a retreat. I had outfaced these men, I would continue
+to outface them; come what might, I would stand by the word spoken.
+
+The sense of my own constancy somewhat uplifted my spirits, but not
+much. At the best of it there was an icy place about my heart, and life
+seemed a black business to be at all engaged in. For two souls in
+particular my pity flowed. The one was myself, to be so friendless and
+lost among dangers. The other was the girl, the daughter of James More.
+I had seen but little of her; yet my view was taken and my judgment
+made. I thought her a lass of a clean honour, like a man's; I thought
+her one to die of a disgrace; and now I believed her father to be at
+that moment bargaining his vile life for mine. It made a bond in my
+thoughts betwixt the girl and me. I had seen her before only as a
+wayside appearance, though one that pleased me strangely; I saw her now
+in a sudden nearness of relation, as the daughter of my blood foe, and I
+might say, my murderer. I reflected it was hard I should be so plagued
+and persecuted all my days for other folk's affairs, and have no manner
+of pleasure myself. I got meals and a bed to sleep in when my concerns
+would suffer it; beyond that my wealth was of no help to me. If I was to
+hang, my days were like to be short; if I was not to hang but to escape
+out of this trouble, they might yet seem long to me ere I was done with
+them. Of a sudden her face appeared in my memory, the way I had first
+seen it, with the parted lips; at that, weakness came in my bosom and
+strength into my legs; and I set resolutely forward on the way to Dean.
+If I was to hang to-morrow, and it was sure enough I might very likely
+sleep that night in a dungeon, I determined I should hear and speak once
+more with Catriona.
+
+The exercise of walking and the thought of my destination braced me yet
+more, so that I began to pluck up a kind of spirit. In the village of
+Dean, where it sits in the bottom of a glen beside the river, I inquired
+my way of a miller's man, who sent me up the hill upon the farther side
+by a plain path, and so to a decent-like small house in a garden of
+lawns and apple-trees. My heart beat high as I stepped inside the garden
+hedge, but it fell low indeed when I came face to face with a grim and
+fierce old lady, walking there in a white mutch with a man's hat
+strapped upon the top of it.
+
+"What do ye come seeking here?" she asked.
+
+I told her I was after Miss Drummond.
+
+"And what may be your business with Miss Drummond?" says she.
+
+I told her I had met her on Saturday last, had been so fortunate as to
+render her a trifling service, and was come now on the young lady's
+invitation.
+
+"Oh, so you're Saxpence!" she cried, with a very sneering manner. "A
+braw gift, a bonny gentleman. And hae ye ony ither name and designation,
+or were ye bapteesed Saxpence?" she asked.
+
+I told my name.
+
+"Preserve me!" she cried. "Has Ebenezer gotten a son?"
+
+"No, ma'am," said I. "I am a son of Alexander's. It's I that am the
+Laird of Shaws."
+
+"Ye'll find your work cut out for ye to establish that," quoth she.
+
+"I perceive you know my uncle," said I; "and I daresay you may be the
+better pleased to hear that business is arranged."
+
+"And what brings ye here after Miss Drummond?" she pursued.
+
+"I'm come after my saxpence, mem," said I. "It's to be thought, being my
+uncle's nephew, I would be found a careful lad."
+
+"So ye have a spark of sleeness in ye," observed the old lady, with some
+approval. "I thought ye had just been a cuif--you and your saxpence, and
+your _lucky day_ and your _sake of Balwhidder_"--from which I was
+gratified to learn that Catriona had not forgotten some of our talk.
+"But all this is by the purpose," she resumed. "Am I to understand that
+ye come here keeping company?"
+
+"This is surely rather an early question," said I. "The maid is young,
+so am I, worse fortune. I have but seen her the once. I'll not deny," I
+added, making up my mind to try her with some frankness, "I'll not deny
+but she has run in my head a good deal since I met in with her. That is
+one thing; but it would be quite another, and I think I would look very
+like a fool, to commit myself."
+
+"You can speak out of your mouth, I see," said the old lady. "Praise
+God, and so can I! I was fool enough to take charge of this rogue's
+daughter: a fine charge I have gotten; but it's mine, and I'll carry it
+the way I want to. Do ye mean to tell me, Mr. Balfour of Shaws, that you
+would marry James More's daughter, and him hanged? Well, then, where
+there's no possible marriage there shall be no manner of carryings on,
+and take that for said. Lasses are bruckle things," she added, with a
+nod; "and though ye would never think it by my wrunkled chafts, I was a
+lassie mysel', and a bonny one."
+
+"Lady Allardyce," said I, "for that I suppose to be your name, you seem
+to do the two sides of the talking, which is a very poor manner to come
+to an agreement. You give me rather a home thrust when you ask if I
+would marry, at the gallows' foot, a young lady whom I have seen but the
+once. I have told you already I would never be so untenty as to commit
+myself. And yet I'll go some way with you. If I continue to like the
+lass as well as I have reason to expect, it will be something more than
+her father, or the gallows either, that keeps the two of us apart. As
+for my family, I found it by the wayside like a lost bawbee! I owe less
+than nothing to my uncle; and if ever I marry, it will be to please one
+person: that's myself."
+
+"I have heard this kind of talk before ye were born," said Mrs. Ogilvy,
+"which is perhaps the reason that I think of it so little. There's much
+to be considered. This James More is a kinsman of mine, to my shame be
+it spoken. But the better the family, the mair men hanged or heided,
+that's always been poor Scotland's story. And if it was just the
+hanging! For my part, I think I would be best pleased with James upon
+the gallows, which would be at least an end to him. Catrine's a good
+lass enough, and a good-hearted, and lets herself be deaved all day with
+a runt of an auld wife like me. But, ye see, there's the weak bit. She's
+daft about that long, false, fleeching beggar of a father of hers, and
+red-mad about the Gregara, and proscribed names, and King James, and a
+wheen blethers. And you might think ye could guide her, ye would find
+yourself sore mista'en. Ye say ye've seen her but the once..."
+
+"Spoke with her but the once, I should have said," I interrupted. "I saw
+her again this morning from a window at Prestongrange's."
+
+This I daresay I put in because it sounded well; but I was properly paid
+for my ostentation on the return.
+
+"What's this of it?" cries the old lady, with a sudden pucker of her
+face. "I think it was at the Advocate's door-cheek that ye met her
+first."
+
+I told her that was so.
+
+"H'm," she said; and then suddenly, upon rather a scolding tone, "I have
+your bare word for it," she cries, "as to who and what you are. By your
+way of it, you're Balfour of the Shaws; but for what I ken you may be
+Balfour of the Deevil's oxter. It's possible ye may come here for what
+ye say, and it's equally possible ye may come here for deil care what!
+I'm good enough whig to sit quiet, and to have keepit all my men-folk's
+heads upon their shoulders. But I'm not just a good enough whig to be
+made a fool of neither. And I tell you fairly, there's too much
+Advocate's door and Advocate's window here for a man that comes taigling
+after a Macgregor's daughter. Ye can tell that to the Advocate that sent
+ye, with my fond love. And I kiss my loof to ye, Mr. Balfour," says she,
+suiting the action to the word, "and a braw journey to ye back to where
+ye cam frae."
+
+"If you think me a spy," I broke out, and speech stuck in my throat. I
+stood and looked murder at the old lady for a space, then bowed and
+turned away.
+
+"Here! Hoots! The callant's in a creel!" she cried. "Think ye a spy?
+what else would I think ye--me that kens naething by ye? But I see that
+I was wrong; and as I cannot fight, I'll have to apologise. A bonny
+figure I would be with a broadsword. Ay! ay!" she went on, "you're none
+such a bad lad in your way; I think ye'll have some redeeming vices.
+But, oh, Davit Balfour, ye're damned countryfeed. Ye'll have to win over
+that, lad; ye'll have to soople your back-bone, and think a wee pickle
+less of your dainty self; and ye'll have to try to find out that
+women-folk are nae grenadiers. But that can never be. To your last day
+you'll ken no more of women-folk than what I do of sow-gelding."
+
+I had never been used with such expressions from a lady's tongue, the
+only two ladies I had known, Mrs. Campbell and my mother, being most
+devout and most particular women; and I suppose my amazement must have
+been depicted in my countenance, for Mrs. Ogilvy burst forth suddenly in
+a fit of laughter.
+
+"Keep me!" she cried, struggling with her mirth, "you have the finest
+timber face--and you to marry the daughter of a Hieland cateran! Davie,
+my dear, I think we'll have to make a match of it--if it was just to see
+the weans. And now," she went on, "there's no manner of service in your
+daidling here, for the young woman is from home, and it's my fear that
+the old woman is no suitable companion for your father's son. Forbye
+that I have nobody but myself to look after my reputation, and have been
+long enough alone with a sedooctive youth. And come back another day for
+your saxpence!" she cried after me as I left.
+
+My skirmish with this disconcerting lady gave my thoughts a boldness
+they had otherwise wanted. For two days the image of Catriona had mixed
+in all my meditations; she made their background, so that I scarce
+enjoyed my own company without a glint of her in a corner of my mind.
+But now she came immediately near; I seemed to touch her, whom I had
+never touched but the once; I let myself flow out to her in a happy
+weakness, and looking all about, and before and behind, saw the world
+like an undesirable desert, where men go as soldiers on a march,
+following their duty with what constancy they have, and Catriona alone
+there to offer me some pleasure of my days; I wondered at myself that I
+could dwell on such considerations in that time of my peril and
+disgrace; and when I remembered my youth I was ashamed. I had my studies
+to complete; I had to be called into some useful business; I had yet to
+take my part of service in a place where all must serve; I had yet to
+learn, and know, and prove myself a man; and I had so much sense as
+blush that I should be already tempted with these further-on and holier
+delights and duties. My education spoke home to me sharply; I was never
+brought up on sugar biscuits, but on the hard food of the truth. I knew
+that he was quite unfit to be a husband who was not prepared to be a
+father also; and for a boy like me to play the father was a mere
+derision.
+
+When I was in the midst of these thoughts and about half-way back to
+town I saw a figure coming to meet me, and the trouble of my heart was
+heightened. It seemed I had everything in the world to say to her, but
+nothing to say first; and remembering how tongue-tied I had been that
+morning at the Advocate's, I made sure that I would find myself struck
+dumb. But when she came up my fears fled away; not even the
+consciousness of what I had been privately thinking disconcerted me the
+least; and I found I could talk with her as easily and rationally as I
+might with Alan.
+
+"O!" she cried, "you have been seeking your sixpence: did you get it?"
+
+I told her no; but now I had met with her my walk was not in vain.
+"Though I have seen you to-day already," said I, and told her where and
+when.
+
+"I did not see you," she said. "My eyes are big, but there are better
+than mine at seeing far. Only I heard singing in the house."
+
+"That was Miss Grant," said I, "the eldest and the bonniest."
+
+"They say they are all beautiful," said she.
+
+"They think the same of you, Miss Drummond," I replied, "and were all
+crowding to the window to observe you."
+
+"It is a pity about my being so blind," said she, "or I might have seen
+them too. And you were in the house? You must have been having the fine
+time with the fine music and the pretty ladies."
+
+"There is just where you are wrong," said I; "for I was as uncouth as a
+sea-fish upon the brae of a mountain. The truth is that I am better
+fitted to go about with rudas men than pretty ladies."
+
+"Well, I would think so too, at all events!" said she, at which we both
+of us laughed.
+
+"It is a strange thing, now," said I. "I am not the least afraid with
+you, yet I could have run from the Miss Grants. And I was afraid of your
+cousin too."
+
+"O, I think any man will be afraid of her," she cried. "My father is
+afraid of her himself."
+
+The name of her father brought me to a stop. I looked at her as she
+walked by my side; I recalled the man, and the little I knew and the
+much I guessed of him; and comparing the one with the other, felt like a
+traitor to be silent.
+
+"Speaking of which," said I, "I met your father no later than this
+morning."
+
+"Did you?" she cried, with a voice of joy that seemed to mock at me.
+"You saw James More? You will have spoken with him, then?"
+
+"I did even that," said I.
+
+Then I think things went the worst way for me that was humanly possible.
+She gave me a look of mere gratitude. "Ah, thank you for that!" says
+she.
+
+"You thank me for very little," said I, and then stopped. But it seemed
+when I was holding back so much, something at least had to come out. "I
+spoke rather ill to him," said I; "I did not like him very much; I spoke
+him rather ill, and he was angry."
+
+"I think you had little to do then, and less to tell it to his
+daughter!" she cried out. "But those that do not love and cherish him I
+will not know."
+
+"I will take the freedom of a word yet," said I, beginning to tremble.
+"Perhaps neither your father nor I are in the best of good spirits at
+Prestongrange's. I daresay we both have anxious business there, for it's
+a dangerous house. I was sorry for him too, and spoke to him the first,
+if I could but have spoken the wiser. And for one thing, in my opinion,
+you will soon find that his affairs are mending."
+
+"It will not be through your friendship, I am thinking," said she; "and
+he is much made up to you for your sorrow."
+
+"Miss Drummond," cried I, "I am alone in this world...."
+
+"And I am not wondering at that," said she.
+
+"O, let me speak!" said I. "I will speak but the once, and then leave
+you, if you will, for ever. I came this day in the hopes of a kind word
+that I am sore in want of. I know that what I said must hurt you, and I
+knew it then. It would have been easy to have spoken smooth, easy to lie
+to you; can you not think how I was tempted to the same? Cannot you see
+the truth of my heart shine out?"
+
+"I think here is a great deal of work, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I think
+we will have met but the once, and will can part like gentle-folk."
+
+"O, let me have one to believe in me!" I pleaded, "I cannae bear it
+else. The whole world is clanned against me. How am I to go through with
+my dreadful fate? If there's to be none to believe in me I cannot do it.
+The man must just die, for I cannot do it."
+
+She had still looked straight in front of her, head in air; but at my
+words or the tone of my voice she came to a stop. "What is this you
+say?" she asked. "What are you talking of?"
+
+"It is my testimony which may save an innocent life," said I, "and they
+will not suffer me to bear it. What would you do yourself? You know what
+this is, whose father lies in danger. Would you desert the poor soul?
+They have tried all ways with me. They have sought to bribe me; they
+offered me hills and valleys. And to-day that sleuth-hound told me how I
+stood, and to what a length he would go to butcher and disgrace me. I am
+to be brought in a party to the murder; I am to have held Glenure in
+talk for money and old clothes; I am to be killed and shamed. If this is
+the way I am to fall, and me scarce a man--if this is the story to be
+told of me in all Scotland--if you are to believe it too, and my name is
+to be nothing but a by-word--Catriona, how can I go through with it? The
+thing's not possible; it's more than a man has in his heart."
+
+I poured my words out in a whirl, one upon the other; and when I stopped
+I found her gazing on me with a startled face.
+
+"Glenure! It is the Appin murder," she said softly, but with a very deep
+surprise.
+
+I had turned back to bear her company, and we were now come near the
+head of the brae above Dean village. At this word I stepped in front of
+her like one suddenly distracted.
+
+"For God's sake!" I cried, "for God's sake, what is this that I have
+done?" and carried my fists to my temples. "What made me do it? Sure, I
+am bewitched to say these things!"
+
+"In the name of heaven, what ails you now?" she cried.
+
+"I gave my honour," I groaned, "I gave my honour and now I have broke
+it. O, Catriona!"
+
+"I am asking you what it is," she said; "was it these things you should
+not have spoken? And do you think _I_ have no honour, then? or that I am
+one that would betray a friend? I hold up my right hand to you and
+swear."
+
+"O, I knew you would be true!" said I. "It's me--it's here. I that stood
+but this morning and out-faced them, that risked rather to die disgraced
+upon the gallows than do wrong--and a few hours after I throw my honour
+away by the roadside in common talk! 'There is one thing clear upon our
+interview,' says he, 'that I can rely on your pledged word.' Where is my
+word now? Who could believe me now? _You_ could not believe me. I am
+clean fallen down; I had best die!" All this I said with a weeping
+voice, but I had no tears in my body.
+
+"My heart is sore for you," said she, "but be sure you are too nice. I
+would not believe you, do you say? I would trust you with anything. And
+these men? I would not be thinking of them! Men who go about to entrap
+and to destroy you! Fy! this is no time to crouch. Look up! Do you not
+think I will be admiring you like a great hero of the good--and you a
+boy not much older than myself? And because you said a word too much in
+a friend's ear, that would die ere she betrayed you--to make such a
+matter! It is one thing that we must both forget."
+
+"Catriona," said I, looking at her, hang-dog, "is this true of it? Would
+ye trust me yet?"
+
+"Will you not believe the tears upon my face?" she cried. "It is the
+world I am thinking of you, Mr. David Balfour. Let them hang you; I will
+never forget, I will grow old and still remember you. I think it is
+great to die so; I will envy you that gallows."
+
+"And maybe all this while I am but a child frighted with bogles," said
+I. "Maybe they but make a mock of me."
+
+"It is what I must know," she said. "I must hear the whole. The harm is
+done at all events, and I must hear the whole."
+
+I had sat down on the wayside, where she took a place beside me, and I
+told her all that matter much as I have written it, my thoughts about
+her father's dealing being alone omitted.
+
+"Well," she said, when I had finished, "you are a hero, surely, and I
+never would have thought that same! And I think you are in peril, too.
+O, Symon Fraser! to think upon that man! For his life and the dirty
+money, to be dealing in such traffic!" And just then she called out
+aloud with a queer word that was common with her, and belongs, I
+believe, to her own language. "My torture!" says she, "look at the sun!"
+
+Indeed, it was already dipping towards the mountains.
+
+She bid me come again soon, gave me her hand, and left me in a turmoil
+of glad spirits. I delayed to go home to my lodging, for I had a terror
+of immediate arrest; but got some supper at a change house, and the
+better part of that night walked by myself in the barley-fields, and had
+such a sense of Catriona's presence that I seemed to bear her in my
+arms.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE BRAVO
+
+
+The next day, August 29th, I kept my appointment at the Advocate's in a
+coat that I had made to my own measure, and was but newly ready.
+
+"Aha," says Prestongrange, "you are very fine to-day; my misses are to
+have a fine cavalier. Come, I take that kind of you. I take that kind of
+you, Mr. David. O, we shall do very well yet, and I believe your
+troubles are nearly at an end."
+
+"You have news for me?" cried I.
+
+"Beyond anticipation," he replied. "Your testimony is after all to be
+received; and you may go, if you will, in my company to the trial, which
+is to be held at Inverary, Thursday, 21st _proximo_."
+
+I was too much amazed to find words.
+
+"In the meanwhile," he continued, "though I will not ask you to renew
+your pledge, I must caution you strictly to be reticent. To-morrow your
+precognition must be taken; and outside of that, do you know, I think
+least said will be soonest mended."
+
+"I shall try to go discreetly," said I. "I believe it is yourself that I
+must thank for this crowning mercy, and I do thank you gratefully. After
+yesterday, my lord, this is like the doors of Heaven. I cannot find it
+in my heart to get the thing believed."
+
+"Ah, but you must try and manage, you must try and manage to believe
+it," says he, soothing-like, "and I am very glad to hear your
+acknowledgment of obligation, for I think you may be able to repay me
+very shortly"--he coughed--"or even now. The matter is much changed.
+Your testimony, which I shall not trouble you for to-day, will doubtless
+alter the complexion of the case for all concerned, and this makes it
+less delicate for me to enter with you on a side issue."
+
+"My lord," I interrupted, "excuse me for interrupting you, but how has
+this been brought about? The obstacles you told me of on Saturday
+appeared even to me to be quite insurmountable; how has it been
+contrived?"
+
+"My dear Mr. David," said he, "it would never do for me to divulge (even
+to you, as you say) the councils of the Government; and you must content
+yourself, if you please, with the gross fact."
+
+He smiled upon me like a father as he spoke, playing the while with a
+new pen; methought it was impossible there could be any shadow of
+deception in the man: yet when he drew to him a sheet of paper, dipped
+his pen among the ink, and began again to address me, I was somehow not
+so certain, and fell instinctively into an attitude of guard.
+
+"There is a point I wish to touch upon," he began. "I purposely left it
+before upon one side, which need be now no longer necessary. This is
+not, of course, a part of your examination, which is to follow by
+another hand; this is a private interest of my own. You say you
+encountered Breck upon the hill?"
+
+"I did, my lord," said I.
+
+"This was immediately after the murder?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"Did you speak to him?"
+
+"I did."
+
+"You had known him before, I think?" says my lord, carelessly.
+
+"I cannot guess your reason for so thinking, my lord," I replied, "but
+such is the fact."
+
+"And when did you part with him again?" said he.
+
+"I reserve my answer," said I. "The question will be put to me at the
+assize."
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said he, "will you not understand that all this is
+without prejudice to yourself? I have promised you life and honour; and,
+believe me, I can keep my word. You are therefore clear of all anxiety.
+Alan, it appears, you suppose you can protect; and you talk to me of
+your gratitude, which I think (if you push me) is not ill-deserved.
+There are a great many different considerations all pointing the same
+way; and I will never be persuaded that you could not help us (if you
+chose) to put salt on Alan's tail."
+
+"My lord," said I, "I give you my word I do not so much as guess where
+Alan is."
+
+He paused a breath. "Nor how he might be found?" he asked.
+
+I sat before him like a log of wood.
+
+"And so much for your gratitude, Mr. David!" he observed. Again there
+was a piece of silence. "Well," said he, rising, "I am not fortunate,
+and we are a couple at cross purposes. Let us speak of it no more; you
+will receive notice when, where, and by whom we are to take your
+precognition. And in the meantime, my misses must be waiting you. They
+will never forgive me if I detain their cavalier."
+
+Into the hands of these graces I was accordingly offered up, and found
+them dressed beyond what I had thought possible, and looking fair as a
+posy.
+
+As we went forth from the doors a small circumstance occurred which came
+afterwards to look extremely big. I heard a whistle sound loud and brief
+like a signal, and looking all about, spied for one moment the red head
+of Neil of the Tom, the son of Duncan. The next moment he was gone
+again, nor could I see so much as the skirt-tail of Catriona, upon whom
+I naturally supposed him to be then attending.
+
+My three keepers led me out by Bristo and the Bruntsfield Links; whence
+a path carried us to Hope Park, a beautiful pleasance, laid with
+gravel-walks, furnished with seats and summer-sheds, and warded by a
+keeper.
+
+The way there was a little longsome; the two younger misses affected an
+air of genteel weariness that damped me cruelly, the eldest considered
+me with something that at times appeared like mirth; and though I
+thought I did myself more justice than the day before, it was not
+without some effort. Upon our reaching the park I was launched on a bevy
+of eight or ten young gentlemen (some of them cockaded officers, the
+rest chiefly advocates) who crowded to attend upon these beauties; and
+though I was presented to all of them in very good words, it seemed I
+was by all immediately forgotten. Young folk in a company are like to
+savage animals: they fall upon or scorn a stranger without civility, or
+I may say, humanity; and I am sure, if I had been among baboons, they
+would have shown me quite as much of both. Some of the advocates set up
+to be wits, and some of the soldiers to be rattles; and I could not tell
+which of these extremes annoyed me most. All had a manner of handling
+their swords and coat-skirts, for the which (in mere black envy) I could
+have kicked them from that park. I daresay, upon their side, they
+grudged me extremely the fine company in which I had arrived; and
+altogether I had soon fallen behind, and stepped stiffly in the rear of
+all that merriment with my own thoughts.
+
+From these I was recalled by one of the officers, Lieutenant Hector
+Duncansby, a gawky, leering, Highland boy, asking if my name was not
+"Palfour."
+
+I told him it was, not very kindly, for his manner was scant civil.
+
+"Ha, Palfour," says he, and then, repeating it, "Palfour, Palfour!"
+
+"I am afraid you do not like my name, sir," says I, annoyed with myself
+to be annoyed with such a rustical fellow.
+
+"No," says he, "but I wass thinking."
+
+"I would not advise you to make a practice of that, sir," says I. "I
+feel sure you would not find it to agree with you."
+
+"Tit you effer hear where Alan Grigor fand the tangs?" said he.
+
+I asked him what he could possibly mean, and he answered, with a
+heckling laugh, that he thought I must have found the poker in the same
+place and swallowed it.
+
+There could be no mistake about this, and my cheek burned.
+
+"Before I went about to put affronts on gentlemen," said I, "I think I
+would learn the English language first."
+
+He took me by the sleeve with a nod and a wink, and led me quietly
+outside Hope Park. But no sooner were we beyond the view of the
+promenaders, than the fashion of his countenance changed. "You tam
+lowland scoon'rel!" cries he, and hit me a buffet on the jaw with his
+closed fist.
+
+I paid him as good or better on the return; whereupon he stepped a
+little back and took off his hat to me decorously.
+
+"Enough plows I think," says he. "I will be the offended shentleman, for
+who effer heard of such suffeeciency as tell a shentlemans that is the
+king's officer he cannae speak Cot's English? We have swords at our
+hurdies, and here is the King's Park at hand. Will ye walk first, or let
+me show ye the way?"
+
+I returned his bow, told him to go first, and followed him. As he went I
+heard him grumble to himself about _Cot's English_ and the _King's
+coat_, so that I might have supposed him to be seriously offended. But
+his manner at the beginning of our interview was there to belie him. It
+was manifest he had come prepared to fasten a quarrel on me, right or
+wrong; manifest that I was taken in a fresh contrivance of my enemies;
+and to me (conscious as I was of my deficiencies) manifest enough that I
+should be the one to fall in our encounter.
+
+As we came into that rough rocky desert of the King's Park I was tempted
+half-a-dozen times to take to my heels and run for it, so loath was I to
+show my ignorance in fencing, and so much averse to die or even to be
+wounded. But I considered if their malice went as far as this, it would
+likely stick at nothing; and that to fall by the sword, however
+ungracefully, was still an improvement on the gallows. I considered
+besides that by the unguarded pertness of my words and the quickness of
+my blow I had put myself quite out of court; and that even if I ran, my
+adversary would, probably pursue and catch me, which would add disgrace
+to my misfortune. So that, taking all in all, I continued marching
+behind him, much as a man follows the hangman, and certainly with no
+more hope.
+
+We went about the end of the long craigs, and came into the Hunter's
+Bog. Here, on a piece of fair turf, my adversary drew. There was nobody
+there to see us but some birds; and no resource for me but to follow his
+example, and stand on guard with the best face I could display. It seems
+it was not good enough for Mr. Duncansby, who spied some flaw in my
+manoeuvres, paused, looked upon me sharply, and came off and on, and
+menaced me with his blade in the air. As I had seen no such proceedings
+from Alan, and was besides a good deal affected with the proximity of
+death, I grew quite bewildered, stood helpless, and could have longed to
+run away.
+
+"Fat, deil, ails her?" cries the lieutenant.
+
+And suddenly engaging, he twitched the sword out of my grasp and sent it
+flying far among the rushes.
+
+Twice was this manoeuvre repeated; and the third time when I brought
+back my humiliated weapon, I found he had returned his own to the
+scabbard, and stood awaiting me with a face of some anger, and his hands
+clasped under his skirt.
+
+"Pe tamned if I touch you!" he cried, and asked me bitterly what right I
+had to stand up before "shentlemans" when I did not know the back of a
+sword from the front of it.
+
+I answered that was the fault of my upbringing; and would he do me the
+justice to say I had given him all the satisfaction it was unfortunately
+in my power to offer, and had stood up like a man?
+
+"And that is the truth," said he. "I am fery prave myself, and pold as a
+lions. But to stand up there--and you ken naething of fence!--the way
+that you did, I declare it was peyond me. And I am sorry for the plow;
+though I declare I pelief your own was the elder brother, and my held
+still sings with it. And I declare if I had kent what way it wass, I
+would not put a hand to such a piece of pusiness."
+
+"That is handsomely said," I replied, "and I am sure you will not stand
+up a second time to be the actor for my private enemies."
+
+"Indeed, no, Palfour," said he; "and I think I was used extremely
+suffeeciently myself to be set up to fecht with an auld wife, or all the
+same as a bairn whateffer! And I will tell the Master so, and fecht him,
+by Cot, himself!"
+
+"And if you knew the nature of Mr. Symon's quarrel with me," said I,
+"you would be yet the more affronted to be mingled up with such
+affairs."
+
+He swore he could well believe it; that all the Lovats were made of the
+same meal and the devil was the miller that ground that; then suddenly
+shaking me by the hand, he vowed I was a pretty enough fellow after all,
+that it was a thousand pities I had been neglected, and that if he could
+find the time, he would give an eye himself to have me educated.
+
+"You can do me a better service than even what you propose," said I; and
+when he had asked its nature--"Come with me to the house of one of my
+enemies, and testify how I have carried myself this day," I told him.
+"That will be the true service. For though he has sent me a gallant
+adversary for the first, the thought in Mr. Symon's mind is merely
+murder. There will be a second and then a third; and by what you have
+seen of my cleverness with the cold steel, you can judge for yourself
+what is like to be upshot."
+
+"And I would not like it myself, if I was no more of a man than what you
+wass!" he cried. "But I will do you right, Palfour. Lead on!"
+
+If I had walked slowly on the way into that accursed park my heels were
+light enough on the way out. They kept time to a very good old air, that
+is as ancient as the Bible, and the words of it are: "_Surely the
+bitterness of death is passed_." I mind that I was extremely thirsty,
+and had a drink at Saint Margaret's well on the road down, and the
+sweetness of that water passed belief. We went through the sanctuary, up
+the Canongate, in by the Netherbow, and straight to Prestongrange's
+door, talking as we came and arranging the details of our affair. The
+footman owned his master was at home, but declared him engaged with
+other gentlemen on very private business, and his door forbidden.
+
+"My business is but for three minutes, and it cannot wait," said I. "You
+may say it is by no means private, and I shall be even glad to have some
+witnesses."
+
+As the man departed unwillingly enough upon this errand, we made so bold
+as to follow him to the antechamber, whence I could hear for a while the
+murmuring of several voices in the room within. The truth is, they were
+three at the one table--Prestongrange, Symon Fraser, and Mr. Erskine,
+Sheriff of Perth; and as they were met in consultation on the very
+business of the Appin murder, they were a little disturbed at my
+appearance, but decided to receive me.
+
+"Well, well, Mr. Balfour, and what brings you here again? and who is
+this you bring with you?" says Prestongrange.
+
+As for Fraser, he looked before him on the table.
+
+"He is here to bear a little testimony in my favour, my lord, which I
+think it very needful you should hear," said I, and turned to Duncansby.
+
+"I have only to say this," said the lieutenant, "that I stood up this
+day with Palfour in the Hunter's Pog, which I am now fery sorry for, and
+he behaved himself as pretty as a shentlemans could ask it. And I have
+creat respects for Palfour," he added.
+
+"I thank you for your honest expressions," said I.
+
+Whereupon Duncansby made his bow to the company, and left the chamber,
+as we had agreed upon before.
+
+"What have I to do with this?" says Prestongrange.
+
+"I will tell your lordship in two words," said I. "I have brought this
+gentleman, a King's officer, to do me so much justice. Now I think my
+character is covered, and until a certain date, which your lordship can
+very well supply, it will be quite in vain to despatch against me any
+more officers. I will not consent to fight my way through the garrison
+of the castle."
+
+The veins swelled on Prestongrange's brow, and he regarded me with fury.
+
+"I think the devil uncoupled this dog of a lad between my legs!" he
+cried; and then, turning fiercely on his neighbour, "This is some of
+your work, Symon," he said. "I spy your hand in the business, and, let
+me tell you, I resent it. It is disloyal, when we are agreed upon one
+expedient, to follow another in the dark. You are disloyal to me. What!
+you let me send this lad to the place with my very daughters! And
+because I let drop a word to you ... Fy, sir, keep your dishonours to
+yourself!"
+
+Symon was deadly pale. "I will be a kick-ball between you and the Duke
+no longer," he exclaimed. "Either come to an agreement, or come to a
+differ, and have it out among yourselves. But I will no longer fetch and
+carry, and get your contrary instructions, and be blamed by both. For if
+I were to tell you what I think of all your Hanover business it would
+make your head sing."
+
+But Sheriff Erskine had preserved his temper, and now intervened
+smoothly. "And in the meantime," says he, "I think we should tell Mr.
+Balfour that his character for valour is quite established. He may sleep
+in peace. Until the date he was so good as to refer to it shall be put
+to the proof no more."
+
+His coolness brought the others to their prudence; and they made haste,
+with a somewhat distracted civility, to pack me from the house.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE HEATHER ON FIRE
+
+
+When I left Prestongrange that afternoon I was for the first time angry.
+The Advocate had made a mock of me. He had pretended my testimony was to
+be received and myself respected; and in that very hour, not only was
+Symon practising against my life by the hands of the Highland soldier,
+but (as appeared from his own language) Prestongrange himself had some
+design in operation. I counted my enemies: Prestongrange with all the
+King's authority behind him; and the Duke with the power of the West
+Highlands; and the Lovat interest by their side to help them with so
+great a force in the north, and the whole clan of old Jacobite spies and
+traffickers. And when I remembered James More, and the red head of Neil
+the son of Duncan, I thought there was perhaps a fourth in the
+confederacy, and what remained of Rob Roy's old desperate sept of
+caterans would be banded against me with the others. One thing was
+requisite, some strong friend or wise adviser. The country must be full
+of such, both able and eager to support me, or Lovat and the Duke and
+Prestongrange had not been nosing for expedients; and it made me rage to
+think that I might brush against my champions in the street and be no
+wiser.
+
+And just then (like an answer) a gentleman brushed against me going by,
+gave me a meaning look, and turned into a close. I knew him with the
+tail of my eye--it was Stewart the Writer; and, blessing my good
+fortune, turned in to follow him. As soon as I had entered the close I
+saw him standing in the mouth of a stair, where he made me a signal and
+immediately vanished. Seven storeys up, there he was again in a house
+door, the which he locked behind us after we had entered. The house was
+quite dismantled, with not a stick of furniture; indeed, it was one of
+which Stewart had the letting in his hands.
+
+"We'll have to sit upon the floor," said he; "but we're safe here for
+the time being, and I've been wearying to see ye, Mr. Balfour."
+
+"How's it with Alan?'" I asked.
+
+"Brawly," said he. "Andie picks him up at Gillane Sands to-morrow,
+Wednesday. He was keen to say good-by to ye, but the way that things
+were going, I was feared the pair of ye was maybe best apart. And that
+brings me to the essential: how does your business speed?"
+
+"Why," said I, "I was told only this morning that my testimony was
+accepted, and I was to travel to Inverary with the Advocate, no less."
+
+"Hout awa!" cried Stewart. "I'll never believe that."
+
+"I have maybe a suspicion of my own," says I, "but I would like fine to
+hear your reasons."
+
+"Well, I tell ye fairly, I'm horn-mad," cries Stewart. "If my one hand
+could pull their Government down I would pluck it like a rotten apple.
+I'm doer for Appin and for James of the Glens; and, of course, it's my
+duty to defend my kinsman for his life. Hear how it goes with me, and
+I'll leave the judgment of it to yourself. The first thing they have to
+do is to get rid of Alan. They cannae bring in James as art and part
+until they've brought in Alan first as principal; that's sound law: they
+could never put the cart before the horse."
+
+"And how are they to bring in Alan till they can catch him?" says I.
+
+"Ah, but there is a way to evite that arrestment," said he. "Sound law,
+too. It would be a bonny thing if, by the escape of one ill-doer another
+was to go scatheless, and the remeid is to summon the principal and put
+him to outlawry for the non-compearance. Now there's four places where a
+person can be summoned: at his dwelling-house; at a place where he has
+resided forty days; at the head burgh of the shire where he ordinarily
+resorts; or lastly (if there be ground to think him forth of Scotland),
+_at the cross of Edinburgh, and the pier and shore of Leith, for sixty
+days_. The purpose of which last provision is evident upon its face:
+being that outgoing ships may have time to carry news of the
+transaction, and the summonsing be something other than a form. Now take
+the case of Alan. He has no dwelling-house that ever I could hear of; I
+would be obliged if anyone would show me where he has lived forty days
+together since the '45; there is no shire where he resorts whether
+ordinarily or extraordinarily; if he has a domicile at all, which I
+misdoubt, it must be with his regiment in France; and if he is not yet
+forth of Scotland (as we happen to know and they happen to guess) it
+must be evident to the most dull it's what he's aiming for. Where, then,
+and what way should he be summoned? I ask it at yourself, a layman."
+
+"You have given the very words," said I. "Here at the cross, and at the
+pier and shore of Leith, for sixty days."
+
+"Ye're a sounder Scots lawyer than Prestongrange, then!" cries the
+Writer. "He has had Alan summoned once; that was on the twenty-fifth,
+the day that we first met. Once, and done with it. And where? Where, but
+at the cross of Inverary, the head burgh of the Campbells. A word in
+your ear, Mr. Balfour--they're not seeking Alan."
+
+"What do you mean?" I cried. "Not seeking him?"
+
+"By the best that I can make of it," said he. "Not wanting to find him,
+in my poor thought. They think perhaps he might set up a fair defence,
+upon the back of which James, the man they're really after, might climb
+out. This is not a case, ye see, it's a conspiracy."
+
+"Yet I can tell you Prestongrange asked after Alan keenly," said I;
+"though, when I come to think of it, he was something of the easiest put
+by."
+
+"See that!" says he. "But there! I may be right or wrong, that's
+guesswork at the best, and let me get to my facts again. It comes to my
+ears that James and the witnesses--the witnesses, Mr. Balfour!--lay in
+close dungeons, and shackled forbye, in the military prison at Fort
+William; none allowed in to them, nor they to write. The witnesses, Mr.
+Balfour; heard ye ever the match of that? I assure ye, no old, crooked
+Stewart of the gang ever outfaced the law more impudently. It's clean in
+the two eyes of the Act of Parliament of 1700, anent wrongous
+imprisonment. No sooner did I get the news than I petitioned the Lord
+Justice Clerk. I have his word to-day. There's law for ye! here's
+justice!"
+
+He put a paper in my hand, that same mealy-mouthed, false-faced paper
+that was printed since in the pamphlet "by a bystander," for behoof (as
+the title says) of James's "poor widow and five children."
+
+"See," said Stewart, "he couldn't dare to refuse me access to my client,
+so he _recommends the commanding officer to let me in_. Recommends!--the
+Lord Justice Clerk of Scotland recommends. Is not the purpose of such
+language plain? They hope the officer may be so dull, or so very much
+the reverse, as to refuse the recommendation. I would have to make the
+journey back again betwixt here and Fort William. There would follow a
+fresh delay till I got fresh authority, and they had disavowed the
+officer--military man, notoriously ignorant of the law, and that--I ken
+the cant of it. Then the journey a third time; and there we should be on
+the immediate heels of the trial before I had received my first
+instruction. Am I not right to call this a conspiracy?"
+
+"It will bear that colour," said I.
+
+"And I'll go on to prove it you outright," said he. "They have the right
+to hold James in prison, yet they cannot deny me to visit him. They have
+no right to hold the witnesses; but am I to get a sight of them, that
+should be as free as the Lord Justice Clerk himself? See--read: _For the
+rest, refuses to give any orders to keepers of prisons who are not
+accused as having done anything contrary to the duties of their office_.
+Anything contrary! Sirs! And the Act of seventeen hunner! Mr. Balfour,
+this makes my heart to burst. The heather is on fire inside my wame."
+
+"And the plain English of that phrase," said I, "is that the witnesses
+are still to lie in prison and you are not to see them?"
+
+"And I am not to see them until Inverary, when the court is set!" cries
+he, "and then to hear Prestongrange upon _the anxious responsibilities
+of his office and the great facilities afforded the defence!_ But I'll
+begowk them there, Mr. David. I have a plan to waylay the witnesses upon
+the road, and see if I cannae get a little harle of justice out of the
+_military man notoriously ignorant of the law_ that shall command the
+party."
+
+It was actually so--it was actually on the wayside near Tynedrum, and by
+the connivance of a soldier officer, that Mr. Stewart first saw the
+witnesses upon the case.
+
+"There is nothing that would surprise me in this business," I remarked.
+
+"I'll surprise you ere I'm done!" cries he. "Do ye see this?"--producing
+a print still wet from the press. "This is the libel: see, there's
+Prestongrange's name to the list of witnesses, and I find no word of any
+Balfour. But here is not the question. Who do ye think paid for the
+printing of this paper?"
+
+"I suppose it would likely be King George," said I.
+
+"But it happens it was me!" he cried. "Not but it was printed by and for
+themselves, for the Grants and the Erskines, and yon thief of the black
+midnight, Symon Fraser. But could _I_ win to get a copy? No! I was to go
+blindfold to my defence; I was to hear the charges for the first time in
+court alongst the jury."
+
+"Is not this against the law?" I asked.
+
+"I cannot say so much," he replied. "It was a favour so natural and so
+constantly rendered (till this nonesuch business) that the law has never
+looked to it. And now admire the hand of Providence! A stranger is in
+Fleming's printing house, spies a proof on the floor, picks it up, and
+carries it to me. Of all things, it was just this libel. Whereupon I had
+it set again--printed at the expense of the defence: _sumptibus moesti
+rei_; heard ever man the like of it?--and here it is for anybody, the
+muckle secret out--all may see it now. But how do you think I would
+enjoy this, that has the life of my kinsman on my conscience?"
+
+"Troth, I think you would enjoy it ill," said I.
+
+"And now you see how it is," he concluded, "and why, when you tell me
+your evidence is to be let in, I laugh aloud in your face."
+
+It was now my turn. I laid before him in brief Mr. Symon's threats and
+offers, and the whole incident of the bravo, with the subsequent scene
+at Prestongrange's. Of my first talk, according to promise, I said
+nothing, nor indeed was it necessary. All the time I was talking Stewart
+nodded his head like a mechanical figure; and no sooner had my voice
+ceased, than he opened his mouth and gave me his opinion in two words,
+dwelling strong on both of them.
+
+"Disappear yourself," said he.
+
+"I do not take you," said I.
+
+"Then I'll carry you there," said he. "By my view of it you're to
+disappear whatever. O, that's outside debate. The Advocate, who is not
+without some spunks of a remainder decency, has wrung your life-safe out
+of Symon and the Duke. He has refused to put you on your trial, and
+refused to have you killed; and there is the clue to their ill words
+together, for Symon and the Duke can keep faith with neither friend nor
+enemy. Ye're not to be tried then, and ye're not to be murdered; but I'm
+in bitter error if ye're not to be kidnapped and carried away like the
+Lady Grange. Bet me what you please--there was their _expedient!_"
+
+"You make me think," said I, and told him of the whistle and the
+red-headed retainer, Neil.
+
+"Wherever James More is there's one big rogue, never be deceived on
+that," said he. "His father was none so ill a man, though a kenning on
+the wrong side of the law, and no friend to my family, that I should
+waste my breath to be defending him! But as for James he's a brock and a
+blagyard. I like the appearing of this red-headed Neil as little as
+yourself. It looks uncanny: fiegh! it smells bad. It was old Lovat that
+managed the Lady Grange affair, if young Lovat is to handle yours, it'll
+be all in the family. What's James More in prison for? The same offence:
+abduction. His men have had practice in the business. He'll be to lend
+them to be Symon's instruments; and the next thing we'll be hearing,
+James will have made his peace, or else he'll have escaped; and you'll
+be in Benbecula or Applecross."
+
+"Ye make a strong case," I admitted.
+
+"And what I want," he resumed, "is that you should disappear yourself
+ere they can get their hands upon ye. Lie quiet until just before the
+trial, and spring upon them at the last of it when they'll be looking
+for you least. This is always supposing, Mr. Balfour, that your evidence
+is worth so very great a measure of both risk and fash."
+
+"I will tell you one thing," said I. "I saw the murderer and it was not
+Alan."
+
+"Then, by God, my cousin's saved!" cried Stewart. "You have his life
+upon your tongue; and there's neither time, risk, nor money to be spared
+to bring you to the trial." He emptied his pockets on the floor. "Here
+is all that I have by me," he went on. "Take it, ye'll want it ere ye're
+through. Go straight down this close, there's a way out by there to the
+Lang Dykes, and by my will of it! see no more of Edinburgh till the
+clash is over."
+
+"Where am I to go, then?" I inquired.
+
+"And I wish that I could tell ye!" says he, "but all the places that I
+could send ye to, would be just the places they would seek. No, ye must
+fend for yourself, and God be your guiding! Five days before the trial,
+September the sixteen, get word to me at the _King's Arms_ in Stirling;
+and if ye've managed for yourself as long as that, I'll see that ye
+reach Inverary."
+
+"One thing more," said I. "Can I no see Alan?"
+
+He seemed boggled. "Hech, I would rather you wouldnae," said he. "But I
+can never deny that Alan is extremely keen of it, and is to lie this
+night by Silvermills on purpose. If you're sure that you're not
+followed, Mr. Balfour--but make sure of that--lie in a good place and
+watch your road for a clear hour before ye risk it. It would be a
+dreadful business if both you and him was to miscarry!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE RED-HEADED MAN
+
+
+It was about half-past three when I came forth on the Lang Dykes. Dean
+was where I wanted to go. Since Catriona dwelled there, and the Glengyle
+Macgregors appeared almost certainly to be employed against me, it was
+just one of the few places I should have kept away from; and being a
+very young man, and beginning to be very much in love, I turned my face
+in that direction without pause. As a salve to my conscience and common
+sense, however, I took a measure of precaution. Coming over the crown of
+a bit of a rise in the road, I clapped down suddenly among the barley
+and lay waiting. After a while, a man went by that looked to be a
+Highlandman, but I had never seen him till that hour. Presently after
+came Neil of the red head. The next to go past was a miller's cart, and
+after that nothing but manifest country people. Here was enough to have
+turned the most foolhardy from his purpose, but my inclination ran too
+strong the other way. I argued it out that if Neil was on that road, it
+was the right road to find him in, leading direct to his chief's
+daughter; as for the other Highlandman, if I was to be startled off by
+every Highlandman I saw, I would scarce reach anywhere. And having quite
+satisfied myself with this disingenuous debate, I made the better speed
+of it, and came a little after four to Mrs. Drummond-Ogilvy's.
+
+Both ladies were within the house; and upon my perceiving them together
+by the open door, I plucked off my hat and said, "Here was a lad come
+seeking saxpence," which I thought might please the dowager.
+
+Catriona ran out to greet me heartily, and, to my surprise, the old lady
+seemed scarce less forward than herself. I learned long afterwards that
+she had despatched a horseman by daylight to Rankeillor at the
+Queensferry, whom she knew to be the doer for Shaws, and had then in her
+pocket a letter from that good friend of mine, presenting, in the most
+favourable view, my character and prospects. But had I read it I could
+scarce have seen more clear in her designs. Maybe I was _countryfeed_;
+at least, I was not so much so as she thought; and it was plain enough,
+even to my homespun wits, that she was bent to hammer up a match between
+her cousin and a beardless boy that was something of a laird in Lothian.
+
+"Saxpence had better take his broth with us, Catrine," says she. "Run
+and tell the lasses."
+
+And for the little while we were alone was at a good deal of pains to
+flatter me; always cleverly, always with the appearance of a banter,
+still calling me Saxpence, but with such a turn that should rather
+uplift me in my own opinion. When Catriona returned the design became if
+possible more obvious, and she showed off the girl's advantages like a
+horse-couper with a horse. My face flamed that she should think me so
+obtuse. Now I would fancy the girl was being innocently made a show of,
+and then I could have beaten the old carline wife with a cudgel; and
+now, that perhaps these two had set their heads together to entrap me,
+and at that I sat and gloomed betwixt them like the very image of
+ill-will. At last the matchmaker had a better device, which was to leave
+the pair of us alone. When my suspicions are anyway roused it is
+sometimes a little the wrong side of easy to allay them. But though I
+knew what breed she was of, and that was a breed of thieves, I could
+never look in Catriona's face and disbelieve her.
+
+"I must not ask?" says she, eagerly, the same moment we were left alone.
+
+"Ah, but to-day I can talk with a free conscience," I replied. "I am
+lightened of my pledge, and indeed (after what has come and gone since
+morning) I would not have renewed it were it asked."
+
+"Tell me," she said. "My cousin will not be so long."
+
+So I told her the tale of the lieutenant from the first step to the last
+of it, making it as mirthful as I could, and, indeed, there was matter
+of mirth in that absurdity.
+
+"And I think you will be as little fitted for the rudas men as for the
+pretty ladies, after all!" says she, when I had done. "But what was your
+father that he could not learn you to draw the sword? It is most
+ungentle; I have not heard the match of that in anyone."
+
+"It is most misconvenient at least," said I; "and I think my father
+(honest man!) must have been wool-gathering to learn me Latin in the
+place of it. But you see I do the best I can, and just stand up like
+Lot's wife and let them hammer at me."
+
+"Do you know what makes me smile?" said she. "Well, it is this. I am
+made this way, that I should have been a man child. In my own thoughts
+it is so I am always; and I go on telling myself about this thing that
+is to befall and that. Then it comes to the place of the fighting, and
+it comes over me that I am only a girl at all events, and cannot hold a
+sword or give one good blow; and then I have to twist my story round
+about, so that the fighting is to stop, and yet me have the best of it,
+just like you and the lieutenant; and I am the boy that makes the fine
+speeches all through, like Mr. David Balfour."
+
+"You are a bloodthirsty maid," said I.
+
+"Well, I know it is good to sew and spin, and to make samplers," she
+said, "but if you were to do nothing else in the great world, I think
+you will say yourself it is a driech business; and it is not that I want
+to kill, I think. Did ever you kill anyone?"
+
+"That I have, as it chances. Two, no less, and me still a lad that
+should be at the college," said I. "But yet, in the look-back, I take no
+shame for it."
+
+"But how did you feel, then--after it?" she asked.
+
+"'Deed, I sat down and grat like a bairn," said I.
+
+"I know that, too," she cried. "I feel where these tears should come
+from. And at any rate, I would not wish to kill, only to be Catherine
+Douglas that put her arm through the staples of the bolt, where it was
+broken. That is my chief hero. Would you not love to die so--for your
+king?" she asked.
+
+"Troth," said I, "my affection for my king, God bless the puggy face of
+him, is under more control; and I thought I saw death so near to me this
+day already, that I am rather taken up with the notion of living."
+
+"Right," she said, "the right mind of a man! Only you must learn arms; I
+would not like to have a friend that cannot strike. But it will not have
+been with the sword that you killed these two?"
+
+"Indeed, no," said I, "but with a pair of pistols. And a fortunate thing
+it was the men were so near-hand to me, for I am about as clever with
+the pistols as I am with the sword."
+
+So then she drew from me the story of our battle in the brig, which I
+had omitted in my first account of my affairs.
+
+"Yes," said she, "you are brave. And your friend, I admire and love
+him."
+
+"Well, and I think any one would!" said I. "He has his faults like other
+folk; but he is brave and staunch and kind, God bless him! That will be
+a strange day when I forget Alan." And the thought of him, and that it
+was within my choice to speak with him that night, had almost overcome
+me.
+
+"And where will my head be gone that I have not told my news!" she
+cried, and spoke of a letter from her father, bearing that she might
+visit him to-morrow in the castle whither he was now transferred, and
+that his affairs were mending. "You do not like to hear it," said she.
+"Will you judge my father and not know him?"
+
+"I am a thousand miles from judging," I replied. "And I give you my word
+I do rejoice to know your heart is lightened. If my face fell at all, as
+I suppose it must, you will allow this is rather an ill day for
+compositions, and the people in power extremely ill persons to be
+compounding with. I have Symon Fraser extremely heavy on my stomach
+still."
+
+"Ah!" she cried, "you will not be evening these two; and you should bear
+in mind that Prestongrange and James More, my father, are of the one
+blood."
+
+"I never heard tell of that," said I.
+
+"It is rather singular how little you are acquainted with," said she.
+"One part may call themselves Grant, and one Macgregor, but they are
+still of the same clan. They are all the sons of Alpin, from whom, I
+think, our country has its name."
+
+"What country is that?" I asked.
+
+"My country and yours," said she.
+
+"This is my day for discoveries, I think," said I, "for I always thought
+the name of it was Scotland."
+
+"Scotland is the name of what you call Ireland," she replied. "But the
+old ancient true name of this place that we have our foot-soles on, and
+that our bones are made of, will be Alban. It was Alban they called it
+when our forefathers will be fighting for it against Rome and Alexander;
+and it is called so still in your own tongue that you forget."
+
+"Troth," said I, "and that I never learned!" For I lacked heart to take
+her up about the Macedonian.
+
+"But your fathers and mothers talked it, one generation with another,"
+said she. "And it was sung about the cradles before you or me were ever
+dreamed of; and your name remembers it still. Ah, if you could talk that
+language you would find me another girl. The heart speaks in that
+tongue."
+
+I had a meal with the two ladies, all very good, served in fine old
+plate, and the wine excellent, for it seems that Mrs. Ogilvy was rich.
+Our talk, too, was pleasant enough; but as soon as I saw the sun decline
+sharply and the shadows to run out long, I rose to take my leave. For my
+mind was now made up to say farewell to Alan; and it was needful I
+should see the trysting wood, and reconnoitre it, by daylight. Catriona
+came with me as far as to the garden gate.
+
+"It is long till I see you now?" she asked.
+
+"It is beyond my judging," I replied. "It will be long, it may be
+never."
+
+"It may be so," said she. "And you are sorry?"
+
+I bowed my head, looking upon her.
+
+"So am I, at all events," said she. "I have seen you but a small time,
+but I put you very high. You are true, you are brave; in time I think
+you will be more of a man yet. I will be proud to hear of that. If you
+should speed worse, if it will come to fall as we are afraid--O well!
+think you have the one friend. Long after you are dead and me an old
+wife, I will be telling the bairns about David Balfour, and my tears
+running. I will be telling how we parted, and what I said to you, and
+did to you. _God go with you and guide you, prays your little friend_:
+so I said--I will be telling them--and here is what I did."
+
+She took up my hand and kissed it. This so surprised my spirits that I
+cried out like one hurt. The colour came strong in her face, and she
+looked at me and nodded.
+
+"O yes, Mr. David," said she, "that is what I think of you. The heart
+goes with the lips."
+
+I could read in her face high spirit, and a chivalry like a brave
+child's; not anything besides. She kissed my hand, as she had kissed
+Prince Charlie's, with a higher passion than the common kind of clay has
+any sense of. Nothing before had taught me how deep I was her lover, nor
+how far I had yet to climb to make her think of me in such a character.
+Yet I could tell myself I had advanced some way, and that her heart had
+beat and her blood flowed at thoughts of me.
+
+After that honour she had done me I could offer no more trivial
+civility. It was even hard for me to speak; a certain lifting in her
+voice had knocked directly at the door of my own tears.
+
+"I praise God for your kindness, dear," said I. "Farewell, my little
+friend!" giving her that name which she had given to herself; with which
+I bowed and left her.
+
+My way was down the glen of the Leith River, towards Stockbridge and
+Silvermills. A path led in the foot of it, the water bickered and sang
+in the midst; the sunbeams overhead struck out of the west among long
+shadows and (as the valley turned) made like a new scene and a new world
+of it at every corner. With Catriona behind and Alan before me, I was
+like one lifted up. The place besides, and the hour, and the talking of
+the water, infinitely pleased me; and I lingered in my steps and looked
+before and behind me as I went. This was the cause, under providence,
+that I spied a little in my rear a red head among some bushes.
+
+Anger sprang in my heart, and I turned straight about and walked at a
+stiff pace to where I came from. The path lay close by the bushes where
+I had remarked the head. The cover came to the wayside, and as I passed
+I was all strung up to meet and to resist an onfall. No such thing
+befell, I went by unmeddled with; and at that fear increased upon me. It
+was still day indeed, but the place exceeding solitary. If my haunters
+had let slip that fair occasion I could but judge they aimed at
+something more than David Balfour. The lives of Alan and James weighed
+upon my spirit with the weight of two grown bullocks.
+
+Catriona was yet in the garden walking by herself.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "you see me back again."
+
+"With a changed face," said she.
+
+"I carry two men's lives besides my own," said I. "It would be a sin and
+a shame not to walk carefully. I was doubtful whether I did right to
+come here. I would like it ill, if it was by that means we were brought
+to harm."
+
+"I could tell you one that would be liking it less, and will like little
+enough to hear you talking at this very same time," she cried. "What
+have I done, at all events?"
+
+"O, you! you are not alone," I replied. "But since I went off I have
+been dogged again, and I can give you the name of him that follows me.
+It is Neil, son of Duncan, your man or your father's."
+
+"To be sure you are mistaken there," she said, with a white face. "Neil
+is in Edinburgh on errands from my father."
+
+"It is what I fear," said I, "the last of it. But for his being in
+Edinburgh I think I can show you another of that. For sure you have some
+signal, a signal of need, such as would bring him to your help, if he
+was anywhere within the reach of ears and legs?"
+
+"Why, how will you know that?" says she.
+
+"By means of a magical talisman God gave to me when I was born, and the
+name they call it by is Common-sense," said I. "Oblige me so far as to
+make your signal, and I will show you the red head of Neil."
+
+No doubt but I spoke bitter and sharp. My heart was bitter. I blamed
+myself and the girl and hated both of us: her for the vile crew that she
+was come of, myself for my wanton folly to have stuck my head in such a
+byke of wasps.
+
+Catriona set her fingers to her lips and whistled once, with an
+exceeding clear, strong, mounting note, as full as a ploughman's. A
+while we stood silent; and I was about to ask her to repeat the same,
+when I heard the sound of some one bursting through the bushes below on
+the braeside. I pointed in that direction with a smile, and presently
+Neil leaped into the garden. His eyes burned, and he had a black knife
+(as they call it on the Highland side) naked in his hand; but, seeing me
+beside his mistress, stood like a man struck.
+
+"He has come to your call," said I; "judge how near he was to Edinburgh,
+or what was the nature of your father's errands. Ask himself. If I am to
+lose my life, or the lives of those that hang by me, through the means
+of your clan, let me go where I have to go with my eyes open."
+
+She addressed him tremulously in the Gaelic. Remembering Alan's anxious
+civility in that particular, I could have laughed out loud for
+bitterness; here, sure, in the midst of these suspicions, was the hour
+she should have stuck by English.
+
+Twice or thrice they spoke together, and I could make out that Neil (for
+all his obsequiousness) was an angry man.
+
+Then she turned to me. "He swears it is not," she said.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "do you believe the man yourself?"
+
+She made a gesture like wringing the hands.
+
+"How will I can know?" she cried.
+
+"But I must find some means to know," said I. "I cannot continue to go
+dovering round in the black night with two men's lives at my girdle!
+Catriona, try to put yourself in my place, as I vow to God I try hard to
+put myself in yours. This is no kind of talk that should ever have
+fallen between me and you; no kind of talk; my heart is sick with it.
+See, keep him here till two of the morning, and I care not. Try him with
+that."
+
+They spoke together once more in the Gaelic.
+
+"He says he has James More my father's errand," said she. She was whiter
+than ever, and her voice faltered as she said it.
+
+"It is pretty plain now," said I, "and may God forgive the wicked!"
+
+She said never anything to that, but continued gazing at me with the
+same white face.
+
+"This is a fine business," said I again. "Am I to fall, then, and those
+two along with me?"
+
+"O, what am I to do?" she cried. "Could I go against my father's orders,
+and him in prison, in the danger of his life?"
+
+"But perhaps we go too fast," said I. "This may be a lie too. He may
+have no right orders; all may be contrived by Symon, and your father
+knowing nothing."
+
+She burst out weeping between the pair of us; and my heart smote me
+hard, for I thought this girl was in a dreadful situation.
+
+"Here," said I, "keep him but the one hour; and I'll chance it, and say
+God bless you."
+
+She put out her hand to me. "I will be needing one good word," she
+sobbed.
+
+"The full hour, then?" said I, keeping her hand in mine. "Three lives of
+it, my lass!"
+
+"The full hour!" she said, and cried aloud on her Redeemer to forgive
+her.
+
+I thought it no fit place for me, and fled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS
+
+
+I lost no time, but down through the valley and by Stockbrig and
+Silvermills as hard as I could stave. It was Alan's tryst to lie every
+night between twelve and two "in a bit scrog of wood by east of
+Silvermills and by south the south mill-lade." This I found easy enough,
+where it grew on a steep brae, with the mill-lade flowing swift and deep
+along the foot of it; and here I began to walk slower and to reflect
+more reasonably on my employment. I saw I had made but a fool's bargain
+with Catriona. It was not to be supposed that Neil was sent alone upon
+his errand, but perhaps he was the only man belonging to James More; in
+which case, I should have done all I could to hang Catriona's father,
+and nothing the least material to help myself. To tell the truth, I
+fancied neither one of these ideas. Suppose, by holding back Neil, the
+girl should have helped to hang her father, I thought she would never
+forgive herself this side of time. And suppose there were others
+pursuing me that moment, what kind of a gift was I come bringing to
+Alan? and how would I like that?
+
+I was up with the west end of that wood when these two considerations
+struck me like a cudgel. My feet stopped of themselves and my heart
+along with them. "What wild game is this that I have been playing?"
+thought I; and turned instantly upon my heels to go elsewhere.
+
+This brought my face to Silvermills; the path came past the village with
+a crook, but all plainly visible; and, Highland or Lowland, there was
+nobody stirring. Here was my advantage, here was just such a conjuncture
+as Stewart had counselled me to profit by, and I ran by the side of the
+mill-lade, fetched about beyond the east corner of the wood, threaded
+through the midst of it, and returned to the west selvage, whence I
+could again command the path, and yet be myself unseen. Again it was all
+empty, and my heart began to rise.
+
+For more than an hour I sat close in the border of the trees, and no
+hare or eagle could have kept a more particular watch. When that hour
+began the sun was already set, but the sky still all golden and the
+daylight clear; before the hour was done it had fallen to be half mirk,
+the images and distances of things were mingled, and observation began
+to be difficult. All that time not a foot of man had come east from
+Silvermills, and the few that had gone west were honest countryfolk and
+their wives upon the road to bed. If I were tracked by the most cunning
+spies in Europe, I judged it was beyond the course of nature they could
+have any jealousy of where I was; and going a little further home into
+the wood I lay down to wait for Alan.
+
+The strain of my attention had been great, for I had watched not the
+path only, but every bush and field within my vision. That was now at an
+end. The moon, which was in her first quarter, glinted a little in the
+wood; all round there was a stillness of the country; and as I lay there
+on my back, the next three or four hours, I had a fine occasion to
+review my conduct.
+
+Two things became plain to me first: that I had had no right to go that
+day to Dean, and (having gone there) had now no right to be lying where
+I was. This (where Alan was to come) was just the one wood in all broad
+Scotland that was, by every proper feeling, closed against me; I
+admitted that, and yet stayed on, wondering at myself. I thought of the
+measure with which I had meted to Catriona that same night; how I had
+prated of the two lives I carried, and had thus forced her to enjeopardy
+her father's; and how I was here exposing them again, it seemed in
+wantonness. A good conscience is eight parts of courage. No sooner had I
+lost conceit of my behaviour, than I seemed to stand disarmed amidst a
+throng of terrors. Of a sudden I sat up. How if I went now to
+Prestongrange, caught him (as I still easily might) before he slept, and
+made a full submission? Who could blame me? Not Stewart the writer; I
+had but to say that I was followed, despaired of getting clear, and so
+gave in. Not Catriona: here, too, I had my answer ready; that I could
+not bear she should expose her father. So, in a moment, I could lay all
+these troubles by, which were after all and truly none of mine; swim
+clear of the Appin murder; get forth out of handstroke of all the
+Stewarts and Campbells, all the whigs and tories, in the land; and live
+thenceforth to my own mind, and be able to enjoy and to improve my
+fortunes, and devote some hours of my youth to courting Catriona, which
+would be surely a more suitable occupation than to hide and run and be
+followed like a hunted thief, and begin over again the dreadful miseries
+of my escape with Alan.
+
+At first I thought no shame of this capitulation; I was only amazed I
+had not thought upon the thing and done it earlier; and began to inquire
+into the causes of the change. These I traced to my lowness of spirits,
+that back to my late recklessness, and that again to the common, old,
+public, disconsidered sin of self-indulgence. Instantly the text came in
+my head, "_How can Satan cast out Satan?_" What? (I thought) I had, by
+self-indulgence, and the following of pleasant paths, and the lure of a
+young maid, cast myself wholly out of conceit with my own character, and
+jeopardised the lives of James and Alan? And I was to seek the way out
+by the same road as I had entered in? No; the hurt that had been caused
+by self-indulgence must be cured by self-denial; the flesh I had
+pampered must be crucified. I looked about me for that course which I
+least liked to follow: this was to leave the wood without waiting to see
+Alan, and go forth again alone, in the dark and in the midst of my
+perplexed and dangerous fortunes.
+
+I have been the more careful to narrate this passage of my reflections,
+because I think it is of some utility, and may serve as an example to
+young men. But there is reason (they say) in planting kale, and even in
+ethic and religion, room for common sense. It was already close on
+Alan's hour, and the moon was down. If I left (as I could not very
+decently whistle to my spies to follow me) they might miss me in the
+dark and tack themselves to Alan by mistake. If I stayed, I could at the
+least of it set my friend upon his guard which might prove his mere
+salvation. I had adventured other peoples' safety in a course of
+self-indulgence; to have endangered them again, and now on a mere design
+of penance, would have been scarce rational. Accordingly, I had scarce
+risen from my place ere I sat down again, but already in a different
+frame of spirits, and equally marvelling at my past weakness and
+rejoicing in my present composure.
+
+Presently after came a crackling in the thicket. Putting my mouth near
+down to the ground, I whistled a note or two of Alan's air; an answer
+came, in the like guarded tone, and soon we had thralled together in the
+dark.
+
+"Is this you at last, Davie?" he whispered.
+
+"Just myself," said I.
+
+"God, man, but I've been wearying to see ye!" says he. "I've had the
+longest kind of a time. A' day, I've had my dwelling into the inside of
+a stack of hay, where I couldnae see the nebs of my ten fingers; and
+then two hours of it waiting here for you, and you never coming! Dod,
+and ye're none too soon the way it is, with me to sail the morn! The
+morn? what am I saying?--the day, I mean."
+
+"Ay, Alan, man, the day, sure enough," said I. "It's past twelve now,
+surely, and ye sail the day. This'll be a long road you have before
+you."
+
+"We'll have a long crack of it first," said he.
+
+"Well, indeed, and I have a good deal it will be telling you to hear,"
+said I.
+
+And I told him what behooved, making rather a jumble of it, but clear
+enough when done. He heard me out with very few questions, laughing here
+and there like a man delighted: and the sound of his laughing (above all
+there, in the dark, where neither one of us could see the other) was
+extraordinary friendly to my heart.
+
+"Ay, Davie, ye're a queer character," says he, when I had done: "a queer
+bitch after a', and I have no mind of meeting with the like of ye. As
+for your story, Prestongrange is a Whig like yoursel', so I'll say the
+less of him; and, dod! I believe he was the best friend ye had, if ye
+could only trust him. But Symon Fraser and James More are my ain kind of
+cattle, and I'll give them the name that they deserve. The muckle black
+de'il was father to the Frasers, a'body kens that; and as for the
+Gregara, I never could abye the reek of them since I could stotter on
+two feet. I bloodied the nose of one, I mind, when I was still so wambly
+on my legs that I cowped upon the top of him. A proud man was my father
+that day, God rest him! and I think he had the cause. I'll never can
+deny but what Robin was something of a piper," he added; "but as for
+James More, the de'il guide him for me!"
+
+"One thing we have to consider," said I. "Was Charles Stewart right or
+wrong? Is it only me they're after, or the pair of us?"
+
+"And what's your ain opinion, you that's a man of so much experience?"
+said he.
+
+"It passes me," said I.
+
+"And me too," says Alan. "Do ye think this lass would keep her word to
+ye?" he asked.
+
+"I do that," said I.
+
+"Well, there's nae telling," said he. "And anyway, that's over and done:
+he'll be joined to the rest of them lang syne."
+
+"How many would ye think there would be of them?" I asked.
+
+"That depends," said Alan. "If it was only you, they would likely send
+two-three lively, brisk young birkies, and if they thought that I was to
+appear in the employ, I daresay ten or twelve," said he.
+
+It was no use, I gave a little crack of laughter.
+
+"And I think your own two eyes will have seen me drive that number, or
+the double of it, nearer hand!" cries he.
+
+"It matters the less," said I, "because I am well rid of them for this
+time."
+
+"Nae doubt that's your opinion," said he; "but I wouldnae be the least
+surprised if they were hunkering this wood. Ye see, David man, they'll
+be Hieland folk. There'll be some Frasers, I'm thinking, and some of the
+Gregara; and I would never deny but what the both of them, and the
+Gregara in especial, were clever experienced persons. A man kens little
+till he's driven a spreagh of neat cattle (say) ten miles through a
+throng lowland country and the black soldiers maybe at his tail. It's
+there that I learned a great part of my penetration. And ye need nae
+tell me: it's better than war; which is the next best, however, though
+generally rather a bauchle of a business. Now the Gregara have had grand
+practice."
+
+"No doubt that's a branch of education that was left out with me," said
+I.
+
+"And I can see the marks of it upon ye constantly," said Alan. "But
+that's the strange thing about you folk of the college learning: ye're
+ignorant, and ye cannae see 't. Wae's me for my Greek and Hebrew; but,
+man, I ken that I dinnae ken them--there's the differ of it. Now, here's
+you. Ye lie on your wame a bittie in the bield of this wood, and ye tell
+me that ye've cuist off these Frasers and Macgregors. Why! _Because I
+couldnae see them_, says you. Ye blockhead, that's their livelihood."
+
+"Take the worst of it," said I, "and what are we to do?"
+
+"I am thinking of that same," said he. "We might twine. It wouldnae be
+greatly to my taste; and forbye that, I see reasons against it. First,
+it's now unco dark, and it's just humanly possible we might give them
+the clean slip. If we keep together, we make but the ae line of it; if
+we gang separate, we make twae of them: the more likelihood to stave in
+upon some of these gentry of yours. And then, second, if they keep the
+track of us, it may come to a fecht for it yet, Davie; and then, I'll
+confess I would be blythe to have you at my oxter, and I think you would
+be none the worse of having me at yours. So, by my way of it, we should
+creep out of this wood no further gone than just the inside of next
+minute, and hold away east for Gillane, where I'm to find my ship. It'll
+be like old days while it lasts, Davie; and (come the time) we'll have
+to think what you should be doing. I'm wae to leave ye here, wanting
+me."
+
+"Have with ye, then!" says I. "Do ye gang back where you were stopping."
+
+"De'il a fear!" said Alan. "They were good folks to me, but I think they
+would be a good deal disappointed if they saw my bonny face again. For
+(the way times go) I amnae just what ye could call a Walcome Guest.
+Which makes me the keener for your company, Mr. David Balfour of the
+Shaws, and set ye up! For, leave aside twa cracks here in the wood with
+Charlie Stewart, I have scarce said black or white since the day we
+parted at Corstorphine."
+
+With which he rose from his place, and we began to move quietly eastward
+through the wood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN
+
+
+It was likely between one and two; the moon (as I have said) was down; a
+strongish wind, carrying a heavy wrack of cloud, had set in suddenly
+from the west; and we began our movement in as black a night as ever a
+fugitive or a murderer wanted. The whiteness of the path guided us into
+the sleeping town of Broughton, thence through Picardy, and beside my
+old acquaintance the gibbet of the two thieves. A little beyond we made
+a useful beacon, which was a light in an upper window of Lochend.
+Steering by this, but a good deal at random, and with some trampling of
+the harvest, and stumbling and falling down upon the banks, we made our
+way across country, and won forth at last upon the linky, boggy muirland
+that they call the Figgate Whins. Here, under a bush of whin, we lay
+down the remainder of that night and slumbered.
+
+The day called us about five. A beautiful morning it was, the high
+westerly wind still blowing strong, but the clouds all blown away to
+Europe. Alan was already sitting up and smiling to himself. It was my
+first sight of my friend since we were parted, and I looked upon him
+with enjoyment. He had still the same big great-coat on his back; but
+(what was new) he had now a pair of knitted boot-hose drawn above the
+knee. Doubtless these were intended for disguise; but, as the day
+promised to be warm, he made a most unseasonable figure.
+
+"Well, Davie," said he, "is this no a bonny morning? Here is a day that
+looks the way that a day ought to. This is a great change of it from the
+belly of my haystack; and while you were there sottering and sleeping I
+have done a thing that maybe I do over seldom."
+
+"And what was that?" said I.
+
+"O, just said my prayers," said he.
+
+"And where are my gentry, as ye call them?" I asked.
+
+"Gude kens," says he; "and the short and the long of it is that we must
+take our chance of them. Up with your foot-soles, Davie! Forth, Fortune,
+once again of it! And a bonny walk we are like to have."
+
+So we went east by the beach of the sea, towards where the salt-pans
+were smoking in by the Esk mouth. No doubt there was a by-ordinary bonny
+blink of morning sun on Arthur's Seat and the green Pentlands; and the
+pleasantness of the day appeared to set Alan among nettles.
+
+"I feel like a gomeral," says he, "to be leaving Scotland on a day like
+this. It sticks in my head; I would maybe like it better to stay here
+and hing."
+
+"Ay, but ye wouldnae, Alan," said I.
+
+"No but what France is a good place too," he explained; "but it's some
+way no the same. It's brawer, I believe, but it's no Scotland. I like it
+fine when I'm there, man; yet I kind of weary for Scots divots and the
+Scots peat-reek."
+
+"If that's all you have to complain of, Alan, it's no such great
+affair," said I.
+
+"And it sets me ill to be complaining, whatever," said he, "and me but
+new out of yon de'il's haystack."
+
+"And so you were unco' weary of your haystack?" I asked.
+
+"Weary's nae word for it," said he. "I'm not just precisely a man that's
+easily cast down; but I do better with caller air and the lift above my
+head. I'm like the auld Black Douglas (wasnae't?) that likit better to
+hear the laverock sing than the mouse cheep. And yon place, ye see,
+Davie--whilk was a very suitable place to hide in, as I'm free to
+own--was pit mirk from dawn to gloaming. There were days (or nights, for
+how would I tell one from other?) that seemed to me as long as a long
+winter."
+
+"How did you know the hour to bide your tryst?" I asked.
+
+"The goodman brought me my meat and a drop brandy, and a candle-dowp to
+eat it by, about eleeven," said he. "So, when I had swallowed a bit, it
+would be time to be getting to the wood. There I lay and wearied for ye
+sore, Davie," says he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "and guessed when
+the two hours would be about by--unless Charlie Stewart would come and
+tell me on his watch--and then back to the dooms haystack. Na, it was a
+driech employ, and praise the Lord that I have warstled through with
+it!"
+
+"What did you do with yourself?" I asked.
+
+"Faith," said he, "the best I could! Whiles I played at the
+knucklebones. I'm an extraordinar good hand at the knucklebones, but
+it's a poor piece of business playing with naebody to admire ye. And
+whiles I would make songs."
+
+"What were they about?" says I.
+
+"O, about the deer and the heather," says he, "and about the ancient old
+chiefs that are all by with it long syne, and just about what songs are
+about in general. And then whiles I would make believe I had a set of
+pipes and I was playing. I played some grand springs, and I thought I
+played them awful bonny; I vow whiles that I could hear the squeal of
+them! But the great affair is that it's done with."
+
+With that he carried me again to my adventures, which he heard all over
+again with more particularity, and extraordinary approval, swearing at
+intervals that I was "a queer character of a callant."
+
+"So ye were frich'ened of Sym Fraser?" he asked once.
+
+"In troth was I!" cried I.
+
+"So would I have been, Davie," said he. "And that is indeed a dreidful
+man. But it is only proper to give the de'il his due; and I can tell you
+he is a most respectable person on the field of war."
+
+"Is he so brave?" I asked.
+
+"Brave!" said he. "He is as brave as my steel sword."
+
+The story of my duel set him beside himself.
+
+"To think of that!" he cried. "I showed ye the trick in Corrynakiegh
+too. And three times--three times disarmed! It's a disgrace upon my
+character that learned ye! Here, stand up, out with your airn; ye shall
+walk no step beyond this place upon the road till ye can do yoursel' and
+me mair credit."
+
+"Alan," said I, "this is midsummer madness. Here is no time for fencing
+lessons."
+
+"I cannae well say no to that," he admitted. "But three times, man! And
+you standing there like a straw bogle and rinning to fetch your ain
+sword like a doggie with a pocket-napkin! David, this man Duncansby must
+be something altogether by-ordinar! He maun be extraordinar skilly. If I
+had the time, I would gang straight back and try a turn at him mysel'.
+The man must be a provost."
+
+"You silly fellow," said I, "you forget it was just me."
+
+"Na," said he, "but three times!"
+
+"When ye ken yourself that I am fair incompetent," I cried.
+
+"Well, I never heard tell the equal of it," said he.
+
+"I promise you the one thing, Alan," said I. "The next time that we
+forgather, I'll be better learned. You shall not continue to bear the
+disgrace of a friend that cannot strike."
+
+"Ay, the next time!" says he. "And when will that be, I would like to
+ken?"
+
+"Well, Alan, I have had some thoughts of that, too," said I; "and my
+plan is this. It's my opinion to be called an advocate."
+
+"That's but a weary trade, Davie," says Alan, "and rather a blagyard one
+forby. Ye would be better in a king's coat than that."
+
+"And no doubt that would be the way to have us meet," cried I. "But as
+you'll be in King Lewie's coat, and I'll be in King Geordie's, we'll
+have a dainty meeting of it."
+
+"There's some sense in that," he admitted.
+
+"An advocate, then, it'll have to be," I continued, "and I think it a
+more suitable trade for a gentleman that was _three times_ disarmed. But
+the beauty of the thing is this: that one of the best colleges for that
+kind of learning--and the one where my kinsman, Pilrig, made his
+studies--is the college of Leyden in Holland. Now, what say you, Alan?
+Could not a cadet of _Royal Ecossais_ get a furlough, slip over the
+marches, and call in upon a Leyden student!"
+
+"Well, and I would think he could!" cried he. "Ye see, I stand well in
+with my colonel, Count Drummond-Melfort; and, what's mair to the
+purpose, I have a cousin of mine lieutenant-colonel in a regiment of the
+Scots-Dutch. Naething could be mair proper than what I would get a leave
+to see Lieutenant-Colonel Stewart of Halkett's. And Lord Melfort, who is
+a very scienteefic kind of a man, and writes books like Cæsar, would be
+doubtless very pleased to have the advantage of my observes."
+
+"Is Lord Melfort an author, then?" I asked, for much as Alan thought of
+soldiers, I thought more of the gentry that write books.
+
+"The very same, Davie," said he. "One would think a colonel would have
+something better to attend to. But what can I say that make songs?"
+
+"Well, then," said I, "it only remains you should give me an address to
+write you at in France; and as soon as I am got to Leyden I will send
+you mine."
+
+"The best will be to write me in the care of my chieftain," said he,
+"Charles Stewart, of Ardsheil, Esquire, at the town of Melons, in the
+Isle of France. It might take long, or it might take short, but it would
+aye get to my hands at the last of it."
+
+We had a haddock to our breakfast in Musselburgh, where it amused me
+vastly to hear Alan. His great-coat and boot-hose were extremely
+remarkable this warm morning, and perhaps some hint of an explanation
+had been wise; but Alan went into that matter like a business, or I
+should rather say, like a diversion. He engaged the goodwife of the
+house with some compliments upon the rizzoring of our haddocks; and the
+whole of the rest of our stay held her in talk about a cold he had taken
+on his stomach, gravely relating all manner of symptoms and sufferings,
+and hearing with a vast show of interest all the old wives' remedies she
+could supply him with in return.
+
+We left Musselburgh before the first ninepenny coach was due from
+Edinburgh, for (as Alan said) that was a rencounter we might very well
+avoid. The wind, although still high, was very mild, the sun shone
+strong, and Alan began to suffer in proportion. From Prestonpans he had
+me aside to the field of Gladsmuir, where he exerted himself a great
+deal more than needful to describe the stages of the battle. Thence, at
+his old round pace, we travelled to Cockenzie. Though they were building
+herring-busses there at Mrs. Cadell's, it seemed a desert-like,
+back-going town, about half full of ruined houses; but the ale-house was
+clean, and Alan, who was now in a glowing heat, must indulge himself
+with a bottle of ale, and carry on to the new luckie with the old story
+of the cold upon his stomach, only now the symptoms were all different.
+
+I sat listening; and it came in my mind that I had scarce ever heard him
+address three serious words to any woman, but he was always drolling and
+fleering and making a private mock of them, and yet brought to that
+business a remarkable degree of energy and interest. Something to this
+effect I remarked to him, when the good wife (as chanced) was called
+away.
+
+"What do ye want?" says he. "A man should aye put his best foot forrit
+with the womenkind; he should aye give them a bit of a story to divert
+them, the poor lambs! It's what ye should learn to attend to, David; ye
+should get the principles, it's like a trade. Now, if this had been a
+young lassie, or onyways bonnie, she would never have heard tell of my
+stomach, Davie. But aince they're too old to be seeking joes, they a'
+set up to be apotecaries. Why? What do I ken? They'll be just the way
+God made them, I suppose. But I think a man would be a gomeral that
+didnae give his attention to the same."
+
+And here, the luckie coming back, he turned from me as if with
+impatience to renew their former conversation. The lady had branched
+some while before from Alan's stomach to the case of a goodbrother of
+her own in Aberlady, whose last sickness and demise she was describing
+at extraordinary length. Sometimes it was merely dull, sometimes both
+dull and awful, for she talked with unction. The upshot was that I fell
+in a deep muse, looking forth of the window on the road, and scarce
+marking what I saw. Presently had any been looking they might have seen
+me to start.
+
+"We pit a fomentation to his feet," the goodwife was saying, "and a het
+stane to his wame, and we gied him hyssop and water of pennyroyal, and
+fine, clean balsam of sulphur for the hoast...."
+
+"Sir," says I, cutting very quietly in, "there's a friend of mine gone
+by the house."
+
+"Is that e'en sae?" replies Alan, as though it were a thing of
+small-account. And then, "Ye were saying, mem?" says he; and the
+wearyful wife went on.
+
+Presently, however, he paid her with a half-crown piece, and she must go
+forth after the change.
+
+"Was it him with the red head?" asked Alan.
+
+"Ye have it," said I.
+
+"What did I tell you in the wood?" he cried. "And yet it's strange he
+should be here too! Was he his lane?"
+
+"His lee-lane for what I could see," said I.
+
+"Did he gang by?" he asked.
+
+"Straight by," said I, "and looked neither to the right nor left."
+
+"And that's queerer yet," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind, Davie, that
+we should be stirring. But where to?--deil hae't! This is like old days
+fairly," cries he.
+
+"There is one big differ, though," said I, "that now we have money in
+our pockets."
+
+"And another big differ, Mr. Balfour," says he, "that now we have dogs
+at our tail. They're on the scent; they're in full cry, David. It's a
+bad business and be damned to it." And he sat thinking hard with a look
+of his that I knew well.
+
+"I'm saying, Luckie," says he, when the goodwife returned, "have ye a
+back road out of this change house?"
+
+She told him there was and where it led to.
+
+"Then, sir," says he to me, "I think that will be the shortest road for
+us. And here's good-bye to ye, my braw woman; and I'll no forget thon of
+the cinnamon water."
+
+We went out by way of the woman's kale yard, and up a lane among fields.
+Alan looked sharply to all sides, and seeing we were in a little hollow
+place of the country, out of view of men, sat down.
+
+"Now for a council of war, Davie," said he. "But first of all, a bit
+lesson to ye. Suppose that I had been like you, what would yon old wife
+have minded of the pair of us? Just that we had gone out by the back
+gate. And what does she mind now? A fine, canty, friendly, cracky man,
+that suffered with the stomach, poor body! and was real ta'en up about
+the goodbrother. O man, David, try and learn to have some kind of
+intelligence!"
+
+"I'll try, Alan," said I.
+
+"And now for him of the red head," says he; "was he gaun fast or slow?"
+
+"Betwixt and between," said I.
+
+"No kind of a hurry about the man?" he asked.
+
+"Never a sign of it," said I.
+
+"Nhm!" said Alan, "it looks queer. We saw nothing of them this morning
+on the Whins; he's passed us by, he doesnae seem to be looking, and yet
+here he is on our road! Dod, Davie, I begin to take a notion. I think
+it's no you they're seeking, I think it's me; and I think they ken fine
+where they're gaun."
+
+"They ken?" I asked.
+
+"I think Andie Scougal's sold me--him or his mate wha kent some part of
+the affair--or else Chairlie's clerk callant, which would be a pity
+too," says Alan; "and if you askit me for just my inward private
+conviction, I think there'll be heads cracked on Gillane sands."
+
+"Alan," I cried, "if you're at all right there'll be folk there and to
+spare. It'll be small service to crack heads."
+
+"It would aye be a satisfaction though," says Alan. "But bide a bit,
+bide a bit; I'm thinking--and thanks to this bonny westland wind, I
+believe I've still a chance of it. It's this way, Davie. I'm no trysted
+with this man Scougal till the gloaming comes. _But_," says he, "_if I
+can get a bit of a wind out of the west I'll be there long or that_," he
+says, "_and lie-to for ye behind the Isle of Fidra_. Now if your gentry
+kens the place, they ken the time forbye. Do ye see me coming, Davie?
+Thanks to Johnnie Cope and other red-coat gomerals, I should ken this
+country like the back of my hand; and if ye're ready for another bit run
+with Alan Breck, we'll can cast back inshore, and come down to the
+seaside again by Dirleton. If the ship's there, we'll try and get on
+board of her. If she's no there, I'll just have to get back to my weary
+haystack. But either way of it, I think we will leave your gentry
+whistling on their thumbs."
+
+"I believe there's some chance in it," said I. "Have on with ye, Alan!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+GILLANE SANDS
+
+
+I did not profit by Alan's pilotage as he had done by his marchings
+under General Cope; for I can scarce tell what way we went. It is my
+excuse that we travelled exceeding fast. Some part we ran, some trotted,
+and the rest walked at a vengeance of a pace. Twice, while we were at
+top speed, we ran against country-folk; but though we plumped into the
+first from round a corner, Alan was as ready as a loaded musket.
+
+"Hae ye seen my horse?" he gasped.
+
+"Na, man, I haenae seen nae horse the day," replied the countryman.
+
+And Alan spared the time to explain to him that we were travelling "ride
+and tie"; that our charger had escaped, and it was feared he had gone
+home to Linton. Not only that, but he expended some breath (of which he
+had not very much left) to curse his own misfortune and my stupidity
+which was said to be its cause.
+
+"Them that cannae tell the truth," he observed to myself as we went on
+again, "should be aye mindfu' to leave an honest, handy lee behind them.
+If folk dinnae ken what ye're doing, Davie, they're terrible taken up
+with it; but if they think they ken, they care nae mair for it than what
+I do for pease porridge."
+
+As we had first made inland, so our road came in the end to lie very
+near due north; the old Kirk of Aberlady for a landmark on the left; on
+the right, the top of the Berwick Law; and it was thus we struck the
+shore again, not far from Dirleton. From North Berwick west to Gillane
+Ness there runs a string of four small islets, Craiglieth, the Lamb,
+Fidra, and Eyebrough, notable by their diversity of size and shape.
+Fidra is the most particular, being a strange grey islet of two humps,
+made the more conspicuous by a piece of ruin; and I mind that (as we
+drew closer to it) by some door or window of these ruins the sea peeped
+through like a man's eye. Under the lee of Fidra there is a good
+anchorage in westerly winds, and there, from a far way off, we could see
+the _Thistle_ riding.
+
+The shore in face of these islets is altogether waste. Here is no
+dwelling of man, and scarce any passage, or at most of vagabond children
+running at their play. Gillane is a small place on the far side of the
+Ness, the folk of Dirleton go to their business in the inland fields,
+and those of North Berwick straight to the sea-fishing from their haven;
+so that few parts of the coast are lonelier. But I mind, as we crawled
+upon our bellies into that multiplicity of heights and hollows, keeping
+a bright eye upon all sides, and our hearts hammering at our ribs, there
+was such a shining of the sun and the sea, such a stir of the wind in
+the bent grass, and such a bustle of down-popping rabbits and up-flying
+gulls, that the desert seemed to me like a place alive. No doubt it was
+in all ways well chosen for a secret embarcation, if the secret had been
+kept; and even now that it was out, and the place watched, we were able
+to creep unperceived to the front of the sandhills, where they look down
+immediately on the beach and sea.
+
+But here Alan came to a full stop.
+
+"Davie," said he, "this is a kittle passage! As long as we lie here
+we're safe; but I'm nane sae muckle nearer to my ship or the coast of
+France. And as soon as we stand up and signal the brig, it's another
+matter. For where will your gentry be, think ye?"
+
+"Maybe they're no come yet," said I. "And even if they are, there's one
+clear matter in our favour. They'll be all arranged to take us, that's
+true. But they'll have arranged for our coming from the east, and here
+we are upon their west."
+
+"Ay," says Alan, "I wish we were in some force, and this was a battle,
+we would have bonnily out-manoeuvred them! But it isnae, Davit; and the
+way it is, is a wee thing less inspiring to Alan Breck. I swither,
+Davie."
+
+"Time flies, Alan," said I.
+
+"I ken that," said Alan. "I ken naething else, as the French folk say.
+But this is a dreidful case of heids or tails. O! if I could but ken
+where your gentry were!"
+
+"Alan," said I, "this is no like you. It's got to be now or never."
+
+ "This is no me, quo' he,"
+
+sang Alan, with a queer face betwixt shame and drollery.
+
+ "Neither you nor me, quo' he, neither you nor me,
+ Wow, na, Johnnie man! neither you nor me."
+
+And then of a sudden he stood straight up where he was, and with a
+handkerchief flying in his right hand, marched down upon the beach. I
+stood up myself, but lingered behind him, scanning the sandhills to the
+east. His appearance was at first unremarked: Scougal not expecting him
+so early, and _my gentry_ watching on the other side. Then they awoke on
+board the _Thistle_, and it seemed they had all in readiness, for there
+was scarce a second's bustle on the deck before we saw a skiff put round
+her stern and begin to pull lively for the coast. Almost at the same
+moment of time, and perhaps half a mile away towards Gillane Ness, the
+figure of a man appeared for a blink upon a sandhill, waving with his
+arms; and though he was gone again in the same flash, the gulls in that
+part continued a little longer to fly wild.
+
+Alan had not seen this, looking straight to seaward at the ship and
+skiff.
+
+"It maun be as it will!" said he, when I had told him. "Weel may yon
+boatie row, or my craig'll have to thole a raxing."
+
+That part of the beach was long and flat, and excellent walking when the
+tide was down; a little cressy burn flowed over it in one place to the
+sea; and the sandhills ran along the head of it like the rampart of a
+town. No eye of ours could spy what was passing behind there in the
+bents, no hurry of ours could mend the speed of the boat's coming: time
+stood still with us through that uncanny period of waiting.
+
+"There is one thing I would like to ken," says Alan. "I would like fine
+to ken these gentry's orders. We're worth four hunner pound the pair of
+us: how if they took the guns to us, Davie? They would get a bonny shot
+from the top of that lang sandy bank."
+
+"Morally impossible," said I. "The point is that they can have no guns.
+This thing has been gone about too secret; pistols they may have, but
+never guns."
+
+"I believe ye'll be in the right," says Alan. "For all which I am
+wearying a good deal for yon boat."
+
+And he snapped his fingers and whistled to it like a dog.
+
+It was now perhaps a third of the way in, and we ourselves already hard
+on the margin of the sea, so that the soft sand rose over my shoes.
+There was no more to do whatever but to wait, to look as much as we were
+able at the creeping nearer of the boat, and as little as we could
+manage at the long impenetrable front of the sandhills, over which the
+gulls twinkled and behind which our enemies were doubtless marshalling.
+
+"This is a fine, bright, caller place to get shot in," says Alan,
+suddenly; "and, man, I wish that I had your courage!"
+
+"Alan!" I cried, "what kind of talk is this of it? You're just made of
+courage; it's the character of the man, as I could prove myself if there
+was nobody else."
+
+"And you would be the more mistaken," said he. "What makes the differ
+with me is just my great penetration and knowledge of affairs. But for
+auld, cauld, dour, deidly courage, I am not fit to hold a candle to
+yourself. Look at us two here upon the sands. Here am I, fair hotching
+to be off; here's you (for all that I ken) in two minds of it whether
+you'll no stop. Do you think that I could do that, or would? No me!
+Firstly, because I havenae got the courage and wouldnae daur; and
+secondly, because I am a man of so much penetration and would see ye
+damned first."
+
+"It's there ye're coming, is it?" I cried. "Ah, man Alan, you can wile
+your old wives, but you never can wile me."
+
+Remembrance of my temptation in the wood made me strong as iron.
+
+"I have a tryst to keep," I continued. "I am trysted with your cousin
+Charlie; I have passed my word."
+
+"Braw trysts that you'll can keep," said Alan. "Ye'll just mistryst
+aince and for a' with the gentry in the bents. And what for?" he went on
+with an extreme threatening gravity. "Just tell me that, my mannie! Are
+ye to be speerited away like Lady Grange? Are they to drive a dirk in
+your inside and bury ye in the bents? Or is it to be the other way, and
+are they to bring ye in with James? Are they folk to be trustit? Would
+ye stick your head in the mouth of Sim Fraser and the ither Whigs?" he
+added with extraordinary bitterness.
+
+"Alan," cried I, "they're all rogues and liars, and I'm with ye there.
+The more reason there should be one decent man in such a land of
+thieves! My word is passed, and I'll stick to it. I said long syne to
+your kinswoman that I would stumble at no risk. Do ye mind of that?--the
+night Red Colin fell, it was. No more I will, then. Here I stop.
+Prestongrange promised me my life; if he's to be mansworn, here I'll
+have to die."
+
+"Aweel, aweel," said Alan.
+
+All this time we had seen or heard no more of our pursuers. In truth we
+had caught them unawares; their whole party (as I was to learn
+afterwards) had not yet reached the scene; what there was of them was
+spread among the bents towards Gillane. It was quite an affair to call
+them in and bring them over, and the boat was making speed. They were
+besides but cowardly fellows: a mere leash of Highland cattle thieves,
+of several clans, no gentleman there to be the captain: and the more
+they looked at Alan and me upon the beach, the less (I must suppose)
+they liked the looks of us.
+
+Whoever had betrayed Alan it was not the captain: he was in the skiff
+himself, steering and stirring up his oarsmen, like a man with his heart
+in his employ. Already he was near in, and the boat scouring--already
+Alan's face had flamed crimson with the excitement of his deliverance,
+when our friends in the bents, either in despair to see their prey
+escape them or with some hope of scaring Andie, raised suddenly a shrill
+cry of several voices.
+
+This sound, arising from what appeared to be a quite deserted coast, was
+really very daunting, and the men in the boat held water instantly.
+
+"What's this of it?" sings out the captain, for he was come within an
+easy hail.
+
+"Freens o' mine," says Alan, and began immediately to wade forth in the
+shallow water towards the boat. "Davie," he said, pausing, "Davie, are
+ye no coming? I am swier to leave ye."
+
+"Not a hair of me," said I.
+
+He stood part of a second where he was to his knees in the salt water,
+hesitating.
+
+"He that will to Cupar, maun to Cupar," said he, and swashing in deeper
+than his waist, was hauled into the skiff, which was immediately
+directed for the ship.
+
+I stood where he had left me, with my hands behind my back; Alan sat
+with his head turned watching me; and the boat drew smoothly away. Of a
+sudden I came the nearest hand to shedding tears, and seemed to myself
+the most deserted, solitary lad in Scotland. With that I turned my back
+upon the sea and faced the sand hills. There was no sight or sound of
+man; the sun shone on the wet sand and the dry, the wind blew in the
+bents, the gulls made a dreary piping. As I passed higher up the beach,
+the sand-lice were hopping nimbly about the stranded tangles. The devil
+any other sight or sound in that unchancy place. And yet I knew there
+were folk there, observing me, upon some secret purpose. They were no
+soldiers, or they would have fallen on and taken us ere now; doubtless
+they were some common rogues hired for my undoing, perhaps to kidnap,
+perhaps to murder me outright. From the position of those engaged, the
+first was the more likely; from what I knew of their character and
+ardency in this business, I thought the second very possible; and the
+blood ran cold about my heart.
+
+I had a mad idea to loosen my sword in the scabbard; for though I was
+very unfit to stand up like a gentleman blade to blade, I thought I
+could do some scathe in a random combat. But I perceived in time the
+folly of resistance. This was no doubt the joint "expedient" on which
+Prestongrange and Fraser were agreed. The first, I was very sure, had
+done something to secure my life; the second was pretty likely to have
+slipped in some contrary hints into the ears of Neil and his companions;
+and if I were to show bare steel I might play straight into the hands of
+my worst enemy and seal my own doom.
+
+These thoughts brought me to the head of the beach. I cast a look
+behind, the boat was nearing the brig, and Alan flew his handkerchief
+for a farewell, which I replied to with the waving of my hand. But Alan
+himself was shrunk to a small thing in my view, alongside of this pass
+that lay in front of me. I set my hat hard on my head, clenched my
+teeth, and went right before me up the face of the sand-wreath. It made
+a hard climb, being steep, and the sand like water underfoot. But I
+caught hold at last by the long bent grass on the brae-top, and pulled
+myself to a good footing. The same moment men stirred and stood up here
+and there, six or seven of them, ragged-like knaves, each with a dagger
+in his hand. The fair truth is, I shut my eyes and prayed. When I opened
+them again, the rogues were crept the least thing nearer without speech
+or hurry. Every eye was upon mine, which struck me with a strange
+sensation of their brightness, and of the fear with which they continued
+to approach me. I held out my hands empty: whereupon one asked, with a
+strong Highland brogue, if I surrendered.
+
+"Under protest," said I, "if ye ken what that means, which I misdoubt."
+
+At that word, they came all in upon me like a flight of birds upon a
+carrion, seized me, took my sword, and all the money from my pockets,
+bound me hand and foot with some strong line, and cast me on a tussock
+of bent. There they sat about their captive in a part of a circle and
+gazed upon him silently like something dangerous, perhaps a lion or a
+tiger on the spring. Presently this attention was relaxed. They drew
+nearer together, fell to speech in the Gaelic, and very cynically
+divided my property before my eyes. It was my diversion in this time
+that I could watch from my place the progress of my friend's escape. I
+saw the boat come to the brig and be hoisted in, the sails fill, and the
+ship pass out seaward behind the isles and by North Berwick.
+
+In the course of two hours or so, more and more ragged Highlandmen kept
+collecting, Neil among the first, until the party must have numbered
+near a score. With each new arrival there was a fresh bout of talk, that
+sounded like complaints and explanations; but I observed one thing, none
+of those that came late had any share in the division of my spoils. The
+last discussion was very violent and eager, so that once I thought they
+would have quarrelled; on the heels of which their company parted, the
+bulk of them returning westward in a troop, and only three, Neil and two
+others, remaining sentries on the prisoner.
+
+"I could name one who would be very ill pleased with your day's work,
+Neil Duncanson," said I, when the rest had moved away.
+
+He assured me in answer I should be tenderly used, for he knew he was
+"acquent wi' the leddy."
+
+This was all our talk, nor did any other son of man appear upon that
+portion of the coast until the sun had gone down among the Highland
+mountains, and the gloaming was beginning to grow dark. At which hour I
+was aware of a long, lean, bony-like Lothian man of a very swarthy
+countenance, that came towards us among the bents on a farm horse.
+
+"Lads," cried he, "hae ye a paper like this?" and held up one in his
+hand. Neil produced a second, which the new comer studied through a pair
+of horn spectacles, and saying all was right and we were the folk he was
+seeking, immediately dismounted. I was then set in his place, my feet
+tied under the horse's belly, and we set forth under the guidance of the
+Lowlander. His path must have been very well chosen, for we met but one
+pair--a pair of lovers--the whole way, and these, perhaps taking us to
+be free-traders, fled on our approach. We were at one time close at the
+foot of Berwick Law on the south side; at another, as we passed over
+some open hills, I spied the lights of a clachan and the old tower of a
+church among some trees not far off, but too far to cry for help, if I
+had dreamed of it. At last we came again within sound of the sea. There
+was moonlight, though not much; and by this I could see the three huge
+towers and broken battlements of Tantallon, that old chief place of the
+Red Douglases. The horse was picketed in the bottom of the ditch to
+graze, and I was led within, and forth into the court, and thence into a
+tumble-down stone hall. Here my conductors built a brisk fire in the
+midst of the pavement, for there was a chill in the night. My hands were
+loosed, I was set by the wall in the inner end, and (the Lowlander
+having produced provisions) I was given oatmeal bread and a pitcher of
+French brandy. This done, I was left once more alone with my three
+Highlandmen. They sat close by the fire drinking and talking; the wind
+blew in by the breaches, cast about the smoke and flames, and sang in
+the tops of the towers; I could hear the sea under the cliffs, and my
+mind being reassured as to my life, and my body and spirits wearied with
+the day's employment, I turned upon one side and slumbered.
+
+I had no means of guessing at what hour I was wakened, only the moon was
+down and the fire low. My feet were now loosed, and I was carried
+through the ruins and down the cliff-side by a precipitous path to where
+I found a fisher's boat in a haven of the rocks. This I was had on board
+of, and we began to put forth from the shore in a fine starlight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE BASS
+
+
+I had no thought where they were taking me; only looked here and there
+for the appearance of a ship; and there ran the while in my head a word
+of Ransome's--the _twenty-pounders_. If I were to be exposed a second
+time to that same former danger of the plantations, I judged it must
+turn ill with me; there was no second Alan, and no second shipwreck and
+spare yard to be expected now; and I saw myself hoe tobacco under the
+whip's lash. The thought chilled me; the air was sharp upon the water,
+the stretchers of the boat drenched with a cold dew; and I shivered in
+my place beside the steersman. This was the dark man whom I have called
+hitherto the Lowlander; his name was Dale, ordinarily called Black
+Andie. Feeling the thrill of my shiver, he very kindly handed me a rough
+jacket full of fish-scales, with which I was glad to cover myself.
+
+"I thank you for this kindness," said I, "and will make so free as to
+repay it with a warning. You take a high responsibility in this affair.
+You are not like these ignorant, barbarous Highlanders, but know what
+the law is and the risks of those that break it."
+
+"I am no just exactly what ye would ca' an extremist for the law," says
+he, "at the best of times; but in this business I act with a good
+warranty."
+
+"What are you going to do with me?" I asked.
+
+"Nae harm," said he, "nae harm ava'. Ye'll hae strong freens, I'm
+thinking. Ye'll be richt eneuch yet."
+
+There began to fall a greyness on the face of the sea; little dabs of
+pink and like coals of slow fire came in the east; and at the same time
+the geese awakened, and began crying about the top of the Bass. It is
+just the one crag of rock, as everybody knows, but great enough to carve
+a city from. The sea was extremely little, but there went a hollow
+plowter round the base of it. With the growing of the dawn I could see
+it clearer and clearer; the straight crags painted with sea-birds'
+droppings like a morning frost, the sloping top of it green with grass,
+the clan of white geese that cried about the sides, and the black,
+broken buildings of the prison sitting close on the sea's edge.
+
+At the sight the truth came in upon me in a clap.
+
+"It's there you're taking me!" I cried.
+
+"Just to the Bass, mannie," said he: "whaur the auld sants were afore
+ye, and I misdoubt if ye have come so fairly by your preeson."
+
+"But none dwells there now," I cried; "the place is long a ruin."
+
+"It'll be the mair pleisand a change for the solan geese, then," quoth
+Andie dryly.
+
+The day coming slowly brighter I observed on the bilge, among the big
+stones with which fisherfolk ballast their boats, several kegs and
+baskets, and a provision of fuel. All these were discharged upon the
+crag. Andie, myself, and my three Highlanders (I call them mine,
+although it was the other way about), landed along with them. The sun
+was not yet up when the boat moved away again, the noise of the oars on
+the thole-pins echoing from the cliffs, and left us in our singular
+reclusion.
+
+Andie Dale was the Prefect (as I would jocularly call him) of the Bass,
+being at once the shepherd and the gamekeeper of that small and rich
+estate. He had to mind the dozen or so of sheep that fed and fattened on
+the grass of the sloping part of it, like beasts grazing the roof of a
+cathedral. He had charge besides of the solan geese that roosted in the
+crags; and from these an extraordinary income is derived. The young are
+dainty eating, as much as two shillings a-piece being a common price,
+and paid willingly by epicures; even the grown birds are valuable for
+their oil and feathers; and a part of the minister's stipend of North
+Berwick is paid to this day in solan geese, which makes it (in some
+folks' eyes) a parish to be coveted. To perform these several
+businesses, as well as to protect the geese from poachers, Andie had
+frequent occasion to sleep and pass days together on the crag; and we
+found the man at home there like a farmer in his steading. Bidding us
+all shoulder some of the packages, a matter in which I made haste to
+bear a hand, he led us in by a locked gate, which was the only admission
+to the island, and through the ruins of the fortress, to the governor's
+house. There we saw, by the ashes in the chimney and a standing
+bed-place in one corner, that he made his usual occupation.
+
+This bed he now offered me to use, saying he supposed I would set up to
+be gentry.
+
+"My gentrice has nothing to do with where I lie," said I. "I bless God I
+have lain hard ere now, and can do the same again with thankfulness.
+While I am here, Mr. Andie, if that be your name, I will do my part and
+take my place beside the rest of you; and I ask you on the other hand to
+spare me your mockery, which I own I like ill."
+
+He grumbled a little at this speech, but seemed upon reflection to
+approve it. Indeed, he was a long-headed, sensible man, and a good Whig
+and Presbyterian; read daily in a pocket Bible, and was both able and
+eager to converse seriously on religion, leaning more than a little
+towards the Cameronian extremes. His morals were of a more doubtful
+colour. I found he was deep in the free trade, and used the ruins of
+Tantallon for a magazine of smuggled merchandise. As for a gauger, I do
+not believe he valued the life of one at half-a-farthing. But that part
+of the coast of Lothian is to this day as wild a place, and the commons
+there as rough a crew as any in Scotland.
+
+One incident of my imprisonment is made memorable by a consequence it
+had long after. There was a warship at this time stationed in the Firth,
+the _Seahorse_, Captain Palliser. It chanced she was cruising in the
+month of September, plying between Fife and Lothian, and sounding for
+sunk dangers. Early one fine morning she was seen about two miles to
+east of us, where she lowered a boat, and seemed to examine the Wildfire
+Rocks and Satan's Bush, famous dangers of that coast. And presently,
+after having got her boat again, she came before the wind and was headed
+directly for the Bass. This was very troublesome to Andie and the
+Highlanders; the whole business of my sequestration was designed for
+privacy, and here, with a navy captain perhaps blundering ashore, it
+looked to become public enough, if it were nothing worse. I was in a
+minority of one, I am no Alan to fall upon so many, and I was far from
+sure that a warship was the least likely to improve my condition. All
+which considered, I gave Andie my parole of good behaviour and
+obedience, and was had briskly to the summit of the rock, where we all
+lay down, at the cliff's edge, in different places of observation and
+concealment. The _Seahorse_ came straight on till I thought she would
+have struck, and we (looking giddily down) could see the ship's company
+at their quarters and hear the leadsman singing at the lead. Then she
+suddenly wore and let fly a volley of I know not how many great guns.
+The rock was shaken with the thunder of the sound, the smoke flowed over
+our heads, and the geese rose in number beyond computation or belief. To
+hear their screaming and to see the twinkling of their wings, made a
+most inimitable curiosity: and I suppose it was after this somewhat
+childish pleasure that Captain Palliser had come so near the Bass. He
+was to pay dear for it in time. During his approach I had the
+opportunity to make a remark upon the rigging of that ship by which I
+ever after knew it miles away; and this was a means (under Providence)
+of my averting from a friend a great calamity, and inflicting on Captain
+Palliser himself a sensible disappointment.
+
+All the time of my stay on the rock we lived well. We had small ale and
+brandy, and oatmeal of which we made our porridge night and morning. At
+times a boat came from the Castleton and brought us a quarter of mutton,
+for the sheep upon the rock we must not touch, these being specially fed
+to market. The geese were unfortunately out of season, and we let them
+be. We fished ourselves, and yet more often made the geese to fish for
+us: observing one when he had made a capture and scaring him from his
+prey ere he had swallowed it.
+
+The strange nature of this place, and the curiosities with which it
+abounded, held me busy and amused. Escape being impossible, I was
+allowed my entire liberty, and continually explored the surface of the
+isle wherever it might support the foot of man. The old garden of the
+prison was still to be observed, with flowers and pot-herbs running
+wild, and some ripe cherries on a bush. A little lower stood a chapel or
+a hermit's cell; who built or dwelt in it, none may know, and the
+thought of its age made a ground of many meditations. The prison too,
+where I now bivouacked with Highland cattle thieves, was a place full of
+history, both human and divine. I thought it strange so many saints and
+martyrs should have gone by there so recently, and left not so much as a
+leaf out of their Bibles, or a name carved upon the wall, while the
+rough soldier lads that mounted guard upon the battlements had filled
+the neighbourhood with their mementoes--broken tobacco-pipes for the
+most part, and that in a surprising plenty, but also metal buttons from
+their coats. There were times when I thought I could have heard the
+pious sound of psalms out of the martyrs' dungeons, and seen the
+soldiers tramp the ramparts with their glinting pipes, and the dawn
+rising behind them out of the North Sea.
+
+No doubt it was a good deal Andie and his tales that put these fancies
+in my head. He was extraordinary well acquainted with the story of the
+rock in all particulars, down to the names of private soldiers, his
+father having served there in that same capacity. He was gifted besides
+with a natural genius for narration, so that the people seemed to speak
+and the things to be done before your face. This gift of his and my
+assiduity to listen brought us the more close together. I could not
+honestly deny but what I liked him; I soon saw that he liked me; and
+indeed, from the first I had set myself out to capture his good will. An
+odd circumstance (to be told presently) effected this beyond my
+expectation; but even in early days we made a friendly pair to be a
+prisoner and his gaoler.
+
+I should trifle with my conscience if I pretended my stay upon the Bass
+was wholly disagreeable. It seemed to me a safe place, as though I was
+escaped there out of my troubles. No harm was to be offered me; a
+material impossibility, rock and the deep sea, prevented me from fresh
+attempts; I felt I had my life safe and my honour safe, and there were
+times when I allowed myself to gloat on them like stolen waters. At
+other times my thoughts were very different. I recalled how strong I had
+expressed myself both to Rankeillor and to Stewart; I reflected that my
+captivity upon the Bass, in view of a great part of the coasts of Fife
+and Lothian, was a thing I should be thought more likely to have
+invented than endured; and in the eyes of these two gentlemen, at least,
+I must pass for a boaster and a coward. Now I would take this lightly
+enough; tell myself that so long as I stood well with Catriona Drummond,
+the opinion of the rest of man was but moonshine and spilled water; and
+thence pass off into those meditations of a lover which are so
+delightful to himself and must always appear so surprisingly idle to a
+reader. But anon the fear would take me otherwise; I would be shaken
+with a perfect panic of self-esteem, and these supposed hard judgments
+appear an injustice impossible to be supported. With that another train
+of thought would be presented, and I had scarce begun to be concerned
+about men's judgments of myself, than I was haunted with the remembrance
+of James Stewart in his dungeon and the lamentations of his wife. Then,
+indeed, passion began to work in me; I could not forgive myself to sit
+there idle; it seemed (if I were a man at all) that I could fly or swim
+out of my place of safety; and it was in such humours and to amuse my
+self-reproaches that I would set the more particularly to win the good
+side of Andie Dale.
+
+At last, when we two were alone on the summit of the rock on a bright
+morning, I put in some hint about a bribe. He looked at me, cast back
+his head, and laughed out loud.
+
+"Ay, you're funny, Mr. Dale," said I, "but perhaps if you glance an eye
+upon that paper you may change your note."
+
+The stupid Highlanders had taken from me at the time of my seizure
+nothing but hard money, and the paper I now showed Andie was an
+acknowledgment from the British Linen Company for a considerable sum.
+
+He read it. "Troth, and ye're nane sae ill aff," said he.
+
+"I thought that would maybe vary your opinions," said I.
+
+"Hout!" said he. "It shaws me ye can bribe; but I'm no to be bribit."
+
+"We'll see about that yet a while," says I. "And first, I'll show you
+that I know what I am talking. You have orders to detain me here till
+Thursday, 21st September."
+
+"Ye're no a'thegether wrong either," says Andie. "I'm to let ye gang,
+bar orders contrair, on Saturday, the 23rd."
+
+I could not but feel there was something extremely insidious in this
+arrangement. That I was to reappear precisely in time to be too late
+would cast the more discredit on my tale, if I were minded to tell one;
+and this screwed me to fighting point.
+
+"Now then, Andie, you that kens the world, listen to me, and think while
+ye listen," said I. "I know there are great folks in the business, and I
+make no doubt you have their names to go upon. I have seen some of them
+myself since this affair began, and said my say into their faces too.
+But what kind of a crime would this be that I had committed? or what
+kind of a process is this that I am fallen under? To be apprehended by
+some ragged John-Hielandmen on August 30th, carried to a rickle of old
+stones that is now neither fort nor gaol (whatever it once was) but just
+the gamekeeper's lodge of the Bass Rock, and set free again, September
+23d, as secretly as I was first arrested--does that sound like law to
+you? or does it sound like justice? or does it not sound honestly like a
+piece of some low dirty intrigue, of which the very folk that meddle
+with it are ashamed?"
+
+"I canna gainsay ye, Shaws. It looks unco underhand," says Andie. "And
+werenae the folk guid sound Whigs and true-blue Presbyterians I would
+hae seen them ayont Jordan and Jeroozlem or I would have set hand to
+it."
+
+"The Master of Lovat'll be a braw Whig," says I, "and a grand
+Presbyterian."
+
+"I ken naething by him," said he. "I hae nae trokings wi' Lovats."
+
+"No, it'll be Prestongrange that you'll be dealing with," said I.
+
+"Ah, but I'll no tell ye that," said Andie.
+
+"Little need when I ken," was my retort.
+
+"There's just the ae thing ye can be fairly sure of, Shaws," says Andie.
+"And that is that (try as ye please) I'm no dealing wi' yoursel'; nor
+yet I amnae goin' to," he added.
+
+"Well, Andie, I see I'll have to be speak out plain with you," I
+replied. And I told him so much as I thought needful of the facts.
+
+He heard me out with serious interest, and when I had done, seemed to
+consider a little with himself.
+
+"Shaws," said he at last, "I deal with the naked hand. It's a queer
+tale, and no vary creditable, the way you tell it; and I'm far frae
+minting that is other than the way that ye believe it. As for yoursel',
+ye seems to me rather a dacent-like young man. But me, that's aulder and
+mair judeecious, see perhaps a wee bit further forrit in the job than
+what ye can dae. And here is the maitter clear and plain to ye. There'll
+be nae skaith to yoursel' if I keep ye here; far frae that, I think
+ye'll be a hantle better by it. There'll be nae skaith to the
+kintry--just ae mair Hielantman hangit--Gude kens, a guid riddance! On
+the ither hand it would be considerable skaith to me if I would let you
+free. Sae, speakin' as a guid Whig, an honest freen' to you, and an
+anxious freen' to my ainsel', the plain fact is that I think ye'll just
+have to bide here wi' Andie an' the solans."
+
+"Andie," said I, laying my hand upon his knee, "this Hielantman's
+innocent."
+
+"Ay, it's a peety about that," said he. "But ye see in this warld, the
+way God made it, we cannae just get a'thing that we want."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+
+
+I have yet said little of the Highlanders. They were all three of the
+followers of James More, which bound the accusation very tight about
+their master's neck. All understood a word or two of English; but Neil
+was the only one who judged he had enough of it for general converse, in
+which (when once he got embarked) his company was often tempted to the
+contrary opinion. They were tractable, simple creatures; showed much
+more courtesy than might have been expected from their raggedness and
+their uncouth appearance, and fell spontaneously to be like three
+servants for Andie and myself.
+
+Dwelling in that isolated place, in the old falling ruins of a prison,
+and among endless strange sounds of the sea and the sea-birds, I thought
+I perceived in them early the effects of superstitious fear. When there
+was nothing doing they would either lie and sleep, for which their
+appetite appeared insatiable, or Neil would entertain the others with
+stories which seemed always of a terrifying strain. If neither of these
+delights were within reach--if perhaps two were sleeping and the third
+could find no means to follow their example--I would see him sit and
+listen and look about him in a progression of uneasiness, starting, his
+face blenching, his hands clutched, a man strung like a bow. The nature
+of these fears I had never an occasion to find out, but the sight of
+them was catching, and the nature of the place that we were in
+favourable to alarms. I can find no word for it in the English, but
+Andie had an expression for it in the Scots from which he never varied.
+
+"Ay," he would say, "_it's an unco place, the Bass_." It is so I always
+think of it. It was an unco place by night, unco by day; and these were
+unco sounds, of the calling of the solans, and the plash of the sea and
+the rock echoes, that hung continually in our ears. It was chiefly so in
+moderate weather. When the waves were anyway great they roared about the
+rock like thunder and the drums of armies, dreadful but merry to hear;
+and it was in the calm days that a man could daunt himself with
+listening--not a Highlandman only, as I several times experimented on
+myself, so many still, hollow noises haunted and reverberated in the
+porches of the rock.
+
+This brings me to a story I heard, and a scene I took part in, which
+quite changed our terms of living, and had a great effect on my
+departure. It chanced one night I fell in a muse beside the fire and
+(that little air of Alan's coming back to my memory) began to whistle. A
+hand was laid upon my arm, and the voice of Neil bade me to stop, for it
+was not "canny musics."
+
+"Not canny?" I asked. "How can that be?"
+
+"Na," said he; "it will be made by a bogle and her wanting ta heid upon
+his body."[13]
+
+"Well," said I, "there can be no bogles here, Neil; for it's not likely
+they would fash themselves to frighten solan geese."
+
+"Ay?" says Andie, "is that what ye think of it? But I'll can tell ye
+there's been waur nor bogles here."
+
+"What's waur than bogles, Andie?" said I.
+
+"Warlocks," said he. "Or a warlock at the least of it. And that's a
+queer tale, too," he added. "And if ye would like, I'll tell it ye."
+
+To be sure we were all of the one mind, and even the Highlander that had
+the least English of the three set himself to listen with all his might.
+
+
+THE TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+
+My faither, Tam Dale, peace to his banes, was a wild, sploring lad in
+his young days, wi' little wisdom and less grace. He was fond of a lass
+and fond of a glass, and fond of a ran-dan; but I could never hear tell
+that he was muckle use for honest employment. Frae ae thing to anither,
+he listed at last for a sodger and was in the garrison of this fort,
+which was the first way that ony of the Dales cam to set foot upon the
+Bass. Sorrow upon that service! The governor brewed his ain ale; it
+seems it was the warst conceivable. The rock was proveesioned frae the
+shore with vivers, the thing was ill-guided, and there were whiles when
+they but to fish and shoot solans for their diet. To crown a', thir was
+the Days of the Persecution. The perishin' cauld chalmers were all
+occupeed wi' sants and martyrs, the saut of the yearth, of which it
+wasnae worthy. And though Tam Dale carried a firelock there, a single
+sodger, and liked a lass and a glass, as I was sayin', the mind of the
+man was mair just than set with his position. He had glints of the glory
+of the kirk; there were whiles when his dander rase to see the Lord's
+sants misguided, and shame covered him that he should be haulding a
+can'le (or carrying a firelock) in so black a business. There were
+nights of it when he was here on sentry, the place a' wheesht, the
+frosts o' winter maybe riving in the wa's, and he would hear are o' the
+prisoners strike up a psalm, and the rest join in, and the blessed
+sounds rising from the different chalmers--or dungeons, I would raither
+say--so that this auld craig in the sea was like a pairt of Heev'n.
+Black shame was on his saul; his sins hove up before him muckle as the
+Bass, and above a', that chief sin, that he should have a hand in
+hagging and hashing at Christ's Kirk. But the truth is that he resisted
+the spirit. Day cam, there were the rousing companions, and his guid
+resolves depairtit.
+
+In thir days, dwalled upon the Bass a man of God, Peden the Prophet was
+his name. Ye'll have heard tell of Prophet Peden. There was never the
+wale of him sinsyne, and it's a question wi' mony if there ever was his
+like afore. He was wild 's a peat-hag, fearsome to look at, fearsome to
+hear, his face like the day of judgment. The voice of him was like a
+solan's and dinnle'd in folks' lugs, and the words of him like coals of
+fire.
+
+Now there was a lass on the rock, and I think she had little to do, for
+it was nae place far dacent weemen; but it seems she was bonny, and her
+and Tam Dale were very well agreed. It befell that Peden was in the
+gairden his lane at the praying when Tam and the lass cam by; and what
+should the lassie do but mock with laughter at the sant's devotions? He
+rose and lookit at the twa o' them, and Tam's knees knoitered thegether
+at the look of him. But whan he spak, it was mair in sorrow than in
+anger. "Poor thing, poor thing!" says he, and it was the lass he lookit
+at. "I hear you skirl and laugh," he says, "but the Lord has a deid shot
+prepared for you, and at that surprising judgment ye shall skirl but the
+ae time!" Shortly thereafter she was daundering on the craigs wi'
+twa-three sodgers, and it was a blawy day. There cam a gowst of wind,
+claught her by the coats, and awa' wi' her bag and baggage. And it was
+remarked by the sodgers that she gied but the ae skirl.
+
+Nae doubt this judgment had some weicht upon Tam Dale; but it passed
+again and him none the better. Ae day he was flyting wi' anither
+sodger-lad. "Deil hae me!" quo' Tam, for he was a profane swearer. And
+there was Peden glowering at him, gash an' waefu'; Peden wi' his lang
+chafts an' luntin' een, the maud happed about his kist, and the hand of
+him held out wi' the black nails upon the finger-nebs--for he had nae
+care of the body. "Fy, fy, poor man!" cries he, "the poor fool man!
+_Deil hae me_, quo' he; an' I see the deil at his oxter." The conviction
+of guilt and grace cam in on Tam like the deep sea; he flang doun the
+pike that was in his hands--"I will nae mair lift arms against the cause
+o' Christ!" says he, and was as gude's word. There was a sair fyke in
+the beginning, but the governor, seeing him resolved, gied him his
+dischairge, and he went and dwallt and merried in North Berwick, and had
+aye a gude name with honest folk frae that day on.
+
+It was in the year seeventeen hunner and sax that the Bass cam in the
+hands o' the Da'rymples, and there was twa men soucht the chairge of it.
+Baith were weel qualified, for they had baith been sodgers in the
+garrison, and kent the gate to handle solans, and the seasons and values
+of them. Forby that they were baith--or they baith seemed--earnest
+professors and men of comely conversation. The first of them was just
+Tam Dale, my faither. The second was ane Lapraik, whom the folk ca'd Tod
+Lapraik maistly, but whether for his name or his nature I could never
+hear tell. Weel, Tam gaed to see Lapraik upon this business, and took
+me, that was a toddlin' laddie, by the hand. Tod had his dwallin' in the
+lang loan benorth the kirkyaird. It's a dark uncanny loan, forby that
+the kirk has aye had an ill name since the days o' James the Saxt and
+the deevil's cantrips played therein when the Queen was on the seas; and
+as for Tod's house, it was in the mirkest end, and was little liked by
+some that kenned the best. The door was on the sneck that day, and me
+and my faither gaed straucht in. Tod was a wabster to his trade; his
+loom stood in the but. There he sat, a muckle fat, white hash of a man
+like creish, wi' a kind of a holy smile that gart me scunner. The hand
+of him aye cawed the shuttle, but his een was steeked. We cried to him
+by his name, we skirled in the deid lug of him, we shook him by the
+shou'ther. Nae mainner o' service! There he sat on his dowp, an' cawed
+the shuttle and smiled like creish.
+
+"God be guid to us," says Tam Dale, "this is no canny!"
+
+He had jimp said the word, when Tod Lapraik cam to himsel'.
+
+"Is this you, Tam?" says he. "Haith, man! I'm blythe to see ye. I whiles
+fa' into a bit dwam like this," he says; "it's frae the stamach."
+
+Weel, they began to crack about the Bass and which of them twa was to
+get the warding o't, and by little and little cam to very ill words, and
+twined in anger. I mind weel, that as my faither and me gaed hame again,
+he cam ower and ower the same expression, how little he likit Tod
+Lapraik and his dwams.
+
+"Dwam!" says he. "I think folk hae brunt far dwams like yon."
+
+Aweel, my faither got the Bass and Tod had to go wantin'. It was
+remembered sinsyne what way he had ta'en the thing. "Tam," says he, "ye
+hae gotten the better o'me aince mair, and I hope," says he, "ye'll find
+at least a' that ye expeckit at the Bass." Which have since been thought
+remarkable expressions. At last the time came for Tam Dale to take young
+solans. This was a business he was weel used wi', he had been a
+craigsman frae a laddie, and trustit nane but himsel'. So there was he
+hingin' by a line an' speldering on the craig face, whaur it's hieest
+and steighest. Fower tenty lads were on the tap, hauldin' the line and
+mindin' for his signals. But whaur Tam hung there was naething but the
+craig, and the sea belaw, and the solans skirling and flying. It was a
+braw spring morn, and Tam whustled as he claught in the young geese.
+Mony's the time I heard him tell of this experience, and aye the swat
+ran upon the man.
+
+It chanced, ye see, that Tam keeked up, and he was awaur of a muckle
+solan, and the solan pyking at the line. He thocht this by-ordinar and
+outside the creature's habits. He minded that ropes was unco saft
+things, and the solan's neb and the Bass Rock unco hard, and that twa
+hunner feet were raither mair than he would care to fa'.
+
+"Shoo!" says Tam. "Awa', bird! Shoo, awa' wi' ye!" says he.
+
+The solan keekit doun into Tam's face, and there was something unco in
+the creature's ee. Just the ae keek it gied, and back to the rope. But
+now it wroucht and warstl't like a thing dementit. There never was the
+solan made that wroucht as that solan wroucht; and it seemed to
+understand it's employ brawly, birzing the saft rope between the neb of
+it and a crunkled jag o' stane.
+
+There gaed a cauld stend o' fear into Tam's heart. "This thing is nae
+bird," thinks he. His een turnt backward in his heid and the day gaed
+black about him. "If I get a dwam here," he thoucht, "it's by wi' Tam
+Dale." And he signalled for the lads to pu' him up.
+
+And it seemed the solan understood about signals. For nae sooner was the
+signal made than he let be the rope, spried his wings, squawked out
+loud, took a turn flying, and dashed straucht at Tam Dale's een. Tam had
+a knife, he gart the cauld steel glitter. And it seemed the solan
+understood about knives, for nae suner did the steel glint in the sun
+than he gied the ae squawk, but laigher, like a body disappointit, and
+flegged aff about the roundness of the craig, and Tam saw him nae mair.
+And as sune as that thing was gane, Tam's held drapt upon his shouther,
+and they pu'd him up like a deid corp, dadding on the craig.
+
+A dram of brandy (which he went never without) broucht him to his mind,
+or what was left of it. Up he sat.
+
+"Rin, Geordie, rin to the boat, mak' sure of the boat, man--rin!" he
+cries, "or yon solan 'll have it awa'," says he.
+
+The fower lads stared at ither, an' tried to whilly-wha him to be quiet.
+But naething, would satisfy Tam Dale, till ane o' them had startit on
+aheid to stand sentry on the boat. The ithers askit if he was for down
+again.
+
+"Na," says he, "and niether you nor me," says he, "and as sune as I can
+win to stand on my twa feet we'll be aff frae this craig o' Sawtan."
+
+Sure eneuch, nae time was lost, and that was ower muckle; for before
+they won to North Berwick Tam was in a crying fever. He lay a' the
+simmer; and wha was sae kind as come speiring for him, but Tod Lapraik!
+Folk thocht afterwards that ilka time Tod cam near the house the fever
+had worsened. I kenna for that; but what I ken the best, that was the
+end of it.
+
+It was about this time o' the year; my grandfaither was out at the white
+fishing; and like a bairn, I but to gang wi' him. We had a grand take, I
+mind, and the way that the fish lay broucht us near in by the Bass,
+whaur we forgaithered wi' anither boat that belanged to a man Sandie
+Fletcher in Castleton. He's no lang deid niether, or ye could spier at
+himsel'. Weel, Sandie hailed.
+
+"What's yon on the Bass?" says he.
+
+"On the Bass?" says grandfaither.
+
+"Ay," says Sandie, "on the green side o't."
+
+"Whatten kind of a thing?" says grandfaither. "There cannae be naething
+on the Bass but just the sheep."
+
+"It looks unco like a body," quo' Sandie, who was nearer in.
+
+"A body!" says we, and we nane of us likit that. For there was nae boat
+that could have broucht a man, and the key o' the prison yett hung ower
+my faither's held at hame in the press bed.
+
+We keept the twa boats closs for company, and crap in nearer hand.
+Grandfaither had a gless, for he had been a sailor, and the captain of a
+smack, and had lost her on the sands of Tay. And when we took the gless
+to it, sure eneuch there was a man. He was in a crunkle o' green brae, a
+wee below the chaipel, a' by his lee lane, and lowped and flang and
+danced like a daft quean at a waddin'.
+
+"It's Tod," says grandfaither, and passed the gless to Sandie.
+
+"Ay, it's him," says Sandie.
+
+"Or ane in the likeness o' him,'' says grandfaither.
+
+"Sma' is the differ," quo' Sandie. "De'il or warlock, I'll try the gun
+at him," quo' he, and broucht up a fowling-piece that he aye carried,
+for Sandie was a notable famous shot in all that country.
+
+"Haud your hand, Sandie," says grandfaither; "we maun see clearer
+first," says he, "or this may be a dear day's wark to the baith of us."
+
+"Hout!" says Sandie, "this is the Lord's judgments surely, and be damned
+to it!" says he.
+
+"Maybe ay, and maybe no," says my grandfaither, worthy man! "But have
+you a mind of the Procurator Fiscal, that I think ye'll have
+forgaithered wi' before," says he.
+
+This was ower true, and Sandie was a wee thing set ajee. "Aweel, Edie,"
+says he, "and what would be your way of it?"
+
+"Ou, just this," says grandfaither. "Let me that has the fastest boat
+gang back to North Berwick, and let you bide here and keep an eye on
+Thon. If I cannae find Lapraik, I'll join ye and the twa of us'll have a
+crack wi' him. But if Lapraik's at hame, I'll rin up the flag at the
+harbour, and ye can try Thon Thing wi' the gun."
+
+Aweel, so it was agreed between them twa. I was just a bairn, an' clum
+in Sandie's boat, whaur I thoucht I would see the best of the employ. My
+grandsire gied Sandie a siller tester to pit in his gun wi' the leid
+draps, bein' mair deidly again bogles. And then the ae boat set aff for
+North Berwick, an' the tither lay whaur it was and watched the wanchancy
+thing on the braeside.
+
+A' the time we lay there it lowped and flang and capered and span like a
+teetotum, and whiles we could hear it skelloch as it span. I hae seen
+lassies, the daft queans, that would lowp and dance a winter's nicht,
+and still be lowping and dancing when the winter's day cam in. But there
+would be folk there to hauld them company, and the lads to egg them on;
+and this thing was its lee-lane. And there would be a fiddler diddling
+his elbock in the chimney-side; and this thing had nae music but the
+skirling of the solans. And the lassies were bits o' young things wi'
+the reid life dinnling and stending in their members; and this was a
+muckle, fat, crieshy man, and him fa'n in the vale o' years. Say what ye
+like, I maun say what I believe. It was joy was in the creature's heart;
+the joy o' hell, I daursay: joy whatever. Mony a time I have askit
+mysel', why witches and warlocks should sell their sauls (whilk are
+their maist dear possessions) and be auld, duddy, wrunkl't wives or
+auld, feckless, doddered men; and then I mind upon Tod Lapraik dancing
+a' they hours by his lane in the black glory of his heart. Nae doubt
+they burn for it in muckle hell, but they have a grand time here of it,
+whatever!--and the Lord forgie us!
+
+Weel, at the hinder end, we saw the wee flag yirk up to the mast-held
+upon the harbour rocks. That was a' Sandie waited for. He up wi' the
+gun, took a deleeberate aim, an' pu'd the trigger. There cam' a bang and
+then ae waefu' skirl frae the Bass. And there were we rubbin' our een
+and lookin' at ither like daft folk. For wi' the bang and the skirl the
+thing had clean disappeared. The sun glintit, the wund blew, and there
+was the bare yaird whaur the Wonder had been lowping and flinging but ae
+second syne.
+
+The hale way hame I roared and grat wi' the terror of that dispensation.
+The grawn folk were nane sae muckle better; there was little said in
+Sandie's boat but just the name of God; and when we won in by the pier,
+the harbour rocks were fair black wi' the folk waitin' us. It seems they
+had fund Lapraik in ane of his dwams, cawing the shuttle and smiling. Ae
+lad they sent to hoist the flag, and the rest abode there in the
+wabster's house. You may be sure they liked it little; but it was a
+means of grace to severals that stood there praying in to themsel's (for
+nane cared to pray out loud) and looking on thon awesome thing as it
+cawed the shuttle. Syne, upon a suddenty, and wi' the ae driedfu'
+skelloch, Tod sprang up frae his hinderlands and fell forrit on the wab,
+a bluidy corp.
+
+When the corp was examined the leid draps hadnae played buff upon the
+warlock's body; sorrow a leid drap was to be fund; but there was
+grandfather's siller tester in the puddock's heart of him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Andie had scarce done when there befell a mighty silly affair that had
+its consequence. Neil, as I have said, was himself a great narrator. I
+have heard since that he knew all the stories in the Highlands; and
+thought much of himself, and was thought much of by others, on the
+strength of it. Now Andie's tale reminded him of one he had already
+heard.
+
+"She would ken that story afore," he said. "She was the story of Uistean
+More M'Gillie Phadrig and the Gavar Vore."
+
+"It is no sic a thing," cried Andie. "It is the story of my faither (now
+wi' God) and Tod Lapraik. And the same in your beard," says he; "and
+keep the tongue of ye inside your Hielant chafts!"
+
+In dealing with Highlanders it will be found, and has been shown in
+history, how well it goes with Lowland gentlefolk; but the thing appears
+scarce feasible for Lowland commons. I had already remarked that Andie
+was continually on the point of quarrelling with our three Macgregors,
+and now, sure enough, it was to come.
+
+"Thir will be no words to use to shentlemans," says Neil.
+
+"Shentlemans!" cries Andie. "Shentlemans, ye hielant stot! If God would
+give ye the grace to see yoursel' the way that ithers see ye, ye would
+throw your denner up."
+
+There came some kind of a Gaelic oath from Neil, and the black knife was
+in his hand that moment.
+
+There was no time to think; and I caught the Highlander by the leg, and
+had him down, and his armed hand pinned out, before I knew what I was
+doing. His comrades sprang to rescue him, Andie and I were without
+weapons, the Gregara three to two. It seemed we were beyond salvation,
+when Neil screamed in his own tongue, ordering the others back, and made
+his submission to myself in a manner the most abject, even giving me up
+his knife which (upon a repetition of his promises) I returned to him on
+the morrow.
+
+Two things I saw plain: the first, that I must not build too high on
+Andie, who had shrunk against the wall and stood there, as pale as
+death, till the affair was over; the second, the strength of my own
+position with the Highlanders, who must have received extraordinary
+charges to be tender of my safety. But if I thought Andie came not very
+well out in courage, I had no fault to find with him upon the account of
+gratitude. It was not so much that he troubled me with thanks, as that
+his whole mind and manner appeared changed; and as he preserved ever
+after a great timidity of our companions, he and I were yet more
+constantly together.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE MISSING WITNESS
+
+
+On the seventeenth, the day I was trysted with the Writer, I had much
+rebellion against fate. The thought of him waiting in the _King's Arms_,
+and of what he would think, and what he would say when next we met,
+tormented and oppressed me. The truth was unbelievable, so much I had to
+grant, and it seemed cruel hard I should be posted as a liar and a
+coward, and have never consciously omitted what it was possible that I
+should do. I repeated this form of words with a kind of bitter relish,
+and re-examined in that light the steps of my behaviour. It seemed I had
+behaved to James Stewart as a brother might; all the past was a picture
+that I could be proud of, and there was only the present to consider. I
+could not swim the sea, nor yet fly in the air, but there was always
+Andie. I had done him a service, he liked me; I had a lever there to
+work on; if it were just for decency, I must try once more with Andie.
+
+It was late afternoon; there was no sound in all the Bass but the lap
+and bubble of a very quiet sea; and my four companions were all crept
+apart, the three Macgregors higher on the rock, and Andie with his Bible
+to a sunny place among the ruins; there I found him in deep sleep, and,
+as soon as he was awake, appealed to him with some fervour of manner and
+a good show of argument.
+
+"If I thoucht it was to do guid to ye, Shaws!" said he, staring at me
+over his spectacles.
+
+"It's to save another," said I, "and to redeem my word. What would be
+more good than that? Do ye no mind the scripture, Andie? And you with
+the Book upon your lap! _What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole
+world?"_
+
+"Ay," said he, "that's grand for you. But where do I come in? I have my
+word to redeem the same's yoursel'. And what are ye asking me to do, but
+just to sell it ye for siller?"
+
+"Andie! have I named the name of siller?" cried I.
+
+"Ou, the name's naething," said he; "the thing is there, whatever. It
+just comes to this; if I am to service ye the way that you propose, I'll
+loss my lieihood. Then it's clear ye'll have to make it up to me, and a
+pickle mair, for your ain credit like. And what's that but just a bribe?
+And if even I was certain of the bribe! But by a' that I can learn, it's
+far frae that; and if _you_ were to hang, where would _I_ be? Na: the
+thing's no possible. And just awa' wi' ye like a bonny lad! and let
+Andie read his chapter."
+
+I remember I was at bottom a good deal gratified with this result; and
+the next humour I fell into was one (I had near said) of gratitude to
+Prestongrange, who had saved me, in this violent, illegal manner, out of
+the midst of my dangers, temptations, and perplexities. But this was
+both too flimsy and too cowardly to last me long, and the remembrance of
+James began to succeed to the possession of my spirits. The 21st, the
+day set for the trial, I passed in such misery of mind as I can scarce
+recall to have endured, save perhaps upon Isle Earraid only. Much of the
+time I lay on a braeside betwixt sleep and waking, my body motionless,
+my mind full of violent thoughts. Sometimes I slept indeed; but the
+court-house of Inverary and the prisoner glancing on all sides to find
+his missing witness, followed me in slumber; and I would wake again with
+a start to darkness of spirit and distress of body. I thought Andie
+seemed to observe me, but I paid him little heed. Verily, my bread was
+bitter to me, and my days a burthen.
+
+Early the next morning (Friday, 22nd) a boat came with provisions, and
+Andie placed a packet in my hand. The cover was without address but
+sealed with a Government seal. It enclosed two notes. "Mr. Balfour can
+now see for himself it is too late to meddle. His conduct will be
+observed and his discretion rewarded." So ran the first, which seemed to
+be laboriously writ with the left hand. There was certainly nothing in
+these expressions to compromise the writer, even if that person could be
+found; the seal, which formidably served instead of signature, was
+affixed to a separate sheet on which there was no scratch of writing;
+and I had to confess that (so far) my adversaries knew what they were
+doing, and to digest as well as I was able the threat that peeped under
+the promise.
+
+But the second enclosure was by far the more surprising. It was in a
+lady's hand of writ. "_Maister Dauvit Balfour is informed a friend was
+speiring for him, and her eyes were of the grey_," it ran--and seemed so
+extraordinary a piece to come to my hands at such a moment and under
+cover of a Government seal, that I stood stupid. Catriona's grey eyes
+shone in my remembrance. I thought, with a bound of pleasure, she must
+be the friend. But who should the writer be, to have her billet thus
+enclosed with Prestongrange's? And of all wonders, why was it thought
+needful to give me this pleasing but most inconsequential intelligence
+upon the Bass? For the writer, I could hit upon none possible except
+Miss Grant. Her family, I remembered, had remarked on Catriona's eyes
+and even named her for their colour; and she herself had been much in
+the habit to address me with a broad pronunciation, by way of a sniff, I
+supposed, at my rusticity. No doubt, besides, but she lived in the same
+house as this letter came from. So there remained but one step to be
+accounted for; and that was how Prestongrange should have permitted her
+at all in an affair so secret, or let her daft-like billet go in the
+same cover with his own. But even here I had a glimmering. For, first of
+all, there was something rather alarming about the young lady, and papa
+might be more under her domination than I knew. And second, there was
+the man's continual policy to be remembered, how his conduct had been
+continually mingled with caresses, and he had scarce ever, in the midst
+of so much contention, laid aside a mask of friendship. He must conceive
+that my imprisonment had incensed me. Perhaps this little jesting,
+friendly message was intended to disarm my rancour?
+
+I will be honest--and I think it did. I felt a sudden warmth towards
+that beautiful Miss Grant, that she should stoop to so much interest in
+my affairs. The summoning up of Catriona moved me of itself to milder
+and more cowardly counsels. If the Advocate knew of her and of our
+acquaintance--if I should please him by some of that "discretion" at
+which his letter pointed--to what might not this lead? _In vain is the
+net spread in the sight of any fowl_, the scripture says. Well, fowls
+must be wiser than folk! For I thought I perceived the policy, and yet
+fell in with it.
+
+I was in this frame, my heart beating, the grey eyes plain before me
+like two stars, when Andie broke in upon my musing.
+
+"I see ye hae gotten guid news," said he.
+
+I found him looking curiously in my face; with that, there came before
+me like a vision of James Stewart and the court of Inverary; and my mind
+turned at once like a door upon its hinges. Trials, I reflected,
+sometimes draw out longer than is looked for. Even if I came to Inverary
+just too late, something might yet be attempted in the interests of
+James--and in those of my own character, the best would be accomplished.
+In a moment, it seemed without thought, I had a plan devised.
+
+"Andie," said I, "is it still to be to-morrow?"
+
+He told me nothing was changed.
+
+"Was anything said about the hour?" I asked.
+
+He told me it was to be two o'clock afternoon.
+
+"And about the place?" I pursued.
+
+"Whatten place?" says Andie.
+
+"The place I'm to be landed at," said I.
+
+He owned there was nothing as to that.
+
+"Very well, then," I said, "this shall be mine to arrange. The wind is
+in the east, my road lies westward; keep your boat, I hire it; let us
+work up the Forth all day; and land me at two o'clock to-morrow at the
+westmost we'll can have reached."
+
+"Ye daft callant!" he cried, "ye would try for Inverary after a'!"
+
+"Just that, Andie," says I.
+
+"Weel, ye're ill to beat!" says he. "And I was kind o' sorry for ye a'
+day yesterday," he added. "Ye see, I was never entirely sure till then,
+which way of it ye really wantit."
+
+Here was a spur to a lame horse!
+
+"A word in your ear, Andie," said I. "This plan of mine has another
+advantage yet. We can leave these Hielandmen behind us on the rock, and
+one of your boats from the Castleton can bring them off to-morrow. Yon
+Neil has a queer eye when he regards you; maybe, if I was once out of
+the gate there might be knives again; these red-shanks are unco
+grudgeful. And if there should come to be any question, here is your
+excuse. Our lives were in danger by these savages; being answerable for
+my safety, you chose the part to bring me from their neighbourhood and
+detain me the rest of the time on board your boat; and do you know,
+Andie?" says I, with a smile, "I think it was very wisely chosen."
+
+"The truth is I have nae goo for Neil," says Andie, "nor he for me, I'm
+thinking; and I would like ill to come to my hands wi' the man. Tam
+Anster will make a better hand of it with the cattle onyway." (For this
+man, Anster, came from Fife, where the Gaelic is still spoken.) "Ay,
+ay!" says Andie, "Tam'll can deal with them the best. And troth! the
+mair I think of it, the less I see what way we would be required. The
+place--ay, feggs! they had forgot the place. Eh, Shaws, ye're a
+lang-heided chield when ye like! Forby that I'm awing ye my life," he
+added, with more solemnity, and offered me his hand upon the bargain.
+
+Whereupon, with scarce more words, we stepped suddenly on board the
+boat, cast off, and set the lug. The Gregara were then busy upon
+breakfast, for the cookery was their usual part; but, one of them
+stepping to the battlements, our flight was observed before we were
+twenty fathoms from the rock; and the three of them ran about the ruins
+and the landing-shelf, for all the world like ants about a broken nest,
+hailing and crying on us to return. We were still in both the lee and
+the shadow of the rock, which last lay broad upon the waters, but
+presently came forth in almost the same moment into the wind and
+sunshine; the sail filled, the boat heeled to the gunwale, and we swept
+immediately beyond sound of the men's voices. To what terrors they
+endured upon the rock, where they were now deserted without the
+countenance of any civilised person or so much as the protection of a
+Bible, no limit can be set; nor had they any brandy left to be their
+consolation, for even in the haste and secrecy of our departure Andie
+had managed to remove it.
+
+It was our first care to set Anster ashore in a cove by the Glenteithy
+Rocks, so that the deliverance of our maroons might be duly seen to the
+next day. Thence we kept away up Firth. The breeze, which was then so
+spirited, swiftly declined, but never wholly failed us. All day we kept
+moving, though often not much more; and it was after dark ere we were up
+with the Queensferry. To keep the letter of Andie's engagement (or what
+was left of it) I must remain on board, but I thought no harm to
+communicate with the shore in writing. On Prestongrange's cover, where
+the Government seal must have a good deal surprised my correspondent, I
+writ, by the boat's lantern, a few necessary words, and Andie carried
+them to Rankeillor. In about an hour he came aboard again, with a purse
+of money and the assurance that a good horse should be standing saddled
+for me by two to-morrow at Clackmannan Pool. This done, and the boat
+riding by her stone anchor, we lay down to sleep under the sail.
+
+We were in the Pool the next day long ere two; and there was nothing
+left for me but sit and wait. I felt little alacrity upon my errand. I
+would have been glad of any passable excuse to lay it down; but none
+being to be found, my uneasiness was no less great than if I had been
+running to some desired pleasure. By shortly after one the horse was at
+the waterside, and I could see a man walking it to and fro till I should
+land, which vastly swelled my impatience. Andie ran the moment of my
+liberation very fine, showing himself a man of his bare word, but scarce
+serving his employers with a heaped measure; and by about fifty seconds
+after two I was in the saddle and on the full stretch for Stirling. In a
+little more than an hour I had passed that town, and was already
+mounting Alan Water side, when the weather broke in a small tempest. The
+rain blinded me, the wind had nearly beat me from the saddle, and the
+first darkness of the night surprised me in a wilderness still some way
+east of Balwhidder, not very sure of my direction and mounted on a horse
+that began already to be weary.
+
+In the press of my hurry, and to be spared the delay and annoyance of a
+guide, I had followed (so far as it was possible for any horseman) the
+line of my journey with Alan. This I did with open eyes, foreseeing a
+great risk in it, which the tempest had now brought to a reality. The
+last that I knew of where I was, I think it must have been about Uam
+Var; the hour perhaps six at night. I must still think it great good
+fortune that I got about eleven to my destination, the house of Duncan
+Dhu. Where I had wandered in the interval perhaps the horse could tell.
+I know we were twice down, and once over the saddle and for a moment
+carried away in a roaring burn. Steed and rider were bemired up to the
+eyes.
+
+From Duncan I had news of the trial. It was followed in all these
+Highland regions with religious interest; news of it spread from
+Inverary as swift as men could travel; and I was rejoiced to learn that,
+up to a late hour that Saturday, it was not yet concluded; and all men
+began to suppose it must spread over to the Monday. Under the spur of
+this intelligence I would not sit to eat; but, Duncan having agreed to
+be my guide, took the road again on foot, with the piece in my hand and
+munching as I went. Duncan brought with him a flask of usquebaugh and a
+hand-lantern; which last enlightened us just so long as we could find
+houses where to rekindle it, for the thing leaked outrageously and blew
+out with every gust. The more part of the night we walked blindfold
+among sheets of rain, and day found us aimless on the mountains. Hard by
+we struck a hut on a burn-side, where we got a bite and a direction;
+and, a little before the end of the sermon, came to the kirk doors of
+Inverary.
+
+The rain had somewhat washed the upper parts of me, but I was still
+bogged as high as to the knees; I streamed water; I was so weary I could
+hardly limp, and my face was like a ghost's. I stood certainly more in
+need of a change of raiment and a bed to lie on, than of all the
+benefits in Christianity. For all which (being persuaded the chief point
+for me was to make myself immediately public) I set the door open,
+entered that church with the dirty Duncan at my tails, and finding a
+vacant place hard by, sat down.
+
+"Thirteenthly, my brethren, and in parenthesis, the law itself must be
+regarded as a means of grace," the minister was saying, in the voice of
+one delighting to pursue an argument.
+
+The sermon was in English on account of the assize. The judges were
+present with their armed attendants, the halberts glittered in a corner
+by the door, and the seats were thronged beyond custom with the array of
+lawyers. The text was in Romans 5th and 13th--the minister a skilled
+hand; and the whole of that able churchful--from Argyle, and my Lords
+Elchies and Kilkerran, down to the halbertmen that came in their
+attendance--was sunk with gathered brows in a profound critical
+attention. The minister himself and a sprinkling of those about the door
+observed our entrance at the moment and immediately forgot the same; the
+rest either did not hear or would not heed; and I sat there amongst my
+friends and enemies unremarked.
+
+The first that I singled out was Prestongrange. He sat well forward,
+like an eager horseman in the saddle, his lips moving with relish, his
+eyes glued on the minister: the doctrine was clearly to his mind.
+Charles Stewart, on the other hand, was half asleep, and looked harassed
+and pale. As for Symon Fraser, he appeared like a blot, and almost a
+scandal, in the midst of that attentive congregation, digging his hands
+in his pockets, shifting his legs, clearing his throat, rolling up his
+bald eyebrows and shooting out his eyes to right and left, now with a
+yawn, now with a secret smile. At times too, he would take the Bible in
+front of him, run it through, seem to read a bit, run it through again,
+and stop and yawn prodigiously: the whole as if for exercise.
+
+In the course of this restlessness his eye alighted on myself. He sat a
+second stupefied, than tore a half leaf out of the Bible, scrawled upon
+it with a pencil, and passed it with a whispered word to his next
+neighbor. The note came to Prestongrange, who gave me but the one look;
+thence it voyaged to the hands of Mr. Erskine; thence again to Argyle,
+where he sat between the other two lords of session, and his Grace
+turned and fixed me with an arrogant eye. The last of those interested
+to observe my presence was Charlie Stewart, and he too began to pencil
+and hand about despatches, none of which I was able to trace to their
+destination in the crowd.
+
+But the passage of these notes had aroused notice; all who were in the
+secret (or supposed themselves to be so) were whispering
+information--the rest questions; and the minister himself seemed quite
+discountenanced by the flutter in the church and sudden stir and
+whispering. His voice changed, he plainly faltered, nor did he again
+recover the easy conviction and full tones of his delivery. It would be
+a puzzle to him till his dying day, why a sermon that had gone with
+triumph through four parts, should thus miscarry in the fifth.
+
+As for me, I continued to sit there, very wet and weary, and a good deal
+anxious as to what should happen next, but greatly exulting in my
+success.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE MEMORIAL
+
+
+The last word of the blessing was scarce out of the minister's mouth
+before Stewart had me by the arm. We were the first to be forth of the
+church, and he made such extraordinary expedition that we were safe
+within the four walls of a house before the street had begun to be
+thronged with the home-going congregation.
+
+"Am I yet in time?" I asked.
+
+"Ay and no," said he. "The case is over; the jury is enclosed, and will
+be so kind as let us ken their view of it to-morrow in the morning, the
+same as I could have told it my own self three days ago before the play
+began. The thing has been public from the start. The panel kent it, '_Ye
+may do what ye will for me_,' whispers he two days ago. '_I ken my fate
+by what the Duke of Argyle has just said to Mr. Macintosh_.' O, it's
+been a scandal!
+
+ The great Argyle he gaed before,
+ He gart the cannons and guns to roar,
+
+and the very macer cried 'Cruachan!' But now that I have got you again
+I'll never despair. The oak shall go over the myrtle yet; we'll ding the
+Campbells yet in their own town. Praise God that I should see the day!"
+
+He was leaping with excitement, emptied out his mails upon the floor
+that I might have a change of clothes, and incommoded me with his
+assistance as I changed. What remained to be done, or how I was to do
+it, was what he never told me nor, I believe, so much as thought of.
+"We'll ding the Camphells yet!" that was still his overcome. And it was
+forced home upon my mind how this, that had the externals of a sober
+process of law, was in its essence a clan battle between savage clans. I
+thought my friend the Writer none of the least savage. Who, that had
+only seen him at a counsel's back before the Lord Ordinary or following
+a golf ball and laying down his clubs on Bruntsfield links, could have
+recognised for the same person this voluble and violent clansman?
+
+James Stewart's counsel were four in number--Sheriffs Brown of Colstoun
+and Miller, Mr. Robert Macintosh and Mr. Stewart younger of Stewart
+Hall. These were covenanted to dine with the Writer after sermon, and I
+was very obligingly included of the party. No sooner the cloth lifted,
+and the first bowl very artfully compounded by Sheriff Miller, than we
+fell to the subject in hand. I made a short narration of my seizure and
+captivity, and was then examined and re-examined upon the circumstances
+of the murder. It will be remembered this was the first time I had had
+my say out, or the matter at all handled, among lawyers; and the
+consequence was very dispiriting to the others and (I must own)
+disappointing to myself.
+
+"To sum up," said Colstoun, "you prove that Alan was on the spot; you
+have heard him proffer menaces against Glenure; and though you assure us
+he was not the man who fired, you leave a strong impression that he was
+in league with him, and consenting, perhaps immediately assisting, in
+the act. You show him besides, at the risk of his own liberty, actively
+furthering the criminal's escape. And the rest of your testimony (so far
+as the least material) depends on the bare word of Alan or of James, the
+two accused. In short, you do not at all break, but only lengthen by one
+personage, the chain that binds our client to the murderer; and I need
+scarcely say that the introduction of a third accomplice rather
+aggravates that appearance of a conspiracy which has been our stumbling
+block from the beginning."
+
+"I am of the same opinion," said Sheriff Miller. "I think we may all be
+very much obliged to Prestongrange for taking a most uncomfortable
+witness out of our way. And chiefly, I think, Mr. Balfour himself might
+be obliged. For you talk of a third accomplice, but Mr. Balfour (in my
+view) has very much the appearance of a fourth."
+
+"Allow me, sirs!" interposed Stewart the Writer. "There is another view.
+Here we have a witness--never fash whether material or not--a witness in
+this cause, kidnapped by that old, lawless, bandit crew of the Glengyle
+Macgregors, and sequestered for near upon a month in a bourock of old
+cold ruins on the Bass. Move that and see what dirt you fling on the
+proceedings! Sirs, this is a tale to make the world ring with! It would
+be strange, with such a grip as this, if we couldnae squeeze out a
+pardon for my client."
+
+"And suppose we took up Mr. Balfour's cause to-morrow?" said Stewart
+Hall. "I am much deceived or we should find so many impediments thrown
+in our path, as that James should have been hanged before we had found a
+court to hear us. This is a great scandal, but I suppose we have none of
+us forgot a greater still, I mean the matter of the Lady Grange. The
+woman was still in durance; my friend Mr. Hope of Rankeillor did what
+was humanly possible; and how did he speed? He never got a warrant!
+Well, it'll be the same now; the same weapons will be used. This is a
+scene, gentlemen, of clan animosity. The hatred of the name which I have
+the honor to bear, rages in high quarters. There is nothing here to be
+viewed but naked Campbell spite and scurvy Campbell intrigue."
+
+You may be sure this was to touch a welcome topic, and I sat for some
+time in the midst of my learned counsel, almost deaved with their talk
+but extremely little the wiser for its purport. The Writer was led into
+some hot expressions; Colstoun must take him up and set him right; the
+rest joined in on different sides, but all pretty noisy; the Duke of
+Argyle was beaten like a blanket; King George came in for a few digs in
+the by-going and a great deal of rather elaborate defence: and there was
+only one person that seemed to be forgotten, and that was James of the
+Glens.
+
+Through all this Mr. Miller sat quiet. He was a slip of an oldish
+gentleman, ruddy and twinkling; he spoke in a smooth rich voice, with an
+infinite effect of pawkiness, dealing out each word the way an actor
+does, to give the most expression possible; and even now, when he was
+silent, and sat there with his wig laid aside, his glass in both hands,
+his mouth funnily pursed, and his chin out, he seemed the mere picture
+of a merry slyness. It was plain he had a word to say, and waited for
+the fit occasion.
+
+It came presently. Colstoun had wound up one of his speeches with some
+expression of their duty to their client. His brother sheriff was
+pleased, I suppose, with the transition. He took the table in his
+confidence with a gesture and a look.
+
+"That suggests to me a consideration which seems overlooked," said he.
+"The interest of our client goes certainly before all, but the world
+does not come to an end with James Stewart." Whereat he cocked his eye.
+"I might condescend, _exempli gratia_, upon a Mr. George Brown, a Mr.
+Thomas Miller, and a Mr. David Balfour. Mr. David Balfour has a very
+good ground of complaint, and I think, gentlemen--if his story was
+properly red out--I think there would be a number of wigs on the green."
+
+The whole table turned to him with a common movement.
+
+"Properly handled and carefully red out, his is a story that could
+scarcely fail to have some consequence," he continued. "The whole
+administration of justice, from its highest officer downward, would be
+totally discredited; and it looks to me as if they would need to be
+replaced." He seemed to shine with cunning as he said it. "And I need
+not point out to ye that this of Mr. Balfour's would be a remarkable
+bonny cause to appear in," he added.
+
+Well, there they all were started on another hare; Mr. Balfour's cause,
+and what kind of speeches could be there delivered, and what officials
+could be thus turned out, and who would succeed to their positions. I
+shall give but the two specimens. It was proposed to approach Symon
+Fraser, whose testimony, if it could be obtained, could prove certainly
+fatal to Argyle and Prestongrange. Miller highly approved of the
+attempt. "We have here before us a dreeping roast," said he, "here is
+cut-and-come-again for all." And methought all licked their lips. The
+other was already near the end. Stewart the Writer was out of the body
+with, delight, smelling vengeance on his chief enemy, the Duke.
+
+"Gentlemen," cried he, charging his glass, "here is to Sheriff Miller.
+His legal abilities are known to all. His culinary, this bowl in front
+of us is here to speak for. But when it comes to the poleetical!"--cries
+he, and drains the glass.
+
+"Ay, but it will hardly prove politics in your meaning, my friend," said
+the gratified Miller. "A revolution, if you like, and I think I can
+promise you that historical writers shall date from Mr. Balfour's cause.
+But properly guided, Mr. Stewart, tenderly guided, it shall prove a
+peaceful revolution."
+
+"And if the damned Campbells get their ears rubbed, what care I?" cries
+Stewart, smiting down his fist.
+
+It will be thought I was not very well pleased with all this, though I
+could scarce forbear smiling at a kind of innocency in these old
+intriguers. But it was not my view to have undergone so many sorrows for
+the advancement of Sheriff Miller or to make a revolution in the
+Parliament House: and I interposed accordingly with as much simplicity
+of manner as I could assume.
+
+"I have to thank you, gentlemen, for your advice," said I. "And now I
+would like, by your leave, to set you two or three questions. There is
+one thing that has fallen rather on one side, for instance: Will this
+cause do any good to our friend James of the Glens?"
+
+They seemed all a hair set back, and gave various answers, but
+concurring practically in one point, that James had now no hope but in
+the King's mercy.
+
+"To proceed, then," said I, "will it do any good to Scotland? We have a
+saying that it is an ill bird that fouls his own nest. I remember
+hearing we had a riot in Edinburgh when I was an infant child, which
+gave occasion to the late Queen to call this country barbarous; and I
+always understood that we had rather lost than gained by that. Then came
+the year 'Forty-five, which made Scotland to be talked of everywhere;
+but I never heard it said we had anyway gained by the 'Forty-five. And
+now we come to this cause of Mr. Balfour's, as you call it. Sheriff
+Miller tells us historical writers are to date from it, and I would not
+wonder. It is only my fear they would date from it as a period of
+calamity and public reproach."
+
+The nimble-witted Miller had already smelt where I was travelling to,
+and made haste to get on the same road. "Forcibly put, Mr. Balfour,"
+says he. "A weighty observe, sir."
+
+"We have next to ask ourselves if it will be good for King George," I
+pursued. "Sheriff Miller appears pretty easy upon this; but I doubt you
+will scarce be able to pull down the house from under him, without his
+Majesty coming by a knock or two, one of which might easily prove
+fatal."
+
+I gave them a chance to answer, but none volunteered.
+
+"Of those for whom the case was to be profitable," I went on, "Sheriff
+Miller gave us the names of several, among the which he was good enough
+to mention mine. I hope he will pardon me if I think otherwise. I
+believe I hung not the least back in this affair while there was life to
+be saved; but I own I thought myself extremely hazarded, and I own I
+think it would be a pity for a young man, with some idea of coming to
+the bar, to ingrain upon himself the character of a turbulent, factious
+fellow before he was yet twenty. As for James, it seems--at this date of
+the proceedings, with the sentence as good as pronounced--he has no hope
+but in the King's mercy. May not his Majesty, then, be more pointedly
+addressed, the characters of these high officers sheltered from the
+public, and myself kept out of a position which I think spells ruin for
+me?"
+
+They all sat and gazed into their glasses, and I could see they found my
+attitude on the affair unpalatable. But Miller was ready at all events.
+
+"If I may be allowed to put our young friend's notion in more formal
+shape," says he, "I understand him to propose that we should embody the
+fact of his sequestration, and perhaps some heads of the testimony he
+was prepared to offer, in a memorial to the Crown. This plan has
+elements of success. It is as likely as any other (and perhaps likelier)
+to help our client. Perhaps his Majesty would have the goodness to feel
+a certain gratitude to all concerned in such a memorial, which might be
+construed into an expression of a very delicate loyalty; and I think, in
+the drafting of the same, this view might be brought forward."
+
+They all nodded to each other, not without sighs, for the former
+alternative was doubtless more after their inclination.
+
+"Paper then, Mr. Stewart, if you please," pursued Miller; "and I think
+it might very fittingly be signed by the five of us here present, as
+procurators for the 'condemned man.'"
+
+"It can do none of us any harm at least," says Colstoun, heaving another
+sigh, for he had seen himself Lord Advocate the last ten minutes.
+
+Thereupon they set themselves, not very enthusiastically, to draft the
+memorial--a process in the course of which they soon caught fire; and I
+had no more ado but to sit looking on and answer an occasional question.
+The paper was very well expressed; beginning with a recitation of the
+facts about myself, the reward offered for my apprehension, my
+surrender, the pressure brought to bear upon me; my sequestration; and
+my arrival at Inverary in time to be too late; going on to explain the
+reasons of loyalty and public interest for which it was agreed to waive
+any right of action; and winding up with a forcible appeal to the King's
+mercy on behalf of James.
+
+Methought I was a good deal sacrificed, and rather represented in the
+light of a firebrand of a fellow whom my cloud of lawyers had restrained
+with difficulty from extremes. But I let it pass, and made but the one
+suggestion, that I should be described as ready to deliver my own
+evidence and adduce that of others before any commission of inquiry--and
+the one demand, that I should be immediately furnished with a copy.
+
+Colstoun hummed and hawed. "This is a very confidential document," said
+he.
+
+"And my position towards Prestongrange is highly peculiar," I replied.
+"No question but I must have touched his heart at our first interview,
+so that he has since stood my friend consistently. But for him,
+gentlemen, I must now be lying dead or awaiting my sentence alongside
+poor James. For which reason I choose to communicate to him the fact of
+this memorial as soon as it is copied. You are to consider also that
+this step will make for my protection. I have enemies here accustomed to
+drive hard; his Grace is in his own country, Lovat by his side; and if
+there should hang any ambiguity over our proceedings, I think I might
+very well awake in gaol."
+
+Not finding any very ready answer to these considerations, my company of
+advisers were at the last persuaded to consent, and made only this
+condition that I was to lay the paper before Prestongrange with the
+express compliments of all concerned.
+
+The Advocate was at the castle dining with his Grace. By the hand of one
+of Colstoun's servants I sent him a billet asking for an interview, and
+received a summons to meet him at once in a private house of the town.
+Here I found him alone in a chamber; from his face there was nothing to
+be gleaned; yet I was not so unobservant but what I spied some halberts
+in the hall, and not so stupid but what I could gather he was prepared
+to arrest me there and then, should it appear advisable.
+
+"So, Mr. David, this is you?" said he.
+
+"Where I fear I am not overly welcome, my lord," said I. "And I would
+like before I go further to express my sense of your lordship's
+continued good offices, even should they now cease."
+
+"I have heard of your gratitude before," he replied drily, "and I think
+this can scarce be the matter you called me from my wine to listen to. I
+would remember also, if I were you, that you still stand on a very boggy
+foundation."
+
+"Not now, my lord, I think," said I; "and if your lordship will but
+glance an eye along this, you will perhaps think as I do."
+
+He read it sedulously through, frowning heavily; then turned back to one
+part and another which he seemed to weigh and compare the effect of. His
+face a little lightened.
+
+"This is not so bad but what it might be worse," said he; "though I am
+still likely to pay dear for my acquaintance with Mr. David Balfour."
+
+"Rather for your indulgence to that unlucky young man, my lord," said I.
+
+He still skimmed the paper, and all the while his spirits seemed to
+mend.
+
+"And to whom am I indebted for this?" he asked presently. "Other
+counsels must have been discussed, I think. Who was it proposed this
+private method? Was it Miller?"
+
+"My lord, it was myself," said I. "These gentlemen have shown me no such
+consideration, as that I should deny myself any credit I can fairly
+claim, or spare them any responsibility they should properly bear. And
+the mere truth is, that they were all in favour of a process which
+should have remarkable consequences in the Parliament House, and prove
+for them (in one of their own expressions) a dripping roast. Before I
+intervened, I think they were on the point of sharing out the different
+law appointments. Our friend Mr. Symon was to be taken in upon some
+composition."
+
+Prestongrange smiled. "These are our friends!" said he. "And what were
+your reasons for dissenting, Mr. David?"
+
+I told them without concealment, expressing, however, with more force
+and volume those which regarded Prestongrange himself.
+
+"You do me no more than justice," said he. "I have fought as hard in
+your interest as you have fought against mine. And how came you here
+to-day?" he asked. "As the case drew out, I began to grow uneasy that I
+had clipped the period so fine, and I was even expecting you to-morrow.
+But to-day--I never dreamed of it."
+
+I was not, of course, going to betray Andie.
+
+"I suspect there is some very weary cattle by the road," said I.
+
+"If I had known you were such a mosstrooper you should have tasted
+longer of the Bass," says he.
+
+"Speaking of which, my lord, I return your letter." And I gave him the
+enclosure in the counterfeit hand.
+
+"There was the cover also with the seal," said he.
+
+"I have it not," said I. "It bore naught but the address, and could not
+compromise a cat. The second enclosure I have, and with your permission,
+I desire to keep it."
+
+I thought he winced a little, but he said nothing to the point.
+"To-morrow," he resumed, "our business here is to be finished, and I
+proceed by Glasgow. I would be very glad to have you of my party, Mr.
+David."
+
+"My lord...." I began.
+
+"I do not deny it will be of service to me," he interrupted. "I desire
+even that, when we shall come to Edinburgh you should alight at my
+house. You have very warm friends in the Miss Grants, who will be
+overjoyed to have you to themselves. If you think I have been of use to
+you, you can thus easily repay me, and so far from losing, may reap some
+advantage by the way. It is not every strange young man who is presented
+in society by the King's Advocate."
+
+Often enough already (in our brief relations) this gentleman had caused
+my head to spin; no doubt but what for a moment he did so again now.
+Here was the old fiction still maintained of my particular favour with
+his daughters, one of whom had been so good as laugh at me, while the
+other two had scarce deigned to remark the fact of my existence. And now
+I was to ride with my lord to Glascow; I was to dwell with him in
+Edinburgh; I was to be brought into society under his protection! That
+he should have so much good-nature as to forgive me was surprising
+enough; that he could wish to take me up and serve me seemed impossible;
+and I began to seek for some ulterior meaning. One was plain. If I
+became his guest, repentance was excluded; I could never think better of
+my present design and bring any action. And besides, would not my
+presence in his house draw out the whole pungency of the memorial? For
+that complaint could not be very seriously regarded, if the person
+chiefly injured was the guest of the official most incriminated. As I
+thought upon this, I could not quite refrain from smiling.
+
+"This is in the nature of a countercheck to the memorial?" said I.
+
+"You are cunning, Mr. David," said he, "and you do not wholly guess
+wrong; the fact will be of use to me in my defence. Perhaps, however,
+you underrate my friendly sentiments, which are perfectly genuine. I
+have a respect for you, Mr. David, mingled with awe," says he, smiling.
+
+"I am more than willing, I am earnestly desirous to meet your wishes,"
+said I. "It is my design to be called to the bar, where your lordship's
+countenance would be invaluable; and I am besides sincerely grateful to
+yourself and family for different marks of interest and of indulgence.
+The difficulty is here. There is one point in which we pull two ways.
+You are trying to hang James Stewart, I am trying to save him. In so far
+as my riding with you would better your lordship's defence, I am at your
+lordship's orders; but in so far as it would help to hang James Stewart,
+you see me at a stick."
+
+I thought he swore to himself. "You should certainly be called; the bar
+is the true scene for your talents," says he, bitterly, and then fell a
+while silent. "I will tell you," he presently resumed, "there is no
+question of James Stewart, for or against. James is a dead man; his life
+is given and taken--bought (if you like it better) and sold; no memorial
+can help--no defalcation of a faithful Mr. David hurt him. Blow high,
+blow low, there will be no pardon for James Stewart: and take that for
+said! The question is now of myself: am I to stand or fall? and I do not
+deny to you that I am in some danger. But will Mr. David Balfour
+consider why? It is not because I have pushed the case unduly against
+James; for that, I am sure of condonation. And it is not because I have
+sequestered Mr. David on a rock, though it will pass under that colour;
+but because I did not take the ready and plain path, to which I was
+pressed repeatedly, and send Mr. David to his grave or to the gallows.
+Hence the scandal--hence this damned memorial," striking the paper on
+his leg. "My tenderness for you has brought me in this difficulty. I
+wish to know if your tenderness to your own conscience is too great to
+let you help me out of it?"
+
+No doubt but there was much of the truth in what he said; if James was
+past helping, whom was it more natural that I should turn to help than
+just the man before me, who had helped myself so often, and was even now
+setting me a pattern of patience? I was besides not only weary, but
+beginning to be ashamed of my perpetual attitude of suspicion and
+refusal.
+
+"If you will name the time and place, I will be punctually ready to
+attend your lordship," said I.
+
+He shook hands with me. "And I think my misses have some news for you,"
+says he, dismissing me.
+
+I came away, vastly pleased to have my peace made, yet a little
+concerned in conscience; nor could I help wondering, as I went back,
+whether, perhaps, I had not been a scruple too good-natured. But there
+was the fact, that this was a man that might have been my father, an
+able man, a great dignitary, and one that, in the hour of my need, had
+reached a hand to my assistance. I was in the better humour to enjoy the
+remainder of that evening, which I passed with the advocates, in
+excellent company no doubt, but perhaps with rather more than a
+sufficiency of punch: for though I went early to bed I have no clear
+mind of how I got there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE TEE'D BALL
+
+
+On the morrow, from the justices' private room, where none could see me,
+I heard the verdict given in and judgment rendered upon James. The
+Duke's words I am quite sure I have correctly; and since that famous
+passage has been made a subject of dispute, I may as well commemorate my
+version. Having referred to the year '45, the chief of the Campbells,
+sitting as Justice-General upon the bench, thus addressed the
+unfortunate Stewart before him: "If you had been successful in that
+rebellion, you might have been giving the law where you have now
+received the judgment of it; we, who are this day your judges, might
+have been tried before one of your mock courts of judicature; and then
+you might have been satiated with the blood of any name or clan to which
+you had an aversion."
+
+"This is to let the cat out of the bag, indeed," thought I. And that was
+the general impression. It was extraordinary how the young advocate lads
+took hold and made a mock of this speech, and how scarce a meal passed
+but what some one would get in the words: "And then you might have been
+satiated." Many songs were made in that time for the hour's diversion,
+and are near all forgot. I remember one began:
+
+ What do ye want the bluid of, bluid of?
+ Is it a name, or is it a clan,
+ Or is it an aefauld Hielandman,
+ That ye want the bluid of, bluid of?
+
+Another went to my old favourite air, _The House of Airlie_, and began
+thus:
+
+ It fell on a day when Argyle was on the bench,
+ That they served him a Stewart for his denner.
+
+And one of the verses ran:
+
+ Then up and spak the Duke, and flyted on his cook,
+ I regaird it as a sensible aspersion,
+ That I would sup ava', an' satiate my maw,
+ With the bluid of ony clan of my aversion.
+
+James was as fairly murdered as though the Duke had got a fowling-piece
+and stalked him. So much of course I knew: but others knew not so much,
+and were more affected by the items of scandal that came to light in the
+progress of the cause. One of the chief was certainly this sally of the
+justice's. It was run hard by another of a juryman, who had struck into
+the midst of Colstoun's speech for the defence with a "Pray, sir, cut it
+short, we are quite weary," which seemed the very excess of impudence
+and simplicity. But some of my new lawyer friends were still more
+staggered with an innovation that had disgraced and even vitiated the
+proceedings. One witness was never called. His name, indeed, was
+printed, where it may still be seen on the fourth page of the list:
+"James Drummond, _alias_ Macgregor, _alias_ James More, late tenant in
+Inveronachile"; and his precognition had been taken, as the manner is,
+in writing. He had remembered or invented (God help him) matter which
+was lead in James Stewart's shoes, and I saw was like to prove wings to
+his own. This testimony it was highly desirable to bring to the notice
+of the jury, without exposing the man himself to the perils of
+cross-examination; and the way it was brought about was a matter of
+surprise to all. For the paper was handed round (like a curiosity) in
+court; passed through the jury-box, where it did its work; and
+disappeared again (as though by accident) before it reached the counsel
+for the prisoner. This was counted a most insidious device; and that the
+name of James More should be mingled up with it filled me with shame for
+Catriona and concern for myself.
+
+The following day, Prestongrange and I, with a considerable company, set
+out for Glasgow, where (to my impatience) we continued to linger some
+time in a mixture of pleasure and affairs. I lodged with my lord, with
+whom I was encouraged to familiarity; had my place at entertainments;
+was presented to the chief guests; and altogether made more of than I
+thought accorded either with my parts or station; so that, on strangers
+being present, I would often blush for Prestongrange. It must be owned
+the view I had taken of the world in these last months was fit to cast a
+gloom upon my character. I had met many men, some of them leaders in
+Israel whether by their birth or talents; and who among them all had
+shown clean hands? As for the Browns and Millers, I had seen their
+self-seeking, I could never again respect them. Prestongrange was the
+best yet; he had saved me, had spared me rather, when others had it in
+their minds to murder me outright; but the blood of James lay at his
+door; and I thought his present dissimulation with myself a thing below
+pardon. That he should affect to find pleasure in my discourse almost
+surprised me out of my patience. I would sit and watch him with a kind
+of a slow fire of anger in my bowels. "Ah, friend, friend," I would
+think to myself, "if you were but through with this affair of the
+memorial, would you not kick me in the streets?" Here I did him, as
+events have proved, the most foul injustice; and I think he was at once
+far more sincere, and a far more artful performer than I supposed.
+
+But I had some warrant for my incredulity in the behaviour of that court
+of young advocates that hung about him in the hope of patronage. The
+sudden favour of a lad not previously heard of troubled them at first
+out of measure; but two days were not gone by before I found myself
+surrounded with flattery and attention. I was the same young man, and
+neither better nor bonnier, that they had rejected a month before; and
+now there was no civility too fine for me! The same, do I say? It was
+not so; and the byname by which I went behind my back confirmed it.
+Seeing me so firm with the Advocate, and persuaded that I was to fly
+high and far, they had taken a word from the golfing green, and called
+me _the Tee'd Ball_.[14] I was told I was now "one of themselves"; I was
+to taste of their soft lining, who had already made my own experience of
+the roughness of the outer husk; and the one, to whom I had been
+presented in Hope Park, was so assured as even to remind me of that
+meeting. I told him I had not the pleasure of remembering it.
+
+"Why," says he, "it was Miss Grant herself presented me! My name is
+so-and-so."
+
+"It may very well be, sir," said I, "but I have kept no mind of it."
+
+At which he desisted; and in the midst of the disgust that commonly
+overflowed my spirits I had a glisk of pleasure.
+
+But I have not patience to dwell upon that time at length. When I was in
+company with these young politics I was borne down with shame for myself
+and my own plain ways, and scorn for them and their duplicity. Of the
+two evils, I thought Prestongrange to be the least; and while I was
+always as stiff as buckram to the young bloods, I made rather a
+dissimulation of my hard feelings towards the Advocate, and was (in old
+Mr. Campbell's word) "soople to the laird." Himself commented on the
+difference, and bid me be more of my age, and make friends with my young
+comrades.
+
+I told him I was slow of making friends.
+
+"I will take the word back," said he. "But there is such a thing as
+_Fair gude e'en and fair gude day_, Mr. David. These are the same young
+men with whom you are to pass your days and get through life: your
+backwardness has a look of arrogance; and unless you can assume a little
+more lightness of manner, I fear you will meet difficulties in the
+path."
+
+"It will be an ill job to make a silk purse of a sow's ear," said I.
+
+On the morning of October 1st I was awakened by the clattering in of an
+express; and getting to my window almost before he had dismounted, I saw
+the messenger had ridden hard. Somewhile after I was called to
+Prestongrange, where he was sitting in his bedgown and nightcap, with
+his letters around him.
+
+"Mr. David," said he, "I have a piece of news for you. It concerns some
+friends of yours, of whom I sometimes think you are a little ashamed,
+for you have never referred to their existence."
+
+I suppose I blushed.
+
+"I see you understand, since you make the answering signal," said he.
+"And I must compliment you on your excellent taste in beauty. But do you
+know, Mr. David, this seems to me a very enterprising lass? She crops up
+from every side. The Government of Scotland appears unable to proceed
+for Mistress Katrine Drummond, which was somewhat the case (no great
+while back) with a certain Mr. David Balfour. Should not these make a
+good match? Her first intromission in politics--but I must not tell you
+that story, the authorities have decided you are to hear it otherwise
+and from a livelier narrator. This new example is more serious, however;
+and I am afraid I must alarm you with the intelligence that she is now
+in prison."
+
+I cried out.
+
+"Yes," said he, "the little lady is in prison. But I would not have you
+to despair. Unless you (with your friends and memorials) shall procure
+my downfall, she is to suffer nothing."
+
+"But what has she done? What is her offence?" I cried.
+
+"It might be almost construed a high treason," he returned, "for she has
+broke the King's Castle of Edinburgh."
+
+"The lady is much my friend," I said. "I know you would not work me if
+the thing were serious."
+
+"And yet it is serious in a sense," said he; "for this rogue of a
+Katrine--or Cateran, as we may call her--has set adrift again upon the
+world that very doubtful character, her papa."
+
+Here was one of my previsions justified: James More was once again at
+liberty. He had lent his men to keep me a prisoner; he had volunteered
+his testimony in the Appin case, and the same (no matter by what
+subterfuge) had been employed to influence the jury. Now came his
+reward, and he was free. It might please the authorities to give to it
+the colour of an escape; but I knew better--I knew it was the fulfilment
+of a bargain. The same course of thought relieved me of the least alarm
+for Catriona. She might be thought to have broke prison for her father;
+she might have believed so herself. But the chief hand in the whole
+business was that of Prestongrange; and I was sure, so far from letting
+her come to punishment, he would not suffer her to be even tried.
+Whereupon thus came out of me the not very politic ejaculation:
+
+"Ah! I was expecting that!"
+
+"You have at times a great deal of discretion too!" says Prestongrange.
+
+"And what is my lord pleased to mean by that?" I asked.
+
+"I was just marvelling," he replied, "that being so clever as to draw
+these inferences, you should not be clever enough to keep them to
+yourself. But I think you would like to hear the details of the affair.
+I have received two versions: and the least official is the more full
+and far the more entertaining, being from the lively pen of my eldest
+daughter. 'Here is all the town bizzing with a fine piece of work,' she
+writes, 'and what would make the thing more noted (if it were only
+known) the malefactor is a _protégée_ of his lordship my papa. I am sure
+your heart is too much in your duty (if it were nothing else) to have
+forgotten Grey Eyes. What does she do, but get a broad hat with the
+flaps open, a long hairy-like man's great-coat, and a big gravatt; kilt
+her coats up to _Gude kens whaur_, clap two pair of boot-hose upon her
+legs, take a pair of _clouted brogues_[15] in her hand, and off to the
+Castle? Here she gives herself out to be a soutar[16] in the employ of
+James More, and gets admitted to his cell, the lieutenant (who seems to
+have been full of pleasantry) making sport among his soldiers of the
+soutar's great-coat. Presently they hear disputation and the sound of
+blows inside. Out flies the cobbler, his coat flying, the flaps of his
+hat beat about his face, and the lieutenant and his soldiers mock at him
+as he runs off. They laughed not so hearty the next time they had
+occasion to visit the cell, and found nobody but a tall, pretty,
+grey-eyed lass in the female habit! As for the cobbler, he was "over the
+hills ayont Dumblane," and it's thought that poor Scotland will have to
+console herself without him. I drank Catriona's health this night in
+public. Indeed, the whole town admires her; and I think the beaux would
+wear bits of her garters in their button-holes if they could only get
+them. I would have gone to visit her in prison too, only I remembered in
+time I was papa's daughter; so I wrote her a billet instead, which I
+entrusted to the faithful Doig, and I hope you will admit I can be
+political when I please. The same faithful gomeral is to despatch this
+letter by the express along with those of the wiseacres, so that you may
+hear Tom Fool in company with Solomon. Talking of _gomerals_, do tell
+_Dauvit Balfour_. I would I could see the face of him at the thought of
+a long-legged lass in such a predicament! to say nothing of the levities
+of your affectionate daughter, and his respectful friend.' So my rascal
+signs herself!" continued Prestongrange. "And you see, Mr. David, it is
+quite true what I tell you, that my daughters regard you with the most
+affectionate playfulness."
+
+
+"The gomeral is much obliged," said I.
+
+"And was not this prettily done?" he went on. "Is not this Highland maid
+a piece of a heroine?"
+
+"I was always sure she had a great heart," said I. "And I wager she
+guessed nothing.... But I beg your pardon, this is to tread upon
+forbidden subjects."
+
+"I will go bail she did not," he returned, quite openly. "I will go bail
+she thought she was flying straight into King George's face."
+
+Remembrance of Catriona, and the thought of her lying in captivity,
+moved me strangely. I could see that even Prestongrange admired, and
+could not withhold his lips from smiling when he considered her
+behaviour. As for Miss Grant, for all her ill habit of mockery, her
+admiration shone out plain. A kind of a heat came on me.
+
+"I am not your lordship's daughter..." I began.
+
+"That I know of!" he put in smiling.
+
+"I speak like a fool," said I, "or rather I began wrong. It would
+doubtless be unwise in Mistress Grant to go to her in prison; but for
+me, I think I would look like a half-hearted friend if I did not fly
+there instantly."
+
+"So-ho, Mr. David," says he, "I thought that you and I were in a
+bargain?"
+
+"My lord," I said, "when I made that bargain I was a good deal affected
+by your goodness, but I'll never can deny that I was moved besides by my
+own interest. There was self-seeking in my heart, and I think shame of
+it now. It may be for your lordship's safety to say this fashious Davie
+Balfour is your friend and housemate. Say it then; I'll never contradict
+you. But as for your patronage, I give it all back. I ask but the one
+thing--let me go, and give me a pass to see her in her prison."
+
+He looked at me with a hard eye. "You put the cart before the horse, I
+think," says he. "That which I had given was a portion of my liking,
+which your thankless nature does not seem to have remarked. But for my
+patronage, it is not given, nor (to be exact) is it yet offered." He
+paused a bit. "And I warn you, you do not know yourself," he added.
+"Youth is a hasty season; you will think better of all this before a
+year."
+
+"Well, and I would like to be that kind of youth!" I cried. "I have seen
+too much of the other party, in these young advocates that fawn upon
+your lordship and are even at the pains to fawn on me. And I have seen
+it in the old ones also. They are all for by-ends, the whole clan of
+them! It's this that makes me seem to misdoubt your lordship's liking.
+Why would I think that you would like me? But ye told me yourself ye had
+an interest!"
+
+I stopped at this, confounded that I had run so far; he was observing me
+with a unfathomable face.
+
+"My lord, I ask your pardon," I resumed. "I have nothing in my chafts
+but a rough country tongue. I think it would be only decent-like if I
+would go to see my friend in her captivity; but I'm owing you my life,
+I'll never forget that; and-if it's for your lordship's good, here I'll
+stay. That's barely gratitude."
+
+"This might have been reached in fewer words," says Prestongrange,
+grimly. "It is easy, and it is at times gracious, to say a plain Scots
+'ay'."
+
+"Ah, but, my lord, I think ye take me not yet entirely!" cried I. "For
+_your_ sake, for my life-safe, and the kindness that ye say ye bear to
+me--for these, I'll consent; but not for any good that might be coming
+to myself. If I stand aside when this young maid is in her trial, it's a
+thing I will be noways advantaged by; I will lose by it, I will never
+gain. I would rather make a shipwreck wholly than to build on that
+foundation."
+
+He was a minute serious, then smiled. "You mind me of the man with the
+long nose," said he: "was you to look at the moon by a telescope, you
+would see David Balfour there! But you shall have your way of it. I will
+ask at you one service, and then set you free. My clerks are overdriven;
+be so good as copy me these few pages," says he, visibly swithering
+among some huge rolls of manuscripts, "and when that is done, I shall
+bid you God speed! I would never charge myself with Mr. David's
+conscience; and if you could cast some part of it (as you went by) in a
+moss hag, you would find yourself to ride much easier without it."
+
+"Perhaps not just entirely in the same direction though, my lord!" says
+I.
+
+"And you shall have the last word, too!" cries he gaily.
+
+Indeed he had some cause for gaiety, having now found the means to gain
+his purpose. To lessen the weight of the memorial, or to have a readier
+answer at his hand, he desired I should appear publicly in the character
+of his intimate. But if I were to appear with the same publicity as a
+visitor to Catriona in her prison the world would scarce stint to draw
+conclusions, and the true nature of James More's escape must become
+evident to all. This was the little problem I had set him of a sudden,
+and to which he had so briskly found an answer. I was to be tethered in
+Glasgow by that job of copying, which in mere outward decency I could
+not well refuse; and during these hours of my employment Catriona was
+privately got rid of. I think shame to write of this man that loaded me
+with so many goodnesses. He was kind to me as any father, yet I ever
+thought him as false as a cracked bell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES
+
+
+The copying was a weary business, the more so as I perceived very early
+there was no sort of urgency in the matters treated, and began very
+early to consider my employment a pretext. I had no sooner finished,
+than I got to horse, used what remained of daylight to the best purpose,
+and being at last fairly benighted, slept in a house by Almond-Water
+side. I was in the saddle again before the day, and the Edinburgh booths
+were just opening when I clattered in by the West Bow and drew up a
+smoking horse at my lord Advocate's door. I had a written word for Doig,
+my lord's private hand that was thought to be in all his secrets, a
+worthy, little plain man, all fat and snuff and self-sufficiency. Him I
+found already at his desk and already bedabbled with maccabaw, in the
+same anteroom where I rencountered with James More. He read the note
+scrupulously through like a chapter in his Bible.
+
+"H'm," says he, "ye come a wee thing ahint-hand, Mr. Balfour. The bird's
+flaen, we hae letten her out."
+
+"Miss Drummond is set free?" I cried.
+
+"Achy!" said he. "What would we keep her for, ye ken? To hae made a
+steer about the bairn would hae pleased naebody."
+
+"And where'll she be now?" says I.
+
+"Gude kens!" says Doig, with a shrug.
+
+"She'll have gone home to Lady Allardyce, I'm thinking," said I.
+
+"That'll be it," said he.
+
+"Then I'll gang there straight," says I.
+
+"But ye'll be for a bite or ye go?" said he.
+
+"Neither bite nor sup," said I. "I had a good waucht of milk in by
+Ratho."
+
+"Aweel, aweel," says Doig. "But ye'll can leave your horse here and your
+bags, for it seems we're to have your up-put."
+
+"Na, na," said I. "Tamson's mear[17] would never be the thing for me,
+this day of all days."
+
+Doig speaking somewhat broad, I had been led by imitation into an accent
+much more countrified than I was usually careful to affect, a good deal
+broader indeed than I have written it down; and I was the more ashamed
+when another voice joined in behind me with a scrap of a ballad:
+
+ "Gae saddle me the bonny black,
+ Gae saddle sune and mak' him ready,
+ For I will down the Gatehope-slack,
+ And a' to see my bonny leddy."
+
+The young lady, when I turned to her, stood in a morning gown, and her
+hands muffled in the same, as if to hold me at a distance. Yet I could
+not but think there was kindness in the eye with which she saw me.
+
+"My best respects to you, Mistress Grant," said I bowing.
+
+"The like to yourself, Mr. David," she replied, with a deep courtesy,
+"And I beg to remind you of an old musty saw, that meat and mass never
+hindered man. The mass I cannot afford you, for we are all good
+Protestants. But the meat I press on your attention. And I would not
+wonder but I could find something for your private ear that would be
+worth the stopping for."
+
+"Mistress Grant," said I, "I believe I am already your debtor for some
+merry words--and I think they were kind too--on a piece of unsigned
+paper."
+
+"Unsigned paper?" says she, and made a droll face, which was likewise
+wondrous beautiful, as of one trying to remember.
+
+"Or else I am the more deceived," I went on. "But to be sure, we shall
+have the time to speak of these, since your father is so good as to make
+me for a while your inmate; and the _gomeral_ begs you at this time only
+for the favour of his liberty."
+
+"You give yourself hard names," said she.
+
+"Mr. Doig and I would be blythe to take harder at your clever pen," says
+I.
+
+"Once more I have to admire the discretion of all men-folk," she
+replied. "But if you will not eat, off with you at once; you will be
+back the sooner, for you go on a fool's errand. Off with you, Mr.
+David," she continued, opening the door.
+
+ "He has lowpen on his bonny grey,
+ He rade the richt gate and the ready;
+ I trow he would neither stint nor stay,
+ Far he was seeking his bonny leddy."
+
+I did not wait to be twice bidden, and did justice to Miss Grant's
+citation on the way to Dean.
+
+Old Lady Allardyce walked there alone in the garden, in her hat and
+mutch, and having a silver-mounted staff of some black wood to lean
+upon. As I alighted from my horse, and drew near to her with _congees_,
+I could see the blood come in her face, and her head fling into the air
+like what I had conceived of empresses.
+
+"What brings you to my poor door?" she cried, speaking high through her
+nose. "I cannot bar it. The males of my house are dead and buried; I
+have neither son nor husband to stand in the gate for me; any beggar can
+pluck me by the baird[18]--and a baird there is, and that's the worst of
+it yet!" she added, partly to herself.
+
+I was extremely put out at this reception, and the last remark, which
+seemed like a daft wife's, left me near hand speechless.
+
+"I see I have fallen under your displeasure, ma'am," said I. "Yet I will
+still be so bold as ask after Mistress Drummond."
+
+She considered me with a burning eye, her lips pressed close together
+into twenty creases, her hand shaking on her staff. "This cows all!" she
+cried. "Ye come to me to spier for her! Would God I knew!"
+
+"She is not here?" I cried.
+
+She threw up her chin and made a step and a cry at me, so that I fell
+back incontinent.
+
+"Out upon your leeing throat!" she cried. "What! ye come and spier at
+me! She's in jyle, whaur ye took her to--that's all there is to it. And
+of a' the beings ever I beheld in breeks, to think it should be you! Ye
+timmer scoun'rel, if I had a male left to my name I would have your
+jaicket dustit till ye raired."
+
+I thought it not good to delay longer in that place because I remarked
+her passion to be rising. As I turned to the horse-post she even
+followed me; and I make no shame to confess that I rode away with the
+one stirrup on and scrambling for the other.
+
+As I knew no other quarter where I could push my inquiries, there was
+nothing left me but to return to the Advocate's. I was well received by
+the four ladies, who were now in company together, and must give the
+news of Prestongrange and what word went in the west country, at the
+most inordinate length and with great weariness to myself; while all the
+time that young lady, with whom I so much desired to be alone again,
+observed me quizzically and seemed to find pleasure in the sight of my
+impatience. At last, after I had endured a meal with them, and was come
+very near the point of appealing for an interview before her aunt, she
+went and stood by the music case, and picking out a tune, sang to it on
+a high key--"He that will not when he may, When he will he shall have
+nay." But this was the end of her rigours, and presently, after making
+some excuse of which I have no mind, she carried me away in private to
+her father's library. I should not fail to say that she was dressed to
+the nines, and appeared extraordinary handsome.
+
+"Now, Mr. David, sit ye down here and let us have a two-handed crack,"
+said she. "For I have much to tell you, and it appears besides that I
+have been grossly unjust to your good taste."
+
+"In what manner, Mistress Grant?" I asked. "I trust I have never seemed
+to fail in due respect."
+
+"I will be your surety, Mr. David," said she. "Your respect, whether to
+yourself or your poor neighbours, has been always and most fortunately
+beyond imitation. But that is by the question. You got a note from me?"
+she asked.
+
+"I was so bold as to suppose so upon inference," said I, "and it was
+kindly thought upon."
+
+"It must have prodigiously surprised you," said she. "But let us begin
+with the beginning. You have not perhaps forgot a day when you were so
+kind as to escort three very tedious misses to Hope Park? I have the
+less cause to forget it myself, because you was so particular obliging
+as to introduce me to some of the principles of the Latin grammar, a
+thing which wrote itself profoundly on my gratitude."
+
+"I fear I was sadly pedantical," said I, overcome with confusion at the
+memory. "You are only to consider I am quite unused with the society of
+ladies."
+
+"I will say the less about the grammar then," she replied. "But how came
+you to desert your charge? 'He has thrown her out, overboard, his ain
+dear Annie!'" she hummed; "and his ain dear Annie and her two sisters
+had to taigle home by theirselves like a string of green geese! It seems
+you returned to my papa's, where you showed yourself excessively
+martial, and then on to realms unknown, with an eye (it appears) to the
+Bass Rock; solan geese being perhaps more to your mind than bonny
+lasses."
+
+Through all this raillery there was something indulgent in the lady's
+eye which made me suppose there might be better coming.
+
+"You take a pleasure to torment me," said I, "and I make a very feckless
+plaything; but let me ask you to be more merciful. At this time there is
+but the one thing that I care to hear of, and that will be news of
+Catriona."
+
+"Do you call her by that name to her face, Mr. Balfour?" she asked.
+
+"In troth, and I am not very sure," I stammered.
+
+"I would not do so in any case to strangers," said Miss Grant. "And why
+are you so much immersed in the affairs of this young lady?"
+
+"I heard she was in prison," said I.
+
+"Well, and now you hear that she is out of it," she replied, "and what
+more would you have? She has no need of any further champion."
+
+"I may have the greater need of her, ma'am," said I.
+
+"Come, this is better!" says Miss Grant. "But look me fairly in the
+face; am I not bonnier than she?"
+
+"I would be the last to be denying it," said I. "There is not your
+marrow in all Scotland."
+
+"Well, here you have the pick of the two at your hand, and must needs
+speak of the other," said she. "This is never the way to please the
+ladies, Mr. Balfour."
+
+"But, mistress," said I, "there are surely other things besides mere
+beauty."
+
+"By which I am to understand that I am no better than I should be,
+perhaps?" she asked.
+
+"By which you will please understand that I am like the cock in the
+midden in the fable book," said I. "I see the braw jewel--and I like
+fine to see it too--but I have more need of the pickle corn."
+
+"Bravissimo!" she cried. "There is a word well said at last, and I will
+reward you for it with my story. That same night of your desertion I
+came late from a friend's house--where I was excessively admired,
+whatever you may think of it--and what should I hear but that a lass in
+a tartan screen desired to speak with me? She had been there an hour or
+better, said the servant-lass, and she grat in to herself as she sat
+waiting. I went to her direct; she rose as I came in, and I knew her at
+a look. '_Grey Eyes!_' says I to myself, but was more wise than to let
+on. _You will be Miss Grant at last?_ she says, rising and looking at me
+hard and pitiful. _Ay, it was true he said, you are bonny at all
+events.--The way God made me, my dear_, I said, _but I would be gey and
+obliged if ye could tell me what brought you here at such a time of the
+night--Lady_, she said, _we are kinsfolk, we are both come of the blood
+of the sons of Alpin.--My dear_, I replied, _I think no more of Alpin or
+his sons than what I do of a kale-stock. You have a better argument in
+these tears upon your bonny face_. And at that I was so weakminded as to
+kiss her, which is what you would like to do dearly, and I wager will
+never find the courage of. I say it was weakminded of me, for I knew no
+more of her than the outside; but it was the wisest stroke I could have
+hit upon. She is a very staunch, brave nature, but I think she has been
+little used with tenderness; and at that caress (though to say the
+truth, it was but lightly given) her heart went out to me. I will never
+betray the secrets of my sex, Mr. Davie; I will never tell you the way
+she turned me round her thumb, because it is the same she will use to
+twist yourself. Ay, it is a fine lass! She is as clean as hill well
+water."
+
+"She is e'en't!" I cried.
+
+"Well, then, she told me her concerns," pursued Miss Grant, "and in what
+a swither she was in about her papa, and what a taking about yourself,
+with very little cause, and in what a perplexity she had found herself
+after you was gone away. _And then I minded at long last,_ says she,
+_that we were kinswomen, and that Mr. David should have given you the
+name of the bonniest of the bonny, and I was thinking to myself 'If she
+is so bonny she will be good at all events; and I took up my foot soles
+out of that_. That was when I forgave yourself, Mr. Davie. When you was
+in my society, you seemed upon hot iron; by all marks, if ever I saw a
+young man that wanted to be gone, it was yourself, and I and my two
+sisters were the ladies you were so desirous to be gone from; and now it
+appeared you had given me some notice in the bygoing, and was so kind as
+to comment on my attractions! From that hour you may date our
+friendship, and I began to think with tenderness upon the Latin
+grammar."
+
+"You will have many hours to rally me in," said I, "and I think besides
+you do yourself injustice, I think it was Catriona turned your heart in
+my direction, she is too simple to perceive as you do the stiffness of
+her friend."
+
+"I would not like to wager upon that, Mr. David," said she. "The lasses
+have clear eyes. But at least she is your friend entirely, as I was to
+see. I carried her in to his lordship my papa; and his Advocacy, being
+in a favourable stage of claret, was so good as to receive the pair of
+us. _Here is Grey Eyes that you have been deaved with these days past_,
+said I, _she is come to prove that we spoke true, and I lay the
+prettiest lass in the three Lothians at your feet_--making a papistical
+reservation of myself. She suited her action to my words; down she went
+upon her knees to him--I would not like to swear but he saw two of her,
+which doubtless made her appeal the more irresistible, for you are all a
+pack of Mahomedans--told him what had passed that night, and how she had
+withheld her father's man from following of you, and what a case she was
+in about her father, and what a flutter for yourself; and begged with
+weeping for the lives of both of you (neither of which was in the
+slightest danger) till I vow I was proud of my sex because it was done
+so pretty, and ashamed for it because of the smallness of the occasion.
+She had not gone far, I assure you, before the Advocate was wholly
+sober, to see his inmost politics ravelled out by a young lass and
+discovered to the most unruly of his daughters. But we took him in hand,
+the pair of us, and brought that matter straight. Properly managed--and
+that means managed by me--there is no one to compare with my papa."
+
+"He has been a good man to me," said I.
+
+"Well, he was a good man to Katrine, and I was there to see to it," said
+she.
+
+"And she pled for me!" said I.
+
+"She did that, and very movingly," said Miss Grant. "I would not like to
+tell you what she said, I find you vain enough already."
+
+"God reward her for it!" cried I.
+
+"With Mr. David Balfour, I suppose?" says she.
+
+"You do me too much injustice at the last!" I cried. "I would tremble to
+think of her in such hard hands. Do you think I would presume, because
+she begged my life? She would do that for a new whelped puppy! I have
+had more than that to set me up, if you but ken'd. She kissed that hand
+of mine. Ay, but she did. And why? because she thought I was playing a
+brave part and might be going to my death. It was not for my sake, but I
+need not be telling that to you that cannot look at me without laughter.
+It was for the love of what she thought was bravery. I believe there is
+none but me and poor Prince Charlie had that honour done them. Was this
+not to make a god of me? and do you not think my heart would quake when
+I remember it?"
+
+"I do laugh at you a good deal, and a good deal more than is quite
+civil," said she; "but I will tell you one thing: if you speak to her
+like that, you have some glimmerings of a chance."
+
+"Me?" I cried, "I would never dare. I can speak to you, Miss Grant,
+because it's a matter of indifference what ye think of me. But her? no
+fear!" said I.
+
+"I think you have the largest feet in all broad Scotland," says she.
+
+"Troth, they are no very small," said I, looking down.
+
+"Ah, poor Catriona!" cried Miss Grant.
+
+And I could but stare upon her; for though I now see very well what she
+was driving at (and perhaps some justification for the same), I was
+never swift at the uptake in such flimsy talk.
+
+"Ah well, Mr. David," she said, "it goes sore against my conscience, but
+I see I shall have to be your speaking board. She shall know you came to
+her straight upon the news of her imprisonment; she shall know you would
+not pause to eat; and of your conversation she shall hear just so much
+as I think convenient for a maid of her age and inexperience. Believe
+me, you will be in that way much better served than you could serve
+yourself, for I will keep the big feet out of the platter."
+
+"You know where she is, then?" I exclaimed.
+
+"That I do, Mr. David, and will never tell," said she.
+
+"Why that?" I asked.
+
+"Well," she said, "I am a good friend, as you will soon discover; and
+the chief of those that I am a friend to is my papa. I assure you, you
+will never heat nor melt me out of that, so you may spare me your
+sheep's eyes; and adieu to your David-Balfourship for the now."
+
+"But there is yet one thing more," I cried. "There is one thing that
+must be stopped, being mere ruin to herself, and to me too."
+
+"Well," she said, "be brief, I have spent half the day on you already."
+
+"My Lady Allardyce believes," I began, "she supposes--she thinks that I
+abducted her."
+
+The colour came into Miss Grant's face, so that at first I was quite
+abashed to find her ear so delicate, till I bethought me she was
+struggling rather with mirth, a notion in which I was altogether
+confirmed by the shaking of her voice as she replied--
+
+"I will take up the defence of your reputation," said she. "You may
+leave it in my hands."
+
+And with that she withdrew out of the library.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY
+
+
+For about exactly two months I remained a guest in Prestongrange's
+family, where I bettered my acquaintance with the bench, the bar, and
+the flower of Edinburgh company. You are not to suppose my education was
+neglected, on the contrary I was kept extremely busy. I studied the
+French, so as to be more prepared to go to Leyden; I set myself to the
+fencing, and wrought hard, sometimes three hours in the day, with
+notable advancement; at the suggestion of my cousin, Pilrig, who was an
+apt musician, I was put to a singing class, and by the orders of my Miss
+Grant, to one for the dancing, at which. I must say I proved far from
+ornamental. However, all were good enough to say it gave me an address a
+little more genteel; and there is no question but I learned to manage my
+coat skirts and sword with more dexterity, and to stand in a room as
+though the same belonged to me. My clothes themselves were all earnestly
+re-ordered; and the most trifling circumstance, such as where I should
+tie my hair, or the colour of my ribbon, debated among the three misses
+like a thing of weight. One way with another, no doubt I was a good deal
+improved to look at, and acquired a bit of a modish air that would have
+surprised the good folks at Essendean.
+
+The two younger misses were very willing to discuss a point of my
+habiliment, because that was in the line of their chief thoughts. I
+cannot say that they appeared any other way conscious of my presence;
+and though always more than civil, with a kind of heartless cordiality,
+could not hide how much I wearied them. As for the aunt, she was a
+wonderful still woman; and I think she gave me much the same attention
+as she gave the rest of the family, which was little enough. The eldest
+daughter and the Advocate himself were thus my principal friends, and
+our familiarity was much increased by a pleasure that we took in common.
+Before the court met we spent a day or two at the house of Grange,
+living very nobly with an open table, and here it was that we three
+began to ride out together in the fields, a practice afterwards
+maintained in Edinburgh, so far as the Advocate's continual affairs
+permitted. When we were put in a good frame by the briskness of the
+exercise, the difficulties of the way, or the accidents of bad weather,
+my shyness wore entirely off; we forgot that we were strangers, and
+speech not being required, it flowed the more naturally on. Then it was
+that they had my story from me, bit by bit, from the time that I left
+Essendean, with my voyage and battle in the _Covenant_, wanderings in
+the heather, etc.; and from the interest they found in my adventures
+sprung the circumstance of a jaunt we made a little later on, a day when
+the courts were not sitting, and of which I will tell a trifle more at
+length.
+
+We took horse early, and passed first by the house of Shaws, where it
+stood smokeless in a great field of white frost, for it was yet early in
+the day. Here Prestongrange alighted down, gave me his horse, and
+proceeded alone to visit my uncle. My heart, I remember, swelled up
+bitter within me at the sight of that bare house and the thought of the
+old miser sitting chittering within in the cold kitchen.
+
+"There is my home," said I. "And my family."
+
+"Poor David Balfour!" said Miss Grant.
+
+What passed during the visit I have never heard; but it would doubtless
+not be very agreeable to Ebenezer; for when the Advocate came forth
+again his face was dark.
+
+"I think you will soon be the laird indeed, Mr. Davie," says he, turning
+half about with the one foot in the stirrup.
+
+"I will never pretend sorrow," said I; and, to say the truth, during his
+absence Miss Grant and I had been embellishing the place in fancy with
+plantations, parterres, and a terrace, much as I have since carried out
+in fact.
+
+Thence we pushed to the Queensferry, where Rankeillor gave us a good
+welcome, being indeed out of the body to receive so great a visitor.
+Here the Advocate was so unaffectedly good as to go quite fully over my
+affairs, sitting perhaps two hours with the Writer in his study, and
+expressing (I was told) a great esteem for myself and concern for my
+fortunes. To while this time, Miss Grant and I and young Rankeillor took
+boat and passed the Hope to Limekilns. Rankeillor made himself very
+ridiculous (and, I thought offensive) with his admiration for the young
+lady, and to my wonder (only it is so common a weakness of her sex) she
+seemed, if anything, to be a little gratified. One use it had: for when
+we were come to the other side, she laid her commands on him to mind the
+boat, while she and I passed a little further to the ale-house. This was
+her own thought, for she had been taken with my account of Alison
+Hastie, and desired to see the lass herself. We found her once more
+alone--indeed, I believe her father wrought all day in the fields--and
+she curtsied dutifully to the gentry-folk and the beautiful young lady
+in the riding coat.
+
+"Is this all the welcome I am to get?" said I, holding out my hand. "And
+have you no more memory of old friends?"
+
+"Keep me! wha's this of it?" she cried, and then, "God's truth, it's the
+tautit[19] laddie!"
+
+"The very same," says I.
+
+"Mony's the time I've thocht upon you and your freen, and blythe am I to
+see in your braws,"[20] she cried. "Though I kent ye were come to your
+ain folk by the grand present that ye sent me and that I thank ye for
+with a' my heart."
+
+"There," said Miss Grant to me, "run out by with ye, like a good bairn.
+I didnae come here to stand and hand a candle; it's her and me that are
+to crack."
+
+I suppose she stayed ten minutes in the house, but when she came forth I
+observed two things--that her eyes were reddened, and a silver brooch
+was gone out of her bosom. This very much affected me.
+
+"I never saw you so well adorned," said I.
+
+"O Davie man, dinna be a pompous gowk!" said she, and was more than
+usually sharp to me the remainder of the day.
+
+About candlelight we came home from this excursion.
+
+For a good while I heard nothing further of Catriona: my Miss Grant
+remaining quite impenetrable, and stopping my mouth with pleasantries.
+At last, one day that she returned from walking and found me alone in
+the parlour over my French, I thought there was something unusual in her
+looks; the colour heightened, the eyes sparkling high, and a bit of a
+smile continually bitten in as she regarded me. She seemed indeed like
+the very spirit of mischief, and walking briskly in the room, had soon
+involved me in a kind of quarrel over nothing and (at the least) with
+nothing intended on my side. I was like Christian in the slough; the
+more I tried to clamber out upon the side, the deeper I became involved;
+until at last I heard her declare, with a great deal of passion, that
+she would take that answer at the hands of none, and I must down upon my
+knees for pardon.
+
+The causelessness of all this fuff stirred my own bile. "I have said
+nothing you can properly object to," said I, "and as for my knees, that
+is an attitude I keep for God."
+
+"And as a goddess I am to be served!" she cried, shaking her brown locks
+at me and with a bright colour. "Every man that comes within waft of my
+petticoats shall use me so!"
+
+"I will go so far as ask your pardon for the fashion's sake, although I
+vow I know not why," I replied. "But for these play-acting postures, you
+can go to others."
+
+"O Davie!" she said. "Not if I was to beg you?"
+
+I bethought me I was fighting with a woman, which is the same as to say
+a child, and that upon a point entirely formal.
+
+"I think it a bairnly thing," I said, "not worthy in you to ask, or me
+to render. Yet I will not refuse you, neither," said I; "and the stain,
+if there be any, rests with yourself." And at that I kneeled fairly
+down.
+
+"There!" she cried. "There is the proper station, there is where I have
+been manoeuvring to bring you." And then, suddenly, "Kep,"[21] said she,
+flung me a folded billet, and ran from the apartment laughing.
+
+The billet had neither place nor date. "Dear Mr. David," it began, "I
+get your news continually by my cousin, Miss Grant, and it is a pleisand
+hearing. I am very well, in a good place, among good folk, but
+necessitated to be quite private, though I am hoping that at long last
+we may meet again. All your friendships have been told me by my loving
+cousin, who loves us both. She bids me to send you this writing, and
+oversees the same. I will be asking you to do all her commands, and rest
+your affectionate friend, Catriona Macgregor-Drummond. P.S.--Will you
+not see my cousin, Allardyce?"
+
+I think it not the least brave of my campaigns (as the soldiers say)
+that I should have done as I was here bidden and gone forthright to the
+house by Dean. But the old lady was now entirely changed and supple as a
+glove. By what means Miss Grant had brought this round I could never
+guess; I am sure at least, she dared not to appear openly in the affair,
+for her papa was compromised in it pretty deep. It was he, indeed, who
+had persuaded Catriona to leave, or rather, not to return, to her
+cousin's, placing her instead with a family of Gregorys, decent people,
+quite at the Advocate's disposition, and in whom she might have the more
+confidence because they were of her own clan and family. These kept her
+private till all was ripe, heated and helped her to attempt her father's
+rescue, and after she was discharged from prison received her again into
+the same secrecy. Thus Prestongrange obtained and used his instrument;
+nor did there leak out the smallest word of his acquaintance with the
+daughter of James More. There was some whispering, of course, upon the
+escape of that discredited person; but the Government replied by a show
+of rigour, one of the cell porters was flogged, the lieutenant of the
+guard (my poor friend, Duncansby) was broken of his rank, and as for
+Catriona, all men were well enough pleased that her fault should be
+passed by in silence.
+
+I could never induce Miss Grant to carry back an answer. "No," she would
+say, when I persisted, "I am going to keep the big feet out of the
+platter." This was the more hard to bear, as I was aware she saw my
+little friend many times in the week, and carried her my news whenever
+(as she said) I "had behaved myself." At last she treated me to what she
+called an indulgence, and I thought rather more of a banter. She was
+certainly a strong, almost a violent friend, to all she liked; chief
+among whom was a certain frail old gentlewoman, very blind, and very
+witty, who dwelt in the top of a tall land on a strait close, with a
+nest of linnets in a cage, and thronged all day with visitors. Miss
+Grant was very fond to carry me there and put me to entertain her friend
+with the narrative of my misfortunes; and Miss Tibbie Ramsay (that was
+her name) was particular kind, and told me a great deal that was worth
+knowledge of old folks and past affairs in Scotland. I should say that
+from her chamber window, and not three feet away, such is the straitness
+of that close, it was possible to look into a barred loophole lighting
+the stairway of the opposite house.
+
+Here, upon some pretext, Miss Grant left me one day alone with Miss
+Ramsay. I mind I thought that lady inattentive and like one preoccupied.
+I was besides yery uncomfortable, for the window, contrary to custom,
+was left open and the day was cold. All at once the voice of Miss Grant
+sounded in my ears as from a distance.
+
+"Here, Shaws!" she cried, "keek out of the window and see what I have
+broughten you."
+
+I think it was the prettiest sight that ever I beheld; the well of the
+close was all in clear shadow where a man could see distinctly, the
+walls very black and dingy; and there from the barred loophole I saw two
+faces smiling across at me--Miss Grant's and Catriona's.
+
+"There!" says Miss Grant, "I wanted her to see you in your braws like
+the lass of Limekilns. I wanted her to see what I could make of you,
+when I buckled to the job in earnest!"
+
+It came in my mind she had been more than common particular that day
+upon my dress: and I think that some of the same care had been bestowed
+upon Catriona. For so merry and sensible a lady, Miss Grant was
+certainly wonderful taken up with duds.
+
+"Catriona!" was all I could get out.
+
+As for her, she said nothing in the world, but only waved her hand and
+smiled to me, and was suddenly carried away again from before the
+loophole.
+
+The vision was no sooner lost than I ran to the house door, where I
+found I was locked in; thence back to Miss Ramsay, crying for the key,
+but might as well have cried upon the castle rock. She had passed her
+word, she said, and I must be a good lad. It was impossible to burst the
+door, even if it had been mannerly; it was impossible I should leap from
+the window, being seven storeys above ground. All I could do was to
+crane over the close and watch for their reappearance from the stair. It
+was little to see, being no more than the tops of their two heads each
+on a ridiculous bobbin of skirts, like to a pair of pincushions. Nor did
+Catriona so much as look up for a farewell; being prevented (as I heard
+afterwards) by Miss Grant, who told her folk were never seen to less
+advantage than from above downward.
+
+On the way home, as soon as I was set free, I upbraided Miss Grant with
+her cruelty.
+
+"I am sorry you was disappointed," says she demurely. "For my part I was
+very pleased. You looked better than I dreaded; you looked--if it will
+not make you vain--a mighty pretty young man when you appeared in the
+window. You are to remember that she could not see your feet," says she,
+with the manner of one reassuring me.
+
+"O!" cried I, "leave my feet be, they are no bigger than my neighbor's."
+
+"They are even smaller than some," said she, "but I speak in parables
+like a Hebrew prophet."
+
+"I marvel little they were sometimes stoned!" says I. "But you miserable
+girl, how could you do it? Why should you care to tantalise me with a
+moment?"
+
+"Love is like folk," says she, "it needs some kind of vivers."[22]
+
+"O, Barbara, let me see her properly!" I pleaded. "_You_ can, you see
+her when you please; let me have half an hour."
+
+"Who is it that is managing this love affair? You? Or me?" she asked,
+and as I continued to press her with my instances, fell back upon a
+deadly expedient: that of imitating the tones of my voice when I called
+on Catriona by name; with which, indeed, she held me in subjection for
+some days to follow.
+
+There was never the least word heard of the memorial, or none by me.
+Prestongrange and his grace the Lord President may have heard of it (for
+what I know) on the deafest sides of their heads; they kept it to
+themselves, at least; the public was none the wiser; and in course of
+time, on November 8th, and in the midst of a prodigious storm of wind
+and rain, poor James of the Glens was duly hanged at Lettermore by
+Balachulish.
+
+So there was the final upshot of my politics! Innocent men have perished
+before James, and are like to keep on perishing (in spite of all our
+wisdom) till the end of time. And till the end of time, young folk (who
+are not yet used with the duplicity of life and men) will struggle as I
+did, and make heroical resolves, and take long risks; and the course of
+events will push them upon the one side and go on like a marching army.
+James was hanged; and here was I dwelling in the house of Prestongrange,
+and grateful to him for his fatherly attention. He was hanged; and
+behold! When I met Mr. Symon in the causeway, I was fain to pull off my
+beaver to him like a good little boy before his dominie. He had been
+hanged by fraud and violence, and the world wagged along, and there was
+not a pennyweight of difference; and the villains of that horrid plot
+were decent, kind, respectable fathers of families, who went to kirk and
+took the sacrament!
+
+But I had had my view of that detestable business they call politics--I
+had seen it from behind, when it is all bones and blackness; and I was
+cured for life of any temptations to take part in it again. A plain,
+quiet, private path was that which I was ambitious to walk in, when I
+might keep my head out of the way of dangers and my conscience out of
+the road of temptation. For, upon a retrospect, it appeared I had not
+done so grandly, after all; but with the greatest possible amount of big
+speech and preparation, had accomplished nothing.
+
+The 25th of the same month, a ship was advertised to sail from Leith;
+and I was suddenly recommended to make up my mails for Leyden. To
+Prestongrange I could, of course, say nothing; for I had already been a
+long while sorning on his house and table. But with his daughter I was
+more open, bewailing my fate that I should be sent out of the country,
+and assuring her, unless she should bring me to farewell with Catriona,
+I would refuse at the last hour.
+
+"Have I not given you my advice?" she asked.
+
+"I know you have," said I, "and I know how much I am beholden to you
+already, and that I am bidden to obey your orders. But you must confess
+you are something too merry a lass at times to lippen[23] to entirely."
+
+"I will tell you, then," said she. "Be you on board at nine o'clock
+forenoon; the ship does not sail before one; keep your boat alongside;
+and if you are not pleased with my farewells when I shall send them, you
+can come ashore again and seek Katrine for yourself."
+
+Since I could make no more of her, I was fain to be content with this.
+
+The day came round at last when she and I were to separate. We had been
+extremely intimate and familiar; I was much in her debt; and what way we
+were to part was a thing that put me from my sleep, like the vails I was
+to give to the domestic servants. I knew she considered me too backward,
+and rather desired to rise in her opinion on that head. Besides which,
+after so much affection shown and (I believe) felt upon both sides, it
+would have looked cold-like to be anyways stiff. Accordingly, I got my
+courage up and my words ready, and the last chance we were like to be
+alone, asked pretty boldly to be allowed to salute her in farewell.
+
+"You forget yourself strangely, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I cannot call
+to mind that I had given you any right to presume on our acquaintancy."
+
+I stood before her like a stopped clock, and knew not what to think, far
+less to say, when of a sudden she cast her arms about my neck and kissed
+me with the best will in the world.
+
+"You inimitable bairn!" she cried. "Did you think that I would let us
+part like strangers? Because I can never keep my gravity at you five
+minutes on end, you must not dream I do not love you very well; I am all
+love and laughter, every time I cast an eye on you! And now I will give
+you an advice to conclude your education, which you will have need of
+before its very long. Never _ask_ women-folk. They're bound to answer
+'No'; God never made the lass that could resist the temptation. It's
+supposed by divines to be the curse of Eve; because she did not say it
+when the devil offered her the apple, her daughters can say nothing
+else."
+
+"Since I am so soon to lose my bonny professor," I began.
+
+"This is gallant, indeed," says she curtseying.
+
+"--I would put the one question," I went on; "May I ask a lass to marry
+me?"
+
+"You think you could not marry her without?" she asked. "Or else get her
+to offer?"
+
+"You see you cannot be serious," said I.
+
+"I shall be very serious in one thing, David," said she. "I shall always
+be your friend."
+
+As I got to my horse the next morning, the four ladies were all at the
+same window whence we had once looked down on Catriona, and all cried
+farewell and waved their pocket napkins as I rode away; one out of the
+four I knew was truly sorry; and at the thought of that, and how I had
+come to the door three months ago for the first time, sorrow and
+gratitude made a confusion in my mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+FATHER AND DAUGHTER
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND
+
+
+The ship lay at a single anchor, well outside the pier of Leith, so that
+all we passengers must come to it by the means of skiffs. This was very
+little troublesome, for the reason that the day was a flat calm, very
+frosty and cloudy, and with a low shifting fog upon the water. The body
+of the vessel was thus quite hid as I drew near, but the tall spars of
+her stood high and bright in a sunshine like the flickering of a fire.
+She proved to be a very roomy, commodious merchant, but somewhat blunt
+in the bows, and loaden extraordinary deep with salt, salted salmon, and
+fine white linen stockings for the Dutch. Upon my coming on board, the
+captain welcomed me, one Sang (out of Lesmahago, I believe), a very
+hearty, friendly tarpauling of a man, but at the moment in rather of a
+bustle. There had no other of the passengers yet appeared, so that I was
+left to walk about upon the deck, viewing the prospect and wondering a
+good deal what these farewells should be which I was promised.
+
+All Edinburgh and the Pentland Hills glinted above me in a kind of
+smuisty brightness, now and again overcome with blots of cloud; of Leith
+there was no more than the tops of chimneys visible, and on the face of
+the water, where the haar[24] lay, nothing at all. Out of this I was
+presently aware of a sound of oars pulling, and a little after (as if
+out of the smoke of a fire) a boat issued. There sat a grave man in the
+stern sheets, well muffled from the cold, and by his side a tall,
+pretty, tender figure of a maid that brought my heart to a stand. I had
+scarce the time to catch my breath in, and be ready to meet her, as she
+stepped upon the deck, smiling, and making my best bow, which was now
+vastly finer than some months before when I first made it to her
+ladyship. No doubt we were both a good deal changed; she seemed to have
+shot up taller, like a young, comely tree. She had now a kind of pretty
+backwardness that became her well, as of one that regarded herself more
+highly and was fairly woman; and for another thing, the hand of the same
+magician had been at work upon the pair of us, and Miss Grant had made
+us both _braw_, if she could make but the one _bonny_.
+
+The same cry, in words not very different, came from both of us, that
+the other was come in compliment to say farewell, and then we perceived
+in a flash we were to ship together.
+
+"O, why will not Baby have been telling me!" she cried; and then
+remembered a letter she had been given, on the condition of not opening
+it till she was well on board. Within was an enclosure for myself, and
+ran thus:
+
+
+ "DEAR DAVIE,--What do you think of my farewell? and what
+ do you say to your fellow-passenger? Did you kiss, or did you
+ ask? I was about to have signed here, but that would leave the
+ purport of my question doubtful; and in my own case _I ken the
+ answer_. So fill up here with good advice. Do not be too
+ blate,[25]
+ and for God's sake do not try to be too forward; nothing sets
+ you
+ worse. I am
+
+ "Your affectionate friend and governess,
+
+ "BARBARA GRANT."
+
+
+I wrote a word of answer and compliment on a leaf out of my pocketbook,
+put it in with another scratch from Catriona, sealed the whole with my
+new signet of the Balfour arms, and despatched it by the hand of
+Prestongrange's servant that still waited in my boat.
+
+Then we had time to look upon each other more at leisure, which we had
+not done for a piece of a minute before (upon a common impulse) we shook
+hands again.
+
+"Catriona!" said I; it seemed that was the first and last word of my
+eloquence.
+
+"You will be glad to see me again?" says she.
+
+"And I think that is an idle word," said I. "We are too deep friends to
+make speech upon such trifles."
+
+"Is she not the girl of all the world?" she cried again. "I was never
+knowing such a girl, so honest and so beautiful."
+
+"And yet she cared no more for Alpin than what she did for a
+kale-stock," said I.
+
+"Ah, she will say so indeed!" cries Catriona. "Yet it was for the name
+and the gentle kind blood that she took me up and was so good to me."
+
+"Well, I will tell you why it was," said I. "There are all sorts of
+people's faces in this world. There is Barbara's face, that everyone
+must look at and admire, and think her a fine, brave, merry girl. And
+then there is your face, which is quite different, I never knew how
+different till to-day. You cannot see yourself, and that is why you do
+not understand; but it was for the love of your face that she took you
+up and was so good to you. And everybody in the world would do the
+same."
+
+"Everybody?" says she.
+
+"Every living soul!" said I.
+
+"Ah, then, that will be why the soldiers at the castle took me up!" she
+cried.
+
+"Barbara has been teaching you to catch me," said I.
+
+"She will have taught me more than that at all events. She will have
+taught me a great deal about Mr. David--all the ill of him, and a little
+that was not so ill either now and then," she said, smiling. "She will
+have told me all there was of Mr. David, only just that he would sail
+upon this very same ship. And why is it you go?"
+
+I told her.
+
+"Ah, well," said she, "we will be some days in company and then (I
+suppose) good-bye for altogether! I go to meet my father at a place of
+the name of Helvoetsluys, and from there to France, to be exiles by the
+side of our chieftain."
+
+I could say no more than just "O!" the name of James More always drying
+up my very voice.
+
+She was quick to perceive it, and to guess some portion of my thought.
+
+"There is one thing I must be saying first of all, Mr. David," said she.
+"I think two of my kinsfolk have not behaved to you altogether very
+well. And the one of them two is James More, my father, and the other is
+the Laird of Prestongrange. Prestongrange will have spoken by himself,
+or his daughter in the place of him. But for James More, my father, I
+have this much to say: he lay shackled in a prison; he is a plain honest
+soldier and a plain Highland gentleman; what they would be after, he
+never would be guessing; but if he had understood it was to be some
+prejudice to a young gentleman like yourself, he would have died first.
+And for the sake of all your friendships, I will be asking you to pardon
+my father and family for that same mistake."
+
+"Catriona," said I, "what that mistake was I do not care to know. I know
+but the one thing, that you went to Prestongrange and begged my life
+upon your knees. O, I ken well it was for your father that you went, but
+when you were there you pleaded for me also. It is a thing I cannot
+speak of. There are two things I cannot think of in to myself; and the
+one is your good words when you called yourself my little friend, and
+the other that you pleaded for my life. Let us never speak more, we two,
+of pardon or offence."
+
+We stood after that silent, Catriona looking on the deck and I on her;
+and before there was more speech, a little wind having sprung up, in the
+nor'-west, they began to shake out the sails and heave in upon the
+anchor.
+
+There were six passengers besides our two selves, which made of it a
+full cabin. Three were solid merchants out of Leith, Kirkaldy, and
+Dundee, all engaged in the same adventure into High Germany; one was a
+Hollander returning; the rest worthy merchants' wives, to the charge of
+one of whom Catriona was recommended. Mrs. Grebbie (for that was her
+name) was by great good fortune heavily incommoded by the sea, and lay
+day and night on the broad of her back. We were besides the only
+creatures at all young on board the _Rose_, except a white-faced boy
+that did my old duty to attend upon the table; and it came about that
+Catriona and I were left almost entirely to ourselves. We had the next
+seats together at the table, where I waited on her with extraordinary
+pleasure. On deck, I made her a soft place with my cloak; and the
+weather being singularly fine for that season, with bright frosty days
+and nights, a steady, gentle wind, and scarce a sheet started all the
+way through the North Sea, we sat there (only now and again walking to
+and fro for warmth) from the first blink of the sun till eight or nine
+at night under the clear stars. The merchants or Captain Sang would
+sometimes glance and smile upon us, or pass a merry word or two and give
+us the go-by again; but the most part of the time they were deep in
+herring and chintzes and linen, or in computations of the slowness of
+the passage, and left us to our own concerns, which were very little
+important to any but ourselves.
+
+At the first, we had a great deal to say, and thought ourselves pretty
+witty; and I was at a little pains to be the _beau_, and she (I believe)
+to play the young lady of experience. But soon we grew plainer with each
+other; I laid aside my high, clipped English (what little there was of
+it) and forgot to make my Edinburgh bows and scrapes; she upon her side,
+fell into a sort of kind familiarity; and we dwelt together like those
+of the same household, only (upon my side) with a more deep emotion.
+About the same time, the bottom seemed to fall out of our conversation,
+and neither one of us the less pleased. Whiles she would tell me old
+wives' tales, of which she had a wonderful variety, many of them from my
+friend red-headed Niel. She told them very pretty, and they were pretty
+enough childish tales; but the pleasure to myself was in the sound of
+her voice, and the thought that she was telling and I listening. Whiles,
+again, we would sit entirely silent, not communicating even with a look,
+and tasting pleasure enough in the sweetness of that neighbourhood. I
+speak here only for myself. Of what was in the maid's mind, I am not
+very sure that ever I asked myself; and what was in my own, I was afraid
+to consider. I need make no secret of it now, either to myself or to the
+reader: I was fallen totally in love. She came between me and the sun.
+She had grown suddenly taller, as I say, but with a wholesome growth;
+she seemed all health, and lightness, and brave spirits; and I thought
+she walked like a young deer, and stood like a birch upon the mountains.
+It was enough for me to sit near by her on the deck; and I declare I
+scarce spent two thoughts upon the future, and was so well content with
+what I then enjoyed that I was never at the pains to imagine any further
+step; unless perhaps that I would be sometimes tempted to take her hand
+in mine and hold it there. But I was too like a miser of what joys I had
+and would venture nothing on a hazard.
+
+What we spoke was usually of ourselves or of each other, so that if
+anyone had been at so much pains as overhear us, he must have supposed
+us the most egotistical persons in the world. It befell one day when we
+were at this practice, that we came on a discourse of friends and
+friendship, and I think now that we were sailing near the wind. We said
+what a fine thing friendship was, and how little we had guessed of it,
+and how it made life a new thing, and a thousand covered things of the
+same kind that will have been said, since the foundation of the world,
+by young folk in the same predicament. Then we remarked upon the
+strangeness of that circumstance, that friends came together in the
+beginning as if they were there for the first time, and yet each had
+been alive a good while, losing time with other people.
+
+"It is not much that I have done," said she, "and I could be telling you
+the five-fifths of it in two-three words. It is only a girl I am, and
+what can befall a girl, at all events? But I went with the clan in the
+year '45. The men marched with swords and firelocks, and some of them in
+brigades in the same set of tartan; they were not backward at the
+marching, I can tell you. And there were gentlemen from the Low Country,
+with their tenants mounted and trumpets to sound, and there was a grand
+skirling of war-pipes. I rode on a little Highland horse on the right
+hand of my father, James More, and of Glengyle himself. And here is one
+fine thing that I remember, that Glengyle kissed me in the face, because
+(says he) 'my kinswoman, you are the only lady of the clan that has come
+out,' and me a little maid of maybe twelve years old! I saw Prince
+Charlie too, and the blue eyes of him; he was pretty indeed! I had his
+hand to kiss in the front of the army. O, well, these were the good
+days, but it is all like a dream that I have seen and then awakened. It
+went what way you very well know; and these were the worst days of all,
+when the red-coat soldiers were out, and my father and my uncles lay in
+the hill, and I was to be carrying them their meat in the middle night,
+or at the short side of day when the cocks crow. Yes, I have walked in
+the night, many's the time, and my heart great in me for terror of the
+darkness. It is a strange thing I will never have been meddled with a
+bogle; but they say a maid goes safe. Next there was my uncle's
+marriage, and that was a dreadful affair beyond all. Jean Kay was that
+woman's name; and she had me in the room with her that night at
+Inversnaid, the night we took her from her friends in the old, ancient
+manner. She would and she wouldn't; she was for marrying Rob the one
+minute, and the next she would be for none of him. I will never have
+seen such a feckless creature of a woman; surely all there was of her
+would tell her ay or no. Well, she was a widow, and I can never be
+thinking a widow a good woman."
+
+"Catriona!" says I, "how do you make out that?"
+
+"I do not know," said she; "I am only telling you the seeming in my
+heart. And then to marry a new man! Fy! But that was her; and she was
+married again upon my Uncle Robin, and went with him awhile to kirk and
+market; and then wearied, or else her friends got claught of her and
+talked her round, or maybe she turned ashamed; at the least of it, she
+ran away, and went back to her own folk, and said we had held her in the
+lake, and I will never tell you all what. I have never thought much of
+any females since that day. And so in the end my father, James More,
+came to be cast in prison, and you know the rest of it as well as me."
+
+"And through all you had no friends?" said I.
+
+"No," said she; "I have been pretty chief with two-three lasses on the
+braes, but not to call it friends."
+
+"Well, mine is a plain tale," said I. "I never had a friend to my name
+till I met in with you."
+
+"And that brave Mr. Stewart?" she asked.
+
+"O, yes, I was forgetting him," I said. "But he is a man, and that is
+very different."
+
+"I would think so," said she. "O, yes, it is quite different."
+
+"And then there was one other," said I. "I once thought I had a friend,
+but it proved a disappointment."
+
+She asked me who she was?
+
+"It was a he, then," said I. "We were the two best lads at my father's
+school, and we thought we loved each other dearly. Well, the time came
+when he went to Glasgow to a merchant's house, that was his second
+cousin once removed; and wrote me two-three times by the carrier; and
+then he found new friends, and I might write till I was tired, he took
+no notice. Eh, Catriona, it took me a long while to forgive the world.
+There is not anything more bitter than to lose a fancied friend."
+
+Then she began to question me close upon his looks and character, for we
+were each a great deal concerned in all that touched the other; till at
+last, in a very evil hour, I minded of his letters and went and fetched
+the bundle from the cabin.
+
+"Here are his letters," said I, "and all the letters that ever I got.
+That will be the last I'll can tell of myself; you know the lave[26] as
+well as I do."
+
+"Will you let me read them, then?" says she.
+
+I told her, _if she would be at the pains_; and she bade me go away and
+she would read them from the one end to the other. Now, in this bundle
+that I gave her, there were packed together not only all the letters of
+my false friend, but one or two of Mr. Campbell's when he was in town at
+the Assembly, and to make a complete roll of all that ever was written
+to me, Catriona's little word, and the two I had received from Miss
+Grant, one when I was on the Bass and one on board that ship. But of
+these last I had no particular mind at the moment.
+
+I was in that state of subjection to the thought of my friend that it
+mattered not what I did, nor scarce whether I was in her presence or out
+of it; I had caught her like some kind of a noble fever that lived
+continually in my bosom, by night and by day, and whether I was waking
+or asleep. So it befell that after I was come into the fore-part of the
+ship where the broad bows splashed into the billows, I was in no such
+hurry to return as you might fancy; rather prolonged my absence like a
+variety in pleasure. I do not think I am by nature much of an Epicurean;
+and there had come till then so small a share of pleasure in my way that
+I might be excused perhaps to dwell on it unduly.
+
+When I returned to her again, I had a faint, painful impression as of a
+buckle slipped, so coldly she returned the packet.
+
+"You have read them?" said I; and I thought my voice sounded not wholly
+natural, for I was turning in my mind for what could ail her.
+
+"Did you mean me to read all?" she asked.
+
+I told her "Yes," with a drooping voice.
+
+"The last of them as well?" said she.
+
+I knew where we were now; yet I would not lie to her either. "I gave
+them all without after-thought," I said, "as I supposed that you would
+read them. I see no harm in any."
+
+"I will be differently made," said she. "I thank God I am differently
+made. It was not a fit letter to be shown me. It was not fit to be
+written."
+
+"I think you are speaking of your own friend, Barbara Grant?" said I.
+
+"There will not be anything as bitter as to lose a fancied friend," said
+she, quoting my own expression.
+
+"I think it is sometimes the friendship that was fancied!" I cried.
+"What kind of justice do you call this, to blame me for some words that
+a tomfool of a madcap lass has written down upon a piece of paper? You
+know yourself with what respect I have behaved--and would do always."
+
+"Yet you would show me that same letter!" says she. "I want no such
+friends. I can be doing very well, Mr. Balfour, without her--or you."
+
+"This is your fine gratitude!" says I.
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," said she. "I will be asking you to take
+away your--letters." She seemed to choke upon the word, so that it
+sounded like an oath.
+
+"You shall never ask twice," said I; picked up that bundle, walked a
+little way forward and cast them as far as possible into the sea. For a
+very little more, I could have cast myself after them.
+
+The rest of the day I walked up and down raging. There were few names so
+ill but what I gave her them in my own mind before the sun went down.
+All that I had ever heard of Highland pride seemed quite outdone; that a
+girl (scarce grown) should resent so trifling an allusion, and that from
+her next friend, that she had near wearied me with praising of! I had
+bitter, sharp, hard thoughts of her, like an angry boy's. If I had
+kissed her indeed (I thought), perhaps she would have taken it pretty
+well; and only because it had been written down, and with a spice of
+jocularity, up she must fuff in this ridiculous passion. It seemed to me
+there was a want of penetration in the female sex, to make angels weep
+over the case of the poor men.
+
+We were side by side again at supper, and what a change was there! She
+was like curdled milk to me; her face was like a wooden doll's; I could
+have indifferently smitten her or grovelled at her feet, but she gave me
+not the least occasion to do either. No sooner the meal done than she
+betook herself to attend on Mrs. Gebbie, which I think she had a little
+neglected heretofore. But she was to make up for lost time, and in what
+remained of the passage was extraordinary assiduous with the old lady,
+and on deck began to make a great deal more than I thought wise of
+Captain Sang. Not but what the captain seemed a worthy, fatherly man;
+but I hated to behold her in the least familiarity with anyone except
+myself.
+
+Altogether, she was so quick to avoid me, and so constant to keep
+herself surrounded with others, that I must watch a long while before I
+could find my opportunity; and after it was found, I made not much of
+it, as you are now to hear.
+
+"I have no guess how I have offended," said I; "it should scarce be
+beyond pardon, then. O, try if you can pardon me."
+
+"I have no pardon to give," said she; and the words seemed to come out
+of her throat like marbles. "I will be very much obliged for all your
+friendships." And she made me an eight part of a curtsey.
+
+But I had schooled myself beforehand to say more, and I was going to say
+it too.
+
+"There is one thing," said I. "If I have shocked your particularity by
+the showing of that letter, it cannot touch Miss Grant. She wrote not to
+you, but to a poor, common, ordinary lad, who might have had more sense
+than show it. If you are to blame me--"
+
+"I will advise you to say no more about that girl, at all events!" said
+Catriona. "It is her I will never look the road of, not if she lay
+dying." She turned away from me, and suddenly back. "Will you swear you
+will have no more to deal with her?" she cried.
+
+"Indeed, and I will never be so unjust then," said I; "nor yet so
+ungrateful."
+
+And now it was I that turned away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HELVOETSLUYS
+
+
+The weather in the end considerably worsened; the wind sang in the
+shrouds, the sea swelled higher, and the ship began to labour and cry
+out among the billows. The song of the leadsman in the chains was now
+scarce ceasing, for we thrid all the way among shoals. About nine in the
+morning, in a burst of wintry sun between two squalls of hail, I had my
+first look of Holland--a line of windmills birling in the breeze. It was
+besides my first knowledge of these daft-like contrivances, which gave
+me a near sense of foreign travel and a new world and life. We came to
+an anchor about half-past eleven, outside the harbour of Helvoetsluys,
+in a place where the sea sometimes broke and the ship pitched
+outrageously. You may be sure we were all on deck save Mrs. Gebbie, some
+of us in cloaks, others mantled in the ship's tarpaulins, all clinging
+on by ropes, and jesting the most like old sailor-folk that we could
+imitate.
+
+Presently a boat, that was backed like a partan-crab, came gingerly
+alongside, and the skipper of it hailed our master in the Dutch. Thence
+Captain Sang turned, very troubled like, to Catriona; and the rest of us
+crowding about, the nature of the difficulty was made plain to all. The
+_Rose_ was bound to the port of Rotterdam, whither the other passengers
+were in a great impatience to arrive, in view of a conveyance due to
+leave that very evening in the direction of the Upper Germany. This,
+with the present half-gale of wind, the captain (if no time were lost)
+declared himself still capable to save. Now James More had trysted in
+Helvoet with his daughter, and the captain had engaged to call before
+the port and place her (according to the custom) in a shore boat. There
+was the boat, to be sure, and there was Catriona ready: but both our
+master and the patroon of the boat scrupled at the risk, and the first
+was in no humour to delay.
+
+"Your father," said he, "would be gey an little pleased if we was to
+break a leg to ye, Miss Drummond, let-a-be drowning of you. Take my way
+of it," says he, "and come on-by with the rest of us here to Rotterdam.
+Ye can get a passage down the Maes in a sailing scoot as far to the
+Brill, and thence on again, by a place in a rattel-waggon, back to
+Helvoet."
+
+But Catriona would hear of no change. She looked white-like as she
+beheld the bursting of the sprays, the green seas that sometimes poured
+upon the forecastle, and the perpetual bounding and swooping of the boat
+among the billows; but she stood firmly by her father's orders. "My
+father, James More, will have arranged it so," was her first word and
+her last. I thought it very idle and indeed wanton in the girl to be so
+literal and stand opposite to so much kind advice; but the fact is she
+had a very good reason, if she would have told us. Sailing scoots and
+rattel-waggons are excellent things; only the use of them must first be
+paid for, and all she was possessed of in the world was just two
+shillings and a penny halfpenny sterling. So it fell out that captain
+and passengers, not knowing of her destitution--and she being too proud
+to tell them--spoke in vain.
+
+"But you ken nae French and nae Dutch neither," said one.
+
+"It is very true," says she, "but since the year '46 there are so many
+of the honest Scots abroad that I will be doing very well, I thank you."
+
+There was a pretty country simplicity in this that made some laugh,
+others looked the more sorry, and Mr. Gebbie fall outright in a passion.
+I believe he knew it was his duty (his wife having accepted charge of
+the girl) to have gone ashore with her and seen her safe; nothing would
+have induced him to have done so, since it must have involved the loss
+of his conveyance; and I think he made it up to his conscience by the
+loudness of his voice. At least he broke out upon Captain Sang, raging
+and saying the thing was a disgrace; that it was mere death to try to
+leave the ship, and at any event we could not cast down an innocent maid
+in a boatful of nasty Holland fishers, and leave her to her fate. I was
+thinking something of the same; took the mate upon one side, arranged
+with him to send on my chests by track-scoot to an address I had in
+Leyden, and stood up and signalled to the fishers.
+
+"I will go ashore with the young lady, Captain Sang," said I. "It is all
+one what way I go to Leyden;" and leaped at the same time into the boat,
+which I managed not so elegantly but what I fell with two of the fishers
+in the bilge.
+
+From the boat the business appeared yet more precarious than from the
+ship, she stood so high over us, swung down so swift, and menaced us so
+perpetually with her plunging and passaging upon the anchor cable. I
+began to think I had made a fool's bargain, that it was merely
+impossible Catriona should be got on board to me, and that I stood to be
+set ashore at Helvoet all by myself and with no hope of any reward but
+the pleasure of embracing James More, if I should want to. But this was
+to reckon without the lass's courage. She had seen me leap with very
+little appearance (however much reality) of hesitation; to be sure, she
+was not to be beat by her discarded friend. Up she stood on the bulwarks
+and held by a stay, the wind blowing in her petticoats, which made the
+enterprise more dangerous and gave us rather more of a view of her
+stockings than would be thought genteel in cities. There was no minute
+lost, and scarce time given for any to interfere if they had wished the
+same. I stood up on the other side and spread my arms; the ship swung
+down on us, the patroon humoured his boat nearer in than was perhaps
+wholly safe, and Catriona leaped into the air. I was so happy as to
+catch her, and the fishers readily supporting us, escaped a fall. She
+held to me a moment very tight, breathing quick and deep; thence (she
+still clinging to me with both hands) we were passed aft to our places
+by the steersman; and Captain Sang and all the crew and passengers
+cheering and crying farewell, the boat was put about for shore.
+
+As soon as Catriona came a little to herself she unhanded me suddenly
+but said no word. No more did I; and indeed the whistling of the wind
+and the breaching of the sprays made it no time for speech; and our crew
+not only toiled excessively but made extremely little way, so that the
+_Rose_ had got her anchor and was off again before we had approached the
+harbour mouth.
+
+We were no sooner in smooth water than the patroon, according to their
+beastly Hollands custom, stopped his boat and required of us our fares.
+Two guilders was the man's demand, between three and four shillings
+English money, for each passenger. But at this Catriona began to cry out
+with a vast deal of agitation. She had asked of Captain Sang, she said,
+and the fare was but an English shilling. "Do you think I will have come
+on board and not ask first?" cries she. The patroon scolded back upon
+her in a lingo where the oaths were English and the rest right Hollands;
+till at last (seeing her near tears) I privately slipped in the rogue's
+hand six shillings, whereupon he was obliging enough to receive from her
+the other shilling without more complaint. No doubt I was a good deal
+nettled and ashamed. I like to see folk thrifty but not with so much
+passion; and I daresay it would be rather coldly that I asked her, as
+the boat moved on again for shore, where it was that she was trysted
+with her father.
+
+"He is to be inquired of at the house of one Sprott, an honest Scotch
+merchant," says she; and then with the same breath, "I am wishing to
+thank you very much--you are a brave friend to me."
+
+"It will be time enough when I get you to your father," said I, little
+thinking that I spoke so true. "I can tell him a fine tale of a loyal
+daughter."
+
+"O, I do not think I will be a loyal girl, at all events," she cried,
+with a great deal of painfulness in the expression. "I do not think my
+heart is true."
+
+"Yet there are very few that would have made that leap, and all to obey
+a father's orders," I observed.
+
+"I cannot have you to be thinking of me so," she cried again. "When you
+had done that same, how would I stop behind? And at all events that was
+not all the reasons." Whereupon, with a burning face, she told me the
+plain truth upon her poverty.
+
+"Good guide us!" cried I, "what kind of daft-like proceeding is this, to
+let yourself be launched on the continent of Europe with an empty
+purse--I count it hardly decent--scant decent!" I cried.
+
+"You forget James More, my father, is a poor gentleman," said she. "He
+is a hunted exile."
+
+"But I think not all your friends are hunted exiles," I exclaimed. "And
+was this fair to them that care for you? Was it fair to me? was it fair
+to Miss Grant that counselled you to go, and would be driven fair
+horn-mad if she could hear of it? Was it even fair to these Gregory folk
+that you were living with, and used you lovingly? It's a blessing you
+have fallen in my hands! Suppose your father hindered by an accident,
+what would become of you here, and you your lee-alone in a strange
+place? The thought of the thing frightens me," I said.
+
+"I will have lied to all of them," she replied. "I will have told them
+all that I had plenty. I told _her_ too. I could not be lowering James
+More to them."
+
+I found out later on that she must have lowered him in the very dust,
+for the lie was originally the father's not the daughter's, and she thus
+obliged to persevere in it for the man's reputation. But at the time I
+was ignorant of this, and the mere thought of her destitution and the
+perils in which she must have fallen, had ruffled me almost beyond
+reason.
+
+"Well, well, well," said I, "you will have to learn more sense."
+
+I left her mails for the moment in an inn upon the shore, where I got a
+direction for Sprott's house in my new French, and we walked there--it
+was some little way--beholding the place with wonder as we went. Indeed,
+there was much for Scots folk to admire; canals and trees being
+intermingled with the houses; the houses, each within itself, of a brave
+red brick, the colour of a rose, with steps and benches of blue marble
+at the cheek of every door, and the whole town so clean you might have
+dined upon the causeway. Sprott was within, upon his ledgers, in a low
+parlour, very neat and clean, and set out with china and pictures and a
+globe of the earth in a brass frame. He was a big-chafted, ruddy, lusty
+man, with a crooked hard look to him; and he made us not that much
+civility as offer us a seat.
+
+"Is James More Macgregor now in Helvoet, sir?" says I.
+
+"I ken nobody by such a name," says he, impatient-like.
+
+"Since you are so particular," says I, "I will amend my question, and
+ask you where we are to find in Helvoet one James Drummond, _alias_
+Macgregor, _alias_ James More, late tenant in Iveronachile?"
+
+"Sir," says he, "he may be in Hell for what I ken, and for my part I
+wish he was."
+
+"The young lady is that gentleman's daughter, sir," said I, "before
+whom, I think you will agree with me, it is not very becoming to discuss
+his character."
+
+"I have nothing to make either with him, or her, or you!" cries he in
+his gross voice.
+
+"Under your favour, Mr. Sprott," said I, "this young lady is come from
+Scotland seeking him, and by whatever mistake, was given the name of
+your house for a direction. An error it seems to have been, but I think
+this places both you and me--who am but her fellow-traveller by
+accident--under a strong obligation to help our countrywoman."
+
+"Will you ding me daft?" he cries. "I tell ye I ken naething and care
+less either for him or his breed. I tell ye the man owes me money."
+
+"That may very well be, sir," said I, who was now rather more angry than
+himself. "At least I owe you nothing; the young lady is under my
+protection; and I am neither at all used with these manners, nor in the
+least content with them."
+
+As I said this, and without particularly thinking what I did, I drew a
+step or two nearer to his table; thus striking, by mere good fortune, on
+the only argument that could at all affect the man. The blood left his
+lusty countenance.
+
+"For the Lord's sake dinna be hasty, sir!" he cried. "I am truly wishfu'
+no to be offensive. But ye ken, sir, I'm like a wheen guid-natured,
+honest, canty auld fallows--my bark is waur nor my bite. To hear me, ye
+micht whiles fancy I was a wee thing dour; but na, na! its a kind auld
+fellow at heart, Sandie Sprott! And ye could never imagine the fyke and
+fash this man has been to me."
+
+"Very good, sir," said I. "Then I will make that much freedom with your
+kindness, as trouble you for your last news of Mr. Drummond."
+
+"You're welcome, sir!" said he. "As for the young leddy (my respec's to
+her!) he'll just have clean forgotten her. I ken the man, ye see; I have
+lost siller by him ere now. He thinks of naebody but just himsel'; clan,
+king, or dauchter, if he can get his wameful, he would give them a' the
+go-by! ay, or his correspondent either. For there is a sense in whilk I
+may be nearly almost said to be his correspondent. The fact is, we are
+employed thegether in a business affair, and I think it's like to turn
+out a dear affair for Sandie Sprott. The man's as guid's my pairtner,
+and I give ye my mere word I ken naething by where he is. He micht be
+coming here to Helvoet; he micht come here the morn, he michtnae come
+for a twalmonth; I would wonder at naething--or just at the ae thing,
+and that's if he was to pay me my siller. Ye see what way I stand with
+it; and it's clear I'm no very likely to meddle up with the young leddy,
+as ye ca' her. She cannae stop here, that's ae thing certain sure. Dod,
+sir, I'm a lone man! If I was to tak her in, its highly possible the
+hellicat would try and gar me marry her when he turned up."
+
+"Enough of this talk," said I. "I will take the young lady among better
+friends. Give me pen, ink, and paper, and I will leave here for James
+More the address of my correspondent in Leyden. He can inquire from me
+where he is to seek his daughter."
+
+This word I wrote and sealed; which while I was doing, Sprott of his own
+motion made a welcome offer, to charge himself with Miss Drummond's
+mails, and even send a porter for them to the inn. I advanced him to
+that effect a dollar or two to be a cover, and he gave me an
+acknowledgment in writing of the sum.
+
+Whereupon (I giving my arm to Catriona) we left the house of this
+unpalatable rascal. She had said no word throughout, leaving me to judge
+and speak in her place; I, upon my side, had been careful not to
+embarrass her by a glance; and even now although my heart still glowed
+inside of me with shame and anger, I made it my affair to seem quite
+easy.
+
+"Now," said I, "let us get back to yon same inn where they can speak the
+French, have a piece of dinner, and inquire for conveyances to
+Rotterdam. I will never be easy till I have you safe again in the hands
+of Mrs. Gebbie."
+
+"I suppose it will have to be," said Catriona, "though whoever will be
+pleased, I do not think it will be her. And I will remind you this once
+again that I have but one shilling, and three baubees."
+
+"And just this once again," said I, "I will remind you it was a blessing
+that I came alongst with you."
+
+"What else would I be thinking all this time!" says she, and I thought
+weighed a little on my arm. "It is you that are the good friend to me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+TRAVELS IN HOLLAND
+
+
+The rattel-wagon, which is a kind of a long wagon set with benches,
+carried us in four hours of travel to the great city of Rotterdam. It
+was long past dark by then, but the streets pretty brightly lighted and
+thronged with the wild-like, outlandish characters--bearded Hebrews,
+black men, and the hordes of courtesans, most indecently adorned with
+finery and stopping seamen by their very sleeves; the clash of talk
+about us made our heads to whirl; and what was the most unexpected of
+all, we appeared to be no more struck with all these foreigners than
+they with us. I made the best face I could, for the lass's sake and my
+own credit; but the truth is I felt like a lost sheep, and my heart beat
+in my bosom with anxiety. Once or twice I inquired after the harbor or
+the berth of the ship _Rose_; but either fell on some who spoke only
+Hollands, or my own French failed me. Trying a street at a venture, I
+came upon a lane of lighted houses, the doors and windows thronged with
+wauf-like painted women; these jostled and mocked upon us as we passed,
+and I was thankful we had nothing of their language. A little after we
+issued forth upon an open place along the harbour.
+
+"We shall be doing now," cries I, as soon as I spied masts. "Let us walk
+here by the harbour. We are sure to meet some that has the English, and
+at the best of it we may light upon that very ship."
+
+We did the next best, as happened; for about nine of the evening, whom
+should we walk into the arms of but Captain Sang? He told us they had
+made their run in the most incredible brief time, the wind holding
+strong until they reached port; by which means his passengers were all
+gone already on their further travels. It was impossible to chase after
+the Gebbies into High Germany, and we had no other acquaintance to fall
+back upon but Captain Sang himself. It was the more gratifying to find
+the man friendly and wishful to assist. He made it a small affair to
+find some good plain family of merchants, where Catriona might harbour
+till the _Rose_ was loaden; declared he would then blithely carry her
+back to Leith for nothing and see her safe in the hands of Mr. Gregory;
+and in the meanwhile carried us to a late ordinary for the meal we stood
+in need of. He seemed extremely friendly, as I say, but what surprised
+me a good deal, rather boisterous in the bargain; and the cause of this
+was soon to appear. For at the ordinary, calling for Rhenish wine and
+drinking of it deep, he soon became unutterably tipsy. In, this case, as
+too common with all men, but especially with those of his rough trade,
+what little sense or manners he possessed deserted him; and he behaved
+himself so scandalous to the young lady, jesting most ill-favoredly at
+the figure she had made on the ship's rail, that I had no resource but
+carry her suddenly away.
+
+She came out of that ordinary clinging to me close. "Take me away,
+David," she said. "_You_ keep me. I am not afraid with you."
+
+"And have no cause, my little friend!" cried I, and could have found it
+in my heart to weep.
+
+"Where will you be taking me?" she said again. "Don't leave me at all
+events, never leave me."
+
+"Where am I taking you indeed?" says I stopping, for I had been staving
+on ahead in mere blindness. "I must stop and think. But I'll not leave
+you, Catriona; the Lord do so to me, and more also, if I should fail or
+fash you."
+
+She crept closer in to me by way of a reply.
+
+"Here," I said, "is the stillest place that we have hit on yet in this
+busy byke of a city. Let us sit down here under yon tree and consider of
+our course."
+
+That tree (which I am little like to forget) stood hard by the harbour
+side. It was a black night, but lights were in the houses, and nearer
+hand in the quiet ships; there was a shining of the city on the one
+hand, and a buzz hung over it of many thousands walking and talking; on
+the other, it was dark and the water bubbled on the sides. I spread my
+cloak upon a builder's stone, and made her sit there; she would have
+kept her hold upon me, for she still shook with the late affronts; but I
+wanted to think clear, disengaged myself, and paced to and fro before
+her, in the manner of what we call a smuggler's walk, belabouring my
+brains for any remedy. By the course of these scattering thoughts I was
+brought suddenly face to face with a remembrance that, in the heat and
+haste of our departure, I had left Captain Sang to pay the ordinary. At
+this I began to laugh out loud, for I thought the man well served; and
+at the same time, by an instinctive movement, carried my hand to the
+pocket where my money was. I suppose it was in the lane where the women
+jostled us; but there is only the one thing certain, that my purse was
+gone.
+
+"You will have thought of something good," said she, observing me to
+pause.
+
+At the pinch we were in, my mind became suddenly clear as a perspective
+glass, and I saw there was no choice of methods. I had not one doit of
+coin, but in my pocket-book I had still my letter on the Leyden
+merchant; and there was now but the one way to get to Leyden, and that
+was to walk on our two feet.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I know you're brave and I believe you're strong, do
+you think you could walk thirty miles on a plain road?" We found it, I
+believe, scarce the two-thirds of that, but such was my notion of the
+distance.
+
+"David," she said, "if you will just keep near, I will go anywhere and
+do anything. The courage of my heart, it is all broken. Do not be
+leaving me in this horrible country by myself, and I will do all else."
+
+"Can you start now and march all night?" said I.
+
+"I will do all that you can ask of me," she said, "and never ask you
+why. I have been a bad ungrateful girl to you; and do what you please
+with me now! And I think Miss Barbara Grant is the best lady in the
+world," she added, "and I do not see what she would deny you for at all
+events."
+
+This was Greek and Hebrew to me; but I had other matters to consider,
+and the first of these was to get clear of that city on the Leyden road.
+It proved a cruel problem; and it may have been one or two at night ere
+we had solved it. Once beyond the houses, there was neither moon or
+stars to guide us; only the whiteness of the way in the midst and a
+blackness of an alley on both hands. The walking was besides made most
+extraordinary difficult by a plain black frost that fell suddenly in the
+small hours and turned that highway into one long slide.
+
+"Well, Catriona," said I, "here we are like the king's sons and the old
+wives' daughters in your daft-like Highland tales. Soon we'll be going
+over the '_seven Bens, the seven glens, and the seven mountain moors_.'"
+Which was a common byword or overcome in these tales of hers that had
+stuck in my memory.
+
+"Ah," says she, "but here are no glens or mountains! Though I will never
+be denying but what the trees and some of the plain places hereabouts
+are very pretty. But our country is the best yet."
+
+"I wish we could say as much for our own folk," says I, recalling Sprott
+and Sang, and perhaps James More himself.
+
+"I will never complain of the country of my friend," said she, and spoke
+it out with an accent so particular that I seemed to see the look upon
+her face.
+
+I caught in my breath sharp and came near falling (for my pains) on the
+black ice.
+
+"I do not know what _you_ think, Catriona," said I, when I was a little
+recovered, "but this has been the best day yet! I think shame to say it,
+when you have met in with such misfortunes and disfavours; but for me,
+it has been the best day yet."
+
+"It was a good day when you showed me so much love," said she.
+
+"And yet I think shame to be happy too," I went on, "and you here on the
+road in the black night."
+
+"Where in the great world would I be else?" she cried. "I am thinking I
+am safest where I am with you."
+
+"I am quite forgiven, then?" I asked.
+
+"Will you not forgive me that time so much as not to take it in your
+mouth again?" she cried. "There's is nothing in this heart to you but
+thanks. But I will be honest too," she added, with a kind of suddenness,
+"and I'll never can forgive that girl."
+
+"Is this Miss Grant again?" said I. "You said yourself she was the best
+lady in the world."
+
+"So she will be, indeed!" says Catriona. "But I will never forgive her
+for all that. I will never, never forgive her, and let me hear tell of
+her no more."
+
+"Well," said I, "this beats all that ever came to my knowledge; and I
+wonder that you can indulge yourself in such bairnly whims. Here is a
+young lady that was the best friend in the world to the both of us, that
+learned us how to dress ourselves, and in a great manner how to behave,
+as anyone can see that knew us both before and after."
+
+But Catriona stopped square in the midst of the highway.
+
+"It is this way of it," said she. "Either you will go on to speak of
+her, and I will go back to yon town, and let come of it what God
+pleases! Or else you will do me that politeness to talk of other
+things."
+
+I was the most nonplussed person in this world; but I bethought me that
+she depended altogether on my help, that she was of the frail sex and
+not so much beyond a child, and it was for me to be wise for the pair of
+us.
+
+"My dear girl," said I, "I can make neither head nor tails of this; but
+God forbid that I should do anything to set you on the jee. As for
+talking of Miss Grant I have no such a mind to it, and I believe it was
+yourself began it. My only design (if I took you up at all) was for your
+own improvement, for I hate the very look of injustice. Not that I do
+not wish you to have a good pride and a nice female delicacy; they
+become you well; but here you show them to excess."
+
+"Well, then, have you done?" said she.
+
+"I have done," said I.
+
+"A very good thing," said she, and we went on again, but now in silence.
+
+It was an eerie employment to walk in the gross night, beholding only
+shadows and hearing nought but our own steps. At first, I believe our
+hearts burned against each other with a deal of enmity; but the darkness
+and the cold, and the silence, which only the cocks sometimes
+interrupted, or sometimes the farmyard dogs, had pretty soon brought
+down our pride to the dust; and for my own particular, I would have
+jumped at any decent opening for speech.
+
+Before the day peeped, came on a warmish rain, and the frost was all
+wiped away from among our feet. I took my cloak to her and sought to hap
+her in the same; she bade me, rather impatiently, to keep it.
+
+"Indeed and I will do no such thing," said I. "Here am I, a great, ugly
+lad that has seen all kinds of weather, and here are you a tender,
+pretty maid! My dear, you would not put me to a shame?"
+
+Without more words she let me cover her; which as I was doing in the
+darkness, I let my hand rest a moment on her shoulder, almost like an
+embrace.
+
+"You must try to be more patient of your friend," said I.
+
+I thought she seemed to lean the least thing in the world against my
+bosom, or perhaps it was but fancy.
+
+"There will be no end to your goodness," said she.
+
+And we went on again in silence; but now all was changed; and the
+happiness that was in my heart was like a fire in a great chimney.
+
+The rain passed ere day; it was but a sloppy morning as we came into the
+town of Delft. The red gabled houses made a handsome show on either hand
+of a canal; the servant lassies were out slestering and scrubbing at the
+very stones upon the public highway; smoke rose from a hundred kitchens;
+and it came in upon me strongly it was time to break our fasts.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I believe you have yet a shilling and three
+baubees?"
+
+"Are you wanting it?" said she, and passed me her purse. "I am wishing
+it was five pounds! What will you want it for?"
+
+"And what have we been walking for all night, like a pair of waif
+Egyptians?" says I. "Just because I was robbed of my purse and all I
+possessed in that unchancy town of Rotterdam. I will tell you of it now,
+because I think the worst is over, but we have still a good tramp before
+us till we get to where my money is, and if you would not buy me a piece
+of bread, I were like to go fasting."
+
+She looked at me with open eyes. By the light of the new day she was all
+black and pale for weariness, so that my heart smote me for her. But as
+for her, she broke out laughing.
+
+"My torture! are we beggars then?" she cried. "You too? O, I could have
+wished for this same thing! And I am glad to buy your breakfast to you.
+But it would be pleisand if I would have had to dance to get a meal to
+you! For I believe they are not very well acquainted with our manner of
+dancing over here, and might be paying for the curiosity of that sight."
+
+I could have kissed her for that word, not with a lover's mind, but in a
+heat of admiration. For it always warms a man to see a woman brave.
+
+We got a drink of milk from a country wife but new come to the town, and
+in a baker's, a piece of excellent, hot, sweet-smelling bread, which we
+ate upon the road as we went on. That road from Delft to the Hague is
+just five miles of a fine avenue shaded with trees, a canal on the one
+hand, on the other excellent pastures of cattle. It was pleasant here
+indeed.
+
+"And now, Davie," said she, "what will you do with me at all events?"
+
+"It is what we have to speak of," said I, "and the sooner yet the
+better. I can come by money in Leyden; that will be all well. But the
+trouble is how to dispose of you until your father come. I thought last
+night you seemed a little sweir to part from me?"
+
+"It will be more than seeming then," said she.
+
+"You are a very young maid," said I, "and I am but a very young callant.
+This is a great piece of difficulty. What way are we to manage? Unless,
+indeed, you could pass to be my sister?"
+
+"And what for no?" said she, "if you would let me!"
+
+"I wish you were so, indeed!" I cried. "I would be a fine man if I had
+such a sister. But the rub is that you are Catriona Drummond."
+
+"And now I will be Catrine Balfour," she said. "And who is to ken? They
+are all strange folk here."
+
+"If you think that it would do," says I. "I own it troubles me. I would
+like it very ill, if I advised you at all wrong."
+
+"David, I have no friend here but you," she said.
+
+"The mere truth is, I am too young to be your friend," said I. "I am too
+young to advise you, or you to be advised. I see not what else we are to
+do, and yet I ought to warn you."
+
+"I will have no choice left," said she. "My father James More has not
+used me very well, and it is not the first time. I am cast upon your
+hands like a sack of barley meal, and have nothing else to think of but
+your pleasure. If you will have me, good and well. If you will not"--she
+turned and touched her hand upon my arm--"David, I am afraid," said she.
+
+"No, but I ought to warn you," I began; and then bethought me that I was
+the bearer of the purse, and it would never do to seem too churlish.
+"Catriona," said I, "don't misunderstand me: I am just trying to do my
+duty by you, girl! Here am I going alone to this strange city, to be a
+solitary student there; and here is this chance arisen that you might
+dwell with me a bit, and be like my sister: you can surely understand
+this much, my dear, that I would just love to have you?"
+
+"Well, and here I am," said she. "So that's soon settled."
+
+I know I was in duty bounden to have spoke more plain. I know this was a
+great blot on my character for which I was lucky that I did not pay more
+dear. But I minded how easy her delicacy had been startled with a word
+of kissing her in Barbara's letter; now that she depended on me, how was
+I to be more bold? Besides, the truth is, I could see no other feasible
+method to dispose of her. And I daresay inclination pulled me very
+strong.
+
+A little beyond the Hague she fell very lame and made the rest of the
+distance heavily enough. Twice she must rest by the wayside, which she
+did with pretty apologies, calling herself a shame to the Highlands and
+the race she came of, and nothing but a hindrance to myself. It was her
+excuse, she said, that she was not much used with walking shod. I would
+have had her strip off her shoes and stockings and go barefoot. But she
+pointed out to me that the women of that country, even in the landward
+roads, appeared to be all shod.
+
+"I must not be disgracing my brother," said she, and was very merry with
+it all, although her face told tales of her.
+
+There is a garden in that city we were bound to, sanded below with clean
+sand, the trees meeting overhead, some of them trimmed, some pleached,
+and the whole place beautified with alleys and arbours. Here I left
+Catriona, and went forward by myself to find my correspondent. There I
+drew on my credit, and asked to be recommended to some decent, retired
+lodging. My baggage not being yet arrived, I told him I supposed I
+should require his caution with the people of the house; and explained
+that, my sister being come for a while to keep house with me, I should
+be wanting two chambers. This was all very well; but the trouble was
+that Mr. Balfour in his letter of recommendation had condescended on a
+great deal of particulars, and never a word of any sister in the case. I
+could see my Dutchman was extremely suspicious; and viewing me over the
+rims of a great pair of spectacles--he was a poor, frail body, and
+reminded me of an infirm rabbit--he began to question me close.
+
+Here I fell in a panic. Suppose he accept my tale (thinks I), suppose he
+invite my sister to his house, and that I bring her. I shall have a fine
+ravelled pirn to unwind, and may end by disgracing both the lassie and
+myself. Thereupon I began hastily to expound to him my sister's
+character. She was of a bashful disposition, it appeared, and so
+extremely fearful of meeting strangers that I had left her at that
+moment sitting in a public place alone. And then, being launched upon
+the stream of falsehood, I must do like all the rest of the world in the
+same circumstance, and plunge in deeper than was any service; adding
+some altogether needless particulars of Miss Balfour's ill-health and
+retirement during childhood. In the midst of which I awoke to a sense of
+my behaviour, and was turned to one blush.
+
+The old gentleman was not so much deceived but what he discovered a
+willingness to be quit of me. But he was first of all a man of business;
+and knowing that my money was good enough, however it might be with my
+conduct, he was so far obliging as to send his son to be my guide and
+caution in the matter of a lodging. This implied my presenting of the
+young man to Catriona. The poor, pretty child was much recovered with
+resting, looked and behaved to perfection, and took my arm and gave me
+the name of brother more easily than I could answer her. But there was
+one misfortune: thinking to help, she was rather towardly than otherwise
+to my Dutchman. And I could not but reflect that Miss Balfour had rather
+suddenly outgrown her bashfulness. And there was another thing, the
+difference of our speech. I had the Low Country tongue and dwelled upon
+my words; she had a hill voice, spoke with something of an English
+accent, only far more delightful, and was scarce quite fit to be called
+a deacon in the craft of talking English grammar; so that, for a brother
+and sister, we made a most uneven pair. But the young Hollander was a
+heavy dog, without so much spirit in his belly as to remark her
+prettiness, for which I scorned him. And as soon as he had found a cover
+to our heads, he left us alone, which was the greater service of the
+two.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS
+
+
+The place found was in the upper part of a house backed on a canal. We
+had two rooms, the second entering from the first; each had a chimney
+built out into the floor in the Dutch manner; and being alongside, each
+had the same prospect from the window of the top of a tree below us in a
+little court, of a piece of the canal, and of houses in the Hollands
+architecture and a church spire upon the further side. A full set of
+bells hung in that spire and made delightful music; and when there was
+any sun at all, it shone direct in our two chambers. From a tavern hard
+by we had good meals sent in.
+
+The first night we were both pretty weary, and she extremely so. There
+was little talk between us, and I packed her off to her bed as soon as
+she had eaten. The first thing in the morning I wrote word to Sprott to
+have her mails sent on, together with a line to Alan at his chief's; and
+had the same dispatched, and her breakfast ready, ere I waked her. I was
+a little abashed when she came forth in her one habit, and the mud of
+the way upon her stockings. By what inquiries I had made, it seemed a
+good few days must pass before her mails could come to hand in Leyden,
+and it was plainly needful she must have a shift of things. She was
+unwilling at first that I should go to that expense; but I reminded her
+she was now a rich man's sister and must appear suitably in the part,
+and we had not got to the second merchant's before she was entirely
+charmed into the spirit of the thing, and her eyes shining. It pleased
+me to see her so innocent and thorough in this pleasure. What was more
+extraordinary was the passion into which I fell on it myself; being
+never satisfied that I had bought her enough or fine enough, and never
+weary of beholding her in different attires. Indeed, I began to
+understand some little of Miss Grant's immersion in that interest of
+clothes; for the truth is, when you have the ground of a beautiful
+person to adorn, the whole business becomes beautiful. The Dutch
+chintzes I should say were extraordinary cheap and fine; but I would be
+ashamed to set down what I paid for stockings to her. Altogether I spent
+so great a sum upon this pleasuring (as I may call it) that I was
+ashamed for a great while to spend more; and by way of a set off, I left
+our chambers pretty bare. If we had beds, if Catriona was a little braw,
+and I had light to see her by, we were richly enough lodged for me.
+
+By the end of this merchandising I was glad to leave her at the door
+with all our purchases, and go for a long walk alone in which to read
+myself a lecture. Here had I taken under my roof, and as good as to my
+bosom, a young lass extremely beautiful, and whose innocence was her
+peril. My talk with the old Dutchman, and the lies to which I was
+constrained, had already given me a sense of how my conduct must appear
+to others; and now, after the strong admiration I had just experienced
+and the immoderacy with which I had continued my vain purchases, I began
+to think of it myself as very hasarded. I bethought me, if I had a
+sister indeed, whether I would so expose her; then, judging the case too
+problematical, I varied my question into this, whether I would so trust
+Catriona in the hands of any other Christian being: the answer to which
+made my face to burn. The more cause, since I had been entrapped and had
+entrapped the girl into an undue situation, that I should behave in it
+with scrupulous nicety. She depended on me wholly for her bread and
+shelter; in case I should alarm her delicacy, she had no retreat.
+Besides, I was her host and her protector; and the more irregularly I
+had fallen in these positions, the less excuse for me if I should profit
+by the same to forward even the most honest suit; for with the
+opportunities that I enjoyed, and which no wise parent would have
+suffered for a moment, even the most honest suit would be unfair. I saw
+I must be extremely hold-off in my relations; and yet not too much so
+neither; for if I had no right to appear at all in the character of a
+suitor, I must yet appear continually, and if possible agreeably, in
+that of host. It was plain I should require a great deal of tact and
+conduct, perhaps more than my years afforded. But I had rushed in where
+angels might have feared to tread, and there was no way out of that
+position, save by behaving right while I was in it. I made a set of
+rules for my guidance; prayed for strength to be enabled to observe
+them, and as a more human aid to the same end purchased a study book in
+law. This being all that I could think of, I relaxed from these grave
+considerations; whereupon my mind bubbled at once into an effervescency
+of pleasing spirits, and it was like one treading on air that I turned
+homeward. As I thought that name of home, and recalled the image of that
+figure awaiting me between four walls, my heart beat upon my bosom.
+
+My troubles began with my return. She ran to greet me with an obvious
+and affecting pleasure. She was clad, besides, entirely in the new
+clothes that I had bought for her; looked in them beyond expression
+well; and must walk about and drop me curtseys to display them and to be
+admired. I am sure I did it with an ill grace, for I thought to have
+choked upon the words.
+
+"Well," she said, "if you will not be caring for my pretty clothes, see
+what I have done with our two chambers." And she showed me the place all
+very finely swept and the fires glowing in the two chimneys.
+
+I was glad of a chance to seem a little more severe than I quite felt.
+"Catriona," said I, "I am very much displeased with you, and you must
+never again lay a hand upon my room. One of us two must have the rule
+while we are here together; it is most fit it should be I who am both
+the man and the elder; and I give you that for my command."
+
+She dropped me one of her curtseys which were extraordinary taking. "If
+you will be cross," said she, "I must be making pretty manners at you,
+Davie. I will be very obedient, as I should be when every stitch upon
+all there is of me belongs to you. But you will not be very cross
+either, because now I have not anyone else."
+
+This struck me hard, and I made haste, in a kind of penitence, to blot
+out all the good effect of my last speech. In this direction, progress
+was more easy, being down hill; she led me forward, smiling; at the
+sight of her, in the brightness of the fire and with her pretty becks
+and looks, my heart was altogether melted. We made our meal with
+infinite mirth and tenderness; and the two seemed to be commingled into
+one, so that our very laughter sounded like a kindness.
+
+In the midst of which I awoke to better recollections, made a lame word
+of excuse, and set myself boorishly to my studies. It was a substantial,
+instructive book that I had bought, by the late Dr. Heineccius, in which
+I was to do a great deal of reading these next days, and often very glad
+that I had no one to question me of what I read. Methought she bit her
+lip at me a little, and that cut me. Indeed it left her wholly solitary,
+the more as she was very little of a reader, and had never a book. But
+what was I to do?
+
+So the rest of the evening flowed by almost without speech.
+
+I could have beat myself. I could not lie in my bed that night for rage
+and repentance, but walked to and fro on my bare feet till I was nearly
+perished, for the chimney was gone out and the frost keen. The thought
+of her in the next room, the thought that she might even hear me as I
+walked, the remembrance of my churlishness and that I must continue to
+practise the same ungrateful course or be dishonoured, put me beside my
+reason. I stood like a man between Scylla and Charybdis: _What must she
+think of me_? was my one thought that softened me continually into
+weakness. _What is to become of us_? the other which steeled me again to
+resolution. This was my first night of wakefulness and divided counsels,
+of which I was now to pass many, pacing like a madman, sometimes weeping
+like a childish boy, sometimes praying (I would fain hope) like a
+Christian.
+
+But prayer is not very difficult, and the hitch comes in practice. In
+her presence, and above all if I allowed any beginning of familiarity, I
+found I had very little command of what should follow. But to sit all
+day in the same room with her, and feign to be engaged upon Heineccius,
+surpassed my strength. So that I fell instead upon the expedient of
+absenting myself so much as I was able; taking out classes and sitting
+there regularly, often with small attention, the test of which I found
+the other day in a note-book of that period, where I had left off to
+follow an edifying lecture and actually scribbled in my book some very
+ill verses, though the Latinity is rather better than I thought I could
+ever have compassed. The evil of this course was unhappily near as great
+as its advantage. I had the less time of trial, but I believe, while
+that time lasted, I was tried the more extremely. For she being so much
+left to solitude, she came to greet my return with an increasing fervour
+that came nigh to overmaster me. These friendly offers I must
+barbarously cast back; and my rejection sometimes wounded her so cruelly
+that I must unbend and seek to make it up to her in kindness. So that
+our time passed in ups and downs, tiffs and disappointments, upon the
+which I could almost say (if it may be said with reverence) that I was
+crucified.
+
+The base of my trouble was Catriona's extraordinary innocence, at which
+I was not so much surprised as filled with pity and admiration. She
+seemed to have no thought of our position, no sense of my struggles;
+welcomed any mark of my weakness with responsive joy; and when I was
+drove again to my retrenchments, did not always dissemble her chagrin.
+There were times when I have thought to myself, 'If she were over head
+in love, and set her cap to catch me, she would scarce behave much
+otherwise;' and then I would fall again into wonder at the simplicity of
+woman, from whom I felt (in these moments) that I was not worthy to be
+descended.
+
+There was one point in particular on which our warfare turned, and of
+all things, this was the question of her clothes. My baggage had soon
+followed me from Rotterdam, and hers from Helvoet. She had now, as it
+were, two wardrobes; and it grew to be understood between us (I could
+never tell how) that when she was friendly she would wear my clothes,
+and when otherwise her own. It was meant for a buffet, and (as it were)
+the renunciation of her gratitude; and I felt it so in my bosom, but was
+generally more wise than to appear to have observed the circumstance.
+
+Once, indeed, I was betrayed into a childishness greater than her own;
+it fell in this way. On my return from classes, thinking upon her
+devoutly with a great deal of love and a good deal of annoyance in the
+bargain, the annoyance began to fade away out of my mind; and spying in
+a window one of those forced flowers, of which the Hollanders are so
+skilled in the artifice, I gave way to an impulse and bought it for
+Catriona. I do not know the name of that flower, but it was of the pink
+colour, and I thought she would admire the same, and carried it home to
+her with a wonderful soft heart. I had left her in my clothes, and when
+I returned to find her all changed and a face to match, I cast but the
+one look at her from head to foot, ground my teeth together, flung the
+window open, and my flower into the court, and then (between rage and
+prudence) myself out of that room again, of which I slammed the door as
+I went out.
+
+On the steep stair I came near falling, and this brought me to myself,
+so that I began at once to see the folly of my conduct. I went, not into
+the street as I had purposed, but to the house court, which was always a
+solitary place, and where I saw my flower (that had cost me vastly more
+than it was worth) hanging in the leafless tree. I stood by the side of
+the canal, and looked upon the ice. Country people went by on their
+skates, and I envied them. I could see no way out of the pickle I was
+in: no way so much as to return to the room I had just left. No doubt
+was in my mind but I had now betrayed the secret of my feelings; and to
+make things worse, I had shown at the same time (and that with wretched
+boyishness) incivility to my helpless guest.
+
+I suppose she must have seen me from the open window. It did not seem to
+me that I had stood there very long before I heard the crunching of
+footsteps on the frozen snow, and turning somewhat angrily (for I was in
+no spirit to be interrupted) saw Catriona drawing near. She was all
+changed again, to the clocked stockings.
+
+"Are we not to have our walk to-day?" said she.
+
+I was looking at her in a maze. "Where is your brooch?" says I.
+
+She carried her hand to her bosom and coloured high. "I will have
+forgotten it," said she. "I will run upstairs for it quick, and then
+surely we'll can have our walk?"
+
+There was a note of pleading in that last that staggered me; I had
+neither words nor voice to utter them; I could do no more than nod by
+way of answer; and the moment she had left me, climbed into the tree and
+recovered my flower, which on her return I offered her.
+
+"I bought it for you, Catriona," said I.
+
+She fixed it in the midst of her bosom with the brooch, I could have
+thought tenderly.
+
+"It is none the better of my handling," said I again, and blushed.
+
+"I will be liking it none the worse, you may be sure of that," said she.
+
+We did not speak so much that day, she seemed a thought on the reserve
+though not unkindly. As for me, all the time of our walking, and after
+we came home, and I had seen her put my flower into a pot of water, I
+was thinking to myself what puzzles women were. I was thinking, the one
+moment, it was the most stupid thing on earth she should not have
+perceived my love; and the next, that she had certainly perceived it
+long ago, and (being a wise girl with the fine female instinct of
+propriety) concealed her knowledge.
+
+We had our walk daily. Out in the streets I felt more safe; I relaxed a
+little in my guardedness; and for one thing, there was no Heineccius.
+This made these periods not only a relief to myself, but a particular
+pleasure to my poor child. When I came back about the hour appointed, I
+would generally find her ready dressed and glowing with anticipation.
+She would prolong their duration to the extreme, seeming to dread (as I
+did myself) the hour of the return; and there is scarce a field or
+waterside near Leyden, scarce a street or lane there, where we have not
+lingered. Outside of these, I bade her confine herself entirely to our
+lodgings; this in the fear of her encountering any acquaintance, which
+would have rendered our position very difficult. From the same
+apprehension I would never suffer her to attend church, nor even go
+myself; but made some kind of shift to hold worship privately in our own
+chamber--I hope with an honest, but I am quite sure with a very much
+divided mind. Indeed, there was scarce anything that more affected me,
+than thus to kneel down alone with her before God like man and wife.
+
+One day it was snowing downright hard. I had thought it not possible
+that we should venture forth, and was surprised to find her waiting for
+me ready dressed.
+
+"I will not be doing without my walk," she cried. "You are never a good
+boy, Davie, in the house; I will never be caring for you only in the
+open air. I think we two will better turn Egyptian and dwell by the
+roadside."
+
+That was the best walk yet of all of them; she clung near to me in the
+falling snow; it beat about and melted on us, and the drops stood upon
+her bright cheeks like tears and ran into her smiling mouth. Strength
+seemed to come upon me with the sight like a giant's; I thought I could
+have caught her up and run with her into the uttermost places in the
+earth; and we spoke together all that time beyond belief for freedom and
+sweetness.
+
+It was the dark night when we came to the house door. She pressed my arm
+upon her bosom. "Thank you kindly for these same good hours," said she,
+on a deep note of her voice.
+
+The concern in which I fell instantly on this address, put me with the
+same swiftness on my guard; and we were no sooner in the chamber, and
+the light made, than she beheld the old, dour, stubborn countenance of
+the student of Heineccius. Doubtless she was more than usually hurt; and
+I know for myself, I found it more than usually difficult to maintain my
+strangeness. Even at the meal, I durst scarce unbuckle and scarce lift
+my eyes to her; and it was no sooner over than I fell again to my
+civilian, with more seeming abstraction and less understanding than
+before. Methought, as I-read, I could hear my heart strike like an
+eight-day clock. Hard as I feigned to study, there was still some of my
+eyesight that spilled beyond the book upon Catriona. She sat on the
+floor by the side of my great mail, and the chimney lighted her up, and
+shone and blinked upon her, and made her glow and darken through a
+wonder of fine hues. Now she would be gazing in the fire, and then again
+at me; and at that I would be plunged in a terror of myself, and turn
+the pages of Heineccius like a man looking for the text in church.
+
+Suddenly she called out aloud, "O, why does not my father come?" she
+cried, and fell at once into a storm of tears.
+
+I leaped up, flung Heineccius fairly into the fire, ran to her side, and
+cast an arm around her sobbing body.
+
+She put me from her sharply. "You do not love your friend," says she. "I
+could be so happy too, if you would let me!" And then, "O, what will I
+have done that you should hate me so?"
+
+"Hate you!" cries I, and held her firm. "You blind lass, can you not see
+a little in my wretched heart? Do you think when I set there, reading in
+that fool-book that I have just burned and be damned to it, I take ever
+the least thought of any stricken thing but just yourself? Night after
+night I could have grat to see you sitting there your lone. And what was
+I to do? You are here under my honour; would you punish me for that? Is
+it for that that you would spurn a loving servant?"
+
+At the word, with a small, sudden motion, she clung near to me. I raised
+her face to mine, I kissed it, and she bowed her brow upon my bosom,
+clasping me tight. I sat in a mere whirl like a man drunken. Then I
+heard her voice sound very small and muffled in my clothes.
+
+"Did you kiss her truly?" she asked.
+
+There went through me so great a heave of surprise that I was all shook
+with it.
+
+"Miss Grant!" I cried, all in a disorder. "Yes, I asked her to kiss me
+good-bye, the which she did."
+
+"Ah, well!" said she, "you have kissed me too, at all events."
+
+At the strangeness and sweetness of that word, I saw where we had
+fallen; rose, and set her on her feet.
+
+"This will never do," said I. "This will never, never do. O Catrine,
+Catrine!" Then there came a pause in which I was debarred from any
+speaking. And then, "Go away to your bed," said I. "Go away to your bed
+and leave me."
+
+She turned to obey me like a little child, and the next I knew of it,
+had stopped in the very doorway.
+
+"Good night, Davie!" said she.
+
+"And O, good night, my love!" I cried, with a great outbreak of my soul,
+and caught her to me again, so that it seemed I must have broken her.
+The next moment I had thrust her from the room, shut to the door even
+with violence, and stood alone.
+
+The milk was spilt now, the word was out and the truth told. I had crept
+like an untrusty man into the poor maid's affections; she was in my hand
+like any frail, innocent thing to make or mar; and what weapon of
+defence was left me? It seemed like a symbol that Heinoccius, my old
+protection, was now burned. I repented, yet could not find it in my
+heart to blame myself for that great failure. It seemed not possible to
+have resisted the boldness of her innocence or that last temptation of
+her weeping. And all that I had to excuse me did but make my sin appear
+the greater--it was upon a nature so defenceless, and with such
+advantages of the position, that I seemed to have practised.
+
+What was to become of us now? It seemed we could no longer dwell in the
+one place. But where was I to go? or where she? Without either choice or
+fault of ours, life had conspired to wall us together in that narrow
+place. I had a wild thought of marrying out of hand; and the next moment
+put it from me with revolt. She was a child, she could not tell her own
+heart; I had surprised her weakness, I must never go on to build on that
+surprisal; I must keep her not only clear of reproach, but free as she
+had come to me.
+
+Down I sat before the fire, and reflected, and repented, and beat my
+brains in vain for any means of escape. About two of the morning, there
+were three red embers left and the house and all the city was asleep,
+when I was aware of a small sound of weeping in the next room. She
+thought that I slept, the poor soul; she regretted her weakness--and
+what perhaps (God help her!) she called her forwardness--and in the dead
+of the night solaced herself with tears. Tender and bitter feelings,
+love and penitence and pity struggled in my soul; it seemed I was under
+bond to heal that weeping.
+
+"O, try to forgive me!" I cried out, "try, try to forgive me. Let us
+forget it all, let us try if we'll no can forget it!"
+
+There came no answer, but the sobbing ceased. I stood a long while with
+my hands still clasped as I had spoken; then the cold of the night laid
+hold upon me with a shudder, and I think my reason reawakened.
+
+"You can make no hand of this, Davie," thinks I. "To bed with you like a
+wise lad, and try if you can sleep. To-morrow you may see your way."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE
+
+
+I was called on the morrow out of a late and troubled slumber by a
+knocking on my door, ran to open it, and had almost swooned with the
+contrariety of my feelings, mostly painful; for on the threshold, in a
+rough wrapraseal and an extraordinary big laced hat, there stood James
+More.
+
+I ought to have been glad perhaps without admixture, for there was a
+sense in which the man came like an answer to prayer. I had been saying
+till my head was weary that Catriona and I must separate, and looking
+till my head ached for any possible means of separation. Here were the
+means come to me upon two legs, and joy was the hindmost of my thoughts.
+It is to be considered, however, that even if the weight of the future
+were lifted off me by the man's arrival, the present heaved up the more
+black and menacing; so that, as I first stood before him in my shirt and
+breeches, I believe I took a leaping step backward like a person shot.
+
+"Ah," said he, "I have found you, Mr. Balfour." And offered me his
+large, fine hand, the which (recovering at the same time my post in the
+doorway, as if with some thought of resistance) I took him by
+doubtfully. "It is a remarkable circumstance how our affairs appear to
+intermingle," he continued. "I am owing you an apology for an
+unfortunate intrusion upon yours, which I suffered myself to be
+entrapped into by my confidence in that false-face, Prestongrange; I
+think shame to own to you that I was ever trusting to a lawyer." He
+shrugged his shoulders with a very French air. "But indeed the man is
+very plausible," says he. "And now it seems that you have busied
+yourself handsomely in the matter of my daughter, for whose direction I
+was remitted to yourself."
+
+"I think, sir," said I, with a very painful air, "that it will be
+necessary we two should have an explanation."
+
+"There is nothing amiss?" he asked. "My agent, Mr. Sprott--"
+
+"For God's sake moderate your voice!" I cried. "She must not hear till
+we have had an explanation."
+
+"She is in this place?" cries he.
+
+"That is her chamber door," said I.
+
+"You are here with her alone?" he asked.
+
+"And who else would I have got to stay with us?" cries I.
+
+I will do him the justice to admit that he turned pale.
+
+"This is very unusual," said he. "This is a very unusual circumstance.
+You are right, we must hold an explanation."
+
+So saying, he passed me by, and I must own the tall old rogue appeared
+at that moment extraordinary dignified. He had now, for the first time,
+the view of my chamber, which I scanned (I may say) with his eyes. A bit
+of morning sun glinted in by the window pane, and showed it off; my bed,
+my mails, and washing dish, with some disorder of my clothes, and the
+unlighted chimney, made the only plenishing; no mistake but it looked
+bare and cold, and the most unsuitable, beggarly place conceivable to
+harbour a young lady. At the same time came in on my mind the
+recollection of the clothes that I had bought for her; and I thought
+this contrast of poverty and prodigality bore an ill appearance.
+
+He looked all about the chamber for a seat, and finding nothing else to
+his purpose except my bed, took a place upon the side of it; where,
+after I had closed the door, I could not very well avoid joining him.
+For however this extraordinary interview might end, it must pass if
+possible without waking Catriona; and the one thing needful was that we
+should sit close and talk low. But I can scarce picture what a pair we
+made; he in his great coat which the coldness of my chamber made
+extremely suitable; I shivering in my shirt and breeks; he with very
+much the air of a judge; and I (whatever I looked) with very much the
+feelings of a man who has heard the last trumpet.
+
+"Well?" says he.
+
+And "Well" I began, but found myself unable to go further.
+
+"You tell me she is here?" said he again, but now with a spice of
+impatiency that seemed to brace me up.
+
+"She is in this house," said I, "and I knew the circumstance would be
+called unusual. But you are to consider how very unusual the whole
+business was from the beginning. Here is a young lady landed on the
+coast of Europe with two shillings and a penny halfpenny. She is
+directed to yon man Sprott in Helvoet. I hear you call him your agent.
+All I can say is he could do nothing but damn and swear at the mere
+mention of your name, and I must fee him out of my own pocket even to
+receive the custody of her effects, You speak of unusual circumstances,
+Mr. Drummond, if that be the name you prefer. Here was a circumstance,
+if you like, to which it was barbarity to have exposed her."
+
+"But this is what I cannot understand the least," said James. "My
+daughter was placed into the charge of some responsible persons, whose
+names I have forgot."
+
+"Gebbie was the name," said I; "and there is no doubt that Mr. Gebbie
+should have gone ashore with her at Helvoet. But he did not, Mr.
+Drummond; and I think you might praise God that I was there to offer in
+his place."
+
+"I shall have a word to say to Mr. Gebbie before done," said he. "As for
+yourself, I think it might have occurred that you were somewhat young
+for such a post."
+
+"But the choice was not between me and somebody else, it was between me
+and nobody," I cried. "Nobody offered in my place, and I must say I
+think you show a very small degree of gratitude to me that did."
+
+"I shall wait until I understand my obligation a little more in the
+particular," says he.
+
+"Indeed, and I think it stares you in the face, then," said I. "Your
+child was deserted, she was clean flung away in the midst of Europe,
+with scarce two shillings, and not two words of any language spoken
+there: I must say, a bonny business! I brought her to this place. I gave
+her the name and the tenderness due to a sister. All this has not gone
+without expense, but that I scarce need to hint at. They were services
+due to the young lady's character which I respect; and I think it would
+be a bonny business too, if I was to be singing her praises to her
+father."
+
+"You are a young man," he began.
+
+"So I hear you tell me," said I, with a good deal of heat.
+
+"You are a very young man," he repeated, "or you would have understood
+the significancy of the step."
+
+"I think you speak very much at your ease," cried I. "What else was I to
+do? It is a fact I might have hired some decent, poor woman to be a
+third to us, and I declare I never thought of it until this moment! But
+where was I to find her, that am a foreigner myself? And let me point
+out to your observation, Mr. Drummond, that it would have cost me money
+out of my pocket. For here is just what it comes to, that I had to pay
+through the nose for your neglect; and there is only the one story to
+it, just that you were so unloving and so careless as to have lost your
+daughter."
+
+"He that lives in a glass house should not be casting stones," says he;
+"and we will finish inquiring into the behaviour of Miss Drummond,
+before we go on to sit in judgment on her father."
+
+"But I will be entrapped into no such attitude," said I. "The character
+of Miss Drummond is far above inquiry, as her father ought to know. So
+is mine, and I am telling you that. There are but the two ways of it
+open. The one is to express your thanks to me as one gentleman to
+another, and to say no more. The other (if you are so difficult as to be
+still dissatisfied) is to pay me that which I have expended and be
+done."
+
+He seemed to soothe me with a hand in the air.
+
+"There, there," said he. "You go too fast, you go too fast, Mr. Balfour.
+It is a good thing that I have learned to be more patient. And I believe
+you forget that I have yet to see my daughter."
+
+I began to be a little relieved upon this speech and a change in the
+man's manner that I spied in him as soon as the name of money fell
+between us.
+
+"I was thinking it would be more fit--if you will excuse the plainness
+of my dressing in your presence--that I should go forth and leave you to
+encounter her alone?" said I.
+
+"What I would have looked for at your hands!" says he; and there was no
+mistake but what he said it civilly.
+
+I thought this better and better still, and as I began to pull on my
+hose, recalling the man's impudent mendicancy at Prestongrange's, I
+determined to pursue what seemed to be my victory.
+
+"If you have any mind to stay some while in Leyden," said I, "this room
+is very much at your disposal, and I can easy find another for myself:
+in which way we shall have the least amount of flitting possible, there
+being only one to change."
+
+"Why, sir," said he, making his bosom big, "I think no shame of a
+poverty I have come by in the service of my king; I make no secret that
+my affairs are quite involved; and for the moment, it would be even
+impossible for me to undertake a journey."
+
+"Until you have occasion to communicate with your friends," said I,
+"perhaps it might be convenient for you (as of course it would be
+honourable to myself) if you were to regard yourself in the light of my
+guest?"
+
+"Sir," said he, "when an offer is frankly made, I think I honour myself
+most to imitate that frankness. Your hand, Mr. David; you have the
+character that I respect the most; you are one of those from whom a
+gentleman can take a favour and no more words about it. I am an old
+soldier," he went on, looking rather disgusted-like around my chamber,
+"and you need not fear I shall prove burthensome. I have ate too often
+at a dyke-side, drank of the ditch, and had no roof but the rain."
+
+"I should be telling you," said I, "that our breakfasts are sent
+customarily in about this time of morning. I propose I should go now to
+the tavern, and bid them add a cover for yourself and delay the meal the
+matter of an hour, which will give you an interval to meet your daughter
+in."
+
+Methought his nostrils wagged at this. "O, an hour," says he. "That is
+perhaps superfluous. Half an hour, Mr. David, or say twenty minutes; I
+shall do very well in that. And by the way," he adds, detaining me by
+the coat, "what is it you drink in the morning, whether ale or wine?"
+
+"To be frank with you, sir," says I, "I drink nothing else but spare,
+cold water?"
+
+"Tut-tut," says he, "that is fair destruction to the stomach, take an
+old campaigner's word for it. Our country spirit at home is perhaps the
+most entirely wholesome; but as that is not come-at-able, Rhenish or a
+white wine of Burgundy will be next best."
+
+"I shall make it my business to see you are supplied," said I.
+
+"Why, very good," said he, "and we shall make a man of you yet, Mr.
+David."
+
+By this time, I can hardly say that I was minding him at all, beyond an
+odd thought of the kind of father-in-law that he was like to prove; and
+all my cares centred about the lass his daughter, to whom I determined
+to convey some warning of her visitor. I stepped to the door
+accordingly, and cried through the panels, knocking thereon at the same
+time: "Miss Drummond, here is your father come at last."
+
+With that I went forth upon my errand, having (by two words)
+extraordinarily damaged my affairs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE THREESOME
+
+
+Whether or not I was to be so much blamed, or rather perhaps pitied, I
+must leave others to judge of. My shrewdness (of which I have a good
+deal, too) seems not so great with the ladies. No doubt, at the moment
+when I awaked her, I was thinking a good deal of the effect upon James
+More; and similarly when I returned and we were all sat down to
+breakfast, I continued to behave to the young lady with deference and
+distance; as I still think to have been most wise. Her father had cast
+doubts upon the innocence of my friendship; and these, it was my first
+business to allay. But there is a kind of an excuse for Catriona also.
+We had shared in a scene of some tenderness and passion, and given and
+received caresses; I had thrust her from me with violence; I had called
+aloud upon her in the night from the one room to the other; she had
+passed hours of wakefulness and weeping; and it is not to be supposed I
+had been absent from her pillow thoughts. Upon the back of this, to be
+awaked, with unaccustomed formality, under the name of Miss Drummond,
+and to be thenceforth used with a great deal of distance and respect,
+led her entirely in error on my private sentiments; and she was indeed
+so incredibly abused as to imagine me repentant and trying to draw off!
+
+The trouble betwixt us seems to have been this: that whereas I (since I
+had first set eyes on his great hat) thought singly of James More, his
+return and suspicions, she made so little of these that I may say she
+scarce remarked them, and all her troubles and doings regarded what had
+passed between us in the night before. This is partly to be explained by
+the innocence and boldness of her character; and partly because James
+More, having sped so ill in his interview with me, or had his mouth
+closed by my invitation, said no word to her upon the subject. At the
+breakfast, accordingly, it soon appeared we were at cross purposes. I
+had looked to find her in clothes of her own: I found her (as if her
+father were forgotten) wearing some of the best that I had bought for
+her and which she knew (or thought) that I admired her in. I had looked
+to find her imitate my affectation of distance, and be most precise and
+formal; instead I found her flushed and wild-like, with eyes
+extraordinary bright, and a painful and varying expression, calling me
+by name with a sort of appeal of tenderness, and referring and deferring
+to my thoughts and wishes like an anxious or a suspected wife.
+
+But this was not for long. As I beheld her so regardless of her own
+interests, which I had jeopardised and was now endeavoring to recover, I
+redoubled my own boldness in the manner of a lesson to the girl. The
+more she came forward, the further I drew back; the more she betrayed
+the closeness of our intimacy, the more pointedly civil I became, until
+even her father (if he had not been so engrossed with eating) might have
+observed the opposition. In the midst of which, of a sudden, she became
+wholly changed, and I told myself, with a good deal of relief, that she
+had took the hint at last.
+
+All day I was at my classes or in quest of my new lodging; and though
+the hour of our customary walk hung miserably on my hands, I cannot say
+but I was happy on the whole to find my way cleared, the girl again in
+proper keeping, the father satisfied or at least acquiescent, and myself
+free to prosecute my love with honour. At supper, as at all our meals,
+it was James More that did the talking. No doubt but he talked well, if
+anyone could have believed him. But I will speak of him presently more
+at large. The meal at an end, he rose, got his great coat, and looking
+(as I thought) at me, observed he had affairs abroad. I took this for a
+hint that I was to be going also, and got up; whereupon the girl, who
+had scarce given me greeting at my entrance, turned her eyes on me wide
+open, with a look that bade me stay. I stood between them like a fish
+out of water, turning from one to the other; neither seemed to observe
+me, she gazing on the floor, he buttoning his coat: which vastly swelled
+my embarrassment. This appearance of indifferency argued, upon her side,
+a good deal of anger very near to burst out. Upon his, I thought it
+horribly alarming; I made sure there was a tempest brewing there; and
+considering that to be the chief peril, turned towards him and put
+myself (so to speak) in the man's hands.
+
+"Can I do anything for _you_, Mr. Drummond?" says I.
+
+He stifled a yawn, which again I thought to be duplicity. "Why, Mr.
+David," said he, "since you are so obliging as to propose it, you might
+show me the way to a certain tavern" (of which he gave the name) "where
+I hope to fall in with some old companions in arms."
+
+There was no more to say, and I got my hat and cloak to bear him
+company.
+
+"And as for you," he says to his daughter, "you had best go to your bed.
+I shall be late home, and _Early to bed and early to rise, gars bonny
+lasses have bright eyes."_
+
+Whereupon he kissed her with a good deal of tenderness, and ushered me
+before him from the door. This was so done (I thought on purpose) that
+it was scarce possible there should be any parting salutation; but I
+observed she did not look at me, and set it down to terror of James
+More.
+
+It was some distance to that tavern. He talked all the way of matters
+which did not interest me the smallest, and at the door dismissed me
+with empty manners. Thence I walked to my new lodging, where I had not
+so much as a chimney to hold me warm, and no society but my own
+thoughts. These were still bright enough; I did not so much as dream
+that Catriona was turned against me; I thought we were like folk
+pledged; I thought we had been too near and spoke too warmly to be
+severed, least of all by what were only steps in a most needful policy.
+And the chief of my concern was only the kind of father-in-law that I
+was getting, which was not at all the kind I would have chosen: and the
+matter of how soon I ought to speak to him, which was a delicate point
+on several sides. In the first place, when I thought how young I was, I
+blushed all over, and could almost have found it in my heart to have
+desisted; only that if once I let them go from Leyden without
+explanation, I might lose her altogether. And in the second place, there
+was our very irregular situation to be kept in view, and the rather
+scant measure of satisfaction I had given James More that morning. I
+concluded, on the whole, that delay would not hurt anything, yet I would
+not delay too long neither; and got to my cold bed with a full heart.
+
+The next day, as James More seemed a little on the complaining hand in
+the matter of my chamber, I offered to have in more furniture; and
+coming in the afternoon, with porters bringing chairs and tables, found
+the girl once more left to herself. She greeted me on my admission
+civilly, but withdrew at once to her own room, of which she shut the
+door. I made my disposition, and paid and dismissed the men so that she
+might hear them go, when I supposed she would at once come forth again
+to speak to me. I waited yet awhile, then knocked upon her door.
+
+"Catriona!" said I.
+
+The door was opened so quickly, even before I had the word out, that I
+thought she must have stood behind it listening. She remained there in
+the interval quite still; but she had a look that I cannot put a name
+on, as of one in a bitter trouble.
+
+"Are we not to have our walk to-day either?" so I faltered.
+
+"I am thanking you," said she. "I will not be caring much to walk, now
+that my father is come home."
+
+"But I think he has gone out himself and left you here alone," said I.
+
+"And do you think that was very kindly said?" she asked.
+
+"It was not unkindly meant," I replied. "What ails you, Catriona? What
+have I done to you that you should turn from me like this?"
+
+"I do not turn from you at all," she said, speaking very carefully. "I
+will ever be grateful to my friend that was good to me; I will ever be
+his friend in all that I am able. But now that my father James More is
+come again, there is a difference to be made, and I think there are some
+things said and done that would be better to be forgotten. But I will
+ever be your friend in all that I am able, and if that is not all that
+. . . if it is not so much. . . . Not that you will be caring! But I would
+not have you think of me too hard. It was true what you said to me, that
+I was too young to be advised, and I am hoping you will remember I was
+just a child. I would not like to lose your friendship, at all events."
+
+She began this very pale; but before she was done, the blood was in her
+face like scarlet, so that not her words only, but her face and the
+trembling of her very hands, besought me to be gentle. I saw for the
+first time, how very wrong I had done to place the child in that
+position, where she had been entrapped into a moment's weakness, and now
+stood before me like a person shamed.
+
+"Miss Drummond," I said, and stuck, and made the same beginning once
+again, "I wish you could see into my heart," I cried. "You would read
+there that my respect is undiminished. If that were possible, I should
+say it was increased. This is but the result of the mistake we made; and
+had to come; and the less said of it now the better. Of all of our life
+here, I promise you it shall never pass my lips; I would like to promise
+you too that I would never think of it, but it's a memory that will be
+always dear to me. And as for a friend, you have one here that would die
+for you."
+
+"I am thanking you," said she.
+
+We stood awhile silent, and my sorrow for myself began to get the upper
+hand; for here were all my dreams come to a sad tumble, and my love
+lost, and myself alone again in the world as at the beginning.
+
+"Well," said I, "we shall be friends always, that's a certain thing. But
+this is a kind of a farewell too: it's a kind of a farewell after all; I
+shall always ken Miss Drummond, but this is a farewell to my Catriona."
+
+I looked at her; I could hardly say I saw her, but she seemed to grow
+great and brighten in my eyes; and with that I suppose I must have lost
+my head, for I called out her name again and made a step at her with my
+hands reached forth.
+
+She shrank back like a person struck, her face flamed; but the blood
+sprang no faster up into her cheeks, than what it flowed back upon my
+own heart, at sight of it, with penitence and concern. I found no words
+to excuse myself, but bowed before her very deep, and went my ways out
+of the house with death in my bosom.
+
+I think it was about five days that followed without any change. I saw
+her scarce ever but at meals, and then of course in the company of James
+More. If we were alone even for a moment, I made it my devoir to behave
+the more distantly and to multiply respectful attentions, having always
+in my mind's eye that picture of the girl shrinking and flaming in a
+blush, and in my heart more pity for her than I could depict in words. I
+was sorry enough for myself, I need not dwell on that, having fallen all
+my length and more than all my height in a few seconds; but, indeed, I
+was near as sorry for the girl, and sorry enough to be scarce angry with
+her save by fits and starts. Her plea was good: she was but a child; she
+had been placed in an unfair position; if she had deceived herself and
+me, it was no more than was to have been looked for.
+
+And for another thing she was now very much alone. Her father, when he
+was by, was rather a caressing parent; but he was very easy led away by
+his affairs and pleasures, neglected her without compunction or remark,
+spent his nights in taverns when he had the money, which was more often
+than I could at all account for; and even in the course of these few
+days, failed once to come to a meal, which Catriona and I were at last
+compelled to partake of without him. It was the evening meal, and I left
+immediately that I had eaten, observing I supposed she would prefer to
+be alone; to which she agreed and (strange as it may seem) I quite
+believed her. Indeed, I thought myself but an eyesore to the girl, and a
+reminder of a moment's weakness that she now abhorred to think of. So
+she must sit alone in that room where she and I had been so merry, and
+in the blink of that chimney whose light had shone upon our many
+difficult and tender moments. There she must sit alone, and think of
+herself as of a maid who had most unmaidenly proffered her affections
+and had the same rejected. And in the meanwhile I would be alone some
+other place, and reading myself (whenever I was tempted to be angry)
+lessons upon human frailty and female delicacy. And altogether I suppose
+there were never two poor fools made themselves more unhappy in a
+greater misconception.
+
+As for James, he paid not so much heed to us, or to anything in nature
+but his pocket, and his belly, and his own prating talk. Before twelve
+hours were gone he had raised a small loan of me; before thirty, he had
+asked for a second and been refused. Money and refusal he took with the
+same kind of high good-nature. Indeed, he had an outside air of
+magnanimity that was very well fitted to impose upon a daughter; and the
+light in which he was constantly presented in his talk, and the man's
+fine presence and great ways went together pretty harmoniously. So that
+a man that had no business with him, and either very little penetration
+or a furious deal of prejudice, might almost have been taken in. To me,
+after my first two interviews, he was as plain as print; I saw him to be
+perfectly selfish, with a perfect innocency in the same; and I would
+harken to his swaggering talk (of arms, and "an old soldier," and "a
+poor Highland gentleman," and "the strength of my country and my
+friends") as I might to the babbling of a parrot.
+
+The odd thing was that I fancy he believed some part of it himself, or
+did at times; I think he was so false all through that he scarce knew
+when he was lying; and for one thing, his moments of dejection must have
+been wholly genuine. There were times when he would be the most silent,
+affectionate, clinging creature possible, holding Catriona's hand like a
+big baby, and begging of me not to leave if I had any love to him; of
+which, indeed, I had none, but all the more to his daughter. He would
+press and indeed beseech us to entertain him with our talk, a thing very
+difficult in the state of our relations; and again break forth in
+pitiable regrets for his own land and friends, or into Gaelic singing.
+
+"This is one of the melancholy airs of my native land," he would say.
+"You may think it strange to see a soldier weep, and indeed it is to
+make a near friend of you," says he. "But the notes of this singing are
+in my blood, and the words come out of my heart. And when I mind upon my
+red mountains and the wild birds calling there, and the brave streams of
+water running down, I would scarce think shame to weep before my
+enemies." Then he would sing again, and translate to me pieces of the
+song, with a great deal of boggling and much expressed contempt against
+the English language. "It says here," he would say, "that the sun is
+gone down, and the battle is at an end, and the brave chiefs are
+defeated. And it tells here how the stars see them fleeing into strange
+countries or lying dead on the red mountain; and they will never more
+shout the call of battle or wash their feet in the streams of the
+valley. But if you had only some of this language, you would weep also
+because the words of it are beyond all expression, and it is mere
+mockery to tell you it in English."
+
+Well, I thought there was a good deal of mockery in the business, one
+way and another; and yet, there was some feeling too, for which I hated
+him, I think, the worst of all. And it used to cut me to the quick to
+see Catriona so much concerned for the old rogue, and weeping herself to
+see him weep, when I was sure one-half of his distress flowed from his
+last night's drinking in some tavern. There were times when I was
+tempted to lend him a round sum, and see the last of him for good; but
+this would have been to see the last of Catriona as well, for which I
+was scarcely so prepared; and besides, it went against my conscience to
+squander my good money on one who was so little of a husband.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+A TWOSOME
+
+
+I believe it was about the fifth day, and I know at least that James was
+in one of his fits of gloom, when I received three letters. The first
+was from Alan, offering to visit me in Leyden; the other two were out of
+Scotland and prompted by the same affair, which was the death of my
+uncle and my own complete accession to my rights. Rankeillor's was, of
+course, wholly in the business view; Miss Grant's was like herself, a
+little more witty than wise, full of blame to me for not having written
+(though how was I to write with such intelligence?) and of rallying talk
+about Catriona, which it cut me to the quick to read in her very
+presence.
+
+For it was of course in my own rooms that I found them, when I came to
+dinner, so that I was surprised out of my news in the very first moment
+of reading it. This made a welcome diversion for all three of us, nor
+could any have foreseen the ill consequences that ensued. It was
+accident that brought the three letters the same day, and that gave them
+into my hand in the same room with James More; and of all the events
+that flowed from that accident, and which I might have prevented if I
+had held my tongue, the truth is that they were preordained before
+Agricola came into Scotland or Abraham set out upon his travels.
+
+The first that I opened was naturally Alan's; and what more natural than
+that I should comment on his design to visit me? but I observed James to
+sit up with an air of immediate attention.
+
+"Is that not Alan Breck that was suspected of the Appin accident?" he
+inquired.
+
+I told him, "Ay," it was the same; and he withheld me some time from my
+other letters, asking of our acquaintance, of Alan's manner of life in
+France, of which I knew very little, and further of his visit as now
+proposed.
+
+"All we forfeited folk hang a little together," he explained, "and
+besides I know the gentleman: and though his descent is not the thing,
+and indeed he has no true right to use the name of Stewart, he was very
+much admired in the day of Drummossie. He did there like a soldier; if
+some that need not be named had done as well, the upshot need not have
+been so melancholy to remember. There were two that did their best that
+day, and it makes a bond between the pair of us," says he.
+
+I could scarce refrain from shooting out my tongue at him, and could
+almost have wished that Alan had been there to have inquired a little
+further into that mention of his birth. Though, they tell me, the same
+was indeed not wholly regular.
+
+Meanwhile, I had opened Miss Grant's, and could not withhold an
+exclamation.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, forgetting, the first time since her father was
+arrived, to address her by a handle, "I am come into my kingdom fairly,
+I am the laird of Shaws indeed--my uncle is dead at last."
+
+She clapped her hands together leaping from her seat. The next moment it
+must have come over both of us at once what little cause of joy was left
+to either, and we stood opposite, staring on each other sadly.
+
+But James showed himself a ready hypocrite. "My daughter," says he, "is
+this how my cousin learned you to behave? Mr. David has lost a near
+friend, and we should first condole with him on his bereavement."
+
+"Troth, sir," said I, turning to him in a kind of anger, "I can make no
+such faces. His death is as blythe news as ever I got."
+
+"It's a good soldier's philosophy," says James. "'Tis the way of flesh,
+we must all go, all go. And if the gentleman was so far from your
+favour, why, very well! But we may at least congratulate you on your
+accession to your estates."
+
+"Nor can I say that either," I replied, with the same heat. "It is a
+good estate; what matters that to a lone man that has enough already? I
+had a good revenue before in my frugality; and but for the man's
+death--which gratifies me, shame to me that must confess it!--I see not
+how anyone is to be bettered by this change."
+
+"Come, come," said he, "you are more affected than you let on, or you
+would never make yourself out so lonely. Here are three letters; that
+means three that wish you well; and I could name two more, here in this
+very chamber. I have known you not so very long, but Catriona, when we
+are alone, is never done with the singing of your praises."
+
+She looked up at him, a little wild at that; and he slid off at once
+into another matter, the extent of my estate, which (during the most of
+the dinner time) he continued to dwell upon with interest. But it was to
+no purpose he dissembled; he had touched the matter with too gross a
+hand: and I knew what to expect. Dinner was scarce ate when he plainly
+discovered his designs. He reminded Catriona of an errand, and bid her
+attend to it. "I do not see you should be gone beyond the hour," he
+added, "and friend David will be good enough to bear me company till you
+return." She made haste to obey him without words. I do not know if she
+understood, I believe not; but I was completely satisfied, and sat
+strengthening my mind for what should follow.
+
+The door had scarce closed behind her departure, when the man leaned
+back in his chair and addressed me with a good affectation of easiness.
+Only the one thing betrayed him and that was his face; which suddenly
+shone all over with fine points of sweat.
+
+"I am rather glad to have a word alone with you," says he, "because in
+our first interview there were some expressions you misapprehended and I
+have long meant to set you right upon. My daughter stands beyond doubt.
+So do you, and I would make that good with my sword against all
+gainsayers. But, my dear David, this world is a censorious place--as who
+should know it better than myself, who have lived ever since the days of
+my late departed father, God sain him! in a perfect spate of calumnies?
+We have to face to that; you and me have to consider of that; we have to
+consider of that." And he wagged his head like a minister in a pulpit.
+
+"To what effect, Mr. Drummond?" said I. "I would be obliged to you if
+you would approach your point."
+
+"Ay, ay," says he, laughing, "like your character indeed! and what I
+most admire in it. But the point, my worthy fellow, is sometimes in a
+kittle bit." He filled a glass of wine. "Though between you and me, that
+are such fast friends, it need not bother us long. The point, I need
+scarcely tell you, is my daughter. And the first thing is that I have no
+thought in my mind of blaming you. In the unfortunate circumstances,
+what could you do else? 'Deed, and I cannot tell."
+
+"I thank you for that," said I, pretty close upon my guard.
+
+"I have besides studied your character," he went on; "your talents are
+fair; you seem to have a moderate competence; which does no harm; and
+one thing with another, I am very happy to have to announce to you that
+I have decided on the latter of the two ways open."
+
+"I am afraid I am dull," said I. "What ways are these?"
+
+He bent his brows upon me formidably and uncrossed his legs. "Why, sir,"
+says he, "I think I need scarce describe them to a gentleman of your
+condition; either that I should cut your throat or that you should marry
+my daughter."
+
+"You are pleased to be quite plain at last," said I.
+
+"And I believe I have been plain from the beginning!" cries he
+robustiously. "I am a careful parent, Mr. Balfour; but I thank God, a
+patient and deleeberate man. There is many a father, sir, that would
+have hirsled you at once either to the altar or the field. My esteem for
+your character--"
+
+"Mr. Drummond," I interrupted, "if you have any esteem for me at all, I
+will beg of you to moderate your voice. It is quite needless to rowt at
+a gentleman in the same chamber with yourself and lending you his best
+attention."
+
+"Why, very true," says he, with an immediate change. "And you must
+excuse the agitations of a parent."
+
+"I understand you then," I continued--"for I will take no note of your
+other alternative, which perhaps it was a pity you let fall--I
+understand you rather to offer me encouragement in case I should desire
+to apply for your daughter's hand?"
+
+"It is not possible to express my meaning better," said he, "and I see
+we shall do well together."
+
+"That remains to be yet seen," said I. "But so much I need make no
+secret of, that I bear the lady you refer to the most tender affection,
+and I could not fancy, even in a dream, a better fortune than to get
+her."
+
+"I was sure of it, I felt certain of you, David," he cried, and reached
+out his hand to me.
+
+I put it by. "You go too fast, Mr. Drummond," said I. "There are
+conditions to be made; and there is a difficulty in the path, which I
+see not entirely how we shall come over. I have told you that, upon my
+side, there is no objection to the marriage, but I have good reason to
+believe there will be much on the young lady's."
+
+"This is all beside the mark," says he. "I will engage for her
+acceptance."
+
+"I think you forget, Mr. Drummond," said I, "that, even in dealing with
+myself you have been betrayed into two-three unpalatable expressions. I
+will have none such employed to the young lady. I am here to speak and
+think for the two of us; and I give you to understand that I would no
+more let a wife be forced upon myself, than what I would let a husband
+be forced on the young lady."
+
+He sat and glowered at me like one in doubt and a good deal of temper.
+
+"So that this is to be the way of it," I concluded. "I will marry Miss
+Drummond, and that blythely, if she is entirely willing. But if there be
+the least unwillingness, as I have reason to fear--marry her will I
+never."
+
+"Well, well," said he, "this is a small affair. As soon as she returns I
+will sound her a bit, and hope to reassure you----"
+
+But I cut in again. "Not a finger of you, Mr. Drummond, or I cry off,
+and you can seek a husband to your daughter somewhere else," said I. "It
+is I that am to be the only dealer and the only judge. I shall satisfy
+myself exactly; and none else shall anyways meddle--you the least of
+all."
+
+"Upon my word, sir!" he exclaimed, "and who are you to be the judge?"
+
+"The bridegroom, I believe," said I.
+
+"This is to quibble," he cried. "You turn your back upon the facts. The
+girl, my daughter, has no choice left to exercise. Her character is
+gone."
+
+"And I ask your pardon," said I, "but while this matter lies between her
+and you and me, that is not so."
+
+"What security have I!" he cried. "Am I to let my daughter's reputation
+depend upon a chance?"
+
+"You should have thought of all this long ago," said I, "before you were
+so misguided as to lose her; and not afterwards, when it is quite too
+late. I refuse to regard myself as any way accountable for your neglect,
+and I will be browbeat by no man living. My mind is quite made up, and
+come what may, I will not depart from it a hair's breadth. You and me
+are to sit here in company till her return; upon which, without either
+word or look from you, she and I are to go forth again to hold our talk.
+If she can satisfy me that she is willing to this step, I will then make
+it; and if she cannot, I will not."
+
+He leaped out of his seat like a man stung. "I can spy your manoeuvre,"
+he cried; "you would work upon her to refuse!"
+
+"Maybe ay, and maybe no," said I. "That is the way it is to be,
+whatever."
+
+"And if I refuse?" cries he.
+
+"Then, Mr. Drummond, it will have to come to the throat-cutting," said
+I.
+
+What with the size of the man, his great length of arm in which he came
+near rivalling his father, and his reputed skill at weapons, I did not
+use this word without some trepidation, to say nothing at all of the
+circumstance that he was Catriona's father. But I might have spared
+myself alarms. From the poorness of my lodging--he does not seem to have
+remarked his daughter's dresses, which were indeed all equally new to
+him--and from the fact that I had shown myself averse to lend, he had
+embraced a strong idea of my poverty. The sudden news of my estate
+convinced him of his error, and he had made but the one bound of it on
+this fresh venture, to which he was now so wedded, that I believe he
+would have suffered anything rather than fall to the alternative of
+fighting.
+
+A little while longer he continued to dispute with me until I hit upon a
+word that silenced him.
+
+"If I find you so averse to let me see the lady by herself," said I, "I
+must suppose you have very good grounds to think me in the right about
+her unwillingness."
+
+He gabbled some kind of an excuse.
+
+"But all this is very exhausting to both of our tempers," I added, "and
+I think we would do better to preserve a judicious silence."
+
+The which we did until the girl returned, and I must suppose would have
+cut a very ridiculous figure, had there been any there to view us.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE
+
+
+I opened the door to Catriona and stopped her on the threshold.
+
+"Your father wishes us to take our walk," said I.
+
+She looked to James More, who nodded, and at that, like a trained
+soldier, she turned to go with me.
+
+We took one of our old ways, where we had gone often together, and been
+more happy than I can tell of in the past. I came a half a step behind,
+so that I could watch her unobserved. The knocking of her little shoes
+upon the way sounded extraordinary pretty and sad; and I thought it a
+strange moment that I should be so near both ends of it at once, and
+walk in the midst between two destinies, and could not tell whether I
+was hearing these steps for the last time, or whether the sound of them
+was to go in and out with me till death should part us.
+
+She avoided even to look at me, only walked before her, like one who had
+a guess of what was coming. I saw I must speak soon before my courage
+was run out, but where to begin I knew not. In this painful situation,
+when the girl was as good as forced into my arms and had already
+besought my forbearance, any excess of pressure must have seemed
+indecent; yet to avoid it wholly would have a very cold-like appearance.
+Between these extremes I stood helpless, and could have bit my fingers;
+so that, when at last I managed to speak at all, it may be said I spoke
+at random.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I am in a very painful situation; or rather, so we
+are both; and I would be a good deal obliged to you if you would promise
+to let me speak through first of all, and not to interrupt till I have
+done."
+
+She promised me that simply.
+
+"Well," said I, "this that I have got to say is very difficult, and I
+know very well I have no right to be saying it. After what passed
+between the two of us last Friday, I have no manner of right. We have
+got so ravelled up (and all by my fault) that I know very well the least
+I could do is just to hold my tongue, which was what I intended fully,
+and there was nothing further from my thoughts than to have troubled you
+again. But, my dear, it has become merely necessary, and no way by it.
+You see, this estate of mine has fallen in, which makes me rather a
+better match; and the--the business would not have quite the same
+ridiculous-like appearance that it would before. Besides which, it's
+supposed that our affairs have got so much ravelled up (as I was saying)
+that it would be better to let them be the way they are. In my view,
+this part of the thing is vastly exaggerate, and if I were you I would
+not wear two thoughts on it. Only it's right I should mention the same,
+because there's no doubt it has some influence on James More. Then I
+think we were none so unhappy when we dwelt together in this town
+before. I think we did pretty well together. If you would look back, my
+dear--"
+
+"I will look neither back nor forward," she interrupted. "Tell me the
+one thing: this is my father's doing?"
+
+"He approves of it," said I. "He approved that I should ask your hand in
+marriage," and was going on again with somewhat more of an appeal upon
+her feelings; but she marked me not, and struck into the midst.
+
+"He told you to!" she cried. "It is no sense denying it, you said
+yourself that there was nothing farther from your thoughts. He told you
+to."
+
+"He spoke of it the first, if that is what you mean," I began.
+
+She was walking ever the faster, and looking fair in front of her; but
+at this she made a little noise in her head, and I thought she would
+have run.
+
+"Without which," I went on, "after what you said last Friday, I would
+never have been so troublesome as make the offer. But when he as good as
+asked me, what was I to do?"
+
+She stopped and turned round upon me.
+
+"Well, it is refused at all events," she cried, "and there will be an
+end of that."
+
+And she began to walk forward.
+
+"I suppose I could expect no better," said I, "but I think you might try
+to be a little kind to me for the last end of it. I see not why you
+should be harsh. I have loved you very well, Catriona--no harm that I
+should call you so for the last time. I have done the best that I could
+manage, I am trying the same still, and only vexed that I can do no
+better. It is a strange thing to me that you can take any pleasure to be
+hard to me."
+
+"I am not thinking of you," she said, "I am thinking of that man, my
+father."
+
+"Well, and that way, too!" said I. "I can be of use to you that way,
+too; I will have to be. It is very needful, my dear, that we should
+consult about your father; for the way this talk has gone, an angry man
+will be James More."
+
+She stopped again. "It is because I am disgraced?" she asked.
+
+"That is what he is thinking," I replied, "but I have told you already
+to make nought of it."
+
+"It will be all one to me," she cried. "I prefer to be disgraced!"
+
+I did not know very well what to answer, and stood silent.
+
+There seemed to be something working in her bosom after that last cry;
+presently she broke out, "And what is the meaning of all this? Why is
+all this shame loundered on my head? How could you dare it, David
+Balfour?"
+
+"My dear," said I, "what else was I to do?"
+
+"I am not your dear," she said, "and I defy you to be calling me these
+words."
+
+"I am not thinking of my words," said I. "My heart bleeds for you, Miss
+Drummond. Whatever I may say, be sure you have my pity in your difficult
+position. But there is just the one thing that I wish you would bear in
+view, if it was only long enough to discuss it quietly; for there is
+going to be a collieshangie when we two get home. Take my word for it,
+it will need the two of us to make this matter end in peace."
+
+"Ay," said she. There sprang a patch of red in either of her cheeks.
+"Was he for fighting you?" said she.
+
+"Well, he was that," said I.
+
+She gave a dreadful kind of laugh. "At all events, it is complete!" she
+cried. And then turning on me: "My father and I are a fine pair," she
+said, "but I am thanking the good God there will be somebody worse than
+what we are. I am thanking the good God that he has let me see you so.
+There will never be the girl made that would not scorn you."
+
+I had borne a good deal pretty patiently, but this was over the mark.
+
+"You have no right to speak to me like that," said I. "What have I done
+but to be good to you, or try to? And here is my repayment! O, it is too
+much."
+
+She kept looking at me with a hateful smile. "Coward!" said she.
+
+"The word in your throat and in your father's!" I cried. "I have dared
+him this day already in your interest. I will dare him again, the nasty
+pole-cat; little I care which of us should fall! Come," said I, "back to
+the house with us; let us be done with it, let me be done with the whole
+Hieland crew of you! You will see what you think when I am dead."
+
+She shook her head at me with that same smile I could have struck her
+for.
+
+"O, smile away!" I cried. "I have seen your bonny father smile on the
+wrong side this day. Not that I mean he was afraid, of course," I added
+hastily, "but he preferred the other way of it."
+
+"What is this?" she asked.
+
+"When I offered to draw with him," said I.
+
+"You offered to draw upon James More?" she cried.
+
+"And I did so," said I, "and found him backward enough, or how would we
+be here?"
+
+"There is a meaning upon this," said she. "What is it you are meaning?"
+
+"He was to make you take me," I replied, "and I would not have it. I
+said you should be free, and I must speak with you alone; little I
+supposed it would be such a speaking! '_And what if I refuse_?' says
+he.--'_Then it must come to the throat cutting_,' says I, '_for I will
+no more have a husband forced on that young lady than what I would have
+a wife forced upon myself_.' These were my words, they were a friend's
+words; bonnily have I been paid for them! Now you have refused me of
+your own clear free will, and there lives no father in the Highlands, or
+out of them, that can force on this marriage. I will see that your
+wishes are respected; I will make the same my business, as I have all
+through. But I think you might have that decency as to affect some
+gratitude. 'Deed, and I thought you knew me better! I have not behaved
+quite well to you, but that was weakness. And to think me a coward and
+such a coward as that--O, my lass, there was a stab for the last of it!"
+
+"Davie, how would I guess?" she cried. "O, this is a dreadful business!
+Me and mine,"--she gave a kind of wretched cry at the word--"me and mine
+are not fit to speak to you. O, I could be kneeling down to you in the
+street, I could be kissing your hands for your forgiveness!"
+
+"I will keep the kisses I have got from you already," cried I. "I will
+keep the ones I wanted and that were something worth; I will not be
+kissed in penitence."
+
+"What can you be thinking of this miserable girl?" says she.
+
+"What I am trying to tell you all this while!" said I, "that you had
+best leave me alone, whom you can make no more unhappy if you tried, and
+turn your attention to James More, your father, with whom you are like
+to have a queer pirn to wind."
+
+"O, that I must be going out into the world alone with such a man!" she
+cried, and seemed to catch herself in with a great effort. "But trouble
+yourself no more for that," said she. "He does not know what kind of
+nature is in my heart. He will pay me dear for this day of it; dear,
+dear, will he pay."
+
+She turned, and began to go home and I to accompany her. At which she
+stopped.
+
+"I will be going alone," she said. "It is alone I must be seeing him."
+
+Some little while I raged about the streets, and told myself I was the
+worst used lad in Christendom. Anger choked me; it was all very well for
+me to breathe deep; it seemed there was not air enough about Leyden to
+supply me, and I thought I would have burst like a man at the bottom of
+the sea. I stopped and laughed at myself at a street corner a minute
+together, laughing out loud, so that a passenger looked at me, which
+brought me to myself.
+
+"Well," I thought, "I have been a gull and a ninny and a soft Tommy long
+enough. Time it was done. Here is a good lesson to have nothing to do
+with that accursed sex, that was the ruin of the man in the beginning
+and will be so to the end. God knows I was happy enough before ever I
+saw her; God knows I can be happy enough again when I have seen the last
+of her."
+
+That seemed to me the chief affair: to see them go. I dwelled upon the
+idea fiercely; and presently slipped on, in a kind of malevolence, to
+consider how very poorly they were like to fare when Davie Balfour was
+no longer by to be their milk-cow; at which, to my own very great
+surprise, the disposition of my mind turned bottom up. I was still
+angry; I still hated her; and yet I thought I owed it to myself that she
+should suffer nothing.
+
+This carried me home again at once, where I found the mails drawn out
+and ready fastened by the door, and the father and daughter with every
+mark upon them of a recent disagreement. Catriona was like a wooden
+doll; James More breathed hard, his face was dotted with white spots,
+and his nose upon one side. As soon as I came in, the girl looked at him
+with a steady, clear, dark look that might very well have been followed
+by a blow. It was a hint that was more contemptuous than a command, and
+I was surprised to see James More accept it. It was plain he had had a
+master talking-to; and I could see there must be more of the devil in
+the girl than I had guessed, and more good-humor about the man than I
+had given him the credit of.
+
+He began, at least, calling me Mr. Balfour, and plainly speaking from a
+lesson; but he got not very far, for at the first pompous swell of his
+voice, Catriona cut in.
+
+"I will tell you what James More is meaning," said she. "He means we
+have come to you, beggar-folk, and have not behaved to you very well,
+and we are ashamed of our ingratitude and ill-behaviour. Now we are
+wanting to go away and be forgotten; and my father will have guided his
+gear so ill, that we cannot even do that unless you will give us some
+more alms. For that is what we are, at all events, beggar-folk and
+sorners."
+
+"By your leave, Miss Drummond," said I, "I must speak to your father by
+myself."
+
+She went into her own room and shut the door, without a word or a look.
+
+"You must excuse her, Mr. Balfour," says James More. "She has no
+delicacy."
+
+"I am not here to discuss that with you," said I, "but to be quit of
+you. And to that end I must talk of your position. Now, Mr. Drummond, I
+have kept the run of your affairs more closely than you bargained for. I
+know you had money of your own when you were borrowing mine. I know you
+have had more since you were here in Leyden, though you concealed it
+even from your daughter."
+
+"I bid you beware. I will stand no more baiting," he broke out. "I am
+sick of her and you. What kind of a damned trade is this to be a parent!
+I have had expressions used to me----" There he broke off. "Sir, this is
+the heart of a soldier and a parent," he went on again, laying his hand
+on his bosom, "outraged in both characters--and I bid you beware."
+
+"If you would have let me finish," says I, "you would have found I spoke
+for your advantage."
+
+"My dear friend," he cried, "I know I might have relied upon the
+generosity of your character."
+
+"Man! will you let me speak?" said I. "The fact is that I cannot win to
+find out if you are rich or poor. But it is my idea that your means, as
+they are mysterious in their source, so they are something insufficient
+in amount; and I do not choose your daughter to be lacking. If I durst
+speak to herself, you may be certain I would never dream of trusting it
+to you; because I know you like the back of my hand, and all your
+blustering talk is that much wind to me. However, I believe in your way
+you do still care something for your daughter after all; and I must just
+be doing with that ground of confidence, such as it is."
+
+Whereupon, I arranged with him that he was to communicate with me, as to
+his whereabouts and Catriona's welfare, in consideration of which I was
+to serve him a small stipend.
+
+He heard the business out with a great deal of eagerness; and when it
+was done, "My dear fellow, my dear son," he cried out, "this is more
+like yourself than any of it yet! I will serve you with a soldier's
+faithfulness----"
+
+"Let me hear no more of it!" says I. "You have got me to that pitch that
+the bare name of soldier rises on my stomach. Our traffic is settled; I
+am now going forth and will return in one half-hour, when I expect to
+find my chambers purged of you."
+
+I gave them good measure of time; it was my one fear that I might see
+Catriona again, because tears and weakness were ready in my heart, and I
+cherished my anger like a piece of dignity. Perhaps an hour went by; the
+sun had gone down, a little wisp of a new moon was following it across a
+scarlet sunset; already there were stars in the east, and in my
+chambers, when at last I entered them, the night lay blue. I lit a taper
+and reviewed the rooms; in the first there remained nothing so much as
+to awake a memory of those who were gone; but in the second, in a corner
+of the floor, I spied a little heap that brought my heart into my mouth.
+She had left behind at her departure all that ever she had of me. It was
+the blow that I felt sorest, perhaps because it was the last; and I fell
+upon that pile of clothing and behaved myself more foolish than I care
+to tell of.
+
+Late in the night, in a strict frost, and my teeth chattering, I came
+again by some portion of my manhood and considered with myself. The
+sight of these poor frocks and ribbons, and her shifts, and the clocked
+stockings, was not to be endured; and if I were to recover any constancy
+of mind, I saw I must be rid of them ere the morning. It was my first
+thought to have made a fire and burned them; but my disposition has
+always been opposed to wastery, for one thing; and for another, to have
+burned these things that she had worn so close upon her body, seemed in
+the nature of a cruelty. There was a corner cupboard in that chamber;
+there I determined to bestow them. The which I did and made it a long
+business, folding them with very little skill indeed but the more care;
+and sometimes dropping them with my tears. All the heart was gone out of
+me, I was weary as though I had run miles, and sore like one beaten;
+when, as I was folding a kerchief that she wore often at her neck, I
+observed there was a corner neatly cut from it. It was a kerchief of a
+very pretty hue, on which I had frequently remarked; and once that she
+had it on, I remembered telling her (by way of a banter) that she wore
+my colours. There came a glow of hope and like a tide of sweetness in my
+bosom; and the next moment I was plunged back in a fresh despair. For
+there was the corner crumpled in a knot and cast down by itself in
+another part of the floor.
+
+But when I argued with myself, I grew more hopeful. She had cut that
+corner off in some childish freak that was manifestly tender; that she
+had cast it away again was little to be wondered at; and I was inclined
+to dwell more upon the first than upon the second, and to be more
+pleased that she had ever conceived the idea of that keepsake, than
+concerned because she had flung it from her in an hour of natural
+resentment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+WE MEET IN DUNKIRK
+
+
+Altogether, then, I was scarce so miserable the next days but what I had
+many hopeful and happy snatches; threw myself with a good deal of
+constancy upon my studies; and made out to endure the time till Alan
+should arrive, or I might hear word of Catriona by the means of James
+More. I had altogether three letters in the time of our separation. One
+was to announce their arrival in the town of Dunkirk in France, from
+which place James shortly after started alone upon a private mission.
+This was to England and to see Lord Holderness; and it has always been a
+bitter thought that my good money helped to pay the charges of the same.
+But he has need of a long spoon who sups with the deil, or James More
+either. During this absence, the time was to fall due for another
+letter; and as the letter was the condition of his stipend, he had been
+so careful as prepare it beforehand and leave it with Catriona to be
+despatched. The fact of our correspondence aroused her suspicions, and
+he was no sooner gone than she had burst the seal. What I received began
+accordingly in the writing of James More:
+
+"My dear Sir,--Your esteemed favour came to hand duly, and I have to
+acknowledge the inclosure according to agreement. It shall be all
+faithfully expended on my daughter, who is well, and desires to be
+remembered to her dear friend. I find her in rather a melancholy
+disposition, but trusts in the mercy of Grod to see her re-established.
+Our manner of life is very much alone, but we solace ourselves with the
+melancholy tunes of our native mountains, and by walking upon the margin
+of the sea that lies next to Scotland. It was better days with me when I
+lay with five wounds upon my body on the field of Gladsmuir. I have found
+employment here in the _haras_ of a French nobleman, where my experience
+is valued. But, my dear Sir, the wages are so exceedingly unsuitable that
+I would be ashamed to mention them, which makes your remittances the more
+necessary to my daughter's comfort, though I daresay the sight of old
+friends would be still better.
+
+"My dear Sir, "Your affectionate obedient servant,
+
+"JAMES MACGREGOR DRUMMOND."
+
+Below it began again in the hand of Catriona:--
+
+ "Do not be believing him, it is all lies together.
+ "C.M.D."
+
+Not only did she add this postcript, but I think she must have come near
+suppressing the letter; for it came long after date, and was closely
+followed by the third. In the time betwixt them, Alan had arrived, and
+made another life to me with his merry conversation; I had been
+presented to his cousin of the Scots-Dutch, a man that drank more than I
+could have thought possible and was not otherwise of interest; I had
+been entertained to many jovial dinners and given some myself, all with
+no great change upon my sorrow; and we two (by which I mean Alan and
+myself, and not at all the cousin) had discussed a good deal the nature
+of my relations with James More and his daughter. I was naturally
+diffident to give particulars; and this disposition was not anyway
+lessened by the nature of Alan's commentary upon those I gave.
+
+"I cannae make head nor tail of it," he would say, "but it sticks in my
+mind ye've made a gowk of yourself. There's few people that has had more
+experience than Alan Breck; and I can never call to mind to have heard
+tell of a lassie like this one of yours. The way that you tell it, the
+thing's fair impossible. Ye must have made a terrible hash of the
+business, David."
+
+"There are whiles that I am of the same mind," said I.
+
+"The strange thing is that ye seem to have a kind of a fancy for her
+too!" said Alan.
+
+"The biggest kind, Alan," said I, "and I think I'll take it to my grave
+with me."
+
+"Well, ye beat me, whatever!" he would conclude.
+
+I showed him the letter with Catriona's postcript. "And here again!" he
+cried. "Impossible to deny a kind of decency to this Catriona, and sense
+forby! As for James More, the man's as boss as a drum; he's just a wame
+and a wheen words; though I'll can never deny that he fought reasonably
+well at Gladsmuir, and it's true what he says here about the five
+wounds. But the loss of him is that the man's boss."
+
+"Ye see, Alan," said I, "it goes against the grain with me to leave the
+maid in such poor hands."
+
+"Ye couldnae weel find poorer," he admitted. "But what are ye to do with
+it? It's this way about a man and a woman, ye see, Davie: The weemenfolk
+have got no kind of reason to them. Either they like the man, and then
+a' goes fine; or else they just detest him, and ye may spare your
+breath--ye can do naething. There's just the two sets of them--them that
+would sell their coats for ye, and them that never look the road ye're
+on. That's a' that there is to women; and you seem to be such a gomeral
+that ye cannae tell the tane frae the tither."
+
+"Well, and I'm afraid that's true for me," said I.
+
+"And yet there's naething easier!" cried Alan. "I could easy learn ye
+the science of the thing; but ye seem to me to be born blind, and
+there's where the diffeeculty comes in!"
+
+"And can _you_ no help me?" I asked, "you that's so clever at the
+trade?"
+
+"Ye see, David, I wasnae here," said he. "I'm like a field officer that
+has naebody but blind men for scouts and _éclaireurs_; and what would he
+ken? But it sticks in my mind that ye'll have made some kind of bauchle;
+and if I was you, I would have a try at her again."
+
+"Would ye so, man Alan?" said I.
+
+"I would e'en't," says he.
+
+The third letter came to my hand while we were deep in some such talk;
+and it will be seen how pat it fell to the occasion. James professed to
+be in some concern upon his daughter's health, which I believe was never
+better; abounded in kind expressions to myself; and finally proposed
+that I should visit them at Dunkirk.
+
+"You will now be enjoying the society of my old comrade, Mr. Stewart,"
+he wrote. "Why not accompany him so far in his return to France? I have
+something very particular for Mr. Stewart's ear; and, at any rate, I
+would be pleased to meet in with an old fellow-soldier and one so mettle
+as himself. As for you, my dear sir, my daughter and I would be proud to
+receive our benefactor, whom we regard as a brother and a son. The
+French nobleman has proved a person of the most filthy avarice of
+character, and I have been necessitate to leave the _haras_. You will
+find us, in consequence, a little poorly lodged in the _auberge_ of a
+man Bazin on the dunes; but the situation is caller, and I make no doubt
+but we might spend some very pleasant days, when Mr. Stewart and I could
+recall our services, and you and my daughter divert yourselves in a
+manner more befitting your age. I beg at least that Mr. Stewart would
+come here; my business with him opens a very wide door."
+
+"What does the man want with me?" cried Alan, when he had read. "What he
+wants with you is clear enough--it's siller. But what can he want with
+Alan Breck?"
+
+"O, it'll be just an excuse," said I. "He is still after this marriage,
+which I wish from my heart that we could bring about. And he asks you
+because he thinks I would be less likely to come wanting you."
+
+"Well, I wish that I kent," says Alan. "Him and me were never onyways
+pack; we used to girn at ither like a pair of pipers. 'Something for my
+ear,' quo' he! I'll maybe have something for his hinder end, before
+we're through with it. Dod, I'm thinking it would be a kind of a
+divertisement to gang and see what he'll be after! Forby that I could
+see your lassie then. What say ye, Davie? Will ye ride with Alan?"
+
+You may be sure I was not backward, and Alan's furlough running towards
+an end, we set forth presently upon this joint adventure.
+
+It was near dark of a January day when we rode at last into the town of
+Dunkirk. We left our horses at the post, and found a guide to Bazin's
+Inn, which lay beyond the walls. Night was quite fallen, so that we were
+the last to leave that fortress, and heard the doors of it close behind
+us as we passed the bridge. On the other side there lay a lighted
+suburb, which we thridded for a while, then turned into a dark lane, and
+presently found ourselves wading in the night among deep sand where we
+could hear a bullering of the sea. We travelled in this fashion for some
+while, following our conductor mostly by the sound of his voice; and I
+had begun to think he was perhaps misleading us, when we came to the top
+of a small brae, and there appeared out of the darkness a dim light in a
+window.
+
+"_Voilà l'auberge à, Bazin_," says the guide.
+
+Alan smacked his lips. "An unco lonely bit," said he, and I thought by
+his tone he was not wholly pleased.
+
+A little after, and we stood in the lower storey of the house, which was
+all in the one apartment, with a stair leading to the chambers at the
+side, benches and tables by the wall, the cooking fire at the one end of
+it, and shelves of bottles and the cellar-trap at the other. Here Bazin,
+who was an ill-looking, big man, told us the Scottish gentleman was gone
+abroad he knew not where, but the young lady was above, and he would
+call her down to us.
+
+I took from my breast the kerchief wanting the corner, and knotted it
+about my throat. I could hear my heart go; and Alan patting me on the
+shoulder with some of his laughable expressions, I could scarce refrain
+from a sharp word. But the time was not long to wait. I heard her step
+pass overhead, and saw her on the stair. This she descended very
+quietly, and greeted me with a pale face and certain seeming of
+earnestness, or uneasiness, in her manner that extremely dashed me.
+
+"My father, James More, will be here soon. He will be very pleased to
+see you," she said. And then of a sudden her face flamed, her eyes
+lightened, the speech stopped upon her lips; and I made sure she had
+observed the kerchief. It was only for a breath that she was
+discomposed; but methought it was with a new animation that she turned
+to welcome Alan. "And you will be his friend Alan Breck?" she cried.
+"Many is the dozen times I will have heard him tell of you; and I love
+you already for all your bravery and goodness."
+
+"Well, well," says Alan, holding her hand in his and viewing her, "and
+so this is the young lady at the last of it! David, you're an awful poor
+hand of a description."
+
+I do not know that ever I heard him speak so straight to people's
+hearts; the sound of his voice was like song.
+
+"What? will he have been describing me?" she cried.
+
+"Little else of it since I ever came out of France!" says he, "forby a
+bit of speciment one night in Scotland in a shaw of wood by Silvermills.
+But cheer up, my dear! ye're bonnier than what he said. And now there's
+one thing sure: you and me are to be a pair of friends. I'm a kind of a
+henchman to Davie here; I'm like a tyke at his heels; and whatever he
+cares for, I've got to care for too--and by the holy airn! they've got
+to care for me! So now you can see what way you stand with Alan Breck,
+and ye'll find ye'll hardly lose on the transaction. He's no very
+bonnie, my dear, but he's leal to them he loves."
+
+"I thank you with my heart for your good words," said she. "I have that
+honour for a brave, honest man that I cannot find any to be answering
+with."
+
+Using travellers' freedom, we spared to wait for James More, and sat
+down to meat, we threesome. Alan had Catriona sit by him and wait upon
+his wants: he made her drink first out of his glass, he surrounded her
+with continual kind gallantries, and yet never gave me the most small
+occasion to be jealous; and he kept the talk so much in his own hand,
+and that in so merry a note, that neither she nor I remembered to be
+embarrassed. If any one had seen us there, it must have been supposed
+that Alan was the old friend and I the stranger. Indeed, I had often
+cause to love and to admire the man, but I never loved or admired him
+better than that night; and I could not help remarking to myself (what I
+was sometimes rather in danger of forgetting) that he had not only much
+experience of life, but in his own way a great deal of natural ability
+besides. As for Catriona she seemed quite carried away; her laugh was
+like a peal of bells, her face gay as a May morning; and I own, although
+I was very well pleased, yet I was a little sad also, and thought myself
+a dull, stockish character in comparison of my friend, and very unfit to
+come into a young maid's life, and perhaps ding down her gaiety.
+
+But if that was like to be my part, I found at least that I was not
+alone in it; for, James More returning suddenly, the girl was changed
+into a piece of stone. Through the rest of that evening, until she made
+an excuse and slipped to bed, I kept an eye upon her without cease: and
+I can bear testimony that she never smiled, scarce spoke, and looked
+mostly on the board in front of her. So that I really marvelled to see
+so much devotion (as it used to be) changed into the very sickness of
+hate.
+
+Of James More it is unnecessary to say much; you know the man already,
+what there was to know of him; and I am weary of writing out his lies.
+Enough that he drank a great deal, and told us very little that was to
+any possible purpose. As for the business with Alan, that was to be
+reserved for the morrow and his private hearing.
+
+It was the more easy to be put off, because Alan and I were pretty weary
+with our day's ride, and sat not very late after Catriona.
+
+We were soon alone in a chamber where we were to make shift with a
+single bed. Alan looked on me with a queer smile.
+
+"Ye muckle ass!" said he.
+
+"What do ye mean by that?" I cried.
+
+"Mean? What do I mean? It's extraordinar, David man," says he, "that you
+should be so mortal stupit."
+
+Again I begged him to speak out.
+
+"Well, it's this of it," said he. "I told ye there were the two kinds of
+women--them that would sell their shifts for ye, and the others. Just
+you try for yoursel', my bonny man I But what's that neepkin at your
+craig?"
+
+I told him.
+
+"I thocht it was something there about," said he.
+
+Nor would he say another word though I besieged him long with
+importunities.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP
+
+
+Daylight showed us how solitary the inn stood. It was plainly hard upon
+the sea, yet out of all view of it, and beset on every side with scabbit
+hills of sand. There was, indeed, only one thing in the nature of a
+prospect, where there stood out over a brae the two sails of a windmill,
+like an ass's ears, but with the ass quite hidden. It was strange (after
+the wind rose, for at first it was dead calm) to see the turning and
+following of each other of these great sails behind the hillock. Scarce
+any road came by there; but a number of footways travelled among the
+bents in all directions up to Mr. Bazin's door. The truth is, he was a
+man of many trades, not any one of them honest, and the position of his
+inn was the best of his livelihood. Smugglers frequented it; political
+agents and forfeited persons bound across the water came there to await
+their passages; and I daresay there was worse behind, for a whole family
+might have been butchered in that house and nobody the wiser.
+
+I slept little and ill. Long ere it was day, I had slipped from beside
+my bedfellow, and was warming myself at the fire or walking to and fro
+before the door. Dawn broke mighty sullen; but a little after, sprang up
+a wind out of the west, which burst the clouds, let through the sun, and
+set the mill to the turning. There was something of spring in the
+sunshine, or else it was in my heart; and the appearing of the great
+sails one after another from behind the hill, diverted me extremely. At
+times I could hear a creak of the machinery; and by half-past eight of
+the day, Catriona began to sing in the house. At this I would have cast
+my hat in the air; and I thought this dreary, desert place was like a
+paradise.
+
+For all which, as the day drew on and nobody came near, I began to be
+aware of an uneasiness that I could scarce explain. It seemed there was
+trouble afoot; the sails of the windmill, as they came up and went down
+over the hill, were like persons spying; and outside of all fancy, it
+was surely a strange neighbourhood and house for a young lady to be
+brought to dwell in.
+
+At breakfast, which we took late, it was manifest that James More was in
+some danger or perplexity; manifest that Alan was alive to the same, and
+watched him close; and this appearance of duplicity upon the one side
+and vigilance upon the other, held me on live coals. The meal was no
+sooner over than James seemed to come to a resolve, and began to make
+apologies. He had an appointment of a private nature in the town (it was
+with the French nobleman, he told me) and we would please excuse him
+till about noon. Meanwhile, he carried his daughter aside to the far end
+of the room, where he seemed to speak rather earnestly and she to listen
+without much inclination.
+
+"I am caring less and less about this man James," said Alan. "There's
+something no right with the man James, and I wouldnae wonder but what
+Alan Breck would give an eye to him this day. I would like fine to see
+yon French nobleman, Davie; and I daresay you could find an employ to
+yoursel, and that would be to speer at the lassie for some news of your
+affair. Just tell it to her plainly--tell her ye're a muckle ass at the
+off-set; and then, if I were you, and ye could do it naitural, I would
+just mint to her I was in some kind of a danger; a' weemenfolk likes
+that."
+
+"I cannae lee, Alan, I cannae do it naitural," says I, mocking him.
+
+"The more fool you!" says he. "Then ye'll can tell her that I
+recommended it; that'll set her to the laughing; and I wouldnae wonder
+but what that was the next best. But see to the pair of them! If I
+didnae feel just sure of the lassie, and that she was awful pleased and
+chief with Alan, I would think there was some kind of hocus-pocus about
+yon."
+
+"And is she so pleased with ye, then, Alan?" I asked.
+
+"She thinks a heap of me," says he. "And I'm no like you: I'm one that
+can tell. That she does--she thinks a heap of Alan. And troth! I'm
+thinking a good deal of him mysel; and with your permission, Shaws, I'll
+be getting a wee yont amang the bents, so that I can see what way James
+goes."
+
+One after another went, till I was left alone beside the breakfast
+table; James to Dunkirk, Alan dogging him, Catriona up the stairs to her
+own chamber. I could very well understand how she should avoid to be
+alone with me; yet was none the better pleased with it for that, and
+bent my mind to entrap her to an interview before the men returned. Upon
+the whole, the best appeared to me to do like Alan. If I was out of view
+among the sand hills, the fine morning would decoy her out; and once I
+had her in the open, I could please myself.
+
+No sooner said than done; nor was I long under the bield of a hillock
+before she appeared at the inn door, looked here and there, and (seeing
+nobody) set out by a path that led directly seaward, and by which I
+followed her. I was in no haste to make my presence known; the further
+she went I made sure of the longer hearing to my suit; and the ground
+being all sandy, it was easy to follow her unheard. The path rose and
+came at last to the head of a knowe. Thence I had a picture for the
+first time of what a desolate wilderness that inn stood hidden in; where
+was no man to be seen, nor any house of man, except just Bazin's and the
+windmill. Only a little further on, the sea appeared and two or three
+ships upon it, pretty as a drawing. One of these was extremely close in
+to be so great a vessel; and I was aware of a shock of new suspicion,
+when I recognized the trim of the _Seahorse_. What should an English
+ship be doing so near in France? Why was Alan brought into her
+neighbourhood, and that in a place so far from any hope of rescue? and
+was it by accident, or by design, that the daughter of James More should
+walk that day to the seaside?
+
+Presently I came forth behind her in the front of the sand hills and
+above the beach. It was here long and solitary; with a man-o'-war's boat
+drawn up about the middle of the prospect, and an officer in charge and
+pacing the sands like one who waited. I sat immediately down where the
+rough grass a good deal covered me, and looked for what should follow.
+Catriona went straight to the boat; the officer met her with civilities;
+they had ten words together; I saw a letter changing hands; and there
+was Catriona returning. At the same time, as if this was all her
+business on the Continent, the boat shoved off and was headed for the
+_Seahorse_. But I observed the officer to remain behind and disappear
+among the bents.
+
+I liked the business little; and the more I considered of it, liked it
+less. Was it Alan the officer was seeking? or Catriona? She drew near
+with her head down, looking constantly on the sand, and made so tender a
+picture that I could not bear to doubt her innocency. The next, she
+raised her face and recognised me; seemed to hesitate, and then came on
+again, but more slowly, and I thought with a changed colour. And at that
+thought, all else that was upon my bosom--fears, suspicions, the care of
+my friend's life--was clean swallowed up; and I rose to my feet and
+stood waiting her in a drunkenness of hope.
+
+I gave her "good-morning" as she came up, which she returned with a good
+deal of composure.
+
+"Will you forgive my having followed you?" said I.
+
+"I know you are always meaning kindly," she replied; and then, with a
+little outburst, "But why will you be sending money to that man? It must
+not be."
+
+"I never sent it for him," said I, "but for you, as you know well."
+
+"And you have no right to be sending it to either one of us," said she.
+"David, it is not right."
+
+"It is not, it is all wrong," said I; "and I pray God he will help this
+dull fellow (if it be at all possible), to make it better. Catriona,
+this is no kind of life for you to lead, and I ask your pardon for the
+word, but yon man is no fit father to take care of you."
+
+"Do not be speaking of him, even!" was her cry.
+
+"And I need speak of him no more, it is not of him that I am thinking,
+O, be sure of that!" says I. "I think of the one thing. I have been
+alone now this long time in Leyden; and when I was by way of at my
+studies, still I was thinking of that. Next Alan came, and I went among
+soldier-men to their big dinners; and still I had the same thought. And
+it was the same before, when I had her there beside me. Catriona, do you
+see this napkin at my throat? You cut a corner from it once and then
+cast it from you. They're _your_ colours now; I wear them in my heart.
+My dear, I cannot want you. O, try to put up with me!"
+
+I stepped before her so as to intercept her walking on.
+
+"Try to put up with me," I was saying, "try and bear me with a little."
+
+Still she had never the word, and a fear began to rise in me like a fear
+of death.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, gazing on her hard, "is it a mistake again? Am I
+quite lost?"
+
+She raised her face to me, breathless.
+
+"Do you want me, Davie, truly?" said she, and I scarce could hear her
+say it.
+
+"I do that," said I. "O, sure you know it--I do that."
+
+"I have nothing left to give or to keep back," said she. "I was all
+yours from the first day, if you would have had a gift of me!" she said.
+
+This was on the summit of a brae; the place was windy and conspicuous,
+we were to be seen there even from the English ship; but I kneeled down
+before her in the sand, and embraced her knees, and burst into that
+storm of weeping that I thought it must have broken me. All thought was
+wholly beaten from my mind by the vehemency of my discomposure. I knew
+not where I was, I had forgot why I was happy; only I knew she stooped,
+and I felt her cherish me to her face and bosom, and heard her words out
+of a whirl.
+
+"Davie," she was saying, "O, Davie, is this what you think of me? Is it
+so that you were caring for poor me? O, Davie, Davie!"
+
+With that she wept also, and our tears were commingled in a perfect
+gladness.
+
+It might have been ten in the day before I came to a clear sense of what
+a mercy had befallen me; and sitting over against her, with her hands in
+mine, gazed in her face, and laughed out loud for pleasure like a child,
+and called her foolish and kind names. I have never seen the place look
+so pretty as these bents by Dunkirk; and the windmill sails, as they
+bobbed over the knowe, were like a tune of music.
+
+I know not how much longer we might have continued to forget all else
+besides ourselves, had I not chanced upon a reference to her father,
+which brought us to reality.
+
+"My little friend," I was calling her again and again, rejoicing to
+summon up the past by the sound of it, and to gaze across on her, and to
+be a little distant--"My little friend, now you are mine altogether;
+mine for good, my little friend; and that man's no longer at all."
+
+There came a sudden whiteness in her face, she plucked her hands from
+mine.
+
+"Davie, take me away from him!" she cried. "There's something wrong;
+he's not true. There will be something wrong; I have a dreadful terror
+here at my heart. What will he be wanting at all events with that King's
+ship? What will this word be saying?" And she held the letter forth. "My
+mind misgives me, it will be some ill to Alan. Open it, Davie--open it
+and see."
+
+I took it, and looked at it, and shook my head.
+
+"No," said I, "it goes against me, I cannot open a man's letter."
+
+"Not to save your friend?" she cried.
+
+"I cannae tell," said I. "I think not. If I was only sure!"
+
+"And you have but to break the seal!" said she.
+
+"I know it," said I, "but the thing goes against me."
+
+"Give it here," said she, "and I will open it myself."
+
+"Nor you neither," said I. "You least of all. It concerns your father,
+and his honour, dear, which we are both misdoubting. No question but the
+place is dangerous-like, and the English ship being here, and your
+father having word of it, and yon officer that stayed ashore! He would
+not be alone either; there must be more along with him; I daresay we are
+spied upon this minute. Ay, no doubt, the letter should be opened; but
+somehow, not by you nor me."
+
+I was about this far with it, and my spirit very much overcome with a
+sense of danger and hidden enemies, when I spied Alan, come back again
+from following James and walking by himself among the sand hills. He was
+in his soldier's coat, of course, and mighty fine; but I could not avoid
+to shudder when I thought how little that jacket would avail him, if he
+were once caught and flung in a skiff, and carried on board of the
+_Seahorse_, a deserter, a rebel, and now a condemned murderer.
+
+"There," said I, "there is the man that has the best right to open it:
+or not, as he thinks fit."
+
+With which I called upon his name, and we both stood up to be a mark for
+him.
+
+"If it is so--if it be more disgrace--will you can bear it?" she asked,
+looking upon me with a burning eye.
+
+"I was asked something of the same question when I had seen you but the
+once," said I. "What do you think I answered? That if I liked you as I
+thought I did--and O, but I like you better!--I would marry you at his
+gallows' foot."
+
+The blood rose in her face; she came close up and pressed upon me,
+holding my hand: and it was so that we awaited Alan.
+
+He came with one of his queer smiles. "What was I telling ye, David?"
+says he.
+
+"There is a time for all things, Alan," said I, "and this time is
+serious. How have you sped? You can speak out plain before this friend
+of ours."
+
+"I have been upon a fool's errand," said he.
+
+"I doubt we have done better than you, then," said I; "and, at least,
+here is a great deal of matter that you must judge of. Do you see that?"
+I went on, pointing to the ship. "That is the _Seahorse_, Captain
+Palliser."
+
+"I should ken her, too," says Alan. "I had fyke enough with her when she
+was stationed in the Forth. But what ails the man to come so close?"
+
+"I will tell you why he came there first," said I. "It was to bring this
+letter to James More. Why he stops here now that it's delivered, what
+it's likely to be about, why there's an officer hiding in the bents, and
+whether or not it's probable that he's alone--I would rather you
+considered for yourself."
+
+"A letter to James More?" said he.
+
+"The same," said I.
+
+"Well, and I can tell ye more than that," said Alan. "For last night
+when you were fast asleep, I heard the man colloquing with some one in
+the French, and then the door of that inn to be opened and shut."
+
+"Alan!" cried I, "you slept all night, and I am here to prove it."
+
+"Ay, but I would never trust Alan whether he was asleep or waking!" says
+he. "But the business looks bad. Let's see the letter."
+
+I gave it him.
+
+"Catriona," said he, "ye'll have to excuse me, my dear; but there's
+nothing less than my fine bones upon the cast of it, and I'll have to
+break this seal."
+
+"It is my wish," said Catriona.
+
+He opened it, glanced it through, and flung his hand in the air.
+
+"The stinking brock!" says he, and crammed the paper in his pocket.
+"Here, let's get our things thegether. This place is fair death to me."
+And he began to walk towards the inn.
+
+It was Catriona who spoke the first. "He has sold you?" she asked.
+
+"Sold me, my dear," said Alan. "But thanks to you and Davie, I'll can
+jink him yet. Just let me win upon my horse!" he added.
+
+"Catriona must come with us," said I. "She can have no more traffic with
+that man. She and I are to be married." At which she pressed my hand to
+her side.
+
+"Are ye there with it?" says Alan, looking back. "The best day's work
+that ever either of ye did yet I And I'm bound to say, my dawtie, ye
+make a real, bonny couple."
+
+The way that he was following brought us close in by the windmill, where
+I was aware of a man in seaman's trousers, who seemed to be spying from
+behind it. Only, of course, we took him in the rear.
+
+"See, Alan!" said I.
+
+"Wheesht!" said he, "this is my affairs."
+
+The man was, no doubt, a little deafened by the clattering of the mill,
+and we got up close before he noticed. Then he turned, and we saw he was
+a big fellow with a mahogany face.
+
+"I think, sir," says Alan, "that you speak the English?"
+
+"_Non, monsieur_," says he, with an incredible bad accent.
+
+"_Non, monsieur_," cries Alan, mocking him. "Is that how they learn you
+French on the _Seahorse?_ Ye muckle, gutsey hash, here's a Scots boot to
+your English hurdies!"
+
+And bounding on him before he could escape, he dealt the man a kick that
+laid him on his nose. Then he stood, with a savage smile, and watched
+him scramble to his feet and scamper off into the sand hills.
+
+"But it's high time I was clear of these empty bents!" said Alan; and
+continued his way at top speed and we still following, to the back door
+of Bazin's inn.
+
+It chanced that as we entered by the one door we came face to face with
+James More entering by the other.
+
+"Here!" said I to Catriona, "quick! upstairs with you and make your
+packets; this is no fit scene for you."
+
+In the meanwhile James and Alan had met in the midst of the long room.
+She passed them close by to reach the stairs; and after she was some way
+up I saw her turn and glance at them again, though without pausing.
+Indeed, they were worth looking at. Alan wore as they met one of his
+best appearances of courtesy and friendliness, yet with something
+eminently warlike, so that James smelled danger off the man, as folk
+smell fire in a house, and stood prepared for accidents.
+
+Time pressed. Alan's situation in that solitary place, and his enemies
+about him, might have daunted Cæsar. It made no change in him; and it
+was in his old spirit of mockery and daffing that he began the
+interview.
+
+"A braw good day to ye again, Mr. Drummond," said he. "What'll yon
+business of yours be just about?"
+
+"Why, the thing being private, and rather of a long story," says James,
+"I think it will keep very well till we have eaten."
+
+"I'm none so sure of that," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind it's either
+now or never; for the fact is me and Mr. Balfour here have gotten a
+line, and we're thinking of the road."
+
+I saw a little surprise in James's eye; but he held himself stoutly.
+
+"I have but the one word to say to cure you of that," said he, "and that
+is the name of my business."
+
+"Say it then," says Alan. "Hout! wha minds for Davie?"
+
+"It is a matter that would make us both rich men," said James.
+
+"Do ye tell me that?" cries Alan.
+
+"I do, sir," said James. "The plain fact is that it is Cluny's
+Treasure."
+
+"No!" cried Alan. "Have ye got word of it?"
+
+"I ken the place, Mr. Stewart, and can take you there," said James.
+
+"This crowns all!" says Alan. "Well, and I'm glad I came to Dunkirk. And
+so this was your business, was it? Halvers, I'm thinking?"
+
+"That is the business, sir," says James.
+
+"Well, well," says Alan; and then in the same tone of childlike
+interest, "It has naething to do with the _Seahorse_, then?" he asked.
+
+"With what?" says James.
+
+"Or the lad that I have just kicked the bottom of behind yon windmill?"
+pursued Alan. "Hut, man! have done with your lees! I have Palliser's
+letter here in my pouch. You're by with it, James More. You can never
+show your face again with dacent folk."
+
+James was taken all aback with it. He stood a second, motionless and
+white, then swelled with the living anger.
+
+"Do you talk to me, you bastard?" he roared out.
+
+"Ye glee'd swine!" cried Alan, and hit him a sounding buffet on the
+mouth, and the next wink of time their blades clashed together.
+
+At the first sound of the bare steel I instinctively leaped back from
+the collision. The next I saw, James parried a thrust so nearly that I
+thought him killed; and it lowed up in my mind that this was the girl's
+father, and in a manner almost my own, and I drew and ran in to sever
+them.
+
+"Keep back, Davie! Are ye daft? Damn ye, keep back!" roared Alan. "Your
+blood be on your ain heid then!"
+
+I beat their blades down twice. I was knocked reeling against the wall;
+I was back again betwixt them. They took no heed of me, thrusting at
+each other like two furies. I can never think how I avoided being
+stabbed myself or stabbing one of these two Rodomonts, and the whole
+business turned about me like a piece of a dream; in the midst of which
+I heard a great cry from the stair, and Catriona sprang before her
+father. In the same moment the point of my sword encountered something
+yielding. It came back to me reddened. I saw the blood flow on the
+girl's kerchief, and stood sick.
+
+"Will you be killing him before my eyes, and me his daughter after all?"
+she cried.
+
+"My dear, I have done with him," said Alan, and went and sat on a table,
+with his arms crossed and the sword naked in his hand.
+
+Awhile she stood before the man, panting, with big eyes, then swung
+suddenly about and faced him.
+
+"Begone!" was her word, "take your shame out of my sight; leave me with
+clean folk. I am a daughter of Alpin! Shame of the sons of Alpin,
+begone!"
+
+It was said with so much passion as awoke me from the horror of my own
+bloodied sword. The two stood facing, she with the red stain on her
+kerchief, he white as a rag. I knew him well enough--I knew it must have
+pierced him in the quick place of his soul; but he betook himself to a
+bravado air.
+
+"Why," says he, sheathing his sword, though still with a bright eye on
+Alan, "if this brawl is over I will but get my portmanteau---"
+
+"There goes no pockmantie out of this place except with me," says Alan.
+
+"Sir!" cries James.
+
+"James More," says Alan, "this lady daughter of yours is to marry my
+friend Davie, upon the which account I let you pack with a hale carcase.
+But take you my advice of it and get that carcase out of harm's way or
+ower late. Little as you suppose it, there are leemits to my temper."
+
+"Be damned, sir, but my money's there!" said James.
+
+"I'm vexed about that, too," says Alan, with his funny face, "but now,
+ye see, it's mines." And then with more gravity, "Be you advised, James
+More, you leave this house."
+
+James seemed to cast about for a moment in his mind; but it's to be
+thought he had enough of Alan's swordsmanship, for he suddenly put off
+his hat to us and (with a face like one of the damned) bade us farewell
+in a series. With which he was gone.
+
+At the same time a spell was lifted from me.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, "it was me--it was my sword. O, are ye much hurt?"
+
+"I know it, Davie, I am loving you for the pain of it; it was done
+defending that bad man, my father. See!" she said, and showed me a
+bleeding scratch, "see, you have made a man of me now. I will carry a
+wound like an old soldier."
+
+Joy that she should be so little hurt, and the love of her brave nature,
+transported me. I embraced her, I kissed the wound.
+
+"And am I to be out of the kissing, me that never lost a chance?" says
+Alan; and putting me aside and taking Catriona by either shoulder, "My
+dear," he said, "you're a true daughter of Alpin. By all accounts, he
+was a very fine man, and he may weel be proud of you. If ever I was to
+get married, it's the marrow of you I would be seeking for a mother to
+my sons. And I bear a king's name and speak the truth."
+
+He said it with a serious heat of admiration that was honey to the girl,
+and through her, to me. It seemed to wipe us clean of all James More's
+disgraces. And the next moment he was just himself again.
+
+"And now by your leave, my dawties," said he, "this is a' very bonny;
+but Alan Breck'll be a wee thing nearer to the gallows than he's caring
+for; and Dod! I think this is a grand place to be leaving."
+
+The word recalled us to some wisdom. Alan ran upstairs and returned with
+our saddle-bags and James More's portmanteau; I picked up Catriona's
+bundle where she had dropped it on the stair; and we were setting forth
+out of that dangerous house, when Bazin stopped the way with cries and
+gesticulations. He had whipped under a table when the swords were drawn,
+but now he was as bold as a lion. There was his bill to be settled,
+there was a chair broken, Alan had sat among his dinner things, James
+More had fled.
+
+"Here," I cried, "pay yourself," and flung him down some Lewie d'ors;
+for I thought it was no time to be accounting.
+
+He sprang upon that money, and we passed him by, and ran forth into the
+open. Upon three sides of the house were seamen hasting and closing in;
+a little nearer to us James More waved his hat as if to hurry them; and
+right behind him, like some foolish person holding up its hands, were
+the sails of the windmill turning.
+
+Alan gave but the one glance, and laid himself down to run. He carried a
+great weight in James More's portmanteau; but I think he would as soon
+have lost his life as cast away that booty which was his revenge; and he
+ran so that I was distressed to follow him, and marvelled and exulted to
+see the girl bounding at my side.
+
+As soon as we appeared, they cast off all disguise upon the other side;
+and the seamen pursued us with shouts and view-hullohs. We had a start
+of some two hundred yards, and they were but bandy-legged tarpaulins
+after all, that could not hope to better us at such an exercise. I
+suppose they were armed, but did not care to use their pistols on French
+ground. And as soon as I perceived that we not only held our advantage
+but drew a little away, I began to feel quite easy of the issue. For all
+which, it was a hot, brisk bit of work, so long as it lasted; Dunkirk
+was still far off; and when we popped over a knowe, and found a company
+of the garrison marching on the other side on some manoeuvre, I could
+very well understand the word that Alan had.
+
+He stopped running at once; and mopping at his brow, "They're a real
+bonny folk, the French nation," says he.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+No sooner were we safe within the walls of Dunkirk than we held a very
+necessary council-of-war on our position. We had taken a daughter from
+her father at the sword's point; any judge would give her back to him at
+once, and by all likelihood clap me and Alan into jail; and though we
+had an argument upon our side in Captain Palisser's letter, neither
+Catriona nor I were very keen to be using it in public. Upon all
+accounts it seemed the most prudent to carry the girl to Paris to the
+hands of her own chieftain, Macgregor of Bohaldie, who would be very
+willing to help his kinswoman, on the one hand, and not at all anxious
+to dishonour James upon the other.
+
+We made but a slow journey of it up, for Catriona was not so good at the
+riding as the running, and had scarce sat in a saddle since the
+'Forty-five. But we made it out at last, reached Paris early of a
+Sabbath morning, and made all speed, under Alan's guidance, to find
+Bohaldie. He was finely lodged, and lived in a good style, having a
+pension in the Scots Fund, as well as private means; greeted Catriona
+like one of his own house, and seemed altogether very civil and
+discreet, but not particularly open. We asked of the news of James More.
+"Poor James!" said he, and shook his head and smiled, so that I thought
+he knew further than he meant to tell. Then we showed him Palisser's
+letter, and he drew a long face at that.
+
+"Poor James!" said he again. "Well, there are worse folk than James
+More, too. But this is dreadful bad. Tut, tut, he must have forgot
+himself entirely! This is a most undesirable letter. But, for all that,
+gentlemen, I cannot see what we would want to make it public for. It's
+an ill bird that fouls his own nest, and we are all Scots folk and all
+Hieland."
+
+Upon this we were all agreed, save perhaps Alan; and still more upon the
+question of our marriage, which Bohaldie took in his own hands, as
+though there had been no such person as James More, and gave Catriona
+away with very pretty manners and agreeable compliments in French. It
+was not till all was over, and our healths drunk, that he told us James
+was in that city, whither he had preceded us some days, and where he now
+lay sick, and like to die. I thought I saw by my wife's face what way
+her inclination pointed.
+
+"And let us go see him, then," said I.
+
+"If it is your pleasure," said Catriona. These were early days.
+
+He was lodged in the same quarter of the city with his chief, in a great
+house upon a corner; and we were guided up to the garret where he lay by
+the sound of Highland piping. It seemed he had just borrowed a set of
+them from Bohaldie to amuse his sickness; though he was no such hand as
+was his brother Rob, he made good music of the kind; and it was strange
+to observe the French folk crowding on the stairs, and some of them
+laughing. He lay propped in a pallet. The first look of him I saw he was
+upon his last business; and, doubtless, this was a strange place for him
+to die in. But even now I find I can scarce dwell upon his end with
+patience. Doubtless, Bohaldie had prepared him; he seemed to know we
+were married, complimented us on the event, and gave us a benediction
+like a patriarch.
+
+"I have been never understood," said he. "I forgive you both without an
+after-thought;" after which he spoke for all the world in his old
+manner, was so obliging as to play us a tune or two upon his pipes, and
+borrowed a small sum before I left. I could not trace even a hint of
+shame in any part of his behaviour; but he was great upon forgiveness;
+it seemed always fresh to him. I think he forgave me every time we met;
+and when after some four days he passed away in a kind of odour of
+affectionate sanctity, I could have torn my hair out for exasperation. I
+had him buried; but what to put upon his tomb was quite beyond me, till
+at last I considered the date would look best alone.
+
+I thought it wiser to resign all thoughts of Leyden, where we had
+appeared once as brother and sister, and it would certainly look strange
+to return in a new character. Scotland would be doing for us; and
+thither, after I had recovered that which I had left behind, we sailed
+in a Low Country ship.
+
+And now, Miss Barbara Balfour (to set the ladies first) and Mr. Alan
+Balfour, younger of Shaws, here is the story brought fairly to an end. A
+great many of the folk that took a part in it, you will find (if you
+think well) that you have seen and spoken with. Alison Hastie in
+Limekilns was the lass that rocked your cradle when you were too small
+to know of it, and walked abroad with you in the policy when you were
+bigger. That very fine great lady that is Miss Barbara's name-mamma is
+no other than the same Miss Grant that made so much a fool of David
+Balfour in the house of the Lord Advocate. And I wonder whether you
+remember a little, lean, lively gentleman in a scratchwig and a
+wraprascal, that came to Shaws very late of a dark night, and whom you
+were awakened out of your beds and brought down to the dining-hall to be
+presented to, by the name of Mr. Jamieson? Or has Alan forgotten what he
+did at Mr. Jamieson's request--a most disloyal act--for which, by the
+letter of the law, he might be hanged--no less than drinking the king's
+health _across the water_? These were strange doings in a good Whig
+house! But Mr. Jamieson is a man privileged, and might set fire to my
+corn-barn; and the name they know him by now in France is the Chevalier
+Stewart.
+
+As for Davie and Catriona, I shall watch you pretty close in the next
+days, and see if you are so bold as to be laughing at papa and mamma. It
+is true we were not so wise as we might have been, and made a great deal
+of sorrow out of nothing; but you will find as you grow up that even the
+artful Miss Barbara, and even the valiant Mr. Alan will be not so very
+much wiser than their parents. For the life of man upon this world of
+ours is a funny business. They talk of the angels weeping; but I think
+they must more often be holding their sides, as they look on; and there
+was one thing I determined to do when I began this long story, and that
+was to tell out everything as it befell.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Footnote 1: Conspicuous.
+
+Footnote 2: Country.
+
+Footnote 3: The Fairies.
+
+Footnote 4: Flatteries.
+
+Footnote 5: Trust to.
+
+Footnote 6: This must have reference to Dr. Cameron on his first
+visit.--D.B.
+
+Footnote 7: Sweethearts.
+
+Footnote 8: Child.
+
+Footnote 9: Palm.
+
+Footnote 10: Gallows.
+
+Footnote 11: My Catechism.
+
+Footnote 12: Now Prince's Street.
+
+Footnote 13: A learned folklorist of my acquaintance hereby identifies
+Alan's air. It has been printed (it seems) in Campbell's _Tales of the
+West Highlands_, Vol. II., p. 91. Upon examination it would really seem
+as if Miss Grant's unrhymed doggrel (see chapter V.) would fit with a
+little humouring to the notes in question.
+
+Footnote 14: A ball placed upon a little mound for convenience of
+striking.
+
+Footnote 15: Patched shoes.
+
+Footnote 16: Shoemaker.
+
+Footnote 17: Tamson's mare, to go afoot.
+
+Footnote 18: Beard.
+
+Footnote 19: Ragged.
+
+Footnote 20: Fine things.
+
+Footnote 21: Catch.
+
+Footnote 22: Victuals.
+
+Footnote 23: Trust.
+
+Footnote 24: Sea fog.
+
+Footnote 25: Bashful.
+
+Footnote 26: Rest.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of David Balfour, Second Part
+by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14133 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14133 ***</div>
+
+<a name="balfour001"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour001.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: SHE DROPPED ME ONE OF HER CURTSEYS, WHICH
+WERE EXTRAORDINARY TAKING" src="images/balfour001sm.jpg" height="762" width="525" /></a><br />
+
+SHE DROPPED ME
+ONE OF HER CURTSEYS, WHICH WERE EXTRAORDINARY TAKING
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+<h4>There are several editions of this ebook in the Project Gutenberg collection. Various characteristics of each ebook are listed to aid in selecting the preferred file.<br />Click on any of the filenumbers below to quickly view each ebook.
+</h4>
+
+
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+
+<tr><td>
+ <b><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/30870/30870-h/30870-h.htm">
+30870</a> </b> </td><td>(A Table of Contents; No illustrations)
+</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+ <b><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/589/589-h/589-h.htm">
+589</a></b></td><td>(No illustrations and No Table of Contents)
+</td></tr>
+
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+ <b><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/14133/14133-h/14133-h.htm">
+14133</a></b> </td><td>(An illustrated HTML file with a Table of Contents)
+</td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+
+
+<h1>DAVID BALFOUR</h1>
+<br />
+<h2>Being Memoirs of his Adventures at home
+and Abroad</h2>
+<br />
+<h3>THE SECOND PART: <i>In which are set forth his Misfortunes
+anent the</i> APPIN <i>Murder; his Troubles with Lord Advocate</i>
+GRANT; <i>Captivity on the Bass Rock; Journey into Holland
+and France; and Singular Relations with</i> JAMES MORE
+DRUMMOND <i>or</i> MACGREGOR, <i>a Son of the notorious</i> ROB
+ROY, <i>and his Daughter</i> CATRIONA</h3>
+<br />
+<h3>WRITTEN BY HIMSELF</h3>
+<h4>AND NOW SET FORTH BY</h4>
+<h2>ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON</h2>
+<br />
+<h3><i>ILLUSTRATED</i></h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+<h4>NEW YORK</h4>
+<h4>CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS</h4>
+<h4>1905</h4>
+
+<h4>COPYRIGHT, 1893, BY</h4>
+<h4>CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS</h4>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2>DEDICATION</h2> <h3>To</h3> <h3>CHARLES BAXTER, <i>Writer to the
+Signet</i>.</h3>
+
+<p>MY DEAR CHARLES,</p>
+
+<p>It is the fate of sequels to disappoint those who have waited for them;
+and, my David having been left to kick his heels for more than a lustre in
+the British Linen Company's office, must expect his late reappearance to be
+greeted with hoots, if not with missiles. Yet, when I remember the days of
+our explorations, I am not without hope. There should be left in our native
+city some seed of the elect; some long-legged, hot-headed youth must repeat
+to-day our dreams and wanderings of so many years ago; he will relish the
+pleasure, which should have been ours, to follow among named streets and
+numbered houses the country walks of David Balfour, to identify Dean, and
+Silvermills, and Broughton, and Hope Park and Pilrig, and poor old
+Lochend--if it still be standing, and the Figgate Whins--if there be any of
+them left; or to push (on a long holiday) so far afield as Gillane or the
+Bass. So, perhaps, his eye shall be opened to behold the series of the
+generations, and he shall weigh with surprise his momentous and nugatory
+gift of life.</p>
+
+<p>You are still--as when first I saw, as when I last addressed you--in the
+venerable city which I must always think of as my home. And I have come so
+far; and the sights and thoughts of my youth pursue me; and I see like a
+vision the youth of my father, and of his father, and the whole stream of
+lives flowing down there, far in the north, with the sound of laughter and
+tears, to cast me out in the end, as by a sudden freshet, on those ultimate
+islands. And I admire and bow my head before the romance of destiny.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+R.L.S.<br />
+<br />
+VAILIMA,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;UPOLU,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;SAMOA,<br />
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1902.<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CONTENTS'></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<blockquote>
+<a href='#Part_I'>Part I</a><br />
+<br />
+<i>THE LORD ADVOCATE</i><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_I'>I. A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_II'>II. THE HIGHLAND WRITER</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_III'>III. I GO TO PILRIG</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_IV'>IV. LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_V'>V. IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VI'>VI. UMQHILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VII'>VII. I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOUR</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VIII'>VIII. THE BRAVO</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_IX'>IX. THE HEATHER ON FIRE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_X'>X. THE RED-HEADED MAN</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XI'>XI. THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XII'>XII. ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIII'>XIII. GILLANE SANDS</a><br
+/>
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIV'>XIV. THE BASS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XV'>XV. BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVI'>XVI. THE MISSING WITNESS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVII'>XVII. THE MEMORIAL</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII'>XVIII. THE TEE'D BALL</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIX'>XIX. I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XX'>XX. I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#Part_II'>Part II</a><br />
+<br />
+<i>FATHER AND DAUGHTER</i><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXI'>XXI. THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXII'>XXII. HELVOETSLUYS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXIII'>XXIII. TRAVELS IN HOLLAND</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXIV'>XXIV. FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXV'>XXV. THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXVI'>XXVI. THE THREESOME</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXVII'>XXVII. A TWOSOME</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXVIII'>XXVIII. IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXIX'>XXIX. WE MEET IN DUNKIRK</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXX'>XXX. THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP</a><br />
+<a href='#CONCLUSION'>XXXI. CONCLUSION</a><br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote>
+<a href='#balfour001'>"SHE DROPPED ME ONE OF HER CURTSEYS, WHICH WERE
+EXTRAORDINARY TAKING"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour002'>"'WHAT DID THEY SUFFER FOR?' I ASKED?"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour003'>"'TIT YOU EFFER HEAR WHERE ALAN GRIGOR FAND THE
+TANGS,' SAID HE"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour004'>"'THE GOODMAN BROUGHT ME MY MEAT AND A DROP
+BRANDY, AND A CANDLE-DOWP TO EAT IT BY, ABOUT
+ELEEVEN,' SAID HE"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour005'>"'THERE HE SAT, A MUCKLE FAT, WHITE HASH OF A MAN
+LIKE CREISH'"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour006'>"'THERE IS NOTHING HERE TO BE VIEWED BUT NAKED
+CAMPBELL SPITE AND SCURVY CAMPBELL INTRIGUE'"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour007'>"UP SHE STOOD ON THE BULWARKS AND HELD BY A
+STAY"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour008'>"'YOU TELL ME SHE IS HERE?' SAID HE AGAIN"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour009'>"'KEEP BACK, DAVIE! ARE YE DAFT?'"</a><br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1"></a>[pg 1]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='Part_I'></a>Part I</h2>
+
+<h2>THE LORD ADVOCATE</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_I'></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK</h3>
+
+
+<p>The 25th day of August, 1751, about two in the afternoon, I, David
+Balfour, came forth of the British Linen Company, a porter attending me
+with a bag of money, and some of the chief of these merchants bowing me
+from their doors. Two days before, and even so late as yestermorning, I was
+like a beggarman by the wayside, clad in rags, brought down to my last
+shillings, my companion a condemned traitor, a price set on my own head for
+a crime with the news of which the country rang. To-day I was served heir
+to my position in life, a landed laird, a bank porter by me carrying my
+gold, recommendations in my pocket, and (in the words of the saying) the
+ball directly at my foot.</p>
+
+<p>There were two circumstances that served me as ballast to so much sail.
+The first was the very difficult <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2"
+id="Page_2"></a>[pg 2]</span>and deadly business I had still to handle; the
+second, the place that I was in. The tall, black city, and the numbers and
+movement and noise of so many folk, made a new world for me, after the
+moorland braes, the sea-sands, and the still country-sides that I had
+frequented up to then. The throng of the citizens in particular abashed me.
+Rankeillor's son was short and small in the girth; his clothes scarce held
+on me; and it was plain I was ill qualified to strut in the front of a
+bank-porter. It was plain, if I did so, I should but set folk laughing, and
+(what was worse in my case) set them asking questions. So that I behooved
+to come by some clothes of my own, and in the meanwhile to walk by the
+porter's side, and put my hand on his arm as though we were a pair of
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>At a merchant's in the Luckenbooths, I had myself fitted out: none too
+fine, for I had no idea to appear like a beggar on horseback; but comely
+and responsible, so that servants should respect me. Thence to an
+armourer's, where I got a plain sword, to suit with my degree in life. I
+felt safer with the weapon, though (for one so ignorant of defence) it
+might be called an added danger. The porter, who was naturally a man of
+some experience, judged my accoutrement to be well chosen.</p>
+
+<p>"Naething kenspeckle,"<sup><a href="#fn1" name="rfn1">[1]</a></sup> said
+he, "plain, dacent claes. As for the rapier, nae doubt it sits wi' your
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a>[pg 3]</span>degree;
+but an I had been you, I would hae waired my siller better-gates than
+that." And proposed I should buy winter-hosen from a wife in the
+Cowgate-back, that was a cousin of his own, and made them "extraordinar
+endurable."</p>
+
+<p>But I had other matters on my hand more pressing. Here I was in this
+old, black city, which was for all the world like a rabbit-warren, not only
+by the number of its indwellers, but the complication of its passages and
+holes. It was indeed a place where no stranger had a chance to find a
+friend, let be another stranger. Suppose him even to hit on the right
+close, people dwelt so thronged in these tall houses, he might very well
+seek a day before he chanced on the right door. The ordinary course was to
+hire a lad they called a <i>caddie</i>, who was like a guide or pilot, led
+you where you had occasion, and (your errands being done) brought you again
+where you were lodging. But these caddies, being always employed in the
+same sort of services, and having it for obligation to be well informed of
+every house and person in the city, had grown to form a brotherhood of
+spies; and I knew from tales of Mr. Campbell's how they communicated one
+with another, what a rage of curiosity they conceived as to their
+employer's business, and how they were like eyes and fingers to the police.
+It would be a piece of little wisdom, the way I was now placed, to tack
+such a ferret to my tails. I had three visits to make, all immediately
+needful: to my kinsman Mr. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4"
+id="Page_4"></a>[pg 4]</span>Balfour of Pilrig, to Stewart the Writer that
+was Appin's agent, and to William Grant Esquire of Prestongrange, Lord
+Advocate of Scotland. Mr. Balfour's was a non-committal visit; and besides
+(Pilrig being in the country) I made bold to find way to it myself, with
+the help of my two legs and a Scots tongue. But the rest were in a
+different case. Not only was the visit to Appin's agent, in the midst of
+the cry about the Appin murder, dangerous in itself, but it was highly
+inconsistent with the other. I was like to have a bad enough time of it
+with my Lord Advocate Grant, the best of ways; but to go to him hot-foot
+from Appin's agent, was little likely to mend my own affairs, and might
+prove the mere ruin of friend Alan's. The whole thing, besides, gave me a
+look of running with the hare and hunting with the hounds that was little
+to my fancy. I determined, therefore, to be done at once with Mr. Stewart
+and the whole Jacobitical side of my business, and to profit for that
+purpose by the guidance of the porter at my side. But it chanced I had
+scarce given him the address, when there came a sprinkle of rain--nothing
+to hurt, only for my new clothes--and we took shelter under a pend at the
+head of a close or alley.</p>
+
+<p>Being strange to what I saw, I stepped a little farther in. The narrow
+paved way descended swiftly. Prodigious tall houses sprang upon each side
+and bulged out, one story beyond another, as they rose. At the top <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></a>[pg 5]</span>only a ribbon
+of sky showed in. By what I could spy in the windows, and by the
+respectable persons that passed out and in, I saw the houses to be very
+well occupied; and the whole appearance of the place interested me like a
+tale.</p>
+
+<p>I was still gazing, when there came a sudden brisk tramp of feet in time
+and clash of steel behind me. Turning quickly, I was aware of a party of
+armed soldiers, and, in their midst, a tall man in a great-coat. He walked
+with a stoop that was like a piece of courtesy, genteel and insinuating: he
+waved his hands plausibly as he went, and his face was sly and handsome. I
+thought his eye took me in, but could not meet it. This procession went by
+to a door in the close, which a serving-man in a fine livery set open; and
+two of the soldier-lads carried the prisoner within, the rest lingering
+with their firelocks by the door.</p>
+
+<p>There can nothing pass in the streets of a city without some following
+of idle folk and children. It was so now; but the more part melted away
+incontinent until but three were left. One was a girl; she was dressed like
+a lady, and had a screen of the Drummond colours on her head; but her
+comrades or (I should say) followers were ragged gillies, such as I had
+seen the matches of by the dozen in my Highland journey. They all spoke
+together earnestly in Gaelic, the sound of which was pleasant in my ears
+for the sake of Alan; and though the rain was by again, and my porter <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></a>[pg 6]</span>plucked at me
+to be going, I even drew nearer where they were, to listen. The lady
+scolded sharply, the others making apologies and cringeing before her, so
+that I made sure she was come of a chief's house. All the while the three
+of them sought in their pockets, and by what I could make out, they had the
+matter of half a farthing among the party; which made me smile a little to
+see all Highland folk alike for fine obeisances and empty sporrans.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced the girl turned suddenly about, so that I saw her face for
+the first time. There is no greater wonder than the way the face of a young
+woman fits in a man's mind, and stays there, and he could never tell you
+why; it just seems it was the thing he wanted. She had wonderful bright
+eyes like stars, and I daresay the eyes had a part in it; but what I
+remember the most clearly was the way her lips were a trifle open as she
+turned. And whatever was the cause, I stood there staring like a fool. On
+her side, as she had not known there was anyone so near, she looked at me a
+little longer, and perhaps with more surprise, than was entirely civil.</p>
+
+<p>It went through my country head she might be wondering at my new
+clothes; with that, I blushed to my hair, and at the sight of my colouring
+it's to be supposed she drew her own conclusions, for she moved her gillies
+farther down the close, and they fell again to this dispute where I could
+hear no more of it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></a>[pg 7]</span>I
+had often admired a lassie before then, if scarce so sudden and strong; and
+it was rather my disposition to withdraw than to come forward, for I was
+much in fear of mockery from the womenkind. You would have thought I had
+now all the more reason to pursue my common practice, since I had met this
+young lady in the city street, seemingly following a prisoner, and
+accompanied with two very ragged, indecent-like Highlandmen. But there was
+here a different ingredient; it was plain the girl thought I had been
+prying in her secrets; and with my new clothes and sword, and at the top of
+my new fortunes, this was more than I could swallow. The beggar on
+horseback could not bear to be thrust down so low, or at the least of it,
+not by this young lady.</p>
+
+<p>I followed, accordingly, and took off my new hat to her, the best that I
+was able.</p>
+
+<p>"Madam," said I, "I think it only fair to myself to let you understand I
+have no Gaelic. It is true I was listening, for I have friends of my own
+across the Highland line, and the sound of that tongue comes friendly; but
+for your private affairs, if you had spoken Greek, I might have had more
+guess at them."</p>
+
+<p>She made me a little, distant curtsey. "There is no harm done," said
+she, with a pretty accent, most like the English (but more agreeable). "A
+cat may look at a king."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not mean to offend," said I. "I have no skill <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a>[pg 8]</span>of city
+manners; I never before this day set foot inside the doors of Edinburgh.
+Take me for a country lad--it's what I am; and I would rather I told you
+than you found it out."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, it will be a very unusual thing for strangers to be speaking to
+each other on the causeway," she replied. "But if you are landward<sup><a
+href="#fn2" name="rfn2">[2]</a></sup> bred it will be different. I am as
+landward as yourself; I am Highland as you see, and think myself the
+farther from my home."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not yet a week since I passed the line," said I. "Less than a
+week ago I was on the Braes of Balwhidder."</p>
+
+<p>"Balwhither?" she cries; "come ye from Balwhither? The name of it makes
+all there is of me rejoice. You will not have been long there, and not
+known some of our friends or family?"</p>
+
+<p>"I lived with a very honest, kind man called Duncan Dhu Maclaren," I
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Well I know Duncan, and you give him the true name!" she said; "and if
+he is an honest man, his wife is honest indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said I, "they are fine people, and the place is a bonny
+place."</p>
+
+<p>"Where in the great world is such another?" she cries; "I am loving the
+smell of that place and the roots that grew there."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></a>[pg 9]</span>I
+was infinitely taken with the spirit of the maid. "I could be wishing I had
+brought you a spray of that heather," says I. "And though I did ill to
+speak with you at the first, now it seems we have common acquaintance, I
+make it my petition you will not forget me. David Balfour is the name I am
+known by. This is my lucky day when I have just come into a landed estate
+and am not very long out of a deadly peril. I wish you would keep my name
+in mind for the sake of Balquidder," said I, "and I will yours for the sake
+of my lucky day."</p>
+
+<p>"My name is not spoken," she replied, with a great deal of haughtiness.
+"More than a hundred years it has not gone upon men's tongues, save for a
+blink. I am nameless like the Folk of Peace.<sup><a href="#fn3"
+name="rfn3">[3]</a></sup> Catriona Drummond is the one I use."</p>
+
+<p>Now indeed I knew where I was standing. In all broad Scotland there was
+but the one name proscribed, and that was the name of the Macgregors. Yet
+so far from fleeing this undesirable acquaintancy, I plunged the deeper
+in.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been sitting with one who was in the same case with yourself,"
+said I, "and I think he will be one of your friends. They called him Robin
+Oig."</p>
+
+<p>"Did ye so?" cries she. "Ye met Rob?"</p>
+
+<p>"I passed the night with him," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a fowl of the night," said she.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></a>[pg
+10]</span>"There was a set of pipes there," I went on, "so you may judge if
+the time passed."</p>
+
+<p>"You should be no enemy, at all events," said she. "That was his brother
+there a moment since, with the red soldiers round him. It is him that I
+call father."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it so?" cried I. "Are you a daughter of James More's?"</p>
+
+<p>"All the daughter that he has," says she: "the daughter of a prisoner;
+that I should forget it so, even for one hour, to talk with strangers!"</p>
+
+<p>Here one of the gillies addressed her in what he had of English, to know
+what "she" (meaning by that himself) was to do about "ta sneeshin." I took
+some note of him for a short, bandy-legged, red-haired, big-headed man,
+that I was to know more of to my cost.</p>
+
+<p>"There can be none the day, Neil," she replied. "How will you get
+'sneeshin,' wanting siller? It will teach you another time to be more
+careful; and I think James More will not be very well pleased with Neil of
+the Tom."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Drummond," I said, "I told you I was in my lucky day. Here I am,
+and a bank-porter at my tail. And remember I have had the hospitality of
+your own country of Balwhidder."</p>
+
+<p>"It was not one of my people gave it," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well," said I, "but I am owing your uncle at least for some springs
+upon the pipes. Besides which, I have offered myself to be your friend, and
+you have <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></a>[pg
+11]</span>been so forgetful that you did not refuse me in the proper
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"If it had been a great sum, it might have done you honour," said she.
+"But I will tell you what this is. James More lies shackled in prison; but
+this time past, they will be bringing him down here daily to the
+Advocate's..."</p>
+
+<p>"The Advocate's?" I cried. "Is that . . . ?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is the house of the Lord Advocate, Grant of Prestongrange," said
+she. "There they bring my father one time and another, for what purpose I
+have no thought in my mind; but it seems there is some hope dawned for him.
+All this same time they will not let me be seeing him, nor yet him write;
+and we wait upon the King's street to catch him; and now we give him his
+snuff as he goes by, and now something else. And here is this son of
+trouble, Neil, son of Duncan, has lost my fourpenny-piece that was to buy
+that snuff, and James More must go wanting, and will think his daughter has
+forgotten him."</p>
+
+<p>I took sixpence from my pocket, gave it to Neil, and bade him go about
+his errand. Then to her, "That sixpence came with me by Balwhidder," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" she said, "you are a friend to the Gregara!"</p>
+
+<p>"I would not like to deceive you either," said I. "I know very little of
+the Gregara and less of James More and his doings; but since the while I
+have been standing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12"
+id="Page_12"></a>[pg 12]</span>in this close, I seem to know something of
+yourself; and if you will just say 'a friend to Miss Catriona' I will see
+you are the less cheated."</p>
+
+<p>"The one cannot be without the other," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I will even try," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And what will you be thinking of myself?" she cried, "to be holding my
+hand to the first stranger!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking nothing but that you are a good daughter," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not be without repaying it," she said; "where is it you
+stop?"</p>
+
+<p>"To tell the truth, I am stopping nowhere yet," said I, "being not full
+three hours in the city; but if you will give me your direction, I will be
+so bold as come seeking my sixpence for myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Will I can trust you for that?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"You have little fear," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"James More could not bear it else," said she. "I stop beyond the
+village of Dean, on the north side of the water, with Mrs. Drummond-Ogilvy
+of Allardyce, who is my near friend and will be glad to thank you."</p>
+
+<p>"You are to see me then, so soon as what I have to do permits," said I;
+and the remembrance of Alan rolling in again upon my mind, I made haste to
+say farewell.</p>
+
+<p>I could not but think, even as I did so, that we had made extraordinary
+free upon short acquaintance, and that a really wise young lady would have
+shown herself <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></a>[pg
+13]</span>more backward. I think it was the bank-porter that put me from
+this ungallant train of thought.</p>
+
+<p>"I thoucht ye had been a lad of some kind o' sense," he began, shooting
+out his lips. "Ye're no likely to gang far this gate. A fule and his
+siller's shune parted. Eh, but ye're a green callant!" he cried, "an' a
+veecious, tae! Cleikin' up wi' baubee-joes!"</p>
+
+<p>"If you dare to speak of the young lady ..." I began.</p>
+
+<p>"Leddy!" he cried. "Haud us and safe us, whatten leddy? Ca' <i>thon</i>
+a leddy? The toun's fu' o' them. Leddies! Man, it's weel seen ye're no very
+acquant in Embro'!"</p>
+
+<p>A clap of anger took me.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," said I, "lead me where I told you, and keep your foul mouth
+shut!"</p>
+
+<p>He did not wholly obey me, for though he no more addressed me directly,
+he sang at me as he went in a very impudent manner of innuendo, and with an
+exceedingly ill voice and ear--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"As Mally Lee cam doun the street, her capuchin did flee.<br />
+She cuist a look ahint her to see her negligee,<br />
+And we're a' gaun east and wast, we're a' gaun ajee,<br />
+We're a' gaun east and wast courtin' Mally Lee."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></a>[pg 14]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_II'></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE HIGHLAND WRITER</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer dwelt at the top of the longest stair
+that ever mason set a hand to; fifteen flights of it, no less; and when I
+had come to his door, and a clerk had opened it, and told me his master was
+within, I had scarce breath enough to send my porter packing.</p>
+
+<p>"Awa' east and wast wi' ye!" said I, took the money bag out of his
+hands, and followed the clerk in.</p>
+
+<p>The outer room was an office with the clerk's chair at a table spread
+with law papers. In the inner chamber, which opened from it, a little brisk
+man sat poring on a deed, from which he scarce raised his eyes upon my
+entrance; indeed, he still kept his finger in the place, as though prepared
+to show me out and fall again to his studies. This pleased me little
+enough; and what pleased me less, I thought the clerk was in a good posture
+to overhear what should pass between us.</p>
+
+<p>I asked if he was Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer.</p>
+
+<p>"The same," says he; "and if the question is equally fair, who may you
+be yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"You never heard tell of my name nor of me <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></a>[pg 15]</span>either," said I, "but I bring
+you a token from a friend that you know well. That you know well," I
+repeated, lowering my voice, "but maybe are not just so keen to hear from
+at this present being. And the bits of business that I have to propone to
+you are rather in the nature of being confidential. In short, I would like
+to think we were quite private."</p>
+
+<p>He rose without more words, casting down his paper like a man
+ill-pleased, sent forth his clerk of an errand, and shut to the house-door
+behind him.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, sir," said he, returning, "speak out your mind and fear nothing;
+though before you begin," he cries out, "I tell you mine misgives me! I
+tell you beforehand, ye're either a Stewart or a Stewart sent ye. A good
+name it is, and one it would ill-become my father's son to lightly. But I
+begin to grue at the sound of it."</p>
+
+<p>"My name is called Balfour," said I, "David Balfour of Shaws. As for him
+that sent me, I will let his token speak." And I showed the silver
+button.</p>
+
+<p>"Put it in your pocket, sir!" cries he, "Ye need name no names. The
+deevil's buckie, I ken the button of him! And de'il hae't! Where is he
+now?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him I knew not where Alan was, but he had some sure place (or
+thought he had) about the north side, where he was to lie until a ship was
+found for him; and how and where he had appointed to be spoken with.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></a>[pg
+16]</span>"It's been always my opinion that I would hang in a tow for this
+family of mine," he cried, "and, dod! I believe the day's come now! Get a
+ship for him, quot' he! And who's to pay for it? The man's daft!"</p>
+
+<p>"That is my part of the affair, Mr. Stewart," said I. "Here is a bag of
+good money, and if more be wanted, more is to be had where it came
+from."</p>
+
+<p>"I needn't ask your politics," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye need not," said I, smiling, "for I'm as big a Whig as grows."</p>
+
+<p>"Stop a bit, stop a bit," says Mr. Stewart. "What's all this? A Whig?
+Then why are you here with Alan's button? and what kind of a black-foot
+traffic is this that I find ye out in, Mr. Whig? Here is a forfeited rebel
+and an accused murderer, with two hundred pounds on his life, and ye ask me
+to meddle in his business, and then tell me ye're a Whig! I have no mind of
+any such Whigs before, though I've kent plenty of them."</p>
+
+<p>"He's a forfeited rebel, the more's the pity," said I, "for the man's my
+friend." I can only wish he had been better guided. And an accused
+murderer, that he is too, for his misfortune; but wrongfully accused."</p>
+
+<p>"I hear you say so," said Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>"More than you are to hear me say so, before long," said I. "Alan Breck
+is innocent, and so is James."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" says he, "the two cases hang together. If Alan is out, James can
+never be in."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></a>[pg
+17]</span>Hereupon I told him briefly of my acquaintance with Alan, of the
+accident that brought me present at the Appin murder, and the various
+passages of our escape among the heather, and my recovery of my estate.
+"So, sir, you have now the whole train of these events," I went on, "and
+can see for yourself how I come to be so much mingled up with the affairs
+of your family and friends, which (for all of our sakes) I wish had been
+plainer and less bloody. You can see for yourself, too, that I have certain
+pieces of business depending, which were scarcely fit to lay before a
+lawyer chosen at random. No more remains, but to ask if you will undertake
+my service?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no great mind to it; but coming as you do with Alan's button,
+the choice is scarcely left me," said he. "What are your instructions?" he
+added, and took up his pen.</p>
+
+<p>"The first point is to smuggle Alan forth of this country," said I, "but
+I need not be repeating that."</p>
+
+<p>"I am little likely to forget it," said Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>"The next thing is the bit money I am owing to Cluny," I went on. "It
+would be ill for me to find a conveyance, but that should be no stick to
+you. It was two pounds five shillings and three-halfpence farthing
+sterling."</p>
+
+<p>He noted it.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said I, "there's a Mr. Henderland, a licensed preacher and
+missionary in Ardgour, that I would like <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a>[pg 18]</span>well to get some snuff into
+the hands of; and as I daresay you keep touch with your friends in Appin
+(so near by), it's a job you could doubtless overtake with the other."</p>
+
+<p>"How much snuff are we to say?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was thinking of two pounds," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Two," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Then there's the lass Alison Hastie, in Limekilns," said I. "Her that
+helped Alan and me across the Forth. I was thinking if I could get her a
+good Sunday gown, such as she could wear with decency in her degree, it
+would be an ease to my conscience: for the mere truth is, we owe her our
+two lives."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see you are thrifty, Mr. Balfour," says he, making his
+notes.</p>
+
+<p>"I would think shame to be otherwise the first day of my fortune," said
+I. "And now, if you will compute the outlay and your own proper charges, I
+would be glad to know if I could get some spending-money back. It's not
+that I grudge the whole of it to get Alan safe; it's not that I lack more;
+but having drawn so much the one day, I think it would have a very ill
+appearance if I was back again seeking, the next. Only be sure you have
+enough," I added, "for I am very undesirous to meet with you again."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I'm pleased to see you're cautious too," said the Writer.
+"But I think ye take a risk to lay so considerable a sum at my
+discretion."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a>[pg
+19]</span>He said this with a plain sneer.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have to run the hazard," I replied. "O, and there's another
+service I would ask, and that's to direct me to a lodging, for I have no
+roof to my head. But it must be a lodging I may seem to have hit upon by
+accident, for it would never do if the Lord Advocate were to get any
+jealousy of our acquaintance."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye may set your weary spirit at rest," said he. "I will never name your
+name, sir; and it's my belief the Advocate is still so much to be
+sympathised with that he doesnae ken of your existence."</p>
+
+<p>I saw I had got to the wrong side of the man.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a braw day coming for him, then," said I, "for he'll have to
+learn of it on the deaf side of his head no later than to-morrow, when I
+call on him."</p>
+
+<p>"When ye <i>call</i> on him!" repeated Mr. Stewart. "Am I daft, or are
+you? What takes ye near the Advocate?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, just to give myself up," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Balfour," he cried, "are ye making a mock of me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," said I, "though I think you have allowed yourself some such
+freedom with myself. But I give you to understand once and for all that I
+am in no jesting spirit."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor yet me," says Stewart. "And I give you to understand (if that's to
+be the word) that I like the looks of your behaviour less and less. You
+come here to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a>[pg
+20]</span>me with all sorts of propositions, which will put me in a train
+of very doubtful acts and bring me among very undesirable persons this many
+a day to come. And then you tell me you're going straight out of my office
+to make your peace with the Advocate! Alan's button here or Alan's button
+there, the four quarters of Alan wouldnae bribe me further in."</p>
+
+<p>"I would take it with a little more temper," said I, "and perhaps we can
+avoid what you object to. I can see no way for it but to give myself up,
+but perhaps you can see another; and if you could, I could never deny but
+what I would be rather relieved. For I think my traffic with his lordship
+is little likely to agree with my health. There's just the one thing clear,
+that I have to give my evidence; for I hope it'll save Alan's character
+(what's left of it), and James's neck, which is the more immediate."</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a breathing-space, and then, "My man," said he,
+"you'll never be allowed to give such evidence."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have to see about that," said I; "I'm stiff-necked when I
+like."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye muckle ass!" cried Stewart, "it's James they want; James has got to
+hang--Alan too, if they could catch him--but James whatever! Go near the
+Advocate with any such business, and you'll see! he'll find a way to muzzle
+ye."</p>
+
+<p>"I think better of the Advocate than that," said I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></a>[pg
+21]</span>"The Advocate be damned!" cries he. "It's the Campbells, man!
+You'll have the whole clanjamfry of them on your back; and so will the
+Advocate too, poor body! It's extraordinar ye cannot see where ye stand! If
+there's no fair way to stop your gab, there's a foul one gaping. They can
+put ye in the dock, do ye no see that?" he cried, and stabbed me with one
+finger in the leg.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said I, "I was told that same no further back than this morning by
+another lawyer."</p>
+
+<p>"And who was he?" asked Stewart. "He spoke sense at least."</p>
+
+<p>I told I must be excused from naming him, for he was a decent stout old
+Whig, and had little mind to be mixed up in such affairs.</p>
+
+<p>"I think all the world seems to be mixed up in it!" cries Stewart. "But
+what said you?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him what had passed between Rankeillor and myself before the
+house of Shaws.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and so ye will hang!" said he. "Ye'll hang beside James Stewart.
+There's your fortune told."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope better of it yet than that," said I; "but I could never deny
+there was a risk."</p>
+
+<p>"Risk!" says he, and then sat silent again. "I ought to thank you for
+your staunchness to my friends, to whom you show a very good spirit," he
+says, "if you have the strength to stand by it. But I warn you that you're
+wading deep. I wouldn't put myself in your <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></a>[pg 22]</span>place (me that's a Stewart
+born!) for all the Stewarts that ever there were since Noah. Risk? ay, I
+take over-many, but to be tried in court before a Campbell jury and a
+Campbell judge, and that in a Campbell country and upon a Campbell
+quarrel--think what you like of me, Balfour, it's beyond me."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a different way of thinking, I suppose," said I; "I was brought up
+to this one by my father before me."</p>
+
+<p>"Glory to his bones! he has left a decent son to his name," says he.
+"Yet I would not have you judge me over-sorely. My case is dooms hard. See,
+sir! ye tell me ye're a Whig: I wonder what I am. No Whig to be sure; I
+couldnae be just that. But--laigh in your ear, man--I'm maybe no very keen
+on the other side."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that a fact?" cried I. "It's what I would think of a man of your
+intelligence."</p>
+
+<p>"Hut! none of your whillywhas!"<sup><a href="#fn4"
+name="rfn4">[4]</a></sup> cries he. "There's intelligence upon both sides.
+But for my private part I have no particular desire to harm King George;
+and as for King James, God bless him! he does very well for me across the
+water. I'm a lawyer, ye see: fond of my books and my bottle, a good plea, a
+well-drawn deed, a crack in the Parliament House with other lawyer bodies,
+and perhaps a turn at the golf on a Saturday at e'en. Where do ye come in
+with your Hieland plaids and claymores?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></a>[pg
+23]</span>"Well," said I, "it's a fact ye have little of the wild
+Highlandman."</p>
+
+<p>"Little?" quoth he. "Nothing, man! And yet I'm Hieland born, and when
+the clan pipes, who but me has to dance? The clan and the name, that goes
+by all. It's just what you said yourself; my father learned it to me, and a
+bonny trade I have of it. Treason and traitors, and the smuggling of them
+out and in; and the French recruiting, weary fall it! and the smuggling
+through of the recruits; and their pleas--a sorrow of their pleas! Here
+haye I been moving one for young Ardshiel, my cousin; claimed the estate
+under the marriage contract--a forfeited estate! I told them it was
+nonsense: muckle they cared! And there was I cocking behind a yadvocate
+that liked the business as little as myself, for it was fair ruin to the
+pair of us--a black mark, <i>disaffected</i>, branded on our hurdies, like
+folk's names upon their kye! And what can I do? I'm a Stewart, ye see, and
+must fend for my clan and family. Then no later by than yesterday there was
+one of our Stewart lads carried to the Castle. What for? I ken fine: Act of
+1736: recruiting for King Lewie. And you'll see, he'll whistle me in to be
+his lawyer, and there'll be another black mark on my chara'ter! I tell you
+fair: if I but kent the heid of a Hebrew word from the hurdies of it be
+dammed but I would fling the whole thing up and turn minister!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a>[pg
+24]</span>"It's rather a hard position," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Dooms hard!" cries he. "And that's what makes me think so much of
+ye--you that's no Stewart--to stick your head so deep in Stewart business.
+And for what, I do not know; unless it was the sense of duty."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope it will be that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," says he, "it's a grand quality. But here is my clerk back; and,
+by your leave, we'll pick a bit of dinner, all the three of us. When that's
+done, I'll give you the direction of a very decent man, that'll be very
+fain to have you for a lodger. And I'll fill your pockets to ye, forbye,
+out of your ain bag. For this business'll not be near as dear as ye
+suppose--not even the ship part of it."</p>
+
+<p>I made him a sign that his clerk was within hearing.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoot, ye neednae mind for Robbie," cries he. "A Stewart too, puir
+deevil! and has smuggled out more French recruits and trafficking Papists
+than what he has hairs upon his face. Why, it's Robin that manages that
+branch of my affairs. Who will we have now, Rob, for across the water?"</p>
+
+<p>"There'll be Andie Scougal, in the <i>Thristle</i>," replied Rob. "I saw
+Hoseason the other day, but it seems he's wanting the ship. Then there'll
+be Tarn Stobo; but I'm none so sure of Tam. I've seen him colloguing with
+some gey queer acquaintances; and if <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></a>[pg 25]</span>it was anybody important, I
+would give Tam the go-by."</p>
+
+<p>"The head's worth two hundred pounds, Robin," said Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>"Gosh, that'll no be Alan Breck?" cried the clerk.</p>
+
+<p>"Just Alan," said his master.</p>
+
+<p>"Weary winds! that's sayrious," cried Robin. "I'll try Andie then;
+Andie'll be the best."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems it's quite a big business," I observed.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Balfour, there's no end to it," said Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a name your clerk mentioned," I went on: "Hoseason. That must
+be my man, I think: Hoseason, of the brig <i>Covenant</i>. Would you set
+your trust on him?"</p>
+
+<p>"He didnae behave very well to you and Alan," said Mr. Stewart; "but my
+mind of the man in general is rather otherwise. If he had taken Alan on
+board his ship on an agreement, it's my notion he would have proved a just
+dealer. How say ye, Rob?"</p>
+
+<p>"No more honest skipper in the trade than Eli," said the clerk. "I would
+lippen to<sup><a href="#fn5" name="rfn5">[5]</a></sup> Eli's word--ay, if
+it was the Chevalier, or Appin himsel'," he added.</p>
+
+<p>"And it was him that brought the doctor, wasnae't?" asked the
+master.</p>
+
+<p>"He was the very man," said the clerk.</p>
+
+<p>"And I think he took the doctor back?" says Stewart.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></a>[pg
+26]</span>"Ay, with his sporran full!" cried Robin. "And Eli kent of
+that!"<sup><a href="#fn6" name="rfn6">[6]</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>"Well, it seems it's hard to ken folk rightly," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"That was just what I forgot when ye came in, Mr. Balfour!" says the
+Writer.</p>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></a>[pg 27]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_III'></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>I GO TO PILRIG</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next morning, I was no sooner awake in my new lodging than I was up
+and into my new clothes; and no sooner the breakfast swallowed, than I was
+forth on my adventures. Alan, I could hope, was fended for; James was like
+to be a more difficult affair, and I could not but think that enterprise
+might cost me dear, even as everybody said to whom I had opened my opinion.
+It seemed I was come to the top of the mountain only to cast myself down;
+that I had clambered up, through so many and hard trials, to be rich, to be
+recognised, to wear city clothes and a sword to my side, all to commit mere
+suicide at the last end of it, and the worst kind of suicide besides, which
+is to get hanged at the King's charges.</p>
+
+<p>What was I doing it for? I asked, as I went down the High Street and out
+north by Leith Wynd. First I said it was to save James Stewart, and no
+doubt the memory of his distress, and his wife's cries, and a word or so I
+had let drop on that occasion worked upon me strongly. At the same time I
+reflected that it was (or ought to be) the most indifferent matter to my
+father's <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a>[pg
+28]</span>son, whether James died in his bed or from a scaffold. He was
+Alan's cousin, to be sure; but so far as regarded Alan, the best thing
+would be to lie low, and let the King, and his Grace of Argyll, and the
+corbie crows, pick the bones of his kinsman their own way. Nor could I
+forget that, while we were all in the pot together, James had shown no such
+particular anxiety whether for Alan or me.</p>
+
+<p>Next it came upon me I was acting for the sake of justice: and I thought
+that a fine word, and reasoned it out that (since we dwelt in polities, at
+some discomfort to each one of us) the main thing of all must still be
+justice, and the death of any innocent man a wound upon the whole
+community. Next, again, it was the Accuser of the Brethren that gave me a
+turn of his argument; bid me think shame for pretending myself concerned in
+these high matters, and told me I was but a prating vain child, who had
+spoken big words to Rankeillor and to Stewart, and held myself bound upon
+my vanity to make good that boastfulness. Nay, and he hit me with the other
+end of the stick; for he accused me of a kind of artful cowardice, going
+about at the expense of a little risk to purchase greater safety. No doubt,
+until I had declared and cleared myself, I might any day encounter Mungo
+Campbell or the sheriff's officer, and be recognised, and dragged into the
+Appin murder by the heels; and, no doubt, in case I could manage my
+declaration with success, I should breathe more free for <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></a>[pg 29]</span>ever
+after. But when I looked this argument full in the face I could see nothing
+to be ashamed of. As for the rest, "Here are the two roads," I thought,
+"and both go to the same place. It's unjust that James should hang if I can
+save him; and it would be ridiculous in me to have talked so much and then
+do nothing. It's lucky for James of the Glens that I have boasted
+beforehand; and none so unlucky for myself, because now I'm committed to do
+right. I have the name of a gentleman and the means of one; it would be a
+poor discovery that I was wanting in the essence." And then I thought this
+was a Pagan spirit, and said a prayer in to myself, asking for what courage
+I might lack, and that I might go straight to my duty like a soldier to
+battle, and come off again scatheless as so many do.</p>
+
+<p>This train of reasoning brought me to a more resolved complexion; though
+it was far from closing up my sense of the dangers that surrounded me, nor
+of how very apt I was (if I went on) to stumble on the ladder of the
+gallows. It was a plain, fair morning, but the wind in the east. The little
+chill of it sang in my blood, and gave me a feeling of the autumn, and the
+dead leaves, and dead folks' bodies in their graves. It seemed the devil
+was in it, if I was to die in that tide of my fortunes and for other folks'
+affairs. On the top of the Calton Hill, though it was not the customary
+time of year for that diversion, some children were crying and running with
+their kites. These toys appeared very plain against the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></a>[pg 30]</span>sky; I
+remarked a great one soar on the wind to a high altitude and then plump
+among the whins; and I thought to myself at sight of it, "There goes
+Davie."</p>
+
+<p>My way lay over Mouter's Hill, and through an end of a clachan on the
+braeside among fields. There was a whirr of looms in it went from house to
+house; bees bummed in the gardens; the neighbours that I saw at the
+doorsteps talked in a strange tongue; and I found out later that this was
+Picardy, a village where the French weavers wrought for the Linen Company.
+Here I got a fresh direction for Pilrig, my destination; and a little
+beyond, on the wayside, came by a gibbet and two men hanged in chains. They
+were dipped in tar, as the manner is; the wind span them, the chains
+clattered, and the birds hung about the uncanny jumping-jacks and cried.
+The sight coming on me suddenly, like an illustration of my fears, I could
+scarce be done with examining it and drinking in discomfort. And as I thus
+turned and turned about the gibbet, what should I strike on, but a weird
+old wife, that sat behind a leg of it, and nodded, and talked aloud to
+herself with becks and courtesies.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are these two, mother?" I asked, and pointed to the corpses.</p>
+
+<p>"A blessing on your precious face!" she cried. "Twa joes<sup><a
+href="#fn7" name="rfn7">[7]</a></sup> o' mine: just twa o' my old joes, my
+hinny dear."</p>
+
+
+<a name="balfour002"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour002.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: WHAT DID THEY SUFFER FOR? I ASKED" src="images/balfour002sm.jpg" height="565" width="383" /></a>
+<br />WHAT DID THEY SUFFER FOR? I ASKED
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></a>[pg
+31]</span>"What did they suffer for?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, just for the guid cause," said she. "Aften I spaed to them the way
+that it would end. Twa shillin' Scots; no pickle mair; and there are twa
+bonny callants hingin' for 't! They took it frae a wean<sup><a href="#fn8"
+name="rfn8">[8]</a></sup> belanged to Brouchton."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay!" said I to myself, and not to the daft limmer, "and did they come
+to such a figure for so poor a business? This is to lose all indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"Gie's your loof,<sup><a href="#fn9" name="rfn9">[9]</a></sup> hinny,"
+says she, "and let me spae your weird to ye."</p>
+
+<p>"No, mother," said I, "I see far enough the way I am. It's an unco thing
+to see too far in front."</p>
+
+<p>"I read it in your bree," she said. "There's a bonnie lassie that has
+bricht een, and there's a wee man in a braw coat, and a big man in a
+pouthered wig, and there's the shadow of the wuddy,<sup><a href="#fn10"
+name="rfn10">[10]</a></sup> joe, that lies braid across your path. Gie's
+your loof, hinny, and let Auld Merren spae it to ye bonny."</p>
+
+<p>The two chance shots that seemed to point at Alan and the daughter of
+James More, struck me hard; and I fled from the eldritch creature, casting
+her a baubee, which she continued to sit and play with under the moving
+shadows of the hanged.</p>
+
+<p>My way down the causeway of Leith Walk would have been more pleasant to
+me but for this encounter. The old rampart ran among fields, the like of
+them <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a>[pg
+32]</span>I had never seen for artfulness of agriculture; I was pleased,
+besides, to be so far in the still countryside; but the shackles of the
+gibbet clattered in my head; and the mops and mows of the old witch, and
+the thought of the dead men, hag-rode my spirits. To hang on a gallows,
+that seemed a hard case; and whether a man came to hang there for two
+shillings Scots, or (as Mr. Stewart had it) from the sense of duty, once he
+was tarred and shackled and hung up, the difference seemed small. There
+might David Balfour hang, and other lads pass on their errands and think
+light of him; and old daft limmers sit at leg-foot and spae their fortunes;
+and the clean genty maids go by, and look to the other side, and hold a
+nose. I saw them plain, and they had grey eyes, and their screens upon
+their heads were of the Drummond colours.</p>
+
+<p>I was thus in the poorest of spirits, though still pretty resolved, when
+I came in view of Pilrig, a pleasant gabled house set by the walkside among
+some brave young woods. The laird's horse was standing saddled at the door
+as I came up, but himself was in the study, where he received me in the
+midst of learned works and musical instruments, for he was not only a deep
+philosopher but much of a musician. He greeted me at first pretty well, and
+when he had read Rankeillor's letter, placed himself obligingly at my
+disposal.</p>
+
+<p>"And what is it, cousin David?" says he--"since it appears that we are
+cousins--what is this that I can <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33"
+id="Page_33"></a>[pg 33]</span>do for you? A word to Prestongrange?
+Doubtless that is easily given. But what should be the word?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Balfour," said I, "if I were to tell you my whole story the way it
+fell out, it's my opinion (and it was Rankeillor's before me) that you
+would be very little made up with it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to hear this of you, kinsman," says he.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not take that at your hands, Mr. Balfour," said I; "I have
+nothing to my charge to make me sorry, or you for me, but just the common
+infirmities of mankind. 'The guilt of Adam's first sin, the want of
+original righteousness, and the corruption of my whole nature,' so much I
+must answer for, and I hope I have been taught where to look for help," I
+said; for I judged from the look of the man he would think the better of me
+if I knew my questions.<sup><a href="#fn11" name="rfn11">[11]</a></sup>
+"But in the way of worldly honour I have no great stumble to reproach
+myself with; and my difficulties have befallen me very much against my will
+and (by all that I can see) without my fault. My trouble is to have become
+dipped in a political complication, which it is judged you would be blythe
+to avoid a knowledge of."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, very well, Mr. David," he replied, "I am pleased to see you are
+all that Rankeillor represented. And for what you say of political
+complications, you do me no more than justice. It is my study to be beyond
+suspicion, and indeed outside the field of it. The <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a>[pg 34]</span>question is," says he, "how,
+if I am to know nothing of the matter, I can very well assist you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sir," said I, "I propose you should write to his lordship, that I
+am a young man of reasonable good family and of good means: both of which I
+believe to be the case."</p>
+
+<p>"I have Rankeillor's word for it," said Mr. Balfour, "and I count that a
+warrandice against all deadly."</p>
+
+<p>"To which you might add (if you will take my word for so much) that I am
+a good churchman, loyal to King George, and so brought up," I went on.</p>
+
+<p>"None of which will do you any harm," said Mr. Balfour.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you might go on to say that I sought his lordship on a matter of
+great moment, connected with His Majesty's service and the administration
+of justice," I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"As I am not to hear the matter," says the laird, "I will not take upon
+myself to qualify its weight. 'Great moment' therefore falls, and 'moment'
+along with it. For the rest, I might express myself much as you
+propose."</p>
+
+<p>"And then, sir," said I, and rubbed my neck a little with my thumb,
+"then I would be very desirous if you could slip in a word that might
+perhaps tell for my protection."</p>
+
+<p>"Protection?" says he. "For your protection? Here is a phrase that
+somewhat dampens me. If the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35"
+id="Page_35"></a>[pg 35]</span>matter be so dangerous, I own I would be a
+little loath to move in it blindfold."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe I could indicate in two words where the thing sticks," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps that would be the best," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's the Appin murder," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He held up both the hands. "Sirs! sirs!" cried he.</p>
+
+<p>I thought by the expression of his face and voice that I had lost my
+helper.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me explain ..." I began.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you kindly, I will hear no more of it," says he. "I decline
+<i>in toto</i> to hear more of it. For your name's sake and Rankeillor's,
+and perhaps a little for your own, I will do what I can to help you; but I
+will hear no more upon the facts. And it is my first clear duty to warn
+you. These are deep waters, Mr. David, and you are a young man. Be cautious
+and think twice."</p>
+
+<p>"It is to be supposed I will have thought oftener than that, Mr.
+Balfour," said I, "and I will direct your attention again to Rankeillor's
+letter, where (I hope and believe) he has registered his approval of that
+which I design."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," said he; and then again, "Well, well! I will do what I can
+for you." Therewith he took a pen and paper, sat awhile in thought, and
+began to write with much consideration. "I understand that <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a>[pg 36]</span>Rankeillor
+approves of what you have in mind?" he asked presently.</p>
+
+<p>"After some discussion, sir, he bade me to go forward in God's name,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"That is the name to go in," said Mr. Balfour, and resumed his writing.
+Presently, he signed, re-read what he had written, and addressed me again.
+"Now here, Mr. David," said he, "is a letter of introduction, which I will
+seal without closing, and give into your hands open, as the form requires.
+But since I am acting in the dark, I will just read it to you, so that you
+may see if it will secure your end--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"PILRIG, <i>August 26th</i>, 1751.
+
+<p>"MY LORD,--This is to bring to your notice my namesake and</p>
+cousin, David Balfour Esquire of Shaws, a young gentleman
+of unblemished descent and good estate. He has enjoyed besides
+the more valuable advantages of a godly training, and his political
+principles are all that your lordship can desire. I am not in
+Mr. Balfour's confidence, but I understand him to have a matter
+to declare, touching His Majesty's service and the administration
+of justice: purposes for which your lordship's zeal is known.
+I should add that the young gentleman's intention is known to
+and approved by some of his friends, who will watch with hopeful
+anxiety the event of his success or failure.'
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>"Whereupon," continued Mr. Balfour, "I have subscribed myself with the
+usual compliments. You observe I have said 'some of your friends;' I hope
+you can justify my plural?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></a>[pg
+37]</span>"Perfectly, sir; my purpose is known and approved by more than
+one," said I. "And your letter, which I take a pleasure to thank you for,
+is all I could have hoped."</p>
+
+<p>"It was all I could squeeze out," said he; "and from what I know of the
+matter you design to meddle in, I can only pray God that it may prove
+sufficient."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></a>[pg 38]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_IV'></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE</h3>
+
+
+<p>My kinsman kept me to a meal, "for the honour of the roof," he said; and
+I believe I made the better speed on my return. I had no thought but to be
+done with the next stage, and have myself fully committed; to a person
+circumstanced as I was, the appearance of closing a door on hesitation and
+temptation was itself extremely tempting; and I was the more disappointed,
+when I came to Prestongrange's house, to be informed he was abroad. I
+believe it was true at the moment, and for some hours after; and then I
+have no doubt the Advocate came home again, and enjoyed himself in a
+neighbouring chamber among friends, while perhaps the very fact of my
+arrival was forgotten. I would have gone away a dozen times, only for this
+strong drawing to have done with my declaration out of hand and be able to
+lay me down to sleep with a free conscience. At first I read, for the
+little cabinet where I was left contained a variety of books. But I fear I
+read with little profit; and the weather falling cloudy, the dusk coming up
+earlier than usual, and my cabinet <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39"
+id="Page_39"></a>[pg 39]</span>being lighted with but a loophole of a
+window, I was at last obliged to desist from this diversion (such as it
+was), and pass the rest of my time of waiting in a very burthensome
+vacuity. The sound of people talking in a naer chamber, the pleasant note
+of a harpsichord, and once the voice of a lady singing, bore me a kind of
+company.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know the hour, but the darkness was long come, when the door of
+the cabinet opened, and I was aware, by the light behind him, of a tall
+figure of a man upon the threshold. I rose at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Is anybody there?" he asked. "Who is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am bearer of a letter from the laird of Pilrig to the Lord Advocate,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been here long?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I would not like to hazard an estimate of how many hours," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the first I hear of it," he replied, with a chuckle. "The lads
+must have forgotten you. But you are in the bit at last, for I am
+Prestongrange."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he passed before me into the next room, whither (upon his
+sign) I followed him, and where he lit a candle and took his place before a
+business-table. It was a long room, of a good proportion, wholly lined with
+books. That small spark of light in a corner struck out the man's handsome
+person and strong face. He was flushed, his eye watered and sparkled, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a>[pg 40]</span>and before
+he sat down I observed him to sway back and forth. No doubt he had been
+supping liberally; but his mind and tongue were under full control.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, sit ye down," said he, "and let us see Pilrig's letter."</p>
+
+<p>He glanced it through in the beginning carelessly, looking up and bowing
+when he came to my name; but at the last words I thought I observed his
+attention to redouble, and I made sure he read them twice. All this while
+you are to suppose my heart was beating, for I had now crossed my Rubicon
+and was come fairly on the field of battle.</p>
+
+<p>"I am pleased to make your acquaintance, Mr. Balfour," he said, when he
+had done. "Let me offer you a glass of claret."</p>
+
+<p>"Under your favour, my lord, I think it would scarce be fair on me,"
+said I. "I have come here, as the letter will have mentioned, on a business
+of some gravity to myself; and as I am little used with wine, I might be
+the sooner affected."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall be the judge," said he. "But if you will permit, I believe I
+will even have the bottle in myself."</p>
+
+<p>He touched a bell, and the footman came, as at a signal, bringing wine
+and glasses.</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure you will not join me?" asked the Advocate. "Well, here is
+to our better acquaintance! In what way can I serve you?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a>[pg
+41]</span>"I should perhaps begin by telling you, my lord, that I am here
+at your own pressing invitation," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You have the advantage of me somewhere," said he, "for I profess I
+think I never heard of you before this evening."</p>
+
+<p>"Right, my lord; the name is indeed new to you," said I. "And yet you
+have been for some time extremely wishful to make my acquaintance, and have
+declared the same in public."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would afford me a clue," says he. "I am no Daniel."</p>
+
+<p>"It will perhaps serve for such," said I, "that if I was in a jesting
+humour--which is far from the case--I believe I might lay a claim on your
+lordship for two hundred pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"In what sense?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"In the sense of rewards offered for my person," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He thrust away his glass once and for all, and sat straight up in the
+chair where he had been previously lolling. "What am I to understand?" said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>A tall strong lad of about eighteen</i>," I quoted, "<i>speaks like
+a Lowlander, and has no beard</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"I recognise those words," said he, "which, if you have come here with
+any ill-judged intention of amusing yourself, are like to prove extremely
+prejudicial to your safety."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></a>[pg
+42]</span>"My purpose in this," I replied, "is just entirely as serious as
+life and death, and you have understood me perfectly. I am the boy who was
+speaking with Glenure when he was shot."</p>
+
+<p>"I can only suppose (seeing you here) that you claim to be innocent,"
+said he.</p>
+
+<p>"The inference is clear," I said. "I am a very loyal subject to King
+George, but if I had anything to reproach myself with, I would have had
+more discretion than to walk into your den."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of that," said he. "This horrid crime, Mr. Balfour, is of a
+dye which cannot permit any clemency. Blood has been barbarously shed. It
+has been shed in direct opposition to his Majesty and our whole frame of
+laws, by those who are their known and public oppugnants. I take a very
+high sense of this. I will not deny that I consider the crime as directly
+personal to his Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"And unfortunately, my lord," I added a little drily, "directly personal
+to another great personage who may be nameless."</p>
+
+<p>"If you mean anything by those words, I must tell you I consider them
+unfit for a good subject; and were they spoke publicly I should make it my
+business to take note of them," said he. "You do not appear to me to
+recognise the gravity of your situation, or you would be more careful not
+to pejorate the same by words which glance upon the purity of justice.
+Justice, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></a>[pg
+43]</span>in this country, and in my poor hands, is no respecter of
+persons."</p>
+
+<p>"You give me too great a share in my own speech, my lord," said I. "I
+did but repeat the common talk of the country, which I have heard
+everywhere, and from men of all opinions as I came along."</p>
+
+<p>"When you are come to more discretion you will understand such talk is
+not to be listened to, how much less repeated," says the Advocate. "But I
+acquit you of an ill intention. That nobleman, whom we all honour and who
+has indeed been wounded in a near place by the late barbarity, sits too
+high to be reached by these aspersions. The Duke of Argyle--you see that I
+deal plainly with you--takes it to heart as I do, and as we are both bound
+to do by our judicial functions and the service of his Majesty; and I could
+wish that all hands, in this ill age, were equally clean of family rancour.
+But from the accident that this is a Campbell who has fallen martyr to his
+duty--as who else but the Campbells have ever put themselves foremost on
+that path? I may say it, who am no Campbell--and that the chief of that
+great house happens (for all our advantages) to be the present head of the
+College of Justice, small minds and disaffected tongues are set agog in
+every changehouse in the country; and I find a young gentleman like Mr.
+Balfour so ill-advised as to make himself their echo." So much he spoke
+with a very oratorical delivery, as if in court, and then <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a>[pg 44]</span>declined
+again upon the manner of a gentleman. "All this apart," said he. "It now
+remains that I should learn what I am to do with you."</p>
+
+<p>"I had thought it was rather I that should learn the same from your
+lordship," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, true," says the Advocate. "But, you see, you come to me well
+recommended. There is a good honest Whig name to this letter," says he,
+picking it up a moment from the table. "And--extra-judicially, Mr.
+Balfour--there is always the possibility of some arrangement. I tell you,
+and I tell you beforehand that you may be the more upon your guard, your
+fate lies with me singly. In such a matter (be it said with reverence) I am
+more powerful than the king's Majesty; and should you please me--and of
+course satisfy my conscience--in what remains to be held of our interview,
+I tell you it may remain between ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning how?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I mean it thus, Mr. Balfour," said he, "that if you give
+satisfaction, no soul need know so much as that you visited my house; and
+you may observe that I do not even call my clerk."</p>
+
+<p>I saw what way he was driving. "I suppose it is needless anyone should
+be informed upon my visit," said I, "though the precise nature of my gains
+by that I cannot see. I am not at all ashamed of coming here."</p>
+
+<p>"And have no cause to be," says he, encouragingly. "Nor yet (if you are
+careful) to fear the consequences."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a>[pg
+45]</span>"My lord," said I, "speaking under your correction, I am not very
+easy to be frightened."</p>
+
+<p>"And I am sure I do not seek to frighten you," says he. "But to the
+interrogation; and let me warn you to volunteer nothing beyond the
+questions I shall ask you. It may consist very immediately with your
+safety. I have a great discretion, it is true, but there are bounds to
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall try to follow your lordship's advice," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He spread a sheet of paper on the table and wrote a heading. "It appears
+you were present, by the way, in the wood of Lettermore at the moment of
+the fatal shot," he began. "Was this by accident?"</p>
+
+<p>"By accident," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"How came you in speech with Colin Campbell?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was inquiring my way of him to Aucharn," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>I observed he did not write this answer down.</p>
+
+<p>"H'm, true," said he, "I had forgotten that. And do you know, Mr.
+Balfour, I would dwell, if I were you, as little as might be on your
+relations with these Stewarts? It might be found to complicate our
+business. I am not yet inclined to regard these matters as essential."</p>
+
+<p>"I had thought, my lord, that all points of fact were equally material
+in such a case," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget we are now trying these Stewarts," he <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a>[pg 46]</span>replied,
+with great significance. "If we should ever come to be trying you, it will
+be very different; and I shall press these very questions that I am now
+willing to glide upon. But to resume: I have it here in Mr. Mungo
+Campbell's precognition that you ran immediately up the brae. How came
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not immediately, my lord, and the cause was my seeing of the
+murderer."</p>
+
+<p>"You saw him, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"As plain as I see your lordship, though not so near hand."</p>
+
+<p>"You know him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should know him again."</p>
+
+<p>"In your pursuit you were not so fortunate, then, as to overtake
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was not."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was alone."</p>
+
+<p>"There was no one else in that neighbourhood?"</p>
+
+<p>"Alan Breck Stewart was not far off, in a piece of a wood."</p>
+
+<p>The Advocate laid his pen down. "I think we are playing at cross
+purposes," said he, "which you will find to prove a very ill amusement for
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I content myself with following your lordship's advice, and answering
+what I am asked," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Be so wise as to bethink yourself in time," said he. "I use you with
+the most anxious tenderness, which <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47"
+id="Page_47"></a>[pg 47]</span>you scarce seem to appreciate, and which
+(unless you be more careful) may prove to be in vain."</p>
+
+<p>"I do appreciate your tenderness, but conceive it to be mistaken," I
+replied, with something of a falter, for I saw we were come to grips at
+last. "I am here to lay before you certain information, by which I shall
+convince you Alan had no hand whatever in the killing of Glenure."</p>
+
+<p>The Advocate appeared for a moment at a stick, sitting with pursed lips,
+and blinking his eyes upon me like an angry cat. "Mr. Balfour," he said at
+last, "I tell you pointedly you go an ill way for your own interests."</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," I said, "I am as free of the charge of considering my own
+interests in this matter as your lordship. As God judges me, I have but the
+one design, and that is to see justice executed and the innocent go clear.
+If in pursuit of that I come to fall under your lordship's displeasure, I
+must bear it as I may."</p>
+
+<p>At this he rose from his chair, lit a second candle, and for a while
+gazed upon me steadily. I was surprised to see a great change of gravity
+fallen upon his face, and I could have almost thought he was a little
+pale.</p>
+
+<p>"You are either very simple, or extremely the reverse, and I see that I
+must deal with you more confidentially," says he. "This is a political
+case--ah, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></a>[pg
+48]</span>yes, Mr. Balfour! whether we like it or no, the case is
+political--and I tremble when I think what issues may depend from it. To a
+political case, I need scarce tell a young man of your education, we
+approach with very different thoughts from one which is criminal only.
+<i>Salus populi suprema lex</i> is a maxim susceptible of great abuse, but
+it has that force which we find elsewhere only in the laws of nature: I
+mean it has the force of necessity. I will open this out to you, if you
+will allow me, at more length. You would have me believe--"</p>
+
+<p>"Under your pardon, my lord, I would have you to believe nothing but
+that which I can prove," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Tut! tut! young gentleman," says he, "be not so pragmatical, and suffer
+a man who might be your father (if it was nothing more) to employ his own
+imperfect language, and express his own poor thoughts, even when they have
+the misfortune not to coincide with Mr. Balfour's. You would have me to
+believe Breck innocent. I would think this of little account, the more so
+as we cannot catch our man. But the matter of Breck's innocence shoots
+beyond itself. Once admitted, it would destroy the whole presumptions of
+our case against another and a very different criminal; a man grown old in
+treason, already twice in arms against his king and already twice forgiven;
+a fomenter of discontent, and (whoever may have fired the shot) the
+unmistakable original of the deed in <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></a>[pg 49]</span>question. I need not tell you
+that I mean James Stewart."</p>
+
+<p>"And I can just say plainly that the innocence of Alan and of James is
+what I am here to declare in private to your lordship, and what I am
+prepared to establish at the trial by my testimony," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"To which I can only answer by an equal plainness, Mr. Balfour," said
+he, "that (in that case) your testimony will not be called by me, and I
+desire you to withhold it altogether."</p>
+
+<p>"You are at the head of Justice in this country," I cried, "and you
+propose to me a crime!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am a man nursing with both hands the interests of this country," he
+replied, "and I press on you a political necessity. Patriotism is not
+always moral in the formal sense. You might be glad of it, I think: it is
+your own protection; the facts are heavy against you; and if I am still
+trying to except you from a very dangerous place, it is in part of course
+because I am not insensible to your honesty in coming here; in part because
+of Pilrig's letter; but in part, and in chief part, because I regard in
+this matter my political duty first and my judicial duty only second. For
+the same reason--I repeat it to you in the same frank words--I do not want
+your testimony."</p>
+
+<p>"I desire not to be thought to make a repartee, when I express only the
+plain sense of our position," said I. "But if your lordship has no need of
+my testimony, I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50"
+id="Page_50"></a>[pg 50]</span>believe the other side would be extremely
+blythe to get it."</p>
+
+<p>Prestongrange arose and began to pace to and fro in the room. "You are
+not so young," he said, "but what you must remember very clearly the year
+'45 and the shock that went about the country. I read in Pilrig's letter
+that you are sound in Kirk and State. Who saved them in that fatal year? I
+do not refer to his Royal Highness and his ramrods, which were extremely
+useful in their day; but the country had been saved and the field won
+before ever Cumberland came upon Drummossie. Who saved it? I repeat; who
+saved the Protestant religion and the whole frame of our civil
+institutions? The late Lord President Culloden, for one; he played a man's
+part, and small thanks he got for it--even as I, whom you see before you,
+straining every nerve in the same service, look for no reward beyond the
+conscience of my duties done. After the President, who else? You know the
+answer as well as I do; 'tis partly a scandal, and you glanced at it
+yourself, and I reproved you for it, when you first came in. It was the
+Duke and the great clan of Campbell. Now here is a Campbell foully
+murdered, and that in the King's service. The Duke and I are Highlanders.
+But we are Highlanders civilised, and it is not so with the great mass of
+our clans and families. They have still savage virtues and defects. They
+are still barbarians, like these Stewarts; <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></a>[pg 51]</span>only the Campbells were
+barbarians on the right side, and the Stewarts were barbarians on the
+wrong. Now be you the judge. The Campbells expect vengeance. If they do not
+get it--if this man James escape--there will be trouble with the Campbells.
+That means disturbance in the Highlands, which are uneasy and very far from
+being disarmed: the disarming is a farce...."</p>
+
+<p>"I can bear you out in that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Disturbance in the Highlands makes the hour of our old watchful enemy,"
+pursued his lordship, holding out a finger as he paced; "and I give you my
+word we may have a '45 again with the Campbells on the other side. To
+protect the life of this man Stewart--which is forfeit already on
+half-a-dozen different counts if not on this--do you propose to plunge your
+country in war, to jeopardise the faith of your fathers, and to expose the
+lives and fortunes of how many thousand innocent persons? . . . These are
+considerations that weigh with me, and that I hope will weigh no less with
+yourself, Mr. Balfour, as a lover of your country, good government, and
+religious truth."</p>
+
+<p>"You deal with me very frankly, and I thank you for it," said I. "I will
+try on my side to be no less honest. I believe your policy to be sound. I
+believe these deep duties may lie upon your lordship; I believe you may
+have laid them on your conscience when you took the oaths of the high
+office which you <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52"
+id="Page_52"></a>[pg 52]</span>hold. But for me, who am just a plain
+man--or scarce a man yet--the plain duties must suffice. I can think but of
+two things, of a poor soul in the immediate and unjust danger of a shameful
+death, and of the cries and tears of his wife that still tingle in my head.
+I cannot see beyond, my lord. It's the way that I am made. If the country
+has to fall, it has to fall. And I pray God, if this be wilful blindness,
+that he may enlighten me before too late."</p>
+
+<p>He had heard me motionless, and stood so a while longer.</p>
+
+<p>"This is an unexpected obstacle," says he, aloud, but to himself.</p>
+
+<p>"And how is your lordship to dispose of me?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"If I wished," said he, "you know that you might sleep in gaol?"</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," says I, "I have slept in worse places."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my boy," said he, "there is one thing appears very plainly from
+our interview, that I may rely on your pledged word. Give me your honour
+that you will be wholly secret, not only on what has passed to-night, but
+in the matter of the Appin case, and I let you go free."</p>
+
+<p>"I will give it till to-morrow or any other near day that you may please
+to set," said I. "I would not be thought too wily; but if I gave the
+promise without qualification, your lordship would have attained his
+end."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></a>[pg
+53]</span>"I had no thought to entrap you," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure of that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see," he continued. "To-morrow is the Sabbath. Come to me on
+Monday by eight in the morning, and give me your promise until then."</p>
+
+<p>"Freely given, my lord," said I. "And with regard to what has fallen
+from yourself, I will give it for as long as it shall please God to spare
+your days."</p>
+
+<p>"You will observe," he said next, "that I have made no employment of
+menaces."</p>
+
+<p>"It was like your lordship's nobility," said I. "Yet I am not altogether
+so dull but what I can perceive the nature of those you have not
+uttered."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, "good-night to you. May you sleep well, for I think it
+is more than I am like to do."</p>
+
+<p>With that he sighed, took up a candle, and gave me his conveyance as far
+as the street door.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></a>[pg 54]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_V'></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next day, Sabbath, August 27th, I had the occasion I had long looked
+forward to, to hear some of the famous Edinburgh preachers, all well known
+to me already by the report of Mr. Campbell. Alas! and I might just as well
+have been at Essendean, and sitting under Mr. Campbell's worthy self! the
+turmoil of my thoughts, which dwelt continually on the interview with
+Prestongrange, inhibiting me from all attention. I was indeed much less
+impressed by the reasoning of the divines than by the spectacle of the
+thronged congregation in the churches, like what I imagined of a theatre or
+(in my then disposition) of an assize of trial; above all at the West Kirk,
+with its three tiers of galleries, where I went in the vain hope that I
+might see Miss Drummond.</p>
+
+<p>On the Monday I betook me for the first time to a barber's, and was very
+well pleased with the result. Thence to the Advocate's, where the red coats
+of the soldiers showed again about his door, making a bright place in the
+close. I looked about for the young lady <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></a>[pg 55]</span>and her gillies; there was
+never a sign of them. But I was no sooner shown into the cabinet or
+antechamber, where I had spent so wearyful a time upon the Saturday, than I
+was aware of the tall figure of James More in a corner. He seemed a prey to
+a painful uneasiness, reaching forth his feet and hands, and his eyes
+speeding here and there without rest about the walls of the small chamber,
+which recalled to me with a sense of pity the man's wretched situation. I
+suppose it was partly this, and partly my strong continuing interest in his
+daughter, that moved me to accost him.</p>
+
+<p>"Give you a good-morning, sir," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And a good-morning to you, sir," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"You bide tryst with Prestongrange?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I do, sir, and I pray your business with that gentleman be more
+agreeable than mine," was his reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope at least that yours will be brief, for I suppose you pass before
+me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"All pass before me," he said, with a shrug and a gesture upward of the
+open hands. "It was not always so, sir, but times change. It was not so
+when the sword was in the scale, young gentleman, and the virtues of the
+soldier might sustain themselves."</p>
+
+<p>There came a kind of Highland snuffle out of the man that raised my
+dander strangely.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Macgregor," said I, "I understand the main thing for a
+soldier is to be silent, and the first of his virtues never to
+complain."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a>[pg
+56]</span>"You have my name, I perceive"--he bowed to me with his arms
+crossed--"though it's one I must not use myself. Well, there is a
+publicity--I have shown my face and told my name too often in the beards of
+my enemies. I must not wonder if both should be known to many that I know
+not."</p>
+
+<p>"That you know not in the least, sir," said I, "nor yet anybody else;
+but the name I am called, if you care to hear it, is Balfour."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a good name," he replied, civilly; "there are many decent folk
+that use it. And now that I call to mind, there was a young gentleman, your
+namesake, that marched surgeon in the year '45 with my battalion."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that would be a brother to Balfour of Baith," said I, for I
+was ready for the surgeon now.</p>
+
+<p>"The same, sir," said James More. "And since I have been fellow-soldier
+with your kinsman, you must suffer me to grasp your hand."</p>
+
+<p>He shook hands with me long and tenderly, beaming on me the while as
+though he had found a brother.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" says he, "these are changed days since your cousin and I heard the
+balls whistle in our lugs."</p>
+
+<p>"I think he was a very far-away cousin," said I, drily, "and I ought to
+tell you that I never clapped eyes upon the man."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," said he, "it makes no change. And you--I do not think you
+were out yourself, sir--I have <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57"
+id="Page_57"></a>[pg 57]</span>no clear mind of your face, which is one not
+probable to be forgotten."</p>
+
+<p>"In the year you refer to, Mr. Macgregor, I was getting skelped in the
+parish school," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"So young!" cries he. "Ah, then you will never be able to think what
+this meeting is to me. In the hour of my adversity, and in the house of my
+enemy, to meet in with the blood of an old brother-in-arms--it heartens me,
+Mr. Balfour, like the skirling of the Highland pipes! Sir, this is a sad
+look-back that many of us have to make: some with falling tears. I have
+lived in my own country like a king; my sword, my mountains, and the faith
+of my friends and kinsmen sufficed for me. Now I lie in a stinking dungeon;
+and do you know, Mr. Balfour," he went on, taking my arm and beginning to
+lead me about, "do you know, sir, that I lack mere necessaries? The malice
+of my foes has quite sequestered my resources. I lie, as you know, sir, on
+a trumped-up charge, of which I am as innocent as yourself. They dare not
+bring me to my trial, and in the meanwhile I am held naked in my prison. I
+could have wished it was your cousin I had met, or his brother Baith
+himself. Either would, I know, have been rejoiced to help me; while a
+comparative stranger like yourself--"</p>
+
+<p>I would be ashamed to set down all he poured out to me in this beggarly
+vein, or the very short and grudging answers that I made to him. There were
+times <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a>[pg
+58]</span>when I was tempted to stop his mouth with some small change; but
+whether it was from shame or pride--whether it was for my own sake or
+Catriona's--whether it was because I thought him no fit father for his
+daughter, or because I resented that grossness of immediate falsity that
+clung about the man himself--the thing was clean beyond me. And I was still
+being wheedled and preached to, and still being marched to and fro, three
+steps and a turn, in that small chamber, and had already, by some very
+short replies, highly incensed, although not finally discouraged, my
+beggar, when Prestongrange appeared in the doorway and bade me eagerly into
+his big chamber.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a moment's engagement," said he; "and that you may not sit
+empty-handed I am going to present you to my three braw daughters, of whom
+perhaps you may have heard, for I think they are more famous than papa.
+This way."</p>
+
+<p>He led me into another long room above, where a dry old lady sat at a
+frame of embroidery, and the three handsomest young women (I suppose) in
+Scotland stood together by a window.</p>
+
+<p>"This is my new friend, Mr. Balfour," said he, presenting me by the arm.
+"David, here is my sister, Miss Grant, who is so good as keep my house for
+me, and will be very pleased if she can help you. And here," says he,
+turning to the three younger ladies, "here are my <i>three braw
+dauchters</i>. A fair question <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59"
+id="Page_59"></a>[pg 59]</span>to ye, Mr. Davie: which of the three is the
+best favoured? And I wager he will never have the impudence to propound
+honest Alan Ramsay's answer!"</p>
+
+<p>Hereupon all three, and the old Miss Grant as well, cried out against
+this sally, which (as I was acquainted with the verses he referred to)
+brought shame into my own cheek. It seemed to me a citation unpardonable in
+a father, and I was amazed that these ladies could laugh even while they
+reproved, or made believe to.</p>
+
+<p>Under cover of this mirth, Prestongrange got forth of the chamber, and I
+was left, like a fish upon dry land, in that very unsuitable society. I
+could never deny, in looking back upon what followed, that I was eminently
+stockish; and I must say the ladies were well drilled to have so long a
+patience with me. The aunt indeed sat close at her embroidery, only looking
+now and again and smiling; but the misses, and especially the eldest, who
+was besides the most handsome, paid me a score of attentions which I was
+very ill able to repay. It was all in vain to tell myself I was a young
+fellow of some worth as well as good estate, and had no call to feel
+abashed before these lasses, the eldest not so much older than myself, and
+no one of them by any probability half as learned. Reasoning would not
+change the fact; and there were times when the colour came into my face to
+think I was shaved that day for the first time.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></a>[pg
+60]</span>The talk going, with all their endeavours, very heavily, the
+eldest took pity on my awkwardness, sat down to her instrument, of which
+she was a passed mistress, and entertained me for a while with playing and
+singing, both in the Scots and in the Italian manners; this put me more at
+my ease, and being reminded of Alan's air that he had taught me in the hole
+near Carriden, I made so bold as to whistle a bar or two, and ask if she
+knew that.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. "I never heard a note of it," said she. "Whistle it
+all through. And now once again," she added, after I had done so.</p>
+
+<p>Then she picked it out upon the keyboard, and (to my surprise) instantly
+enriched the same with well-sounding chords, and sang, as she played, with
+a very droll expression and broad accent:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"Haenae I got just the lilt of it?<br />
+Isnae this the tune that ye whustled?"<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>"You see," she says, "I can do the poetry too, only it won't rhyme." And
+then again:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"I am Miss Grant, sib to the Advocate:<br />
+You, I believe, are Dauvit Balfour."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I told her how much astonished I was by her genius.</p>
+
+<p>"And what do you call the name of it?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know the real name," said I. "I just call it <i>Alan's
+air</i>."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me directly in the face. "I shall call <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a>[pg 61]</span>it
+<i>David's air</i>," said she; "though if it's the least like what your
+namesake of Israel played to Saul I would never wonder that the king got
+little good by it, for it's but melancholy music. Your other name I do not
+like; so, if you was ever wishing to hear your tune again you are to ask
+for it by mine."</p>
+
+<p>This was said with a significance that gave my heart a jog. "Why that,
+Miss Grant?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," says she, "if ever you should come to get hanged, I will set your
+last dying speech and confession to that tune and sing it."</p>
+
+<p>This put it beyond a doubt that she was partly informed of my story and
+peril. How, or just how much, it was more difficult to guess. It was plain
+she knew there was something of danger in the name of Alan, and thus warned
+me to leave it out of reference; and plain she knew that I stood under some
+criminal suspicion. I judged besides that the harshness of her last speech
+(which besides she had followed up immediately with a very noisy piece of
+music) was to put an end to the present conversation. I stood beside her,
+affecting to listen and admire, but truly whirled away by my own thoughts.
+I have always found this young lady to be a lover of the mysterious; and
+certainly this first interview made a mystery that was beyond my plummet.
+One thing I learned long after, the hours of the Sunday had been well
+employed, the bank porter had been found and examined, my visit to Charles
+Stewart was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></a>[pg
+62]</span>discovered, and the deduction made that I was pretty deep with
+James and Alan, and most likely in a continued correspondence with the
+last. Hence this broad hint that was given me across the harpsichord.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the piece of music, one of the younger misses, who was
+at a window over the close, cried on her sisters to come quick, for there
+was "<i>Grey eyes</i> again." The whole family trooped there at once, and
+crowded one another for a look. The window whither they ran was in an odd
+corner of that room, gave above the entrance door, and flanked up the
+close.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Mr. Balfour," they cried, "come and see. She is the most
+beautiful creature! She hangs round the close-head these last days, always
+with some wretched-like gillies, and yet seems quite a lady."</p>
+
+<p>I had no need to look; neither did I look twice, or long. I was afraid
+she might have seen me there, looking down upon her from that chamber of
+music, and she without, and her father in the same house, perhaps begging
+for his life with tears, and myself come but newly from rejecting his
+petitions. But even that glance set me in a better conceit of myself, and
+much less awe of the young ladies. They were beautiful, that was beyond
+question, but Catriona was beautiful too, and had a kind of brightness in
+her like a coal of fire. As much as the others cast me down, she lifted me
+up. I remembered I had talked easily with her. If I could make no hand of
+it with these fine maids, it was perhaps <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></a>[pg 63]</span>something their own fault. My
+embarrassment began to be a little mingled and lightened with a sense of
+fun; and when the aunt smiled at me from her embroidery, and the three
+daughters unbent to me like a baby, all with "papa's orders" written on
+their faces, there were times when I could have found it in my heart to
+smile myself.</p>
+
+<p>Presently papa returned, the same kind, happy-like, pleasant-spoken
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, girls," said he, "I must take Mr. Balfour away again; but I hope
+you have been able to persuade him to return where I shall be always
+gratified to find him."</p>
+
+<p>So they each made me a little farthing compliment, and I was led
+away.</p>
+
+<p>If this visit to the family had been meant to soften my resistance, it
+was the worst of failures. I was no such ass but what I understood how poor
+a figure I had made, and that the girls would be yawning their jaws off as
+soon as my stiff back was turned. I felt I had shown how little I had in me
+of what was soft and graceful; and I longed for a chance to prove that I
+had something of the other stuff, the stern and dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I was to be served to my desire, for the scene to which he was
+conducting me was of a different character.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></a>[pg 64]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VI'></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>UMQUILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT</h3>
+
+
+<p>There was a man waiting us in Prestongrange's study, whom I distasted at
+the first look, as we distaste a ferret or an earwig. He was bitter ugly,
+but seemed very much of a gentleman; had still manners, but capable of
+sudden leaps and violences; and a small voice, which could ring out shrill
+and dangerous when he so desired.</p>
+
+<p>The Advocate presented us in a familiar, friendly way.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Fraser," said he, "here is Mr. Balfour whom we talked about. Mr.
+David, this is Mr. Symon Fraser, whom we used to call by another title, but
+that is an old song. Mr. Fraser has an errand to you."</p>
+
+<p>With that he stepped aside to his book-shelves, and made believe to
+consult a quarto volume in the far end.</p>
+
+<p>I was thus left (in a sense) alone with perhaps the last person in the
+world I had expected. There was no doubt upon the terms of introduction;
+this could be no other than the forfeited Master of Lovat and chief of the
+great clan Fraser. I knew he had led his men in <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></a>[pg 65]</span>the Rebellion; I knew his
+father's head--my old lord's, that grey fox of the mountains--to have
+fallen on the block for that offence, the lands of the family to have been
+seized, and their nobility attainted. I could not conceive what he should
+be doing in Grant's house; I could not conceive that he had been called to
+the bar, had eaten all his principles, and was now currying favour with the
+Government even to the extent of acting Advocate-Depute in the Appin
+murder.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Balfour," said he, "what is all this I hear of ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would not become me to prejudge," said I, "but if the Advocate was
+your authority he is fully possessed of my opinions."</p>
+
+<p>"I may tell you I am engaged in the Appin case," he went on; "I am to
+appear under Prestongrange; and from my study of the precognitions I can
+assure you your opinions are erroneous. The guilt of Breck is manifest; and
+your testimony, in which you admit you saw him on the hill at the very
+moment, will certify his hanging."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be rather ill to hang him till you catch him," I observed. "And
+for other matters I very willingly leave you to your own impressions."</p>
+
+<p>"The Duke has been informed," he went on. "I have just come from his
+Grace, and he expressed himself before me with an honest freedom like the
+great nobleman he is. He spoke of you by name, Mr. Balfour, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></a>[pg 66]</span>and
+declared his gratitude beforehand in case you would be led by those who
+understand your own interests and those of the country so much better than
+yourself. Gratitude is no empty expression in that mouth: <i>experto
+crede</i>. I daresay you know something of my name and clan, and the
+damnable example and lamented end of my late father, to say nothing of my
+own errata. Well, I have made my peace with that good Duke; he has
+intervened for me with our friend Prestongrange; and here I am with my foot
+in the stirrup again and some of the responsibility shared into my hand of
+prosecuting King George's enemies and avenging the late daring and
+barefaced insult to his Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"Doubtless a proud position for your father's son," says I.</p>
+
+<p>He wagged his bald eyebrows at me. "You are pleased to make experiments
+in the ironical, I think," said he. "But I am here upon duty, I am here to
+discharge my errand in good faith, it is in vain you think to divert me.
+And let me tell you, for a young fellow of spirit and ambition like
+yourself, a good shove in the beginning will do more than ten years'
+drudgery. The shove is now at your command; choose what you will to be
+advanced in, the Duke will watch upon you with the affectionate disposition
+of a father."</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking that I lack the docility of the son," says I.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you really suppose, sir, that the whole policy <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></a>[pg 67]</span>of this
+country is to be suffered to trip up and tumble down for an ill-mannered
+colt of a boy?" he cried. "This has been made a test case, all who would
+prosper in the future must put a shoulder to the wheel. Look at me! Do you
+suppose it is for my pleasure that I put myself in the highly invidious
+position of prosecuting a man that I have drawn the sword alongside of? The
+choice is not left me."</p>
+
+<p>"But I think, sir, that you forfeited your choice when you mixed in with
+that unnatural rebellion," I remarked. "My case is happily otherwise; I am
+a true man, and can look either the Duke or King George in the face without
+concern."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it so the wind sits?" says he. "I protest you are fallen in the
+worst sort of error. Prestongrange has been hitherto so civil (he tells me)
+as not to combat your allegations; but you must not think they are not
+looked upon with strong suspicion. You say you are innocent. My dear sir,
+the facts declare you guilty."</p>
+
+<p>"I was waiting for you there," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"The evidence of Mungo Campbell; your flight after the completion of the
+murder; your long course of secresy--my good young man!" said Mr. Symon,
+"here is enough evidence to hang a bullock, let be a David Balfour! I shall
+be upon that trial; my voice shall be raised; I shall then speak much
+otherwise from what I do to-day, and far less to your gratification, little
+as you like it now! Ah, you look white!" cries he. "I have <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></a>[pg 68]</span>found the
+key of your impudent heart. You look pale, your eyes waver, Mr. David! You
+see the grave and the gallows nearer by than you had fancied."</p>
+
+<p>"I own to a natural weakness," said I. "I think no shame for that. Shame
+. . ." I was going on.</p>
+
+<p>"Shame waits for you on the gibbet," he broke in.</p>
+
+<p>"Where I shall but be even'd with my lord your father," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Aha, but not so!" he cried, "and you do not yet see to the bottom of
+this business. My father suffered in a great cause, and for dealing in the
+affairs of kings. You are to hang for a dirty murder about boddle-pieces.
+Your personal part in it, the treacherous one of holding the poor wretch in
+talk, your accomplices a pack of ragged Highland gillies. And it can be
+shown, my great Mr. Balfour--it can be shown, and it <i>will</i> be shown,
+trust <i>me</i> that has a finger in the pie--it can be shown, and shall be
+shown, that you were paid to do it. I think I can see the looks go round
+the court when I adduce my evidence, and it shall appear that you, a young
+man of education, let yourself be corrupted to this shocking act for a suit
+of cast clothes, a bottle of Highland spirits, and
+three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in copper money."</p>
+
+<p>There was a touch of the truth in these words that knocked me like a
+blow: clothes, a bottle of <i>usquebaugh</i>, and
+three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in change <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></a>[pg 69]</span>made up, indeed, the most of
+what Alan and I had carried from Aucharn; and I saw that some of James's
+people had been blabbing in their dungeons.</p>
+
+<p>"You see I know more than you fancied," he resumed in triumph. "And as
+for giving it this turn, great Mr. David, you must not suppose the
+Government of Great Britain and Ireland will ever be stuck for want of
+evidence. We have men here in prison who will swear out their lives as we
+direct them; as I direct, if you prefer the phrase. So now you are to guess
+your part of glory if you choose to die. On the one hand, life, wine,
+women, and a duke to be your hand-gun; on the other, a rope to your craig,
+and a gibbet to clatter your bones on, and the lousiest, lowest story to
+hand down to your namesakes in the future that was ever told about a hired
+assassin. And see here!" he cried, with a formidable shrill voice, "see
+this paper that I pull out of my pocket. Look at the name there: it is the
+name of the great David, I believe, the ink scarce dry yet. Can you guess
+its nature? It is the warrant for your arrest, which I have but to touch
+this bell beside me to have executed on the spot. Once in the Tolbooth upon
+this paper, may God help you, for the die is cast!"</p>
+
+<p>I must never deny that I was greatly horrified by so much baseness, and
+much unmanned by the immediacy and ugliness of my danger. Mr. Symon had
+already gloried in the changes of my hue; I make no doubt I <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></a>[pg 70]</span>was now no
+ruddier than my shirt; my speech besides trembled.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a gentleman in this room," cried I. "I appeal to him. I put my
+life and credit in his hands."</p>
+
+<p>Prestongrange shut his book with a snap. "I told you so, Symon," said
+he; "you have played your hand for all it was worth, and you have lost. Mr.
+David," he went on, "I wish you to believe it was by no choice of mine you
+were subjected to this proof. I wish you could understand how glad I am you
+should come forth from it with so much credit. You may not quite see how,
+but it is a little of a service to myself. For had our friend here been
+more successful than I was last night, it might have appeared that he was a
+better judge of men than I; it might have appeared we were altogether in
+the wrong situations, Mr. Symon and myself. And I know our friend Symon to
+be ambitious," says he, striking lightly on Fraser's shoulder. "As for this
+stage play, it is over; my sentiments are very much engaged in your behalf;
+and whatever issue we can find to this unfortunate affair, I shall make it
+my business to see it is adopted with tenderness to you."</p>
+
+<p>These were very good words, and I could see besides that there was
+little love, and perhaps a spice of genuine ill-will, between those two who
+were opposed to me. For all that, it was unmistakable this interview had
+been designed, perhaps rehearsed, with the consent of <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></a>[pg 71]</span>both; it
+was plain my adversaries were in earnest to try me by all methods; and now
+(persuasion, flattery, and menaces having been tried in vain) I could not
+but wonder what would be their next expedient. My eyes besides were still
+troubled, and my knees loose under me, with the distress of the late
+ordeal; and I could do no more than stammer the same form of words: "I put
+my life and credit in your hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," says he, "we must try to save them. And in the meanwhile
+let us return to gentler methods. You must not bear any grudge upon my
+friend, Mr. Symon, who did but speak by his brief. And even if you did
+conceive some malice against myself, who stood by and seemed rather to hold
+a candle, I must not let that extend to innocent members of my family.
+These are greatly engaged to see more of you, and I cannot consent to have
+my young women-folk disappointed. To-morrow they will be going to Hope
+Park, where I think it very proper you should make your bow. Call for me
+first, when I may possibly have something for your private hearing; then
+you shall be turned abroad again under the conduct of my misses; and until
+that time repeat to me your promise of secrecy."</p>
+
+<p>I had done better to have instantly refused, but in truth I was beside
+the power of reasoning; did as I was bid; took my leave I know not how; and
+when I was forth again in the close, and the door had shut behind me, was
+glad to lean on a house wall and wipe my face. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></a>[pg 72]</span>That horrid apparition (as I
+may call it) of Mr. Symon rang in my memory, as a sudden noise rings after
+it is over on the ear. Tales of the man's father, of his falseness, of his
+manifold perpetual treacheries, rose before me from all that I had heard
+and read, and joined on with what I had just experienced of himself. Each
+time it occurred to me, the ingenious foulness of that calumny he had
+proposed to nail upon my character startled me afresh. The case of the man
+upon the gibbet by Leith Walk appeared scarce distinguishable from that I
+was now to consider as my own. To rob a child of so little more than
+nothing was certainly a paltry enterprise for two grown men; but my own
+tale, as it was to be represented in a court by Symon Fraser, appeared a
+fair second in every possible point of view of sordidness and
+cowardice.</p>
+
+<p>The voices of two of Prestongrange's liveried men upon his doorstep
+recalled me to myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha'e," said the one, "this billet as fast as ye can link to the
+captain."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that for the cateran back again?" asked the other.</p>
+
+<p>"It would seem sae," returned the first. "Him and Symon are seeking
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"I think Prestongrange is gane gyte," says the second. "He'll have James
+More in bed with him next."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, it's neither your affair nor mine's," says the first.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></a>[pg
+73]</span>And they parted, the one upon his errand, and the other back into
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>This looked as ill as possible. I was scarce gone and they were sending
+already for James More, to whom I thought Mr. Symon must have pointed when
+he spoke of men in prison and ready to redeem their lives by all
+extremities. My scalp curdled among my hair, and the next moment the blood
+leaped in me to remember Catriona. Poor lass! her father stood to be hanged
+for pretty indefensible misconduct. What was yet more unpalatable, it now
+seemed he was prepared to save his four quarters by the worst of shame and
+the most foul of cowardly murders--murder by the false oath; and to
+complete our misfortunes, it seemed myself was picked out to be the
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>I began to walk swiftly and at random, conscious only of a desire for
+movement, air, and the open country.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></a>[pg 74]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VII'></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOR</h3>
+
+
+<p>I came forth, I vow I know not how, on the <i>Lang Dykes</i>.<sup><a
+href="#fn12" name="rfn12">[12]</a></sup> This is a rural road which runs on
+the north side over against the city. Thence I could see the whole black
+length of it tail down, from where the castle stands upon its crags above
+the loch in a long line of spires and gable ends, and smoking chimneys, and
+at the sight my heart swelled in my bosom. My youth, as I have told, was
+already inured to dangers; but such danger as I had seen the face of but
+that morning, in the midst of what they call the safety of a town, shook me
+beyond experience. Peril of slavery, peril of shipwreck, peril of sword and
+shot, I had stood all of these without discredit; but the peril there was
+in the sharp voice and the fat face of Symon, properly Lord Lovat, daunted
+me wholly.</p>
+
+<p>I sat by the lake side in a place where the rushes went down into the
+water, and there steeped my wrists and laved my temples. If I could have
+done so with any remains of self-esteem I would now have fled from my
+foolhardy enterprise. But (call it courage or <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></a>[pg 75]</span>cowardice, and I believe it
+was both the one and the other) I decided I was ventured out beyond the
+possibility of a retreat. I had outfaced these men, I would continue to
+outface them; come what might, I would stand by the word spoken.</p>
+
+<p>The sense of my own constancy somewhat uplifted my spirits, but not
+much. At the best of it there was an icy place about my heart, and life
+seemed a black business to be at all engaged in. For two souls in
+particular my pity flowed. The one was myself, to be so friendless and lost
+among dangers. The other was the girl, the daughter of James More. I had
+seen but little of her; yet my view was taken and my judgment made. I
+thought her a lass of a clean honour, like a man's; I thought her one to
+die of a disgrace; and now I believed her father to be at that moment
+bargaining his vile life for mine. It made a bond in my thoughts betwixt
+the girl and me. I had seen her before only as a wayside appearance, though
+one that pleased me strangely; I saw her now in a sudden nearness of
+relation, as the daughter of my blood foe, and I might say, my murderer. I
+reflected it was hard I should be so plagued and persecuted all my days for
+other folk's affairs, and have no manner of pleasure myself. I got meals
+and a bed to sleep in when my concerns would suffer it; beyond that my
+wealth was of no help to me. If I was to hang, my days were like to be
+short; if I was not to hang but to escape out of this trouble, they <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></a>[pg 76]</span>might yet
+seem long to me ere I was done with them. Of a sudden her face appeared in
+my memory, the way I had first seen it, with the parted lips; at that,
+weakness came in my bosom and strength into my legs; and I set resolutely
+forward on the way to Dean. If I was to hang to-morrow, and it was sure
+enough I might very likely sleep that night in a dungeon, I determined I
+should hear and speak once more with Catriona.</p>
+
+<p>The exercise of walking and the thought of my destination braced me yet
+more, so that I began to pluck up a kind of spirit. In the village of Dean,
+where it sits in the bottom of a glen beside the river, I inquired my way
+of a miller's man, who sent me up the hill upon the farther side by a plain
+path, and so to a decent-like small house in a garden of lawns and
+apple-trees. My heart beat high as I stepped inside the garden hedge, but
+it fell low indeed when I came face to face with a grim and fierce old
+lady, walking there in a white mutch with a man's hat strapped upon the top
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>"What do ye come seeking here?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>I told her I was after Miss Drummond.</p>
+
+<p>"And what may be your business with Miss Drummond?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>I told her I had met her on Saturday last, had been so fortunate as to
+render her a trifling service, and was come now on the young lady's
+invitation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, so you're Saxpence!" she cried, with a very sneering manner. "A
+braw gift, a bonny gentleman. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77"
+id="Page_77"></a>[pg 77]</span>And hae ye ony ither name and designation,
+or were ye bapteesed Saxpence?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>I told my name.</p>
+
+<p>"Preserve me!" she cried. "Has Ebenezer gotten a son?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, ma'am," said I. "I am a son of Alexander's. It's I that am the
+Laird of Shaws."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye'll find your work cut out for ye to establish that," quoth she.</p>
+
+<p>"I perceive you know my uncle," said I; "and I daresay you may be the
+better pleased to hear that business is arranged."</p>
+
+<p>"And what brings ye here after Miss Drummond?" she pursued.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm come after my saxpence, mem," said I. "It's to be thought, being my
+uncle's nephew, I would be found a careful lad."</p>
+
+<p>"So ye have a spark of sleeness in ye," observed the old lady, with some
+approval. "I thought ye had just been a cuif--you and your saxpence, and
+your <i>lucky day</i> and your <i>sake of Balwhidder</i>"--from which I was
+gratified to learn that Catriona had not forgotten some of our talk. "But
+all this is by the purpose," she resumed. "Am I to understand that ye come
+here keeping company?"</p>
+
+<p>"This is surely rather an early question," said I. "The maid is young,
+so am I, worse fortune. I have but seen her the once. I'll not deny," I
+added, making <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></a>[pg
+78]</span>up my mind to try her with some frankness, "I'll not deny but she
+has run in my head a good deal since I met in with her. That is one thing;
+but it would be quite another, and I think I would look very like a fool,
+to commit myself."</p>
+
+<p>"You can speak out of your mouth, I see," said the old lady. "Praise
+God, and so can I! I was fool enough to take charge of this rogue's
+daughter: a fine charge I have gotten; but it's mine, and I'll carry it the
+way I want to. Do ye mean to tell me, Mr. Balfour of Shaws, that you would
+marry James More's daughter, and him hanged? Well, then, where there's no
+possible marriage there shall be no manner of carryings on, and take that
+for said. Lasses are bruckle things," she added, with a nod; "and though ye
+would never think it by my wrunkled chafts, I was a lassie mysel', and a
+bonny one."</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Allardyce," said I, "for that I suppose to be your name, you seem
+to do the two sides of the talking, which is a very poor manner to come to
+an agreement. You give me rather a home thrust when you ask if I would
+marry, at the gallows' foot, a young lady whom I have seen but the once. I
+have told you already I would never be so untenty as to commit myself. And
+yet I'll go some way with you. If I continue to like the lass as well as I
+have reason to expect, it will be something more than her father, or the
+gallows either, that keeps the two of us apart. As for my family, I found
+it by <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></a>[pg
+79]</span>the wayside like a lost bawbee! I owe less than nothing to my
+uncle; and if ever I marry, it will be to please one person: that's
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard this kind of talk before ye were born," said Mrs. Ogilvy,
+"which is perhaps the reason that I think of it so little. There's much to
+be considered. This James More is a kinsman of mine, to my shame be it
+spoken. But the better the family, the mair men hanged or heided, that's
+always been poor Scotland's story. And if it was just the hanging! For my
+part, I think I would be best pleased with James upon the gallows, which
+would be at least an end to him. Catrine's a good lass enough, and a
+good-hearted, and lets herself be deaved all day with a runt of an auld
+wife like me. But, ye see, there's the weak bit. She's daft about that
+long, false, fleeching beggar of a father of hers, and red-mad about the
+Gregara, and proscribed names, and King James, and a wheen blethers. And
+you might think ye could guide her, ye would find yourself sore mista'en.
+Ye say ye've seen her but the once..."</p>
+
+<p>"Spoke with her but the once, I should have said," I interrupted. "I saw
+her again this morning from a window at Prestongrange's."</p>
+
+<p>This I daresay I put in because it sounded well; but I was properly paid
+for my ostentation on the return.</p>
+
+<p>"What's this of it?" cries the old lady, with a sudden <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></a>[pg 80]</span>pucker of
+her face. "I think it was at the Advocate's door-cheek that ye met her
+first."</p>
+
+<p>I told her that was so.</p>
+
+<p>"H'm," she said; and then suddenly, upon rather a scolding tone, "I have
+your bare word for it," she cries, "as to who and what you are. By your way
+of it, you're Balfour of the Shaws; but for what I ken you may be Balfour
+of the Deevil's oxter. It's possible ye may come here for what ye say, and
+it's equally possible ye may come here for deil care what! I'm good enough
+whig to sit quiet, and to have keepit all my men-folk's heads upon their
+shoulders. But I'm not just a good enough whig to be made a fool of
+neither. And I tell you fairly, there's too much Advocate's door and
+Advocate's window here for a man that comes taigling after a Macgregor's
+daughter. Ye can tell that to the Advocate that sent ye, with my fond love.
+And I kiss my loof to ye, Mr. Balfour," says she, suiting the action to the
+word, "and a braw journey to ye back to where ye cam frae."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think me a spy," I broke out, and speech stuck in my throat. I
+stood and looked murder at the old lady for a space, then bowed and turned
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Here! Hoots! The callant's in a creel!" she cried. "Think ye a spy?
+what else would I think ye--me that kens naething by ye? But I see that I
+was wrong; and as I cannot fight, I'll have to apologise. A bonny figure I
+would be with a broadsword. Ay! <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81"
+id="Page_81"></a>[pg 81]</span>ay!" she went on, "you're none such a bad
+lad in your way; I think ye'll have some redeeming vices. But, oh, Davit
+Balfour, ye're damned countryfeed. Ye'll have to win over that, lad; ye'll
+have to soople your back-bone, and think a wee pickle less of your dainty
+self; and ye'll have to try to find out that women-folk are nae grenadiers.
+But that can never be. To your last day you'll ken no more of women-folk
+than what I do of sow-gelding."</p>
+
+<p>I had never been used with such expressions from a lady's tongue, the
+only two ladies I had known, Mrs. Campbell and my mother, being most devout
+and most particular women; and I suppose my amazement must have been
+depicted in my countenance, for Mrs. Ogilvy burst forth suddenly in a fit
+of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep me!" she cried, struggling with her mirth, "you have the finest
+timber face--and you to marry the daughter of a Hieland cateran! Davie, my
+dear, I think we'll have to make a match of it--if it was just to see the
+weans. And now," she went on, "there's no manner of service in your
+daidling here, for the young woman is from home, and it's my fear that the
+old woman is no suitable companion for your father's son. Forbye that I
+have nobody but myself to look after my reputation, and have been long
+enough alone with a sedooctive youth. And come back another day for your
+saxpence!" she cried after me as I left.</p>
+
+<p>My skirmish with this disconcerting lady gave my <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></a>[pg 82]</span>thoughts a
+boldness they had otherwise wanted. For two days the image of Catriona had
+mixed in all my meditations; she made their background, so that I scarce
+enjoyed my own company without a glint of her in a corner of my mind. But
+now she came immediately near; I seemed to touch her, whom I had never
+touched but the once; I let myself flow out to her in a happy weakness, and
+looking all about, and before and behind, saw the world like an undesirable
+desert, where men go as soldiers on a march, following their duty with what
+constancy they have, and Catriona alone there to offer me some pleasure of
+my days; I wondered at myself that I could dwell on such considerations in
+that time of my peril and disgrace; and when I remembered my youth I was
+ashamed. I had my studies to complete; I had to be called into some useful
+business; I had yet to take my part of service in a place where all must
+serve; I had yet to learn, and know, and prove myself a man; and I had so
+much sense as blush that I should be already tempted with these further-on
+and holier delights and duties. My education spoke home to me sharply; I
+was never brought up on sugar biscuits, but on the hard food of the truth.
+I knew that he was quite unfit to be a husband who was not prepared to be a
+father also; and for a boy like me to play the father was a mere
+derision.</p>
+
+<p>When I was in the midst of these thoughts and about <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></a>[pg 83]</span>half-way
+back to town I saw a figure coming to meet me, and the trouble of my heart
+was heightened. It seemed I had everything in the world to say to her, but
+nothing to say first; and remembering how tongue-tied I had been that
+morning at the Advocate's, I made sure that I would find myself struck
+dumb. But when she came up my fears fled away; not even the consciousness
+of what I had been privately thinking disconcerted me the least; and I
+found I could talk with her as easily and rationally as I might with
+Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"O!" she cried, "you have been seeking your sixpence: did you get
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>I told her no; but now I had met with her my walk was not in vain.
+"Though I have seen you to-day already," said I, and told her where and
+when.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not see you," she said. "My eyes are big, but there are better
+than mine at seeing far. Only I heard singing in the house."</p>
+
+<p>"That was Miss Grant," said I, "the eldest and the bonniest."</p>
+
+<p>"They say they are all beautiful," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"They think the same of you, Miss Drummond," I replied, "and were all
+crowding to the window to observe you."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pity about my being so blind," said she, "or I might have seen
+them too. And you were in the house? You must have been having the fine
+time with the fine music and the pretty ladies."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a>[pg
+84]</span>"There is just where you are wrong," said I; "for I was as
+uncouth as a sea-fish upon the brae of a mountain. The truth is that I am
+better fitted to go about with rudas men than pretty ladies."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I would think so too, at all events!" said she, at which we both
+of us laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a strange thing, now," said I. "I am not the least afraid with
+you, yet I could have run from the Miss Grants. And I was afraid of your
+cousin too."</p>
+
+<p>"O, I think any man will be afraid of her," she cried. "My father is
+afraid of her himself."</p>
+
+<p>The name of her father brought me to a stop. I looked at her as she
+walked by my side; I recalled the man, and the little I knew and the much I
+guessed of him; and comparing the one with the other, felt like a traitor
+to be silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Speaking of which," said I, "I met your father no later than this
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you?" she cried, with a voice of joy that seemed to mock at me.
+"You saw James More? You will have spoken with him, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did even that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>Then I think things went the worst way for me that was humanly possible.
+She gave me a look of mere gratitude. "Ah, thank you for that!" says
+she.</p>
+
+<p>"You thank me for very little," said I, and then stopped. But it seemed
+when I was holding back so <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85"
+id="Page_85"></a>[pg 85]</span>much, something at least had to come out. "I
+spoke rather ill to him," said I; "I did not like him very much; I spoke
+him rather ill, and he was angry."</p>
+
+<p>"I think you had little to do then, and less to tell it to his
+daughter!" she cried out. "But those that do not love and cherish him I
+will not know."</p>
+
+<p>"I will take the freedom of a word yet," said I, beginning to tremble.
+"Perhaps neither your father nor I are in the best of good spirits at
+Prestongrange's. I daresay we both have anxious business there, for it's a
+dangerous house. I was sorry for him too, and spoke to him the first, if I
+could but have spoken the wiser. And for one thing, in my opinion, you will
+soon find that his affairs are mending."</p>
+
+<p>"It will not be through your friendship, I am thinking," said she; "and
+he is much made up to you for your sorrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Drummond," cried I, "I am alone in this world...."</p>
+
+<p>"And I am not wondering at that," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"O, let me speak!" said I. "I will speak but the once, and then leave
+you, if you will, for ever. I came this day in the hopes of a kind word
+that I am sore in want of. I know that what I said must hurt you, and I
+knew it then. It would have been easy to have spoken smooth, easy to lie to
+you; can you not think how I was tempted to the same? Cannot you see the
+truth of my heart shine out?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></a>[pg
+86]</span>"I think here is a great deal of work, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I
+think we will have met but the once, and will can part like
+gentle-folk."</p>
+
+<p>"O, let me have one to believe in me!" I pleaded, "I cannae bear it
+else. The whole world is clanned against me. How am I to go through with my
+dreadful fate? If there's to be none to believe in me I cannot do it. The
+man must just die, for I cannot do it."</p>
+
+<p>She had still looked straight in front of her, head in air; but at my
+words or the tone of my voice she came to a stop. "What is this you say?"
+she asked. "What are you talking of?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is my testimony which may save an innocent life," said I, "and they
+will not suffer me to bear it. What would you do yourself? You know what
+this is, whose father lies in danger. Would you desert the poor soul? They
+have tried all ways with me. They have sought to bribe me; they offered me
+hills and valleys. And to-day that sleuth-hound told me how I stood, and to
+what a length he would go to butcher and disgrace me. I am to be brought in
+a party to the murder; I am to have held Glenure in talk for money and old
+clothes; I am to be killed and shamed. If this is the way I am to fall, and
+me scarce a man--if this is the story to be told of me in all Scotland--if
+you are to believe it too, and my name is to be nothing but a
+by-word--Catriona, how can I go through with it? <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></a>[pg 87]</span>The thing's not possible;
+it's more than a man has in his heart."</p>
+
+<p>I poured my words out in a whirl, one upon the other; and when I stopped
+I found her gazing on me with a startled face.</p>
+
+<p>"Glenure! It is the Appin murder," she said softly, but with a very deep
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>I had turned back to bear her company, and we were now come near the
+head of the brae above Dean village. At this word I stepped in front of her
+like one suddenly distracted.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake!" I cried, "for God's sake, what is this that I have
+done?" and carried my fists to my temples. "What made me do it? Sure, I am
+bewitched to say these things!"</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of heaven, what ails you now?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"I gave my honour," I groaned, "I gave my honour and now I have broke
+it. O, Catriona!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am asking you what it is," she said; "was it these things you should
+not have spoken? And do you think <i>I</i> have no honour, then? or that I
+am one that would betray a friend? I hold up my right hand to you and
+swear."</p>
+
+<p>"O, I knew you would be true!" said I. "It's me--it's here. I that stood
+but this morning and out-faced them, that risked rather to die disgraced
+upon the gallows than do wrong--and a few hours after I throw <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></a>[pg 88]</span>my honour
+away by the roadside in common talk! 'There is one thing clear upon our
+interview,' says he, 'that I can rely on your pledged word.' Where is my
+word now? Who could believe me now? <i>You</i> could not believe me. I am
+clean fallen down; I had best die!" All this I said with a weeping voice,
+but I had no tears in my body.</p>
+
+<p>"My heart is sore for you," said she, "but be sure you are too nice. I
+would not believe you, do you say? I would trust you with anything. And
+these men? I would not be thinking of them! Men who go about to entrap and
+to destroy you! Fy! this is no time to crouch. Look up! Do you not think I
+will be admiring you like a great hero of the good--and you a boy not much
+older than myself? And because you said a word too much in a friend's ear,
+that would die ere she betrayed you--to make such a matter! It is one thing
+that we must both forget."</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, looking at her, hang-dog, "is this true of it? Would
+ye trust me yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you not believe the tears upon my face?" she cried. "It is the
+world I am thinking of you, Mr. David Balfour. Let them hang you; I will
+never forget, I will grow old and still remember you. I think it is great
+to die so; I will envy you that gallows."</p>
+
+<p>"And maybe all this while I am but a child frighted with bogles," said
+I. "Maybe they but make a mock of me."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></a>[pg
+89]</span>"It is what I must know," she said. "I must hear the whole. The
+harm is done at all events, and I must hear the whole."</p>
+
+<p>I had sat down on the wayside, where she took a place beside me, and I
+told her all that matter much as I have written it, my thoughts about her
+father's dealing being alone omitted.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, when I had finished, "you are a hero, surely, and I
+never would have thought that same! And I think you are in peril, too. O,
+Symon Fraser! to think upon that man! For his life and the dirty money, to
+be dealing in such traffic!" And just then she called out aloud with a
+queer word that was common with her, and belongs, I believe, to her own
+language. "My torture!" says she, "look at the sun!"</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, it was already dipping towards the mountains.</p>
+
+<p>She bid me come again soon, gave me her hand, and left me in a turmoil
+of glad spirits. I delayed to go home to my lodging, for I had a terror of
+immediate arrest; but got some supper at a change house, and the better
+part of that night walked by myself in the barley-fields, and had such a
+sense of Catriona's presence that I seemed to bear her in my arms.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></a>[pg 90]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VIII'></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BRAVO</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next day, August 29th, I kept my appointment at the Advocate's in a
+coat that I had made to my own measure, and was but newly ready.</p>
+
+<p>"Aha," says Prestongrange, "you are very fine to-day; my misses are to
+have a fine cavalier. Come, I take that kind of you. I take that kind of
+you, Mr. David. O, we shall do very well yet, and I believe your troubles
+are nearly at an end."</p>
+
+<p>"You have news for me?" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"Beyond anticipation," he replied. "Your testimony is after all to be
+received; and you may go, if you will, in my company to the trial, which is
+to be held at Inverary, Thursday, 21st <i>proximo</i>."</p>
+
+<p>I was too much amazed to find words.</p>
+
+<p>"In the meanwhile," he continued, "though I will not ask you to renew
+your pledge, I must caution you strictly to be reticent. To-morrow your
+precognition must be taken; and outside of that, do you know, I think least
+said will be soonest mended."</p>
+
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour003"></a>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour003.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: TIT YOU EFFER HEAR WHERE ALAN GRIGOR FAND
+THE TANGS? SAID HE" src="images/balfour003sm.jpg" height="571" width="382" /></a>
+<br />TIT YOU EFFER HEAR
+WHERE ALAN GRIGOR FAND THE TANGS? SAID HE
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+<p>"I shall try to go discreetly," said I. "I believe it is yourself that I
+must thank for this crowning mercy, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91"
+id="Page_91"></a>[pg 91]</span>and I do thank you gratefully. After
+yesterday, my lord, this is like the doors of Heaven. I cannot find it in
+my heart to get the thing believed."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but you must try and manage, you must try and manage to believe
+it," says he, soothing-like, "and I am very glad to hear your
+acknowledgment of obligation, for I think you may be able to repay me very
+shortly"--he coughed--"or even now. The matter is much changed. Your
+testimony, which I shall not trouble you for to-day, will doubtless alter
+the complexion of the case for all concerned, and this makes it less
+delicate for me to enter with you on a side issue."</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," I interrupted, "excuse me for interrupting you, but how has
+this been brought about? The obstacles you told me of on Saturday appeared
+even to me to be quite insurmountable; how has it been contrived?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Mr. David," said he, "it would never do for me to divulge (even
+to you, as you say) the councils of the Government; and you must content
+yourself, if you please, with the gross fact."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled upon me like a father as he spoke, playing the while with a
+new pen; methought it was impossible there could be any shadow of deception
+in the man: yet when he drew to him a sheet of paper, dipped his pen among
+the ink, and began again to address me, I was somehow not so certain, and
+fell instinctively into an attitude of guard.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></a>[pg
+92]</span>"There is a point I wish to touch upon," he began. "I purposely
+left it before upon one side, which need be now no longer necessary. This
+is not, of course, a part of your examination, which is to follow by
+another hand; this is a private interest of my own. You say you encountered
+Breck upon the hill?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did, my lord," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"This was immediately after the murder?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you speak to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did."</p>
+
+<p>"You had known him before, I think?" says my lord, carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot guess your reason for so thinking, my lord," I replied, "but
+such is the fact."</p>
+
+<p>"And when did you part with him again?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I reserve my answer," said I. "The question will be put to me at the
+assize."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Balfour," said he, "will you not understand that all this is
+without prejudice to yourself? I have promised you life and honour; and,
+believe me, I can keep my word. You are therefore clear of all anxiety.
+Alan, it appears, you suppose you can protect; and you talk to me of your
+gratitude, which I think (if you push me) is not ill-deserved. There are a
+great many different considerations all pointing the same way; and I will
+never be persuaded that you could not help us (if you chose) to put salt on
+Alan's tail."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></a>[pg
+93]</span>"My lord," said I, "I give you my word I do not so much as guess
+where Alan is."</p>
+
+<p>He paused a breath. "Nor how he might be found?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>I sat before him like a log of wood.</p>
+
+<p>"And so much for your gratitude, Mr. David!" he observed. Again there
+was a piece of silence. "Well," said he, rising, "I am not fortunate, and
+we are a couple at cross purposes. Let us speak of it no more; you will
+receive notice when, where, and by whom we are to take your precognition.
+And in the meantime, my misses must be waiting you. They will never forgive
+me if I detain their cavalier."</p>
+
+<p>Into the hands of these graces I was accordingly offered up, and found
+them dressed beyond what I had thought possible, and looking fair as a
+posy.</p>
+
+<p>As we went forth from the doors a small circumstance occurred which came
+afterwards to look extremely big. I heard a whistle sound loud and brief
+like a signal, and looking all about, spied for one moment the red head of
+Neil of the Tom, the son of Duncan. The next moment he was gone again, nor
+could I see so much as the skirt-tail of Catriona, upon whom I naturally
+supposed him to be then attending.</p>
+
+<p>My three keepers led me out by Bristo and the Bruntsfield Links; whence
+a path carried us to Hope Park, a beautiful pleasance, laid with
+gravel-walks, furnished with seats and summer-sheds, and warded by a
+keeper.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></a>[pg
+94]</span>The way there was a little longsome; the two younger misses
+affected an air of genteel weariness that damped me cruelly, the eldest
+considered me with something that at times appeared like mirth; and though
+I thought I did myself more justice than the day before, it was not without
+some effort. Upon our reaching the park I was launched on a bevy of eight
+or ten young gentlemen (some of them cockaded officers, the rest chiefly
+advocates) who crowded to attend upon these beauties; and though I was
+presented to all of them in very good words, it seemed I was by all
+immediately forgotten. Young folk in a company are like to savage animals:
+they fall upon or scorn a stranger without civility, or I may say,
+humanity; and I am sure, if I had been among baboons, they would have shown
+me quite as much of both. Some of the advocates set up to be wits, and some
+of the soldiers to be rattles; and I could not tell which of these extremes
+annoyed me most. All had a manner of handling their swords and coat-skirts,
+for the which (in mere black envy) I could have kicked them from that park.
+I daresay, upon their side, they grudged me extremely the fine company in
+which I had arrived; and altogether I had soon fallen behind, and stepped
+stiffly in the rear of all that merriment with my own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>From these I was recalled by one of the officers, Lieutenant Hector
+Duncansby, a gawky, leering, Highland boy, asking if my name was not
+"Palfour."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></a>[pg 95]</span>I
+told him it was, not very kindly, for his manner was scant civil.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha, Palfour," says he, and then, repeating it, "Palfour, Palfour!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid you do not like my name, sir," says I, annoyed with myself
+to be annoyed with such a rustical fellow.</p>
+
+<p>"No," says he, "but I wass thinking."</p>
+
+<p>"I would not advise you to make a practice of that, sir," says I. "I
+feel sure you would not find it to agree with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Tit you effer hear where Alan Grigor fand the tangs?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him what he could possibly mean, and he answered, with a
+heckling laugh, that he thought I must have found the poker in the same
+place and swallowed it.</p>
+
+<p>There could be no mistake about this, and my cheek burned.</p>
+
+<p>"Before I went about to put affronts on gentlemen," said I, "I think I
+would learn the English language first."</p>
+
+<p>He took me by the sleeve with a nod and a wink, and led me quietly
+outside Hope Park. But no sooner were we beyond the view of the
+promenaders, than the fashion of his countenance changed. "You tam lowland
+scoon'rel!" cries he, and hit me a buffet on the jaw with his closed
+fist.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></a>[pg 96]</span>I
+paid him as good or better on the return; whereupon he stepped a little
+back and took off his hat to me decorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Enough plows I think," says he. "I will be the offended shentleman, for
+who effer heard of such suffeeciency as tell a shentlemans that is the
+king's officer he cannae speak Cot's English? We have swords at our
+hurdies, and here is the King's Park at hand. Will ye walk first, or let me
+show ye the way?"</p>
+
+<p>I returned his bow, told him to go first, and followed him. As he went I
+heard him grumble to himself about <i>Cot's English</i> and the <i>King's
+coat</i>, so that I might have supposed him to be seriously offended. But
+his manner at the beginning of our interview was there to belie him. It was
+manifest he had come prepared to fasten a quarrel on me, right or wrong;
+manifest that I was taken in a fresh contrivance of my enemies; and to me
+(conscious as I was of my deficiencies) manifest enough that I should be
+the one to fall in our encounter.</p>
+
+<p>As we came into that rough rocky desert of the King's Park I was tempted
+half-a-dozen times to take to my heels and run for it, so loath was I to
+show my ignorance in fencing, and so much averse to die or even to be
+wounded. But I considered if their malice went as far as this, it would
+likely stick at nothing; and that to fall by the sword, however
+ungracefully, was still an improvement on the gallows. I considered besides
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></a>[pg 97]</span>that
+by the unguarded pertness of my words and the quickness of my blow I had
+put myself quite out of court; and that even if I ran, my adversary would,
+probably pursue and catch me, which would add disgrace to my misfortune. So
+that, taking all in all, I continued marching behind him, much as a man
+follows the hangman, and certainly with no more hope.</p>
+
+<p>We went about the end of the long craigs, and came into the Hunter's
+Bog. Here, on a piece of fair turf, my adversary drew. There was nobody
+there to see us but some birds; and no resource for me but to follow his
+example, and stand on guard with the best face I could display. It seems it
+was not good enough for Mr. Duncansby, who spied some flaw in my
+manoeuvres, paused, looked upon me sharply, and came off and on, and
+menaced me with his blade in the air. As I had seen no such proceedings
+from Alan, and was besides a good deal affected with the proximity of
+death, I grew quite bewildered, stood helpless, and could have longed to
+run away.</p>
+
+<p>"Fat, deil, ails her?" cries the lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>And suddenly engaging, he twitched the sword out of my grasp and sent it
+flying far among the rushes.</p>
+
+<p>Twice was this manoeuvre repeated; and the third time when I brought
+back my humiliated weapon, I found he had returned his own to the scabbard,
+and stood awaiting me with a face of some anger, and his hands clasped
+under his skirt.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></a>[pg
+98]</span>"Pe tamned if I touch you!" he cried, and asked me bitterly what
+right I had to stand up before "shentlemans" when I did not know the back
+of a sword from the front of it.</p>
+
+<p>I answered that was the fault of my upbringing; and would he do me the
+justice to say I had given him all the satisfaction it was unfortunately in
+my power to offer, and had stood up like a man?</p>
+
+<p>"And that is the truth," said he. "I am fery prave myself, and pold as a
+lions. But to stand up there--and you ken naething of fence!--the way that
+you did, I declare it was peyond me. And I am sorry for the plow; though I
+declare I pelief your own was the elder brother, and my held still sings
+with it. And I declare if I had kent what way it wass, I would not put a
+hand to such a piece of pusiness."</p>
+
+<p>"That is handsomely said," I replied, "and I am sure you will not stand
+up a second time to be the actor for my private enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, no, Palfour," said he; "and I think I was used extremely
+suffeeciently myself to be set up to fecht with an auld wife, or all the
+same as a bairn whateffer! And I will tell the Master so, and fecht him, by
+Cot, himself!"</p>
+
+<p>"And if you knew the nature of Mr. Symon's quarrel with me," said I,
+"you would be yet the more affronted to be mingled up with such
+affairs."</p>
+
+<p>He swore he could well believe it; that all the Lovats <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a>[pg 99]</span>were made
+of the same meal and the devil was the miller that ground that; then
+suddenly shaking me by the hand, he vowed I was a pretty enough fellow
+after all, that it was a thousand pities I had been neglected, and that if
+he could find the time, he would give an eye himself to have me
+educated.</p>
+
+<p>"You can do me a better service than even what you propose," said I; and
+when he had asked its nature--"Come with me to the house of one of my
+enemies, and testify how I have carried myself this day," I told him. "That
+will be the true service. For though he has sent me a gallant adversary for
+the first, the thought in Mr. Symon's mind is merely murder. There will be
+a second and then a third; and by what you have seen of my cleverness with
+the cold steel, you can judge for yourself what is like to be upshot."</p>
+
+<p>"And I would not like it myself, if I was no more of a man than what you
+wass!" he cried. "But I will do you right, Palfour. Lead on!"</p>
+
+<p>If I had walked slowly on the way into that accursed park my heels were
+light enough on the way out. They kept time to a very good old air, that is
+as ancient as the Bible, and the words of it are: "<i>Surely the bitterness
+of death is passed</i>." I mind that I was extremely thirsty, and had a
+drink at Saint Margaret's well on the road down, and the sweetness of that
+water passed belief. We went through the sanctuary, up the Canongate, in by
+the Netherbow, and straight to Prestongrange's <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></a>[pg 100]</span>door, talking as we came
+and arranging the details of our affair. The footman owned his master was
+at home, but declared him engaged with other gentlemen on very private
+business, and his door forbidden.</p>
+
+<p>"My business is but for three minutes, and it cannot wait," said I. "You
+may say it is by no means private, and I shall be even glad to have some
+witnesses."</p>
+
+<p>As the man departed unwillingly enough upon this errand, we made so bold
+as to follow him to the antechamber, whence I could hear for a while the
+murmuring of several voices in the room within. The truth is, they were
+three at the one table--Prestongrange, Symon Fraser, and Mr. Erskine,
+Sheriff of Perth; and as they were met in consultation on the very business
+of the Appin murder, they were a little disturbed at my appearance, but
+decided to receive me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well, Mr. Balfour, and what brings you here again? and who is
+this you bring with you?" says Prestongrange.</p>
+
+<p>As for Fraser, he looked before him on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"He is here to bear a little testimony in my favour, my lord, which I
+think it very needful you should hear," said I, and turned to
+Duncansby.</p>
+
+<p>"I have only to say this," said the lieutenant, "that I stood up this
+day with Palfour in the Hunter's Pog, which I am now fery sorry for, and he
+behaved himself as pretty as a shentlemans could ask it. And I have creat
+respects for Palfour," he added.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></a>[pg
+101]</span>"I thank you for your honest expressions," said I.</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon Duncansby made his bow to the company, and left the chamber,
+as we had agreed upon before.</p>
+
+<p>"What have I to do with this?" says Prestongrange.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell your lordship in two words," said I. "I have brought this
+gentleman, a King's officer, to do me so much justice. Now I think my
+character is covered, and until a certain date, which your lordship can
+very well supply, it will be quite in vain to despatch against me any more
+officers. I will not consent to fight my way through the garrison of the
+castle."</p>
+
+<p>The veins swelled on Prestongrange's brow, and he regarded me with
+fury.</p>
+
+<p>"I think the devil uncoupled this dog of a lad between my legs!" he
+cried; and then, turning fiercely on his neighbour, "This is some of your
+work, Symon," he said. "I spy your hand in the business, and, let me tell
+you, I resent it. It is disloyal, when we are agreed upon one expedient, to
+follow another in the dark. You are disloyal to me. What! you let me send
+this lad to the place with my very daughters! And because I let drop a word
+to you ... Fy, sir, keep your dishonours to yourself!"</p>
+
+<p>Symon was deadly pale. "I will be a kick-ball between you and the Duke
+no longer," he exclaimed. "Either come to an agreement, or come to a
+differ, and have it out among yourselves. But I will no longer fetch and
+carry, and get your contrary instructions, and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></a>[pg 102]</span>be blamed by both. For if
+I were to tell you what I think of all your Hanover business it would make
+your head sing."</p>
+
+<p>But Sheriff Erskine had preserved his temper, and now intervened
+smoothly. "And in the meantime," says he, "I think we should tell Mr.
+Balfour that his character for valour is quite established. He may sleep in
+peace. Until the date he was so good as to refer to it shall be put to the
+proof no more."</p>
+
+<p>His coolness brought the others to their prudence; and they made haste,
+with a somewhat distracted civility, to pack me from the house.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></a>[pg
+103]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_IX'></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE HEATHER ON FIRE</h3>
+
+
+<p>When I left Prestongrange that afternoon I was for the first time angry.
+The Advocate had made a mock of me. He had pretended my testimony was to be
+received and myself respected; and in that very hour, not only was Symon
+practising against my life by the hands of the Highland soldier, but (as
+appeared from his own language) Prestongrange himself had some design in
+operation. I counted my enemies: Prestongrange with all the King's
+authority behind him; and the Duke with the power of the West Highlands;
+and the Lovat interest by their side to help them with so great a force in
+the north, and the whole clan of old Jacobite spies and traffickers. And
+when I remembered James More, and the red head of Neil the son of Duncan, I
+thought there was perhaps a fourth in the confederacy, and what remained of
+Rob Roy's old desperate sept of caterans would be banded against me with
+the others. One thing was requisite, some strong friend or wise adviser.
+The country must be full of such, both able and eager to support me, or
+Lovat and the Duke <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104"
+id="Page_104"></a>[pg 104]</span>and Prestongrange had not been nosing for
+expedients; and it made me rage to think that I might brush against my
+champions in the street and be no wiser.</p>
+
+<p>And just then (like an answer) a gentleman brushed against me going by,
+gave me a meaning look, and turned into a close. I knew him with the tail
+of my eye--it was Stewart the Writer; and, blessing my good fortune, turned
+in to follow him. As soon as I had entered the close I saw him standing in
+the mouth of a stair, where he made me a signal and immediately vanished.
+Seven storeys up, there he was again in a house door, the which he locked
+behind us after we had entered. The house was quite dismantled, with not a
+stick of furniture; indeed, it was one of which Stewart had the letting in
+his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have to sit upon the floor," said he; "but we're safe here for
+the time being, and I've been wearying to see ye, Mr. Balfour."</p>
+
+<p>"How's it with Alan?'" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Brawly," said he. "Andie picks him up at Gillane Sands to-morrow,
+Wednesday. He was keen to say good-by to ye, but the way that things were
+going, I was feared the pair of ye was maybe best apart. And that brings me
+to the essential: how does your business speed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why," said I, "I was told only this morning that my testimony was
+accepted, and I was to travel to Inverary with the Advocate, no less."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></a>[pg
+105]</span>"Hout awa!" cried Stewart. "I'll never believe that."</p>
+
+<p>"I have maybe a suspicion of my own," says I, "but I would like fine to
+hear your reasons."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I tell ye fairly, I'm horn-mad," cries Stewart. "If my one hand
+could pull their Government down I would pluck it like a rotten apple. I'm
+doer for Appin and for James of the Glens; and, of course, it's my duty to
+defend my kinsman for his life. Hear how it goes with me, and I'll leave
+the judgment of it to yourself. The first thing they have to do is to get
+rid of Alan. They cannae bring in James as art and part until they've
+brought in Alan first as principal; that's sound law: they could never put
+the cart before the horse."</p>
+
+<p>"And how are they to bring in Alan till they can catch him?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but there is a way to evite that arrestment," said he. "Sound law,
+too. It would be a bonny thing if, by the escape of one ill-doer another
+was to go scatheless, and the remeid is to summon the principal and put him
+to outlawry for the non-compearance. Now there's four places where a person
+can be summoned: at his dwelling-house; at a place where he has resided
+forty days; at the head burgh of the shire where he ordinarily resorts; or
+lastly (if there be ground to think him forth of Scotland), <i>at the cross
+of Edinburgh, and the pier and shore of Leith, for sixty days</i>. The
+purpose of which <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106"
+id="Page_106"></a>[pg 106]</span>last provision is evident upon its face:
+being that outgoing ships may have time to carry news of the transaction,
+and the summonsing be something other than a form. Now take the case of
+Alan. He has no dwelling-house that ever I could hear of; I would be
+obliged if anyone would show me where he has lived forty days together
+since the '45; there is no shire where he resorts whether ordinarily or
+extraordinarily; if he has a domicile at all, which I misdoubt, it must be
+with his regiment in France; and if he is not yet forth of Scotland (as we
+happen to know and they happen to guess) it must be evident to the most
+dull it's what he's aiming for. Where, then, and what way should he be
+summoned? I ask it at yourself, a layman."</p>
+
+<p>"You have given the very words," said I. "Here at the cross, and at the
+pier and shore of Leith, for sixty days."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye're a sounder Scots lawyer than Prestongrange, then!" cries the
+Writer. "He has had Alan summoned once; that was on the twenty-fifth, the
+day that we first met. Once, and done with it. And where? Where, but at the
+cross of Inverary, the head burgh of the Campbells. A word in your ear, Mr.
+Balfour--they're not seeking Alan."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" I cried. "Not seeking him?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the best that I can make of it," said he. "Not wanting to find him,
+in my poor thought. They think <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107"
+id="Page_107"></a>[pg 107]</span>perhaps he might set up a fair defence,
+upon the back of which James, the man they're really after, might climb
+out. This is not a case, ye see, it's a conspiracy."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet I can tell you Prestongrange asked after Alan keenly," said I;
+"though, when I come to think of it, he was something of the easiest put
+by."</p>
+
+<p>"See that!" says he. "But there! I may be right or wrong, that's
+guesswork at the best, and let me get to my facts again. It comes to my
+ears that James and the witnesses--the witnesses, Mr. Balfour!--lay in
+close dungeons, and shackled forbye, in the military prison at Fort
+William; none allowed in to them, nor they to write. The witnesses, Mr.
+Balfour; heard ye ever the match of that? I assure ye, no old, crooked
+Stewart of the gang ever outfaced the law more impudently. It's clean in
+the two eyes of the Act of Parliament of 1700, anent wrongous imprisonment.
+No sooner did I get the news than I petitioned the Lord Justice Clerk. I
+have his word to-day. There's law for ye! here's justice!"</p>
+
+<p>He put a paper in my hand, that same mealy-mouthed, false-faced paper
+that was printed since in the pamphlet "by a bystander," for behoof (as the
+title says) of James's "poor widow and five children."</p>
+
+<p>"See," said Stewart, "he couldn't dare to refuse me access to my client,
+so he <i>recommends the commanding officer to let me in</i>.
+Recommends!--the Lord <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108"
+id="Page_108"></a>[pg 108]</span>Justice Clerk of Scotland recommends. Is
+not the purpose of such language plain? They hope the officer may be so
+dull, or so very much the reverse, as to refuse the recommendation. I would
+have to make the journey back again betwixt here and Fort William. There
+would follow a fresh delay till I got fresh authority, and they had
+disavowed the officer--military man, notoriously ignorant of the law, and
+that--I ken the cant of it. Then the journey a third time; and there we
+should be on the immediate heels of the trial before I had received my
+first instruction. Am I not right to call this a conspiracy?"</p>
+
+<p>"It will bear that colour," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And I'll go on to prove it you outright," said he. "They have the right
+to hold James in prison, yet they cannot deny me to visit him. They have no
+right to hold the witnesses; but am I to get a sight of them, that should
+be as free as the Lord Justice Clerk himself? See--read: <i>For the rest,
+refuses to give any orders to keepers of prisons who are not accused as
+having done anything contrary to the duties of their office</i>. Anything
+contrary! Sirs! And the Act of seventeen hunner! Mr. Balfour, this makes my
+heart to burst. The heather is on fire inside my wame."</p>
+
+<p>"And the plain English of that phrase," said I, "is that the witnesses
+are still to lie in prison and you are not to see them?"</p>
+
+<p>"And I am not to see them until Inverary, when the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></a>[pg 109]</span>court
+is set!" cries he, "and then to hear Prestongrange upon <i>the anxious
+responsibilities of his office and the great facilities afforded the
+defence!</i> But I'll begowk them there, Mr. David. I have a plan to waylay
+the witnesses upon the road, and see if I cannae get a little harle of
+justice out of the <i>military man notoriously ignorant of the law</i> that
+shall command the party."</p>
+
+<p>It was actually so--it was actually on the wayside near Tynedrum, and by
+the connivance of a soldier officer, that Mr. Stewart first saw the
+witnesses upon the case.</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing that would surprise me in this business," I
+remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll surprise you ere I'm done!" cries he. "Do ye see this?"--producing
+a print still wet from the press. "This is the libel: see, there's
+Prestongrange's name to the list of witnesses, and I find no word of any
+Balfour. But here is not the question. Who do ye think paid for the
+printing of this paper?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it would likely be King George," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"But it happens it was me!" he cried. "Not but it was printed by and for
+themselves, for the Grants and the Erskines, and yon thief of the black
+midnight, Symon Fraser. But could <i>I</i> win to get a copy? No! I was to
+go blindfold to my defence; I was to hear the charges for the first time in
+court alongst the jury."</p>
+
+<p>"Is not this against the law?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot say so much," he replied. "It was a <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></a>[pg 110]</span>favour so natural and so
+constantly rendered (till this nonesuch business) that the law has never
+looked to it. And now admire the hand of Providence! A stranger is in
+Fleming's printing house, spies a proof on the floor, picks it up, and
+carries it to me. Of all things, it was just this libel. Whereupon I had it
+set again--printed at the expense of the defence: <i>sumptibus moesti
+rei</i>; heard ever man the like of it?--and here it is for anybody, the
+muckle secret out--all may see it now. But how do you think I would enjoy
+this, that has the life of my kinsman on my conscience?"</p>
+
+<p>"Troth, I think you would enjoy it ill," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And now you see how it is," he concluded, "and why, when you tell me
+your evidence is to be let in, I laugh aloud in your face."</p>
+
+<p>It was now my turn. I laid before him in brief Mr. Symon's threats and
+offers, and the whole incident of the bravo, with the subsequent scene at
+Prestongrange's. Of my first talk, according to promise, I said nothing,
+nor indeed was it necessary. All the time I was talking Stewart nodded his
+head like a mechanical figure; and no sooner had my voice ceased, than he
+opened his mouth and gave me his opinion in two words, dwelling strong on
+both of them.</p>
+
+<p>"Disappear yourself," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not take you," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll carry you there," said he. "By my view of it you're to
+disappear whatever. O, that's outside <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></a>[pg 111]</span>debate. The Advocate, who
+is not without some spunks of a remainder decency, has wrung your life-safe
+out of Symon and the Duke. He has refused to put you on your trial, and
+refused to have you killed; and there is the clue to their ill words
+together, for Symon and the Duke can keep faith with neither friend nor
+enemy. Ye're not to be tried then, and ye're not to be murdered; but I'm in
+bitter error if ye're not to be kidnapped and carried away like the Lady
+Grange. Bet me what you please--there was their <i>expedient!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"You make me think," said I, and told him of the whistle and the
+red-headed retainer, Neil.</p>
+
+<p>"Wherever James More is there's one big rogue, never be deceived on
+that," said he. "His father was none so ill a man, though a kenning on the
+wrong side of the law, and no friend to my family, that I should waste my
+breath to be defending him! But as for James he's a brock and a blagyard. I
+like the appearing of this red-headed Neil as little as yourself. It looks
+uncanny: fiegh! it smells bad. It was old Lovat that managed the Lady
+Grange affair, if young Lovat is to handle yours, it'll be all in the
+family. What's James More in prison for? The same offence: abduction. His
+men have had practice in the business. He'll be to lend them to be Symon's
+instruments; and the next thing we'll be hearing, James will have made his
+peace, or else he'll have escaped; and you'll be in Benbecula or
+Applecross."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></a>[pg
+112]</span>"Ye make a strong case," I admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"And what I want," he resumed, "is that you should disappear yourself
+ere they can get their hands upon ye. Lie quiet until just before the
+trial, and spring upon them at the last of it when they'll be looking for
+you least. This is always supposing, Mr. Balfour, that your evidence is
+worth so very great a measure of both risk and fash."</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you one thing," said I. "I saw the murderer and it was not
+Alan."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, by God, my cousin's saved!" cried Stewart. "You have his life
+upon your tongue; and there's neither time, risk, nor money to be spared to
+bring you to the trial." He emptied his pockets on the floor. "Here is all
+that I have by me," he went on. "Take it, ye'll want it ere ye're through.
+Go straight down this close, there's a way out by there to the Lang Dykes,
+and by my will of it! see no more of Edinburgh till the clash is over."</p>
+
+<p>"Where am I to go, then?" I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"And I wish that I could tell ye!" says he, "but all the places that I
+could send ye to, would be just the places they would seek. No, ye must
+fend for yourself, and God be your guiding! Five days before the trial,
+September the sixteen, get word to me at the <i>King's Arms</i> in
+Stirling; and if ye've managed for yourself as long as that, I'll see that
+ye reach Inverary."</p>
+
+<p>"One thing more," said I. "Can I no see Alan?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></a>[pg
+113]</span>He seemed boggled. "Hech, I would rather you wouldnae," said he.
+"But I can never deny that Alan is extremely keen of it, and is to lie this
+night by Silvermills on purpose. If you're sure that you're not followed,
+Mr. Balfour--but make sure of that--lie in a good place and watch your road
+for a clear hour before ye risk it. It would be a dreadful business if both
+you and him was to miscarry!"</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></a>[pg
+114]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_X'></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RED-HEADED MAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was about half-past three when I came forth on the Lang Dykes. Dean
+was where I wanted to go. Since Catriona dwelled there, and the Glengyle
+Macgregors appeared almost certainly to be employed against me, it was just
+one of the few places I should have kept away from; and being a very young
+man, and beginning to be very much in love, I turned my face in that
+direction without pause. As a salve to my conscience and common sense,
+however, I took a measure of precaution. Coming over the crown of a bit of
+a rise in the road, I clapped down suddenly among the barley and lay
+waiting. After a while, a man went by that looked to be a Highlandman, but
+I had never seen him till that hour. Presently after came Neil of the red
+head. The next to go past was a miller's cart, and after that nothing but
+manifest country people. Here was enough to have turned the most foolhardy
+from his purpose, but my inclination ran too strong the other way. I argued
+it out that if Neil was on that road, it was the right road to find him in,
+leading <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></a>[pg
+115]</span>direct to his chief's daughter; as for the other Highlandman, if
+I was to be startled off by every Highlandman I saw, I would scarce reach
+anywhere. And having quite satisfied myself with this disingenuous debate,
+I made the better speed of it, and came a little after four to Mrs.
+Drummond-Ogilvy's.</p>
+
+<p>Both ladies were within the house; and upon my perceiving them together
+by the open door, I plucked off my hat and said, "Here was a lad come
+seeking saxpence," which I thought might please the dowager.</p>
+
+<p>Catriona ran out to greet me heartily, and, to my surprise, the old lady
+seemed scarce less forward than herself. I learned long afterwards that she
+had despatched a horseman by daylight to Rankeillor at the Queensferry,
+whom she knew to be the doer for Shaws, and had then in her pocket a letter
+from that good friend of mine, presenting, in the most favourable view, my
+character and prospects. But had I read it I could scarce have seen more
+clear in her designs. Maybe I was <i>countryfeed</i>; at least, I was not
+so much so as she thought; and it was plain enough, even to my homespun
+wits, that she was bent to hammer up a match between her cousin and a
+beardless boy that was something of a laird in Lothian.</p>
+
+<p>"Saxpence had better take his broth with us, Catrine," says she. "Run
+and tell the lasses."</p>
+
+<p>And for the little while we were alone was at a good deal of pains to
+flatter me; always cleverly, always <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></a>[pg 116]</span>with the appearance of a
+banter, still calling me Saxpence, but with such a turn that should rather
+uplift me in my own opinion. When Catriona returned the design became if
+possible more obvious, and she showed off the girl's advantages like a
+horse-couper with a horse. My face flamed that she should think me so
+obtuse. Now I would fancy the girl was being innocently made a show of, and
+then I could have beaten the old carline wife with a cudgel; and now, that
+perhaps these two had set their heads together to entrap me, and at that I
+sat and gloomed betwixt them like the very image of ill-will. At last the
+matchmaker had a better device, which was to leave the pair of us alone.
+When my suspicions are anyway roused it is sometimes a little the wrong
+side of easy to allay them. But though I knew what breed she was of, and
+that was a breed of thieves, I could never look in Catriona's face and
+disbelieve her.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not ask?" says she, eagerly, the same moment we were left
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but to-day I can talk with a free conscience," I replied. "I am
+lightened of my pledge, and indeed (after what has come and gone since
+morning) I would not have renewed it were it asked."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," she said. "My cousin will not be so long."</p>
+
+<p>So I told her the tale of the lieutenant from the first step to the last
+of it, making it as mirthful as I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117"
+id="Page_117"></a>[pg 117]</span>could, and, indeed, there was matter of
+mirth in that absurdity.</p>
+
+<p>"And I think you will be as little fitted for the rudas men as for the
+pretty ladies, after all!" says she, when I had done. "But what was your
+father that he could not learn you to draw the sword? It is most ungentle;
+I have not heard the match of that in anyone."</p>
+
+<p>"It is most misconvenient at least," said I; "and I think my father
+(honest man!) must have been wool-gathering to learn me Latin in the place
+of it. But you see I do the best I can, and just stand up like Lot's wife
+and let them hammer at me."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know what makes me smile?" said she. "Well, it is this. I am
+made this way, that I should have been a man child. In my own thoughts it
+is so I am always; and I go on telling myself about this thing that is to
+befall and that. Then it comes to the place of the fighting, and it comes
+over me that I am only a girl at all events, and cannot hold a sword or
+give one good blow; and then I have to twist my story round about, so that
+the fighting is to stop, and yet me have the best of it, just like you and
+the lieutenant; and I am the boy that makes the fine speeches all through,
+like Mr. David Balfour."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a bloodthirsty maid," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I know it is good to sew and spin, and to make samplers," she
+said, "but if you were to do <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118"
+id="Page_118"></a>[pg 118]</span>nothing else in the great world, I think
+you will say yourself it is a driech business; and it is not that I want to
+kill, I think. Did ever you kill anyone?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I have, as it chances. Two, no less, and me still a lad that
+should be at the college," said I. "But yet, in the look-back, I take no
+shame for it."</p>
+
+<p>"But how did you feel, then--after it?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed, I sat down and grat like a bairn," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that, too," she cried. "I feel where these tears should come
+from. And at any rate, I would not wish to kill, only to be Catherine
+Douglas that put her arm through the staples of the bolt, where it was
+broken. That is my chief hero. Would you not love to die so--for your
+king?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Troth," said I, "my affection for my king, God bless the puggy face of
+him, is under more control; and I thought I saw death so near to me this
+day already, that I am rather taken up with the notion of living."</p>
+
+<p>"Right," she said, "the right mind of a man! Only you must learn arms; I
+would not like to have a friend that cannot strike. But it will not have
+been with the sword that you killed these two?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, no," said I, "but with a pair of pistols. And a fortunate thing
+it was the men were so near-hand to me, for I am about as clever with the
+pistols as I am with the sword."</p>
+
+<p>So then she drew from me the story of our battle <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></a>[pg 119]</span>in the
+brig, which I had omitted in my first account of my affairs.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said she, "you are brave. And your friend, I admire and love
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I think any one would!" said I. "He has his faults like other
+folk; but he is brave and staunch and kind, God bless him! That will be a
+strange day when I forget Alan." And the thought of him, and that it was
+within my choice to speak with him that night, had almost overcome me.</p>
+
+<p>"And where will my head be gone that I have not told my news!" she
+cried, and spoke of a letter from her father, bearing that she might visit
+him to-morrow in the castle whither he was now transferred, and that his
+affairs were mending. "You do not like to hear it," said she. "Will you
+judge my father and not know him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am a thousand miles from judging," I replied. "And I give you my word
+I do rejoice to know your heart is lightened. If my face fell at all, as I
+suppose it must, you will allow this is rather an ill day for compositions,
+and the people in power extremely ill persons to be compounding with. I
+have Symon Fraser extremely heavy on my stomach still."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" she cried, "you will not be evening these two; and you should bear
+in mind that Prestongrange and James More, my father, are of the one
+blood."</p>
+
+<p>"I never heard tell of that," said I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></a>[pg
+120]</span>"It is rather singular how little you are acquainted with," said
+she. "One part may call themselves Grant, and one Macgregor, but they are
+still of the same clan. They are all the sons of Alpin, from whom, I think,
+our country has its name."</p>
+
+<p>"What country is that?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"My country and yours," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"This is my day for discoveries, I think," said I, "for I always thought
+the name of it was Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>"Scotland is the name of what you call Ireland," she replied. "But the
+old ancient true name of this place that we have our foot-soles on, and
+that our bones are made of, will be Alban. It was Alban they called it when
+our forefathers will be fighting for it against Rome and Alexander; and it
+is called so still in your own tongue that you forget."</p>
+
+<p>"Troth," said I, "and that I never learned!" For I lacked heart to take
+her up about the Macedonian.</p>
+
+<p>"But your fathers and mothers talked it, one generation with another,"
+said she. "And it was sung about the cradles before you or me were ever
+dreamed of; and your name remembers it still. Ah, if you could talk that
+language you would find me another girl. The heart speaks in that
+tongue."</p>
+
+<p>I had a meal with the two ladies, all very good, served in fine old
+plate, and the wine excellent, for it seems that Mrs. Ogilvy was rich. Our
+talk, too, was pleasant enough; but as soon as I saw the sun decline <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></a>[pg 121]</span>sharply
+and the shadows to run out long, I rose to take my leave. For my mind was
+now made up to say farewell to Alan; and it was needful I should see the
+trysting wood, and reconnoitre it, by daylight. Catriona came with me as
+far as to the garden gate.</p>
+
+<p>"It is long till I see you now?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It is beyond my judging," I replied. "It will be long, it may be
+never."</p>
+
+<p>"It may be so," said she. "And you are sorry?"</p>
+
+<p>I bowed my head, looking upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"So am I, at all events," said she. "I have seen you but a small time,
+but I put you very high. You are true, you are brave; in time I think you
+will be more of a man yet. I will be proud to hear of that. If you should
+speed worse, if it will come to fall as we are afraid--O well! think you
+have the one friend. Long after you are dead and me an old wife, I will be
+telling the bairns about David Balfour, and my tears running. I will be
+telling how we parted, and what I said to you, and did to you. <i>God go
+with you and guide you, prays your little friend</i>: so I said--I will be
+telling them--and here is what I did."</p>
+
+<p>She took up my hand and kissed it. This so surprised my spirits that I
+cried out like one hurt. The colour came strong in her face, and she looked
+at me and nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"O yes, Mr. David," said she, "that is what I think of you. The heart
+goes with the lips."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></a>[pg
+122]</span>I could read in her face high spirit, and a chivalry like a
+brave child's; not anything besides. She kissed my hand, as she had kissed
+Prince Charlie's, with a higher passion than the common kind of clay has
+any sense of. Nothing before had taught me how deep I was her lover, nor
+how far I had yet to climb to make her think of me in such a character. Yet
+I could tell myself I had advanced some way, and that her heart had beat
+and her blood flowed at thoughts of me.</p>
+
+<p>After that honour she had done me I could offer no more trivial
+civility. It was even hard for me to speak; a certain lifting in her voice
+had knocked directly at the door of my own tears.</p>
+
+<p>"I praise God for your kindness, dear," said I. "Farewell, my little
+friend!" giving her that name which she had given to herself; with which I
+bowed and left her.</p>
+
+<p>My way was down the glen of the Leith River, towards Stockbridge and
+Silvermills. A path led in the foot of it, the water bickered and sang in
+the midst; the sunbeams overhead struck out of the west among long shadows
+and (as the valley turned) made like a new scene and a new world of it at
+every corner. With Catriona behind and Alan before me, I was like one
+lifted up. The place besides, and the hour, and the talking of the water,
+infinitely pleased me; and I lingered in my steps and looked before and
+behind me as I went. This was the cause, under providence, that <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></a>[pg 123]</span>I spied
+a little in my rear a red head among some bushes.</p>
+
+<p>Anger sprang in my heart, and I turned straight about and walked at a
+stiff pace to where I came from. The path lay close by the bushes where I
+had remarked the head. The cover came to the wayside, and as I passed I was
+all strung up to meet and to resist an onfall. No such thing befell, I went
+by unmeddled with; and at that fear increased upon me. It was still day
+indeed, but the place exceeding solitary. If my haunters had let slip that
+fair occasion I could but judge they aimed at something more than David
+Balfour. The lives of Alan and James weighed upon my spirit with the weight
+of two grown bullocks.</p>
+
+<p>Catriona was yet in the garden walking by herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "you see me back again."</p>
+
+<p>"With a changed face," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I carry two men's lives besides my own," said I. "It would be a sin and
+a shame not to walk carefully. I was doubtful whether I did right to come
+here. I would like it ill, if it was by that means we were brought to
+harm."</p>
+
+<p>"I could tell you one that would be liking it less, and will like little
+enough to hear you talking at this very same time," she cried. "What have I
+done, at all events?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, you! you are not alone," I replied. "But since I went off I have
+been dogged again, and I can give you <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></a>[pg 124]</span>the name of him that
+follows me. It is Neil, son of Duncan, your man or your father's."</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure you are mistaken there," she said, with a white face. "Neil
+is in Edinburgh on errands from my father."</p>
+
+<p>"It is what I fear," said I, "the last of it. But for his being in
+Edinburgh I think I can show you another of that. For sure you have some
+signal, a signal of need, such as would bring him to your help, if he was
+anywhere within the reach of ears and legs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, how will you know that?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>"By means of a magical talisman God gave to me when I was born, and the
+name they call it by is Common-sense," said I. "Oblige me so far as to make
+your signal, and I will show you the red head of Neil."</p>
+
+<p>No doubt but I spoke bitter and sharp. My heart was bitter. I blamed
+myself and the girl and hated both of us: her for the vile crew that she
+was come of, myself for my wanton folly to have stuck my head in such a
+byke of wasps.</p>
+
+<p>Catriona set her fingers to her lips and whistled once, with an
+exceeding clear, strong, mounting note, as full as a ploughman's. A while
+we stood silent; and I was about to ask her to repeat the same, when I
+heard the sound of some one bursting through the bushes below on the
+braeside. I pointed in that direction with a smile, and presently Neil
+leaped into the garden. His eyes burned, and he had a black <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></a>[pg 125]</span>knife
+(as they call it on the Highland side) naked in his hand; but, seeing me
+beside his mistress, stood like a man struck.</p>
+
+<p>"He has come to your call," said I; "judge how near he was to Edinburgh,
+or what was the nature of your father's errands. Ask himself. If I am to
+lose my life, or the lives of those that hang by me, through the means of
+your clan, let me go where I have to go with my eyes open."</p>
+
+<p>She addressed him tremulously in the Gaelic. Remembering Alan's anxious
+civility in that particular, I could have laughed out loud for bitterness;
+here, sure, in the midst of these suspicions, was the hour she should have
+stuck by English.</p>
+
+<p>Twice or thrice they spoke together, and I could make out that Neil (for
+all his obsequiousness) was an angry man.</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned to me. "He swears it is not," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "do you believe the man yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>She made a gesture like wringing the hands.</p>
+
+<p>"How will I can know?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"But I must find some means to know," said I. "I cannot continue to go
+dovering round in the black night with two men's lives at my girdle!
+Catriona, try to put yourself in my place, as I vow to God I try hard to
+put myself in yours. This is no kind of talk that <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></a>[pg 126]</span>should ever have fallen
+between me and you; no kind of talk; my heart is sick with it. See, keep
+him here till two of the morning, and I care not. Try him with that."</p>
+
+<p>They spoke together once more in the Gaelic.</p>
+
+<p>"He says he has James More my father's errand," said she. She was whiter
+than ever, and her voice faltered as she said it.</p>
+
+<p>"It is pretty plain now," said I, "and may God forgive the wicked!"</p>
+
+<p>She said never anything to that, but continued gazing at me with the
+same white face.</p>
+
+<p>"This is a fine business," said I again. "Am I to fall, then, and those
+two along with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, what am I to do?" she cried. "Could I go against my father's orders,
+and him in prison, in the danger of his life?"</p>
+
+<p>"But perhaps we go too fast," said I. "This may be a lie too. He may
+have no right orders; all may be contrived by Symon, and your father
+knowing nothing."</p>
+
+<p>She burst out weeping between the pair of us; and my heart smote me
+hard, for I thought this girl was in a dreadful situation.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," said I, "keep him but the one hour; and I'll chance it, and say
+God bless you."</p>
+
+<p>She put out her hand to me. "I will be needing one good word," she
+sobbed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></a>[pg
+127]</span>"The full hour, then?" said I, keeping her hand in mine. "Three
+lives of it, my lass!"</p>
+
+<p>"The full hour!" she said, and cried aloud on her Redeemer to forgive
+her.</p>
+
+<p>I thought it no fit place for me, and fled.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></a>[pg
+128]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XI'></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS</h3>
+
+
+<p>I lost no time, but down through the valley and by Stockbrig and
+Silvermills as hard as I could stave. It was Alan's tryst to lie every
+night between twelve and two "in a bit scrog of wood by east of Silvermills
+and by south the south mill-lade." This I found easy enough, where it grew
+on a steep brae, with the mill-lade flowing swift and deep along the foot
+of it; and here I began to walk slower and to reflect more reasonably on my
+employment. I saw I had made but a fool's bargain with Catriona. It was not
+to be supposed that Neil was sent alone upon his errand, but perhaps he was
+the only man belonging to James More; in which case, I should have done all
+I could to hang Catriona's father, and nothing the least material to help
+myself. To tell the truth, I fancied neither one of these ideas. Suppose,
+by holding back Neil, the girl should have helped to hang her father, I
+thought she would never forgive herself this side of time. And suppose
+there were others pursuing me that moment, what kind of a gift was I come
+bringing to Alan? and how would I like that?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></a>[pg
+129]</span>I was up with the west end of that wood when these two
+considerations struck me like a cudgel. My feet stopped of themselves and
+my heart along with them. "What wild game is this that I have been
+playing?" thought I; and turned instantly upon my heels to go
+elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>This brought my face to Silvermills; the path came past the village with
+a crook, but all plainly visible; and, Highland or Lowland, there was
+nobody stirring. Here was my advantage, here was just such a conjuncture as
+Stewart had counselled me to profit by, and I ran by the side of the
+mill-lade, fetched about beyond the east corner of the wood, threaded
+through the midst of it, and returned to the west selvage, whence I could
+again command the path, and yet be myself unseen. Again it was all empty,
+and my heart began to rise.</p>
+
+<p>For more than an hour I sat close in the border of the trees, and no
+hare or eagle could have kept a more particular watch. When that hour began
+the sun was already set, but the sky still all golden and the daylight
+clear; before the hour was done it had fallen to be half mirk, the images
+and distances of things were mingled, and observation began to be
+difficult. All that time not a foot of man had come east from Silvermills,
+and the few that had gone west were honest countryfolk and their wives upon
+the road to bed. If I were tracked by the most cunning spies in Europe, I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></a>[pg
+130]</span>judged it was beyond the course of nature they could have any
+jealousy of where I was; and going a little further home into the wood I
+lay down to wait for Alan.</p>
+
+<p>The strain of my attention had been great, for I had watched not the
+path only, but every bush and field within my vision. That was now at an
+end. The moon, which was in her first quarter, glinted a little in the
+wood; all round there was a stillness of the country; and as I lay there on
+my back, the next three or four hours, I had a fine occasion to review my
+conduct.</p>
+
+<p>Two things became plain to me first: that I had had no right to go that
+day to Dean, and (having gone there) had now no right to be lying where I
+was. This (where Alan was to come) was just the one wood in all broad
+Scotland that was, by every proper feeling, closed against me; I admitted
+that, and yet stayed on, wondering at myself. I thought of the measure with
+which I had meted to Catriona that same night; how I had prated of the two
+lives I carried, and had thus forced her to enjeopardy her father's; and
+how I was here exposing them again, it seemed in wantonness. A good
+conscience is eight parts of courage. No sooner had I lost conceit of my
+behaviour, than I seemed to stand disarmed amidst a throng of terrors. Of a
+sudden I sat up. How if I went now to Prestongrange, caught him (as I still
+easily might) before he slept, and made a full submission? Who could blame
+me? Not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></a>[pg
+131]</span>Stewart the writer; I had but to say that I was followed,
+despaired of getting clear, and so gave in. Not Catriona: here, too, I had
+my answer ready; that I could not bear she should expose her father. So, in
+a moment, I could lay all these troubles by, which were after all and truly
+none of mine; swim clear of the Appin murder; get forth out of handstroke
+of all the Stewarts and Campbells, all the whigs and tories, in the land;
+and live thenceforth to my own mind, and be able to enjoy and to improve my
+fortunes, and devote some hours of my youth to courting Catriona, which
+would be surely a more suitable occupation than to hide and run and be
+followed like a hunted thief, and begin over again the dreadful miseries of
+my escape with Alan.</p>
+
+<p>At first I thought no shame of this capitulation; I was only amazed I
+had not thought upon the thing and done it earlier; and began to inquire
+into the causes of the change. These I traced to my lowness of spirits,
+that back to my late recklessness, and that again to the common, old,
+public, disconsidered sin of self-indulgence. Instantly the text came in my
+head, "<i>How can Satan cast out Satan?</i>" What? (I thought) I had, by
+self-indulgence, and the following of pleasant paths, and the lure of a
+young maid, cast myself wholly out of conceit with my own character, and
+jeopardised the lives of James and Alan? And I was to seek the way out by
+the same road as I had <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132"
+id="Page_132"></a>[pg 132]</span>entered in? No; the hurt that had been
+caused by self-indulgence must be cured by self-denial; the flesh I had
+pampered must be crucified. I looked about me for that course which I least
+liked to follow: this was to leave the wood without waiting to see Alan,
+and go forth again alone, in the dark and in the midst of my perplexed and
+dangerous fortunes.</p>
+
+<p>I have been the more careful to narrate this passage of my reflections,
+because I think it is of some utility, and may serve as an example to young
+men. But there is reason (they say) in planting kale, and even in ethic and
+religion, room for common sense. It was already close on Alan's hour, and
+the moon was down. If I left (as I could not very decently whistle to my
+spies to follow me) they might miss me in the dark and tack themselves to
+Alan by mistake. If I stayed, I could at the least of it set my friend upon
+his guard which might prove his mere salvation. I had adventured other
+peoples' safety in a course of self-indulgence; to have endangered them
+again, and now on a mere design of penance, would have been scarce
+rational. Accordingly, I had scarce risen from my place ere I sat down
+again, but already in a different frame of spirits, and equally marvelling
+at my past weakness and rejoicing in my present composure.</p>
+
+<p>Presently after came a crackling in the thicket. Putting my mouth near
+down to the ground, I whistled a note or two of Alan's air; an answer came,
+in the like <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></a>[pg
+133]</span>guarded tone, and soon we had thralled together in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this you at last, Davie?" he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"Just myself," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"God, man, but I've been wearying to see ye!" says he. "I've had the
+longest kind of a time. A' day, I've had my dwelling into the inside of a
+stack of hay, where I couldnae see the nebs of my ten fingers; and then two
+hours of it waiting here for you, and you never coming! Dod, and ye're none
+too soon the way it is, with me to sail the morn! The morn? what am I
+saying?--the day, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, Alan, man, the day, sure enough," said I. "It's past twelve now,
+surely, and ye sail the day. This'll be a long road you have before
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have a long crack of it first," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, indeed, and I have a good deal it will be telling you to hear,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>And I told him what behooved, making rather a jumble of it, but clear
+enough when done. He heard me out with very few questions, laughing here
+and there like a man delighted: and the sound of his laughing (above all
+there, in the dark, where neither one of us could see the other) was
+extraordinary friendly to my heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, Davie, ye're a queer character," says he, when I had done: "a queer
+bitch after a', and I have no mind of meeting with the like of ye. As for
+your <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></a>[pg
+134]</span>story, Prestongrange is a Whig like yoursel', so I'll say the
+less of him; and, dod! I believe he was the best friend ye had, if ye could
+only trust him. But Symon Fraser and James More are my ain kind of cattle,
+and I'll give them the name that they deserve. The muckle black de'il was
+father to the Frasers, a'body kens that; and as for the Gregara, I never
+could abye the reek of them since I could stotter on two feet. I bloodied
+the nose of one, I mind, when I was still so wambly on my legs that I
+cowped upon the top of him. A proud man was my father that day, God rest
+him! and I think he had the cause. I'll never can deny but what Robin was
+something of a piper," he added; "but as for James More, the de'il guide
+him for me!"</p>
+
+<p>"One thing we have to consider," said I. "Was Charles Stewart right or
+wrong? Is it only me they're after, or the pair of us?"</p>
+
+<p>"And what's your ain opinion, you that's a man of so much experience?"
+said he.</p>
+
+<p>"It passes me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And me too," says Alan. "Do ye think this lass would keep her word to
+ye?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I do that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there's nae telling," said he. "And anyway, that's over and done:
+he'll be joined to the rest of them lang syne."</p>
+
+<p>"How many would ye think there would be of them?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></a>[pg
+135]</span>"That depends," said Alan. "If it was only you, they would
+likely send two-three lively, brisk young birkies, and if they thought that
+I was to appear in the employ, I daresay ten or twelve," said he.</p>
+
+<p>It was no use, I gave a little crack of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"And I think your own two eyes will have seen me drive that number, or
+the double of it, nearer hand!" cries he.</p>
+
+<p>"It matters the less," said I, "because I am well rid of them for this
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"Nae doubt that's your opinion," said he; "but I wouldnae be the least
+surprised if they were hunkering this wood. Ye see, David man, they'll be
+Hieland folk. There'll be some Frasers, I'm thinking, and some of the
+Gregara; and I would never deny but what the both of them, and the Gregara
+in especial, were clever experienced persons. A man kens little till he's
+driven a spreagh of neat cattle (say) ten miles through a throng lowland
+country and the black soldiers maybe at his tail. It's there that I learned
+a great part of my penetration. And ye need nae tell me: it's better than
+war; which is the next best, however, though generally rather a bauchle of
+a business. Now the Gregara have had grand practice."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt that's a branch of education that was left out with me," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"And I can see the marks of it upon ye constantly," said Alan. "But
+that's the strange thing about you <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136"
+id="Page_136"></a>[pg 136]</span>folk of the college learning: ye're
+ignorant, and ye cannae see 't. Wae's me for my Greek and Hebrew; but, man,
+I ken that I dinnae ken them--there's the differ of it. Now, here's you. Ye
+lie on your wame a bittie in the bield of this wood, and ye tell me that
+ye've cuist off these Frasers and Macgregors. Why! <i>Because I couldnae
+see them</i>, says you. Ye blockhead, that's their livelihood."</p>
+
+<p>"Take the worst of it," said I, "and what are we to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking of that same," said he. "We might twine. It wouldnae be
+greatly to my taste; and forbye that, I see reasons against it. First, it's
+now unco dark, and it's just humanly possible we might give them the clean
+slip. If we keep together, we make but the ae line of it; if we gang
+separate, we make twae of them: the more likelihood to stave in upon some
+of these gentry of yours. And then, second, if they keep the track of us,
+it may come to a fecht for it yet, Davie; and then, I'll confess I would be
+blythe to have you at my oxter, and I think you would be none the worse of
+having me at yours. So, by my way of it, we should creep out of this wood
+no further gone than just the inside of next minute, and hold away east for
+Gillane, where I'm to find my ship. It'll be like old days while it lasts,
+Davie; and (come the time) we'll have to think what you should be doing.
+I'm wae to leave ye here, wanting me."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></a>[pg
+137]</span>"Have with ye, then!" says I. "Do ye gang back where you were
+stopping."</p>
+
+<p>"De'il a fear!" said Alan. "They were good folks to me, but I think they
+would be a good deal disappointed if they saw my bonny face again. For (the
+way times go) I amnae just what ye could call a Walcome Guest. Which makes
+me the keener for your company, Mr. David Balfour of the Shaws, and set ye
+up! For, leave aside twa cracks here in the wood with Charlie Stewart, I
+have scarce said black or white since the day we parted at
+Corstorphine."</p>
+
+<p>With which he rose from his place, and we began to move quietly eastward
+through the wood.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></a>[pg
+138]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XII'></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was likely between one and two; the moon (as I have said) was down; a
+strongish wind, carrying a heavy wrack of cloud, had set in suddenly from
+the west; and we began our movement in as black a night as ever a fugitive
+or a murderer wanted. The whiteness of the path guided us into the sleeping
+town of Broughton, thence through Picardy, and beside my old acquaintance
+the gibbet of the two thieves. A little beyond we made a useful beacon,
+which was a light in an upper window of Lochend. Steering by this, but a
+good deal at random, and with some trampling of the harvest, and stumbling
+and falling down upon the banks, we made our way across country, and won
+forth at last upon the linky, boggy muirland that they call the Figgate
+Whins. Here, under a bush of whin, we lay down the remainder of that night
+and slumbered.</p>
+
+<p>The day called us about five. A beautiful morning it was, the high
+westerly wind still blowing strong, but the clouds all blown away to
+Europe. Alan was already sitting up and smiling to himself. It was my first
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></a>[pg
+139]</span>sight of my friend since we were parted, and I looked upon him
+with enjoyment. He had still the same big great-coat on his back; but (what
+was new) he had now a pair of knitted boot-hose drawn above the knee.
+Doubtless these were intended for disguise; but, as the day promised to be
+warm, he made a most unseasonable figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Davie," said he, "is this no a bonny morning? Here is a day that
+looks the way that a day ought to. This is a great change of it from the
+belly of my haystack; and while you were there sottering and sleeping I
+have done a thing that maybe I do over seldom."</p>
+
+<p>"And what was that?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"O, just said my prayers," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"And where are my gentry, as ye call them?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Gude kens," says he; "and the short and the long of it is that we must
+take our chance of them. Up with your foot-soles, Davie! Forth, Fortune,
+once again of it! And a bonny walk we are like to have."</p>
+
+<p>So we went east by the beach of the sea, towards where the salt-pans
+were smoking in by the Esk mouth. No doubt there was a by-ordinary bonny
+blink of morning sun on Arthur's Seat and the green Pentlands; and the
+pleasantness of the day appeared to set Alan among nettles.</p>
+
+<p>"I feel like a gomeral," says he, "to be leaving Scotland <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></a>[pg 140]</span>on a
+day like this. It sticks in my head; I would maybe like it better to stay
+here and hing."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but ye wouldnae, Alan," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"No but what France is a good place too," he explained; "but it's some
+way no the same. It's brawer, I believe, but it's no Scotland. I like it
+fine when I'm there, man; yet I kind of weary for Scots divots and the
+Scots peat-reek."</p>
+
+<p>"If that's all you have to complain of, Alan, it's no such great
+affair," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And it sets me ill to be complaining, whatever," said he, "and me but
+new out of yon de'il's haystack."</p>
+
+<p>"And so you were unco' weary of your haystack?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Weary's nae word for it," said he. "I'm not just precisely a man that's
+easily cast down; but I do better with caller air and the lift above my
+head. I'm like the auld Black Douglas (wasnae't?) that likit better to hear
+the laverock sing than the mouse cheep. And yon place, ye see, Davie--whilk
+was a very suitable place to hide in, as I'm free to own--was pit mirk from
+dawn to gloaming. There were days (or nights, for how would I tell one from
+other?) that seemed to me as long as a long winter."</p>
+
+<p>"How did you know the hour to bide your tryst?" I asked.</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour004"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour004.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: THE GOODMAN BROUGHT ME MY MEAT AND A DROP
+BRANDY, AND A CANDLE-DOWP TO EAT IT BY, ABOUT ELEEVEN, SAID HE" src="images/balfour004sm.jpg" height="562" width="382" /></a>
+<br />THE GOODMAN BROUGHT ME MY MEAT AND A DROP
+BRANDY, AND A CANDLE-DOWP TO EAT IT BY, ABOUT ELEEVEN, SAID HE
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+<p>"The goodman brought me my meat and a drop <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></a>[pg 141]</span>brandy, and a candle-dowp
+to eat it by, about eleeven," said he. "So, when I had swallowed a bit, it
+would be time to be getting to the wood. There I lay and wearied for ye
+sore, Davie," says he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "and guessed when
+the two hours would be about by--unless Charlie Stewart would come and tell
+me on his watch--and then back to the dooms haystack. Na, it was a driech
+employ, and praise the Lord that I have warstled through with it!"</p>
+
+<p>"What did you do with yourself?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Faith," said he, "the best I could! Whiles I played at the
+knucklebones. I'm an extraordinar good hand at the knucklebones, but it's a
+poor piece of business playing with naebody to admire ye. And whiles I
+would make songs."</p>
+
+<p>"What were they about?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"O, about the deer and the heather," says he, "and about the ancient old
+chiefs that are all by with it long syne, and just about what songs are
+about in general. And then whiles I would make believe I had a set of pipes
+and I was playing. I played some grand springs, and I thought I played them
+awful bonny; I vow whiles that I could hear the squeal of them! But the
+great affair is that it's done with."</p>
+
+<p>With that he carried me again to my adventures, which he heard all over
+again with more particularity, and extraordinary approval, swearing at
+intervals that I was "a queer character of a callant."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></a>[pg
+142]</span>"So ye were frich'ened of Sym Fraser?" he asked once.</p>
+
+<p>"In troth was I!" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"So would I have been, Davie," said he. "And that is indeed a dreidful
+man. But it is only proper to give the de'il his due; and I can tell you he
+is a most respectable person on the field of war."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he so brave?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Brave!" said he. "He is as brave as my steel sword."</p>
+
+<p>The story of my duel set him beside himself.</p>
+
+<p>"To think of that!" he cried. "I showed ye the trick in Corrynakiegh
+too. And three times--three times disarmed! It's a disgrace upon my
+character that learned ye! Here, stand up, out with your airn; ye shall
+walk no step beyond this place upon the road till ye can do yoursel' and me
+mair credit."</p>
+
+<p>"Alan," said I, "this is midsummer madness. Here is no time for fencing
+lessons."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannae well say no to that," he admitted. "But three times, man! And
+you standing there like a straw bogle and rinning to fetch your ain sword
+like a doggie with a pocket-napkin! David, this man Duncansby must be
+something altogether by-ordinar! He maun be extraordinar skilly. If I had
+the time, I would gang straight back and try a turn at him mysel'. The man
+must be a provost."</p>
+
+<p>"You silly fellow," said I, "you forget it was just me."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></a>[pg
+143]</span>"Na," said he, "but three times!"</p>
+
+<p>"When ye ken yourself that I am fair incompetent," I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I never heard tell the equal of it," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I promise you the one thing, Alan," said I. "The next time that we
+forgather, I'll be better learned. You shall not continue to bear the
+disgrace of a friend that cannot strike."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, the next time!" says he. "And when will that be, I would like to
+ken?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Alan, I have had some thoughts of that, too," said I; "and my
+plan is this. It's my opinion to be called an advocate."</p>
+
+<p>"That's but a weary trade, Davie," says Alan, "and rather a blagyard one
+forby. Ye would be better in a king's coat than that."</p>
+
+<p>"And no doubt that would be the way to have us meet," cried I. "But as
+you'll be in King Lewie's coat, and I'll be in King Geordie's, we'll have a
+dainty meeting of it."</p>
+
+<p>"There's some sense in that," he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"An advocate, then, it'll have to be," I continued, "and I think it a
+more suitable trade for a gentleman that was <i>three times</i> disarmed.
+But the beauty of the thing is this: that one of the best colleges for that
+kind of learning--and the one where my kinsman, Pilrig, made his
+studies--is the college of Leyden in Holland. Now, what say you, Alan?
+Could not a cadet of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144"
+id="Page_144"></a>[pg 144]</span><i>Royal Ecossais</i> get a furlough, slip
+over the marches, and call in upon a Leyden student!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I would think he could!" cried he. "Ye see, I stand well in
+with my colonel, Count Drummond-Melfort; and, what's mair to the purpose, I
+have a cousin of mine lieutenant-colonel in a regiment of the Scots-Dutch.
+Naething could be mair proper than what I would get a leave to see
+Lieutenant-Colonel Stewart of Halkett's. And Lord Melfort, who is a very
+scienteefic kind of a man, and writes books like C&aelig;sar, would be
+doubtless very pleased to have the advantage of my observes."</p>
+
+<p>"Is Lord Melfort an author, then?" I asked, for much as Alan thought of
+soldiers, I thought more of the gentry that write books.</p>
+
+<p>"The very same, Davie," said he. "One would think a colonel would have
+something better to attend to. But what can I say that make songs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then," said I, "it only remains you should give me an address to
+write you at in France; and as soon as I am got to Leyden I will send you
+mine."</p>
+
+<p>"The best will be to write me in the care of my chieftain," said he,
+"Charles Stewart, of Ardsheil, Esquire, at the town of Melons, in the Isle
+of France. It might take long, or it might take short, but it would aye get
+to my hands at the last of it."</p>
+
+<p>We had a haddock to our breakfast in Musselburgh, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></a>[pg 145]</span>where
+it amused me vastly to hear Alan. His great-coat and boot-hose were
+extremely remarkable this warm morning, and perhaps some hint of an
+explanation had been wise; but Alan went into that matter like a business,
+or I should rather say, like a diversion. He engaged the goodwife of the
+house with some compliments upon the rizzoring of our haddocks; and the
+whole of the rest of our stay held her in talk about a cold he had taken on
+his stomach, gravely relating all manner of symptoms and sufferings, and
+hearing with a vast show of interest all the old wives' remedies she could
+supply him with in return.</p>
+
+<p>We left Musselburgh before the first ninepenny coach was due from
+Edinburgh, for (as Alan said) that was a rencounter we might very well
+avoid. The wind, although still high, was very mild, the sun shone strong,
+and Alan began to suffer in proportion. From Prestonpans he had me aside to
+the field of Gladsmuir, where he exerted himself a great deal more than
+needful to describe the stages of the battle. Thence, at his old round
+pace, we travelled to Cockenzie. Though they were building herring-busses
+there at Mrs. Cadell's, it seemed a desert-like, back-going town, about
+half full of ruined houses; but the ale-house was clean, and Alan, who was
+now in a glowing heat, must indulge himself with a bottle of ale, and carry
+on to the new luckie with the old story of the cold upon his stomach, only
+now the symptoms were all different.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></a>[pg
+146]</span>I sat listening; and it came in my mind that I had scarce ever
+heard him address three serious words to any woman, but he was always
+drolling and fleering and making a private mock of them, and yet brought to
+that business a remarkable degree of energy and interest. Something to this
+effect I remarked to him, when the good wife (as chanced) was called
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"What do ye want?" says he. "A man should aye put his best foot forrit
+with the womenkind; he should aye give them a bit of a story to divert
+them, the poor lambs! It's what ye should learn to attend to, David; ye
+should get the principles, it's like a trade. Now, if this had been a young
+lassie, or onyways bonnie, she would never have heard tell of my stomach,
+Davie. But aince they're too old to be seeking joes, they a' set up to be
+apotecaries. Why? What do I ken? They'll be just the way God made them, I
+suppose. But I think a man would be a gomeral that didnae give his
+attention to the same."</p>
+
+<p>And here, the luckie coming back, he turned from me as if with
+impatience to renew their former conversation. The lady had branched some
+while before from Alan's stomach to the case of a goodbrother of her own in
+Aberlady, whose last sickness and demise she was describing at
+extraordinary length. Sometimes it was merely dull, sometimes both dull and
+awful, for she talked with unction. The upshot was that I fell in a deep
+muse, looking forth of the window on the road, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></a>[pg 147]</span>and scarce marking what I
+saw. Presently had any been looking they might have seen me to start.</p>
+
+<p>"We pit a fomentation to his feet," the goodwife was saying, "and a het
+stane to his wame, and we gied him hyssop and water of pennyroyal, and
+fine, clean balsam of sulphur for the hoast...."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," says I, cutting very quietly in, "there's a friend of mine gone
+by the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that e'en sae?" replies Alan, as though it were a thing of
+small-account. And then, "Ye were saying, mem?" says he; and the wearyful
+wife went on.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, however, he paid her with a half-crown piece, and she must go
+forth after the change.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it him with the red head?" asked Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye have it," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"What did I tell you in the wood?" he cried. "And yet it's strange he
+should be here too! Was he his lane?"</p>
+
+<p>"His lee-lane for what I could see," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Did he gang by?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Straight by," said I, "and looked neither to the right nor left."</p>
+
+<p>"And that's queerer yet," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind, Davie, that
+we should be stirring. But where to?--deil hae't! This is like old days
+fairly," cries he.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one big differ, though," said I, "that now we have money in
+our pockets."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></a>[pg
+148]</span>"And another big differ, Mr. Balfour," says he, "that now we
+have dogs at our tail. They're on the scent; they're in full cry, David.
+It's a bad business and be damned to it." And he sat thinking hard with a
+look of his that I knew well.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm saying, Luckie," says he, when the goodwife returned, "have ye a
+back road out of this change house?"</p>
+
+<p>She told him there was and where it led to.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, sir," says he to me, "I think that will be the shortest road for
+us. And here's good-bye to ye, my braw woman; and I'll no forget thon of
+the cinnamon water."</p>
+
+<p>We went out by way of the woman's kale yard, and up a lane among fields.
+Alan looked sharply to all sides, and seeing we were in a little hollow
+place of the country, out of view of men, sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"Now for a council of war, Davie," said he. "But first of all, a bit
+lesson to ye. Suppose that I had been like you, what would yon old wife
+have minded of the pair of us? Just that we had gone out by the back gate.
+And what does she mind now? A fine, canty, friendly, cracky man, that
+suffered with the stomach, poor body! and was real ta'en up about the
+goodbrother. O man, David, try and learn to have some kind of
+intelligence!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll try, Alan," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And now for him of the red head," says he; "was he gaun fast or
+slow?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></a>[pg
+149]</span>"Betwixt and between," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"No kind of a hurry about the man?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Never a sign of it," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Nhm!" said Alan, "it looks queer. We saw nothing of them this morning
+on the Whins; he's passed us by, he doesnae seem to be looking, and yet
+here he is on our road! Dod, Davie, I begin to take a notion. I think it's
+no you they're seeking, I think it's me; and I think they ken fine where
+they're gaun."</p>
+
+<p>"They ken?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I think Andie Scougal's sold me--him or his mate wha kent some part of
+the affair--or else Chairlie's clerk callant, which would be a pity too,"
+says Alan; "and if you askit me for just my inward private conviction, I
+think there'll be heads cracked on Gillane sands."</p>
+
+<p>"Alan," I cried, "if you're at all right there'll be folk there and to
+spare. It'll be small service to crack heads."</p>
+
+<p>"It would aye be a satisfaction though," says Alan. "But bide a bit,
+bide a bit; I'm thinking--and thanks to this bonny westland wind, I believe
+I've still a chance of it. It's this way, Davie. I'm no trysted with this
+man Scougal till the gloaming comes. <i>But</i>," says he, "<i>if I can get
+a bit of a wind out of the west I'll be there long or that</i>," he says,
+"<i>and lie-to for ye behind the Isle of Fidra</i>. Now if your gentry kens
+the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></a>[pg
+150]</span>place, they ken the time forbye. Do ye see me coming, Davie?
+Thanks to Johnnie Cope and other red-coat gomerals, I should ken this
+country like the back of my hand; and if ye're ready for another bit run
+with Alan Breck, we'll can cast back inshore, and come down to the seaside
+again by Dirleton. If the ship's there, we'll try and get on board of her.
+If she's no there, I'll just have to get back to my weary haystack. But
+either way of it, I think we will leave your gentry whistling on their
+thumbs."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe there's some chance in it," said I. "Have on with ye,
+Alan!"</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></a>[pg
+151]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIII'></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>GILLANE SANDS</h3>
+
+
+<p>I did not profit by Alan's pilotage as he had done by his marchings
+under General Cope; for I can scarce tell what way we went. It is my excuse
+that we travelled exceeding fast. Some part we ran, some trotted, and the
+rest walked at a vengeance of a pace. Twice, while we were at top speed, we
+ran against country-folk; but though we plumped into the first from round a
+corner, Alan was as ready as a loaded musket.</p>
+
+<p>"Hae ye seen my horse?" he gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"Na, man, I haenae seen nae horse the day," replied the countryman.</p>
+
+<p>And Alan spared the time to explain to him that we were travelling "ride
+and tie"; that our charger had escaped, and it was feared he had gone home
+to Linton. Not only that, but he expended some breath (of which he had not
+very much left) to curse his own misfortune and my stupidity which was said
+to be its cause.</p>
+
+<p>"Them that cannae tell the truth," he observed to myself as we went on
+again, "should be aye mindfu' to leave an honest, handy lee behind them. If
+folk <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></a>[pg
+152]</span>dinnae ken what ye're doing, Davie, they're terrible taken up
+with it; but if they think they ken, they care nae mair for it than what I
+do for pease porridge."</p>
+
+<p>As we had first made inland, so our road came in the end to lie very
+near due north; the old Kirk of Aberlady for a landmark on the left; on the
+right, the top of the Berwick Law; and it was thus we struck the shore
+again, not far from Dirleton. From North Berwick west to Gillane Ness there
+runs a string of four small islets, Craiglieth, the Lamb, Fidra, and
+Eyebrough, notable by their diversity of size and shape. Fidra is the most
+particular, being a strange grey islet of two humps, made the more
+conspicuous by a piece of ruin; and I mind that (as we drew closer to it)
+by some door or window of these ruins the sea peeped through like a man's
+eye. Under the lee of Fidra there is a good anchorage in westerly winds,
+and there, from a far way off, we could see the <i>Thistle</i> riding.</p>
+
+<p>The shore in face of these islets is altogether waste. Here is no
+dwelling of man, and scarce any passage, or at most of vagabond children
+running at their play. Gillane is a small place on the far side of the
+Ness, the folk of Dirleton go to their business in the inland fields, and
+those of North Berwick straight to the sea-fishing from their haven; so
+that few parts of the coast are lonelier. But I mind, as we crawled upon
+our bellies into that multiplicity of heights and hollows, keeping a bright
+eye upon all sides, and our <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153"
+id="Page_153"></a>[pg 153]</span>hearts hammering at our ribs, there was
+such a shining of the sun and the sea, such a stir of the wind in the bent
+grass, and such a bustle of down-popping rabbits and up-flying gulls, that
+the desert seemed to me like a place alive. No doubt it was in all ways
+well chosen for a secret embarcation, if the secret had been kept; and even
+now that it was out, and the place watched, we were able to creep
+unperceived to the front of the sandhills, where they look down immediately
+on the beach and sea.</p>
+
+<p>But here Alan came to a full stop.</p>
+
+<p>"Davie," said he, "this is a kittle passage! As long as we lie here
+we're safe; but I'm nane sae muckle nearer to my ship or the coast of
+France. And as soon as we stand up and signal the brig, it's another
+matter. For where will your gentry be, think ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe they're no come yet," said I. "And even if they are, there's one
+clear matter in our favour. They'll be all arranged to take us, that's
+true. But they'll have arranged for our coming from the east, and here we
+are upon their west."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," says Alan, "I wish we were in some force, and this was a battle,
+we would have bonnily out-manoeuvred them! But it isnae, Davit; and the way
+it is, is a wee thing less inspiring to Alan Breck. I swither, Davie."</p>
+
+<p>"Time flies, Alan," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I ken that," said Alan. "I ken naething else, as <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></a>[pg 154]</span>the
+French folk say. But this is a dreidful case of heids or tails. O! if I
+could but ken where your gentry were!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alan," said I, "this is no like you. It's got to be now or never."</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"This is no me, quo' he,"<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>sang Alan, with a queer face betwixt shame and drollery.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"Neither you nor me, quo' he, neither you nor me,<br />
+Wow, na, Johnnie man! neither you nor me."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And then of a sudden he stood straight up where he was, and with a
+handkerchief flying in his right hand, marched down upon the beach. I stood
+up myself, but lingered behind him, scanning the sandhills to the east. His
+appearance was at first unremarked: Scougal not expecting him so early, and
+<i>my gentry</i> watching on the other side. Then they awoke on board the
+<i>Thistle</i>, and it seemed they had all in readiness, for there was
+scarce a second's bustle on the deck before we saw a skiff put round her
+stern and begin to pull lively for the coast. Almost at the same moment of
+time, and perhaps half a mile away towards Gillane Ness, the figure of a
+man appeared for a blink upon a sandhill, waving with his arms; and though
+he was gone again in the same flash, the gulls in that part continued a
+little longer to fly wild.</p>
+
+<p>Alan had not seen this, looking straight to seaward at the ship and
+skiff.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></a>[pg
+155]</span>"It maun be as it will!" said he, when I had told him. "Weel may
+yon boatie row, or my craig'll have to thole a raxing."</p>
+
+<p>That part of the beach was long and flat, and excellent walking when the
+tide was down; a little cressy burn flowed over it in one place to the sea;
+and the sandhills ran along the head of it like the rampart of a town. No
+eye of ours could spy what was passing behind there in the bents, no hurry
+of ours could mend the speed of the boat's coming: time stood still with us
+through that uncanny period of waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one thing I would like to ken," says Alan. "I would like fine
+to ken these gentry's orders. We're worth four hunner pound the pair of us:
+how if they took the guns to us, Davie? They would get a bonny shot from
+the top of that lang sandy bank."</p>
+
+<p>"Morally impossible," said I. "The point is that they can have no guns.
+This thing has been gone about too secret; pistols they may have, but never
+guns."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe ye'll be in the right," says Alan. "For all which I am
+wearying a good deal for yon boat."</p>
+
+<p>And he snapped his fingers and whistled to it like a dog.</p>
+
+<p>It was now perhaps a third of the way in, and we ourselves already hard
+on the margin of the sea, so that the soft sand rose over my shoes. There
+was no more to do whatever but to wait, to look as much as we were <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></a>[pg 156]</span>able at
+the creeping nearer of the boat, and as little as we could manage at the
+long impenetrable front of the sandhills, over which the gulls twinkled and
+behind which our enemies were doubtless marshalling.</p>
+
+<p>"This is a fine, bright, caller place to get shot in," says Alan,
+suddenly; "and, man, I wish that I had your courage!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alan!" I cried, "what kind of talk is this of it? You're just made of
+courage; it's the character of the man, as I could prove myself if there
+was nobody else."</p>
+
+<p>"And you would be the more mistaken," said he. "What makes the differ
+with me is just my great penetration and knowledge of affairs. But for
+auld, cauld, dour, deidly courage, I am not fit to hold a candle to
+yourself. Look at us two here upon the sands. Here am I, fair hotching to
+be off; here's you (for all that I ken) in two minds of it whether you'll
+no stop. Do you think that I could do that, or would? No me! Firstly,
+because I havenae got the courage and wouldnae daur; and secondly, because
+I am a man of so much penetration and would see ye damned first."</p>
+
+<p>"It's there ye're coming, is it?" I cried. "Ah, man Alan, you can wile
+your old wives, but you never can wile me."</p>
+
+<p>Remembrance of my temptation in the wood made me strong as iron.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a tryst to keep," I continued. "I am <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></a>[pg 157]</span>trysted with your cousin
+Charlie; I have passed my word."</p>
+
+<p>"Braw trysts that you'll can keep," said Alan. "Ye'll just mistryst
+aince and for a' with the gentry in the bents. And what for?" he went on
+with an extreme threatening gravity. "Just tell me that, my mannie! Are ye
+to be speerited away like Lady Grange? Are they to drive a dirk in your
+inside and bury ye in the bents? Or is it to be the other way, and are they
+to bring ye in with James? Are they folk to be trustit? Would ye stick your
+head in the mouth of Sim Fraser and the ither Whigs?" he added with
+extraordinary bitterness.</p>
+
+<p>"Alan," cried I, "they're all rogues and liars, and I'm with ye there.
+The more reason there should be one decent man in such a land of thieves!
+My word is passed, and I'll stick to it. I said long syne to your kinswoman
+that I would stumble at no risk. Do ye mind of that?--the night Red Colin
+fell, it was. No more I will, then. Here I stop. Prestongrange promised me
+my life; if he's to be mansworn, here I'll have to die."</p>
+
+<p>"Aweel, aweel," said Alan.</p>
+
+<p>All this time we had seen or heard no more of our pursuers. In truth we
+had caught them unawares; their whole party (as I was to learn afterwards)
+had not yet reached the scene; what there was of them was spread among the
+bents towards Gillane. It was quite an affair to call them in and bring
+them over, and the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158"
+id="Page_158"></a>[pg 158]</span>boat was making speed. They were besides
+but cowardly fellows: a mere leash of Highland cattle thieves, of several
+clans, no gentleman there to be the captain: and the more they looked at
+Alan and me upon the beach, the less (I must suppose) they liked the looks
+of us.</p>
+
+<p>Whoever had betrayed Alan it was not the captain: he was in the skiff
+himself, steering and stirring up his oarsmen, like a man with his heart in
+his employ. Already he was near in, and the boat scouring--already Alan's
+face had flamed crimson with the excitement of his deliverance, when our
+friends in the bents, either in despair to see their prey escape them or
+with some hope of scaring Andie, raised suddenly a shrill cry of several
+voices.</p>
+
+<p>This sound, arising from what appeared to be a quite deserted coast, was
+really very daunting, and the men in the boat held water instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"What's this of it?" sings out the captain, for he was come within an
+easy hail.</p>
+
+<p>"Freens o' mine," says Alan, and began immediately to wade forth in the
+shallow water towards the boat. "Davie," he said, pausing, "Davie, are ye
+no coming? I am swier to leave ye."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a hair of me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He stood part of a second where he was to his knees in the salt water,
+hesitating.</p>
+
+<p>"He that will to Cupar, maun to Cupar," said he, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></a>[pg 159]</span>and
+swashing in deeper than his waist, was hauled into the skiff, which was
+immediately directed for the ship.</p>
+
+<p>I stood where he had left me, with my hands behind my back; Alan sat
+with his head turned watching me; and the boat drew smoothly away. Of a
+sudden I came the nearest hand to shedding tears, and seemed to myself the
+most deserted, solitary lad in Scotland. With that I turned my back upon
+the sea and faced the sand hills. There was no sight or sound of man; the
+sun shone on the wet sand and the dry, the wind blew in the bents, the
+gulls made a dreary piping. As I passed higher up the beach, the sand-lice
+were hopping nimbly about the stranded tangles. The devil any other sight
+or sound in that unchancy place. And yet I knew there were folk there,
+observing me, upon some secret purpose. They were no soldiers, or they
+would have fallen on and taken us ere now; doubtless they were some common
+rogues hired for my undoing, perhaps to kidnap, perhaps to murder me
+outright. From the position of those engaged, the first was the more
+likely; from what I knew of their character and ardency in this business, I
+thought the second very possible; and the blood ran cold about my
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>I had a mad idea to loosen my sword in the scabbard; for though I was
+very unfit to stand up like a gentleman blade to blade, I thought I could
+do some scathe in a random combat. But I perceived in time the folly of
+resistance. This was no doubt the joint "expedient" <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></a>[pg 160]</span>on
+which Prestongrange and Fraser were agreed. The first, I was very sure, had
+done something to secure my life; the second was pretty likely to have
+slipped in some contrary hints into the ears of Neil and his companions;
+and if I were to show bare steel I might play straight into the hands of my
+worst enemy and seal my own doom.</p>
+
+<p>These thoughts brought me to the head of the beach. I cast a look
+behind, the boat was nearing the brig, and Alan flew his handkerchief for a
+farewell, which I replied to with the waving of my hand. But Alan himself
+was shrunk to a small thing in my view, alongside of this pass that lay in
+front of me. I set my hat hard on my head, clenched my teeth, and went
+right before me up the face of the sand-wreath. It made a hard climb, being
+steep, and the sand like water underfoot. But I caught hold at last by the
+long bent grass on the brae-top, and pulled myself to a good footing. The
+same moment men stirred and stood up here and there, six or seven of them,
+ragged-like knaves, each with a dagger in his hand. The fair truth is, I
+shut my eyes and prayed. When I opened them again, the rogues were crept
+the least thing nearer without speech or hurry. Every eye was upon mine,
+which struck me with a strange sensation of their brightness, and of the
+fear with which they continued to approach me. I held out my hands empty:
+whereupon one asked, with a strong Highland brogue, if I surrendered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></a>[pg
+161]</span>"Under protest," said I, "if ye ken what that means, which I
+misdoubt."</p>
+
+<p>At that word, they came all in upon me like a flight of birds upon a
+carrion, seized me, took my sword, and all the money from my pockets, bound
+me hand and foot with some strong line, and cast me on a tussock of bent.
+There they sat about their captive in a part of a circle and gazed upon him
+silently like something dangerous, perhaps a lion or a tiger on the spring.
+Presently this attention was relaxed. They drew nearer together, fell to
+speech in the Gaelic, and very cynically divided my property before my
+eyes. It was my diversion in this time that I could watch from my place the
+progress of my friend's escape. I saw the boat come to the brig and be
+hoisted in, the sails fill, and the ship pass out seaward behind the isles
+and by North Berwick.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of two hours or so, more and more ragged Highlandmen kept
+collecting, Neil among the first, until the party must have numbered near a
+score. With each new arrival there was a fresh bout of talk, that sounded
+like complaints and explanations; but I observed one thing, none of those
+that came late had any share in the division of my spoils. The last
+discussion was very violent and eager, so that once I thought they would
+have quarrelled; on the heels of which their company parted, the bulk of
+them returning westward in a troop, and only three, Neil and two others,
+remaining sentries on the prisoner.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></a>[pg
+162]</span>"I could name one who would be very ill pleased with your day's
+work, Neil Duncanson," said I, when the rest had moved away.</p>
+
+<p>He assured me in answer I should be tenderly used, for he knew he was
+"acquent wi' the leddy."</p>
+
+<p>This was all our talk, nor did any other son of man appear upon that
+portion of the coast until the sun had gone down among the Highland
+mountains, and the gloaming was beginning to grow dark. At which hour I was
+aware of a long, lean, bony-like Lothian man of a very swarthy countenance,
+that came towards us among the bents on a farm horse.</p>
+
+<p>"Lads," cried he, "hae ye a paper like this?" and held up one in his
+hand. Neil produced a second, which the new comer studied through a pair of
+horn spectacles, and saying all was right and we were the folk he was
+seeking, immediately dismounted. I was then set in his place, my feet tied
+under the horse's belly, and we set forth under the guidance of the
+Lowlander. His path must have been very well chosen, for we met but one
+pair--a pair of lovers--the whole way, and these, perhaps taking us to be
+free-traders, fled on our approach. We were at one time close at the foot
+of Berwick Law on the south side; at another, as we passed over some open
+hills, I spied the lights of a clachan and the old tower of a church among
+some trees not far off, but too far to cry for help, if I had dreamed of
+it. At last we came again within sound of <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></a>[pg 163]</span>the sea. There was
+moonlight, though not much; and by this I could see the three huge towers
+and broken battlements of Tantallon, that old chief place of the Red
+Douglases. The horse was picketed in the bottom of the ditch to graze, and
+I was led within, and forth into the court, and thence into a tumble-down
+stone hall. Here my conductors built a brisk fire in the midst of the
+pavement, for there was a chill in the night. My hands were loosed, I was
+set by the wall in the inner end, and (the Lowlander having produced
+provisions) I was given oatmeal bread and a pitcher of French brandy. This
+done, I was left once more alone with my three Highlandmen. They sat close
+by the fire drinking and talking; the wind blew in by the breaches, cast
+about the smoke and flames, and sang in the tops of the towers; I could
+hear the sea under the cliffs, and my mind being reassured as to my life,
+and my body and spirits wearied with the day's employment, I turned upon
+one side and slumbered.</p>
+
+<p>I had no means of guessing at what hour I was wakened, only the moon was
+down and the fire low. My feet were now loosed, and I was carried through
+the ruins and down the cliff-side by a precipitous path to where I found a
+fisher's boat in a haven of the rocks. This I was had on board of, and we
+began to put forth from the shore in a fine starlight.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></a>[pg
+164]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIV'></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BASS</h3>
+
+
+<p>I had no thought where they were taking me; only looked here and there
+for the appearance of a ship; and there ran the while in my head a word of
+Ransome's--the <i>twenty-pounders</i>. If I were to be exposed a second
+time to that same former danger of the plantations, I judged it must turn
+ill with me; there was no second Alan, and no second shipwreck and spare
+yard to be expected now; and I saw myself hoe tobacco under the whip's
+lash. The thought chilled me; the air was sharp upon the water, the
+stretchers of the boat drenched with a cold dew; and I shivered in my place
+beside the steersman. This was the dark man whom I have called hitherto the
+Lowlander; his name was Dale, ordinarily called Black Andie. Feeling the
+thrill of my shiver, he very kindly handed me a rough jacket full of
+fish-scales, with which I was glad to cover myself.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you for this kindness," said I, "and will make so free as to
+repay it with a warning. You take a high responsibility in this affair. You
+are not like <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></a>[pg
+165]</span>these ignorant, barbarous Highlanders, but know what the law is
+and the risks of those that break it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am no just exactly what ye would ca' an extremist for the law," says
+he, "at the best of times; but in this business I act with a good
+warranty."</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do with me?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Nae harm," said he, "nae harm ava'. Ye'll hae strong freens, I'm
+thinking. Ye'll be richt eneuch yet."</p>
+
+<p>There began to fall a greyness on the face of the sea; little dabs of
+pink and like coals of slow fire came in the east; and at the same time the
+geese awakened, and began crying about the top of the Bass. It is just the
+one crag of rock, as everybody knows, but great enough to carve a city
+from. The sea was extremely little, but there went a hollow plowter round
+the base of it. With the growing of the dawn I could see it clearer and
+clearer; the straight crags painted with sea-birds' droppings like a
+morning frost, the sloping top of it green with grass, the clan of white
+geese that cried about the sides, and the black, broken buildings of the
+prison sitting close on the sea's edge.</p>
+
+<p>At the sight the truth came in upon me in a clap.</p>
+
+<p>"It's there you're taking me!" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Just to the Bass, mannie," said he: "whaur the auld sants were afore
+ye, and I misdoubt if ye have come so fairly by your preeson."</p>
+
+<p>"But none dwells there now," I cried; "the place is long a ruin."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></a>[pg
+166]</span>"It'll be the mair pleisand a change for the solan geese, then,"
+quoth Andie dryly.</p>
+
+<p>The day coming slowly brighter I observed on the bilge, among the big
+stones with which fisherfolk ballast their boats, several kegs and baskets,
+and a provision of fuel. All these were discharged upon the crag. Andie,
+myself, and my three Highlanders (I call them mine, although it was the
+other way about), landed along with them. The sun was not yet up when the
+boat moved away again, the noise of the oars on the thole-pins echoing from
+the cliffs, and left us in our singular reclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Andie Dale was the Prefect (as I would jocularly call him) of the Bass,
+being at once the shepherd and the gamekeeper of that small and rich
+estate. He had to mind the dozen or so of sheep that fed and fattened on
+the grass of the sloping part of it, like beasts grazing the roof of a
+cathedral. He had charge besides of the solan geese that roosted in the
+crags; and from these an extraordinary income is derived. The young are
+dainty eating, as much as two shillings a-piece being a common price, and
+paid willingly by epicures; even the grown birds are valuable for their oil
+and feathers; and a part of the minister's stipend of North Berwick is paid
+to this day in solan geese, which makes it (in some folks' eyes) a parish
+to be coveted. To perform these several businesses, as well as to protect
+the geese from poachers, Andie had frequent occasion <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></a>[pg 167]</span>to
+sleep and pass days together on the crag; and we found the man at home
+there like a farmer in his steading. Bidding us all shoulder some of the
+packages, a matter in which I made haste to bear a hand, he led us in by a
+locked gate, which was the only admission to the island, and through the
+ruins of the fortress, to the governor's house. There we saw, by the ashes
+in the chimney and a standing bed-place in one corner, that he made his
+usual occupation.</p>
+
+<p>This bed he now offered me to use, saying he supposed I would set up to
+be gentry.</p>
+
+<p>"My gentrice has nothing to do with where I lie," said I. "I bless God I
+have lain hard ere now, and can do the same again with thankfulness. While
+I am here, Mr. Andie, if that be your name, I will do my part and take my
+place beside the rest of you; and I ask you on the other hand to spare me
+your mockery, which I own I like ill."</p>
+
+<p>He grumbled a little at this speech, but seemed upon reflection to
+approve it. Indeed, he was a long-headed, sensible man, and a good Whig and
+Presbyterian; read daily in a pocket Bible, and was both able and eager to
+converse seriously on religion, leaning more than a little towards the
+Cameronian extremes. His morals were of a more doubtful colour. I found he
+was deep in the free trade, and used the ruins of Tantallon for a magazine
+of smuggled merchandise. As for a gauger, I do not believe he valued the
+life of one at half-a-farthing. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168"
+id="Page_168"></a>[pg 168]</span>But that part of the coast of Lothian is
+to this day as wild a place, and the commons there as rough a crew as any
+in Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>One incident of my imprisonment is made memorable by a consequence it
+had long after. There was a warship at this time stationed in the Firth,
+the <i>Seahorse</i>, Captain Palliser. It chanced she was cruising in the
+month of September, plying between Fife and Lothian, and sounding for sunk
+dangers. Early one fine morning she was seen about two miles to east of us,
+where she lowered a boat, and seemed to examine the Wildfire Rocks and
+Satan's Bush, famous dangers of that coast. And presently, after having got
+her boat again, she came before the wind and was headed directly for the
+Bass. This was very troublesome to Andie and the Highlanders; the whole
+business of my sequestration was designed for privacy, and here, with a
+navy captain perhaps blundering ashore, it looked to become public enough,
+if it were nothing worse. I was in a minority of one, I am no Alan to fall
+upon so many, and I was far from sure that a warship was the least likely
+to improve my condition. All which considered, I gave Andie my parole of
+good behaviour and obedience, and was had briskly to the summit of the
+rock, where we all lay down, at the cliff's edge, in different places of
+observation and concealment. The <i>Seahorse</i> came straight on till I
+thought she would have struck, and we (looking giddily down) could see the
+ship's company at their <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169"
+id="Page_169"></a>[pg 169]</span>quarters and hear the leadsman singing at
+the lead. Then she suddenly wore and let fly a volley of I know not how
+many great guns. The rock was shaken with the thunder of the sound, the
+smoke flowed over our heads, and the geese rose in number beyond
+computation or belief. To hear their screaming and to see the twinkling of
+their wings, made a most inimitable curiosity: and I suppose it was after
+this somewhat childish pleasure that Captain Palliser had come so near the
+Bass. He was to pay dear for it in time. During his approach I had the
+opportunity to make a remark upon the rigging of that ship by which I ever
+after knew it miles away; and this was a means (under Providence) of my
+averting from a friend a great calamity, and inflicting on Captain Palliser
+himself a sensible disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>All the time of my stay on the rock we lived well. We had small ale and
+brandy, and oatmeal of which we made our porridge night and morning. At
+times a boat came from the Castleton and brought us a quarter of mutton,
+for the sheep upon the rock we must not touch, these being specially fed to
+market. The geese were unfortunately out of season, and we let them be. We
+fished ourselves, and yet more often made the geese to fish for us:
+observing one when he had made a capture and scaring him from his prey ere
+he had swallowed it.</p>
+
+<p>The strange nature of this place, and the curiosities with which it
+abounded, held me busy and amused. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170"
+id="Page_170"></a>[pg 170]</span>Escape being impossible, I was allowed my
+entire liberty, and continually explored the surface of the isle wherever
+it might support the foot of man. The old garden of the prison was still to
+be observed, with flowers and pot-herbs running wild, and some ripe
+cherries on a bush. A little lower stood a chapel or a hermit's cell; who
+built or dwelt in it, none may know, and the thought of its age made a
+ground of many meditations. The prison too, where I now bivouacked with
+Highland cattle thieves, was a place full of history, both human and
+divine. I thought it strange so many saints and martyrs should have gone by
+there so recently, and left not so much as a leaf out of their Bibles, or a
+name carved upon the wall, while the rough soldier lads that mounted guard
+upon the battlements had filled the neighbourhood with their
+mementoes--broken tobacco-pipes for the most part, and that in a surprising
+plenty, but also metal buttons from their coats. There were times when I
+thought I could have heard the pious sound of psalms out of the martyrs'
+dungeons, and seen the soldiers tramp the ramparts with their glinting
+pipes, and the dawn rising behind them out of the North Sea.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it was a good deal Andie and his tales that put these fancies
+in my head. He was extraordinary well acquainted with the story of the rock
+in all particulars, down to the names of private soldiers, his father
+having served there in that same capacity. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></a>[pg 171]</span>He was gifted besides with
+a natural genius for narration, so that the people seemed to speak and the
+things to be done before your face. This gift of his and my assiduity to
+listen brought us the more close together. I could not honestly deny but
+what I liked him; I soon saw that he liked me; and indeed, from the first I
+had set myself out to capture his good will. An odd circumstance (to be
+told presently) effected this beyond my expectation; but even in early days
+we made a friendly pair to be a prisoner and his gaoler.</p>
+
+<p>I should trifle with my conscience if I pretended my stay upon the Bass
+was wholly disagreeable. It seemed to me a safe place, as though I was
+escaped there out of my troubles. No harm was to be offered me; a material
+impossibility, rock and the deep sea, prevented me from fresh attempts; I
+felt I had my life safe and my honour safe, and there were times when I
+allowed myself to gloat on them like stolen waters. At other times my
+thoughts were very different. I recalled how strong I had expressed myself
+both to Rankeillor and to Stewart; I reflected that my captivity upon the
+Bass, in view of a great part of the coasts of Fife and Lothian, was a
+thing I should be thought more likely to have invented than endured; and in
+the eyes of these two gentlemen, at least, I must pass for a boaster and a
+coward. Now I would take this lightly enough; tell myself that so <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></a>[pg 172]</span>long as
+I stood well with Catriona Drummond, the opinion of the rest of man was but
+moonshine and spilled water; and thence pass off into those meditations of
+a lover which are so delightful to himself and must always appear so
+surprisingly idle to a reader. But anon the fear would take me otherwise; I
+would be shaken with a perfect panic of self-esteem, and these supposed
+hard judgments appear an injustice impossible to be supported. With that
+another train of thought would be presented, and I had scarce begun to be
+concerned about men's judgments of myself, than I was haunted with the
+remembrance of James Stewart in his dungeon and the lamentations of his
+wife. Then, indeed, passion began to work in me; I could not forgive myself
+to sit there idle; it seemed (if I were a man at all) that I could fly or
+swim out of my place of safety; and it was in such humours and to amuse my
+self-reproaches that I would set the more particularly to win the good side
+of Andie Dale.</p>
+
+<p>At last, when we two were alone on the summit of the rock on a bright
+morning, I put in some hint about a bribe. He looked at me, cast back his
+head, and laughed out loud.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, you're funny, Mr. Dale," said I, "but perhaps if you glance an eye
+upon that paper you may change your note."</p>
+
+<p>The stupid Highlanders had taken from me at the time of my seizure
+nothing but hard money, and the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173"
+id="Page_173"></a>[pg 173]</span>paper I now showed Andie was an
+acknowledgment from the British Linen Company for a considerable sum.</p>
+
+<p>He read it. "Troth, and ye're nane sae ill aff," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought that would maybe vary your opinions," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Hout!" said he. "It shaws me ye can bribe; but I'm no to be
+bribit."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll see about that yet a while," says I. "And first, I'll show you
+that I know what I am talking. You have orders to detain me here till
+Thursday, 21st September."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye're no a'thegether wrong either," says Andie. "I'm to let ye gang,
+bar orders contrair, on Saturday, the 23rd."</p>
+
+<p>I could not but feel there was something extremely insidious in this
+arrangement. That I was to reappear precisely in time to be too late would
+cast the more discredit on my tale, if I were minded to tell one; and this
+screwed me to fighting point.</p>
+
+<p>"Now then, Andie, you that kens the world, listen to me, and think while
+ye listen," said I. "I know there are great folks in the business, and I
+make no doubt you have their names to go upon. I have seen some of them
+myself since this affair began, and said my say into their faces too. But
+what kind of a crime would this be that I had committed? or what kind of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></a>[pg
+174]</span>process is this that I am fallen under? To be apprehended by
+some ragged John-Hielandmen on August 30th, carried to a rickle of old
+stones that is now neither fort nor gaol (whatever it once was) but just
+the gamekeeper's lodge of the Bass Rock, and set free again, September 23d,
+as secretly as I was first arrested--does that sound like law to you? or
+does it sound like justice? or does it not sound honestly like a piece of
+some low dirty intrigue, of which the very folk that meddle with it are
+ashamed?"</p>
+
+<p>"I canna gainsay ye, Shaws. It looks unco underhand," says Andie. "And
+werenae the folk guid sound Whigs and true-blue Presbyterians I would hae
+seen them ayont Jordan and Jeroozlem or I would have set hand to it."</p>
+
+<p>"The Master of Lovat'll be a braw Whig," says I, "and a grand
+Presbyterian."</p>
+
+<p>"I ken naething by him," said he. "I hae nae trokings wi' Lovats."</p>
+
+<p>"No, it'll be Prestongrange that you'll be dealing with," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but I'll no tell ye that," said Andie.</p>
+
+<p>"Little need when I ken," was my retort.</p>
+
+<p>"There's just the ae thing ye can be fairly sure of, Shaws," says Andie.
+"And that is that (try as ye please) I'm no dealing wi' yoursel'; nor yet I
+amnae goin' to," he added.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Andie, I see I'll have to be speak out plain <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></a>[pg 175]</span>with
+you," I replied. And I told him so much as I thought needful of the
+facts.</p>
+
+<p>He heard me out with serious interest, and when I had done, seemed to
+consider a little with himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Shaws," said he at last, "I deal with the naked hand. It's a queer
+tale, and no vary creditable, the way you tell it; and I'm far frae minting
+that is other than the way that ye believe it. As for yoursel', ye seems to
+me rather a dacent-like young man. But me, that's aulder and mair
+judeecious, see perhaps a wee bit further forrit in the job than what ye
+can dae. And here is the maitter clear and plain to ye. There'll be nae
+skaith to yoursel' if I keep ye here; far frae that, I think ye'll be a
+hantle better by it. There'll be nae skaith to the kintry--just ae mair
+Hielantman hangit--Gude kens, a guid riddance! On the ither hand it would
+be considerable skaith to me if I would let you free. Sae, speakin' as a
+guid Whig, an honest freen' to you, and an anxious freen' to my ainsel',
+the plain fact is that I think ye'll just have to bide here wi' Andie an'
+the solans."</p>
+
+<p>"Andie," said I, laying my hand upon his knee, "this Hielantman's
+innocent."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, it's a peety about that," said he. "But ye see in this warld, the
+way God made it, we cannae just get a'thing that we want."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></a>[pg
+176]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XV'></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK</h3>
+
+
+<p>I have yet said little of the Highlanders. They were all three of the
+followers of James More, which bound the accusation very tight about their
+master's neck. All understood a word or two of English; but Neil was the
+only one who judged he had enough of it for general converse, in which
+(when once he got embarked) his company was often tempted to the contrary
+opinion. They were tractable, simple creatures; showed much more courtesy
+than might have been expected from their raggedness and their uncouth
+appearance, and fell spontaneously to be like three servants for Andie and
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>Dwelling in that isolated place, in the old falling ruins of a prison,
+and among endless strange sounds of the sea and the sea-birds, I thought I
+perceived in them early the effects of superstitious fear. When there was
+nothing doing they would either lie and sleep, for which their appetite
+appeared insatiable, or Neil would entertain the others with stories which
+seemed always of a terrifying strain. If neither of these delights were
+within reach--if perhaps two were <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177"
+id="Page_177"></a>[pg 177]</span>sleeping and the third could find no means
+to follow their example--I would see him sit and listen and look about him
+in a progression of uneasiness, starting, his face blenching, his hands
+clutched, a man strung like a bow. The nature of these fears I had never an
+occasion to find out, but the sight of them was catching, and the nature of
+the place that we were in favourable to alarms. I can find no word for it
+in the English, but Andie had an expression for it in the Scots from which
+he never varied.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," he would say, "<i>it's an unco place, the Bass</i>." It is so I
+always think of it. It was an unco place by night, unco by day; and these
+were unco sounds, of the calling of the solans, and the plash of the sea
+and the rock echoes, that hung continually in our ears. It was chiefly so
+in moderate weather. When the waves were anyway great they roared about the
+rock like thunder and the drums of armies, dreadful but merry to hear; and
+it was in the calm days that a man could daunt himself with listening--not
+a Highlandman only, as I several times experimented on myself, so many
+still, hollow noises haunted and reverberated in the porches of the
+rock.</p>
+
+<p>This brings me to a story I heard, and a scene I took part in, which
+quite changed our terms of living, and had a great effect on my departure.
+It chanced one night I fell in a muse beside the fire and (that little air
+of Alan's coming back to my memory) began <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></a>[pg 178]</span>to whistle. A hand was
+laid upon my arm, and the voice of Neil bade me to stop, for it was not
+"canny musics."</p>
+
+<p>"Not canny?" I asked. "How can that be?"</p>
+
+<p>"Na," said he; "it will be made by a bogle and her wanting ta heid upon
+his body."<sup><a href="#fn13" name="rfn13">[13]</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "there can be no bogles here, Neil; for it's not likely
+they would fash themselves to frighten solan geese."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay?" says Andie, "is that what ye think of it? But I'll can tell ye
+there's been waur nor bogles here."</p>
+
+<p>"What's waur than bogles, Andie?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Warlocks," said he. "Or a warlock at the least of it. And that's a
+queer tale, too," he added. "And if ye would like, I'll tell it ye."</p>
+
+<p>To be sure we were all of the one mind, and even the Highlander that had
+the least English of the three set himself to listen with all his
+might.</p>
+
+
+<h4>THE TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK</h4>
+
+<p>My faither, Tam Dale, peace to his banes, was a wild, sploring lad in
+his young days, wi' little wisdom and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></a>[pg 179]</span>less grace. He was fond of
+a lass and fond of a glass, and fond of a ran-dan; but I could never hear
+tell that he was muckle use for honest employment. Frae ae thing to
+anither, he listed at last for a sodger and was in the garrison of this
+fort, which was the first way that ony of the Dales cam to set foot upon
+the Bass. Sorrow upon that service! The governor brewed his ain ale; it
+seems it was the warst conceivable. The rock was proveesioned frae the
+shore with vivers, the thing was ill-guided, and there were whiles when
+they but to fish and shoot solans for their diet. To crown a', thir was the
+Days of the Persecution. The perishin' cauld chalmers were all occupeed wi'
+sants and martyrs, the saut of the yearth, of which it wasnae worthy. And
+though Tam Dale carried a firelock there, a single sodger, and liked a lass
+and a glass, as I was sayin', the mind of the man was mair just than set
+with his position. He had glints of the glory of the kirk; there were
+whiles when his dander rase to see the Lord's sants misguided, and shame
+covered him that he should be haulding a can'le (or carrying a firelock) in
+so black a business. There were nights of it when he was here on sentry,
+the place a' wheesht, the frosts o' winter maybe riving in the wa's, and he
+would hear are o' the prisoners strike up a psalm, and the rest join in,
+and the blessed sounds rising from the different chalmers--or dungeons, I
+would raither say--so that this auld craig in the sea was like a pairt of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></a>[pg
+180]</span>Heev'n. Black shame was on his saul; his sins hove up before him
+muckle as the Bass, and above a', that chief sin, that he should have a
+hand in hagging and hashing at Christ's Kirk. But the truth is that he
+resisted the spirit. Day cam, there were the rousing companions, and his
+guid resolves depairtit.</p>
+
+<p>In thir days, dwalled upon the Bass a man of God, Peden the Prophet was
+his name. Ye'll have heard tell of Prophet Peden. There was never the wale
+of him sinsyne, and it's a question wi' mony if there ever was his like
+afore. He was wild 's a peat-hag, fearsome to look at, fearsome to hear,
+his face like the day of judgment. The voice of him was like a solan's and
+dinnle'd in folks' lugs, and the words of him like coals of fire.</p>
+
+<p>Now there was a lass on the rock, and I think she had little to do, for
+it was nae place far dacent weemen; but it seems she was bonny, and her and
+Tam Dale were very well agreed. It befell that Peden was in the gairden his
+lane at the praying when Tam and the lass cam by; and what should the
+lassie do but mock with laughter at the sant's devotions? He rose and
+lookit at the twa o' them, and Tam's knees knoitered thegether at the look
+of him. But whan he spak, it was mair in sorrow than in anger. "Poor thing,
+poor thing!" says he, and it was the lass he lookit at. "I hear you skirl
+and laugh," he says, "but the Lord has a deid shot prepared for you, and at
+that surprising judgment <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181"
+id="Page_181"></a>[pg 181]</span>ye shall skirl but the ae time!" Shortly
+thereafter she was daundering on the craigs wi' twa-three sodgers, and it
+was a blawy day. There cam a gowst of wind, claught her by the coats, and
+awa' wi' her bag and baggage. And it was remarked by the sodgers that she
+gied but the ae skirl.</p>
+
+<p>Nae doubt this judgment had some weicht upon Tam Dale; but it passed
+again and him none the better. Ae day he was flyting wi' anither
+sodger-lad. "Deil hae me!" quo' Tam, for he was a profane swearer. And
+there was Peden glowering at him, gash an' waefu'; Peden wi' his lang
+chafts an' luntin' een, the maud happed about his kist, and the hand of him
+held out wi' the black nails upon the finger-nebs--for he had nae care of
+the body. "Fy, fy, poor man!" cries he, "the poor fool man! <i>Deil hae
+me</i>, quo' he; an' I see the deil at his oxter." The conviction of guilt
+and grace cam in on Tam like the deep sea; he flang doun the pike that was
+in his hands--"I will nae mair lift arms against the cause o' Christ!" says
+he, and was as gude's word. There was a sair fyke in the beginning, but the
+governor, seeing him resolved, gied him his dischairge, and he went and
+dwallt and merried in North Berwick, and had aye a gude name with honest
+folk frae that day on.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the year seeventeen hunner and sax that the Bass cam in the
+hands o' the Da'rymples, and there was twa men soucht the chairge of it.
+Baith were weel <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182"
+id="Page_182"></a>[pg 182]</span>qualified, for they had baith been sodgers
+in the garrison, and kent the gate to handle solans, and the seasons and
+values of them. Forby that they were baith--or they baith seemed--earnest
+professors and men of comely conversation. The first of them was just Tam
+Dale, my faither. The second was ane Lapraik, whom the folk ca'd Tod
+Lapraik maistly, but whether for his name or his nature I could never hear
+tell. Weel, Tam gaed to see Lapraik upon this business, and took me, that
+was a toddlin' laddie, by the hand. Tod had his dwallin' in the lang loan
+benorth the kirkyaird. It's a dark uncanny loan, forby that the kirk has
+aye had an ill name since the days o' James the Saxt and the deevil's
+cantrips played therein when the Queen was on the seas; and as for Tod's
+house, it was in the mirkest end, and was little liked by some that kenned
+the best. The door was on the sneck that day, and me and my faither gaed
+straucht in. Tod was a wabster to his trade; his loom stood in the but.
+There he sat, a muckle fat, white hash of a man like creish, wi' a kind of
+a holy smile that gart me scunner. The hand of him aye cawed the shuttle,
+but his een was steeked. We cried to him by his name, we skirled in the
+deid lug of him, we shook him by the shou'ther. Nae mainner o' service!
+There he sat on his dowp, an' cawed the shuttle and smiled like creish.</p>
+
+<p>"God be guid to us," says Tam Dale, "this is no canny!"</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour005"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour005.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: THERE HE SAT, A MUCKLE FAT, WHITE HASH OF A
+MAN LIKE CREISH" src="images/balfour005sm.jpg" height="546" width="380" /></a>
+<br />THERE HE SAT, A MUCKLE
+FAT, WHITE HASH OF A MAN LIKE CREISH
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></a>[pg
+183]</span>He had jimp said the word, when Tod Lapraik cam to himsel'.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this you, Tam?" says he. "Haith, man! I'm blythe to see ye. I whiles
+fa' into a bit dwam like this," he says; "it's frae the stamach."</p>
+
+<p>Weel, they began to crack about the Bass and which of them twa was to
+get the warding o't, and by little and little cam to very ill words, and
+twined in anger. I mind weel, that as my faither and me gaed hame again, he
+cam ower and ower the same expression, how little he likit Tod Lapraik and
+his dwams.</p>
+
+<p>"Dwam!" says he. "I think folk hae brunt far dwams like yon."</p>
+
+<p>Aweel, my faither got the Bass and Tod had to go wantin'. It was
+remembered sinsyne what way he had ta'en the thing. "Tam," says he, "ye hae
+gotten the better o'me aince mair, and I hope," says he, "ye'll find at
+least a' that ye expeckit at the Bass." Which have since been thought
+remarkable expressions. At last the time came for Tam Dale to take young
+solans. This was a business he was weel used wi', he had been a craigsman
+frae a laddie, and trustit nane but himsel'. So there was he hingin' by a
+line an' speldering on the craig face, whaur it's hieest and steighest.
+Fower tenty lads were on the tap, hauldin' the line and mindin' for his
+signals. But whaur Tam hung there was naething but the craig, and the sea
+belaw, and the solans skirling and flying. It was a braw spring morn, and
+Tam <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></a>[pg
+184]</span>whustled as he claught in the young geese. Mony's the time I
+heard him tell of this experience, and aye the swat ran upon the man.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced, ye see, that Tam keeked up, and he was awaur of a muckle
+solan, and the solan pyking at the line. He thocht this by-ordinar and
+outside the creature's habits. He minded that ropes was unco saft things,
+and the solan's neb and the Bass Rock unco hard, and that twa hunner feet
+were raither mair than he would care to fa'.</p>
+
+<p>"Shoo!" says Tam. "Awa', bird! Shoo, awa' wi' ye!" says he.</p>
+
+<p>The solan keekit doun into Tam's face, and there was something unco in
+the creature's ee. Just the ae keek it gied, and back to the rope. But now
+it wroucht and warstl't like a thing dementit. There never was the solan
+made that wroucht as that solan wroucht; and it seemed to understand it's
+employ brawly, birzing the saft rope between the neb of it and a crunkled
+jag o' stane.</p>
+
+<p>There gaed a cauld stend o' fear into Tam's heart. "This thing is nae
+bird," thinks he. His een turnt backward in his heid and the day gaed black
+about him. "If I get a dwam here," he thoucht, "it's by wi' Tam Dale." And
+he signalled for the lads to pu' him up.</p>
+
+<p>And it seemed the solan understood about signals. For nae sooner was the
+signal made than he let be the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185"
+id="Page_185"></a>[pg 185]</span>rope, spried his wings, squawked out loud,
+took a turn flying, and dashed straucht at Tam Dale's een. Tam had a knife,
+he gart the cauld steel glitter. And it seemed the solan understood about
+knives, for nae suner did the steel glint in the sun than he gied the ae
+squawk, but laigher, like a body disappointit, and flegged aff about the
+roundness of the craig, and Tam saw him nae mair. And as sune as that thing
+was gane, Tam's held drapt upon his shouther, and they pu'd him up like a
+deid corp, dadding on the craig.</p>
+
+<p>A dram of brandy (which he went never without) broucht him to his mind,
+or what was left of it. Up he sat.</p>
+
+<p>"Rin, Geordie, rin to the boat, mak' sure of the boat, man--rin!" he
+cries, "or yon solan 'll have it awa'," says he.</p>
+
+<p>The fower lads stared at ither, an' tried to whilly-wha him to be quiet.
+But naething, would satisfy Tam Dale, till ane o' them had startit on aheid
+to stand sentry on the boat. The ithers askit if he was for down again.</p>
+
+<p>"Na," says he, "and niether you nor me," says he, "and as sune as I can
+win to stand on my twa feet we'll be aff frae this craig o' Sawtan."</p>
+
+<p>Sure eneuch, nae time was lost, and that was ower muckle; for before
+they won to North Berwick Tam was in a crying fever. He lay a' the simmer;
+and wha was sae kind as come speiring for him, but Tod <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></a>[pg
+186]</span>Lapraik! Folk thocht afterwards that ilka time Tod cam near the
+house the fever had worsened. I kenna for that; but what I ken the best,
+that was the end of it.</p>
+
+<p>It was about this time o' the year; my grandfaither was out at the white
+fishing; and like a bairn, I but to gang wi' him. We had a grand take, I
+mind, and the way that the fish lay broucht us near in by the Bass, whaur
+we forgaithered wi' anither boat that belanged to a man Sandie Fletcher in
+Castleton. He's no lang deid niether, or ye could spier at himsel'. Weel,
+Sandie hailed.</p>
+
+<p>"What's yon on the Bass?" says he.</p>
+
+<p>"On the Bass?" says grandfaither.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," says Sandie, "on the green side o't."</p>
+
+<p>"Whatten kind of a thing?" says grandfaither. "There cannae be naething
+on the Bass but just the sheep."</p>
+
+<p>"It looks unco like a body," quo' Sandie, who was nearer in.</p>
+
+<p>"A body!" says we, and we nane of us likit that. For there was nae boat
+that could have broucht a man, and the key o' the prison yett hung ower my
+faither's held at hame in the press bed.</p>
+
+<p>We keept the twa boats closs for company, and crap in nearer hand.
+Grandfaither had a gless, for he had been a sailor, and the captain of a
+smack, and had lost her on the sands of Tay. And when we took the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></a>[pg 187]</span>gless
+to it, sure eneuch there was a man. He was in a crunkle o' green brae, a
+wee below the chaipel, a' by his lee lane, and lowped and flang and danced
+like a daft quean at a waddin'.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Tod," says grandfaither, and passed the gless to Sandie.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, it's him," says Sandie.</p>
+
+<p>"Or ane in the likeness o' him,'' says grandfaither.</p>
+
+<p>"Sma' is the differ," quo' Sandie. "De'il or warlock, I'll try the gun
+at him," quo' he, and broucht up a fowling-piece that he aye carried, for
+Sandie was a notable famous shot in all that country.</p>
+
+<p>"Haud your hand, Sandie," says grandfaither; "we maun see clearer
+first," says he, "or this may be a dear day's wark to the baith of us."</p>
+
+<p>"Hout!" says Sandie, "this is the Lord's judgments surely, and be damned
+to it!" says he.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe ay, and maybe no," says my grandfaither, worthy man! "But have
+you a mind of the Procurator Fiscal, that I think ye'll have forgaithered
+wi' before," says he.</p>
+
+<p>This was ower true, and Sandie was a wee thing set ajee. "Aweel, Edie,"
+says he, "and what would be your way of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, just this," says grandfaither. "Let me that has the fastest boat
+gang back to North Berwick, and let you bide here and keep an eye on Thon.
+If I cannae find Lapraik, I'll join ye and the twa of us'll <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></a>[pg 188]</span>have a
+crack wi' him. But if Lapraik's at hame, I'll rin up the flag at the
+harbour, and ye can try Thon Thing wi' the gun."</p>
+
+<p>Aweel, so it was agreed between them twa. I was just a bairn, an' clum
+in Sandie's boat, whaur I thoucht I would see the best of the employ. My
+grandsire gied Sandie a siller tester to pit in his gun wi' the leid draps,
+bein' mair deidly again bogles. And then the ae boat set aff for North
+Berwick, an' the tither lay whaur it was and watched the wanchancy thing on
+the braeside.</p>
+
+<p>A' the time we lay there it lowped and flang and capered and span like a
+teetotum, and whiles we could hear it skelloch as it span. I hae seen
+lassies, the daft queans, that would lowp and dance a winter's nicht, and
+still be lowping and dancing when the winter's day cam in. But there would
+be folk there to hauld them company, and the lads to egg them on; and this
+thing was its lee-lane. And there would be a fiddler diddling his elbock in
+the chimney-side; and this thing had nae music but the skirling of the
+solans. And the lassies were bits o' young things wi' the reid life
+dinnling and stending in their members; and this was a muckle, fat, crieshy
+man, and him fa'n in the vale o' years. Say what ye like, I maun say what I
+believe. It was joy was in the creature's heart; the joy o' hell, I
+daursay: joy whatever. Mony a time I have askit mysel', why witches and
+warlocks should <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189"
+id="Page_189"></a>[pg 189]</span>sell their sauls (whilk are their maist
+dear possessions) and be auld, duddy, wrunkl't wives or auld, feckless,
+doddered men; and then I mind upon Tod Lapraik dancing a' they hours by his
+lane in the black glory of his heart. Nae doubt they burn for it in muckle
+hell, but they have a grand time here of it, whatever!--and the Lord forgie
+us!</p>
+
+<p>Weel, at the hinder end, we saw the wee flag yirk up to the mast-held
+upon the harbour rocks. That was a' Sandie waited for. He up wi' the gun,
+took a deleeberate aim, an' pu'd the trigger. There cam' a bang and then ae
+waefu' skirl frae the Bass. And there were we rubbin' our een and lookin'
+at ither like daft folk. For wi' the bang and the skirl the thing had clean
+disappeared. The sun glintit, the wund blew, and there was the bare yaird
+whaur the Wonder had been lowping and flinging but ae second syne.</p>
+
+<p>The hale way hame I roared and grat wi' the terror of that dispensation.
+The grawn folk were nane sae muckle better; there was little said in
+Sandie's boat but just the name of God; and when we won in by the pier, the
+harbour rocks were fair black wi' the folk waitin' us. It seems they had
+fund Lapraik in ane of his dwams, cawing the shuttle and smiling. Ae lad
+they sent to hoist the flag, and the rest abode there in the wabster's
+house. You may be sure they liked it little; but it was a means of grace to
+severals that stood there praying in to themsel's (for nane cared to pray
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></a>[pg
+190]</span>out loud) and looking on thon awesome thing as it cawed the
+shuttle. Syne, upon a suddenty, and wi' the ae driedfu' skelloch, Tod
+sprang up frae his hinderlands and fell forrit on the wab, a bluidy
+corp.</p>
+
+<p>When the corp was examined the leid draps hadnae played buff upon the
+warlock's body; sorrow a leid drap was to be fund; but there was
+grandfather's siller tester in the puddock's heart of him.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Andie had scarce done when there befell a mighty silly affair that had
+its consequence. Neil, as I have said, was himself a great narrator. I have
+heard since that he knew all the stories in the Highlands; and thought much
+of himself, and was thought much of by others, on the strength of it. Now
+Andie's tale reminded him of one he had already heard.</p>
+
+<p>"She would ken that story afore," he said. "She was the story of Uistean
+More M'Gillie Phadrig and the Gavar Vore."</p>
+
+<p>"It is no sic a thing," cried Andie. "It is the story of my faither (now
+wi' God) and Tod Lapraik. And the same in your beard," says he; "and keep
+the tongue of ye inside your Hielant chafts!"</p>
+
+<p>In dealing with Highlanders it will be found, and has been shown in
+history, how well it goes with Lowland gentlefolk; but the thing appears
+scarce feasible for Lowland commons. I had already remarked that Andie was
+continually on the point of quarrelling with <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></a>[pg 191]</span>our three Macgregors, and
+now, sure enough, it was to come.</p>
+
+<p>"Thir will be no words to use to shentlemans," says Neil.</p>
+
+<p>"Shentlemans!" cries Andie. "Shentlemans, ye hielant stot! If God would
+give ye the grace to see yoursel' the way that ithers see ye, ye would
+throw your denner up."</p>
+
+<p>There came some kind of a Gaelic oath from Neil, and the black knife was
+in his hand that moment.</p>
+
+<p>There was no time to think; and I caught the Highlander by the leg, and
+had him down, and his armed hand pinned out, before I knew what I was
+doing. His comrades sprang to rescue him, Andie and I were without weapons,
+the Gregara three to two. It seemed we were beyond salvation, when Neil
+screamed in his own tongue, ordering the others back, and made his
+submission to myself in a manner the most abject, even giving me up his
+knife which (upon a repetition of his promises) I returned to him on the
+morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Two things I saw plain: the first, that I must not build too high on
+Andie, who had shrunk against the wall and stood there, as pale as death,
+till the affair was over; the second, the strength of my own position with
+the Highlanders, who must have received extraordinary charges to be tender
+of my safety. But if I thought Andie came not very well out in courage, I
+had no fault to find with him upon the account of gratitude. It <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></a>[pg 192]</span>was not
+so much that he troubled me with thanks, as that his whole mind and manner
+appeared changed; and as he preserved ever after a great timidity of our
+companions, he and I were yet more constantly together.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></a>[pg
+193]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVI'></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MISSING WITNESS</h3>
+
+
+<p>On the seventeenth, the day I was trysted with the Writer, I had much
+rebellion against fate. The thought of him waiting in the <i>King's
+Arms</i>, and of what he would think, and what he would say when next we
+met, tormented and oppressed me. The truth was unbelievable, so much I had
+to grant, and it seemed cruel hard I should be posted as a liar and a
+coward, and have never consciously omitted what it was possible that I
+should do. I repeated this form of words with a kind of bitter relish, and
+re-examined in that light the steps of my behaviour. It seemed I had
+behaved to James Stewart as a brother might; all the past was a picture
+that I could be proud of, and there was only the present to consider. I
+could not swim the sea, nor yet fly in the air, but there was always Andie.
+I had done him a service, he liked me; I had a lever there to work on; if
+it were just for decency, I must try once more with Andie.</p>
+
+<p>It was late afternoon; there was no sound in all the Bass but the lap
+and bubble of a very quiet sea; and my four companions were all crept
+apart, the three <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194"
+id="Page_194"></a>[pg 194]</span>Macgregors higher on the rock, and Andie
+with his Bible to a sunny place among the ruins; there I found him in deep
+sleep, and, as soon as he was awake, appealed to him with some fervour of
+manner and a good show of argument.</p>
+
+<p>"If I thoucht it was to do guid to ye, Shaws!" said he, staring at me
+over his spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>"It's to save another," said I, "and to redeem my word. What would be
+more good than that? Do ye no mind the scripture, Andie? And you with the
+Book upon your lap! <i>What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole
+world?"</i></p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said he, "that's grand for you. But where do I come in? I have my
+word to redeem the same's yoursel'. And what are ye asking me to do, but
+just to sell it ye for siller?"</p>
+
+<p>"Andie! have I named the name of siller?" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, the name's naething," said he; "the thing is there, whatever. It
+just comes to this; if I am to service ye the way that you propose, I'll
+loss my lieihood. Then it's clear ye'll have to make it up to me, and a
+pickle mair, for your ain credit like. And what's that but just a bribe?
+And if even I was certain of the bribe! But by a' that I can learn, it's
+far frae that; and if <i>you</i> were to hang, where would <i>I</i> be? Na:
+the thing's no possible. And just awa' wi' ye like a bonny lad! and let
+Andie read his chapter."</p>
+
+<p>I remember I was at bottom a good deal gratified with <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></a>[pg 195]</span>this
+result; and the next humour I fell into was one (I had near said) of
+gratitude to Prestongrange, who had saved me, in this violent, illegal
+manner, out of the midst of my dangers, temptations, and perplexities. But
+this was both too flimsy and too cowardly to last me long, and the
+remembrance of James began to succeed to the possession of my spirits. The
+21st, the day set for the trial, I passed in such misery of mind as I can
+scarce recall to have endured, save perhaps upon Isle Earraid only. Much of
+the time I lay on a braeside betwixt sleep and waking, my body motionless,
+my mind full of violent thoughts. Sometimes I slept indeed; but the
+court-house of Inverary and the prisoner glancing on all sides to find his
+missing witness, followed me in slumber; and I would wake again with a
+start to darkness of spirit and distress of body. I thought Andie seemed to
+observe me, but I paid him little heed. Verily, my bread was bitter to me,
+and my days a burthen.</p>
+
+<p>Early the next morning (Friday, 22nd) a boat came with provisions, and
+Andie placed a packet in my hand. The cover was without address but sealed
+with a Government seal. It enclosed two notes. "Mr. Balfour can now see for
+himself it is too late to meddle. His conduct will be observed and his
+discretion rewarded." So ran the first, which seemed to be laboriously writ
+with the left hand. There was certainly nothing in these expressions to
+compromise the writer, even if that <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></a>[pg 196]</span>person could be found; the
+seal, which formidably served instead of signature, was affixed to a
+separate sheet on which there was no scratch of writing; and I had to
+confess that (so far) my adversaries knew what they were doing, and to
+digest as well as I was able the threat that peeped under the promise.</p>
+
+<p>But the second enclosure was by far the more surprising. It was in a
+lady's hand of writ. "<i>Maister Dauvit Balfour is informed a friend was
+speiring for him, and her eyes were of the grey</i>," it ran--and seemed so
+extraordinary a piece to come to my hands at such a moment and under cover
+of a Government seal, that I stood stupid. Catriona's grey eyes shone in my
+remembrance. I thought, with a bound of pleasure, she must be the friend.
+But who should the writer be, to have her billet thus enclosed with
+Prestongrange's? And of all wonders, why was it thought needful to give me
+this pleasing but most inconsequential intelligence upon the Bass? For the
+writer, I could hit upon none possible except Miss Grant. Her family, I
+remembered, had remarked on Catriona's eyes and even named her for their
+colour; and she herself had been much in the habit to address me with a
+broad pronunciation, by way of a sniff, I supposed, at my rusticity. No
+doubt, besides, but she lived in the same house as this letter came from.
+So there remained but one step to be accounted for; and that was how
+Prestongrange should have permitted her at all in an affair so secret, or
+let <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></a>[pg
+197]</span>her daft-like billet go in the same cover with his own. But even
+here I had a glimmering. For, first of all, there was something rather
+alarming about the young lady, and papa might be more under her domination
+than I knew. And second, there was the man's continual policy to be
+remembered, how his conduct had been continually mingled with caresses, and
+he had scarce ever, in the midst of so much contention, laid aside a mask
+of friendship. He must conceive that my imprisonment had incensed me.
+Perhaps this little jesting, friendly message was intended to disarm my
+rancour?</p>
+
+<p>I will be honest--and I think it did. I felt a sudden warmth towards
+that beautiful Miss Grant, that she should stoop to so much interest in my
+affairs. The summoning up of Catriona moved me of itself to milder and more
+cowardly counsels. If the Advocate knew of her and of our acquaintance--if
+I should please him by some of that "discretion" at which his letter
+pointed--to what might not this lead? <i>In vain is the net spread in the
+sight of any fowl</i>, the scripture says. Well, fowls must be wiser than
+folk! For I thought I perceived the policy, and yet fell in with it.</p>
+
+<p>I was in this frame, my heart beating, the grey eyes plain before me
+like two stars, when Andie broke in upon my musing.</p>
+
+<p>"I see ye hae gotten guid news," said he.</p>
+
+<p>I found him looking curiously in my face; with that, there came before
+me like a vision of James Stewart and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></a>[pg 198]</span>the court of Inverary; and
+my mind turned at once like a door upon its hinges. Trials, I reflected,
+sometimes draw out longer than is looked for. Even if I came to Inverary
+just too late, something might yet be attempted in the interests of
+James--and in those of my own character, the best would be accomplished. In
+a moment, it seemed without thought, I had a plan devised.</p>
+
+<p>"Andie," said I, "is it still to be to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>He told me nothing was changed.</p>
+
+<p>"Was anything said about the hour?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>He told me it was to be two o'clock afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>"And about the place?" I pursued.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatten place?" says Andie.</p>
+
+<p>"The place I'm to be landed at," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He owned there was nothing as to that.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then," I said, "this shall be mine to arrange. The wind is
+in the east, my road lies westward; keep your boat, I hire it; let us work
+up the Forth all day; and land me at two o'clock to-morrow at the westmost
+we'll can have reached."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye daft callant!" he cried, "ye would try for Inverary after a'!"</p>
+
+<p>"Just that, Andie," says I.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, ye're ill to beat!" says he. "And I was kind o' sorry for ye a'
+day yesterday," he added. "Ye see, I was never entirely sure till then,
+which way of it ye really wantit."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></a>[pg
+199]</span>Here was a spur to a lame horse!</p>
+
+<p>"A word in your ear, Andie," said I. "This plan of mine has another
+advantage yet. We can leave these Hielandmen behind us on the rock, and one
+of your boats from the Castleton can bring them off to-morrow. Yon Neil has
+a queer eye when he regards you; maybe, if I was once out of the gate there
+might be knives again; these red-shanks are unco grudgeful. And if there
+should come to be any question, here is your excuse. Our lives were in
+danger by these savages; being answerable for my safety, you chose the part
+to bring me from their neighbourhood and detain me the rest of the time on
+board your boat; and do you know, Andie?" says I, with a smile, "I think it
+was very wisely chosen."</p>
+
+<p>"The truth is I have nae goo for Neil," says Andie, "nor he for me, I'm
+thinking; and I would like ill to come to my hands wi' the man. Tam Anster
+will make a better hand of it with the cattle onyway." (For this man,
+Anster, came from Fife, where the Gaelic is still spoken.) "Ay, ay!" says
+Andie, "Tam'll can deal with them the best. And troth! the mair I think of
+it, the less I see what way we would be required. The place--ay, feggs!
+they had forgot the place. Eh, Shaws, ye're a lang-heided chield when ye
+like! Forby that I'm awing ye my life," he added, with more solemnity, and
+offered me his hand upon the bargain.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></a>[pg
+200]</span>Whereupon, with scarce more words, we stepped suddenly on board
+the boat, cast off, and set the lug. The Gregara were then busy upon
+breakfast, for the cookery was their usual part; but, one of them stepping
+to the battlements, our flight was observed before we were twenty fathoms
+from the rock; and the three of them ran about the ruins and the
+landing-shelf, for all the world like ants about a broken nest, hailing and
+crying on us to return. We were still in both the lee and the shadow of the
+rock, which last lay broad upon the waters, but presently came forth in
+almost the same moment into the wind and sunshine; the sail filled, the
+boat heeled to the gunwale, and we swept immediately beyond sound of the
+men's voices. To what terrors they endured upon the rock, where they were
+now deserted without the countenance of any civilised person or so much as
+the protection of a Bible, no limit can be set; nor had they any brandy
+left to be their consolation, for even in the haste and secrecy of our
+departure Andie had managed to remove it.</p>
+
+<p>It was our first care to set Anster ashore in a cove by the Glenteithy
+Rocks, so that the deliverance of our maroons might be duly seen to the
+next day. Thence we kept away up Firth. The breeze, which was then so
+spirited, swiftly declined, but never wholly failed us. All day we kept
+moving, though often not much more; and it was after dark ere we were up
+with the Queensferry. To keep the letter of Andie's engagement (or <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></a>[pg 201]</span>what
+was left of it) I must remain on board, but I thought no harm to
+communicate with the shore in writing. On Prestongrange's cover, where the
+Government seal must have a good deal surprised my correspondent, I writ,
+by the boat's lantern, a few necessary words, and Andie carried them to
+Rankeillor. In about an hour he came aboard again, with a purse of money
+and the assurance that a good horse should be standing saddled for me by
+two to-morrow at Clackmannan Pool. This done, and the boat riding by her
+stone anchor, we lay down to sleep under the sail.</p>
+
+<p>We were in the Pool the next day long ere two; and there was nothing
+left for me but sit and wait. I felt little alacrity upon my errand. I
+would have been glad of any passable excuse to lay it down; but none being
+to be found, my uneasiness was no less great than if I had been running to
+some desired pleasure. By shortly after one the horse was at the waterside,
+and I could see a man walking it to and fro till I should land, which
+vastly swelled my impatience. Andie ran the moment of my liberation very
+fine, showing himself a man of his bare word, but scarce serving his
+employers with a heaped measure; and by about fifty seconds after two I was
+in the saddle and on the full stretch for Stirling. In a little more than
+an hour I had passed that town, and was already mounting Alan Water side,
+when the weather broke in a small tempest. The rain blinded me, the wind
+had nearly beat me from the saddle, and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></a>[pg 202]</span>the first darkness of the
+night surprised me in a wilderness still some way east of Balwhidder, not
+very sure of my direction and mounted on a horse that began already to be
+weary.</p>
+
+<p>In the press of my hurry, and to be spared the delay and annoyance of a
+guide, I had followed (so far as it was possible for any horseman) the line
+of my journey with Alan. This I did with open eyes, foreseeing a great risk
+in it, which the tempest had now brought to a reality. The last that I knew
+of where I was, I think it must have been about Uam Var; the hour perhaps
+six at night. I must still think it great good fortune that I got about
+eleven to my destination, the house of Duncan Dhu. Where I had wandered in
+the interval perhaps the horse could tell. I know we were twice down, and
+once over the saddle and for a moment carried away in a roaring burn. Steed
+and rider were bemired up to the eyes.</p>
+
+<p>From Duncan I had news of the trial. It was followed in all these
+Highland regions with religious interest; news of it spread from Inverary
+as swift as men could travel; and I was rejoiced to learn that, up to a
+late hour that Saturday, it was not yet concluded; and all men began to
+suppose it must spread over to the Monday. Under the spur of this
+intelligence I would not sit to eat; but, Duncan having agreed to be my
+guide, took the road again on foot, with the piece in my hand and munching
+as I went. Duncan brought with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203"
+id="Page_203"></a>[pg 203]</span>him a flask of usquebaugh and a
+hand-lantern; which last enlightened us just so long as we could find
+houses where to rekindle it, for the thing leaked outrageously and blew out
+with every gust. The more part of the night we walked blindfold among
+sheets of rain, and day found us aimless on the mountains. Hard by we
+struck a hut on a burn-side, where we got a bite and a direction; and, a
+little before the end of the sermon, came to the kirk doors of
+Inverary.</p>
+
+<p>The rain had somewhat washed the upper parts of me, but I was still
+bogged as high as to the knees; I streamed water; I was so weary I could
+hardly limp, and my face was like a ghost's. I stood certainly more in need
+of a change of raiment and a bed to lie on, than of all the benefits in
+Christianity. For all which (being persuaded the chief point for me was to
+make myself immediately public) I set the door open, entered that church
+with the dirty Duncan at my tails, and finding a vacant place hard by, sat
+down.</p>
+
+<p>"Thirteenthly, my brethren, and in parenthesis, the law itself must be
+regarded as a means of grace," the minister was saying, in the voice of one
+delighting to pursue an argument.</p>
+
+<p>The sermon was in English on account of the assize. The judges were
+present with their armed attendants, the halberts glittered in a corner by
+the door, and the seats were thronged beyond custom with the array of
+lawyers. The text was in Romans 5th and 13th--the <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></a>[pg 204]</span>minister a skilled hand;
+and the whole of that able churchful--from Argyle, and my Lords Elchies and
+Kilkerran, down to the halbertmen that came in their attendance--was sunk
+with gathered brows in a profound critical attention. The minister himself
+and a sprinkling of those about the door observed our entrance at the
+moment and immediately forgot the same; the rest either did not hear or
+would not heed; and I sat there amongst my friends and enemies
+unremarked.</p>
+
+<p>The first that I singled out was Prestongrange. He sat well forward,
+like an eager horseman in the saddle, his lips moving with relish, his eyes
+glued on the minister: the doctrine was clearly to his mind. Charles
+Stewart, on the other hand, was half asleep, and looked harassed and pale.
+As for Symon Fraser, he appeared like a blot, and almost a scandal, in the
+midst of that attentive congregation, digging his hands in his pockets,
+shifting his legs, clearing his throat, rolling up his bald eyebrows and
+shooting out his eyes to right and left, now with a yawn, now with a secret
+smile. At times too, he would take the Bible in front of him, run it
+through, seem to read a bit, run it through again, and stop and yawn
+prodigiously: the whole as if for exercise.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of this restlessness his eye alighted on myself. He sat a
+second stupefied, than tore a half leaf out of the Bible, scrawled upon it
+with a pencil, and passed it with a whispered word to his next neighbor.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></a>[pg
+205]</span>The note came to Prestongrange, who gave me but the one look;
+thence it voyaged to the hands of Mr. Erskine; thence again to Argyle,
+where he sat between the other two lords of session, and his Grace turned
+and fixed me with an arrogant eye. The last of those interested to observe
+my presence was Charlie Stewart, and he too began to pencil and hand about
+despatches, none of which I was able to trace to their destination in the
+crowd.</p>
+
+<p>But the passage of these notes had aroused notice; all who were in the
+secret (or supposed themselves to be so) were whispering information--the
+rest questions; and the minister himself seemed quite discountenanced by
+the flutter in the church and sudden stir and whispering. His voice
+changed, he plainly faltered, nor did he again recover the easy conviction
+and full tones of his delivery. It would be a puzzle to him till his dying
+day, why a sermon that had gone with triumph through four parts, should
+thus miscarry in the fifth.</p>
+
+<p>As for me, I continued to sit there, very wet and weary, and a good deal
+anxious as to what should happen next, but greatly exulting in my
+success.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></a>[pg
+206]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVII'></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MEMORIAL</h3>
+
+
+<p>The last word of the blessing was scarce out of the minister's mouth
+before Stewart had me by the arm. We were the first to be forth of the
+church, and he made such extraordinary expedition that we were safe within
+the four walls of a house before the street had begun to be thronged with
+the home-going congregation.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I yet in time?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay and no," said he. "The case is over; the jury is enclosed, and will
+be so kind as let us ken their view of it to-morrow in the morning, the
+same as I could have told it my own self three days ago before the play
+began. The thing has been public from the start. The panel kent it, '<i>Ye
+may do what ye will for me</i>,' whispers he two days ago. '<i>I ken my
+fate by what the Duke of Argyle has just said to Mr. Macintosh</i>.' O,
+it's been a scandal!</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+The great Argyle he gaed before,<br />
+He gart the cannons and guns to roar,<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>and the very macer cried 'Cruachan!' But now that <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></a>[pg 207]</span>I have
+got you again I'll never despair. The oak shall go over the myrtle yet;
+we'll ding the Campbells yet in their own town. Praise God that I should
+see the day!"</p>
+
+<p>He was leaping with excitement, emptied out his mails upon the floor
+that I might have a change of clothes, and incommoded me with his
+assistance as I changed. What remained to be done, or how I was to do it,
+was what he never told me nor, I believe, so much as thought of. "We'll
+ding the Camphells yet!" that was still his overcome. And it was forced
+home upon my mind how this, that had the externals of a sober process of
+law, was in its essence a clan battle between savage clans. I thought my
+friend the Writer none of the least savage. Who, that had only seen him at
+a counsel's back before the Lord Ordinary or following a golf ball and
+laying down his clubs on Bruntsfield links, could have recognised for the
+same person this voluble and violent clansman?</p>
+
+<p>James Stewart's counsel were four in number--Sheriffs Brown of Colstoun
+and Miller, Mr. Robert Macintosh and Mr. Stewart younger of Stewart Hall.
+These were covenanted to dine with the Writer after sermon, and I was very
+obligingly included of the party. No sooner the cloth lifted, and the first
+bowl very artfully compounded by Sheriff Miller, than we fell to the
+subject in hand. I made a short narration of my seizure and captivity, and
+was then examined <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208"
+id="Page_208"></a>[pg 208]</span>and re-examined upon the circumstances of
+the murder. It will be remembered this was the first time I had had my say
+out, or the matter at all handled, among lawyers; and the consequence was
+very dispiriting to the others and (I must own) disappointing to
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>"To sum up," said Colstoun, "you prove that Alan was on the spot; you
+have heard him proffer menaces against Glenure; and though you assure us he
+was not the man who fired, you leave a strong impression that he was in
+league with him, and consenting, perhaps immediately assisting, in the act.
+You show him besides, at the risk of his own liberty, actively furthering
+the criminal's escape. And the rest of your testimony (so far as the least
+material) depends on the bare word of Alan or of James, the two accused. In
+short, you do not at all break, but only lengthen by one personage, the
+chain that binds our client to the murderer; and I need scarcely say that
+the introduction of a third accomplice rather aggravates that appearance of
+a conspiracy which has been our stumbling block from the beginning."</p>
+
+<p>"I am of the same opinion," said Sheriff Miller. "I think we may all be
+very much obliged to Prestongrange for taking a most uncomfortable witness
+out of our way. And chiefly, I think, Mr. Balfour himself might be obliged.
+For you talk of a third accomplice, but Mr. Balfour (in my view) has very
+much the appearance of a fourth."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></a>[pg
+209]</span>"Allow me, sirs!" interposed Stewart the Writer. "There is
+another view. Here we have a witness--never fash whether material or not--a
+witness in this cause, kidnapped by that old, lawless, bandit crew of the
+Glengyle Macgregors, and sequestered for near upon a month in a bourock of
+old cold ruins on the Bass. Move that and see what dirt you fling on the
+proceedings! Sirs, this is a tale to make the world ring with! It would be
+strange, with such a grip as this, if we couldnae squeeze out a pardon for
+my client."</p>
+
+<p>"And suppose we took up Mr. Balfour's cause to-morrow?" said Stewart
+Hall. "I am much deceived or we should find so many impediments thrown in
+our path, as that James should have been hanged before we had found a court
+to hear us. This is a great scandal, but I suppose we have none of us
+forgot a greater still, I mean the matter of the Lady Grange. The woman was
+still in durance; my friend Mr. Hope of Rankeillor did what was humanly
+possible; and how did he speed? He never got a warrant! Well, it'll be the
+same now; the same weapons will be used. This is a scene, gentlemen, of
+clan animosity. The hatred of the name which I have the honor to bear,
+rages in high quarters. There is nothing here to be viewed but naked
+Campbell spite and scurvy Campbell intrigue."</p>
+
+<p>You may be sure this was to touch a welcome topic, and I sat for some
+time in the midst of my learned <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210"
+id="Page_210"></a>[pg 210]</span>counsel, almost deaved with their talk but
+extremely little the wiser for its purport. The Writer was led into some
+hot expressions; Colstoun must take him up and set him right; the rest
+joined in on different sides, but all pretty noisy; the Duke of Argyle was
+beaten like a blanket; King George came in for a few digs in the by-going
+and a great deal of rather elaborate defence: and there was only one person
+that seemed to be forgotten, and that was James of the Glens.</p>
+
+<p>Through all this Mr. Miller sat quiet. He was a slip of an oldish
+gentleman, ruddy and twinkling; he spoke in a smooth rich voice, with an
+infinite effect of pawkiness, dealing out each word the way an actor does,
+to give the most expression possible; and even now, when he was silent, and
+sat there with his wig laid aside, his glass in both hands, his mouth
+funnily pursed, and his chin out, he seemed the mere picture of a merry
+slyness. It was plain he had a word to say, and waited for the fit
+occasion.</p>
+
+<p>It came presently. Colstoun had wound up one of his speeches with some
+expression of their duty to their client. His brother sheriff was pleased,
+I suppose, with the transition. He took the table in his confidence with a
+gesture and a look.</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour006"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour006.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: THERE IS NOTHING HERE TO BE VIEWED BUT NAKED
+CAMPBELL SPITE AND SCURVY CAMPBELL INTRIGUE" src="images/balfour006sm.jpg" height="558" width="387" /></a>
+<br />THERE IS NOTHING HERE TO BE VIEWED BUT NAKED CAMPBELL SPITE AND SCURVY
+CAMPBELL INTRIGUE
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+<p>"That suggests to me a consideration which seems overlooked," said he.
+"The interest of our client goes certainly before all, but the world does
+not come to an end with James Stewart." Whereat he cocked his eye. <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></a>[pg 211]</span>"I
+might condescend, <i>exempli gratia</i>, upon a Mr. George Brown, a Mr.
+Thomas Miller, and a Mr. David Balfour. Mr. David Balfour has a very good
+ground of complaint, and I think, gentlemen--if his story was properly red
+out--I think there would be a number of wigs on the green."</p>
+
+<p>The whole table turned to him with a common movement.</p>
+
+<p>"Properly handled and carefully red out, his is a story that could
+scarcely fail to have some consequence," he continued. "The whole
+administration of justice, from its highest officer downward, would be
+totally discredited; and it looks to me as if they would need to be
+replaced." He seemed to shine with cunning as he said it. "And I need not
+point out to ye that this of Mr. Balfour's would be a remarkable bonny
+cause to appear in," he added.</p>
+
+<p>Well, there they all were started on another hare; Mr. Balfour's cause,
+and what kind of speeches could be there delivered, and what officials
+could be thus turned out, and who would succeed to their positions. I shall
+give but the two specimens. It was proposed to approach Symon Fraser, whose
+testimony, if it could be obtained, could prove certainly fatal to Argyle
+and Prestongrange. Miller highly approved of the attempt. "We have here
+before us a dreeping roast," said he, "here is cut-and-come-again for all."
+And methought all licked their lips. The other was already near the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212"></a>[pg 212]</span>end.
+Stewart the Writer was out of the body with, delight, smelling vengeance on
+his chief enemy, the Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," cried he, charging his glass, "here is to Sheriff Miller.
+His legal abilities are known to all. His culinary, this bowl in front of
+us is here to speak for. But when it comes to the poleetical!"--cries he,
+and drains the glass.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but it will hardly prove politics in your meaning, my friend," said
+the gratified Miller. "A revolution, if you like, and I think I can promise
+you that historical writers shall date from Mr. Balfour's cause. But
+properly guided, Mr. Stewart, tenderly guided, it shall prove a peaceful
+revolution."</p>
+
+<p>"And if the damned Campbells get their ears rubbed, what care I?" cries
+Stewart, smiting down his fist.</p>
+
+<p>It will be thought I was not very well pleased with all this, though I
+could scarce forbear smiling at a kind of innocency in these old
+intriguers. But it was not my view to have undergone so many sorrows for
+the advancement of Sheriff Miller or to make a revolution in the Parliament
+House: and I interposed accordingly with as much simplicity of manner as I
+could assume.</p>
+
+<p>"I have to thank you, gentlemen, for your advice," said I. "And now I
+would like, by your leave, to set you two or three questions. There is one
+thing that has fallen rather on one side, for instance: Will this cause do
+any good to our friend James of the Glens?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></a>[pg
+213]</span>They seemed all a hair set back, and gave various answers, but
+concurring practically in one point, that James had now no hope but in the
+King's mercy.</p>
+
+<p>"To proceed, then," said I, "will it do any good to Scotland? We have a
+saying that it is an ill bird that fouls his own nest. I remember hearing
+we had a riot in Edinburgh when I was an infant child, which gave occasion
+to the late Queen to call this country barbarous; and I always understood
+that we had rather lost than gained by that. Then came the year
+'Forty-five, which made Scotland to be talked of everywhere; but I never
+heard it said we had anyway gained by the 'Forty-five. And now we come to
+this cause of Mr. Balfour's, as you call it. Sheriff Miller tells us
+historical writers are to date from it, and I would not wonder. It is only
+my fear they would date from it as a period of calamity and public
+reproach."</p>
+
+<p>The nimble-witted Miller had already smelt where I was travelling to,
+and made haste to get on the same road. "Forcibly put, Mr. Balfour," says
+he. "A weighty observe, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"We have next to ask ourselves if it will be good for King George," I
+pursued. "Sheriff Miller appears pretty easy upon this; but I doubt you
+will scarce be able to pull down the house from under him, without his
+Majesty coming by a knock or two, one of which might easily prove
+fatal."</p>
+
+<p>I gave them a chance to answer, but none volunteered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></a>[pg
+214]</span>"Of those for whom the case was to be profitable," I went on,
+"Sheriff Miller gave us the names of several, among the which he was good
+enough to mention mine. I hope he will pardon me if I think otherwise. I
+believe I hung not the least back in this affair while there was life to be
+saved; but I own I thought myself extremely hazarded, and I own I think it
+would be a pity for a young man, with some idea of coming to the bar, to
+ingrain upon himself the character of a turbulent, factious fellow before
+he was yet twenty. As for James, it seems--at this date of the proceedings,
+with the sentence as good as pronounced--he has no hope but in the King's
+mercy. May not his Majesty, then, be more pointedly addressed, the
+characters of these high officers sheltered from the public, and myself
+kept out of a position which I think spells ruin for me?"</p>
+
+<p>They all sat and gazed into their glasses, and I could see they found my
+attitude on the affair unpalatable. But Miller was ready at all events.</p>
+
+<p>"If I may be allowed to put our young friend's notion in more formal
+shape," says he, "I understand him to propose that we should embody the
+fact of his sequestration, and perhaps some heads of the testimony he was
+prepared to offer, in a memorial to the Crown. This plan has elements of
+success. It is as likely as any other (and perhaps likelier) to help our
+client. Perhaps his Majesty would have the goodness to feel a certain
+gratitude to all concerned in such a memorial, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></a>[pg 215]</span>which might be construed
+into an expression of a very delicate loyalty; and I think, in the drafting
+of the same, this view might be brought forward."</p>
+
+<p>They all nodded to each other, not without sighs, for the former
+alternative was doubtless more after their inclination.</p>
+
+<p>"Paper then, Mr. Stewart, if you please," pursued Miller; "and I think
+it might very fittingly be signed by the five of us here present, as
+procurators for the 'condemned man.'"</p>
+
+<p>"It can do none of us any harm at least," says Colstoun, heaving another
+sigh, for he had seen himself Lord Advocate the last ten minutes.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon they set themselves, not very enthusiastically, to draft the
+memorial--a process in the course of which they soon caught fire; and I had
+no more ado but to sit looking on and answer an occasional question. The
+paper was very well expressed; beginning with a recitation of the facts
+about myself, the reward offered for my apprehension, my surrender, the
+pressure brought to bear upon me; my sequestration; and my arrival at
+Inverary in time to be too late; going on to explain the reasons of loyalty
+and public interest for which it was agreed to waive any right of action;
+and winding up with a forcible appeal to the King's mercy on behalf of
+James.</p>
+
+<p>Methought I was a good deal sacrificed, and rather represented in the
+light of a firebrand of a fellow whom <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></a>[pg 216]</span>my cloud of lawyers had
+restrained with difficulty from extremes. But I let it pass, and made but
+the one suggestion, that I should be described as ready to deliver my own
+evidence and adduce that of others before any commission of inquiry--and
+the one demand, that I should be immediately furnished with a copy.</p>
+
+<p>Colstoun hummed and hawed. "This is a very confidential document," said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"And my position towards Prestongrange is highly peculiar," I replied.
+"No question but I must have touched his heart at our first interview, so
+that he has since stood my friend consistently. But for him, gentlemen, I
+must now be lying dead or awaiting my sentence alongside poor James. For
+which reason I choose to communicate to him the fact of this memorial as
+soon as it is copied. You are to consider also that this step will make for
+my protection. I have enemies here accustomed to drive hard; his Grace is
+in his own country, Lovat by his side; and if there should hang any
+ambiguity over our proceedings, I think I might very well awake in
+gaol."</p>
+
+<p>Not finding any very ready answer to these considerations, my company of
+advisers were at the last persuaded to consent, and made only this
+condition that I was to lay the paper before Prestongrange with the express
+compliments of all concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The Advocate was at the castle dining with his Grace. By the hand of one
+of Colstoun's servants I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217"
+id="Page_217"></a>[pg 217]</span>sent him a billet asking for an interview,
+and received a summons to meet him at once in a private house of the town.
+Here I found him alone in a chamber; from his face there was nothing to be
+gleaned; yet I was not so unobservant but what I spied some halberts in the
+hall, and not so stupid but what I could gather he was prepared to arrest
+me there and then, should it appear advisable.</p>
+
+<p>"So, Mr. David, this is you?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Where I fear I am not overly welcome, my lord," said I. "And I would
+like before I go further to express my sense of your lordship's continued
+good offices, even should they now cease."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard of your gratitude before," he replied drily, "and I think
+this can scarce be the matter you called me from my wine to listen to. I
+would remember also, if I were you, that you still stand on a very boggy
+foundation."</p>
+
+<p>"Not now, my lord, I think," said I; "and if your lordship will but
+glance an eye along this, you will perhaps think as I do."</p>
+
+<p>He read it sedulously through, frowning heavily; then turned back to one
+part and another which he seemed to weigh and compare the effect of. His
+face a little lightened.</p>
+
+<p>"This is not so bad but what it might be worse," said he; "though I am
+still likely to pay dear for my acquaintance with Mr. David Balfour."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></a>[pg
+218]</span>"Rather for your indulgence to that unlucky young man, my lord,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>He still skimmed the paper, and all the while his spirits seemed to
+mend.</p>
+
+<p>"And to whom am I indebted for this?" he asked presently. "Other
+counsels must have been discussed, I think. Who was it proposed this
+private method? Was it Miller?"</p>
+
+<p>"My lord, it was myself," said I. "These gentlemen have shown me no such
+consideration, as that I should deny myself any credit I can fairly claim,
+or spare them any responsibility they should properly bear. And the mere
+truth is, that they were all in favour of a process which should have
+remarkable consequences in the Parliament House, and prove for them (in one
+of their own expressions) a dripping roast. Before I intervened, I think
+they were on the point of sharing out the different law appointments. Our
+friend Mr. Symon was to be taken in upon some composition."</p>
+
+<p>Prestongrange smiled. "These are our friends!" said he. "And what were
+your reasons for dissenting, Mr. David?"</p>
+
+<p>I told them without concealment, expressing, however, with more force
+and volume those which regarded Prestongrange himself.</p>
+
+<p>"You do me no more than justice," said he. "I have fought as hard in
+your interest as you have fought <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219"
+id="Page_219"></a>[pg 219]</span>against mine. And how came you here
+to-day?" he asked. "As the case drew out, I began to grow uneasy that I had
+clipped the period so fine, and I was even expecting you to-morrow. But
+to-day--I never dreamed of it."</p>
+
+<p>I was not, of course, going to betray Andie.</p>
+
+<p>"I suspect there is some very weary cattle by the road," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"If I had known you were such a mosstrooper you should have tasted
+longer of the Bass," says he.</p>
+
+<p>"Speaking of which, my lord, I return your letter." And I gave him the
+enclosure in the counterfeit hand.</p>
+
+<p>"There was the cover also with the seal," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I have it not," said I. "It bore naught but the address, and could not
+compromise a cat. The second enclosure I have, and with your permission, I
+desire to keep it."</p>
+
+<p>I thought he winced a little, but he said nothing to the point.
+"To-morrow," he resumed, "our business here is to be finished, and I
+proceed by Glasgow. I would be very glad to have you of my party, Mr.
+David."</p>
+
+<p>"My lord...." I began.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not deny it will be of service to me," he interrupted. "I desire
+even that, when we shall come to Edinburgh you should alight at my house.
+You have very warm friends in the Miss Grants, who will be overjoyed to
+have you to themselves. If you think <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></a>[pg 220]</span>I have been of use to you,
+you can thus easily repay me, and so far from losing, may reap some
+advantage by the way. It is not every strange young man who is presented in
+society by the King's Advocate."</p>
+
+<p>Often enough already (in our brief relations) this gentleman had caused
+my head to spin; no doubt but what for a moment he did so again now. Here
+was the old fiction still maintained of my particular favour with his
+daughters, one of whom had been so good as laugh at me, while the other two
+had scarce deigned to remark the fact of my existence. And now I was to
+ride with my lord to Glascow; I was to dwell with him in Edinburgh; I was
+to be brought into society under his protection! That he should have so
+much good-nature as to forgive me was surprising enough; that he could wish
+to take me up and serve me seemed impossible; and I began to seek for some
+ulterior meaning. One was plain. If I became his guest, repentance was
+excluded; I could never think better of my present design and bring any
+action. And besides, would not my presence in his house draw out the whole
+pungency of the memorial? For that complaint could not be very seriously
+regarded, if the person chiefly injured was the guest of the official most
+incriminated. As I thought upon this, I could not quite refrain from
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"This is in the nature of a countercheck to the memorial?" said I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221"></a>[pg
+221]</span>"You are cunning, Mr. David," said he, "and you do not wholly
+guess wrong; the fact will be of use to me in my defence. Perhaps, however,
+you underrate my friendly sentiments, which are perfectly genuine. I have a
+respect for you, Mr. David, mingled with awe," says he, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"I am more than willing, I am earnestly desirous to meet your wishes,"
+said I. "It is my design to be called to the bar, where your lordship's
+countenance would be invaluable; and I am besides sincerely grateful to
+yourself and family for different marks of interest and of indulgence. The
+difficulty is here. There is one point in which we pull two ways. You are
+trying to hang James Stewart, I am trying to save him. In so far as my
+riding with you would better your lordship's defence, I am at your
+lordship's orders; but in so far as it would help to hang James Stewart,
+you see me at a stick."</p>
+
+<p>I thought he swore to himself. "You should certainly be called; the bar
+is the true scene for your talents," says he, bitterly, and then fell a
+while silent. "I will tell you," he presently resumed, "there is no
+question of James Stewart, for or against. James is a dead man; his life is
+given and taken--bought (if you like it better) and sold; no memorial can
+help--no defalcation of a faithful Mr. David hurt him. Blow high, blow low,
+there will be no pardon for James Stewart: and take that for said! The
+question is now <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222"
+id="Page_222"></a>[pg 222]</span>of myself: am I to stand or fall? and I do
+not deny to you that I am in some danger. But will Mr. David Balfour
+consider why? It is not because I have pushed the case unduly against
+James; for that, I am sure of condonation. And it is not because I have
+sequestered Mr. David on a rock, though it will pass under that colour; but
+because I did not take the ready and plain path, to which I was pressed
+repeatedly, and send Mr. David to his grave or to the gallows. Hence the
+scandal--hence this damned memorial," striking the paper on his leg. "My
+tenderness for you has brought me in this difficulty. I wish to know if
+your tenderness to your own conscience is too great to let you help me out
+of it?"</p>
+
+<p>No doubt but there was much of the truth in what he said; if James was
+past helping, whom was it more natural that I should turn to help than just
+the man before me, who had helped myself so often, and was even now setting
+me a pattern of patience? I was besides not only weary, but beginning to be
+ashamed of my perpetual attitude of suspicion and refusal.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will name the time and place, I will be punctually ready to
+attend your lordship," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He shook hands with me. "And I think my misses have some news for you,"
+says he, dismissing me.</p>
+
+<p>I came away, vastly pleased to have my peace made, yet a little
+concerned in conscience; nor could I help wondering, as I went back,
+whether, perhaps, I had <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223"
+id="Page_223"></a>[pg 223]</span>not been a scruple too good-natured. But
+there was the fact, that this was a man that might have been my father, an
+able man, a great dignitary, and one that, in the hour of my need, had
+reached a hand to my assistance. I was in the better humour to enjoy the
+remainder of that evening, which I passed with the advocates, in excellent
+company no doubt, but perhaps with rather more than a sufficiency of punch:
+for though I went early to bed I have no clear mind of how I got there.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224"></a>[pg
+224]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVIII'></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE TEE'D BALL</h3>
+
+
+<p>On the morrow, from the justices' private room, where none could see me,
+I heard the verdict given in and judgment rendered upon James. The Duke's
+words I am quite sure I have correctly; and since that famous passage has
+been made a subject of dispute, I may as well commemorate my version.
+Having referred to the year '45, the chief of the Campbells, sitting as
+Justice-General upon the bench, thus addressed the unfortunate Stewart
+before him: "If you had been successful in that rebellion, you might have
+been giving the law where you have now received the judgment of it; we, who
+are this day your judges, might have been tried before one of your mock
+courts of judicature; and then you might have been satiated with the blood
+of any name or clan to which you had an aversion."</p>
+
+<p>"This is to let the cat out of the bag, indeed," thought I. And that was
+the general impression. It was extraordinary how the young advocate lads
+took hold and made a mock of this speech, and how scarce a meal passed but
+what some one would get in the words: "And then you might have been
+satiated." Many <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225"
+id="Page_225"></a>[pg 225]</span>songs were made in that time for the
+hour's diversion, and are near all forgot. I remember one began:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+What do ye want the bluid of, bluid of?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is it a name, or is it a clan,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or is it an aefauld Hielandman,<br />
+That ye want the bluid of, bluid of?<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Another went to my old favourite air, <i>The House of Airlie</i>, and
+began thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+It fell on a day when Argyle was on the bench,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That they served him a Stewart for his denner.<br
+/>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And one of the verses ran:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+Then up and spak the Duke, and flyted on his cook,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I regaird it as a sensible aspersion,<br />
+That I would sup ava', an' satiate my maw,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With the bluid of ony clan of my aversion.<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>James was as fairly murdered as though the Duke had got a fowling-piece
+and stalked him. So much of course I knew: but others knew not so much, and
+were more affected by the items of scandal that came to light in the
+progress of the cause. One of the chief was certainly this sally of the
+justice's. It was run hard by another of a juryman, who had struck into the
+midst of Colstoun's speech for the defence with a "Pray, sir, cut it short,
+we are quite weary," which seemed the very excess of impudence and
+simplicity. But some of my new lawyer friends were still more staggered
+with an innovation that had disgraced and even vitiated the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></a>[pg
+226]</span>proceedings. One witness was never called. His name, indeed, was
+printed, where it may still be seen on the fourth page of the list: "James
+Drummond, <i>alias</i> Macgregor, <i>alias</i> James More, late tenant in
+Inveronachile"; and his precognition had been taken, as the manner is, in
+writing. He had remembered or invented (God help him) matter which was lead
+in James Stewart's shoes, and I saw was like to prove wings to his own.
+This testimony it was highly desirable to bring to the notice of the jury,
+without exposing the man himself to the perils of cross-examination; and
+the way it was brought about was a matter of surprise to all. For the paper
+was handed round (like a curiosity) in court; passed through the jury-box,
+where it did its work; and disappeared again (as though by accident) before
+it reached the counsel for the prisoner. This was counted a most insidious
+device; and that the name of James More should be mingled up with it filled
+me with shame for Catriona and concern for myself.</p>
+
+<p>The following day, Prestongrange and I, with a considerable company, set
+out for Glasgow, where (to my impatience) we continued to linger some time
+in a mixture of pleasure and affairs. I lodged with my lord, with whom I
+was encouraged to familiarity; had my place at entertainments; was
+presented to the chief guests; and altogether made more of than I thought
+accorded either with my parts or station; so that, on strangers being
+present, I would often blush for Prestongrange. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></a>[pg 227]</span>It must be owned the view
+I had taken of the world in these last months was fit to cast a gloom upon
+my character. I had met many men, some of them leaders in Israel whether by
+their birth or talents; and who among them all had shown clean hands? As
+for the Browns and Millers, I had seen their self-seeking, I could never
+again respect them. Prestongrange was the best yet; he had saved me, had
+spared me rather, when others had it in their minds to murder me outright;
+but the blood of James lay at his door; and I thought his present
+dissimulation with myself a thing below pardon. That he should affect to
+find pleasure in my discourse almost surprised me out of my patience. I
+would sit and watch him with a kind of a slow fire of anger in my bowels.
+"Ah, friend, friend," I would think to myself, "if you were but through
+with this affair of the memorial, would you not kick me in the streets?"
+Here I did him, as events have proved, the most foul injustice; and I think
+he was at once far more sincere, and a far more artful performer than I
+supposed.</p>
+
+<p>But I had some warrant for my incredulity in the behaviour of that court
+of young advocates that hung about him in the hope of patronage. The sudden
+favour of a lad not previously heard of troubled them at first out of
+measure; but two days were not gone by before I found myself surrounded
+with flattery and attention. I was the same young man, and neither <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></a>[pg 228]</span>better
+nor bonnier, that they had rejected a month before; and now there was no
+civility too fine for me! The same, do I say? It was not so; and the byname
+by which I went behind my back confirmed it. Seeing me so firm with the
+Advocate, and persuaded that I was to fly high and far, they had taken a
+word from the golfing green, and called me <i>the Tee'd Ball</i>.<sup><a
+href="#fn14" name="rfn14">[14]</a></sup> I was told I was now "one of
+themselves"; I was to taste of their soft lining, who had already made my
+own experience of the roughness of the outer husk; and the one, to whom I
+had been presented in Hope Park, was so assured as even to remind me of
+that meeting. I told him I had not the pleasure of remembering it.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," says he, "it was Miss Grant herself presented me! My name is
+so-and-so."</p>
+
+<p>"It may very well be, sir," said I, "but I have kept no mind of it."</p>
+
+<p>At which he desisted; and in the midst of the disgust that commonly
+overflowed my spirits I had a glisk of pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>But I have not patience to dwell upon that time at length. When I was in
+company with these young politics I was borne down with shame for myself
+and my own plain ways, and scorn for them and their duplicity. Of the two
+evils, I thought Prestongrange to be the least; and while I was always as
+stiff as buckram to the young bloods, I made rather a dissimulation <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></a>[pg 229]</span>of my
+hard feelings towards the Advocate, and was (in old Mr. Campbell's word)
+"soople to the laird." Himself commented on the difference, and bid me be
+more of my age, and make friends with my young comrades.</p>
+
+<p>I told him I was slow of making friends.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take the word back," said he. "But there is such a thing as
+<i>Fair gude e'en and fair gude day</i>, Mr. David. These are the same
+young men with whom you are to pass your days and get through life: your
+backwardness has a look of arrogance; and unless you can assume a little
+more lightness of manner, I fear you will meet difficulties in the
+path."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be an ill job to make a silk purse of a sow's ear," said I.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of October 1st I was awakened by the clattering in of an
+express; and getting to my window almost before he had dismounted, I saw
+the messenger had ridden hard. Somewhile after I was called to
+Prestongrange, where he was sitting in his bedgown and nightcap, with his
+letters around him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. David," said he, "I have a piece of news for you. It concerns some
+friends of yours, of whom I sometimes think you are a little ashamed, for
+you have never referred to their existence."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I blushed.</p>
+
+<p>"I see you understand, since you make the answering signal," said he.
+"And I must compliment you on your excellent taste in beauty. But do you
+know, Mr. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></a>[pg
+230]</span>David, this seems to me a very enterprising lass? She crops up
+from every side. The Government of Scotland appears unable to proceed for
+Mistress Katrine Drummond, which was somewhat the case (no great while
+back) with a certain Mr. David Balfour. Should not these make a good match?
+Her first intromission in politics--but I must not tell you that story, the
+authorities have decided you are to hear it otherwise and from a livelier
+narrator. This new example is more serious, however; and I am afraid I must
+alarm you with the intelligence that she is now in prison."</p>
+
+<p>I cried out.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said he, "the little lady is in prison. But I would not have you
+to despair. Unless you (with your friends and memorials) shall procure my
+downfall, she is to suffer nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"But what has she done? What is her offence?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"It might be almost construed a high treason," he returned, "for she has
+broke the King's Castle of Edinburgh."</p>
+
+<p>"The lady is much my friend," I said. "I know you would not work me if
+the thing were serious."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet it is serious in a sense," said he; "for this rogue of a
+Katrine--or Cateran, as we may call her--has set adrift again upon the
+world that very doubtful character, her papa."</p>
+
+<p>Here was one of my previsions justified: James <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></a>[pg 231]</span>More was once again at
+liberty. He had lent his men to keep me a prisoner; he had volunteered his
+testimony in the Appin case, and the same (no matter by what subterfuge)
+had been employed to influence the jury. Now came his reward, and he was
+free. It might please the authorities to give to it the colour of an
+escape; but I knew better--I knew it was the fulfilment of a bargain. The
+same course of thought relieved me of the least alarm for Catriona. She
+might be thought to have broke prison for her father; she might have
+believed so herself. But the chief hand in the whole business was that of
+Prestongrange; and I was sure, so far from letting her come to punishment,
+he would not suffer her to be even tried. Whereupon thus came out of me the
+not very politic ejaculation:</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! I was expecting that!"</p>
+
+<p>"You have at times a great deal of discretion too!" says
+Prestongrange.</p>
+
+<p>"And what is my lord pleased to mean by that?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was just marvelling," he replied, "that being so clever as to draw
+these inferences, you should not be clever enough to keep them to yourself.
+But I think you would like to hear the details of the affair. I have
+received two versions: and the least official is the more full and far the
+more entertaining, being from the lively pen of my eldest daughter. 'Here
+is all the town bizzing with a fine piece of work,' she writes, 'and <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></a>[pg 232]</span>what
+would make the thing more noted (if it were only known) the malefactor is a
+<i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;e</i> of his lordship my papa. I am sure your heart
+is too much in your duty (if it were nothing else) to have forgotten Grey
+Eyes. What does she do, but get a broad hat with the flaps open, a long
+hairy-like man's great-coat, and a big gravatt; kilt her coats up to
+<i>Gude kens whaur</i>, clap two pair of boot-hose upon her legs, take a
+pair of <i>clouted brogues</i><sup><a href="#fn15"
+name="rfn15">[15]</a></sup> in her hand, and off to the Castle? Here she
+gives herself out to be a soutar<sup><a href="#fn16"
+name="rfn16">[16]</a></sup> in the employ of James More, and gets admitted
+to his cell, the lieutenant (who seems to have been full of pleasantry)
+making sport among his soldiers of the soutar's great-coat. Presently they
+hear disputation and the sound of blows inside. Out flies the cobbler, his
+coat flying, the flaps of his hat beat about his face, and the lieutenant
+and his soldiers mock at him as he runs off. They laughed not so hearty the
+next time they had occasion to visit the cell, and found nobody but a tall,
+pretty, grey-eyed lass in the female habit! As for the cobbler, he was
+"over the hills ayont Dumblane," and it's thought that poor Scotland will
+have to console herself without him. I drank Catriona's health this night
+in public. Indeed, the whole town admires her; and I think the beaux would
+wear bits of her garters in their button-holes if they could only get them.
+I would have gone to visit her in prison too, only I remembered <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></a>[pg 233]</span>in time
+I was papa's daughter; so I wrote her a billet instead, which I entrusted
+to the faithful Doig, and I hope you will admit I can be political when I
+please. The same faithful gomeral is to despatch this letter by the express
+along with those of the wiseacres, so that you may hear Tom Fool in company
+with Solomon. Talking of <i>gomerals</i>, do tell <i>Dauvit Balfour</i>. I
+would I could see the face of him at the thought of a long-legged lass in
+such a predicament! to say nothing of the levities of your affectionate
+daughter, and his respectful friend.' So my rascal signs herself!"
+continued Prestongrange. "And you see, Mr. David, it is quite true what I
+tell you, that my daughters regard you with the most affectionate
+playfulness."</p>
+
+
+<p>"The gomeral is much obliged," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And was not this prettily done?" he went on. "Is not this Highland maid
+a piece of a heroine?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was always sure she had a great heart," said I. "And I wager she
+guessed nothing.... But I beg your pardon, this is to tread upon forbidden
+subjects."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go bail she did not," he returned, quite openly. "I will go bail
+she thought she was flying straight into King George's face."</p>
+
+<p>Remembrance of Catriona, and the thought of her lying in captivity,
+moved me strangely. I could see that even Prestongrange admired, and could
+not withhold his lips from smiling when he considered her behaviour. As for
+Miss Grant, for all her ill habit of <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></a>[pg 234]</span>mockery, her admiration
+shone out plain. A kind of a heat came on me.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not your lordship's daughter..." I began.</p>
+
+<p>"That I know of!" he put in smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"I speak like a fool," said I, "or rather I began wrong. It would
+doubtless be unwise in Mistress Grant to go to her in prison; but for me, I
+think I would look like a half-hearted friend if I did not fly there
+instantly."</p>
+
+<p>"So-ho, Mr. David," says he, "I thought that you and I were in a
+bargain?"</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," I said, "when I made that bargain I was a good deal affected
+by your goodness, but I'll never can deny that I was moved besides by my
+own interest. There was self-seeking in my heart, and I think shame of it
+now. It may be for your lordship's safety to say this fashious Davie
+Balfour is your friend and housemate. Say it then; I'll never contradict
+you. But as for your patronage, I give it all back. I ask but the one
+thing--let me go, and give me a pass to see her in her prison."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me with a hard eye. "You put the cart before the horse, I
+think," says he. "That which I had given was a portion of my liking, which
+your thankless nature does not seem to have remarked. But for my patronage,
+it is not given, nor (to be exact) is it yet offered." He paused a bit.
+"And I warn you, you do not know yourself," he added. "Youth is a <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235"></a>[pg 235]</span>hasty
+season; you will think better of all this before a year."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I would like to be that kind of youth!" I cried. "I have seen
+too much of the other party, in these young advocates that fawn upon your
+lordship and are even at the pains to fawn on me. And I have seen it in the
+old ones also. They are all for by-ends, the whole clan of them! It's this
+that makes me seem to misdoubt your lordship's liking. Why would I think
+that you would like me? But ye told me yourself ye had an interest!"</p>
+
+<p>I stopped at this, confounded that I had run so far; he was observing me
+with a unfathomable face.</p>
+
+<p>"My lord, I ask your pardon," I resumed. "I have nothing in my chafts
+but a rough country tongue. I think it would be only decent-like if I would
+go to see my friend in her captivity; but I'm owing you my life, I'll never
+forget that; and-if it's for your lordship's good, here I'll stay. That's
+barely gratitude."</p>
+
+<p>"This might have been reached in fewer words," says Prestongrange,
+grimly. "It is easy, and it is at times gracious, to say a plain Scots
+'ay'."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but, my lord, I think ye take me not yet entirely!" cried I. "For
+<i>your</i> sake, for my life-safe, and the kindness that ye say ye bear to
+me--for these, I'll consent; but not for any good that might be coming to
+myself. If I stand aside when this young maid <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></a>[pg 236]</span>is in her trial, it's a
+thing I will be noways advantaged by; I will lose by it, I will never gain.
+I would rather make a shipwreck wholly than to build on that
+foundation."</p>
+
+<p>He was a minute serious, then smiled. "You mind me of the man with the
+long nose," said he: "was you to look at the moon by a telescope, you would
+see David Balfour there! But you shall have your way of it. I will ask at
+you one service, and then set you free. My clerks are overdriven; be so
+good as copy me these few pages," says he, visibly swithering among some
+huge rolls of manuscripts, "and when that is done, I shall bid you God
+speed! I would never charge myself with Mr. David's conscience; and if you
+could cast some part of it (as you went by) in a moss hag, you would find
+yourself to ride much easier without it."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not just entirely in the same direction though, my lord!" says
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"And you shall have the last word, too!" cries he gaily.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed he had some cause for gaiety, having now found the means to gain
+his purpose. To lessen the weight of the memorial, or to have a readier
+answer at his hand, he desired I should appear publicly in the character of
+his intimate. But if I were to appear with the same publicity as a visitor
+to Catriona in her prison the world would scarce stint to draw conclusions,
+and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237"></a>[pg
+237]</span>the true nature of James More's escape must become evident to
+all. This was the little problem I had set him of a sudden, and to which he
+had so briskly found an answer. I was to be tethered in Glasgow by that job
+of copying, which in mere outward decency I could not well refuse; and
+during these hours of my employment Catriona was privately got rid of. I
+think shame to write of this man that loaded me with so many goodnesses. He
+was kind to me as any father, yet I ever thought him as false as a cracked
+bell.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238"></a>[pg
+238]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIX'></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h3>I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES</h3>
+
+
+<p>The copying was a weary business, the more so as I perceived very early
+there was no sort of urgency in the matters treated, and began very early
+to consider my employment a pretext. I had no sooner finished, than I got
+to horse, used what remained of daylight to the best purpose, and being at
+last fairly benighted, slept in a house by Almond-Water side. I was in the
+saddle again before the day, and the Edinburgh booths were just opening
+when I clattered in by the West Bow and drew up a smoking horse at my lord
+Advocate's door. I had a written word for Doig, my lord's private hand that
+was thought to be in all his secrets, a worthy, little plain man, all fat
+and snuff and self-sufficiency. Him I found already at his desk and already
+bedabbled with maccabaw, in the same anteroom where I rencountered with
+James More. He read the note scrupulously through like a chapter in his
+Bible.</p>
+
+<p>"H'm," says he, "ye come a wee thing ahint-hand, Mr. Balfour. The bird's
+flaen, we hae letten her out."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Drummond is set free?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></a>[pg
+239]</span>"Achy!" said he. "What would we keep her for, ye ken? To hae
+made a steer about the bairn would hae pleased naebody."</p>
+
+<p>"And where'll she be now?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"Gude kens!" says Doig, with a shrug.</p>
+
+<p>"She'll have gone home to Lady Allardyce, I'm thinking," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"That'll be it," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll gang there straight," says I.</p>
+
+<p>"But ye'll be for a bite or ye go?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither bite nor sup," said I. "I had a good waucht of milk in by
+Ratho."</p>
+
+<p>"Aweel, aweel," says Doig. "But ye'll can leave your horse here and your
+bags, for it seems we're to have your up-put."</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na," said I. "Tamson's mear<sup><a href="#fn17"
+name="rfn17">[17]</a></sup> would never be the thing for me, this day of
+all days."</p>
+
+<p>Doig speaking somewhat broad, I had been led by imitation into an accent
+much more countrified than I was usually careful to affect, a good deal
+broader indeed than I have written it down; and I was the more ashamed when
+another voice joined in behind me with a scrap of a ballad:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"Gae saddle me the bonny black,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gae saddle sune and mak' him ready,<br />
+For I will down the Gatehope-slack,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And a' to see my bonny leddy."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></a>[pg
+240]</span>The young lady, when I turned to her, stood in a morning gown,
+and her hands muffled in the same, as if to hold me at a distance. Yet I
+could not but think there was kindness in the eye with which she saw
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"My best respects to you, Mistress Grant," said I bowing.</p>
+
+<p>"The like to yourself, Mr. David," she replied, with a deep courtesy,
+"And I beg to remind you of an old musty saw, that meat and mass never
+hindered man. The mass I cannot afford you, for we are all good
+Protestants. But the meat I press on your attention. And I would not wonder
+but I could find something for your private ear that would be worth the
+stopping for."</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress Grant," said I, "I believe I am already your debtor for some
+merry words--and I think they were kind too--on a piece of unsigned
+paper."</p>
+
+<p>"Unsigned paper?" says she, and made a droll face, which was likewise
+wondrous beautiful, as of one trying to remember.</p>
+
+<p>"Or else I am the more deceived," I went on. "But to be sure, we shall
+have the time to speak of these, since your father is so good as to make me
+for a while your inmate; and the <i>gomeral</i> begs you at this time only
+for the favour of his liberty."</p>
+
+<p>"You give yourself hard names," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Doig and I would be blythe to take harder at your clever pen," says
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"Once more I have to admire the discretion of all <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></a>[pg
+241]</span>men-folk," she replied. "But if you will not eat, off with you
+at once; you will be back the sooner, for you go on a fool's errand. Off
+with you, Mr. David," she continued, opening the door.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"He has lowpen on his bonny grey,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He rade the richt gate and the ready;<br />
+I trow he would neither stint nor stay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Far he was seeking his bonny leddy."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I did not wait to be twice bidden, and did justice to Miss Grant's
+citation on the way to Dean.</p>
+
+<p>Old Lady Allardyce walked there alone in the garden, in her hat and
+mutch, and having a silver-mounted staff of some black wood to lean upon.
+As I alighted from my horse, and drew near to her with <i>congees</i>, I
+could see the blood come in her face, and her head fling into the air like
+what I had conceived of empresses.</p>
+
+<p>"What brings you to my poor door?" she cried, speaking high through her
+nose. "I cannot bar it. The males of my house are dead and buried; I have
+neither son nor husband to stand in the gate for me; any beggar can pluck
+me by the baird<sup><a href="#fn18" name="rfn18">[18]</a></sup>--and a
+baird there is, and that's the worst of it yet!" she added, partly to
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>I was extremely put out at this reception, and the last remark, which
+seemed like a daft wife's, left me near hand speechless.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></a>[pg
+242]</span>"I see I have fallen under your displeasure, ma'am," said I.
+"Yet I will still be so bold as ask after Mistress Drummond."</p>
+
+<p>She considered me with a burning eye, her lips pressed close together
+into twenty creases, her hand shaking on her staff. "This cows all!" she
+cried. "Ye come to me to spier for her! Would God I knew!"</p>
+
+<p>"She is not here?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>She threw up her chin and made a step and a cry at me, so that I fell
+back incontinent.</p>
+
+<p>"Out upon your leeing throat!" she cried. "What! ye come and spier at
+me! She's in jyle, whaur ye took her to--that's all there is to it. And of
+a' the beings ever I beheld in breeks, to think it should be you! Ye timmer
+scoun'rel, if I had a male left to my name I would have your jaicket dustit
+till ye raired."</p>
+
+<p>I thought it not good to delay longer in that place because I remarked
+her passion to be rising. As I turned to the horse-post she even followed
+me; and I make no shame to confess that I rode away with the one stirrup on
+and scrambling for the other.</p>
+
+<p>As I knew no other quarter where I could push my inquiries, there was
+nothing left me but to return to the Advocate's. I was well received by the
+four ladies, who were now in company together, and must give the news of
+Prestongrange and what word went in the west country, at the most
+inordinate length and with great <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243"
+id="Page_243"></a>[pg 243]</span>weariness to myself; while all the time
+that young lady, with whom I so much desired to be alone again, observed me
+quizzically and seemed to find pleasure in the sight of my impatience. At
+last, after I had endured a meal with them, and was come very near the
+point of appealing for an interview before her aunt, she went and stood by
+the music case, and picking out a tune, sang to it on a high key--"He that
+will not when he may, When he will he shall have nay." But this was the end
+of her rigours, and presently, after making some excuse of which I have no
+mind, she carried me away in private to her father's library. I should not
+fail to say that she was dressed to the nines, and appeared extraordinary
+handsome.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Mr. David, sit ye down here and let us have a two-handed crack,"
+said she. "For I have much to tell you, and it appears besides that I have
+been grossly unjust to your good taste."</p>
+
+<p>"In what manner, Mistress Grant?" I asked. "I trust I have never seemed
+to fail in due respect."</p>
+
+<p>"I will be your surety, Mr. David," said she. "Your respect, whether to
+yourself or your poor neighbours, has been always and most fortunately
+beyond imitation. But that is by the question. You got a note from me?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was so bold as to suppose so upon inference," said I, "and it was
+kindly thought upon."</p>
+
+<p>"It must have prodigiously surprised you," said she. <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244"></a>[pg 244]</span>"But
+let us begin with the beginning. You have not perhaps forgot a day when you
+were so kind as to escort three very tedious misses to Hope Park? I have
+the less cause to forget it myself, because you was so particular obliging
+as to introduce me to some of the principles of the Latin grammar, a thing
+which wrote itself profoundly on my gratitude."</p>
+
+<p>"I fear I was sadly pedantical," said I, overcome with confusion at the
+memory. "You are only to consider I am quite unused with the society of
+ladies."</p>
+
+<p>"I will say the less about the grammar then," she replied. "But how came
+you to desert your charge? 'He has thrown her out, overboard, his ain dear
+Annie!'" she hummed; "and his ain dear Annie and her two sisters had to
+taigle home by theirselves like a string of green geese! It seems you
+returned to my papa's, where you showed yourself excessively martial, and
+then on to realms unknown, with an eye (it appears) to the Bass Rock; solan
+geese being perhaps more to your mind than bonny lasses."</p>
+
+<p>Through all this raillery there was something indulgent in the lady's
+eye which made me suppose there might be better coming.</p>
+
+<p>"You take a pleasure to torment me," said I, "and I make a very feckless
+plaything; but let me ask you to be more merciful. At this time there is
+but the one thing that I care to hear of, and that will be news of
+Catriona."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245"></a>[pg
+245]</span>"Do you call her by that name to her face, Mr. Balfour?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"In troth, and I am not very sure," I stammered.</p>
+
+<p>"I would not do so in any case to strangers," said Miss Grant. "And why
+are you so much immersed in the affairs of this young lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"I heard she was in prison," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and now you hear that she is out of it," she replied, "and what
+more would you have? She has no need of any further champion."</p>
+
+<p>"I may have the greater need of her, ma'am," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, this is better!" says Miss Grant. "But look me fairly in the
+face; am I not bonnier than she?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would be the last to be denying it," said I. "There is not your
+marrow in all Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, here you have the pick of the two at your hand, and must needs
+speak of the other," said she. "This is never the way to please the ladies,
+Mr. Balfour."</p>
+
+<p>"But, mistress," said I, "there are surely other things besides mere
+beauty."</p>
+
+<p>"By which I am to understand that I am no better than I should be,
+perhaps?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"By which you will please understand that I am like the cock in the
+midden in the fable book," said I. "I see the braw jewel--and I like fine
+to see it too--but I have more need of the pickle corn."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246"></a>[pg
+246]</span>"Bravissimo!" she cried. "There is a word well said at last, and
+I will reward you for it with my story. That same night of your desertion I
+came late from a friend's house--where I was excessively admired, whatever
+you may think of it--and what should I hear but that a lass in a tartan
+screen desired to speak with me? She had been there an hour or better, said
+the servant-lass, and she grat in to herself as she sat waiting. I went to
+her direct; she rose as I came in, and I knew her at a look. '<i>Grey
+Eyes!</i>' says I to myself, but was more wise than to let on. <i>You will
+be Miss Grant at last?</i> she says, rising and looking at me hard and
+pitiful. <i>Ay, it was true he said, you are bonny at all events.--The way
+God made me, my dear</i>, I said, <i>but I would be gey and obliged if ye
+could tell me what brought you here at such a time of the night--Lady</i>,
+she said, <i>we are kinsfolk, we are both come of the blood of the sons of
+Alpin.--My dear</i>, I replied, <i>I think no more of Alpin or his sons
+than what I do of a kale-stock. You have a better argument in these tears
+upon your bonny face</i>. And at that I was so weakminded as to kiss her,
+which is what you would like to do dearly, and I wager will never find the
+courage of. I say it was weakminded of me, for I knew no more of her than
+the outside; but it was the wisest stroke I could have hit upon. She is a
+very staunch, brave nature, but I think she has been little used with
+tenderness; and at that caress (though to say the truth, it was but <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247"></a>[pg 247]</span>lightly
+given) her heart went out to me. I will never betray the secrets of my sex,
+Mr. Davie; I will never tell you the way she turned me round her thumb,
+because it is the same she will use to twist yourself. Ay, it is a fine
+lass! She is as clean as hill well water."</p>
+
+<p>"She is e'en't!" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, she told me her concerns," pursued Miss Grant, "and in what
+a swither she was in about her papa, and what a taking about yourself, with
+very little cause, and in what a perplexity she had found herself after you
+was gone away. <i>And then I minded at long last,</i> says she, <i>that we
+were kinswomen, and that Mr. David should have given you the name of the
+bonniest of the bonny, and I was thinking to myself 'If she is so bonny she
+will be good at all events; and I took up my foot soles out of that</i>.
+That was when I forgave yourself, Mr. Davie. When you was in my society,
+you seemed upon hot iron; by all marks, if ever I saw a young man that
+wanted to be gone, it was yourself, and I and my two sisters were the
+ladies you were so desirous to be gone from; and now it appeared you had
+given me some notice in the bygoing, and was so kind as to comment on my
+attractions! From that hour you may date our friendship, and I began to
+think with tenderness upon the Latin grammar."</p>
+
+<p>"You will have many hours to rally me in," said I, "and I think besides
+you do yourself injustice, I think <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248"
+id="Page_248"></a>[pg 248]</span>it was Catriona turned your heart in my
+direction, she is too simple to perceive as you do the stiffness of her
+friend."</p>
+
+<p>"I would not like to wager upon that, Mr. David," said she. "The lasses
+have clear eyes. But at least she is your friend entirely, as I was to see.
+I carried her in to his lordship my papa; and his Advocacy, being in a
+favourable stage of claret, was so good as to receive the pair of us.
+<i>Here is Grey Eyes that you have been deaved with these days past</i>,
+said I, <i>she is come to prove that we spoke true, and I lay the prettiest
+lass in the three Lothians at your feet</i>--making a papistical
+reservation of myself. She suited her action to my words; down she went
+upon her knees to him--I would not like to swear but he saw two of her,
+which doubtless made her appeal the more irresistible, for you are all a
+pack of Mahomedans--told him what had passed that night, and how she had
+withheld her father's man from following of you, and what a case she was in
+about her father, and what a flutter for yourself; and begged with weeping
+for the lives of both of you (neither of which was in the slightest danger)
+till I vow I was proud of my sex because it was done so pretty, and ashamed
+for it because of the smallness of the occasion. She had not gone far, I
+assure you, before the Advocate was wholly sober, to see his inmost
+politics ravelled out by a young lass and discovered to the most unruly of
+his daughters. But we took him in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249"
+id="Page_249"></a>[pg 249]</span>hand, the pair of us, and brought that
+matter straight. Properly managed--and that means managed by me--there is
+no one to compare with my papa."</p>
+
+<p>"He has been a good man to me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he was a good man to Katrine, and I was there to see to it," said
+she.</p>
+
+<p>"And she pled for me!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"She did that, and very movingly," said Miss Grant. "I would not like to
+tell you what she said, I find you vain enough already."</p>
+
+<p>"God reward her for it!" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"With Mr. David Balfour, I suppose?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>"You do me too much injustice at the last!" I cried. "I would tremble to
+think of her in such hard hands. Do you think I would presume, because she
+begged my life? She would do that for a new whelped puppy! I have had more
+than that to set me up, if you but ken'd. She kissed that hand of mine. Ay,
+but she did. And why? because she thought I was playing a brave part and
+might be going to my death. It was not for my sake, but I need not be
+telling that to you that cannot look at me without laughter. It was for the
+love of what she thought was bravery. I believe there is none but me and
+poor Prince Charlie had that honour done them. Was this not to make a god
+of me? and do you not think my heart would quake when I remember it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do laugh at you a good deal, and a good deal <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_250" id="Page_250"></a>[pg 250]</span>more than is quite civil,"
+said she; "but I will tell you one thing: if you speak to her like that,
+you have some glimmerings of a chance."</p>
+
+<p>"Me?" I cried, "I would never dare. I can speak to you, Miss Grant,
+because it's a matter of indifference what ye think of me. But her? no
+fear!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you have the largest feet in all broad Scotland," says she.</p>
+
+<p>"Troth, they are no very small," said I, looking down.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, poor Catriona!" cried Miss Grant.</p>
+
+<p>And I could but stare upon her; for though I now see very well what she
+was driving at (and perhaps some justification for the same), I was never
+swift at the uptake in such flimsy talk.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah well, Mr. David," she said, "it goes sore against my conscience, but
+I see I shall have to be your speaking board. She shall know you came to
+her straight upon the news of her imprisonment; she shall know you would
+not pause to eat; and of your conversation she shall hear just so much as I
+think convenient for a maid of her age and inexperience. Believe me, you
+will be in that way much better served than you could serve yourself, for I
+will keep the big feet out of the platter."</p>
+
+<p>"You know where she is, then?" I exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"That I do, Mr. David, and will never tell," said she.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251"></a>[pg
+251]</span>"Why that?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, "I am a good friend, as you will soon discover; and
+the chief of those that I am a friend to is my papa. I assure you, you will
+never heat nor melt me out of that, so you may spare me your sheep's eyes;
+and adieu to your David-Balfourship for the now."</p>
+
+<p>"But there is yet one thing more," I cried. "There is one thing that
+must be stopped, being mere ruin to herself, and to me too."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, "be brief, I have spent half the day on you
+already."</p>
+
+<p>"My Lady Allardyce believes," I began, "she supposes--she thinks that I
+abducted her."</p>
+
+<p>The colour came into Miss Grant's face, so that at first I was quite
+abashed to find her ear so delicate, till I bethought me she was struggling
+rather with mirth, a notion in which I was altogether confirmed by the
+shaking of her voice as she replied--</p>
+
+<p>"I will take up the defence of your reputation," said she. "You may
+leave it in my hands."</p>
+
+<p>And with that she withdrew out of the library.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252"></a>[pg
+252]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XX'></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<h3>I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY</h3>
+
+
+<p>For about exactly two months I remained a guest in Prestongrange's
+family, where I bettered my acquaintance with the bench, the bar, and the
+flower of Edinburgh company. You are not to suppose my education was
+neglected, on the contrary I was kept extremely busy. I studied the French,
+so as to be more prepared to go to Leyden; I set myself to the fencing, and
+wrought hard, sometimes three hours in the day, with notable advancement;
+at the suggestion of my cousin, Pilrig, who was an apt musician, I was put
+to a singing class, and by the orders of my Miss Grant, to one for the
+dancing, at which. I must say I proved far from ornamental. However, all
+were good enough to say it gave me an address a little more genteel; and
+there is no question but I learned to manage my coat skirts and sword with
+more dexterity, and to stand in a room as though the same belonged to me.
+My clothes themselves were all earnestly re-ordered; and the most trifling
+circumstance, such as where I should tie my hair, or the colour of my
+ribbon, debated among the three misses like a thing of weight. One way with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253"></a>[pg
+253]</span>another, no doubt I was a good deal improved to look at, and
+acquired a bit of a modish air that would have surprised the good folks at
+Essendean.</p>
+
+<p>The two younger misses were very willing to discuss a point of my
+habiliment, because that was in the line of their chief thoughts. I cannot
+say that they appeared any other way conscious of my presence; and though
+always more than civil, with a kind of heartless cordiality, could not hide
+how much I wearied them. As for the aunt, she was a wonderful still woman;
+and I think she gave me much the same attention as she gave the rest of the
+family, which was little enough. The eldest daughter and the Advocate
+himself were thus my principal friends, and our familiarity was much
+increased by a pleasure that we took in common. Before the court met we
+spent a day or two at the house of Grange, living very nobly with an open
+table, and here it was that we three began to ride out together in the
+fields, a practice afterwards maintained in Edinburgh, so far as the
+Advocate's continual affairs permitted. When we were put in a good frame by
+the briskness of the exercise, the difficulties of the way, or the
+accidents of bad weather, my shyness wore entirely off; we forgot that we
+were strangers, and speech not being required, it flowed the more naturally
+on. Then it was that they had my story from me, bit by bit, from the time
+that I left Essendean, with my voyage and battle in the <i>Covenant</i>,
+wanderings in the heather, etc.; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254"
+id="Page_254"></a>[pg 254]</span>and from the interest they found in my
+adventures sprung the circumstance of a jaunt we made a little later on, a
+day when the courts were not sitting, and of which I will tell a trifle
+more at length.</p>
+
+<p>We took horse early, and passed first by the house of Shaws, where it
+stood smokeless in a great field of white frost, for it was yet early in
+the day. Here Prestongrange alighted down, gave me his horse, and proceeded
+alone to visit my uncle. My heart, I remember, swelled up bitter within me
+at the sight of that bare house and the thought of the old miser sitting
+chittering within in the cold kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>"There is my home," said I. "And my family."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor David Balfour!" said Miss Grant.</p>
+
+<p>What passed during the visit I have never heard; but it would doubtless
+not be very agreeable to Ebenezer; for when the Advocate came forth again
+his face was dark.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you will soon be the laird indeed, Mr. Davie," says he, turning
+half about with the one foot in the stirrup.</p>
+
+<p>"I will never pretend sorrow," said I; and, to say the truth, during his
+absence Miss Grant and I had been embellishing the place in fancy with
+plantations, parterres, and a terrace, much as I have since carried out in
+fact.</p>
+
+<p>Thence we pushed to the Queensferry, where Rankeillor gave us a good
+welcome, being indeed out of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255"
+id="Page_255"></a>[pg 255]</span>body to receive so great a visitor. Here
+the Advocate was so unaffectedly good as to go quite fully over my affairs,
+sitting perhaps two hours with the Writer in his study, and expressing (I
+was told) a great esteem for myself and concern for my fortunes. To while
+this time, Miss Grant and I and young Rankeillor took boat and passed the
+Hope to Limekilns. Rankeillor made himself very ridiculous (and, I thought
+offensive) with his admiration for the young lady, and to my wonder (only
+it is so common a weakness of her sex) she seemed, if anything, to be a
+little gratified. One use it had: for when we were come to the other side,
+she laid her commands on him to mind the boat, while she and I passed a
+little further to the ale-house. This was her own thought, for she had been
+taken with my account of Alison Hastie, and desired to see the lass
+herself. We found her once more alone--indeed, I believe her father wrought
+all day in the fields--and she curtsied dutifully to the gentry-folk and
+the beautiful young lady in the riding coat.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this all the welcome I am to get?" said I, holding out my hand. "And
+have you no more memory of old friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"Keep me! wha's this of it?" she cried, and then, "God's truth, it's the
+tautit<sup><a href="#fn19" name="rfn19">[19]</a></sup> laddie!"</p>
+
+<p>"The very same," says I.</p>
+
+<p>"Mony's the time I've thocht upon you and your <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_256" id="Page_256"></a>[pg 256]</span>freen, and blythe am I to
+see in your braws,"<sup><a href="#fn20" name="rfn20">[20]</a></sup> she
+cried. "Though I kent ye were come to your ain folk by the grand present
+that ye sent me and that I thank ye for with a' my heart."</p>
+
+<p>"There," said Miss Grant to me, "run out by with ye, like a good bairn.
+I didnae come here to stand and hand a candle; it's her and me that are to
+crack."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose she stayed ten minutes in the house, but when she came forth I
+observed two things--that her eyes were reddened, and a silver brooch was
+gone out of her bosom. This very much affected me.</p>
+
+<p>"I never saw you so well adorned," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"O Davie man, dinna be a pompous gowk!" said she, and was more than
+usually sharp to me the remainder of the day.</p>
+
+<p>About candlelight we came home from this excursion.</p>
+
+<p>For a good while I heard nothing further of Catriona: my Miss Grant
+remaining quite impenetrable, and stopping my mouth with pleasantries. At
+last, one day that she returned from walking and found me alone in the
+parlour over my French, I thought there was something unusual in her looks;
+the colour heightened, the eyes sparkling high, and a bit of a smile
+continually bitten in as she regarded me. She seemed indeed like the very
+spirit of mischief, and walking briskly in the room, had soon involved me
+in a kind of quarrel over nothing and (at the least) with nothing intended
+on my <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257"></a>[pg
+257]</span>side. I was like Christian in the slough; the more I tried to
+clamber out upon the side, the deeper I became involved; until at last I
+heard her declare, with a great deal of passion, that she would take that
+answer at the hands of none, and I must down upon my knees for pardon.</p>
+
+<p>The causelessness of all this fuff stirred my own bile. "I have said
+nothing you can properly object to," said I, "and as for my knees, that is
+an attitude I keep for God."</p>
+
+<p>"And as a goddess I am to be served!" she cried, shaking her brown locks
+at me and with a bright colour. "Every man that comes within waft of my
+petticoats shall use me so!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will go so far as ask your pardon for the fashion's sake, although I
+vow I know not why," I replied. "But for these play-acting postures, you
+can go to others."</p>
+
+<p>"O Davie!" she said. "Not if I was to beg you?"</p>
+
+<p>I bethought me I was fighting with a woman, which is the same as to say
+a child, and that upon a point entirely formal.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it a bairnly thing," I said, "not worthy in you to ask, or me
+to render. Yet I will not refuse you, neither," said I; "and the stain, if
+there be any, rests with yourself." And at that I kneeled fairly down.</p>
+
+<p>"There!" she cried. "There is the proper station, there is where I have
+been manoeuvring to bring you." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258"
+id="Page_258"></a>[pg 258]</span>And then, suddenly, "Kep,"<sup><a
+href="#fn21" name="rfn21">[21]</a></sup> said she, flung me a folded
+billet, and ran from the apartment laughing.</p>
+
+<p>The billet had neither place nor date. "Dear Mr. David," it began, "I
+get your news continually by my cousin, Miss Grant, and it is a pleisand
+hearing. I am very well, in a good place, among good folk, but necessitated
+to be quite private, though I am hoping that at long last we may meet
+again. All your friendships have been told me by my loving cousin, who
+loves us both. She bids me to send you this writing, and oversees the same.
+I will be asking you to do all her commands, and rest your affectionate
+friend, Catriona Macgregor-Drummond. P.S.--Will you not see my cousin,
+Allardyce?"</p>
+
+<p>I think it not the least brave of my campaigns (as the soldiers say)
+that I should have done as I was here bidden and gone forthright to the
+house by Dean. But the old lady was now entirely changed and supple as a
+glove. By what means Miss Grant had brought this round I could never guess;
+I am sure at least, she dared not to appear openly in the affair, for her
+papa was compromised in it pretty deep. It was he, indeed, who had
+persuaded Catriona to leave, or rather, not to return, to her cousin's,
+placing her instead with a family of Gregorys, decent people, quite at the
+Advocate's disposition, and in whom she might have the more confidence
+because they were of her own clan and family. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_259" id="Page_259"></a>[pg 259]</span>These kept her private
+till all was ripe, heated and helped her to attempt her father's rescue,
+and after she was discharged from prison received her again into the same
+secrecy. Thus Prestongrange obtained and used his instrument; nor did there
+leak out the smallest word of his acquaintance with the daughter of James
+More. There was some whispering, of course, upon the escape of that
+discredited person; but the Government replied by a show of rigour, one of
+the cell porters was flogged, the lieutenant of the guard (my poor friend,
+Duncansby) was broken of his rank, and as for Catriona, all men were well
+enough pleased that her fault should be passed by in silence.</p>
+
+<p>I could never induce Miss Grant to carry back an answer. "No," she would
+say, when I persisted, "I am going to keep the big feet out of the
+platter." This was the more hard to bear, as I was aware she saw my little
+friend many times in the week, and carried her my news whenever (as she
+said) I "had behaved myself." At last she treated me to what she called an
+indulgence, and I thought rather more of a banter. She was certainly a
+strong, almost a violent friend, to all she liked; chief among whom was a
+certain frail old gentlewoman, very blind, and very witty, who dwelt in the
+top of a tall land on a strait close, with a nest of linnets in a cage, and
+thronged all day with visitors. Miss Grant was very fond to carry me there
+and put me to entertain her friend with the narrative of my misfortunes;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></a>[pg
+260]</span>and Miss Tibbie Ramsay (that was her name) was particular kind,
+and told me a great deal that was worth knowledge of old folks and past
+affairs in Scotland. I should say that from her chamber window, and not
+three feet away, such is the straitness of that close, it was possible to
+look into a barred loophole lighting the stairway of the opposite
+house.</p>
+
+<p>Here, upon some pretext, Miss Grant left me one day alone with Miss
+Ramsay. I mind I thought that lady inattentive and like one preoccupied. I
+was besides yery uncomfortable, for the window, contrary to custom, was
+left open and the day was cold. All at once the voice of Miss Grant sounded
+in my ears as from a distance.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Shaws!" she cried, "keek out of the window and see what I have
+broughten you."</p>
+
+<p>I think it was the prettiest sight that ever I beheld; the well of the
+close was all in clear shadow where a man could see distinctly, the walls
+very black and dingy; and there from the barred loophole I saw two faces
+smiling across at me--Miss Grant's and Catriona's.</p>
+
+<p>"There!" says Miss Grant, "I wanted her to see you in your braws like
+the lass of Limekilns. I wanted her to see what I could make of you, when I
+buckled to the job in earnest!"</p>
+
+<p>It came in my mind she had been more than common particular that day
+upon my dress: and I think that some of the same care had been bestowed
+upon Catriona. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261"
+id="Page_261"></a>[pg 261]</span>For so merry and sensible a lady, Miss
+Grant was certainly wonderful taken up with duds.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona!" was all I could get out.</p>
+
+<p>As for her, she said nothing in the world, but only waved her hand and
+smiled to me, and was suddenly carried away again from before the
+loophole.</p>
+
+<p>The vision was no sooner lost than I ran to the house door, where I
+found I was locked in; thence back to Miss Ramsay, crying for the key, but
+might as well have cried upon the castle rock. She had passed her word, she
+said, and I must be a good lad. It was impossible to burst the door, even
+if it had been mannerly; it was impossible I should leap from the window,
+being seven storeys above ground. All I could do was to crane over the
+close and watch for their reappearance from the stair. It was little to
+see, being no more than the tops of their two heads each on a ridiculous
+bobbin of skirts, like to a pair of pincushions. Nor did Catriona so much
+as look up for a farewell; being prevented (as I heard afterwards) by Miss
+Grant, who told her folk were never seen to less advantage than from above
+downward.</p>
+
+<p>On the way home, as soon as I was set free, I upbraided Miss Grant with
+her cruelty.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry you was disappointed," says she demurely. "For my part I was
+very pleased. You looked better than I dreaded; you looked--if it will not
+make you vain--a mighty pretty young man when you appeared <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262"></a>[pg 262]</span>in the
+window. You are to remember that she could not see your feet," says she,
+with the manner of one reassuring me.</p>
+
+<p>"O!" cried I, "leave my feet be, they are no bigger than my
+neighbor's."</p>
+
+<p>"They are even smaller than some," said she, "but I speak in parables
+like a Hebrew prophet."</p>
+
+<p>"I marvel little they were sometimes stoned!" says I. "But you miserable
+girl, how could you do it? Why should you care to tantalise me with a
+moment?"</p>
+
+<p>"Love is like folk," says she, "it needs some kind of vivers."<sup><a
+href="#fn22" name="rfn22">[22]</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>"O, Barbara, let me see her properly!" I pleaded. "<i>You</i> can, you
+see her when you please; let me have half an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it that is managing this love affair? You? Or me?" she asked,
+and as I continued to press her with my instances, fell back upon a deadly
+expedient: that of imitating the tones of my voice when I called on
+Catriona by name; with which, indeed, she held me in subjection for some
+days to follow.</p>
+
+<p>There was never the least word heard of the memorial, or none by me.
+Prestongrange and his grace the Lord President may have heard of it (for
+what I know) on the deafest sides of their heads; they kept it to
+themselves, at least; the public was none the wiser; and in course of time,
+on November 8th, and in the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263"
+id="Page_263"></a>[pg 263]</span>midst of a prodigious storm of wind and
+rain, poor James of the Glens was duly hanged at Lettermore by
+Balachulish.</p>
+
+<p>So there was the final upshot of my politics! Innocent men have perished
+before James, and are like to keep on perishing (in spite of all our
+wisdom) till the end of time. And till the end of time, young folk (who are
+not yet used with the duplicity of life and men) will struggle as I did,
+and make heroical resolves, and take long risks; and the course of events
+will push them upon the one side and go on like a marching army. James was
+hanged; and here was I dwelling in the house of Prestongrange, and grateful
+to him for his fatherly attention. He was hanged; and behold! When I met
+Mr. Symon in the causeway, I was fain to pull off my beaver to him like a
+good little boy before his dominie. He had been hanged by fraud and
+violence, and the world wagged along, and there was not a pennyweight of
+difference; and the villains of that horrid plot were decent, kind,
+respectable fathers of families, who went to kirk and took the
+sacrament!</p>
+
+<p>But I had had my view of that detestable business they call politics--I
+had seen it from behind, when it is all bones and blackness; and I was
+cured for life of any temptations to take part in it again. A plain, quiet,
+private path was that which I was ambitious to walk in, when I might keep
+my head out of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264"
+id="Page_264"></a>[pg 264]</span>way of dangers and my conscience out of
+the road of temptation. For, upon a retrospect, it appeared I had not done
+so grandly, after all; but with the greatest possible amount of big speech
+and preparation, had accomplished nothing.</p>
+
+<p>The 25th of the same month, a ship was advertised to sail from Leith;
+and I was suddenly recommended to make up my mails for Leyden. To
+Prestongrange I could, of course, say nothing; for I had already been a
+long while sorning on his house and table. But with his daughter I was more
+open, bewailing my fate that I should be sent out of the country, and
+assuring her, unless she should bring me to farewell with Catriona, I would
+refuse at the last hour.</p>
+
+<p>"Have I not given you my advice?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I know you have," said I, "and I know how much I am beholden to you
+already, and that I am bidden to obey your orders. But you must confess you
+are something too merry a lass at times to lippen<sup><a href="#fn23"
+name="rfn23">[23]</a></sup> to entirely."</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you, then," said she. "Be you on board at nine o'clock
+forenoon; the ship does not sail before one; keep your boat alongside; and
+if you are not pleased with my farewells when I shall send them, you can
+come ashore again and seek Katrine for yourself."</p>
+
+<p>Since I could make no more of her, I was fain to be content with
+this.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265"></a>[pg
+265]</span>The day came round at last when she and I were to separate. We
+had been extremely intimate and familiar; I was much in her debt; and what
+way we were to part was a thing that put me from my sleep, like the vails I
+was to give to the domestic servants. I knew she considered me too
+backward, and rather desired to rise in her opinion on that head. Besides
+which, after so much affection shown and (I believe) felt upon both sides,
+it would have looked cold-like to be anyways stiff. Accordingly, I got my
+courage up and my words ready, and the last chance we were like to be
+alone, asked pretty boldly to be allowed to salute her in farewell.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget yourself strangely, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I cannot call
+to mind that I had given you any right to presume on our acquaintancy."</p>
+
+<p>I stood before her like a stopped clock, and knew not what to think, far
+less to say, when of a sudden she cast her arms about my neck and kissed me
+with the best will in the world.</p>
+
+<p>"You inimitable bairn!" she cried. "Did you think that I would let us
+part like strangers? Because I can never keep my gravity at you five
+minutes on end, you must not dream I do not love you very well; I am all
+love and laughter, every time I cast an eye on you! And now I will give you
+an advice to conclude your education, which you will have need of before
+its very long. Never <i>ask</i> women-folk. They're <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266"></a>[pg 266]</span>bound
+to answer 'No'; God never made the lass that could resist the temptation.
+It's supposed by divines to be the curse of Eve; because she did not say it
+when the devil offered her the apple, her daughters can say nothing
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"Since I am so soon to lose my bonny professor," I began.</p>
+
+<p>"This is gallant, indeed," says she curtseying.</p>
+
+<p>"--I would put the one question," I went on; "May I ask a lass to marry
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"You think you could not marry her without?" she asked. "Or else get her
+to offer?"</p>
+
+<p>"You see you cannot be serious," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be very serious in one thing, David," said she. "I shall always
+be your friend."</p>
+
+<p>As I got to my horse the next morning, the four ladies were all at the
+same window whence we had once looked down on Catriona, and all cried
+farewell and waved their pocket napkins as I rode away; one out of the four
+I knew was truly sorry; and at the thought of that, and how I had come to
+the door three months ago for the first time, sorrow and gratitude made a
+confusion in my mind.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267"></a>[pg
+267]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='Part_II'></a>Part II</h2>
+
+<h3>FATHER AND DAUGHTER</h3>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXI'></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND</h3>
+
+
+<p>The ship lay at a single anchor, well outside the pier of Leith, so that
+all we passengers must come to it by the means of skiffs. This was very
+little troublesome, for the reason that the day was a flat calm, very
+frosty and cloudy, and with a low shifting fog upon the water. The body of
+the vessel was thus quite hid as I drew near, but the tall spars of her
+stood high and bright in a sunshine like the flickering of a fire. She
+proved to be a very roomy, commodious merchant, but somewhat blunt in the
+bows, and loaden extraordinary deep with salt, salted salmon, and fine
+white linen stockings for the Dutch. Upon my coming on board, the captain
+welcomed me, one Sang (out of Lesmahago, I believe), a very hearty,
+friendly tarpauling of a man, but at the moment in rather of a bustle.
+There had no other of the passengers yet appeared, so that I was left to
+walk about upon the deck, viewing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268"
+id="Page_268"></a>[pg 268]</span>the prospect and wondering a good deal
+what these farewells should be which I was promised.</p>
+
+<p>All Edinburgh and the Pentland Hills glinted above me in a kind of
+smuisty brightness, now and again overcome with blots of cloud; of Leith
+there was no more than the tops of chimneys visible, and on the face of the
+water, where the haar<sup><a href="#fn24" name="rfn24">[24]</a></sup> lay,
+nothing at all. Out of this I was presently aware of a sound of oars
+pulling, and a little after (as if out of the smoke of a fire) a boat
+issued. There sat a grave man in the stern sheets, well muffled from the
+cold, and by his side a tall, pretty, tender figure of a maid that brought
+my heart to a stand. I had scarce the time to catch my breath in, and be
+ready to meet her, as she stepped upon the deck, smiling, and making my
+best bow, which was now vastly finer than some months before when I first
+made it to her ladyship. No doubt we were both a good deal changed; she
+seemed to have shot up taller, like a young, comely tree. She had now a
+kind of pretty backwardness that became her well, as of one that regarded
+herself more highly and was fairly woman; and for another thing, the hand
+of the same magician had been at work upon the pair of us, and Miss Grant
+had made us both <i>braw</i>, if she could make but the one
+<i>bonny</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The same cry, in words not very different, came from both of us, that
+the other was come in compliment to <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_269" id="Page_269"></a>[pg 269]</span>say farewell, and then we
+perceived in a flash we were to ship together.</p>
+
+<p>"O, why will not Baby have been telling me!" she cried; and then
+remembered a letter she had been given, on the condition of not opening it
+till she was well on board. Within was an enclosure for myself, and ran
+thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"DEAR DAVIE,--What do you think of my farewell? and what
+do you say to your fellow-passenger? Did you kiss, or did you
+ask? I was about to have signed here, but that would leave the
+purport of my question doubtful; and in my own case <i>I ken the
+answer</i>. So fill up here with good advice. Do not be too blate,<sup><a
+href="#fn25" name="rfn25">[25]</a></sup>
+and for God's sake do not try to be too forward; nothing sets you
+worse. I am
+
+<p>"Your affectionate friend and governess,</p>
+
+<p>"BARBARA GRANT."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I wrote a word of answer and compliment on a leaf out of my pocketbook,
+put it in with another scratch from Catriona, sealed the whole with my new
+signet of the Balfour arms, and despatched it by the hand of
+Prestongrange's servant that still waited in my boat.</p>
+
+<p>Then we had time to look upon each other more at leisure, which we had
+not done for a piece of a minute before (upon a common impulse) we shook
+hands again.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona!" said I; it seemed that was the first and last word of my
+eloquence.</p>
+
+<p>"You will be glad to see me again?" says she.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270"></a>[pg
+270]</span>"And I think that is an idle word," said I. "We are too deep
+friends to make speech upon such trifles."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she not the girl of all the world?" she cried again. "I was never
+knowing such a girl, so honest and so beautiful."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet she cared no more for Alpin than what she did for a
+kale-stock," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, she will say so indeed!" cries Catriona. "Yet it was for the name
+and the gentle kind blood that she took me up and was so good to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I will tell you why it was," said I. "There are all sorts of
+people's faces in this world. There is Barbara's face, that everyone must
+look at and admire, and think her a fine, brave, merry girl. And then there
+is your face, which is quite different, I never knew how different till
+to-day. You cannot see yourself, and that is why you do not understand; but
+it was for the love of your face that she took you up and was so good to
+you. And everybody in the world would do the same."</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>"Every living soul!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then, that will be why the soldiers at the castle took me up!" she
+cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara has been teaching you to catch me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"She will have taught me more than that at all events. She will have
+taught me a great deal about Mr. David--all the ill of him, and a little
+that was not so ill either now and then," she said, smiling. "She will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271"></a>[pg
+271]</span>have told me all there was of Mr. David, only just that he would
+sail upon this very same ship. And why is it you go?"</p>
+
+<p>I told her.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well," said she, "we will be some days in company and then (I
+suppose) good-bye for altogether! I go to meet my father at a place of the
+name of Helvoetsluys, and from there to France, to be exiles by the side of
+our chieftain."</p>
+
+<p>I could say no more than just "O!" the name of James More always drying
+up my very voice.</p>
+
+<p>She was quick to perceive it, and to guess some portion of my
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one thing I must be saying first of all, Mr. David," said she.
+"I think two of my kinsfolk have not behaved to you altogether very well.
+And the one of them two is James More, my father, and the other is the
+Laird of Prestongrange. Prestongrange will have spoken by himself, or his
+daughter in the place of him. But for James More, my father, I have this
+much to say: he lay shackled in a prison; he is a plain honest soldier and
+a plain Highland gentleman; what they would be after, he never would be
+guessing; but if he had understood it was to be some prejudice to a young
+gentleman like yourself, he would have died first. And for the sake of all
+your friendships, I will be asking you to pardon my father and family for
+that same mistake."</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "what that mistake was I do not <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272"></a>[pg 272]</span>care to
+know. I know but the one thing, that you went to Prestongrange and begged
+my life upon your knees. O, I ken well it was for your father that you
+went, but when you were there you pleaded for me also. It is a thing I
+cannot speak of. There are two things I cannot think of in to myself; and
+the one is your good words when you called yourself my little friend, and
+the other that you pleaded for my life. Let us never speak more, we two, of
+pardon or offence."</p>
+
+<p>We stood after that silent, Catriona looking on the deck and I on her;
+and before there was more speech, a little wind having sprung up, in the
+nor'-west, they began to shake out the sails and heave in upon the
+anchor.</p>
+
+<p>There were six passengers besides our two selves, which made of it a
+full cabin. Three were solid merchants out of Leith, Kirkaldy, and Dundee,
+all engaged in the same adventure into High Germany; one was a Hollander
+returning; the rest worthy merchants' wives, to the charge of one of whom
+Catriona was recommended. Mrs. Grebbie (for that was her name) was by great
+good fortune heavily incommoded by the sea, and lay day and night on the
+broad of her back. We were besides the only creatures at all young on board
+the <i>Rose</i>, except a white-faced boy that did my old duty to attend
+upon the table; and it came about that Catriona and I were left almost
+entirely to ourselves. We had the next seats together at the table, where I
+waited on her with extraordinary pleasure. On deck, I made her a soft place
+with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273"></a>[pg
+273]</span>my cloak; and the weather being singularly fine for that season,
+with bright frosty days and nights, a steady, gentle wind, and scarce a
+sheet started all the way through the North Sea, we sat there (only now and
+again walking to and fro for warmth) from the first blink of the sun till
+eight or nine at night under the clear stars. The merchants or Captain Sang
+would sometimes glance and smile upon us, or pass a merry word or two and
+give us the go-by again; but the most part of the time they were deep in
+herring and chintzes and linen, or in computations of the slowness of the
+passage, and left us to our own concerns, which were very little important
+to any but ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>At the first, we had a great deal to say, and thought ourselves pretty
+witty; and I was at a little pains to be the <i>beau</i>, and she (I
+believe) to play the young lady of experience. But soon we grew plainer
+with each other; I laid aside my high, clipped English (what little there
+was of it) and forgot to make my Edinburgh bows and scrapes; she upon her
+side, fell into a sort of kind familiarity; and we dwelt together like
+those of the same household, only (upon my side) with a more deep emotion.
+About the same time, the bottom seemed to fall out of our conversation, and
+neither one of us the less pleased. Whiles she would tell me old wives'
+tales, of which she had a wonderful variety, many of them from my friend
+red-headed Niel. She told them very pretty, and they were pretty enough
+childish tales; but <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274"
+id="Page_274"></a>[pg 274]</span>the pleasure to myself was in the sound of
+her voice, and the thought that she was telling and I listening. Whiles,
+again, we would sit entirely silent, not communicating even with a look,
+and tasting pleasure enough in the sweetness of that neighbourhood. I speak
+here only for myself. Of what was in the maid's mind, I am not very sure
+that ever I asked myself; and what was in my own, I was afraid to consider.
+I need make no secret of it now, either to myself or to the reader: I was
+fallen totally in love. She came between me and the sun. She had grown
+suddenly taller, as I say, but with a wholesome growth; she seemed all
+health, and lightness, and brave spirits; and I thought she walked like a
+young deer, and stood like a birch upon the mountains. It was enough for me
+to sit near by her on the deck; and I declare I scarce spent two thoughts
+upon the future, and was so well content with what I then enjoyed that I
+was never at the pains to imagine any further step; unless perhaps that I
+would be sometimes tempted to take her hand in mine and hold it there. But
+I was too like a miser of what joys I had and would venture nothing on a
+hazard.</p>
+
+<p>What we spoke was usually of ourselves or of each other, so that if
+anyone had been at so much pains as overhear us, he must have supposed us
+the most egotistical persons in the world. It befell one day when we were
+at this practice, that we came on a discourse of friends and friendship,
+and I think now that we were <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275"
+id="Page_275"></a>[pg 275]</span>sailing near the wind. We said what a fine
+thing friendship was, and how little we had guessed of it, and how it made
+life a new thing, and a thousand covered things of the same kind that will
+have been said, since the foundation of the world, by young folk in the
+same predicament. Then we remarked upon the strangeness of that
+circumstance, that friends came together in the beginning as if they were
+there for the first time, and yet each had been alive a good while, losing
+time with other people.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not much that I have done," said she, "and I could be telling you
+the five-fifths of it in two-three words. It is only a girl I am, and what
+can befall a girl, at all events? But I went with the clan in the year '45.
+The men marched with swords and firelocks, and some of them in brigades in
+the same set of tartan; they were not backward at the marching, I can tell
+you. And there were gentlemen from the Low Country, with their tenants
+mounted and trumpets to sound, and there was a grand skirling of war-pipes.
+I rode on a little Highland horse on the right hand of my father, James
+More, and of Glengyle himself. And here is one fine thing that I remember,
+that Glengyle kissed me in the face, because (says he) 'my kinswoman, you
+are the only lady of the clan that has come out,' and me a little maid of
+maybe twelve years old! I saw Prince Charlie too, and the blue eyes of him;
+he was pretty indeed! I had his hand to kiss in <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_276" id="Page_276"></a>[pg 276]</span>the front of the army. O,
+well, these were the good days, but it is all like a dream that I have seen
+and then awakened. It went what way you very well know; and these were the
+worst days of all, when the red-coat soldiers were out, and my father and
+my uncles lay in the hill, and I was to be carrying them their meat in the
+middle night, or at the short side of day when the cocks crow. Yes, I have
+walked in the night, many's the time, and my heart great in me for terror
+of the darkness. It is a strange thing I will never have been meddled with
+a bogle; but they say a maid goes safe. Next there was my uncle's marriage,
+and that was a dreadful affair beyond all. Jean Kay was that woman's name;
+and she had me in the room with her that night at Inversnaid, the night we
+took her from her friends in the old, ancient manner. She would and she
+wouldn't; she was for marrying Rob the one minute, and the next she would
+be for none of him. I will never have seen such a feckless creature of a
+woman; surely all there was of her would tell her ay or no. Well, she was a
+widow, and I can never be thinking a widow a good woman."</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona!" says I, "how do you make out that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know," said she; "I am only telling you the seeming in my
+heart. And then to marry a new man! Fy! But that was her; and she was
+married again upon my Uncle Robin, and went with him awhile to kirk and
+market; and then wearied, or else her <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_277" id="Page_277"></a>[pg 277]</span>friends got claught of her
+and talked her round, or maybe she turned ashamed; at the least of it, she
+ran away, and went back to her own folk, and said we had held her in the
+lake, and I will never tell you all what. I have never thought much of any
+females since that day. And so in the end my father, James More, came to be
+cast in prison, and you know the rest of it as well as me."</p>
+
+<p>"And through all you had no friends?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said she; "I have been pretty chief with two-three lasses on the
+braes, but not to call it friends."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, mine is a plain tale," said I. "I never had a friend to my name
+till I met in with you."</p>
+
+<p>"And that brave Mr. Stewart?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"O, yes, I was forgetting him," I said. "But he is a man, and that is
+very different."</p>
+
+<p>"I would think so," said she. "O, yes, it is quite different."</p>
+
+<p>"And then there was one other," said I. "I once thought I had a friend,
+but it proved a disappointment."</p>
+
+<p>She asked me who she was?</p>
+
+<p>"It was a he, then," said I. "We were the two best lads at my father's
+school, and we thought we loved each other dearly. Well, the time came when
+he went to Glasgow to a merchant's house, that was his second cousin once
+removed; and wrote me two-three times by <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_278" id="Page_278"></a>[pg 278]</span>the carrier; and then he
+found new friends, and I might write till I was tired, he took no notice.
+Eh, Catriona, it took me a long while to forgive the world. There is not
+anything more bitter than to lose a fancied friend."</p>
+
+<p>Then she began to question me close upon his looks and character, for we
+were each a great deal concerned in all that touched the other; till at
+last, in a very evil hour, I minded of his letters and went and fetched the
+bundle from the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>"Here are his letters," said I, "and all the letters that ever I got.
+That will be the last I'll can tell of myself; you know the lave<sup><a
+href="#fn26" name="rfn26">[26]</a></sup> as well as I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you let me read them, then?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>I told her, <i>if she would be at the pains</i>; and she bade me go away
+and she would read them from the one end to the other. Now, in this bundle
+that I gave her, there were packed together not only all the letters of my
+false friend, but one or two of Mr. Campbell's when he was in town at the
+Assembly, and to make a complete roll of all that ever was written to me,
+Catriona's little word, and the two I had received from Miss Grant, one
+when I was on the Bass and one on board that ship. But of these last I had
+no particular mind at the moment.</p>
+
+<p>I was in that state of subjection to the thought of my friend that it
+mattered not what I did, nor scarce <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_279" id="Page_279"></a>[pg 279]</span>whether I was in her
+presence or out of it; I had caught her like some kind of a noble fever
+that lived continually in my bosom, by night and by day, and whether I was
+waking or asleep. So it befell that after I was come into the fore-part of
+the ship where the broad bows splashed into the billows, I was in no such
+hurry to return as you might fancy; rather prolonged my absence like a
+variety in pleasure. I do not think I am by nature much of an Epicurean;
+and there had come till then so small a share of pleasure in my way that I
+might be excused perhaps to dwell on it unduly.</p>
+
+<p>When I returned to her again, I had a faint, painful impression as of a
+buckle slipped, so coldly she returned the packet.</p>
+
+<p>"You have read them?" said I; and I thought my voice sounded not wholly
+natural, for I was turning in my mind for what could ail her.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you mean me to read all?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>I told her "Yes," with a drooping voice.</p>
+
+<p>"The last of them as well?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>I knew where we were now; yet I would not lie to her either. "I gave
+them all without after-thought," I said, "as I supposed that you would read
+them. I see no harm in any."</p>
+
+<p>"I will be differently made," said she. "I thank God I am differently
+made. It was not a fit letter to be shown me. It was not fit to be
+written."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280"></a>[pg
+280]</span>"I think you are speaking of your own friend, Barbara Grant?"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"There will not be anything as bitter as to lose a fancied friend," said
+she, quoting my own expression.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it is sometimes the friendship that was fancied!" I cried.
+"What kind of justice do you call this, to blame me for some words that a
+tomfool of a madcap lass has written down upon a piece of paper? You know
+yourself with what respect I have behaved--and would do always."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you would show me that same letter!" says she. "I want no such
+friends. I can be doing very well, Mr. Balfour, without her--or you."</p>
+
+<p>"This is your fine gratitude!" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very much obliged to you," said she. "I will be asking you to take
+away your--letters." She seemed to choke upon the word, so that it sounded
+like an oath.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall never ask twice," said I; picked up that bundle, walked a
+little way forward and cast them as far as possible into the sea. For a
+very little more, I could have cast myself after them.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the day I walked up and down raging. There were few names so
+ill but what I gave her them in my own mind before the sun went down. All
+that I had ever heard of Highland pride seemed quite outdone; that a girl
+(scarce grown) should resent so trifling an allusion, and that from her
+next friend, that she <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281"
+id="Page_281"></a>[pg 281]</span>had near wearied me with praising of! I
+had bitter, sharp, hard thoughts of her, like an angry boy's. If I had
+kissed her indeed (I thought), perhaps she would have taken it pretty well;
+and only because it had been written down, and with a spice of jocularity,
+up she must fuff in this ridiculous passion. It seemed to me there was a
+want of penetration in the female sex, to make angels weep over the case of
+the poor men.</p>
+
+<p>We were side by side again at supper, and what a change was there! She
+was like curdled milk to me; her face was like a wooden doll's; I could
+have indifferently smitten her or grovelled at her feet, but she gave me
+not the least occasion to do either. No sooner the meal done than she
+betook herself to attend on Mrs. Gebbie, which I think she had a little
+neglected heretofore. But she was to make up for lost time, and in what
+remained of the passage was extraordinary assiduous with the old lady, and
+on deck began to make a great deal more than I thought wise of Captain
+Sang. Not but what the captain seemed a worthy, fatherly man; but I hated
+to behold her in the least familiarity with anyone except myself.</p>
+
+<p>Altogether, she was so quick to avoid me, and so constant to keep
+herself surrounded with others, that I must watch a long while before I
+could find my opportunity; and after it was found, I made not much of it,
+as you are now to hear.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282"></a>[pg
+282]</span>"I have no guess how I have offended," said I; "it should scarce
+be beyond pardon, then. O, try if you can pardon me."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no pardon to give," said she; and the words seemed to come out
+of her throat like marbles. "I will be very much obliged for all your
+friendships." And she made me an eight part of a curtsey.</p>
+
+<p>But I had schooled myself beforehand to say more, and I was going to say
+it too.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one thing," said I. "If I have shocked your particularity by
+the showing of that letter, it cannot touch Miss Grant. She wrote not to
+you, but to a poor, common, ordinary lad, who might have had more sense
+than show it. If you are to blame me--"</p>
+
+<p>"I will advise you to say no more about that girl, at all events!" said
+Catriona. "It is her I will never look the road of, not if she lay dying."
+She turned away from me, and suddenly back. "Will you swear you will have
+no more to deal with her?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, and I will never be so unjust then," said I; "nor yet so
+ungrateful."</p>
+
+<p>And now it was I that turned away.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283"></a>[pg
+283]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXII'></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h3>HELVOETSLUYS</h3>
+
+
+<p>The weather in the end considerably worsened; the wind sang in the
+shrouds, the sea swelled higher, and the ship began to labour and cry out
+among the billows. The song of the leadsman in the chains was now scarce
+ceasing, for we thrid all the way among shoals. About nine in the morning,
+in a burst of wintry sun between two squalls of hail, I had my first look
+of Holland--a line of windmills birling in the breeze. It was besides my
+first knowledge of these daft-like contrivances, which gave me a near sense
+of foreign travel and a new world and life. We came to an anchor about
+half-past eleven, outside the harbour of Helvoetsluys, in a place where the
+sea sometimes broke and the ship pitched outrageously. You may be sure we
+were all on deck save Mrs. Gebbie, some of us in cloaks, others mantled in
+the ship's tarpaulins, all clinging on by ropes, and jesting the most like
+old sailor-folk that we could imitate.</p>
+
+<p>Presently a boat, that was backed like a partan-crab, came gingerly
+alongside, and the skipper of it hailed our master in the Dutch. Thence
+Captain Sang <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284"></a>[pg
+284]</span>turned, very troubled like, to Catriona; and the rest of us
+crowding about, the nature of the difficulty was made plain to all. The
+<i>Rose</i> was bound to the port of Rotterdam, whither the other
+passengers were in a great impatience to arrive, in view of a conveyance
+due to leave that very evening in the direction of the Upper Germany. This,
+with the present half-gale of wind, the captain (if no time were lost)
+declared himself still capable to save. Now James More had trysted in
+Helvoet with his daughter, and the captain had engaged to call before the
+port and place her (according to the custom) in a shore boat. There was the
+boat, to be sure, and there was Catriona ready: but both our master and the
+patroon of the boat scrupled at the risk, and the first was in no humour to
+delay.</p>
+
+<p>"Your father," said he, "would be gey an little pleased if we was to
+break a leg to ye, Miss Drummond, let-a-be drowning of you. Take my way of
+it," says he, "and come on-by with the rest of us here to Rotterdam. Ye can
+get a passage down the Maes in a sailing scoot as far to the Brill, and
+thence on again, by a place in a rattel-waggon, back to Helvoet."</p>
+
+<p>But Catriona would hear of no change. She looked white-like as she
+beheld the bursting of the sprays, the green seas that sometimes poured
+upon the forecastle, and the perpetual bounding and swooping of the boat
+among the billows; but she stood firmly by her father's orders. "My father,
+James More, will have arranged <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285"
+id="Page_285"></a>[pg 285]</span>it so," was her first word and her last. I
+thought it very idle and indeed wanton in the girl to be so literal and
+stand opposite to so much kind advice; but the fact is she had a very good
+reason, if she would have told us. Sailing scoots and rattel-waggons are
+excellent things; only the use of them must first be paid for, and all she
+was possessed of in the world was just two shillings and a penny halfpenny
+sterling. So it fell out that captain and passengers, not knowing of her
+destitution--and she being too proud to tell them--spoke in vain.</p>
+
+<p>"But you ken nae French and nae Dutch neither," said one.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very true," says she, "but since the year '46 there are so many
+of the honest Scots abroad that I will be doing very well, I thank
+you."</p>
+
+<p>There was a pretty country simplicity in this that made some laugh,
+others looked the more sorry, and Mr. Gebbie fall outright in a passion. I
+believe he knew it was his duty (his wife having accepted charge of the
+girl) to have gone ashore with her and seen her safe; nothing would have
+induced him to have done so, since it must have involved the loss of his
+conveyance; and I think he made it up to his conscience by the loudness of
+his voice. At least he broke out upon Captain Sang, raging and saying the
+thing was a disgrace; that it was mere death to try to leave the ship, and
+at any event we could not cast down an innocent maid in a boatful of nasty
+Holland fishers, and leave <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286"
+id="Page_286"></a>[pg 286]</span>her to her fate. I was thinking something
+of the same; took the mate upon one side, arranged with him to send on my
+chests by track-scoot to an address I had in Leyden, and stood up and
+signalled to the fishers.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go ashore with the young lady, Captain Sang," said I. "It is all
+one what way I go to Leyden;" and leaped at the same time into the boat,
+which I managed not so elegantly but what I fell with two of the fishers in
+the bilge.</p>
+
+<p>From the boat the business appeared yet more precarious than from the
+ship, she stood so high over us, swung down so swift, and menaced us so
+perpetually with her plunging and passaging upon the anchor cable. I began
+to think I had made a fool's bargain, that it was merely impossible
+Catriona should be got on board to me, and that I stood to be set ashore at
+Helvoet all by myself and with no hope of any reward but the pleasure of
+embracing James More, if I should want to. But this was to reckon without
+the lass's courage. She had seen me leap with very little appearance
+(however much reality) of hesitation; to be sure, she was not to be beat by
+her discarded friend. Up she stood on the bulwarks and held by a stay, the
+wind blowing in her petticoats, which made the enterprise more dangerous
+and gave us rather more of a view of her stockings than would be thought
+genteel in cities. There was no minute lost, and scarce time given for any
+to interfere if they had wished the same. I stood up on the other <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287"></a>[pg 287]</span>side
+and spread my arms; the ship swung down on us, the patroon humoured his
+boat nearer in than was perhaps wholly safe, and Catriona leaped into the
+air. I was so happy as to catch her, and the fishers readily supporting us,
+escaped a fall. She held to me a moment very tight, breathing quick and
+deep; thence (she still clinging to me with both hands) we were passed aft
+to our places by the steersman; and Captain Sang and all the crew and
+passengers cheering and crying farewell, the boat was put about for
+shore.</p>
+
+
+<a name="balfour007"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour007.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: UP SHE STOOD ON THE BULWARKS AND HELD BY A
+STAY" src="images/balfour007sm.jpg" height="554" width="387" /></a>
+<br />UP SHE STOOD ON THE BULWARKS AND
+HELD BY A STAY
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+<p>As soon as Catriona came a little to herself she unhanded me suddenly
+but said no word. No more did I; and indeed the whistling of the wind and
+the breaching of the sprays made it no time for speech; and our crew not
+only toiled excessively but made extremely little way, so that the
+<i>Rose</i> had got her anchor and was off again before we had approached
+the harbour mouth.</p>
+
+<p>We were no sooner in smooth water than the patroon, according to their
+beastly Hollands custom, stopped his boat and required of us our fares. Two
+guilders was the man's demand, between three and four shillings English
+money, for each passenger. But at this Catriona began to cry out with a
+vast deal of agitation. She had asked of Captain Sang, she said, and the
+fare was but an English shilling. "Do you think I will have come on board
+and not ask first?" cries she. The patroon scolded back upon her in a lingo
+where the oaths <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288"
+id="Page_288"></a>[pg 288]</span>were English and the rest right Hollands;
+till at last (seeing her near tears) I privately slipped in the rogue's
+hand six shillings, whereupon he was obliging enough to receive from her
+the other shilling without more complaint. No doubt I was a good deal
+nettled and ashamed. I like to see folk thrifty but not with so much
+passion; and I daresay it would be rather coldly that I asked her, as the
+boat moved on again for shore, where it was that she was trysted with her
+father.</p>
+
+<p>"He is to be inquired of at the house of one Sprott, an honest Scotch
+merchant," says she; and then with the same breath, "I am wishing to thank
+you very much--you are a brave friend to me."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be time enough when I get you to your father," said I, little
+thinking that I spoke so true. "I can tell him a fine tale of a loyal
+daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"O, I do not think I will be a loyal girl, at all events," she cried,
+with a great deal of painfulness in the expression. "I do not think my
+heart is true."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet there are very few that would have made that leap, and all to obey
+a father's orders," I observed.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot have you to be thinking of me so," she cried again. "When you
+had done that same, how would I stop behind? And at all events that was not
+all the reasons." Whereupon, with a burning face, she told me the plain
+truth upon her poverty.</p>
+
+<p>"Good guide us!" cried I, "what kind of daft-like proceeding is this, to
+let yourself be launched on the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289"
+id="Page_289"></a>[pg 289]</span>continent of Europe with an empty purse--I
+count it hardly decent--scant decent!" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget James More, my father, is a poor gentleman," said she. "He
+is a hunted exile."</p>
+
+<p>"But I think not all your friends are hunted exiles," I exclaimed. "And
+was this fair to them that care for you? Was it fair to me? was it fair to
+Miss Grant that counselled you to go, and would be driven fair horn-mad if
+she could hear of it? Was it even fair to these Gregory folk that you were
+living with, and used you lovingly? It's a blessing you have fallen in my
+hands! Suppose your father hindered by an accident, what would become of
+you here, and you your lee-alone in a strange place? The thought of the
+thing frightens me," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"I will have lied to all of them," she replied. "I will have told them
+all that I had plenty. I told <i>her</i> too. I could not be lowering James
+More to them."</p>
+
+<p>I found out later on that she must have lowered him in the very dust,
+for the lie was originally the father's not the daughter's, and she thus
+obliged to persevere in it for the man's reputation. But at the time I was
+ignorant of this, and the mere thought of her destitution and the perils in
+which she must have fallen, had ruffled me almost beyond reason.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well, well," said I, "you will have to learn more sense."</p>
+
+<p>I left her mails for the moment in an inn upon the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></a>[pg 290]</span>shore,
+where I got a direction for Sprott's house in my new French, and we walked
+there--it was some little way--beholding the place with wonder as we went.
+Indeed, there was much for Scots folk to admire; canals and trees being
+intermingled with the houses; the houses, each within itself, of a brave
+red brick, the colour of a rose, with steps and benches of blue marble at
+the cheek of every door, and the whole town so clean you might have dined
+upon the causeway. Sprott was within, upon his ledgers, in a low parlour,
+very neat and clean, and set out with china and pictures and a globe of the
+earth in a brass frame. He was a big-chafted, ruddy, lusty man, with a
+crooked hard look to him; and he made us not that much civility as offer us
+a seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Is James More Macgregor now in Helvoet, sir?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"I ken nobody by such a name," says he, impatient-like.</p>
+
+<p>"Since you are so particular," says I, "I will amend my question, and
+ask you where we are to find in Helvoet one James Drummond, <i>alias</i>
+Macgregor, <i>alias</i> James More, late tenant in Iveronachile?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," says he, "he may be in Hell for what I ken, and for my part I
+wish he was."</p>
+
+<p>"The young lady is that gentleman's daughter, sir," said I, "before
+whom, I think you will agree with me, it is not very becoming to discuss
+his character."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291"></a>[pg
+291]</span>"I have nothing to make either with him, or her, or you!" cries
+he in his gross voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Under your favour, Mr. Sprott," said I, "this young lady is come from
+Scotland seeking him, and by whatever mistake, was given the name of your
+house for a direction. An error it seems to have been, but I think this
+places both you and me--who am but her fellow-traveller by accident--under
+a strong obligation to help our countrywoman."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you ding me daft?" he cries. "I tell ye I ken naething and care
+less either for him or his breed. I tell ye the man owes me money."</p>
+
+<p>"That may very well be, sir," said I, who was now rather more angry than
+himself. "At least I owe you nothing; the young lady is under my
+protection; and I am neither at all used with these manners, nor in the
+least content with them."</p>
+
+<p>As I said this, and without particularly thinking what I did, I drew a
+step or two nearer to his table; thus striking, by mere good fortune, on
+the only argument that could at all affect the man. The blood left his
+lusty countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"For the Lord's sake dinna be hasty, sir!" he cried. "I am truly wishfu'
+no to be offensive. But ye ken, sir, I'm like a wheen guid-natured, honest,
+canty auld fallows--my bark is waur nor my bite. To hear me, ye micht
+whiles fancy I was a wee thing dour; but na, na! its a kind auld fellow at
+heart, Sandie Sprott! <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292"
+id="Page_292"></a>[pg 292]</span>And ye could never imagine the fyke and
+fash this man has been to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, sir," said I. "Then I will make that much freedom with your
+kindness, as trouble you for your last news of Mr. Drummond."</p>
+
+<p>"You're welcome, sir!" said he. "As for the young leddy (my respec's to
+her!) he'll just have clean forgotten her. I ken the man, ye see; I have
+lost siller by him ere now. He thinks of naebody but just himsel'; clan,
+king, or dauchter, if he can get his wameful, he would give them a' the
+go-by! ay, or his correspondent either. For there is a sense in whilk I may
+be nearly almost said to be his correspondent. The fact is, we are employed
+thegether in a business affair, and I think it's like to turn out a dear
+affair for Sandie Sprott. The man's as guid's my pairtner, and I give ye my
+mere word I ken naething by where he is. He micht be coming here to
+Helvoet; he micht come here the morn, he michtnae come for a twalmonth; I
+would wonder at naething--or just at the ae thing, and that's if he was to
+pay me my siller. Ye see what way I stand with it; and it's clear I'm no
+very likely to meddle up with the young leddy, as ye ca' her. She cannae
+stop here, that's ae thing certain sure. Dod, sir, I'm a lone man! If I was
+to tak her in, its highly possible the hellicat would try and gar me marry
+her when he turned up."</p>
+
+<p>"Enough of this talk," said I. "I will take the <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></a>[pg 293]</span>young lady among better
+friends. Give me pen, ink, and paper, and I will leave here for James More
+the address of my correspondent in Leyden. He can inquire from me where he
+is to seek his daughter."</p>
+
+<p>This word I wrote and sealed; which while I was doing, Sprott of his own
+motion made a welcome offer, to charge himself with Miss Drummond's mails,
+and even send a porter for them to the inn. I advanced him to that effect a
+dollar or two to be a cover, and he gave me an acknowledgment in writing of
+the sum.</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon (I giving my arm to Catriona) we left the house of this
+unpalatable rascal. She had said no word throughout, leaving me to judge
+and speak in her place; I, upon my side, had been careful not to embarrass
+her by a glance; and even now although my heart still glowed inside of me
+with shame and anger, I made it my affair to seem quite easy.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said I, "let us get back to yon same inn where they can speak the
+French, have a piece of dinner, and inquire for conveyances to Rotterdam. I
+will never be easy till I have you safe again in the hands of Mrs.
+Gebbie."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it will have to be," said Catriona, "though whoever will be
+pleased, I do not think it will be her. And I will remind you this once
+again that I have but one shilling, and three baubees."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></a>[pg
+294]</span>"And just this once again," said I, "I will remind you it was a
+blessing that I came alongst with you."</p>
+
+<p>"What else would I be thinking all this time!" says she, and I thought
+weighed a little on my arm. "It is you that are the good friend to me."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></a>[pg
+295]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXIII'></a>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>TRAVELS IN HOLLAND</h3>
+
+
+<p>The rattel-wagon, which is a kind of a long wagon set with benches,
+carried us in four hours of travel to the great city of Rotterdam. It was
+long past dark by then, but the streets pretty brightly lighted and
+thronged with the wild-like, outlandish characters--bearded Hebrews, black
+men, and the hordes of courtesans, most indecently adorned with finery and
+stopping seamen by their very sleeves; the clash of talk about us made our
+heads to whirl; and what was the most unexpected of all, we appeared to be
+no more struck with all these foreigners than they with us. I made the best
+face I could, for the lass's sake and my own credit; but the truth is I
+felt like a lost sheep, and my heart beat in my bosom with anxiety. Once or
+twice I inquired after the harbor or the berth of the ship <i>Rose</i>; but
+either fell on some who spoke only Hollands, or my own French failed me.
+Trying a street at a venture, I came upon a lane of lighted houses, the
+doors and windows thronged with wauf-like painted women; these jostled and
+mocked upon us as <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296"
+id="Page_296"></a>[pg 296]</span>we passed, and I was thankful we had
+nothing of their language. A little after we issued forth upon an open
+place along the harbour.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall be doing now," cries I, as soon as I spied masts. "Let us walk
+here by the harbour. We are sure to meet some that has the English, and at
+the best of it we may light upon that very ship."</p>
+
+<p>We did the next best, as happened; for about nine of the evening, whom
+should we walk into the arms of but Captain Sang? He told us they had made
+their run in the most incredible brief time, the wind holding strong until
+they reached port; by which means his passengers were all gone already on
+their further travels. It was impossible to chase after the Gebbies into
+High Germany, and we had no other acquaintance to fall back upon but
+Captain Sang himself. It was the more gratifying to find the man friendly
+and wishful to assist. He made it a small affair to find some good plain
+family of merchants, where Catriona might harbour till the <i>Rose</i> was
+loaden; declared he would then blithely carry her back to Leith for nothing
+and see her safe in the hands of Mr. Gregory; and in the meanwhile carried
+us to a late ordinary for the meal we stood in need of. He seemed extremely
+friendly, as I say, but what surprised me a good deal, rather boisterous in
+the bargain; and the cause of this was soon to appear. For at the ordinary,
+calling for Rhenish wine and drinking of it deep, he soon became
+unutterably tipsy. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297"
+id="Page_297"></a>[pg 297]</span>In, this case, as too common with all men,
+but especially with those of his rough trade, what little sense or manners
+he possessed deserted him; and he behaved himself so scandalous to the
+young lady, jesting most ill-favoredly at the figure she had made on the
+ship's rail, that I had no resource but carry her suddenly away.</p>
+
+<p>She came out of that ordinary clinging to me close. "Take me away,
+David," she said. "<i>You</i> keep me. I am not afraid with you."</p>
+
+<p>"And have no cause, my little friend!" cried I, and could have found it
+in my heart to weep.</p>
+
+<p>"Where will you be taking me?" she said again. "Don't leave me at all
+events, never leave me."</p>
+
+<p>"Where am I taking you indeed?" says I stopping, for I had been staving
+on ahead in mere blindness. "I must stop and think. But I'll not leave you,
+Catriona; the Lord do so to me, and more also, if I should fail or fash
+you."</p>
+
+<p>She crept closer in to me by way of a reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," I said, "is the stillest place that we have hit on yet in this
+busy byke of a city. Let us sit down here under yon tree and consider of
+our course."</p>
+
+<p>That tree (which I am little like to forget) stood hard by the harbour
+side. It was a black night, but lights were in the houses, and nearer hand
+in the quiet ships; there was a shining of the city on the one hand, and a
+buzz hung over it of many thousands <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></a>[pg 298]</span>walking and talking; on
+the other, it was dark and the water bubbled on the sides. I spread my
+cloak upon a builder's stone, and made her sit there; she would have kept
+her hold upon me, for she still shook with the late affronts; but I wanted
+to think clear, disengaged myself, and paced to and fro before her, in the
+manner of what we call a smuggler's walk, belabouring my brains for any
+remedy. By the course of these scattering thoughts I was brought suddenly
+face to face with a remembrance that, in the heat and haste of our
+departure, I had left Captain Sang to pay the ordinary. At this I began to
+laugh out loud, for I thought the man well served; and at the same time, by
+an instinctive movement, carried my hand to the pocket where my money was.
+I suppose it was in the lane where the women jostled us; but there is only
+the one thing certain, that my purse was gone.</p>
+
+<p>"You will have thought of something good," said she, observing me to
+pause.</p>
+
+<p>At the pinch we were in, my mind became suddenly clear as a perspective
+glass, and I saw there was no choice of methods. I had not one doit of
+coin, but in my pocket-book I had still my letter on the Leyden merchant;
+and there was now but the one way to get to Leyden, and that was to walk on
+our two feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "I know you're brave and I believe you're strong, do
+you think you could walk thirty miles on a plain road?" We found it, I
+believe, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299"></a>[pg
+299]</span>scarce the two-thirds of that, but such was my notion of the
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>"David," she said, "if you will just keep near, I will go anywhere and
+do anything. The courage of my heart, it is all broken. Do not be leaving
+me in this horrible country by myself, and I will do all else."</p>
+
+<p>"Can you start now and march all night?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I will do all that you can ask of me," she said, "and never ask you
+why. I have been a bad ungrateful girl to you; and do what you please with
+me now! And I think Miss Barbara Grant is the best lady in the world," she
+added, "and I do not see what she would deny you for at all events."</p>
+
+<p>This was Greek and Hebrew to me; but I had other matters to consider,
+and the first of these was to get clear of that city on the Leyden road. It
+proved a cruel problem; and it may have been one or two at night ere we had
+solved it. Once beyond the houses, there was neither moon or stars to guide
+us; only the whiteness of the way in the midst and a blackness of an alley
+on both hands. The walking was besides made most extraordinary difficult by
+a plain black frost that fell suddenly in the small hours and turned that
+highway into one long slide.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Catriona," said I, "here we are like the king's sons and the old
+wives' daughters in your daft-like Highland tales. Soon we'll be going over
+the '<i>seven Bens, the seven glens, and the seven mountain <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300"></a>[pg
+300]</span>moors</i>.'" Which was a common byword or overcome in these
+tales of hers that had stuck in my memory.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," says she, "but here are no glens or mountains! Though I will never
+be denying but what the trees and some of the plain places hereabouts are
+very pretty. But our country is the best yet."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish we could say as much for our own folk," says I, recalling Sprott
+and Sang, and perhaps James More himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I will never complain of the country of my friend," said she, and spoke
+it out with an accent so particular that I seemed to see the look upon her
+face.</p>
+
+<p>I caught in my breath sharp and came near falling (for my pains) on the
+black ice.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know what <i>you</i> think, Catriona," said I, when I was a
+little recovered, "but this has been the best day yet! I think shame to say
+it, when you have met in with such misfortunes and disfavours; but for me,
+it has been the best day yet."</p>
+
+<p>"It was a good day when you showed me so much love," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet I think shame to be happy too," I went on, "and you here on the
+road in the black night."</p>
+
+<p>"Where in the great world would I be else?" she cried. "I am thinking I
+am safest where I am with you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite forgiven, then?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301"></a>[pg
+301]</span>"Will you not forgive me that time so much as not to take it in
+your mouth again?" she cried. "There's is nothing in this heart to you but
+thanks. But I will be honest too," she added, with a kind of suddenness,
+"and I'll never can forgive that girl."</p>
+
+<p>"Is this Miss Grant again?" said I. "You said yourself she was the best
+lady in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"So she will be, indeed!" says Catriona. "But I will never forgive her
+for all that. I will never, never forgive her, and let me hear tell of her
+no more."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "this beats all that ever came to my knowledge; and I
+wonder that you can indulge yourself in such bairnly whims. Here is a young
+lady that was the best friend in the world to the both of us, that learned
+us how to dress ourselves, and in a great manner how to behave, as anyone
+can see that knew us both before and after."</p>
+
+<p>But Catriona stopped square in the midst of the highway.</p>
+
+<p>"It is this way of it," said she. "Either you will go on to speak of
+her, and I will go back to yon town, and let come of it what God pleases!
+Or else you will do me that politeness to talk of other things."</p>
+
+<p>I was the most nonplussed person in this world; but I bethought me that
+she depended altogether on my help, that she was of the frail sex and not
+so much beyond a child, and it was for me to be wise for the pair of
+us.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302"></a>[pg
+302]</span>"My dear girl," said I, "I can make neither head nor tails of
+this; but God forbid that I should do anything to set you on the jee. As
+for talking of Miss Grant I have no such a mind to it, and I believe it was
+yourself began it. My only design (if I took you up at all) was for your
+own improvement, for I hate the very look of injustice. Not that I do not
+wish you to have a good pride and a nice female delicacy; they become you
+well; but here you show them to excess."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, have you done?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I have done," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"A very good thing," said she, and we went on again, but now in
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>It was an eerie employment to walk in the gross night, beholding only
+shadows and hearing nought but our own steps. At first, I believe our
+hearts burned against each other with a deal of enmity; but the darkness
+and the cold, and the silence, which only the cocks sometimes interrupted,
+or sometimes the farmyard dogs, had pretty soon brought down our pride to
+the dust; and for my own particular, I would have jumped at any decent
+opening for speech.</p>
+
+<p>Before the day peeped, came on a warmish rain, and the frost was all
+wiped away from among our feet. I took my cloak to her and sought to hap
+her in the same; she bade me, rather impatiently, to keep it.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed and I will do no such thing," said I. "Here am I, a great, ugly
+lad that has seen all kinds of weather, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_303" id="Page_303"></a>[pg 303]</span>and here are you a tender,
+pretty maid! My dear, you would not put me to a shame?"</p>
+
+<p>Without more words she let me cover her; which as I was doing in the
+darkness, I let my hand rest a moment on her shoulder, almost like an
+embrace.</p>
+
+<p>"You must try to be more patient of your friend," said I.</p>
+
+<p>I thought she seemed to lean the least thing in the world against my
+bosom, or perhaps it was but fancy.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be no end to your goodness," said she.</p>
+
+<p>And we went on again in silence; but now all was changed; and the
+happiness that was in my heart was like a fire in a great chimney.</p>
+
+<p>The rain passed ere day; it was but a sloppy morning as we came into the
+town of Delft. The red gabled houses made a handsome show on either hand of
+a canal; the servant lassies were out slestering and scrubbing at the very
+stones upon the public highway; smoke rose from a hundred kitchens; and it
+came in upon me strongly it was time to break our fasts.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "I believe you have yet a shilling and three
+baubees?"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you wanting it?" said she, and passed me her purse. "I am wishing
+it was five pounds! What will you want it for?"</p>
+
+<p>"And what have we been walking for all night, like a pair of waif
+Egyptians?" says I. "Just because I was robbed of my purse and all I
+possessed in that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304"
+id="Page_304"></a>[pg 304]</span>unchancy town of Rotterdam. I will tell
+you of it now, because I think the worst is over, but we have still a good
+tramp before us till we get to where my money is, and if you would not buy
+me a piece of bread, I were like to go fasting."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me with open eyes. By the light of the new day she was all
+black and pale for weariness, so that my heart smote me for her. But as for
+her, she broke out laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"My torture! are we beggars then?" she cried. "You too? O, I could have
+wished for this same thing! And I am glad to buy your breakfast to you. But
+it would be pleisand if I would have had to dance to get a meal to you! For
+I believe they are not very well acquainted with our manner of dancing over
+here, and might be paying for the curiosity of that sight."</p>
+
+<p>I could have kissed her for that word, not with a lover's mind, but in a
+heat of admiration. For it always warms a man to see a woman brave.</p>
+
+<p>We got a drink of milk from a country wife but new come to the town, and
+in a baker's, a piece of excellent, hot, sweet-smelling bread, which we ate
+upon the road as we went on. That road from Delft to the Hague is just five
+miles of a fine avenue shaded with trees, a canal on the one hand, on the
+other excellent pastures of cattle. It was pleasant here indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, Davie," said she, "what will you do with me at all
+events?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305"></a>[pg
+305]</span>"It is what we have to speak of," said I, "and the sooner yet
+the better. I can come by money in Leyden; that will be all well. But the
+trouble is how to dispose of you until your father come. I thought last
+night you seemed a little sweir to part from me?"</p>
+
+<p>"It will be more than seeming then," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a very young maid," said I, "and I am but a very young callant.
+This is a great piece of difficulty. What way are we to manage? Unless,
+indeed, you could pass to be my sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"And what for no?" said she, "if you would let me!"</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you were so, indeed!" I cried. "I would be a fine man if I had
+such a sister. But the rub is that you are Catriona Drummond."</p>
+
+<p>"And now I will be Catrine Balfour," she said. "And who is to ken? They
+are all strange folk here."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think that it would do," says I. "I own it troubles me. I would
+like it very ill, if I advised you at all wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"David, I have no friend here but you," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"The mere truth is, I am too young to be your friend," said I. "I am too
+young to advise you, or you to be advised. I see not what else we are to
+do, and yet I ought to warn you."</p>
+
+<p>"I will have no choice left," said she. "My father James More has not
+used me very well, and it is not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306"
+id="Page_306"></a>[pg 306]</span>the first time. I am cast upon your hands
+like a sack of barley meal, and have nothing else to think of but your
+pleasure. If you will have me, good and well. If you will not"--she turned
+and touched her hand upon my arm--"David, I am afraid," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"No, but I ought to warn you," I began; and then bethought me that I was
+the bearer of the purse, and it would never do to seem too churlish.
+"Catriona," said I, "don't misunderstand me: I am just trying to do my duty
+by you, girl! Here am I going alone to this strange city, to be a solitary
+student there; and here is this chance arisen that you might dwell with me
+a bit, and be like my sister: you can surely understand this much, my dear,
+that I would just love to have you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and here I am," said she. "So that's soon settled."</p>
+
+<p>I know I was in duty bounden to have spoke more plain. I know this was a
+great blot on my character for which I was lucky that I did not pay more
+dear. But I minded how easy her delicacy had been startled with a word of
+kissing her in Barbara's letter; now that she depended on me, how was I to
+be more bold? Besides, the truth is, I could see no other feasible method
+to dispose of her. And I daresay inclination pulled me very strong.</p>
+
+<p>A little beyond the Hague she fell very lame and made the rest of the
+distance heavily enough. Twice <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307"
+id="Page_307"></a>[pg 307]</span>she must rest by the wayside, which she
+did with pretty apologies, calling herself a shame to the Highlands and the
+race she came of, and nothing but a hindrance to myself. It was her excuse,
+she said, that she was not much used with walking shod. I would have had
+her strip off her shoes and stockings and go barefoot. But she pointed out
+to me that the women of that country, even in the landward roads, appeared
+to be all shod.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not be disgracing my brother," said she, and was very merry with
+it all, although her face told tales of her.</p>
+
+<p>There is a garden in that city we were bound to, sanded below with clean
+sand, the trees meeting overhead, some of them trimmed, some pleached, and
+the whole place beautified with alleys and arbours. Here I left Catriona,
+and went forward by myself to find my correspondent. There I drew on my
+credit, and asked to be recommended to some decent, retired lodging. My
+baggage not being yet arrived, I told him I supposed I should require his
+caution with the people of the house; and explained that, my sister being
+come for a while to keep house with me, I should be wanting two chambers.
+This was all very well; but the trouble was that Mr. Balfour in his letter
+of recommendation had condescended on a great deal of particulars, and
+never a word of any sister in the case. I could see my Dutchman was
+extremely suspicious; and viewing me over the rims of a great pair of
+spectacles--he <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308"
+id="Page_308"></a>[pg 308]</span>was a poor, frail body, and reminded me of
+an infirm rabbit--he began to question me close.</p>
+
+<p>Here I fell in a panic. Suppose he accept my tale (thinks I), suppose he
+invite my sister to his house, and that I bring her. I shall have a fine
+ravelled pirn to unwind, and may end by disgracing both the lassie and
+myself. Thereupon I began hastily to expound to him my sister's character.
+She was of a bashful disposition, it appeared, and so extremely fearful of
+meeting strangers that I had left her at that moment sitting in a public
+place alone. And then, being launched upon the stream of falsehood, I must
+do like all the rest of the world in the same circumstance, and plunge in
+deeper than was any service; adding some altogether needless particulars of
+Miss Balfour's ill-health and retirement during childhood. In the midst of
+which I awoke to a sense of my behaviour, and was turned to one blush.</p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman was not so much deceived but what he discovered a
+willingness to be quit of me. But he was first of all a man of business;
+and knowing that my money was good enough, however it might be with my
+conduct, he was so far obliging as to send his son to be my guide and
+caution in the matter of a lodging. This implied my presenting of the young
+man to Catriona. The poor, pretty child was much recovered with resting,
+looked and behaved to perfection, and took my arm and gave me the name of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309"></a>[pg
+309]</span>brother more easily than I could answer her. But there was one
+misfortune: thinking to help, she was rather towardly than otherwise to my
+Dutchman. And I could not but reflect that Miss Balfour had rather suddenly
+outgrown her bashfulness. And there was another thing, the difference of
+our speech. I had the Low Country tongue and dwelled upon my words; she had
+a hill voice, spoke with something of an English accent, only far more
+delightful, and was scarce quite fit to be called a deacon in the craft of
+talking English grammar; so that, for a brother and sister, we made a most
+uneven pair. But the young Hollander was a heavy dog, without so much
+spirit in his belly as to remark her prettiness, for which I scorned him.
+And as soon as he had found a cover to our heads, he left us alone, which
+was the greater service of the two.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310"></a>[pg
+310]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXIV'></a>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<h3>FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS</h3>
+
+
+<p>The place found was in the upper part of a house backed on a canal. We
+had two rooms, the second entering from the first; each had a chimney built
+out into the floor in the Dutch manner; and being alongside, each had the
+same prospect from the window of the top of a tree below us in a little
+court, of a piece of the canal, and of houses in the Hollands architecture
+and a church spire upon the further side. A full set of bells hung in that
+spire and made delightful music; and when there was any sun at all, it
+shone direct in our two chambers. From a tavern hard by we had good meals
+sent in.</p>
+
+<p>The first night we were both pretty weary, and she extremely so. There
+was little talk between us, and I packed her off to her bed as soon as she
+had eaten. The first thing in the morning I wrote word to Sprott to have
+her mails sent on, together with a line to Alan at his chief's; and had the
+same dispatched, and her breakfast ready, ere I waked her. I was a little
+abashed when she came forth in her one habit, and the mud of the way upon
+her stockings. By what inquiries I had made, it <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_311" id="Page_311"></a>[pg 311]</span>seemed a good few days
+must pass before her mails could come to hand in Leyden, and it was plainly
+needful she must have a shift of things. She was unwilling at first that I
+should go to that expense; but I reminded her she was now a rich man's
+sister and must appear suitably in the part, and we had not got to the
+second merchant's before she was entirely charmed into the spirit of the
+thing, and her eyes shining. It pleased me to see her so innocent and
+thorough in this pleasure. What was more extraordinary was the passion into
+which I fell on it myself; being never satisfied that I had bought her
+enough or fine enough, and never weary of beholding her in different
+attires. Indeed, I began to understand some little of Miss Grant's
+immersion in that interest of clothes; for the truth is, when you have the
+ground of a beautiful person to adorn, the whole business becomes
+beautiful. The Dutch chintzes I should say were extraordinary cheap and
+fine; but I would be ashamed to set down what I paid for stockings to her.
+Altogether I spent so great a sum upon this pleasuring (as I may call it)
+that I was ashamed for a great while to spend more; and by way of a set
+off, I left our chambers pretty bare. If we had beds, if Catriona was a
+little braw, and I had light to see her by, we were richly enough lodged
+for me.</p>
+
+<p>By the end of this merchandising I was glad to leave her at the door
+with all our purchases, and go for a long walk alone in which to read
+myself a lecture. Here had <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312"
+id="Page_312"></a>[pg 312]</span>I taken under my roof, and as good as to
+my bosom, a young lass extremely beautiful, and whose innocence was her
+peril. My talk with the old Dutchman, and the lies to which I was
+constrained, had already given me a sense of how my conduct must appear to
+others; and now, after the strong admiration I had just experienced and the
+immoderacy with which I had continued my vain purchases, I began to think
+of it myself as very hasarded. I bethought me, if I had a sister indeed,
+whether I would so expose her; then, judging the case too problematical, I
+varied my question into this, whether I would so trust Catriona in the
+hands of any other Christian being: the answer to which made my face to
+burn. The more cause, since I had been entrapped and had entrapped the girl
+into an undue situation, that I should behave in it with scrupulous nicety.
+She depended on me wholly for her bread and shelter; in case I should alarm
+her delicacy, she had no retreat. Besides, I was her host and her
+protector; and the more irregularly I had fallen in these positions, the
+less excuse for me if I should profit by the same to forward even the most
+honest suit; for with the opportunities that I enjoyed, and which no wise
+parent would have suffered for a moment, even the most honest suit would be
+unfair. I saw I must be extremely hold-off in my relations; and yet not too
+much so neither; for if I had no right to appear at all in the character of
+a suitor, I must yet appear continually, and if possible agreeably, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313"></a>[pg 313]</span>in that
+of host. It was plain I should require a great deal of tact and conduct,
+perhaps more than my years afforded. But I had rushed in where angels might
+have feared to tread, and there was no way out of that position, save by
+behaving right while I was in it. I made a set of rules for my guidance;
+prayed for strength to be enabled to observe them, and as a more human aid
+to the same end purchased a study book in law. This being all that I could
+think of, I relaxed from these grave considerations; whereupon my mind
+bubbled at once into an effervescency of pleasing spirits, and it was like
+one treading on air that I turned homeward. As I thought that name of home,
+and recalled the image of that figure awaiting me between four walls, my
+heart beat upon my bosom.</p>
+
+<p>My troubles began with my return. She ran to greet me with an obvious
+and affecting pleasure. She was clad, besides, entirely in the new clothes
+that I had bought for her; looked in them beyond expression well; and must
+walk about and drop me curtseys to display them and to be admired. I am
+sure I did it with an ill grace, for I thought to have choked upon the
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, "if you will not be caring for my pretty clothes, see
+what I have done with our two chambers." And she showed me the place all
+very finely swept and the fires glowing in the two chimneys.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314"></a>[pg
+314]</span>I was glad of a chance to seem a little more severe than I quite
+felt. "Catriona," said I, "I am very much displeased with you, and you must
+never again lay a hand upon my room. One of us two must have the rule while
+we are here together; it is most fit it should be I who am both the man and
+the elder; and I give you that for my command."</p>
+
+<p>She dropped me one of her curtseys which were extraordinary taking. "If
+you will be cross," said she, "I must be making pretty manners at you,
+Davie. I will be very obedient, as I should be when every stitch upon all
+there is of me belongs to you. But you will not be very cross either,
+because now I have not anyone else."</p>
+
+<p>This struck me hard, and I made haste, in a kind of penitence, to blot
+out all the good effect of my last speech. In this direction, progress was
+more easy, being down hill; she led me forward, smiling; at the sight of
+her, in the brightness of the fire and with her pretty becks and looks, my
+heart was altogether melted. We made our meal with infinite mirth and
+tenderness; and the two seemed to be commingled into one, so that our very
+laughter sounded like a kindness.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of which I awoke to better recollections, made a lame word
+of excuse, and set myself boorishly to my studies. It was a substantial,
+instructive book that I had bought, by the late Dr. Heineccius, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315"></a>[pg 315]</span>in
+which I was to do a great deal of reading these next days, and often very
+glad that I had no one to question me of what I read. Methought she bit her
+lip at me a little, and that cut me. Indeed it left her wholly solitary,
+the more as she was very little of a reader, and had never a book. But what
+was I to do?</p>
+
+<p>So the rest of the evening flowed by almost without speech.</p>
+
+<p>I could have beat myself. I could not lie in my bed that night for rage
+and repentance, but walked to and fro on my bare feet till I was nearly
+perished, for the chimney was gone out and the frost keen. The thought of
+her in the next room, the thought that she might even hear me as I walked,
+the remembrance of my churlishness and that I must continue to practise the
+same ungrateful course or be dishonoured, put me beside my reason. I stood
+like a man between Scylla and Charybdis: <i>What must she think of me</i>?
+was my one thought that softened me continually into weakness. <i>What is
+to become of us</i>? the other which steeled me again to resolution. This
+was my first night of wakefulness and divided counsels, of which I was now
+to pass many, pacing like a madman, sometimes weeping like a childish boy,
+sometimes praying (I would fain hope) like a Christian.</p>
+
+<p>But prayer is not very difficult, and the hitch comes in practice. In
+her presence, and above all if I allowed <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_316" id="Page_316"></a>[pg 316]</span>any beginning of
+familiarity, I found I had very little command of what should follow. But
+to sit all day in the same room with her, and feign to be engaged upon
+Heineccius, surpassed my strength. So that I fell instead upon the
+expedient of absenting myself so much as I was able; taking out classes and
+sitting there regularly, often with small attention, the test of which I
+found the other day in a note-book of that period, where I had left off to
+follow an edifying lecture and actually scribbled in my book some very ill
+verses, though the Latinity is rather better than I thought I could ever
+have compassed. The evil of this course was unhappily near as great as its
+advantage. I had the less time of trial, but I believe, while that time
+lasted, I was tried the more extremely. For she being so much left to
+solitude, she came to greet my return with an increasing fervour that came
+nigh to overmaster me. These friendly offers I must barbarously cast back;
+and my rejection sometimes wounded her so cruelly that I must unbend and
+seek to make it up to her in kindness. So that our time passed in ups and
+downs, tiffs and disappointments, upon the which I could almost say (if it
+may be said with reverence) that I was crucified.</p>
+
+<p>The base of my trouble was Catriona's extraordinary innocence, at which
+I was not so much surprised as filled with pity and admiration. She seemed
+to have no thought of our position, no sense of my struggles; <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317"></a>[pg
+317]</span>welcomed any mark of my weakness with responsive joy; and when I
+was drove again to my retrenchments, did not always dissemble her chagrin.
+There were times when I have thought to myself, 'If she were over head in
+love, and set her cap to catch me, she would scarce behave much otherwise;'
+and then I would fall again into wonder at the simplicity of woman, from
+whom I felt (in these moments) that I was not worthy to be descended.</p>
+
+<p>There was one point in particular on which our warfare turned, and of
+all things, this was the question of her clothes. My baggage had soon
+followed me from Rotterdam, and hers from Helvoet. She had now, as it were,
+two wardrobes; and it grew to be understood between us (I could never tell
+how) that when she was friendly she would wear my clothes, and when
+otherwise her own. It was meant for a buffet, and (as it were) the
+renunciation of her gratitude; and I felt it so in my bosom, but was
+generally more wise than to appear to have observed the circumstance.</p>
+
+<p>Once, indeed, I was betrayed into a childishness greater than her own;
+it fell in this way. On my return from classes, thinking upon her devoutly
+with a great deal of love and a good deal of annoyance in the bargain, the
+annoyance began to fade away out of my mind; and spying in a window one of
+those forced flowers, of which the Hollanders are so skilled in the
+artifice, I gave way to an impulse and bought it for <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318"></a>[pg
+318]</span>Catriona. I do not know the name of that flower, but it was of
+the pink colour, and I thought she would admire the same, and carried it
+home to her with a wonderful soft heart. I had left her in my clothes, and
+when I returned to find her all changed and a face to match, I cast but the
+one look at her from head to foot, ground my teeth together, flung the
+window open, and my flower into the court, and then (between rage and
+prudence) myself out of that room again, of which I slammed the door as I
+went out.</p>
+
+<p>On the steep stair I came near falling, and this brought me to myself,
+so that I began at once to see the folly of my conduct. I went, not into
+the street as I had purposed, but to the house court, which was always a
+solitary place, and where I saw my flower (that had cost me vastly more
+than it was worth) hanging in the leafless tree. I stood by the side of the
+canal, and looked upon the ice. Country people went by on their skates, and
+I envied them. I could see no way out of the pickle I was in: no way so
+much as to return to the room I had just left. No doubt was in my mind but
+I had now betrayed the secret of my feelings; and to make things worse, I
+had shown at the same time (and that with wretched boyishness) incivility
+to my helpless guest.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose she must have seen me from the open window. It did not seem to
+me that I had stood there very long before I heard the crunching of
+footsteps on <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319"></a>[pg
+319]</span>the frozen snow, and turning somewhat angrily (for I was in no
+spirit to be interrupted) saw Catriona drawing near. She was all changed
+again, to the clocked stockings.</p>
+
+<p>"Are we not to have our walk to-day?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>I was looking at her in a maze. "Where is your brooch?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>She carried her hand to her bosom and coloured high. "I will have
+forgotten it," said she. "I will run upstairs for it quick, and then surely
+we'll can have our walk?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a note of pleading in that last that staggered me; I had
+neither words nor voice to utter them; I could do no more than nod by way
+of answer; and the moment she had left me, climbed into the tree and
+recovered my flower, which on her return I offered her.</p>
+
+<p>"I bought it for you, Catriona," said I.</p>
+
+<p>She fixed it in the midst of her bosom with the brooch, I could have
+thought tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is none the better of my handling," said I again, and blushed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will be liking it none the worse, you may be sure of that," said
+she.</p>
+
+<p>We did not speak so much that day, she seemed a thought on the reserve
+though not unkindly. As for me, all the time of our walking, and after we
+came home, and I had seen her put my flower into a pot of water, I was
+thinking to myself what puzzles women <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_320" id="Page_320"></a>[pg 320]</span>were. I was thinking, the
+one moment, it was the most stupid thing on earth she should not have
+perceived my love; and the next, that she had certainly perceived it long
+ago, and (being a wise girl with the fine female instinct of propriety)
+concealed her knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>We had our walk daily. Out in the streets I felt more safe; I relaxed a
+little in my guardedness; and for one thing, there was no Heineccius. This
+made these periods not only a relief to myself, but a particular pleasure
+to my poor child. When I came back about the hour appointed, I would
+generally find her ready dressed and glowing with anticipation. She would
+prolong their duration to the extreme, seeming to dread (as I did myself)
+the hour of the return; and there is scarce a field or waterside near
+Leyden, scarce a street or lane there, where we have not lingered. Outside
+of these, I bade her confine herself entirely to our lodgings; this in the
+fear of her encountering any acquaintance, which would have rendered our
+position very difficult. From the same apprehension I would never suffer
+her to attend church, nor even go myself; but made some kind of shift to
+hold worship privately in our own chamber--I hope with an honest, but I am
+quite sure with a very much divided mind. Indeed, there was scarce anything
+that more affected me, than thus to kneel down alone with her before God
+like man and wife.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321"></a>[pg
+321]</span>One day it was snowing downright hard. I had thought it not
+possible that we should venture forth, and was surprised to find her
+waiting for me ready dressed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not be doing without my walk," she cried. "You are never a good
+boy, Davie, in the house; I will never be caring for you only in the open
+air. I think we two will better turn Egyptian and dwell by the
+roadside."</p>
+
+<p>That was the best walk yet of all of them; she clung near to me in the
+falling snow; it beat about and melted on us, and the drops stood upon her
+bright cheeks like tears and ran into her smiling mouth. Strength seemed to
+come upon me with the sight like a giant's; I thought I could have caught
+her up and run with her into the uttermost places in the earth; and we
+spoke together all that time beyond belief for freedom and sweetness.</p>
+
+<p>It was the dark night when we came to the house door. She pressed my arm
+upon her bosom. "Thank you kindly for these same good hours," said she, on
+a deep note of her voice.</p>
+
+<p>The concern in which I fell instantly on this address, put me with the
+same swiftness on my guard; and we were no sooner in the chamber, and the
+light made, than she beheld the old, dour, stubborn countenance of the
+student of Heineccius. Doubtless she was more than usually hurt; and I know
+for myself, I found it more <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322"
+id="Page_322"></a>[pg 322]</span>than usually difficult to maintain my
+strangeness. Even at the meal, I durst scarce unbuckle and scarce lift my
+eyes to her; and it was no sooner over than I fell again to my civilian,
+with more seeming abstraction and less understanding than before.
+Methought, as I-read, I could hear my heart strike like an eight-day clock.
+Hard as I feigned to study, there was still some of my eyesight that
+spilled beyond the book upon Catriona. She sat on the floor by the side of
+my great mail, and the chimney lighted her up, and shone and blinked upon
+her, and made her glow and darken through a wonder of fine hues. Now she
+would be gazing in the fire, and then again at me; and at that I would be
+plunged in a terror of myself, and turn the pages of Heineccius like a man
+looking for the text in church.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she called out aloud, "O, why does not my father come?" she
+cried, and fell at once into a storm of tears.</p>
+
+<p>I leaped up, flung Heineccius fairly into the fire, ran to her side, and
+cast an arm around her sobbing body.</p>
+
+<p>She put me from her sharply. "You do not love your friend," says she. "I
+could be so happy too, if you would let me!" And then, "O, what will I have
+done that you should hate me so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hate you!" cries I, and held her firm. "You blind lass, can you not see
+a little in my wretched heart? Do you think when I set there, reading in
+that fool-book that I have just burned and be damned to it, I take <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323"></a>[pg 323]</span>ever
+the least thought of any stricken thing but just yourself? Night after
+night I could have grat to see you sitting there your lone. And what was I
+to do? You are here under my honour; would you punish me for that? Is it
+for that that you would spurn a loving servant?"</p>
+
+<p>At the word, with a small, sudden motion, she clung near to me. I raised
+her face to mine, I kissed it, and she bowed her brow upon my bosom,
+clasping me tight. I sat in a mere whirl like a man drunken. Then I heard
+her voice sound very small and muffled in my clothes.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you kiss her truly?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>There went through me so great a heave of surprise that I was all shook
+with it.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Grant!" I cried, all in a disorder. "Yes, I asked her to kiss me
+good-bye, the which she did."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well!" said she, "you have kissed me too, at all events."</p>
+
+<p>At the strangeness and sweetness of that word, I saw where we had
+fallen; rose, and set her on her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"This will never do," said I. "This will never, never do. O Catrine,
+Catrine!" Then there came a pause in which I was debarred from any
+speaking. And then, "Go away to your bed," said I. "Go away to your bed and
+leave me."</p>
+
+<p>She turned to obey me like a little child, and the next I knew of it,
+had stopped in the very doorway.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324"></a>[pg
+324]</span>"Good night, Davie!" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"And O, good night, my love!" I cried, with a great outbreak of my soul,
+and caught her to me again, so that it seemed I must have broken her. The
+next moment I had thrust her from the room, shut to the door even with
+violence, and stood alone.</p>
+
+<p>The milk was spilt now, the word was out and the truth told. I had crept
+like an untrusty man into the poor maid's affections; she was in my hand
+like any frail, innocent thing to make or mar; and what weapon of defence
+was left me? It seemed like a symbol that Heinoccius, my old protection,
+was now burned. I repented, yet could not find it in my heart to blame
+myself for that great failure. It seemed not possible to have resisted the
+boldness of her innocence or that last temptation of her weeping. And all
+that I had to excuse me did but make my sin appear the greater--it was upon
+a nature so defenceless, and with such advantages of the position, that I
+seemed to have practised.</p>
+
+<p>What was to become of us now? It seemed we could no longer dwell in the
+one place. But where was I to go? or where she? Without either choice or
+fault of ours, life had conspired to wall us together in that narrow place.
+I had a wild thought of marrying out of hand; and the next moment put it
+from me with revolt. She was a child, she could not tell her own heart; I
+had surprised her weakness, I must never go <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_325" id="Page_325"></a>[pg 325]</span>on to build on that
+surprisal; I must keep her not only clear of reproach, but free as she had
+come to me.</p>
+
+<p>Down I sat before the fire, and reflected, and repented, and beat my
+brains in vain for any means of escape. About two of the morning, there
+were three red embers left and the house and all the city was asleep, when
+I was aware of a small sound of weeping in the next room. She thought that
+I slept, the poor soul; she regretted her weakness--and what perhaps (God
+help her!) she called her forwardness--and in the dead of the night solaced
+herself with tears. Tender and bitter feelings, love and penitence and pity
+struggled in my soul; it seemed I was under bond to heal that weeping.</p>
+
+<p>"O, try to forgive me!" I cried out, "try, try to forgive me. Let us
+forget it all, let us try if we'll no can forget it!"</p>
+
+<p>There came no answer, but the sobbing ceased. I stood a long while with
+my hands still clasped as I had spoken; then the cold of the night laid
+hold upon me with a shudder, and I think my reason reawakened.</p>
+
+<p>"You can make no hand of this, Davie," thinks I. "To bed with you like a
+wise lad, and try if you can sleep. To-morrow you may see your way."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326"></a>[pg
+326]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXV'></a>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE</h3>
+
+
+<p>I was called on the morrow out of a late and troubled slumber by a
+knocking on my door, ran to open it, and had almost swooned with the
+contrariety of my feelings, mostly painful; for on the threshold, in a
+rough wrapraseal and an extraordinary big laced hat, there stood James
+More.</p>
+
+<p>I ought to have been glad perhaps without admixture, for there was a
+sense in which the man came like an answer to prayer. I had been saying
+till my head was weary that Catriona and I must separate, and looking till
+my head ached for any possible means of separation. Here were the means
+come to me upon two legs, and joy was the hindmost of my thoughts. It is to
+be considered, however, that even if the weight of the future were lifted
+off me by the man's arrival, the present heaved up the more black and
+menacing; so that, as I first stood before him in my shirt and breeches, I
+believe I took a leaping step backward like a person shot.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," said he, "I have found you, Mr. Balfour." And offered me his
+large, fine hand, the which (recovering <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_327" id="Page_327"></a>[pg 327]</span>at the same time my post
+in the doorway, as if with some thought of resistance) I took him by
+doubtfully. "It is a remarkable circumstance how our affairs appear to
+intermingle," he continued. "I am owing you an apology for an unfortunate
+intrusion upon yours, which I suffered myself to be entrapped into by my
+confidence in that false-face, Prestongrange; I think shame to own to you
+that I was ever trusting to a lawyer." He shrugged his shoulders with a
+very French air. "But indeed the man is very plausible," says he. "And now
+it seems that you have busied yourself handsomely in the matter of my
+daughter, for whose direction I was remitted to yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I think, sir," said I, with a very painful air, "that it will be
+necessary we two should have an explanation."</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing amiss?" he asked. "My agent, Mr. Sprott--"</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake moderate your voice!" I cried. "She must not hear till
+we have had an explanation."</p>
+
+<p>"She is in this place?" cries he.</p>
+
+<p>"That is her chamber door," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You are here with her alone?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"And who else would I have got to stay with us?" cries I.</p>
+
+<p>I will do him the justice to admit that he turned pale.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328"></a>[pg
+328]</span>"This is very unusual," said he. "This is a very unusual
+circumstance. You are right, we must hold an explanation."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he passed me by, and I must own the tall old rogue appeared
+at that moment extraordinary dignified. He had now, for the first time, the
+view of my chamber, which I scanned (I may say) with his eyes. A bit of
+morning sun glinted in by the window pane, and showed it off; my bed, my
+mails, and washing dish, with some disorder of my clothes, and the
+unlighted chimney, made the only plenishing; no mistake but it looked bare
+and cold, and the most unsuitable, beggarly place conceivable to harbour a
+young lady. At the same time came in on my mind the recollection of the
+clothes that I had bought for her; and I thought this contrast of poverty
+and prodigality bore an ill appearance.</p>
+
+<p>He looked all about the chamber for a seat, and finding nothing else to
+his purpose except my bed, took a place upon the side of it; where, after I
+had closed the door, I could not very well avoid joining him. For however
+this extraordinary interview might end, it must pass if possible without
+waking Catriona; and the one thing needful was that we should sit close and
+talk low. But I can scarce picture what a pair we made; he in his great
+coat which the coldness of my chamber made extremely suitable; I shivering
+in my shirt and breeks; he with very much the air of a judge; and I
+(whatever <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329"></a>[pg
+329]</span>I looked) with very much the feelings of a man who has heard the
+last trumpet.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" says he.</p>
+
+<p>And "Well" I began, but found myself unable to go further.</p>
+
+<p>"You tell me she is here?" said he again, but now with a spice of
+impatiency that seemed to brace me up.</p>
+
+<p>"She is in this house," said I, "and I knew the circumstance would be
+called unusual. But you are to consider how very unusual the whole business
+was from the beginning. Here is a young lady landed on the coast of Europe
+with two shillings and a penny halfpenny. She is directed to yon man Sprott
+in Helvoet. I hear you call him your agent. All I can say is he could do
+nothing but damn and swear at the mere mention of your name, and I must fee
+him out of my own pocket even to receive the custody of her effects, You
+speak of unusual circumstances, Mr. Drummond, if that be the name you
+prefer. Here was a circumstance, if you like, to which it was barbarity to
+have exposed her."</p>
+
+<p>"But this is what I cannot understand the least," said James. "My
+daughter was placed into the charge of some responsible persons, whose
+names I have forgot."</p>
+
+<p>"Gebbie was the name," said I; "and there is no doubt that Mr. Gebbie
+should have gone ashore with her at Helvoet. But he did not, Mr. Drummond;
+and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330"></a>[pg
+330]</span>I think you might praise God that I was there to offer in his
+place."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have a word to say to Mr. Gebbie before done," said he. "As for
+yourself, I think it might have occurred that you were somewhat young for
+such a post."</p>
+
+<p>"But the choice was not between me and somebody else, it was between me
+and nobody," I cried. "Nobody offered in my place, and I must say I think
+you show a very small degree of gratitude to me that did."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall wait until I understand my obligation a little more in the
+particular," says he.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, and I think it stares you in the face, then," said I. "Your
+child was deserted, she was clean flung away in the midst of Europe, with
+scarce two shillings, and not two words of any language spoken there: I
+must say, a bonny business! I brought her to this place. I gave her the
+name and the tenderness due to a sister. All this has not gone without
+expense, but that I scarce need to hint at. They were services due to the
+young lady's character which I respect; and I think it would be a bonny
+business too, if I was to be singing her praises to her father."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a young man," he began.</p>
+
+<p>"So I hear you tell me," said I, with a good deal of heat.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a very young man," he repeated, "or you would have understood
+the significancy of the step."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331"></a>[pg
+331]</span>"I think you speak very much at your ease," cried I. "What else
+was I to do? It is a fact I might have hired some decent, poor woman to be
+a third to us, and I declare I never thought of it until this moment! But
+where was I to find her, that am a foreigner myself? And let me point out
+to your observation, Mr. Drummond, that it would have cost me money out of
+my pocket. For here is just what it comes to, that I had to pay through the
+nose for your neglect; and there is only the one story to it, just that you
+were so unloving and so careless as to have lost your daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"He that lives in a glass house should not be casting stones," says he;
+"and we will finish inquiring into the behaviour of Miss Drummond, before
+we go on to sit in judgment on her father."</p>
+
+<p>"But I will be entrapped into no such attitude," said I. "The character
+of Miss Drummond is far above inquiry, as her father ought to know. So is
+mine, and I am telling you that. There are but the two ways of it open. The
+one is to express your thanks to me as one gentleman to another, and to say
+no more. The other (if you are so difficult as to be still dissatisfied) is
+to pay me that which I have expended and be done."</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to soothe me with a hand in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"There, there," said he. "You go too fast, you go too fast, Mr. Balfour.
+It is a good thing that I have <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332"
+id="Page_332"></a>[pg 332]</span>learned to be more patient. And I believe
+you forget that I have yet to see my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>I began to be a little relieved upon this speech and a change in the
+man's manner that I spied in him as soon as the name of money fell between
+us.</p>
+
+<p>"I was thinking it would be more fit--if you will excuse the plainness
+of my dressing in your presence--that I should go forth and leave you to
+encounter her alone?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"What I would have looked for at your hands!" says he; and there was no
+mistake but what he said it civilly.</p>
+
+<p>I thought this better and better still, and as I began to pull on my
+hose, recalling the man's impudent mendicancy at Prestongrange's, I
+determined to pursue what seemed to be my victory.</p>
+
+<p>"If you have any mind to stay some while in Leyden," said I, "this room
+is very much at your disposal, and I can easy find another for myself: in
+which way we shall have the least amount of flitting possible, there being
+only one to change."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sir," said he, making his bosom big, "I think no shame of a
+poverty I have come by in the service of my king; I make no secret that my
+affairs are quite involved; and for the moment, it would be even impossible
+for me to undertake a journey."</p>
+
+<p>"Until you have occasion to communicate with your friends," said I,
+"perhaps it might be convenient <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333"
+id="Page_333"></a>[pg 333]</span>for you (as of course it would be
+honourable to myself) if you were to regard yourself in the light of my
+guest?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," said he, "when an offer is frankly made, I think I honour myself
+most to imitate that frankness. Your hand, Mr. David; you have the
+character that I respect the most; you are one of those from whom a
+gentleman can take a favour and no more words about it. I am an old
+soldier," he went on, looking rather disgusted-like around my chamber, "and
+you need not fear I shall prove burthensome. I have ate too often at a
+dyke-side, drank of the ditch, and had no roof but the rain."</p>
+
+<p>"I should be telling you," said I, "that our breakfasts are sent
+customarily in about this time of morning. I propose I should go now to the
+tavern, and bid them add a cover for yourself and delay the meal the matter
+of an hour, which will give you an interval to meet your daughter in."</p>
+
+<p>Methought his nostrils wagged at this. "O, an hour," says he. "That is
+perhaps superfluous. Half an hour, Mr. David, or say twenty minutes; I
+shall do very well in that. And by the way," he adds, detaining me by the
+coat, "what is it you drink in the morning, whether ale or wine?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be frank with you, sir," says I, "I drink nothing else but spare,
+cold water?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tut-tut," says he, "that is fair destruction to the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334"></a>[pg
+334]</span>stomach, take an old campaigner's word for it. Our country
+spirit at home is perhaps the most entirely wholesome; but as that is not
+come-at-able, Rhenish or a white wine of Burgundy will be next best."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall make it my business to see you are supplied," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, very good," said he, "and we shall make a man of you yet, Mr.
+David."</p>
+
+<p>By this time, I can hardly say that I was minding him at all, beyond an
+odd thought of the kind of father-in-law that he was like to prove; and all
+my cares centred about the lass his daughter, to whom I determined to
+convey some warning of her visitor. I stepped to the door accordingly, and
+cried through the panels, knocking thereon at the same time: "Miss
+Drummond, here is your father come at last."</p>
+
+<p>With that I went forth upon my errand, having (by two words)
+extraordinarily damaged my affairs.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335"></a>[pg
+335]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXVI'></a>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE THREESOME</h3>
+
+
+<p>Whether or not I was to be so much blamed, or rather perhaps pitied, I
+must leave others to judge of. My shrewdness (of which I have a good deal,
+too) seems not so great with the ladies. No doubt, at the moment when I
+awaked her, I was thinking a good deal of the effect upon James More; and
+similarly when I returned and we were all sat down to breakfast, I
+continued to behave to the young lady with deference and distance; as I
+still think to have been most wise. Her father had cast doubts upon the
+innocence of my friendship; and these, it was my first business to allay.
+But there is a kind of an excuse for Catriona also. We had shared in a
+scene of some tenderness and passion, and given and received caresses; I
+had thrust her from me with violence; I had called aloud upon her in the
+night from the one room to the other; she had passed hours of wakefulness
+and weeping; and it is not to be supposed I had been absent from her pillow
+thoughts. Upon the back of this, to be awaked, with unaccustomed formality,
+under the name of Miss Drummond, and to be thenceforth used with a great
+deal of distance <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336"
+id="Page_336"></a>[pg 336]</span>and respect, led her entirely in error on
+my private sentiments; and she was indeed so incredibly abused as to
+imagine me repentant and trying to draw off!</p>
+
+<p>The trouble betwixt us seems to have been this: that whereas I (since I
+had first set eyes on his great hat) thought singly of James More, his
+return and suspicions, she made so little of these that I may say she
+scarce remarked them, and all her troubles and doings regarded what had
+passed between us in the night before. This is partly to be explained by
+the innocence and boldness of her character; and partly because James More,
+having sped so ill in his interview with me, or had his mouth closed by my
+invitation, said no word to her upon the subject. At the breakfast,
+accordingly, it soon appeared we were at cross purposes. I had looked to
+find her in clothes of her own: I found her (as if her father were
+forgotten) wearing some of the best that I had bought for her and which she
+knew (or thought) that I admired her in. I had looked to find her imitate
+my affectation of distance, and be most precise and formal; instead I found
+her flushed and wild-like, with eyes extraordinary bright, and a painful
+and varying expression, calling me by name with a sort of appeal of
+tenderness, and referring and deferring to my thoughts and wishes like an
+anxious or a suspected wife.</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour008"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour008.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: YOU TELL ME SHE IS HERE? SAID HE AGAIN"
+src="images/balfour008sm.jpg" height="550" width="383" /></a>
+<br />YOU TELL ME SHE IS HERE? SAID HE AGAIN
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+<p>But this was not for long. As I beheld her so regardless of her own
+interests, which I had jeopardised <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337"
+id="Page_337"></a>[pg 337]</span>and was now endeavoring to recover, I
+redoubled my own boldness in the manner of a lesson to the girl. The more
+she came forward, the further I drew back; the more she betrayed the
+closeness of our intimacy, the more pointedly civil I became, until even
+her father (if he had not been so engrossed with eating) might have
+observed the opposition. In the midst of which, of a sudden, she became
+wholly changed, and I told myself, with a good deal of relief, that she had
+took the hint at last.</p>
+
+<p>All day I was at my classes or in quest of my new lodging; and though
+the hour of our customary walk hung miserably on my hands, I cannot say but
+I was happy on the whole to find my way cleared, the girl again in proper
+keeping, the father satisfied or at least acquiescent, and myself free to
+prosecute my love with honour. At supper, as at all our meals, it was James
+More that did the talking. No doubt but he talked well, if anyone could
+have believed him. But I will speak of him presently more at large. The
+meal at an end, he rose, got his great coat, and looking (as I thought) at
+me, observed he had affairs abroad. I took this for a hint that I was to be
+going also, and got up; whereupon the girl, who had scarce given me
+greeting at my entrance, turned her eyes on me wide open, with a look that
+bade me stay. I stood between them like a fish out of water, turning from
+one to the other; neither seemed to observe me, she gazing on the floor, he
+buttoning <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338"></a>[pg
+338]</span>his coat: which vastly swelled my embarrassment. This appearance
+of indifferency argued, upon her side, a good deal of anger very near to
+burst out. Upon his, I thought it horribly alarming; I made sure there was
+a tempest brewing there; and considering that to be the chief peril, turned
+towards him and put myself (so to speak) in the man's hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Can I do anything for <i>you</i>, Mr. Drummond?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>He stifled a yawn, which again I thought to be duplicity. "Why, Mr.
+David," said he, "since you are so obliging as to propose it, you might
+show me the way to a certain tavern" (of which he gave the name) "where I
+hope to fall in with some old companions in arms."</p>
+
+<p>There was no more to say, and I got my hat and cloak to bear him
+company.</p>
+
+<p>"And as for you," he says to his daughter, "you had best go to your bed.
+I shall be late home, and <i>Early to bed and early to rise, gars bonny
+lasses have bright eyes."</i></p>
+
+<p>Whereupon he kissed her with a good deal of tenderness, and ushered me
+before him from the door. This was so done (I thought on purpose) that it
+was scarce possible there should be any parting salutation; but I observed
+she did not look at me, and set it down to terror of James More.</p>
+
+<p>It was some distance to that tavern. He talked all <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339"></a>[pg 339]</span>the way
+of matters which did not interest me the smallest, and at the door
+dismissed me with empty manners. Thence I walked to my new lodging, where I
+had not so much as a chimney to hold me warm, and no society but my own
+thoughts. These were still bright enough; I did not so much as dream that
+Catriona was turned against me; I thought we were like folk pledged; I
+thought we had been too near and spoke too warmly to be severed, least of
+all by what were only steps in a most needful policy. And the chief of my
+concern was only the kind of father-in-law that I was getting, which was
+not at all the kind I would have chosen: and the matter of how soon I ought
+to speak to him, which was a delicate point on several sides. In the first
+place, when I thought how young I was, I blushed all over, and could almost
+have found it in my heart to have desisted; only that if once I let them go
+from Leyden without explanation, I might lose her altogether. And in the
+second place, there was our very irregular situation to be kept in view,
+and the rather scant measure of satisfaction I had given James More that
+morning. I concluded, on the whole, that delay would not hurt anything, yet
+I would not delay too long neither; and got to my cold bed with a full
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, as James More seemed a little on the complaining hand in
+the matter of my chamber, I offered to have in more furniture; and coming
+in the afternoon, with porters bringing chairs and tables, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340"></a>[pg 340]</span>found
+the girl once more left to herself. She greeted me on my admission civilly,
+but withdrew at once to her own room, of which she shut the door. I made my
+disposition, and paid and dismissed the men so that she might hear them go,
+when I supposed she would at once come forth again to speak to me. I waited
+yet awhile, then knocked upon her door.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>The door was opened so quickly, even before I had the word out, that I
+thought she must have stood behind it listening. She remained there in the
+interval quite still; but she had a look that I cannot put a name on, as of
+one in a bitter trouble.</p>
+
+<p>"Are we not to have our walk to-day either?" so I faltered.</p>
+
+<p>"I am thanking you," said she. "I will not be caring much to walk, now
+that my father is come home."</p>
+
+<p>"But I think he has gone out himself and left you here alone," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you think that was very kindly said?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It was not unkindly meant," I replied. "What ails you, Catriona? What
+have I done to you that you should turn from me like this?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not turn from you at all," she said, speaking very carefully. "I
+will ever be grateful to my friend that was good to me; I will ever be his
+friend in all that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341"
+id="Page_341"></a>[pg 341]</span>I am able. But now that my father James
+More is come again, there is a difference to be made, and I think there are
+some things said and done that would be better to be forgotten. But I will
+ever be your friend in all that I am able, and if that is not all that . . .
+if it is not so much. . . . Not that you will be caring! But I would not have
+you think of me too hard. It was true what you said to me, that I was too
+young to be advised, and I am hoping you will remember I was just a child.
+I would not like to lose your friendship, at all events."</p>
+
+<p>She began this very pale; but before she was done, the blood was in her
+face like scarlet, so that not her words only, but her face and the
+trembling of her very hands, besought me to be gentle. I saw for the first
+time, how very wrong I had done to place the child in that position, where
+she had been entrapped into a moment's weakness, and now stood before me
+like a person shamed.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Drummond," I said, and stuck, and made the same beginning once
+again, "I wish you could see into my heart," I cried. "You would read there
+that my respect is undiminished. If that were possible, I should say it was
+increased. This is but the result of the mistake we made; and had to come;
+and the less said of it now the better. Of all of our life here, I promise
+you it shall never pass my lips; I would like to promise you too that I
+would never think of it, but it's a memory <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_342" id="Page_342"></a>[pg 342]</span>that will be always dear
+to me. And as for a friend, you have one here that would die for you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am thanking you," said she.</p>
+
+<p>We stood awhile silent, and my sorrow for myself began to get the upper
+hand; for here were all my dreams come to a sad tumble, and my love lost,
+and myself alone again in the world as at the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "we shall be friends always, that's a certain thing. But
+this is a kind of a farewell too: it's a kind of a farewell after all; I
+shall always ken Miss Drummond, but this is a farewell to my Catriona."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at her; I could hardly say I saw her, but she seemed to grow
+great and brighten in my eyes; and with that I suppose I must have lost my
+head, for I called out her name again and made a step at her with my hands
+reached forth.</p>
+
+<p>She shrank back like a person struck, her face flamed; but the blood
+sprang no faster up into her cheeks, than what it flowed back upon my own
+heart, at sight of it, with penitence and concern. I found no words to
+excuse myself, but bowed before her very deep, and went my ways out of the
+house with death in my bosom.</p>
+
+<p>I think it was about five days that followed without any change. I saw
+her scarce ever but at meals, and then of course in the company of James
+More. If we were alone even for a moment, I made it my devoir to behave the
+more distantly and to multiply respectful attentions, having always in my
+mind's eye that picture of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343"
+id="Page_343"></a>[pg 343]</span>the girl shrinking and flaming in a blush,
+and in my heart more pity for her than I could depict in words. I was sorry
+enough for myself, I need not dwell on that, having fallen all my length
+and more than all my height in a few seconds; but, indeed, I was near as
+sorry for the girl, and sorry enough to be scarce angry with her save by
+fits and starts. Her plea was good: she was but a child; she had been
+placed in an unfair position; if she had deceived herself and me, it was no
+more than was to have been looked for.</p>
+
+<p>And for another thing she was now very much alone. Her father, when he
+was by, was rather a caressing parent; but he was very easy led away by his
+affairs and pleasures, neglected her without compunction or remark, spent
+his nights in taverns when he had the money, which was more often than I
+could at all account for; and even in the course of these few days, failed
+once to come to a meal, which Catriona and I were at last compelled to
+partake of without him. It was the evening meal, and I left immediately
+that I had eaten, observing I supposed she would prefer to be alone; to
+which she agreed and (strange as it may seem) I quite believed her. Indeed,
+I thought myself but an eyesore to the girl, and a reminder of a moment's
+weakness that she now abhorred to think of. So she must sit alone in that
+room where she and I had been so merry, and in the blink of that chimney
+whose light had shone upon our many difficult and tender moments. There she
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344"></a>[pg
+344]</span>must sit alone, and think of herself as of a maid who had most
+unmaidenly proffered her affections and had the same rejected. And in the
+meanwhile I would be alone some other place, and reading myself (whenever I
+was tempted to be angry) lessons upon human frailty and female delicacy.
+And altogether I suppose there were never two poor fools made themselves
+more unhappy in a greater misconception.</p>
+
+<p>As for James, he paid not so much heed to us, or to anything in nature
+but his pocket, and his belly, and his own prating talk. Before twelve
+hours were gone he had raised a small loan of me; before thirty, he had
+asked for a second and been refused. Money and refusal he took with the
+same kind of high good-nature. Indeed, he had an outside air of magnanimity
+that was very well fitted to impose upon a daughter; and the light in which
+he was constantly presented in his talk, and the man's fine presence and
+great ways went together pretty harmoniously. So that a man that had no
+business with him, and either very little penetration or a furious deal of
+prejudice, might almost have been taken in. To me, after my first two
+interviews, he was as plain as print; I saw him to be perfectly selfish,
+with a perfect innocency in the same; and I would harken to his swaggering
+talk (of arms, and "an old soldier," and "a poor Highland gentleman," and
+"the strength of my country and my friends") as I might to the babbling of
+a parrot.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345"></a>[pg
+345]</span>The odd thing was that I fancy he believed some part of it
+himself, or did at times; I think he was so false all through that he
+scarce knew when he was lying; and for one thing, his moments of dejection
+must have been wholly genuine. There were times when he would be the most
+silent, affectionate, clinging creature possible, holding Catriona's hand
+like a big baby, and begging of me not to leave if I had any love to him;
+of which, indeed, I had none, but all the more to his daughter. He would
+press and indeed beseech us to entertain him with our talk, a thing very
+difficult in the state of our relations; and again break forth in pitiable
+regrets for his own land and friends, or into Gaelic singing.</p>
+
+<p>"This is one of the melancholy airs of my native land," he would say.
+"You may think it strange to see a soldier weep, and indeed it is to make a
+near friend of you," says he. "But the notes of this singing are in my
+blood, and the words come out of my heart. And when I mind upon my red
+mountains and the wild birds calling there, and the brave streams of water
+running down, I would scarce think shame to weep before my enemies." Then
+he would sing again, and translate to me pieces of the song, with a great
+deal of boggling and much expressed contempt against the English language.
+"It says here," he would say, "that the sun is gone down, and the battle is
+at an end, and the brave chiefs are defeated. And it tells <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346"></a>[pg 346]</span>here
+how the stars see them fleeing into strange countries or lying dead on the
+red mountain; and they will never more shout the call of battle or wash
+their feet in the streams of the valley. But if you had only some of this
+language, you would weep also because the words of it are beyond all
+expression, and it is mere mockery to tell you it in English."</p>
+
+<p>Well, I thought there was a good deal of mockery in the business, one
+way and another; and yet, there was some feeling too, for which I hated
+him, I think, the worst of all. And it used to cut me to the quick to see
+Catriona so much concerned for the old rogue, and weeping herself to see
+him weep, when I was sure one-half of his distress flowed from his last
+night's drinking in some tavern. There were times when I was tempted to
+lend him a round sum, and see the last of him for good; but this would have
+been to see the last of Catriona as well, for which I was scarcely so
+prepared; and besides, it went against my conscience to squander my good
+money on one who was so little of a husband.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347"></a>[pg
+347]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXVII'></a>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<h3>A TWOSOME</h3>
+
+
+<p>I believe it was about the fifth day, and I know at least that James was
+in one of his fits of gloom, when I received three letters. The first was
+from Alan, offering to visit me in Leyden; the other two were out of
+Scotland and prompted by the same affair, which was the death of my uncle
+and my own complete accession to my rights. Rankeillor's was, of course,
+wholly in the business view; Miss Grant's was like herself, a little more
+witty than wise, full of blame to me for not having written (though how was
+I to write with such intelligence?) and of rallying talk about Catriona,
+which it cut me to the quick to read in her very presence.</p>
+
+<p>For it was of course in my own rooms that I found them, when I came to
+dinner, so that I was surprised out of my news in the very first moment of
+reading it. This made a welcome diversion for all three of us, nor could
+any have foreseen the ill consequences that ensued. It was accident that
+brought the three letters the same day, and that gave them into my hand in
+the same room with James More; and of all the events that <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348"></a>[pg 348]</span>flowed
+from that accident, and which I might have prevented if I had held my
+tongue, the truth is that they were preordained before Agricola came into
+Scotland or Abraham set out upon his travels.</p>
+
+<p>The first that I opened was naturally Alan's; and what more natural than
+that I should comment on his design to visit me? but I observed James to
+sit up with an air of immediate attention.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that not Alan Breck that was suspected of the Appin accident?" he
+inquired.</p>
+
+<p>I told him, "Ay," it was the same; and he withheld me some time from my
+other letters, asking of our acquaintance, of Alan's manner of life in
+France, of which I knew very little, and further of his visit as now
+proposed.</p>
+
+<p>"All we forfeited folk hang a little together," he explained, "and
+besides I know the gentleman: and though his descent is not the thing, and
+indeed he has no true right to use the name of Stewart, he was very much
+admired in the day of Drummossie. He did there like a soldier; if some that
+need not be named had done as well, the upshot need not have been so
+melancholy to remember. There were two that did their best that day, and it
+makes a bond between the pair of us," says he.</p>
+
+<p>I could scarce refrain from shooting out my tongue at him, and could
+almost have wished that Alan had been there to have inquired a little
+further into that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349"
+id="Page_349"></a>[pg 349]</span>mention of his birth. Though, they tell
+me, the same was indeed not wholly regular.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, I had opened Miss Grant's, and could not withhold an
+exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," I cried, forgetting, the first time since her father was
+arrived, to address her by a handle, "I am come into my kingdom fairly, I
+am the laird of Shaws indeed--my uncle is dead at last."</p>
+
+<p>She clapped her hands together leaping from her seat. The next moment it
+must have come over both of us at once what little cause of joy was left to
+either, and we stood opposite, staring on each other sadly.</p>
+
+<p>But James showed himself a ready hypocrite. "My daughter," says he, "is
+this how my cousin learned you to behave? Mr. David has lost a near friend,
+and we should first condole with him on his bereavement."</p>
+
+<p>"Troth, sir," said I, turning to him in a kind of anger, "I can make no
+such faces. His death is as blythe news as ever I got."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a good soldier's philosophy," says James. "'Tis the way of flesh,
+we must all go, all go. And if the gentleman was so far from your favour,
+why, very well! But we may at least congratulate you on your accession to
+your estates."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor can I say that either," I replied, with the same heat. "It is a
+good estate; what matters that to a lone man that has enough already? I had
+a good revenue before in my frugality; and but for the man's <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350"></a>[pg
+350]</span>death--which gratifies me, shame to me that must confess it!--I
+see not how anyone is to be bettered by this change."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come," said he, "you are more affected than you let on, or you
+would never make yourself out so lonely. Here are three letters; that means
+three that wish you well; and I could name two more, here in this very
+chamber. I have known you not so very long, but Catriona, when we are
+alone, is never done with the singing of your praises."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him, a little wild at that; and he slid off at once
+into another matter, the extent of my estate, which (during the most of the
+dinner time) he continued to dwell upon with interest. But it was to no
+purpose he dissembled; he had touched the matter with too gross a hand: and
+I knew what to expect. Dinner was scarce ate when he plainly discovered his
+designs. He reminded Catriona of an errand, and bid her attend to it. "I do
+not see you should be gone beyond the hour," he added, "and friend David
+will be good enough to bear me company till you return." She made haste to
+obey him without words. I do not know if she understood, I believe not; but
+I was completely satisfied, and sat strengthening my mind for what should
+follow.</p>
+
+<p>The door had scarce closed behind her departure, when the man leaned
+back in his chair and addressed me with a good affectation of easiness.
+Only the one <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351"></a>[pg
+351]</span>thing betrayed him and that was his face; which suddenly shone
+all over with fine points of sweat.</p>
+
+<p>"I am rather glad to have a word alone with you," says he, "because in
+our first interview there were some expressions you misapprehended and I
+have long meant to set you right upon. My daughter stands beyond doubt. So
+do you, and I would make that good with my sword against all gainsayers.
+But, my dear David, this world is a censorious place--as who should know it
+better than myself, who have lived ever since the days of my late departed
+father, God sain him! in a perfect spate of calumnies? We have to face to
+that; you and me have to consider of that; we have to consider of that."
+And he wagged his head like a minister in a pulpit.</p>
+
+<p>"To what effect, Mr. Drummond?" said I. "I would be obliged to you if
+you would approach your point."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay," says he, laughing, "like your character indeed! and what I
+most admire in it. But the point, my worthy fellow, is sometimes in a
+kittle bit." He filled a glass of wine. "Though between you and me, that
+are such fast friends, it need not bother us long. The point, I need
+scarcely tell you, is my daughter. And the first thing is that I have no
+thought in my mind of blaming you. In the unfortunate circumstances, what
+could you do else? 'Deed, and I cannot tell."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352"></a>[pg
+352]</span>"I thank you for that," said I, pretty close upon my guard.</p>
+
+<p>"I have besides studied your character," he went on; "your talents are
+fair; you seem to have a moderate competence; which does no harm; and one
+thing with another, I am very happy to have to announce to you that I have
+decided on the latter of the two ways open."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid I am dull," said I. "What ways are these?"</p>
+
+<p>He bent his brows upon me formidably and uncrossed his legs. "Why, sir,"
+says he, "I think I need scarce describe them to a gentleman of your
+condition; either that I should cut your throat or that you should marry my
+daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"You are pleased to be quite plain at last," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And I believe I have been plain from the beginning!" cries he
+robustiously. "I am a careful parent, Mr. Balfour; but I thank God, a
+patient and deleeberate man. There is many a father, sir, that would have
+hirsled you at once either to the altar or the field. My esteem for your
+character--"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Drummond," I interrupted, "if you have any esteem for me at all, I
+will beg of you to moderate your voice. It is quite needless to rowt at a
+gentleman in the same chamber with yourself and lending you his best
+attention."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353"></a>[pg
+353]</span>"Why, very true," says he, with an immediate change. "And you
+must excuse the agitations of a parent."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand you then," I continued--"for I will take no note of your
+other alternative, which perhaps it was a pity you let fall--I understand
+you rather to offer me encouragement in case I should desire to apply for
+your daughter's hand?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not possible to express my meaning better," said he, "and I see
+we shall do well together."</p>
+
+<p>"That remains to be yet seen," said I. "But so much I need make no
+secret of, that I bear the lady you refer to the most tender affection, and
+I could not fancy, even in a dream, a better fortune than to get her."</p>
+
+<p>"I was sure of it, I felt certain of you, David," he cried, and reached
+out his hand to me.</p>
+
+<p>I put it by. "You go too fast, Mr. Drummond," said I. "There are
+conditions to be made; and there is a difficulty in the path, which I see
+not entirely how we shall come over. I have told you that, upon my side,
+there is no objection to the marriage, but I have good reason to believe
+there will be much on the young lady's."</p>
+
+<p>"This is all beside the mark," says he. "I will engage for her
+acceptance."</p>
+
+<p>"I think you forget, Mr. Drummond," said I, "that, even in dealing with
+myself you have been betrayed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354"
+id="Page_354"></a>[pg 354]</span>into two-three unpalatable expressions. I
+will have none such employed to the young lady. I am here to speak and
+think for the two of us; and I give you to understand that I would no more
+let a wife be forced upon myself, than what I would let a husband be forced
+on the young lady."</p>
+
+<p>He sat and glowered at me like one in doubt and a good deal of
+temper.</p>
+
+<p>"So that this is to be the way of it," I concluded. "I will marry Miss
+Drummond, and that blythely, if she is entirely willing. But if there be
+the least unwillingness, as I have reason to fear--marry her will I
+never."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," said he, "this is a small affair. As soon as she returns I
+will sound her a bit, and hope to reassure you----"</p>
+
+<p>But I cut in again. "Not a finger of you, Mr. Drummond, or I cry off,
+and you can seek a husband to your daughter somewhere else," said I. "It is
+I that am to be the only dealer and the only judge. I shall satisfy myself
+exactly; and none else shall anyways meddle--you the least of all."</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my word, sir!" he exclaimed, "and who are you to be the
+judge?"</p>
+
+<p>"The bridegroom, I believe," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"This is to quibble," he cried. "You turn your back upon the facts. The
+girl, my daughter, has no choice left to exercise. Her character is
+gone."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355"></a>[pg
+355]</span>"And I ask your pardon," said I, "but while this matter lies
+between her and you and me, that is not so."</p>
+
+<p>"What security have I!" he cried. "Am I to let my daughter's reputation
+depend upon a chance?"</p>
+
+<p>"You should have thought of all this long ago," said I, "before you were
+so misguided as to lose her; and not afterwards, when it is quite too late.
+I refuse to regard myself as any way accountable for your neglect, and I
+will be browbeat by no man living. My mind is quite made up, and come what
+may, I will not depart from it a hair's breadth. You and me are to sit here
+in company till her return; upon which, without either word or look from
+you, she and I are to go forth again to hold our talk. If she can satisfy
+me that she is willing to this step, I will then make it; and if she
+cannot, I will not."</p>
+
+<p>He leaped out of his seat like a man stung. "I can spy your manoeuvre,"
+he cried; "you would work upon her to refuse!"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe ay, and maybe no," said I. "That is the way it is to be,
+whatever."</p>
+
+<p>"And if I refuse?" cries he.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Mr. Drummond, it will have to come to the throat-cutting," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>What with the size of the man, his great length of arm in which he came
+near rivalling his father, and his reputed skill at weapons, I did not use
+this word without <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356"
+id="Page_356"></a>[pg 356]</span>some trepidation, to say nothing at all of
+the circumstance that he was Catriona's father. But I might have spared
+myself alarms. From the poorness of my lodging--he does not seem to have
+remarked his daughter's dresses, which were indeed all equally new to
+him--and from the fact that I had shown myself averse to lend, he had
+embraced a strong idea of my poverty. The sudden news of my estate
+convinced him of his error, and he had made but the one bound of it on this
+fresh venture, to which he was now so wedded, that I believe he would have
+suffered anything rather than fall to the alternative of fighting.</p>
+
+<p>A little while longer he continued to dispute with me until I hit upon a
+word that silenced him.</p>
+
+<p>"If I find you so averse to let me see the lady by herself," said I, "I
+must suppose you have very good grounds to think me in the right about her
+unwillingness."</p>
+
+<p>He gabbled some kind of an excuse.</p>
+
+<p>"But all this is very exhausting to both of our tempers," I added, "and
+I think we would do better to preserve a judicious silence."</p>
+
+<p>The which we did until the girl returned, and I must suppose would have
+cut a very ridiculous figure, had there been any there to view us.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357"></a>[pg
+357]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXVIII'></a>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE</h3>
+
+
+<p>I opened the door to Catriona and stopped her on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>"Your father wishes us to take our walk," said I.</p>
+
+<p>She looked to James More, who nodded, and at that, like a trained
+soldier, she turned to go with me.</p>
+
+<p>We took one of our old ways, where we had gone often together, and been
+more happy than I can tell of in the past. I came a half a step behind, so
+that I could watch her unobserved. The knocking of her little shoes upon
+the way sounded extraordinary pretty and sad; and I thought it a strange
+moment that I should be so near both ends of it at once, and walk in the
+midst between two destinies, and could not tell whether I was hearing these
+steps for the last time, or whether the sound of them was to go in and out
+with me till death should part us.</p>
+
+<p>She avoided even to look at me, only walked before her, like one who had
+a guess of what was coming. I saw I must speak soon before my courage was
+run out, but where to begin I knew not. In this painful situation, when the
+girl was as good as forced into my arms <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_358" id="Page_358"></a>[pg 358]</span>and had already besought
+my forbearance, any excess of pressure must have seemed indecent; yet to
+avoid it wholly would have a very cold-like appearance. Between these
+extremes I stood helpless, and could have bit my fingers; so that, when at
+last I managed to speak at all, it may be said I spoke at random.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "I am in a very painful situation; or rather, so we
+are both; and I would be a good deal obliged to you if you would promise to
+let me speak through first of all, and not to interrupt till I have
+done."</p>
+
+<p>She promised me that simply.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "this that I have got to say is very difficult, and I
+know very well I have no right to be saying it. After what passed between
+the two of us last Friday, I have no manner of right. We have got so
+ravelled up (and all by my fault) that I know very well the least I could
+do is just to hold my tongue, which was what I intended fully, and there
+was nothing further from my thoughts than to have troubled you again. But,
+my dear, it has become merely necessary, and no way by it. You see, this
+estate of mine has fallen in, which makes me rather a better match; and
+the--the business would not have quite the same ridiculous-like appearance
+that it would before. Besides which, it's supposed that our affairs have
+got so much ravelled up (as I was saying) that it would be better to let
+them be the way they are. In my view, this part of <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_359" id="Page_359"></a>[pg 359]</span>the thing is vastly
+exaggerate, and if I were you I would not wear two thoughts on it. Only
+it's right I should mention the same, because there's no doubt it has some
+influence on James More. Then I think we were none so unhappy when we dwelt
+together in this town before. I think we did pretty well together. If you
+would look back, my dear--"</p>
+
+<p>"I will look neither back nor forward," she interrupted. "Tell me the
+one thing: this is my father's doing?"</p>
+
+<p>"He approves of it," said I. "He approved that I should ask your hand in
+marriage," and was going on again with somewhat more of an appeal upon her
+feelings; but she marked me not, and struck into the midst.</p>
+
+<p>"He told you to!" she cried. "It is no sense denying it, you said
+yourself that there was nothing farther from your thoughts. He told you
+to."</p>
+
+<p>"He spoke of it the first, if that is what you mean," I began.</p>
+
+<p>She was walking ever the faster, and looking fair in front of her; but
+at this she made a little noise in her head, and I thought she would have
+run.</p>
+
+<p>"Without which," I went on, "after what you said last Friday, I would
+never have been so troublesome as make the offer. But when he as good as
+asked me, what was I to do?"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped and turned round upon me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360"></a>[pg
+360]</span>"Well, it is refused at all events," she cried, "and there will
+be an end of that."</p>
+
+<p>And she began to walk forward.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I could expect no better," said I, "but I think you might try
+to be a little kind to me for the last end of it. I see not why you should
+be harsh. I have loved you very well, Catriona--no harm that I should call
+you so for the last time. I have done the best that I could manage, I am
+trying the same still, and only vexed that I can do no better. It is a
+strange thing to me that you can take any pleasure to be hard to me."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not thinking of you," she said, "I am thinking of that man, my
+father."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and that way, too!" said I. "I can be of use to you that way,
+too; I will have to be. It is very needful, my dear, that we should consult
+about your father; for the way this talk has gone, an angry man will be
+James More."</p>
+
+<p>She stopped again. "It is because I am disgraced?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"That is what he is thinking," I replied, "but I have told you already
+to make nought of it."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be all one to me," she cried. "I prefer to be disgraced!"</p>
+
+<p>I did not know very well what to answer, and stood silent.</p>
+
+<p>There seemed to be something working in her <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_361" id="Page_361"></a>[pg 361]</span>bosom after that last cry;
+presently she broke out, "And what is the meaning of all this? Why is all
+this shame loundered on my head? How could you dare it, David Balfour?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," said I, "what else was I to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not your dear," she said, "and I defy you to be calling me these
+words."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not thinking of my words," said I. "My heart bleeds for you, Miss
+Drummond. Whatever I may say, be sure you have my pity in your difficult
+position. But there is just the one thing that I wish you would bear in
+view, if it was only long enough to discuss it quietly; for there is going
+to be a collieshangie when we two get home. Take my word for it, it will
+need the two of us to make this matter end in peace."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said she. There sprang a patch of red in either of her cheeks.
+"Was he for fighting you?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he was that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>She gave a dreadful kind of laugh. "At all events, it is complete!" she
+cried. And then turning on me: "My father and I are a fine pair," she said,
+"but I am thanking the good God there will be somebody worse than what we
+are. I am thanking the good God that he has let me see you so. There will
+never be the girl made that would not scorn you."</p>
+
+<p>I had borne a good deal pretty patiently, but this was over the
+mark.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362"></a>[pg
+362]</span>"You have no right to speak to me like that," said I. "What have
+I done but to be good to you, or try to? And here is my repayment! O, it is
+too much."</p>
+
+<p>She kept looking at me with a hateful smile. "Coward!" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"The word in your throat and in your father's!" I cried. "I have dared
+him this day already in your interest. I will dare him again, the nasty
+pole-cat; little I care which of us should fall! Come," said I, "back to
+the house with us; let us be done with it, let me be done with the whole
+Hieland crew of you! You will see what you think when I am dead."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head at me with that same smile I could have struck her
+for.</p>
+
+<p>"O, smile away!" I cried. "I have seen your bonny father smile on the
+wrong side this day. Not that I mean he was afraid, of course," I added
+hastily, "but he preferred the other way of it."</p>
+
+<p>"What is this?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"When I offered to draw with him," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You offered to draw upon James More?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"And I did so," said I, "and found him backward enough, or how would we
+be here?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is a meaning upon this," said she. "What is it you are
+meaning?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was to make you take me," I replied, "and I would not have it. I
+said you should be free, and I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363"
+id="Page_363"></a>[pg 363]</span>must speak with you alone; little I
+supposed it would be such a speaking! '<i>And what if I refuse</i>?' says
+he.--'<i>Then it must come to the throat cutting</i>,' says I, '<i>for I
+will no more have a husband forced on that young lady than what I would
+have a wife forced upon myself</i>.' These were my words, they were a
+friend's words; bonnily have I been paid for them! Now you have refused me
+of your own clear free will, and there lives no father in the Highlands, or
+out of them, that can force on this marriage. I will see that your wishes
+are respected; I will make the same my business, as I have all through. But
+I think you might have that decency as to affect some gratitude. 'Deed, and
+I thought you knew me better! I have not behaved quite well to you, but
+that was weakness. And to think me a coward and such a coward as that--O,
+my lass, there was a stab for the last of it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Davie, how would I guess?" she cried. "O, this is a dreadful business!
+Me and mine,"--she gave a kind of wretched cry at the word--"me and mine
+are not fit to speak to you. O, I could be kneeling down to you in the
+street, I could be kissing your hands for your forgiveness!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will keep the kisses I have got from you already," cried I. "I will
+keep the ones I wanted and that were something worth; I will not be kissed
+in penitence."</p>
+
+<p>"What can you be thinking of this miserable girl?" says she.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364"></a>[pg
+364]</span>"What I am trying to tell you all this while!" said I, "that you
+had best leave me alone, whom you can make no more unhappy if you tried,
+and turn your attention to James More, your father, with whom you are like
+to have a queer pirn to wind."</p>
+
+<p>"O, that I must be going out into the world alone with such a man!" she
+cried, and seemed to catch herself in with a great effort. "But trouble
+yourself no more for that," said she. "He does not know what kind of nature
+is in my heart. He will pay me dear for this day of it; dear, dear, will he
+pay."</p>
+
+<p>She turned, and began to go home and I to accompany her. At which she
+stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"I will be going alone," she said. "It is alone I must be seeing
+him."</p>
+
+<p>Some little while I raged about the streets, and told myself I was the
+worst used lad in Christendom. Anger choked me; it was all very well for me
+to breathe deep; it seemed there was not air enough about Leyden to supply
+me, and I thought I would have burst like a man at the bottom of the sea. I
+stopped and laughed at myself at a street corner a minute together,
+laughing out loud, so that a passenger looked at me, which brought me to
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," I thought, "I have been a gull and a ninny and a soft Tommy long
+enough. Time it was done. Here is a good lesson to have nothing to do with
+that accursed sex, that was the ruin of the man in the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365"></a>[pg
+365]</span>beginning and will be so to the end. God knows I was happy
+enough before ever I saw her; God knows I can be happy enough again when I
+have seen the last of her."</p>
+
+<p>That seemed to me the chief affair: to see them go. I dwelled upon the
+idea fiercely; and presently slipped on, in a kind of malevolence, to
+consider how very poorly they were like to fare when Davie Balfour was no
+longer by to be their milk-cow; at which, to my own very great surprise,
+the disposition of my mind turned bottom up. I was still angry; I still
+hated her; and yet I thought I owed it to myself that she should suffer
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>This carried me home again at once, where I found the mails drawn out
+and ready fastened by the door, and the father and daughter with every mark
+upon them of a recent disagreement. Catriona was like a wooden doll; James
+More breathed hard, his face was dotted with white spots, and his nose upon
+one side. As soon as I came in, the girl looked at him with a steady,
+clear, dark look that might very well have been followed by a blow. It was
+a hint that was more contemptuous than a command, and I was surprised to
+see James More accept it. It was plain he had had a master talking-to; and
+I could see there must be more of the devil in the girl than I had guessed,
+and more good-humor about the man than I had given him the credit of.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366"></a>[pg
+366]</span>He began, at least, calling me Mr. Balfour, and plainly speaking
+from a lesson; but he got not very far, for at the first pompous swell of
+his voice, Catriona cut in.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you what James More is meaning," said she. "He means we
+have come to you, beggar-folk, and have not behaved to you very well, and
+we are ashamed of our ingratitude and ill-behaviour. Now we are wanting to
+go away and be forgotten; and my father will have guided his gear so ill,
+that we cannot even do that unless you will give us some more alms. For
+that is what we are, at all events, beggar-folk and sorners."</p>
+
+<p>"By your leave, Miss Drummond," said I, "I must speak to your father by
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>She went into her own room and shut the door, without a word or a
+look.</p>
+
+<p>"You must excuse her, Mr. Balfour," says James More. "She has no
+delicacy."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not here to discuss that with you," said I, "but to be quit of
+you. And to that end I must talk of your position. Now, Mr. Drummond, I
+have kept the run of your affairs more closely than you bargained for. I
+know you had money of your own when you were borrowing mine. I know you
+have had more since you were here in Leyden, though you concealed it even
+from your daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"I bid you beware. I will stand no more baiting," <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367"></a>[pg 367]</span>he
+broke out. "I am sick of her and you. What kind of a damned trade is this
+to be a parent! I have had expressions used to me----" There he broke off.
+"Sir, this is the heart of a soldier and a parent," he went on again,
+laying his hand on his bosom, "outraged in both characters--and I bid you
+beware."</p>
+
+<p>"If you would have let me finish," says I, "you would have found I spoke
+for your advantage."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear friend," he cried, "I know I might have relied upon the
+generosity of your character."</p>
+
+<p>"Man! will you let me speak?" said I. "The fact is that I cannot win to
+find out if you are rich or poor. But it is my idea that your means, as
+they are mysterious in their source, so they are something insufficient in
+amount; and I do not choose your daughter to be lacking. If I durst speak
+to herself, you may be certain I would never dream of trusting it to you;
+because I know you like the back of my hand, and all your blustering talk
+is that much wind to me. However, I believe in your way you do still care
+something for your daughter after all; and I must just be doing with that
+ground of confidence, such as it is."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon, I arranged with him that he was to communicate with me, as to
+his whereabouts and Catriona's welfare, in consideration of which I was to
+serve him a small stipend.</p>
+
+<p>He heard the business out with a great deal of eagerness; and when it
+was done, "My dear fellow, my <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368"
+id="Page_368"></a>[pg 368]</span>dear son," he cried out, "this is more
+like yourself than any of it yet! I will serve you with a soldier's
+faithfulness----"</p>
+
+<p>"Let me hear no more of it!" says I. "You have got me to that pitch that
+the bare name of soldier rises on my stomach. Our traffic is settled; I am
+now going forth and will return in one half-hour, when I expect to find my
+chambers purged of you."</p>
+
+<p>I gave them good measure of time; it was my one fear that I might see
+Catriona again, because tears and weakness were ready in my heart, and I
+cherished my anger like a piece of dignity. Perhaps an hour went by; the
+sun had gone down, a little wisp of a new moon was following it across a
+scarlet sunset; already there were stars in the east, and in my chambers,
+when at last I entered them, the night lay blue. I lit a taper and reviewed
+the rooms; in the first there remained nothing so much as to awake a memory
+of those who were gone; but in the second, in a corner of the floor, I
+spied a little heap that brought my heart into my mouth. She had left
+behind at her departure all that ever she had of me. It was the blow that I
+felt sorest, perhaps because it was the last; and I fell upon that pile of
+clothing and behaved myself more foolish than I care to tell of.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the night, in a strict frost, and my teeth chattering, I came
+again by some portion of my manhood and considered with myself. The sight
+of these <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369"></a>[pg
+369]</span>poor frocks and ribbons, and her shifts, and the clocked
+stockings, was not to be endured; and if I were to recover any constancy of
+mind, I saw I must be rid of them ere the morning. It was my first thought
+to have made a fire and burned them; but my disposition has always been
+opposed to wastery, for one thing; and for another, to have burned these
+things that she had worn so close upon her body, seemed in the nature of a
+cruelty. There was a corner cupboard in that chamber; there I determined to
+bestow them. The which I did and made it a long business, folding them with
+very little skill indeed but the more care; and sometimes dropping them
+with my tears. All the heart was gone out of me, I was weary as though I
+had run miles, and sore like one beaten; when, as I was folding a kerchief
+that she wore often at her neck, I observed there was a corner neatly cut
+from it. It was a kerchief of a very pretty hue, on which I had frequently
+remarked; and once that she had it on, I remembered telling her (by way of
+a banter) that she wore my colours. There came a glow of hope and like a
+tide of sweetness in my bosom; and the next moment I was plunged back in a
+fresh despair. For there was the corner crumpled in a knot and cast down by
+itself in another part of the floor.</p>
+
+<p>But when I argued with myself, I grew more hopeful. She had cut that
+corner off in some childish freak that was manifestly tender; that she had
+cast it away <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370"></a>[pg
+370]</span>again was little to be wondered at; and I was inclined to dwell
+more upon the first than upon the second, and to be more pleased that she
+had ever conceived the idea of that keepsake, than concerned because she
+had flung it from her in an hour of natural resentment.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371"></a>[pg
+371]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXIX'></a>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+
+<h3>WE MEET IN DUNKIRK</h3>
+
+
+<p>Altogether, then, I was scarce so miserable the next days but what I had
+many hopeful and happy snatches; threw myself with a good deal of constancy
+upon my studies; and made out to endure the time till Alan should arrive,
+or I might hear word of Catriona by the means of James More. I had
+altogether three letters in the time of our separation. One was to announce
+their arrival in the town of Dunkirk in France, from which place James
+shortly after started alone upon a private mission. This was to England and
+to see Lord Holderness; and it has always been a bitter thought that my
+good money helped to pay the charges of the same. But he has need of a long
+spoon who sups with the deil, or James More either. During this absence,
+the time was to fall due for another letter; and as the letter was the
+condition of his stipend, he had been so careful as prepare it beforehand
+and leave it with Catriona to be despatched. The fact of our correspondence
+aroused her suspicions, and he was no sooner gone than she had burst the
+seal. What I received began accordingly in the writing of James More:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372"></a>[pg
+372]</span>"My dear Sir,--Your esteemed favour came to hand duly, and I
+have to acknowledge the inclosure according to agreement. It shall be all
+faithfully expended on my daughter, who is well, and desires to be
+remembered to her dear friend. I find her in rather a melancholy
+disposition, but trusts in the mercy of Grod to see her re-established. Our
+manner of life is very much alone, but we solace ourselves with the
+melancholy tunes of our native mountains, and by walking upon the margin of
+the sea that lies next to Scotland. It was better days with me when I lay
+with five wounds upon my body on the field of Gladsmuir. I have found
+employment here in the <i>haras</i> of a French nobleman, where my
+experience is valued. But, my dear Sir, the wages are so exceedingly
+unsuitable that I would be ashamed to mention them, which makes your
+remittances the more necessary to my daughter's comfort, though I daresay
+the sight of old friends would be still better.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Sir, "Your affectionate obedient servant,</p>
+
+<p>"JAMES MACGREGOR DRUMMOND."</p>
+
+<p>Below it began again in the hand of Catriona:--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"Do not be believing him, it is all lies together.<br />
+"C.M.D."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Not only did she add this postcript, but I think she must have come near
+suppressing the letter; for it came long after date, and was closely
+followed by the third. In the time betwixt them, Alan had arrived, and made
+another life to me with his merry conversation; I had been presented to his
+cousin of the Scots-Dutch, a man that drank more than I could have thought
+possible and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373"></a>[pg
+373]</span>was not otherwise of interest; I had been entertained to many
+jovial dinners and given some myself, all with no great change upon my
+sorrow; and we two (by which I mean Alan and myself, and not at all the
+cousin) had discussed a good deal the nature of my relations with James
+More and his daughter. I was naturally diffident to give particulars; and
+this disposition was not anyway lessened by the nature of Alan's commentary
+upon those I gave.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannae make head nor tail of it," he would say, "but it sticks in my
+mind ye've made a gowk of yourself. There's few people that has had more
+experience than Alan Breck; and I can never call to mind to have heard tell
+of a lassie like this one of yours. The way that you tell it, the thing's
+fair impossible. Ye must have made a terrible hash of the business,
+David."</p>
+
+<p>"There are whiles that I am of the same mind," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"The strange thing is that ye seem to have a kind of a fancy for her
+too!" said Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"The biggest kind, Alan," said I, "and I think I'll take it to my grave
+with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, ye beat me, whatever!" he would conclude.</p>
+
+<p>I showed him the letter with Catriona's postcript. "And here again!" he
+cried. "Impossible to deny a kind of decency to this Catriona, and sense
+forby! As for James More, the man's as boss as a drum; he's <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374"></a>[pg 374]</span>just a
+wame and a wheen words; though I'll can never deny that he fought
+reasonably well at Gladsmuir, and it's true what he says here about the
+five wounds. But the loss of him is that the man's boss."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye see, Alan," said I, "it goes against the grain with me to leave the
+maid in such poor hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye couldnae weel find poorer," he admitted. "But what are ye to do with
+it? It's this way about a man and a woman, ye see, Davie: The weemenfolk
+have got no kind of reason to them. Either they like the man, and then a'
+goes fine; or else they just detest him, and ye may spare your breath--ye
+can do naething. There's just the two sets of them--them that would sell
+their coats for ye, and them that never look the road ye're on. That's a'
+that there is to women; and you seem to be such a gomeral that ye cannae
+tell the tane frae the tither."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I'm afraid that's true for me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet there's naething easier!" cried Alan. "I could easy learn ye
+the science of the thing; but ye seem to me to be born blind, and there's
+where the diffeeculty comes in!"</p>
+
+<p>"And can <i>you</i> no help me?" I asked, "you that's so clever at the
+trade?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye see, David, I wasnae here," said he. "I'm like a field officer that
+has naebody but blind men for scouts and <i>&eacute;claireurs</i>; and what
+would he ken? But it sticks in my mind that ye'll have made some kind <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375"></a>[pg 375]</span>of
+bauchle; and if I was you, I would have a try at her again."</p>
+
+<p>"Would ye so, man Alan?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I would e'en't," says he.</p>
+
+<p>The third letter came to my hand while we were deep in some such talk;
+and it will be seen how pat it fell to the occasion. James professed to be
+in some concern upon his daughter's health, which I believe was never
+better; abounded in kind expressions to myself; and finally proposed that I
+should visit them at Dunkirk.</p>
+
+<p>"You will now be enjoying the society of my old comrade, Mr. Stewart,"
+he wrote. "Why not accompany him so far in his return to France? I have
+something very particular for Mr. Stewart's ear; and, at any rate, I would
+be pleased to meet in with an old fellow-soldier and one so mettle as
+himself. As for you, my dear sir, my daughter and I would be proud to
+receive our benefactor, whom we regard as a brother and a son. The French
+nobleman has proved a person of the most filthy avarice of character, and I
+have been necessitate to leave the <i>haras</i>. You will find us, in
+consequence, a little poorly lodged in the <i>auberge</i> of a man Bazin on
+the dunes; but the situation is caller, and I make no doubt but we might
+spend some very pleasant days, when Mr. Stewart and I could recall our
+services, and you and my daughter divert yourselves in a manner more
+befitting your age. I beg at <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376"
+id="Page_376"></a>[pg 376]</span>least that Mr. Stewart would come here; my
+business with him opens a very wide door."</p>
+
+<p>"What does the man want with me?" cried Alan, when he had read. "What he
+wants with you is clear enough--it's siller. But what can he want with Alan
+Breck?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, it'll be just an excuse," said I. "He is still after this marriage,
+which I wish from my heart that we could bring about. And he asks you
+because he thinks I would be less likely to come wanting you."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I wish that I kent," says Alan. "Him and me were never onyways
+pack; we used to girn at ither like a pair of pipers. 'Something for my
+ear,' quo' he! I'll maybe have something for his hinder end, before we're
+through with it. Dod, I'm thinking it would be a kind of a divertisement to
+gang and see what he'll be after! Forby that I could see your lassie then.
+What say ye, Davie? Will ye ride with Alan?"</p>
+
+<p>You may be sure I was not backward, and Alan's furlough running towards
+an end, we set forth presently upon this joint adventure.</p>
+
+<p>It was near dark of a January day when we rode at last into the town of
+Dunkirk. We left our horses at the post, and found a guide to Bazin's Inn,
+which lay beyond the walls. Night was quite fallen, so that we were the
+last to leave that fortress, and heard the doors of it close behind us as
+we passed the bridge. On the other side there lay a lighted suburb, which
+we <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377"></a>[pg
+377]</span>thridded for a while, then turned into a dark lane, and
+presently found ourselves wading in the night among deep sand where we
+could hear a bullering of the sea. We travelled in this fashion for some
+while, following our conductor mostly by the sound of his voice; and I had
+begun to think he was perhaps misleading us, when we came to the top of a
+small brae, and there appeared out of the darkness a dim light in a
+window.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Voil&agrave; l'auberge &agrave;, Bazin</i>," says the guide.</p>
+
+<p>Alan smacked his lips. "An unco lonely bit," said he, and I thought by
+his tone he was not wholly pleased.</p>
+
+<p>A little after, and we stood in the lower storey of the house, which was
+all in the one apartment, with a stair leading to the chambers at the side,
+benches and tables by the wall, the cooking fire at the one end of it, and
+shelves of bottles and the cellar-trap at the other. Here Bazin, who was an
+ill-looking, big man, told us the Scottish gentleman was gone abroad he
+knew not where, but the young lady was above, and he would call her down to
+us.</p>
+
+<p>I took from my breast the kerchief wanting the corner, and knotted it
+about my throat. I could hear my heart go; and Alan patting me on the
+shoulder with some of his laughable expressions, I could scarce refrain
+from a sharp word. But the time was not long to wait. I heard her step pass
+overhead, and saw her on the stair. This she descended very quietly, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378"></a>[pg
+378]</span>greeted me with a pale face and certain seeming of earnestness,
+or uneasiness, in her manner that extremely dashed me.</p>
+
+<p>"My father, James More, will be here soon. He will be very pleased to
+see you," she said. And then of a sudden her face flamed, her eyes
+lightened, the speech stopped upon her lips; and I made sure she had
+observed the kerchief. It was only for a breath that she was discomposed;
+but methought it was with a new animation that she turned to welcome Alan.
+"And you will be his friend Alan Breck?" she cried. "Many is the dozen
+times I will have heard him tell of you; and I love you already for all
+your bravery and goodness."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," says Alan, holding her hand in his and viewing her, "and
+so this is the young lady at the last of it! David, you're an awful poor
+hand of a description."</p>
+
+<p>I do not know that ever I heard him speak so straight to people's
+hearts; the sound of his voice was like song.</p>
+
+<p>"What? will he have been describing me?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Little else of it since I ever came out of France!" says he, "forby a
+bit of speciment one night in Scotland in a shaw of wood by Silvermills.
+But cheer up, my dear! ye're bonnier than what he said. And now there's one
+thing sure: you and me are to be a pair of friends. I'm a kind of a
+henchman to Davie here; I'm like a tyke at his heels; and whatever he cares
+for, I've <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379"></a>[pg
+379]</span>got to care for too--and by the holy airn! they've got to care
+for me! So now you can see what way you stand with Alan Breck, and ye'll
+find ye'll hardly lose on the transaction. He's no very bonnie, my dear,
+but he's leal to them he loves."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you with my heart for your good words," said she. "I have that
+honour for a brave, honest man that I cannot find any to be answering
+with."</p>
+
+<p>Using travellers' freedom, we spared to wait for James More, and sat
+down to meat, we threesome. Alan had Catriona sit by him and wait upon his
+wants: he made her drink first out of his glass, he surrounded her with
+continual kind gallantries, and yet never gave me the most small occasion
+to be jealous; and he kept the talk so much in his own hand, and that in so
+merry a note, that neither she nor I remembered to be embarrassed. If any
+one had seen us there, it must have been supposed that Alan was the old
+friend and I the stranger. Indeed, I had often cause to love and to admire
+the man, but I never loved or admired him better than that night; and I
+could not help remarking to myself (what I was sometimes rather in danger
+of forgetting) that he had not only much experience of life, but in his own
+way a great deal of natural ability besides. As for Catriona she seemed
+quite carried away; her laugh was like a peal of bells, her face gay as a
+May morning; and I own, although I was very well pleased, yet I was a
+little sad also, and thought myself a dull, stockish character <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380"></a>[pg 380]</span>in
+comparison of my friend, and very unfit to come into a young maid's life,
+and perhaps ding down her gaiety.</p>
+
+<p>But if that was like to be my part, I found at least that I was not
+alone in it; for, James More returning suddenly, the girl was changed into
+a piece of stone. Through the rest of that evening, until she made an
+excuse and slipped to bed, I kept an eye upon her without cease: and I can
+bear testimony that she never smiled, scarce spoke, and looked mostly on
+the board in front of her. So that I really marvelled to see so much
+devotion (as it used to be) changed into the very sickness of hate.</p>
+
+<p>Of James More it is unnecessary to say much; you know the man already,
+what there was to know of him; and I am weary of writing out his lies.
+Enough that he drank a great deal, and told us very little that was to any
+possible purpose. As for the business with Alan, that was to be reserved
+for the morrow and his private hearing.</p>
+
+<p>It was the more easy to be put off, because Alan and I were pretty weary
+with our day's ride, and sat not very late after Catriona.</p>
+
+<p>We were soon alone in a chamber where we were to make shift with a
+single bed. Alan looked on me with a queer smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye muckle ass!" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"What do ye mean by that?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381"></a>[pg
+381]</span>"Mean? What do I mean? It's extraordinar, David man," says he,
+"that you should be so mortal stupit."</p>
+
+<p>Again I begged him to speak out.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's this of it," said he. "I told ye there were the two kinds of
+women--them that would sell their shifts for ye, and the others. Just you
+try for yoursel', my bonny man I But what's that neepkin at your
+craig?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him.</p>
+
+<p>"I thocht it was something there about," said he.</p>
+
+<p>Nor would he say another word though I besieged him long with
+importunities.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382"></a>[pg
+382]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXX'></a>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP</h3>
+
+
+<p>Daylight showed us how solitary the inn stood. It was plainly hard upon
+the sea, yet out of all view of it, and beset on every side with scabbit
+hills of sand. There was, indeed, only one thing in the nature of a
+prospect, where there stood out over a brae the two sails of a windmill,
+like an ass's ears, but with the ass quite hidden. It was strange (after
+the wind rose, for at first it was dead calm) to see the turning and
+following of each other of these great sails behind the hillock. Scarce any
+road came by there; but a number of footways travelled among the bents in
+all directions up to Mr. Bazin's door. The truth is, he was a man of many
+trades, not any one of them honest, and the position of his inn was the
+best of his livelihood. Smugglers frequented it; political agents and
+forfeited persons bound across the water came there to await their
+passages; and I daresay there was worse behind, for a whole family might
+have been butchered in that house and nobody the wiser.</p>
+
+<p>I slept little and ill. Long ere it was day, I had slipped from beside
+my bedfellow, and was warming myself at the fire or walking to and fro
+before the door. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383"
+id="Page_383"></a>[pg 383]</span>Dawn broke mighty sullen; but a little
+after, sprang up a wind out of the west, which burst the clouds, let
+through the sun, and set the mill to the turning. There was something of
+spring in the sunshine, or else it was in my heart; and the appearing of
+the great sails one after another from behind the hill, diverted me
+extremely. At times I could hear a creak of the machinery; and by half-past
+eight of the day, Catriona began to sing in the house. At this I would have
+cast my hat in the air; and I thought this dreary, desert place was like a
+paradise.</p>
+
+<p>For all which, as the day drew on and nobody came near, I began to be
+aware of an uneasiness that I could scarce explain. It seemed there was
+trouble afoot; the sails of the windmill, as they came up and went down
+over the hill, were like persons spying; and outside of all fancy, it was
+surely a strange neighbourhood and house for a young lady to be brought to
+dwell in.</p>
+
+<p>At breakfast, which we took late, it was manifest that James More was in
+some danger or perplexity; manifest that Alan was alive to the same, and
+watched him close; and this appearance of duplicity upon the one side and
+vigilance upon the other, held me on live coals. The meal was no sooner
+over than James seemed to come to a resolve, and began to make apologies.
+He had an appointment of a private nature in the town (it was with the
+French nobleman, he told me) and we would please excuse him till about
+noon. Meanwhile, he carried <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384"
+id="Page_384"></a>[pg 384]</span>his daughter aside to the far end of the
+room, where he seemed to speak rather earnestly and she to listen without
+much inclination.</p>
+
+<p>"I am caring less and less about this man James," said Alan. "There's
+something no right with the man James, and I wouldnae wonder but what Alan
+Breck would give an eye to him this day. I would like fine to see yon
+French nobleman, Davie; and I daresay you could find an employ to yoursel,
+and that would be to speer at the lassie for some news of your affair. Just
+tell it to her plainly--tell her ye're a muckle ass at the off-set; and
+then, if I were you, and ye could do it naitural, I would just mint to her
+I was in some kind of a danger; a' weemenfolk likes that."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannae lee, Alan, I cannae do it naitural," says I, mocking him.</p>
+
+<p>"The more fool you!" says he. "Then ye'll can tell her that I
+recommended it; that'll set her to the laughing; and I wouldnae wonder but
+what that was the next best. But see to the pair of them! If I didnae feel
+just sure of the lassie, and that she was awful pleased and chief with
+Alan, I would think there was some kind of hocus-pocus about yon."</p>
+
+<p>"And is she so pleased with ye, then, Alan?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"She thinks a heap of me," says he. "And I'm no like you: I'm one that
+can tell. That she does--she thinks a heap of Alan. And troth! I'm thinking
+a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385"></a>[pg
+385]</span>good deal of him mysel; and with your permission, Shaws, I'll be
+getting a wee yont amang the bents, so that I can see what way James
+goes."</p>
+
+<p>One after another went, till I was left alone beside the breakfast
+table; James to Dunkirk, Alan dogging him, Catriona up the stairs to her
+own chamber. I could very well understand how she should avoid to be alone
+with me; yet was none the better pleased with it for that, and bent my mind
+to entrap her to an interview before the men returned. Upon the whole, the
+best appeared to me to do like Alan. If I was out of view among the sand
+hills, the fine morning would decoy her out; and once I had her in the
+open, I could please myself.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner said than done; nor was I long under the bield of a hillock
+before she appeared at the inn door, looked here and there, and (seeing
+nobody) set out by a path that led directly seaward, and by which I
+followed her. I was in no haste to make my presence known; the further she
+went I made sure of the longer hearing to my suit; and the ground being all
+sandy, it was easy to follow her unheard. The path rose and came at last to
+the head of a knowe. Thence I had a picture for the first time of what a
+desolate wilderness that inn stood hidden in; where was no man to be seen,
+nor any house of man, except just Bazin's and the windmill. Only a little
+further on, the sea appeared and two or three ships upon it, pretty as a
+drawing. One of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386"
+id="Page_386"></a>[pg 386]</span>these was extremely close in to be so
+great a vessel; and I was aware of a shock of new suspicion, when I
+recognized the trim of the <i>Seahorse</i>. What should an English ship be
+doing so near in France? Why was Alan brought into her neighbourhood, and
+that in a place so far from any hope of rescue? and was it by accident, or
+by design, that the daughter of James More should walk that day to the
+seaside?</p>
+
+<p>Presently I came forth behind her in the front of the sand hills and
+above the beach. It was here long and solitary; with a man-o'-war's boat
+drawn up about the middle of the prospect, and an officer in charge and
+pacing the sands like one who waited. I sat immediately down where the
+rough grass a good deal covered me, and looked for what should follow.
+Catriona went straight to the boat; the officer met her with civilities;
+they had ten words together; I saw a letter changing hands; and there was
+Catriona returning. At the same time, as if this was all her business on
+the Continent, the boat shoved off and was headed for the <i>Seahorse</i>.
+But I observed the officer to remain behind and disappear among the
+bents.</p>
+
+<p>I liked the business little; and the more I considered of it, liked it
+less. Was it Alan the officer was seeking? or Catriona? She drew near with
+her head down, looking constantly on the sand, and made so tender a picture
+that I could not bear to doubt her innocency. The next, she raised her face
+and recognised me; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387"
+id="Page_387"></a>[pg 387]</span>seemed to hesitate, and then came on
+again, but more slowly, and I thought with a changed colour. And at that
+thought, all else that was upon my bosom--fears, suspicions, the care of my
+friend's life--was clean swallowed up; and I rose to my feet and stood
+waiting her in a drunkenness of hope.</p>
+
+<p>I gave her "good-morning" as she came up, which she returned with a good
+deal of composure.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you forgive my having followed you?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I know you are always meaning kindly," she replied; and then, with a
+little outburst, "But why will you be sending money to that man? It must
+not be."</p>
+
+<p>"I never sent it for him," said I, "but for you, as you know well."</p>
+
+<p>"And you have no right to be sending it to either one of us," said she.
+"David, it is not right."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not, it is all wrong," said I; "and I pray God he will help this
+dull fellow (if it be at all possible), to make it better. Catriona, this
+is no kind of life for you to lead, and I ask your pardon for the word, but
+yon man is no fit father to take care of you."</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be speaking of him, even!" was her cry.</p>
+
+<p>"And I need speak of him no more, it is not of him that I am thinking,
+O, be sure of that!" says I. "I think of the one thing. I have been alone
+now this long time in Leyden; and when I was by way of at my studies, still
+I was thinking of that. Next Alan came, and I went among soldier-men to
+their big dinners; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388"
+id="Page_388"></a>[pg 388]</span>and still I had the same thought. And it
+was the same before, when I had her there beside me. Catriona, do you see
+this napkin at my throat? You cut a corner from it once and then cast it
+from you. They're <i>your</i> colours now; I wear them in my heart. My
+dear, I cannot want you. O, try to put up with me!"</p>
+
+<p>I stepped before her so as to intercept her walking on.</p>
+
+<p>"Try to put up with me," I was saying, "try and bear me with a
+little."</p>
+
+<p>Still she had never the word, and a fear began to rise in me like a fear
+of death.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," I cried, gazing on her hard, "is it a mistake again? Am I
+quite lost?"</p>
+
+<p>She raised her face to me, breathless.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you want me, Davie, truly?" said she, and I scarce could hear her
+say it.</p>
+
+<p>"I do that," said I. "O, sure you know it--I do that."</p>
+
+<p>"I have nothing left to give or to keep back," said she. "I was all
+yours from the first day, if you would have had a gift of me!" she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>This was on the summit of a brae; the place was windy and conspicuous,
+we were to be seen there even from the English ship; but I kneeled down
+before her in the sand, and embraced her knees, and burst into that storm
+of weeping that I thought it must have broken me. All thought was wholly
+beaten from my <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389"
+id="Page_389"></a>[pg 389]</span>mind by the vehemency of my discomposure.
+I knew not where I was, I had forgot why I was happy; only I knew she
+stooped, and I felt her cherish me to her face and bosom, and heard her
+words out of a whirl.</p>
+
+<p>"Davie," she was saying, "O, Davie, is this what you think of me? Is it
+so that you were caring for poor me? O, Davie, Davie!"</p>
+
+<p>With that she wept also, and our tears were commingled in a perfect
+gladness.</p>
+
+<p>It might have been ten in the day before I came to a clear sense of what
+a mercy had befallen me; and sitting over against her, with her hands in
+mine, gazed in her face, and laughed out loud for pleasure like a child,
+and called her foolish and kind names. I have never seen the place look so
+pretty as these bents by Dunkirk; and the windmill sails, as they bobbed
+over the knowe, were like a tune of music.</p>
+
+<p>I know not how much longer we might have continued to forget all else
+besides ourselves, had I not chanced upon a reference to her father, which
+brought us to reality.</p>
+
+<p>"My little friend," I was calling her again and again, rejoicing to
+summon up the past by the sound of it, and to gaze across on her, and to be
+a little distant--"My little friend, now you are mine altogether; mine for
+good, my little friend; and that man's no longer at all."</p>
+
+<p>There came a sudden whiteness in her face, she plucked her hands from
+mine.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390"></a>[pg
+390]</span>"Davie, take me away from him!" she cried. "There's something
+wrong; he's not true. There will be something wrong; I have a dreadful
+terror here at my heart. What will he be wanting at all events with that
+King's ship? What will this word be saying?" And she held the letter forth.
+"My mind misgives me, it will be some ill to Alan. Open it, Davie--open it
+and see."</p>
+
+<p>I took it, and looked at it, and shook my head.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said I, "it goes against me, I cannot open a man's letter."</p>
+
+<p>"Not to save your friend?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannae tell," said I. "I think not. If I was only sure!"</p>
+
+<p>"And you have but to break the seal!" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I know it," said I, "but the thing goes against me."</p>
+
+<p>"Give it here," said she, "and I will open it myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor you neither," said I. "You least of all. It concerns your father,
+and his honour, dear, which we are both misdoubting. No question but the
+place is dangerous-like, and the English ship being here, and your father
+having word of it, and yon officer that stayed ashore! He would not be
+alone either; there must be more along with him; I daresay we are spied
+upon this minute. Ay, no doubt, the letter should be opened; but somehow,
+not by you nor me."</p>
+
+<p>I was about this far with it, and my spirit very much overcome with a
+sense of danger and hidden enemies, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_391" id="Page_391"></a>[pg 391]</span>when I spied Alan, come
+back again from following James and walking by himself among the sand
+hills. He was in his soldier's coat, of course, and mighty fine; but I
+could not avoid to shudder when I thought how little that jacket would
+avail him, if he were once caught and flung in a skiff, and carried on
+board of the <i>Seahorse</i>, a deserter, a rebel, and now a condemned
+murderer.</p>
+
+<p>"There," said I, "there is the man that has the best right to open it:
+or not, as he thinks fit."</p>
+
+<p>With which I called upon his name, and we both stood up to be a mark for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"If it is so--if it be more disgrace--will you can bear it?" she asked,
+looking upon me with a burning eye.</p>
+
+<p>"I was asked something of the same question when I had seen you but the
+once," said I. "What do you think I answered? That if I liked you as I
+thought I did--and O, but I like you better!--I would marry you at his
+gallows' foot."</p>
+
+<p>The blood rose in her face; she came close up and pressed upon me,
+holding my hand: and it was so that we awaited Alan.</p>
+
+<p>He came with one of his queer smiles. "What was I telling ye, David?"
+says he.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a time for all things, Alan," said I, "and this time is
+serious. How have you sped? You can speak out plain before this friend of
+ours."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392"></a>[pg
+392]</span>"I have been upon a fool's errand," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt we have done better than you, then," said I; "and, at least,
+here is a great deal of matter that you must judge of. Do you see that?" I
+went on, pointing to the ship. "That is the <i>Seahorse</i>, Captain
+Palliser."</p>
+
+<p>"I should ken her, too," says Alan. "I had fyke enough with her when she
+was stationed in the Forth. But what ails the man to come so close?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you why he came there first," said I. "It was to bring this
+letter to James More. Why he stops here now that it's delivered, what it's
+likely to be about, why there's an officer hiding in the bents, and whether
+or not it's probable that he's alone--I would rather you considered for
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"A letter to James More?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"The same," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I can tell ye more than that," said Alan. "For last night
+when you were fast asleep, I heard the man colloquing with some one in the
+French, and then the door of that inn to be opened and shut."</p>
+
+<p>"Alan!" cried I, "you slept all night, and I am here to prove it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but I would never trust Alan whether he was asleep or waking!" says
+he. "But the business looks bad. Let's see the letter."</p>
+
+<p>I gave it him.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said he, "ye'll have to excuse me, my <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393"></a>[pg 393]</span>dear;
+but there's nothing less than my fine bones upon the cast of it, and I'll
+have to break this seal."</p>
+
+<p>"It is my wish," said Catriona.</p>
+
+<p>He opened it, glanced it through, and flung his hand in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"The stinking brock!" says he, and crammed the paper in his pocket.
+"Here, let's get our things thegether. This place is fair death to me." And
+he began to walk towards the inn.</p>
+
+<p>It was Catriona who spoke the first. "He has sold you?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Sold me, my dear," said Alan. "But thanks to you and Davie, I'll can
+jink him yet. Just let me win upon my horse!" he added.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona must come with us," said I. "She can have no more traffic with
+that man. She and I are to be married." At which she pressed my hand to her
+side.</p>
+
+<p>"Are ye there with it?" says Alan, looking back. "The best day's work
+that ever either of ye did yet I And I'm bound to say, my dawtie, ye make a
+real, bonny couple."</p>
+
+<p>The way that he was following brought us close in by the windmill, where
+I was aware of a man in seaman's trousers, who seemed to be spying from
+behind it. Only, of course, we took him in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>"See, Alan!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Wheesht!" said he, "this is my affairs."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394"></a>[pg
+394]</span>The man was, no doubt, a little deafened by the clattering of
+the mill, and we got up close before he noticed. Then he turned, and we saw
+he was a big fellow with a mahogany face.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, sir," says Alan, "that you speak the English?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Non, monsieur</i>," says he, with an incredible bad accent.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Non, monsieur</i>," cries Alan, mocking him. "Is that how they learn
+you French on the <i>Seahorse?</i> Ye muckle, gutsey hash, here's a Scots
+boot to your English hurdies!"</p>
+
+<p>And bounding on him before he could escape, he dealt the man a kick that
+laid him on his nose. Then he stood, with a savage smile, and watched him
+scramble to his feet and scamper off into the sand hills.</p>
+
+<p>"But it's high time I was clear of these empty bents!" said Alan; and
+continued his way at top speed and we still following, to the back door of
+Bazin's inn.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced that as we entered by the one door we came face to face with
+James More entering by the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Here!" said I to Catriona, "quick! upstairs with you and make your
+packets; this is no fit scene for you."</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile James and Alan had met in the midst of the long room.
+She passed them close by to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395"
+id="Page_395"></a>[pg 395]</span>reach the stairs; and after she was some
+way up I saw her turn and glance at them again, though without pausing.
+Indeed, they were worth looking at. Alan wore as they met one of his best
+appearances of courtesy and friendliness, yet with something eminently
+warlike, so that James smelled danger off the man, as folk smell fire in a
+house, and stood prepared for accidents.</p>
+
+<p>Time pressed. Alan's situation in that solitary place, and his enemies
+about him, might have daunted C&aelig;sar. It made no change in him; and it
+was in his old spirit of mockery and daffing that he began the
+interview.</p>
+
+<p>"A braw good day to ye again, Mr. Drummond," said he. "What'll yon
+business of yours be just about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, the thing being private, and rather of a long story," says James,
+"I think it will keep very well till we have eaten."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm none so sure of that," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind it's either
+now or never; for the fact is me and Mr. Balfour here have gotten a line,
+and we're thinking of the road."</p>
+
+<p>I saw a little surprise in James's eye; but he held himself stoutly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have but the one word to say to cure you of that," said he, "and that
+is the name of my business."</p>
+
+<p>"Say it then," says Alan. "Hout! wha minds for Davie?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396"></a>[pg
+396]</span>"It is a matter that would make us both rich men," said
+James.</p>
+
+<p>"Do ye tell me that?" cries Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"I do, sir," said James. "The plain fact is that it is Cluny's
+Treasure."</p>
+
+<p>"No!" cried Alan. "Have ye got word of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I ken the place, Mr. Stewart, and can take you there," said James.</p>
+
+<p>"This crowns all!" says Alan. "Well, and I'm glad I came to Dunkirk. And
+so this was your business, was it? Halvers, I'm thinking?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is the business, sir," says James.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," says Alan; and then in the same tone of childlike
+interest, "It has naething to do with the <i>Seahorse</i>, then?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"With what?" says James.</p>
+
+<p>"Or the lad that I have just kicked the bottom of behind yon windmill?"
+pursued Alan. "Hut, man! have done with your lees! I have Palliser's letter
+here in my pouch. You're by with it, James More. You can never show your
+face again with dacent folk."</p>
+
+<p>James was taken all aback with it. He stood a second, motionless and
+white, then swelled with the living anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you talk to me, you bastard?" he roared out.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye glee'd swine!" cried Alan, and hit him a sounding buffet on the
+mouth, and the next wink of time their blades clashed together.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397"></a>[pg
+397]</span>At the first sound of the bare steel I instinctively leaped back
+from the collision. The next I saw, James parried a thrust so nearly that I
+thought him killed; and it lowed up in my mind that this was the girl's
+father, and in a manner almost my own, and I drew and ran in to sever
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep back, Davie! Are ye daft? Damn ye, keep back!" roared Alan. "Your
+blood be on your ain heid then!"</p>
+
+<p>I beat their blades down twice. I was knocked reeling against the wall;
+I was back again betwixt them. They took no heed of me, thrusting at each
+other like two furies. I can never think how I avoided being stabbed myself
+or stabbing one of these two Rodomonts, and the whole business turned about
+me like a piece of a dream; in the midst of which I heard a great cry from
+the stair, and Catriona sprang before her father. In the same moment the
+point of my sword encountered something yielding. It came back to me
+reddened. I saw the blood flow on the girl's kerchief, and stood sick.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you be killing him before my eyes, and me his daughter after all?"
+she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, I have done with him," said Alan, and went and sat on a table,
+with his arms crossed and the sword naked in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Awhile she stood before the man, panting, with big eyes, then swung
+suddenly about and faced him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398"></a>[pg
+398]</span>"Begone!" was her word, "take your shame out of my sight; leave
+me with clean folk. I am a daughter of Alpin! Shame of the sons of Alpin,
+begone!"</p>
+
+<p>It was said with so much passion as awoke me from the horror of my own
+bloodied sword. The two stood facing, she with the red stain on her
+kerchief, he white as a rag. I knew him well enough--I knew it must have
+pierced him in the quick place of his soul; but he betook himself to a
+bravado air.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," says he, sheathing his sword, though still with a bright eye on
+Alan, "if this brawl is over I will but get my portmanteau---"</p>
+
+<p>"There goes no pockmantie out of this place except with me," says
+Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir!" cries James.</p>
+
+<p>"James More," says Alan, "this lady daughter of yours is to marry my
+friend Davie, upon the which account I let you pack with a hale carcase.
+But take you my advice of it and get that carcase out of harm's way or ower
+late. Little as you suppose it, there are leemits to my temper."</p>
+
+<p>"Be damned, sir, but my money's there!" said James.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm vexed about that, too," says Alan, with his funny face, "but now,
+ye see, it's mines." And then with more gravity, "Be you advised, James
+More, you leave this house."</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour009"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour009.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: KEEP BACK, DAVIE! ARE YE DAFT?"
+src="images/balfour009sm.jpg" height="557" width="383" /></a>
+<br />KEEP BACK, DAVIE! ARE YE DAFT?
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p>James seemed to cast about for a moment in his <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_399" id="Page_399"></a>[pg 399]</span>mind; but it's to be
+thought he had enough of Alan's swordsmanship, for he suddenly put off his
+hat to us and (with a face like one of the damned) bade us farewell in a
+series. With which he was gone.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time a spell was lifted from me.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," I cried, "it was me--it was my sword. O, are ye much
+hurt?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it, Davie, I am loving you for the pain of it; it was done
+defending that bad man, my father. See!" she said, and showed me a bleeding
+scratch, "see, you have made a man of me now. I will carry a wound like an
+old soldier."</p>
+
+<p>Joy that she should be so little hurt, and the love of her brave nature,
+transported me. I embraced her, I kissed the wound.</p>
+
+<p>"And am I to be out of the kissing, me that never lost a chance?" says
+Alan; and putting me aside and taking Catriona by either shoulder, "My
+dear," he said, "you're a true daughter of Alpin. By all accounts, he was a
+very fine man, and he may weel be proud of you. If ever I was to get
+married, it's the marrow of you I would be seeking for a mother to my sons.
+And I bear a king's name and speak the truth."</p>
+
+<p>He said it with a serious heat of admiration that was honey to the girl,
+and through her, to me. It seemed to wipe us clean of all James More's
+disgraces. And the next moment he was just himself again.</p>
+
+<p>"And now by your leave, my dawties," said he, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_400" id="Page_400"></a>[pg 400]</span>"this is a' very bonny;
+but Alan Breck'll be a wee thing nearer to the gallows than he's caring
+for; and Dod! I think this is a grand place to be leaving."</p>
+
+<p>The word recalled us to some wisdom. Alan ran upstairs and returned with
+our saddle-bags and James More's portmanteau; I picked up Catriona's bundle
+where she had dropped it on the stair; and we were setting forth out of
+that dangerous house, when Bazin stopped the way with cries and
+gesticulations. He had whipped under a table when the swords were drawn,
+but now he was as bold as a lion. There was his bill to be settled, there
+was a chair broken, Alan had sat among his dinner things, James More had
+fled.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," I cried, "pay yourself," and flung him down some Lewie d'ors;
+for I thought it was no time to be accounting.</p>
+
+<p>He sprang upon that money, and we passed him by, and ran forth into the
+open. Upon three sides of the house were seamen hasting and closing in; a
+little nearer to us James More waved his hat as if to hurry them; and right
+behind him, like some foolish person holding up its hands, were the sails
+of the windmill turning.</p>
+
+<p>Alan gave but the one glance, and laid himself down to run. He carried a
+great weight in James More's portmanteau; but I think he would as soon have
+lost his life as cast away that booty which was his revenge; and he ran so
+that I was distressed to follow him, and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_401" id="Page_401"></a>[pg 401]</span>marvelled and exulted to
+see the girl bounding at my side.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as we appeared, they cast off all disguise upon the other side;
+and the seamen pursued us with shouts and view-hullohs. We had a start of
+some two hundred yards, and they were but bandy-legged tarpaulins after
+all, that could not hope to better us at such an exercise. I suppose they
+were armed, but did not care to use their pistols on French ground. And as
+soon as I perceived that we not only held our advantage but drew a little
+away, I began to feel quite easy of the issue. For all which, it was a hot,
+brisk bit of work, so long as it lasted; Dunkirk was still far off; and
+when we popped over a knowe, and found a company of the garrison marching
+on the other side on some manoeuvre, I could very well understand the word
+that Alan had.</p>
+
+<p>He stopped running at once; and mopping at his brow, "They're a real
+bonny folk, the French nation," says he.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402"></a>[pg
+402]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CONCLUSION'></a>CONCLUSION</h2>
+
+
+<p>No sooner were we safe within the walls of Dunkirk than we held a very
+necessary council-of-war on our position. We had taken a daughter from her
+father at the sword's point; any judge would give her back to him at once,
+and by all likelihood clap me and Alan into jail; and though we had an
+argument upon our side in Captain Palisser's letter, neither Catriona nor I
+were very keen to be using it in public. Upon all accounts it seemed the
+most prudent to carry the girl to Paris to the hands of her own chieftain,
+Macgregor of Bohaldie, who would be very willing to help his kinswoman, on
+the one hand, and not at all anxious to dishonour James upon the other.</p>
+
+<p>We made but a slow journey of it up, for Catriona was not so good at the
+riding as the running, and had scarce sat in a saddle since the
+'Forty-five. But we made it out at last, reached Paris early of a Sabbath
+morning, and made all speed, under Alan's guidance, to find Bohaldie. He
+was finely lodged, and lived in a good style, having a pension in the Scots
+Fund, as well as private means; greeted Catriona like one of his own house,
+and seemed altogether very civil and discreet, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_403" id="Page_403"></a>[pg 403]</span>but not particularly open.
+We asked of the news of James More. "Poor James!" said he, and shook his
+head and smiled, so that I thought he knew further than he meant to tell.
+Then we showed him Palisser's letter, and he drew a long face at that.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor James!" said he again. "Well, there are worse folk than James
+More, too. But this is dreadful bad. Tut, tut, he must have forgot himself
+entirely! This is a most undesirable letter. But, for all that, gentlemen,
+I cannot see what we would want to make it public for. It's an ill bird
+that fouls his own nest, and we are all Scots folk and all Hieland."</p>
+
+<p>Upon this we were all agreed, save perhaps Alan; and still more upon the
+question of our marriage, which Bohaldie took in his own hands, as though
+there had been no such person as James More, and gave Catriona away with
+very pretty manners and agreeable compliments in French. It was not till
+all was over, and our healths drunk, that he told us James was in that
+city, whither he had preceded us some days, and where he now lay sick, and
+like to die. I thought I saw by my wife's face what way her inclination
+pointed.</p>
+
+<p>"And let us go see him, then," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"If it is your pleasure," said Catriona. These were early days.</p>
+
+<p>He was lodged in the same quarter of the city with his chief, in a great
+house upon a corner; and we were guided up to the garret where he lay by
+the sound of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404"></a>[pg
+404]</span>Highland piping. It seemed he had just borrowed a set of them
+from Bohaldie to amuse his sickness; though he was no such hand as was his
+brother Rob, he made good music of the kind; and it was strange to observe
+the French folk crowding on the stairs, and some of them laughing. He lay
+propped in a pallet. The first look of him I saw he was upon his last
+business; and, doubtless, this was a strange place for him to die in. But
+even now I find I can scarce dwell upon his end with patience. Doubtless,
+Bohaldie had prepared him; he seemed to know we were married, complimented
+us on the event, and gave us a benediction like a patriarch.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been never understood," said he. "I forgive you both without an
+after-thought;" after which he spoke for all the world in his old manner,
+was so obliging as to play us a tune or two upon his pipes, and borrowed a
+small sum before I left. I could not trace even a hint of shame in any part
+of his behaviour; but he was great upon forgiveness; it seemed always fresh
+to him. I think he forgave me every time we met; and when after some four
+days he passed away in a kind of odour of affectionate sanctity, I could
+have torn my hair out for exasperation. I had him buried; but what to put
+upon his tomb was quite beyond me, till at last I considered the date would
+look best alone.</p>
+
+<p>I thought it wiser to resign all thoughts of Leyden, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405"></a>[pg 405]</span>where
+we had appeared once as brother and sister, and it would certainly look
+strange to return in a new character. Scotland would be doing for us; and
+thither, after I had recovered that which I had left behind, we sailed in a
+Low Country ship.</p>
+
+<p>And now, Miss Barbara Balfour (to set the ladies first) and Mr. Alan
+Balfour, younger of Shaws, here is the story brought fairly to an end. A
+great many of the folk that took a part in it, you will find (if you think
+well) that you have seen and spoken with. Alison Hastie in Limekilns was
+the lass that rocked your cradle when you were too small to know of it, and
+walked abroad with you in the policy when you were bigger. That very fine
+great lady that is Miss Barbara's name-mamma is no other than the same Miss
+Grant that made so much a fool of David Balfour in the house of the Lord
+Advocate. And I wonder whether you remember a little, lean, lively
+gentleman in a scratchwig and a wraprascal, that came to Shaws very late of
+a dark night, and whom you were awakened out of your beds and brought down
+to the dining-hall to be presented to, by the name of Mr. Jamieson? Or has
+Alan forgotten what he did at Mr. Jamieson's request--a most disloyal
+act--for which, by the letter of the law, he might be hanged--no less than
+drinking the king's health <i>across the water</i>? These were strange
+doings in a good Whig house! But Mr. Jamieson is a man privileged, and
+might set fire to my corn-barn; and the <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_406" id="Page_406"></a>[pg 406]</span>name they know him by now
+in France is the Chevalier Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>As for Davie and Catriona, I shall watch you pretty close in the next
+days, and see if you are so bold as to be laughing at papa and mamma. It is
+true we were not so wise as we might have been, and made a great deal of
+sorrow out of nothing; but you will find as you grow up that even the
+artful Miss Barbara, and even the valiant Mr. Alan will be not so very much
+wiser than their parents. For the life of man upon this world of ours is a
+funny business. They talk of the angels weeping; but I think they must more
+often be holding their sides, as they look on; and there was one thing I
+determined to do when I began this long story, and that was to tell out
+everything as it befell.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<p><a href="#rfn1" name="fn1">1.</a> Conspicuous.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn2" name="fn2">2.</a> Country.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn3" name="fn3">3.</a> The Fairies.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn4" name="fn4">4.</a> Flatteries.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn5" name="fn5">5.</a> Trust to.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn6" name="fn6">6.</a> This must have reference to Dr.
+Cameron on his first visit.--D.B.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn7" name="fn7">7.</a> Sweethearts.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn8" name="fn8">8.</a> Child.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn9" name="fn9">9.</a> Palm.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn10" name="fn10">10.</a> Gallows.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn11" name="fn11">11.</a> My Catechism.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn12" name="fn12">12.</a> Now Prince's Street.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn13" name="fn13">13.</a> A learned folklorist of my
+acquaintance hereby identifies Alan's air. It has been printed (it seems)
+in Campbell's <i>Tales of the West Highlands</i>, Vol. II., p. 91. Upon
+examination it would really seem as if Miss Grant's unrhymed doggrel (see
+chapter V.) would fit with a little humouring to the notes in question.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn14" name="fn14">14.</a> A ball placed upon a little mound
+for convenience of striking.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn15" name="fn15">15.</a> Patched shoes.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn16" name="fn16">16.</a> Shoemaker.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn17" name="fn17">17.</a> Tamson's mare, to go afoot.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn18" name="fn18">18.</a> Beard.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn19" name="fn19">19.</a> Ragged.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn20" name="fn20">20.</a> Fine things.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn21" name="fn21">21.</a> Catch.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn22" name="fn22">22.</a> Victuals.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn23" name="fn23">23.</a> Trust.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn24" name="fn24">24.</a> Sea fog.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn25" name="fn25">25.</a> Bashful.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn26" name="fn26">26.</a> Rest.</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14133 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
+
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14133 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14133)
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+Project Gutenberg's David Balfour, Second Part, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: David Balfour, Second Part
+ Being Memoirs Of His Adventures At Home And Abroad, The Second Part:
+ In Which Are Set Forth His Misfortunes Anent The Appin Murder; His
+ Troubles With Lord Advocate Grant; Captivity On The Bass Rock; Journey
+ Into Holland And France; And Singular Relations With James More
+ Drummond Or Macgregor, A Son Of The Notorious Rob Roy, And His
+ Daughter Catriona
+
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+Release Date: November 23, 2004 [EBook #14133]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVID BALFOUR, SECOND PART ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Kevin Handy, John Hagerson, and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+DAVID BALFOUR
+
+Being Memoirs of his Adventures at home
+and Abroad
+
+THE SECOND PART: _In which are set forth his Misfortunes
+anent the_ APPIN _Murder; his Troubles with Lord Advocate_
+GRANT; _Captivity on the Bass Rock; Journey into Holland
+and France; and Singular Relations with_ JAMES MORE
+DRUMMOND _or_ MACGREGOR, _a Son of the notorious_ ROB
+ROY, _and his Daughter_ CATRIONA
+
+WRITTEN BY HIMSELF
+AND NOW SET FORTH BY
+ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
+
+_ILLUSTRATED_
+
+
+NEW YORK
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+1905
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1893, BY
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION TO CHARLES BAXTER, _WRITER TO THE SIGNET_.
+
+MY DEAR CHARLES,
+
+It is the fate of sequels to disappoint those who have waited for them;
+and, my David having been left to kick his heels for more than a lustre
+in the British Linen Company's office, must expect his late reappearance
+to be greeted with hoots, if not with missiles. Yet, when I remember the
+days of our explorations, I am not without hope. There should be left in
+our native city some seed of the elect; some long-legged, hot-headed
+youth must repeat to-day our dreams and wanderings of so many years ago;
+he will relish the pleasure, which should have been ours, to follow
+among named streets and numbered houses the country walks of David
+Balfour, to identify Dean, and Silvermills, and Broughton, and Hope Park
+and Pilrig, and poor old Lochend--if it still be standing, and the
+Figgate Whins--if there be any of them left; or to push (on a long
+holiday) so far afield as Gillane or the Bass. So, perhaps, his eye
+shall be opened to behold the series of the generations, and he shall
+weigh with surprise his momentous and nugatory gift of life.
+
+You are still--as when first I saw, as when I last addressed you--in the
+venerable city which I must always think of as my home. And I have come
+so far; and the sights and thoughts of my youth pursue me; and I see
+like a vision the youth of my father, and of his father, and the whole
+stream of lives flowing down there, far in the north, with the sound of
+laughter and tears, to cast me out in the end, as by a sudden freshet,
+on those ultimate islands. And I admire and bow my head before the
+romance of destiny.
+
+ R.L.S.
+
+ VAILIMA,
+ UPOLU,
+ SAMOA,
+ 1902.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Part I
+
+ _THE LORD ADVOCATE_
+
+ I. A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK
+ II. THE HIGHLAND WRITER
+ III. I GO TO PILRIG
+ IV. LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE
+ V. IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE
+ VI. UMQHILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT
+ VII. I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOUR
+ VIII. THE BRAVO
+ IX. THE HEATHER ON FIRE
+ X. THE RED-HEADED MAN
+ XI. THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS
+ XII. ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN
+ XIII. GILLANE SANDS
+ XIV. THE BASS
+ XV. BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+ XVI. THE MISSING WITNESS
+ XVII. THE MEMORIAL
+ XVIII. THE TEE'D BALL
+ XIX. I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES
+ XX. I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY
+
+ Part II
+
+ _FATHER AND DAUGHTER_
+
+ XXI. THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND
+ XXII. HELVOETSLUYS
+ XXIII. TRAVELS IN HOLLAND
+ XXIV. FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS
+ XXV. THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE
+ XXVI. THE THREESOME
+ XXVII. A TWOSOME
+ XXVIII. IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE
+ XXIX. WE MEET IN DUNKIRK
+ XXX. THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP
+ XXXI. CONCLUSION
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+THE LORD ADVOCATE
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK
+
+
+The 25th day of August, 1751, about two in the afternoon, I, David
+Balfour, came forth of the British Linen Company, a porter attending me
+with a bag of money, and some of the chief of these merchants bowing me
+from their doors. Two days before, and even so late as yestermorning, I
+was like a beggarman by the wayside, clad in rags, brought down to my
+last shillings, my companion a condemned traitor, a price set on my own
+head for a crime with the news of which the country rang. To-day I was
+served heir to my position in life, a landed laird, a bank porter by me
+carrying my gold, recommendations in my pocket, and (in the words of the
+saying) the ball directly at my foot.
+
+There were two circumstances that served me as ballast to so much sail.
+The first was the very difficult and deadly business I had still to
+handle; the second, the place that I was in. The tall, black city, and
+the numbers and movement and noise of so many folk, made a new world for
+me, after the moorland braes, the sea-sands, and the still country-sides
+that I had frequented up to then. The throng of the citizens in
+particular abashed me. Rankeillor's son was short and small in the
+girth; his clothes scarce held on me; and it was plain I was ill
+qualified to strut in the front of a bank-porter. It was plain, if I did
+so, I should but set folk laughing, and (what was worse in my case) set
+them asking questions. So that I behooved to come by some clothes of my
+own, and in the meanwhile to walk by the porter's side, and put my hand
+on his arm as though we were a pair of friends.
+
+At a merchant's in the Luckenbooths, I had myself fitted out: none too
+fine, for I had no idea to appear like a beggar on horseback; but comely
+and responsible, so that servants should respect me. Thence to an
+armourer's, where I got a plain sword, to suit with my degree in life. I
+felt safer with the weapon, though (for one so ignorant of defence) it
+might be called an added danger. The porter, who was naturally a man of
+some experience, judged my accoutrement to be well chosen.
+
+"Naething kenspeckle,"[1] said he, "plain, dacent claes. As for the
+rapier, nae doubt it sits wi' your degree; but an I had been you, I
+would hae waired my siller better-gates than that." And proposed I
+should buy winter-hosen from a wife in the Cowgate-back, that was a
+cousin of his own, and made them "extraordinar endurable."
+
+But I had other matters on my hand more pressing. Here I was in this
+old, black city, which was for all the world like a rabbit-warren, not
+only by the number of its indwellers, but the complication of its
+passages and holes. It was indeed a place where no stranger had a chance
+to find a friend, let be another stranger. Suppose him even to hit on
+the right close, people dwelt so thronged in these tall houses, he might
+very well seek a day before he chanced on the right door. The ordinary
+course was to hire a lad they called a _caddie_, who was like a guide or
+pilot, led you where you had occasion, and (your errands being done)
+brought you again where you were lodging. But these caddies, being
+always employed in the same sort of services, and having it for
+obligation to be well informed of every house and person in the city,
+had grown to form a brotherhood of spies; and I knew from tales of Mr.
+Campbell's how they communicated one with another, what a rage of
+curiosity they conceived as to their employer's business, and how they
+were like eyes and fingers to the police. It would be a piece of little
+wisdom, the way I was now placed, to tack such a ferret to my tails. I
+had three visits to make, all immediately needful: to my kinsman Mr.
+Balfour of Pilrig, to Stewart the Writer that was Appin's agent, and to
+William Grant Esquire of Prestongrange, Lord Advocate of Scotland. Mr.
+Balfour's was a non-committal visit; and besides (Pilrig being in the
+country) I made bold to find way to it myself, with the help of my two
+legs and a Scots tongue. But the rest were in a different case. Not only
+was the visit to Appin's agent, in the midst of the cry about the Appin
+murder, dangerous in itself, but it was highly inconsistent with the
+other. I was like to have a bad enough time of it with my Lord Advocate
+Grant, the best of ways; but to go to him hot-foot from Appin's agent,
+was little likely to mend my own affairs, and might prove the mere ruin
+of friend Alan's. The whole thing, besides, gave me a look of running
+with the hare and hunting with the hounds that was little to my fancy. I
+determined, therefore, to be done at once with Mr. Stewart and the whole
+Jacobitical side of my business, and to profit for that purpose by the
+guidance of the porter at my side. But it chanced I had scarce given him
+the address, when there came a sprinkle of rain--nothing to hurt, only
+for my new clothes--and we took shelter under a pend at the head of a
+close or alley.
+
+Being strange to what I saw, I stepped a little farther in. The narrow
+paved way descended swiftly. Prodigious tall houses sprang upon each
+side and bulged out, one story beyond another, as they rose. At the top
+only a ribbon of sky showed in. By what I could spy in the windows, and
+by the respectable persons that passed out and in, I saw the houses to
+be very well occupied; and the whole appearance of the place interested
+me like a tale.
+
+I was still gazing, when there came a sudden brisk tramp of feet in time
+and clash of steel behind me. Turning quickly, I was aware of a party of
+armed soldiers, and, in their midst, a tall man in a great-coat. He
+walked with a stoop that was like a piece of courtesy, genteel and
+insinuating: he waved his hands plausibly as he went, and his face was
+sly and handsome. I thought his eye took me in, but could not meet it.
+This procession went by to a door in the close, which a serving-man in a
+fine livery set open; and two of the soldier-lads carried the prisoner
+within, the rest lingering with their firelocks by the door.
+
+There can nothing pass in the streets of a city without some following
+of idle folk and children. It was so now; but the more part melted away
+incontinent until but three were left. One was a girl; she was dressed
+like a lady, and had a screen of the Drummond colours on her head; but
+her comrades or (I should say) followers were ragged gillies, such as I
+had seen the matches of by the dozen in my Highland journey. They all
+spoke together earnestly in Gaelic, the sound of which was pleasant in
+my ears for the sake of Alan; and though the rain was by again, and my
+porter plucked at me to be going, I even drew nearer where they were, to
+listen. The lady scolded sharply, the others making apologies and
+cringeing before her, so that I made sure she was come of a chief's
+house. All the while the three of them sought in their pockets, and by
+what I could make out, they had the matter of half a farthing among the
+party; which made me smile a little to see all Highland folk alike for
+fine obeisances and empty sporrans.
+
+It chanced the girl turned suddenly about, so that I saw her face for
+the first time. There is no greater wonder than the way the face of a
+young woman fits in a man's mind, and stays there, and he could never
+tell you why; it just seems it was the thing he wanted. She had
+wonderful bright eyes like stars, and I daresay the eyes had a part in
+it; but what I remember the most clearly was the way her lips were a
+trifle open as she turned. And whatever was the cause, I stood there
+staring like a fool. On her side, as she had not known there was anyone
+so near, she looked at me a little longer, and perhaps with more
+surprise, than was entirely civil.
+
+It went through my country head she might be wondering at my new
+clothes; with that, I blushed to my hair, and at the sight of my
+colouring it's to be supposed she drew her own conclusions, for she
+moved her gillies farther down the close, and they fell again to this
+dispute where I could hear no more of it.
+
+I had often admired a lassie before then, if scarce so sudden and
+strong; and it was rather my disposition to withdraw than to come
+forward, for I was much in fear of mockery from the womenkind. You would
+have thought I had now all the more reason to pursue my common practice,
+since I had met this young lady in the city street, seemingly following
+a prisoner, and accompanied with two very ragged, indecent-like
+Highlandmen. But there was here a different ingredient; it was plain the
+girl thought I had been prying in her secrets; and with my new clothes
+and sword, and at the top of my new fortunes, this was more than I could
+swallow. The beggar on horseback could not bear to be thrust down so
+low, or at the least of it, not by this young lady.
+
+I followed, accordingly, and took off my new hat to her, the best that I
+was able.
+
+"Madam," said I, "I think it only fair to myself to let you understand I
+have no Gaelic. It is true I was listening, for I have friends of my own
+across the Highland line, and the sound of that tongue comes friendly;
+but for your private affairs, if you had spoken Greek, I might have had
+more guess at them."
+
+She made me a little, distant curtsey. "There is no harm done," said
+she, with a pretty accent, most like the English (but more agreeable).
+"A cat may look at a king."
+
+"I do not mean to offend," said I. "I have no skill of city manners; I
+never before this day set foot inside the doors of Edinburgh. Take me
+for a country lad--it's what I am; and I would rather I told you than
+you found it out."
+
+"Indeed, it will be a very unusual thing for strangers to be speaking to
+each other on the causeway," she replied. "But if you are landward[2]
+bred it will be different. I am as landward as yourself; I am Highland
+as you see, and think myself the farther from my home."
+
+"It is not yet a week since I passed the line," said I. "Less than a
+week ago I was on the Braes of Balwhidder."
+
+"Balwhither?" she cries; "come ye from Balwhither? The name of it makes
+all there is of me rejoice. You will not have been long there, and not
+known some of our friends or family?"
+
+"I lived with a very honest, kind man called Duncan Dhu Maclaren," I
+replied.
+
+"Well I know Duncan, and you give him the true name!" she said; "and if
+he is an honest man, his wife is honest indeed."
+
+"Ay," said I, "they are fine people, and the place is a bonny place."
+
+"Where in the great world is such another?" she cries; "I am loving the
+smell of that place and the roots that grew there."
+
+I was infinitely taken with the spirit of the maid. "I could be wishing
+I had brought you a spray of that heather," says I. "And though I did
+ill to speak with you at the first, now it seems we have common
+acquaintance, I make it my petition you will not forget me. David
+Balfour is the name I am known by. This is my lucky day when I have just
+come into a landed estate and am not very long out of a deadly peril. I
+wish you would keep my name in mind for the sake of Balquidder," said I,
+"and I will yours for the sake of my lucky day."
+
+"My name is not spoken," she replied, with a great deal of haughtiness.
+"More than a hundred years it has not gone upon men's tongues, save for
+a blink. I am nameless like the Folk of Peace.[3] Catriona Drummond is
+the one I use."
+
+Now indeed I knew where I was standing. In all broad Scotland there was
+but the one name proscribed, and that was the name of the Macgregors.
+Yet so far from fleeing this undesirable acquaintancy, I plunged the
+deeper in.
+
+"I have been sitting with one who was in the same case with yourself,"
+said I, "and I think he will be one of your friends. They called him
+Robin Oig."
+
+"Did ye so?" cries she. "Ye met Rob?"
+
+"I passed the night with him," said I.
+
+"He is a fowl of the night," said she.
+
+"There was a set of pipes there," I went on, "so you may judge if the
+time passed."
+
+"You should be no enemy, at all events," said she. "That was his brother
+there a moment since, with the red soldiers round him. It is him that I
+call father."
+
+"Is it so?" cried I. "Are you a daughter of James More's?"
+
+"All the daughter that he has," says she: "the daughter of a prisoner;
+that I should forget it so, even for one hour, to talk with strangers!"
+
+Here one of the gillies addressed her in what he had of English, to know
+what "she" (meaning by that himself) was to do about "ta sneeshin." I
+took some note of him for a short, bandy-legged, red-haired, big-headed
+man, that I was to know more of to my cost.
+
+"There can be none the day, Neil," she replied. "How will you get
+'sneeshin,' wanting siller? It will teach you another time to be more
+careful; and I think James More will not be very well pleased with Neil
+of the Tom."
+
+"Miss Drummond," I said, "I told you I was in my lucky day. Here I am,
+and a bank-porter at my tail. And remember I have had the hospitality of
+your own country of Balwhidder."
+
+"It was not one of my people gave it," said she.
+
+"Ah, well," said I, "but I am owing your uncle at least for some springs
+upon the pipes. Besides which, I have offered myself to be your friend,
+and you have been so forgetful that you did not refuse me in the proper
+time."
+
+"If it had been a great sum, it might have done you honour," said she.
+"But I will tell you what this is. James More lies shackled in prison;
+but this time past, they will be bringing him down here daily to the
+Advocate's..."
+
+"The Advocate's?" I cried. "Is that...?"
+
+"It is the house of the Lord Advocate, Grant of Prestongrange," said
+she. "There they bring my father one time and another, for what purpose
+I have no thought in my mind; but it seems there is some hope dawned for
+him. All this same time they will not let me be seeing him, nor yet him
+write; and we wait upon the King's street to catch him; and now we give
+him his snuff as he goes by, and now something else. And here is this
+son of trouble, Neil, son of Duncan, has lost my fourpenny-piece that
+was to buy that snuff, and James More must go wanting, and will think
+his daughter has forgotten him."
+
+I took sixpence from my pocket, gave it to Neil, and bade him go about
+his errand. Then to her, "That sixpence came with me by Balwhidder,"
+said I.
+
+"Ah!" she said, "you are a friend to the Gregara!"
+
+"I would not like to deceive you either," said I. "I know very little of
+the Gregara and less of James More and his doings; but since the while I
+have been standing in this close, I seem to know something of yourself;
+and if you will just say 'a friend to Miss Catriona' I will see you are
+the less cheated."
+
+"The one cannot be without the other," said she.
+
+"I will even try," said I.
+
+"And what will you be thinking of myself?" she cried, "to be holding my
+hand to the first stranger!"
+
+"I am thinking nothing but that you are a good daughter," said I.
+
+"I must not be without repaying it," she said; "where is it you stop?"
+
+"To tell the truth, I am stopping nowhere yet," said I, "being not full
+three hours in the city; but if you will give me your direction, I will
+be so bold as come seeking my sixpence for myself."
+
+"Will I can trust you for that?" she asked.
+
+"You have little fear," said I.
+
+"James More could not bear it else," said she. "I stop beyond the
+village of Dean, on the north side of the water, with Mrs.
+Drummond-Ogilvy of Allardyce, who is my near friend and will be glad to
+thank you."
+
+"You are to see me then, so soon as what I have to do permits," said I;
+and the remembrance of Alan rolling in again upon my mind, I made haste
+to say farewell.
+
+I could not but think, even as I did so, that we had made extraordinary
+free upon short acquaintance, and that a really wise young lady would
+have shown herself more backward. I think it was the bank-porter that
+put me from this ungallant train of thought.
+
+"I thoucht ye had been a lad of some kind o' sense," he began, shooting
+out his lips. "Ye're no likely to gang far this gate. A fule and his
+siller's shune parted. Eh, but ye're a green callant!" he cried, "an' a
+veecious, tae! Cleikin' up wi' baubee-joes!"
+
+"If you dare to speak of the young lady ..." I began.
+
+"Leddy!" he cried. "Haud us and safe us, whatten leddy? Ca' _thon_ a
+leddy? The toun's fu' o' them. Leddies! Man, it's weel seen ye're no
+very acquant in Embro'!"
+
+A clap of anger took me.
+
+"Here," said I, "lead me where I told you, and keep your foul mouth
+shut!"
+
+He did not wholly obey me, for though he no more addressed me directly,
+he sang at me as he went in a very impudent manner of innuendo, and with
+an exceedingly ill voice and ear--
+
+ "As Mally Lee cam doun the street, her capuchin did flee.
+ She cuist a look ahint her to see her negligee,
+ And we're a' gaun east and wast, we're a' gaun ajee,
+ We're a' gaun east and wast courtin' Mally Lee."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HIGHLAND WRITER
+
+
+Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer dwelt at the top of the longest stair
+that ever mason set a hand to; fifteen flights of it, no less; and when
+I had come to his door, and a clerk had opened it, and told me his
+master was within, I had scarce breath enough to send my porter packing.
+
+"Awa' east and wast wi' ye!" said I, took the money bag out of his
+hands, and followed the clerk in.
+
+The outer room was an office with the clerk's chair at a table spread
+with law papers. In the inner chamber, which opened from it, a little
+brisk man sat poring on a deed, from which he scarce raised his eyes
+upon my entrance; indeed, he still kept his finger in the place, as
+though prepared to show me out and fall again to his studies. This
+pleased me little enough; and what pleased me less, I thought the clerk
+was in a good posture to overhear what should pass between us.
+
+I asked if he was Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer.
+
+"The same," says he; "and if the question is equally fair, who may you
+be yourself?"
+
+"You never heard tell of my name nor of me either," said I, "but I bring
+you a token from a friend that you know well. That you know well," I
+repeated, lowering my voice, "but maybe are not just so keen to hear
+from at this present being. And the bits of business that I have to
+propone to you are rather in the nature of being confidential. In short,
+I would like to think we were quite private."
+
+He rose without more words, casting down his paper like a man
+ill-pleased, sent forth his clerk of an errand, and shut to the
+house-door behind him.
+
+"Now, sir," said he, returning, "speak out your mind and fear nothing;
+though before you begin," he cries out, "I tell you mine misgives me! I
+tell you beforehand, ye're either a Stewart or a Stewart sent ye. A good
+name it is, and one it would ill-become my father's son to lightly. But
+I begin to grue at the sound of it."
+
+"My name is called Balfour," said I, "David Balfour of Shaws. As for him
+that sent me, I will let his token speak." And I showed the silver
+button.
+
+"Put it in your pocket, sir!" cries he, "Ye need name no names. The
+deevil's buckie, I ken the button of him! And de'il hae't! Where is he
+now?"
+
+I told him I knew not where Alan was, but he had some sure place (or
+thought he had) about the north side, where he was to lie until a ship
+was found for him; and how and where he had appointed to be spoken with.
+
+"It's been always my opinion that I would hang in a tow for this family
+of mine," he cried, "and, dod! I believe the day's come now! Get a ship
+for him, quot' he! And who's to pay for it? The man's daft!"
+
+"That is my part of the affair, Mr. Stewart," said I. "Here is a bag of
+good money, and if more be wanted, more is to be had where it came
+from."
+
+"I needn't ask your politics," said he.
+
+"Ye need not," said I, smiling, "for I'm as big a Whig as grows."
+
+"Stop a bit, stop a bit," says Mr. Stewart. "What's all this? A Whig?
+Then why are you here with Alan's button? and what kind of a black-foot
+traffic is this that I find ye out in, Mr. Whig? Here is a forfeited
+rebel and an accused murderer, with two hundred pounds on his life, and
+ye ask me to meddle in his business, and then tell me ye're a Whig! I
+have no mind of any such Whigs before, though I've kent plenty of them."
+
+"He's a forfeited rebel, the more's the pity," said I, "for the man's my
+friend." I can only wish he had been better guided. And an accused
+murderer, that he is too, for his misfortune; but wrongfully accused."
+
+"I hear you say so," said Stewart.
+
+"More than you are to hear me say so, before long," said I. "Alan Breck
+is innocent, and so is James."
+
+"Oh!" says he, "the two cases hang together. If Alan is out, James can
+never be in."
+
+Hereupon I told him briefly of my acquaintance with Alan, of the
+accident that brought me present at the Appin murder, and the various
+passages of our escape among the heather, and my recovery of my estate.
+"So, sir, you have now the whole train of these events," I went on, "and
+can see for yourself how I come to be so much mingled up with the
+affairs of your family and friends, which (for all of our sakes) I wish
+had been plainer and less bloody. You can see for yourself, too, that I
+have certain pieces of business depending, which were scarcely fit to
+lay before a lawyer chosen at random. No more remains, but to ask if you
+will undertake my service?"
+
+"I have no great mind to it; but coming as you do with Alan's button,
+the choice is scarcely left me," said he. "What are your instructions?"
+he added, and took up his pen.
+
+"The first point is to smuggle Alan forth of this country," said I, "but
+I need not be repeating that."
+
+"I am little likely to forget it," said Stewart.
+
+"The next thing is the bit money I am owing to Cluny," I went on. "It
+would be ill for me to find a conveyance, but that should be no stick to
+you. It was two pounds five shillings and three-halfpence farthing
+sterling."
+
+He noted it.
+
+"Then," said I, "there's a Mr. Henderland, a licensed preacher and
+missionary in Ardgour, that I would like well to get some snuff into the
+hands of; and as I daresay you keep touch with your friends in Appin (so
+near by), it's a job you could doubtless overtake with the other."
+
+"How much snuff are we to say?" he asked.
+
+"I was thinking of two pounds," said I.
+
+"Two," said he.
+
+"Then there's the lass Alison Hastie, in Limekilns," said I. "Her that
+helped Alan and me across the Forth. I was thinking if I could get her a
+good Sunday gown, such as she could wear with decency in her degree, it
+would be an ease to my conscience: for the mere truth is, we owe her our
+two lives."
+
+"I am glad to see you are thrifty, Mr. Balfour," says he, making his
+notes.
+
+"I would think shame to be otherwise the first day of my fortune," said
+I. "And now, if you will compute the outlay and your own proper charges,
+I would be glad to know if I could get some spending-money back. It's
+not that I grudge the whole of it to get Alan safe; it's not that I lack
+more; but having drawn so much the one day, I think it would have a very
+ill appearance if I was back again seeking, the next. Only be sure you
+have enough," I added, "for I am very undesirous to meet with you
+again."
+
+"Well, and I'm pleased to see you're cautious too," said the Writer.
+"But I think ye take a risk to lay so considerable a sum at my
+discretion."
+
+He said this with a plain sneer.
+
+"I'll have to run the hazard," I replied. "O, and there's another
+service I would ask, and that's to direct me to a lodging, for I have no
+roof to my head. But it must be a lodging I may seem to have hit upon by
+accident, for it would never do if the Lord Advocate were to get any
+jealousy of our acquaintance."
+
+"Ye may set your weary spirit at rest," said he. "I will never name your
+name, sir; and it's my belief the Advocate is still so much to be
+sympathised with that he doesnae ken of your existence."
+
+I saw I had got to the wrong side of the man.
+
+"There's a braw day coming for him, then," said I, "for he'll have to
+learn of it on the deaf side of his head no later than to-morrow, when I
+call on him."
+
+"When ye _call_ on him!" repeated Mr. Stewart. "Am I daft, or are you?
+What takes ye near the Advocate?"
+
+"O, just to give myself up," said I.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," he cried, "are ye making a mock of me?"
+
+"No, sir," said I, "though I think you have allowed yourself some such
+freedom with myself. But I give you to understand once and for all that
+I am in no jesting spirit."
+
+"Nor yet me," says Stewart. "And I give you to understand (if that's to
+be the word) that I like the looks of your behaviour less and less. You
+come here to me with all sorts of propositions, which will put me in a
+train of very doubtful acts and bring me among very undesirable persons
+this many a day to come. And then you tell me you're going straight out
+of my office to make your peace with the Advocate! Alan's button here or
+Alan's button there, the four quarters of Alan wouldnae bribe me further
+in."
+
+"I would take it with a little more temper," said I, "and perhaps we can
+avoid what you object to. I can see no way for it but to give myself up,
+but perhaps you can see another; and if you could, I could never deny
+but what I would be rather relieved. For I think my traffic with his
+lordship is little likely to agree with my health. There's just the one
+thing clear, that I have to give my evidence; for I hope it'll save
+Alan's character (what's left of it), and James's neck, which is the
+more immediate."
+
+He was silent for a breathing-space, and then, "My man," said he,
+"you'll never be allowed to give such evidence."
+
+"We'll have to see about that," said I; "I'm stiff-necked when I like."
+
+"Ye muckle ass!" cried Stewart, "it's James they want; James has got to
+hang--Alan too, if they could catch him--but James whatever! Go near the
+Advocate with any such business, and you'll see! he'll find a way to
+muzzle ye."
+
+"I think better of the Advocate than that," said I.
+
+"The Advocate be damned!" cries he. "It's the Campbells, man! You'll
+have the whole clanjamfry of them on your back; and so will the Advocate
+too, poor body! It's extraordinar ye cannot see where ye stand! If
+there's no fair way to stop your gab, there's a foul one gaping. They
+can put ye in the dock, do ye no see that?" he cried, and stabbed me
+with one finger in the leg.
+
+"Ay," said I, "I was told that same no further back than this morning by
+another lawyer."
+
+"And who was he?" asked Stewart. "He spoke sense at least."
+
+I told I must be excused from naming him, for he was a decent stout old
+Whig, and had little mind to be mixed up in such affairs.
+
+"I think all the world seems to be mixed up in it!" cries Stewart. "But
+what said you?"
+
+I told him what had passed between Rankeillor and myself before the
+house of Shaws.
+
+"Well, and so ye will hang!" said he. "Ye'll hang beside James Stewart.
+There's your fortune told."
+
+"I hope better of it yet than that," said I; "but I could never deny
+there was a risk."
+
+"Risk!" says he, and then sat silent again. "I ought to thank you for
+your staunchness to my friends, to whom you show a very good spirit," he
+says, "if you have the strength to stand by it. But I warn you that
+you're wading deep. I wouldn't put myself in your place (me that's a
+Stewart born!) for all the Stewarts that ever there were since Noah.
+Risk? ay, I take over-many, but to be tried in court before a Campbell
+jury and a Campbell judge, and that in a Campbell country and upon a
+Campbell quarrel--think what you like of me, Balfour, it's beyond me."
+
+"It's a different way of thinking, I suppose," said I; "I was brought up
+to this one by my father before me."
+
+"Glory to his bones! he has left a decent son to his name," says he.
+"Yet I would not have you judge me over-sorely. My case is dooms hard.
+See, sir! ye tell me ye're a Whig: I wonder what I am. No Whig to be
+sure; I couldnae be just that. But--laigh in your ear, man--I'm maybe no
+very keen on the other side."
+
+"Is that a fact?" cried I. "It's what I would think of a man of your
+intelligence."
+
+"Hut! none of your whillywhas!"[4] cries he. "There's intelligence upon
+both sides. But for my private part I have no particular desire to harm
+King George; and as for King James, God bless him! he does very well for
+me across the water. I'm a lawyer, ye see: fond of my books and my
+bottle, a good plea, a well-drawn deed, a crack in the Parliament House
+with other lawyer bodies, and perhaps a turn at the golf on a Saturday
+at e'en. Where do ye come in with your Hieland plaids and claymores?"
+
+"Well," said I, "it's a fact ye have little of the wild Highlandman."
+
+"Little?" quoth he. "Nothing, man! And yet I'm Hieland born, and when
+the clan pipes, who but me has to dance? The clan and the name, that
+goes by all. It's just what you said yourself; my father learned it to
+me, and a bonny trade I have of it. Treason and traitors, and the
+smuggling of them out and in; and the French recruiting, weary fall it!
+and the smuggling through of the recruits; and their pleas--a sorrow of
+their pleas! Here haye I been moving one for young Ardshiel, my cousin;
+claimed the estate under the marriage contract--a forfeited estate! I
+told them it was nonsense: muckle they cared! And there was I cocking
+behind a yadvocate that liked the business as little as myself, for it
+was fair ruin to the pair of us--a black mark, _disaffected_, branded on
+our hurdies, like folk's names upon their kye! And what can I do? I'm a
+Stewart, ye see, and must fend for my clan and family. Then no later by
+than yesterday there was one of our Stewart lads carried to the Castle.
+What for? I ken fine: Act of 1736: recruiting for King Lewie. And you'll
+see, he'll whistle me in to be his lawyer, and there'll be another black
+mark on my chara'ter! I tell you fair: if I but kent the heid of a
+Hebrew word from the hurdies of it be dammed but I would fling the whole
+thing up and turn minister!"
+
+"It's rather a hard position," said I.
+
+"Dooms hard!" cries he. "And that's what makes me think so much of
+ye--you that's no Stewart--to stick your head so deep in Stewart
+business. And for what, I do not know; unless it was the sense of duty."
+
+"I hope it will be that," said I.
+
+"Well," says he, "it's a grand quality. But here is my clerk back; and,
+by your leave, we'll pick a bit of dinner, all the three of us. When
+that's done, I'll give you the direction of a very decent man, that'll
+be very fain to have you for a lodger. And I'll fill your pockets to ye,
+forbye, out of your ain bag. For this business'll not be near as dear as
+ye suppose--not even the ship part of it."
+
+I made him a sign that his clerk was within hearing.
+
+"Hoot, ye neednae mind for Robbie," cries he. "A Stewart too, puir
+deevil! and has smuggled out more French recruits and trafficking
+Papists than what he has hairs upon his face. Why, it's Robin that
+manages that branch of my affairs. Who will we have now, Rob, for across
+the water?"
+
+"There'll be Andie Scougal, in the _Thristle_," replied Rob. "I saw
+Hoseason the other day, but it seems he's wanting the ship. Then
+there'll be Tarn Stobo; but I'm none so sure of Tam. I've seen him
+colloguing with some gey queer acquaintances; and if it was anybody
+important, I would give Tam the go-by."
+
+"The head's worth two hundred pounds, Robin," said Stewart.
+
+"Gosh, that'll no be Alan Breck?" cried the clerk.
+
+"Just Alan," said his master.
+
+"Weary winds! that's sayrious," cried Robin. "I'll try Andie then;
+Andie'll be the best."
+
+"It seems it's quite a big business," I observed.
+
+"Mr. Balfour, there's no end to it," said Stewart.
+
+"There was a name your clerk mentioned," I went on: "Hoseason. That must
+be my man, I think: Hoseason, of the brig _Covenant_. Would you set your
+trust on him?"
+
+"He didnae behave very well to you and Alan," said Mr. Stewart; "but my
+mind of the man in general is rather otherwise. If he had taken Alan on
+board his ship on an agreement, it's my notion he would have proved a
+just dealer. How say ye, Rob?"
+
+"No more honest skipper in the trade than Eli," said the clerk. "I would
+lippen to[5] Eli's word--ay, if it was the Chevalier, or Appin himsel',"
+he added.
+
+"And it was him that brought the doctor, wasnae't?" asked the master.
+
+"He was the very man," said the clerk.
+
+"And I think he took the doctor back?" says Stewart.
+
+"Ay, with his sporran full!" cried Robin. "And Eli kent of that!"[6]
+
+"Well, it seems it's hard to ken folk rightly," said I.
+
+"That was just what I forgot when ye came in, Mr. Balfour!" says the
+Writer.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+I GO TO PILRIG
+
+
+The next morning, I was no sooner awake in my new lodging than I was up
+and into my new clothes; and no sooner the breakfast swallowed, than I
+was forth on my adventures. Alan, I could hope, was fended for; James
+was like to be a more difficult affair, and I could not but think that
+enterprise might cost me dear, even as everybody said to whom I had
+opened my opinion. It seemed I was come to the top of the mountain only
+to cast myself down; that I had clambered up, through so many and hard
+trials, to be rich, to be recognised, to wear city clothes and a sword
+to my side, all to commit mere suicide at the last end of it, and the
+worst kind of suicide besides, which is to get hanged at the King's
+charges.
+
+What was I doing it for? I asked, as I went down the High Street and out
+north by Leith Wynd. First I said it was to save James Stewart, and no
+doubt the memory of his distress, and his wife's cries, and a word or so
+I had let drop on that occasion worked upon me strongly. At the same
+time I reflected that it was (or ought to be) the most indifferent
+matter to my father's son, whether James died in his bed or from a
+scaffold. He was Alan's cousin, to be sure; but so far as regarded Alan,
+the best thing would be to lie low, and let the King, and his Grace of
+Argyll, and the corbie crows, pick the bones of his kinsman their own
+way. Nor could I forget that, while we were all in the pot together,
+James had shown no such particular anxiety whether for Alan or me.
+
+Next it came upon me I was acting for the sake of justice: and I thought
+that a fine word, and reasoned it out that (since we dwelt in polities,
+at some discomfort to each one of us) the main thing of all must still
+be justice, and the death of any innocent man a wound upon the whole
+community. Next, again, it was the Accuser of the Brethren that gave me
+a turn of his argument; bid me think shame for pretending myself
+concerned in these high matters, and told me I was but a prating vain
+child, who had spoken big words to Rankeillor and to Stewart, and held
+myself bound upon my vanity to make good that boastfulness. Nay, and he
+hit me with the other end of the stick; for he accused me of a kind of
+artful cowardice, going about at the expense of a little risk to
+purchase greater safety. No doubt, until I had declared and cleared
+myself, I might any day encounter Mungo Campbell or the sheriff's
+officer, and be recognised, and dragged into the Appin murder by the
+heels; and, no doubt, in case I could manage my declaration with
+success, I should breathe more free for ever after. But when I looked
+this argument full in the face I could see nothing to be ashamed of. As
+for the rest, "Here are the two roads," I thought, "and both go to the
+same place. It's unjust that James should hang if I can save him; and it
+would be ridiculous in me to have talked so much and then do nothing.
+It's lucky for James of the Glens that I have boasted beforehand; and
+none so unlucky for myself, because now I'm committed to do right. I
+have the name of a gentleman and the means of one; it would be a poor
+discovery that I was wanting in the essence." And then I thought this
+was a Pagan spirit, and said a prayer in to myself, asking for what
+courage I might lack, and that I might go straight to my duty like a
+soldier to battle, and come off again scatheless as so many do.
+
+This train of reasoning brought me to a more resolved complexion; though
+it was far from closing up my sense of the dangers that surrounded me,
+nor of how very apt I was (if I went on) to stumble on the ladder of the
+gallows. It was a plain, fair morning, but the wind in the east. The
+little chill of it sang in my blood, and gave me a feeling of the
+autumn, and the dead leaves, and dead folks' bodies in their graves. It
+seemed the devil was in it, if I was to die in that tide of my fortunes
+and for other folks' affairs. On the top of the Calton Hill, though it
+was not the customary time of year for that diversion, some children
+were crying and running with their kites. These toys appeared very plain
+against the sky; I remarked a great one soar on the wind to a high
+altitude and then plump among the whins; and I thought to myself at
+sight of it, "There goes Davie."
+
+My way lay over Mouter's Hill, and through an end of a clachan on the
+braeside among fields. There was a whirr of looms in it went from house
+to house; bees bummed in the gardens; the neighbours that I saw at the
+doorsteps talked in a strange tongue; and I found out later that this
+was Picardy, a village where the French weavers wrought for the Linen
+Company. Here I got a fresh direction for Pilrig, my destination; and a
+little beyond, on the wayside, came by a gibbet and two men hanged in
+chains. They were dipped in tar, as the manner is; the wind span them,
+the chains clattered, and the birds hung about the uncanny jumping-jacks
+and cried. The sight coming on me suddenly, like an illustration of my
+fears, I could scarce be done with examining it and drinking in
+discomfort. And as I thus turned and turned about the gibbet, what
+should I strike on, but a weird old wife, that sat behind a leg of it,
+and nodded, and talked aloud to herself with becks and courtesies.
+
+"Who are these two, mother?" I asked, and pointed to the corpses.
+
+"A blessing on your precious face!" she cried. "Twa joes[7] o' mine:
+just twa o' my old joes, my hinny dear."
+
+"What did they suffer for?" I asked.
+
+"Ou, just for the guid cause," said she. "Aften I spaed to them the way
+that it would end. Twa shillin' Scots; no pickle mair; and there are twa
+bonny callants hingin' for 't! They took it frae a wean[8] belanged to
+Brouchton."
+
+"Ay!" said I to myself, and not to the daft limmer, "and did they come
+to such a figure for so poor a business? This is to lose all indeed."
+
+"Gie's your loof,[9] hinny," says she, "and let me spae your weird to
+ye."
+
+"No, mother," said I, "I see far enough the way I am. It's an unco thing
+to see too far in front."
+
+"I read it in your bree," she said. "There's a bonnie lassie that has
+bricht een, and there's a wee man in a braw coat, and a big man in a
+pouthered wig, and there's the shadow of the wuddy,[10] joe, that lies
+braid across your path. Gie's your loof, hinny, and let Auld Merren spae
+it to ye bonny."
+
+The two chance shots that seemed to point at Alan and the daughter of
+James More, struck me hard; and I fled from the eldritch creature,
+casting her a baubee, which she continued to sit and play with under the
+moving shadows of the hanged.
+
+My way down the causeway of Leith Walk would have been more pleasant to
+me but for this encounter. The old rampart ran among fields, the like of
+them I had never seen for artfulness of agriculture; I was pleased,
+besides, to be so far in the still countryside; but the shackles of the
+gibbet clattered in my head; and the mops and mows of the old witch, and
+the thought of the dead men, hag-rode my spirits. To hang on a gallows,
+that seemed a hard case; and whether a man came to hang there for two
+shillings Scots, or (as Mr. Stewart had it) from the sense of duty, once
+he was tarred and shackled and hung up, the difference seemed small.
+There might David Balfour hang, and other lads pass on their errands and
+think light of him; and old daft limmers sit at leg-foot and spae their
+fortunes; and the clean genty maids go by, and look to the other side,
+and hold a nose. I saw them plain, and they had grey eyes, and their
+screens upon their heads were of the Drummond colours.
+
+I was thus in the poorest of spirits, though still pretty resolved, when
+I came in view of Pilrig, a pleasant gabled house set by the walkside
+among some brave young woods. The laird's horse was standing saddled at
+the door as I came up, but himself was in the study, where he received
+me in the midst of learned works and musical instruments, for he was not
+only a deep philosopher but much of a musician. He greeted me at first
+pretty well, and when he had read Rankeillor's letter, placed himself
+obligingly at my disposal.
+
+"And what is it, cousin David?" says he--"since it appears that we are
+cousins--what is this that I can do for you? A word to Prestongrange?
+Doubtless that is easily given. But what should be the word?"
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said I, "if I were to tell you my whole story the way it
+fell out, it's my opinion (and it was Rankeillor's before me) that you
+would be very little made up with it."
+
+"I am sorry to hear this of you, kinsman," says he.
+
+"I must not take that at your hands, Mr. Balfour," said I; "I have
+nothing to my charge to make me sorry, or you for me, but just the
+common infirmities of mankind. 'The guilt of Adam's first sin, the want
+of original righteousness, and the corruption of my whole nature,' so
+much I must answer for, and I hope I have been taught where to look for
+help," I said; for I judged from the look of the man he would think the
+better of me if I knew my questions.[11] "But in the way of worldly
+honour I have no great stumble to reproach myself with; and my
+difficulties have befallen me very much against my will and (by all that
+I can see) without my fault. My trouble is to have become dipped in a
+political complication, which it is judged you would be blythe to avoid
+a knowledge of."
+
+"Why, very well, Mr. David," he replied, "I am pleased to see you are
+all that Rankeillor represented. And for what you say of political
+complications, you do me no more than justice. It is my study to be
+beyond suspicion, and indeed outside the field of it. The question is,"
+says he, "how, if I am to know nothing of the matter, I can very well
+assist you?"
+
+"Why, sir," said I, "I propose you should write to his lordship, that I
+am a young man of reasonable good family and of good means: both of
+which I believe to be the case."
+
+"I have Rankeillor's word for it," said Mr. Balfour, "and I count that a
+warrandice against all deadly."
+
+"To which you might add (if you will take my word for so much) that I am
+a good churchman, loyal to King George, and so brought up," I went on.
+
+"None of which will do you any harm," said Mr. Balfour.
+
+"Then you might go on to say that I sought his lordship on a matter of
+great moment, connected with His Majesty's service and the
+administration of justice," I suggested.
+
+"As I am not to hear the matter," says the laird, "I will not take upon
+myself to qualify its weight. 'Great moment' therefore falls, and
+'moment' along with it. For the rest, I might express myself much as you
+propose."
+
+"And then, sir," said I, and rubbed my neck a little with my thumb,
+"then I would be very desirous if you could slip in a word that might
+perhaps tell for my protection."
+
+"Protection?" says he. "For your protection? Here is a phrase that
+somewhat dampens me. If the matter be so dangerous, I own I would be a
+little loath to move in it blindfold."
+
+"I believe I could indicate in two words where the thing sticks," said
+I.
+
+"Perhaps that would be the best," said he.
+
+"Well, it's the Appin murder," said I.
+
+He held up both the hands. "Sirs! sirs!" cried he.
+
+I thought by the expression of his face and voice that I had lost my
+helper.
+
+"Let me explain ..." I began.
+
+"I thank you kindly, I will hear no more of it," says he. "I decline _in
+toto_ to hear more of it. For your name's sake and Rankeillor's, and
+perhaps a little for your own, I will do what I can to help you; but I
+will hear no more upon the facts. And it is my first clear duty to warn
+you. These are deep waters, Mr. David, and you are a young man. Be
+cautious and think twice."
+
+"It is to be supposed I will have thought oftener than that, Mr.
+Balfour," said I, "and I will direct your attention again to
+Rankeillor's letter, where (I hope and believe) he has registered his
+approval of that which I design."
+
+"Well, well," said he; and then again, "Well, well! I will do what I can
+for you." Therewith he took a pen and paper, sat awhile in thought, and
+began to write with much consideration. "I understand that Rankeillor
+approves of what you have in mind?" he asked presently.
+
+"After some discussion, sir, he bade me to go forward in God's name,"
+said I.
+
+"That is the name to go in," said Mr. Balfour, and resumed his writing.
+Presently, he signed, re-read what he had written, and addressed me
+again. "Now here, Mr. David," said he, "is a letter of introduction,
+which I will seal without closing, and give into your hands open, as the
+form requires. But since I am acting in the dark, I will just read it to
+you, so that you may see if it will secure your end--
+
+
+ "PILRIG, _August 26th_, 1751.
+
+ "MY LORD,--This is to bring to your notice my namesake and
+ cousin, David Balfour Esquire of Shaws, a young gentleman
+ of unblemished descent and good estate. He has enjoyed besides
+ the more valuable advantages of a godly training, and his
+ political
+ principles are all that your lordship can desire. I am not in
+ Mr. Balfour's confidence, but I understand him to have a
+ matter
+ to declare, touching His Majesty's service and the
+ administration
+ of justice: purposes for which your lordship's zeal is known.
+ I should add that the young gentleman's intention is known to
+ and approved by some of his friends, who will watch with
+ hopeful
+ anxiety the event of his success or failure.'
+
+
+"Whereupon," continued Mr. Balfour, "I have subscribed myself with the
+usual compliments. You observe I have said 'some of your friends;' I
+hope you can justify my plural?"
+
+"Perfectly, sir; my purpose is known and approved by more than one,"
+said I. "And your letter, which I take a pleasure to thank you for, is
+all I could have hoped."
+
+"It was all I could squeeze out," said he; "and from what I know of the
+matter you design to meddle in, I can only pray God that it may prove
+sufficient."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE
+
+
+My kinsman kept me to a meal, "for the honour of the roof," he said; and
+I believe I made the better speed on my return. I had no thought but to
+be done with the next stage, and have myself fully committed; to a
+person circumstanced as I was, the appearance of closing a door on
+hesitation and temptation was itself extremely tempting; and I was the
+more disappointed, when I came to Prestongrange's house, to be informed
+he was abroad. I believe it was true at the moment, and for some hours
+after; and then I have no doubt the Advocate came home again, and
+enjoyed himself in a neighbouring chamber among friends, while perhaps
+the very fact of my arrival was forgotten. I would have gone away a
+dozen times, only for this strong drawing to have done with my
+declaration out of hand and be able to lay me down to sleep with a free
+conscience. At first I read, for the little cabinet where I was left
+contained a variety of books. But I fear I read with little profit; and
+the weather falling cloudy, the dusk coming up earlier than usual, and
+my cabinet being lighted with but a loophole of a window, I was at last
+obliged to desist from this diversion (such as it was), and pass the
+rest of my time of waiting in a very burthensome vacuity. The sound of
+people talking in a naer chamber, the pleasant note of a harpsichord,
+and once the voice of a lady singing, bore me a kind of company.
+
+I do not know the hour, but the darkness was long come, when the door of
+the cabinet opened, and I was aware, by the light behind him, of a tall
+figure of a man upon the threshold. I rose at once.
+
+"Is anybody there?" he asked. "Who is that?"
+
+"I am bearer of a letter from the laird of Pilrig to the Lord Advocate,"
+said I.
+
+"Have you been here long?" he asked.
+
+"I would not like to hazard an estimate of how many hours," said I.
+
+"It is the first I hear of it," he replied, with a chuckle. "The lads
+must have forgotten you. But you are in the bit at last, for I am
+Prestongrange."
+
+So saying, he passed before me into the next room, whither (upon his
+sign) I followed him, and where he lit a candle and took his place
+before a business-table. It was a long room, of a good proportion,
+wholly lined with books. That small spark of light in a corner struck
+out the man's handsome person and strong face. He was flushed, his eye
+watered and sparkled, and before he sat down I observed him to sway back
+and forth. No doubt he had been supping liberally; but his mind and
+tongue were under full control.
+
+"Well, sir, sit ye down," said he, "and let us see Pilrig's letter."
+
+He glanced it through in the beginning carelessly, looking up and bowing
+when he came to my name; but at the last words I thought I observed his
+attention to redouble, and I made sure he read them twice. All this
+while you are to suppose my heart was beating, for I had now crossed my
+Rubicon and was come fairly on the field of battle.
+
+"I am pleased to make your acquaintance, Mr. Balfour," he said, when he
+had done. "Let me offer you a glass of claret."
+
+"Under your favour, my lord, I think it would scarce be fair on me,"
+said I. "I have come here, as the letter will have mentioned, on a
+business of some gravity to myself; and as I am little used with wine, I
+might be the sooner affected."
+
+"You shall be the judge," said he. "But if you will permit, I believe I
+will even have the bottle in myself."
+
+He touched a bell, and the footman came, as at a signal, bringing wine
+and glasses.
+
+"You are sure you will not join me?" asked the Advocate. "Well, here is
+to our better acquaintance! In what way can I serve you?"
+
+"I should perhaps begin by telling you, my lord, that I am here at your
+own pressing invitation," said I.
+
+"You have the advantage of me somewhere," said he, "for I profess I
+think I never heard of you before this evening."
+
+"Right, my lord; the name is indeed new to you," said I. "And yet you
+have been for some time extremely wishful to make my acquaintance, and
+have declared the same in public."
+
+"I wish you would afford me a clue," says he. "I am no Daniel."
+
+"It will perhaps serve for such," said I, "that if I was in a jesting
+humour--which is far from the case--I believe I might lay a claim on
+your lordship for two hundred pounds."
+
+"In what sense?" he inquired.
+
+"In the sense of rewards offered for my person," said I.
+
+He thrust away his glass once and for all, and sat straight up in the
+chair where he had been previously lolling. "What am I to understand?"
+said he.
+
+"_A tall strong lad of about eighteen_," I quoted, "_speaks like a
+Lowlander, and has no beard_."
+
+"I recognise those words," said he, "which, if you have come here with
+any ill-judged intention of amusing yourself, are like to prove
+extremely prejudicial to your safety."
+
+"My purpose in this," I replied, "is just entirely as serious as life
+and death, and you have understood me perfectly. I am the boy who was
+speaking with Glenure when he was shot."
+
+"I can only suppose (seeing you here) that you claim to be innocent,"
+said he.
+
+"The inference is clear," I said. "I am a very loyal subject to King
+George, but if I had anything to reproach myself with, I would have had
+more discretion than to walk into your den."
+
+"I am glad of that," said he. "This horrid crime, Mr. Balfour, is of a
+dye which cannot permit any clemency. Blood has been barbarously shed.
+It has been shed in direct opposition to his Majesty and our whole frame
+of laws, by those who are their known and public oppugnants. I take a
+very high sense of this. I will not deny that I consider the crime as
+directly personal to his Majesty."
+
+"And unfortunately, my lord," I added a little drily, "directly personal
+to another great personage who may be nameless."
+
+"If you mean anything by those words, I must tell you I consider them
+unfit for a good subject; and were they spoke publicly I should make it
+my business to take note of them," said he. "You do not appear to me to
+recognise the gravity of your situation, or you would be more careful
+not to pejorate the same by words which glance upon the purity of
+justice. Justice, in this country, and in my poor hands, is no respecter
+of persons."
+
+"You give me too great a share in my own speech, my lord," said I. "I
+did but repeat the common talk of the country, which I have heard
+everywhere, and from men of all opinions as I came along."
+
+"When you are come to more discretion you will understand such talk is
+not to be listened to, how much less repeated," says the Advocate. "But
+I acquit you of an ill intention. That nobleman, whom we all honour and
+who has indeed been wounded in a near place by the late barbarity, sits
+too high to be reached by these aspersions. The Duke of Argyle--you see
+that I deal plainly with you--takes it to heart as I do, and as we are
+both bound to do by our judicial functions and the service of his
+Majesty; and I could wish that all hands, in this ill age, were equally
+clean of family rancour. But from the accident that this is a Campbell
+who has fallen martyr to his duty--as who else but the Campbells have
+ever put themselves foremost on that path? I may say it, who am no
+Campbell--and that the chief of that great house happens (for all our
+advantages) to be the present head of the College of Justice, small
+minds and disaffected tongues are set agog in every changehouse in the
+country; and I find a young gentleman like Mr. Balfour so ill-advised as
+to make himself their echo." So much he spoke with a very oratorical
+delivery, as if in court, and then declined again upon the manner of a
+gentleman. "All this apart," said he. "It now remains that I should
+learn what I am to do with you."
+
+"I had thought it was rather I that should learn the same from your
+lordship," said I.
+
+"Ay, true," says the Advocate. "But, you see, you come to me well
+recommended. There is a good honest Whig name to this letter," says he,
+picking it up a moment from the table. "And--extra-judicially, Mr.
+Balfour--there is always the possibility of some arrangement. I tell
+you, and I tell you beforehand that you may be the more upon your guard,
+your fate lies with me singly. In such a matter (be it said with
+reverence) I am more powerful than the king's Majesty; and should you
+please me--and of course satisfy my conscience--in what remains to be
+held of our interview, I tell you it may remain between ourselves."
+
+"Meaning how?" I asked.
+
+"Why, I mean it thus, Mr. Balfour," said he, "that if you give
+satisfaction, no soul need know so much as that you visited my house;
+and you may observe that I do not even call my clerk."
+
+I saw what way he was driving. "I suppose it is needless anyone should
+be informed upon my visit," said I, "though the precise nature of my
+gains by that I cannot see. I am not at all ashamed of coming here."
+
+"And have no cause to be," says he, encouragingly. "Nor yet (if you are
+careful) to fear the consequences."
+
+"My lord," said I, "speaking under your correction, I am not very easy
+to be frightened."
+
+"And I am sure I do not seek to frighten you," says he. "But to the
+interrogation; and let me warn you to volunteer nothing beyond the
+questions I shall ask you. It may consist very immediately with your
+safety. I have a great discretion, it is true, but there are bounds to
+it."
+
+"I shall try to follow your lordship's advice," said I.
+
+He spread a sheet of paper on the table and wrote a heading. "It appears
+you were present, by the way, in the wood of Lettermore at the moment of
+the fatal shot," he began. "Was this by accident?"
+
+"By accident," said I.
+
+"How came you in speech with Colin Campbell?" he asked.
+
+"I was inquiring my way of him to Aucharn," I replied.
+
+I observed he did not write this answer down.
+
+"H'm, true," said he, "I had forgotten that. And do you know, Mr.
+Balfour, I would dwell, if I were you, as little as might be on your
+relations with these Stewarts? It might be found to complicate our
+business. I am not yet inclined to regard these matters as essential."
+
+"I had thought, my lord, that all points of fact were equally material
+in such a case," said I.
+
+"You forget we are now trying these Stewarts," he replied, with great
+significance. "If we should ever come to be trying you, it will be very
+different; and I shall press these very questions that I am now willing
+to glide upon. But to resume: I have it here in Mr. Mungo Campbell's
+precognition that you ran immediately up the brae. How came that?"
+
+"Not immediately, my lord, and the cause was my seeing of the murderer."
+
+"You saw him, then?"
+
+"As plain as I see your lordship, though not so near hand."
+
+"You know him?"
+
+"I should know him again."
+
+"In your pursuit you were not so fortunate, then, as to overtake him?"
+
+"I was not."
+
+"Was he alone?"
+
+"He was alone."
+
+"There was no one else in that neighbourhood?"
+
+"Alan Breck Stewart was not far off, in a piece of a wood."
+
+The Advocate laid his pen down. "I think we are playing at cross
+purposes," said he, "which you will find to prove a very ill amusement
+for yourself."
+
+"I content myself with following your lordship's advice, and answering
+what I am asked," said I.
+
+"Be so wise as to bethink yourself in time," said he. "I use you with
+the most anxious tenderness, which you scarce seem to appreciate, and
+which (unless you be more careful) may prove to be in vain."
+
+"I do appreciate your tenderness, but conceive it to be mistaken," I
+replied, with something of a falter, for I saw we were come to grips at
+last. "I am here to lay before you certain information, by which I shall
+convince you Alan had no hand whatever in the killing of Glenure."
+
+The Advocate appeared for a moment at a stick, sitting with pursed lips,
+and blinking his eyes upon me like an angry cat. "Mr. Balfour," he said
+at last, "I tell you pointedly you go an ill way for your own
+interests."
+
+"My lord," I said, "I am as free of the charge of considering my own
+interests in this matter as your lordship. As God judges me, I have but
+the one design, and that is to see justice executed and the innocent go
+clear. If in pursuit of that I come to fall under your lordship's
+displeasure, I must bear it as I may."
+
+At this he rose from his chair, lit a second candle, and for a while
+gazed upon me steadily. I was surprised to see a great change of gravity
+fallen upon his face, and I could have almost thought he was a little
+pale.
+
+"You are either very simple, or extremely the reverse, and I see that I
+must deal with you more confidentially," says he. "This is a political
+case--ah, yes, Mr. Balfour! whether we like it or no, the case is
+political--and I tremble when I think what issues may depend from it. To
+a political case, I need scarce tell a young man of your education, we
+approach with very different thoughts from one which is criminal only.
+_Salus populi suprema lex_ is a maxim susceptible of great abuse, but it
+has that force which we find elsewhere only in the laws of nature: I
+mean it has the force of necessity. I will open this out to you, if you
+will allow me, at more length. You would have me believe--"
+
+"Under your pardon, my lord, I would have you to believe nothing but
+that which I can prove," said I.
+
+"Tut! tut! young gentleman," says he, "be not so pragmatical, and suffer
+a man who might be your father (if it was nothing more) to employ his
+own imperfect language, and express his own poor thoughts, even when
+they have the misfortune not to coincide with Mr. Balfour's. You would
+have me to believe Breck innocent. I would think this of little account,
+the more so as we cannot catch our man. But the matter of Breck's
+innocence shoots beyond itself. Once admitted, it would destroy the
+whole presumptions of our case against another and a very different
+criminal; a man grown old in treason, already twice in arms against his
+king and already twice forgiven; a fomenter of discontent, and (whoever
+may have fired the shot) the unmistakable original of the deed in
+question. I need not tell you that I mean James Stewart."
+
+"And I can just say plainly that the innocence of Alan and of James is
+what I am here to declare in private to your lordship, and what I am
+prepared to establish at the trial by my testimony," said I.
+
+"To which I can only answer by an equal plainness, Mr. Balfour," said
+he, "that (in that case) your testimony will not be called by me, and I
+desire you to withhold it altogether."
+
+"You are at the head of Justice in this country," I cried, "and you
+propose to me a crime!"
+
+"I am a man nursing with both hands the interests of this country," he
+replied, "and I press on you a political necessity. Patriotism is not
+always moral in the formal sense. You might be glad of it, I think: it
+is your own protection; the facts are heavy against you; and if I am
+still trying to except you from a very dangerous place, it is in part of
+course because I am not insensible to your honesty in coming here; in
+part because of Pilrig's letter; but in part, and in chief part, because
+I regard in this matter my political duty first and my judicial duty
+only second. For the same reason--I repeat it to you in the same frank
+words--I do not want your testimony."
+
+"I desire not to be thought to make a repartee, when I express only the
+plain sense of our position," said I. "But if your lordship has no need
+of my testimony, I believe the other side would be extremely blythe to
+get it."
+
+Prestongrange arose and began to pace to and fro in the room. "You are
+not so young," he said, "but what you must remember very clearly the
+year '45 and the shock that went about the country. I read in Pilrig's
+letter that you are sound in Kirk and State. Who saved them in that
+fatal year? I do not refer to his Royal Highness and his ramrods, which
+were extremely useful in their day; but the country had been saved and
+the field won before ever Cumberland came upon Drummossie. Who saved it?
+I repeat; who saved the Protestant religion and the whole frame of our
+civil institutions? The late Lord President Culloden, for one; he played
+a man's part, and small thanks he got for it--even as I, whom you see
+before you, straining every nerve in the same service, look for no
+reward beyond the conscience of my duties done. After the President, who
+else? You know the answer as well as I do; 'tis partly a scandal, and
+you glanced at it yourself, and I reproved you for it, when you first
+came in. It was the Duke and the great clan of Campbell. Now here is a
+Campbell foully murdered, and that in the King's service. The Duke and I
+are Highlanders. But we are Highlanders civilised, and it is not so with
+the great mass of our clans and families. They have still savage virtues
+and defects. They are still barbarians, like these Stewarts; only the
+Campbells were barbarians on the right side, and the Stewarts were
+barbarians on the wrong. Now be you the judge. The Campbells expect
+vengeance. If they do not get it--if this man James escape--there will
+be trouble with the Campbells. That means disturbance in the Highlands,
+which are uneasy and very far from being disarmed: the disarming is a
+farce...."
+
+"I can bear you out in that," said I.
+
+"Disturbance in the Highlands makes the hour of our old watchful enemy,"
+pursued his lordship, holding out a finger as he paced; "and I give you
+my word we may have a '45 again with the Campbells on the other side. To
+protect the life of this man Stewart--which is forfeit already on
+half-a-dozen different counts if not on this--do you propose to plunge
+your country in war, to jeopardise the faith of your fathers, and to
+expose the lives and fortunes of how many thousand innocent persons? . . .
+These are considerations that weigh with me, and that I hope will weigh
+no less with yourself, Mr. Balfour, as a lover of your country, good
+government, and religious truth."
+
+"You deal with me very frankly, and I thank you for it," said I. "I will
+try on my side to be no less honest. I believe your policy to be sound.
+I believe these deep duties may lie upon your lordship; I believe you
+may have laid them on your conscience when you took the oaths of the
+high office which you hold. But for me, who am just a plain man--or
+scarce a man yet--the plain duties must suffice. I can think but of two
+things, of a poor soul in the immediate and unjust danger of a shameful
+death, and of the cries and tears of his wife that still tingle in my
+head. I cannot see beyond, my lord. It's the way that I am made. If the
+country has to fall, it has to fall. And I pray God, if this be wilful
+blindness, that he may enlighten me before too late."
+
+He had heard me motionless, and stood so a while longer.
+
+"This is an unexpected obstacle," says he, aloud, but to himself.
+
+"And how is your lordship to dispose of me?" I asked.
+
+"If I wished," said he, "you know that you might sleep in gaol?"
+
+"My lord," says I, "I have slept in worse places."
+
+"Well, my boy," said he, "there is one thing appears very plainly from
+our interview, that I may rely on your pledged word. Give me your honour
+that you will be wholly secret, not only on what has passed to-night,
+but in the matter of the Appin case, and I let you go free."
+
+"I will give it till to-morrow or any other near day that you may please
+to set," said I. "I would not be thought too wily; but if I gave the
+promise without qualification, your lordship would have attained his
+end."
+
+"I had no thought to entrap you," said he.
+
+"I am sure of that," said I.
+
+"Let me see," he continued. "To-morrow is the Sabbath. Come to me on
+Monday by eight in the morning, and give me your promise until then."
+
+"Freely given, my lord," said I. "And with regard to what has fallen
+from yourself, I will give it for as long as it shall please God to
+spare your days."
+
+"You will observe," he said next, "that I have made no employment of
+menaces."
+
+"It was like your lordship's nobility," said I. "Yet I am not altogether
+so dull but what I can perceive the nature of those you have not
+uttered."
+
+"Well," said he, "good-night to you. May you sleep well, for I think it
+is more than I am like to do."
+
+With that he sighed, took up a candle, and gave me his conveyance as far
+as the street door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE
+
+
+The next day, Sabbath, August 27th, I had the occasion I had long looked
+forward to, to hear some of the famous Edinburgh preachers, all well
+known to me already by the report of Mr. Campbell. Alas! and I might
+just as well have been at Essendean, and sitting under Mr. Campbell's
+worthy self! the turmoil of my thoughts, which dwelt continually on the
+interview with Prestongrange, inhibiting me from all attention. I was
+indeed much less impressed by the reasoning of the divines than by the
+spectacle of the thronged congregation in the churches, like what I
+imagined of a theatre or (in my then disposition) of an assize of trial;
+above all at the West Kirk, with its three tiers of galleries, where I
+went in the vain hope that I might see Miss Drummond.
+
+On the Monday I betook me for the first time to a barber's, and was very
+well pleased with the result. Thence to the Advocate's, where the red
+coats of the soldiers showed again about his door, making a bright place
+in the close. I looked about for the young lady and her gillies; there
+was never a sign of them. But I was no sooner shown into the cabinet or
+antechamber, where I had spent so wearyful a time upon the Saturday,
+than I was aware of the tall figure of James More in a corner. He seemed
+a prey to a painful uneasiness, reaching forth his feet and hands, and
+his eyes speeding here and there without rest about the walls of the
+small chamber, which recalled to me with a sense of pity the man's
+wretched situation. I suppose it was partly this, and partly my strong
+continuing interest in his daughter, that moved me to accost him.
+
+"Give you a good-morning, sir," said I.
+
+"And a good-morning to you, sir," said he.
+
+"You bide tryst with Prestongrange?" I asked.
+
+"I do, sir, and I pray your business with that gentleman be more
+agreeable than mine," was his reply.
+
+"I hope at least that yours will be brief, for I suppose you pass before
+me," said I.
+
+"All pass before me," he said, with a shrug and a gesture upward of the
+open hands. "It was not always so, sir, but times change. It was not so
+when the sword was in the scale, young gentleman, and the virtues of the
+soldier might sustain themselves."
+
+There came a kind of Highland snuffle out of the man that raised my
+dander strangely.
+
+"Well, Mr. Macgregor," said I, "I understand the main thing for a
+soldier is to be silent, and the first of his virtues never to
+complain."
+
+"You have my name, I perceive"--he bowed to me with his arms
+crossed--"though it's one I must not use myself. Well, there is a
+publicity--I have shown my face and told my name too often in the beards
+of my enemies. I must not wonder if both should be known to many that I
+know not."
+
+"That you know not in the least, sir," said I, "nor yet anybody else;
+but the name I am called, if you care to hear it, is Balfour."
+
+"It is a good name," he replied, civilly; "there are many decent folk
+that use it. And now that I call to mind, there was a young gentleman,
+your namesake, that marched surgeon in the year '45 with my battalion."
+
+"I believe that would be a brother to Balfour of Baith," said I, for I
+was ready for the surgeon now.
+
+"The same, sir," said James More. "And since I have been fellow-soldier
+with your kinsman, you must suffer me to grasp your hand."
+
+He shook hands with me long and tenderly, beaming on me the while as
+though he had found a brother.
+
+"Ah!" says he, "these are changed days since your cousin and I heard the
+balls whistle in our lugs."
+
+"I think he was a very far-away cousin," said I, drily, "and I ought to
+tell you that I never clapped eyes upon the man."
+
+"Well, well," said he, "it makes no change. And you--I do not think you
+were out yourself, sir--I have no clear mind of your face, which is one
+not probable to be forgotten."
+
+"In the year you refer to, Mr. Macgregor, I was getting skelped in the
+parish school," said I.
+
+"So young!" cries he. "Ah, then you will never be able to think what
+this meeting is to me. In the hour of my adversity, and in the house of
+my enemy, to meet in with the blood of an old brother-in-arms--it
+heartens me, Mr. Balfour, like the skirling of the Highland pipes! Sir,
+this is a sad look-back that many of us have to make: some with falling
+tears. I have lived in my own country like a king; my sword, my
+mountains, and the faith of my friends and kinsmen sufficed for me. Now
+I lie in a stinking dungeon; and do you know, Mr. Balfour," he went on,
+taking my arm and beginning to lead me about, "do you know, sir, that I
+lack mere necessaries? The malice of my foes has quite sequestered my
+resources. I lie, as you know, sir, on a trumped-up charge, of which I
+am as innocent as yourself. They dare not bring me to my trial, and in
+the meanwhile I am held naked in my prison. I could have wished it was
+your cousin I had met, or his brother Baith himself. Either would, I
+know, have been rejoiced to help me; while a comparative stranger like
+yourself--"
+
+I would be ashamed to set down all he poured out to me in this beggarly
+vein, or the very short and grudging answers that I made to him. There
+were times when I was tempted to stop his mouth with some small change;
+but whether it was from shame or pride--whether it was for my own sake
+or Catriona's--whether it was because I thought him no fit father for
+his daughter, or because I resented that grossness of immediate falsity
+that clung about the man himself--the thing was clean beyond me. And I
+was still being wheedled and preached to, and still being marched to and
+fro, three steps and a turn, in that small chamber, and had already, by
+some very short replies, highly incensed, although not finally
+discouraged, my beggar, when Prestongrange appeared in the doorway and
+bade me eagerly into his big chamber.
+
+"I have a moment's engagement," said he; "and that you may not sit
+empty-handed I am going to present you to my three braw daughters, of
+whom perhaps you may have heard, for I think they are more famous than
+papa. This way."
+
+He led me into another long room above, where a dry old lady sat at a
+frame of embroidery, and the three handsomest young women (I suppose) in
+Scotland stood together by a window.
+
+"This is my new friend, Mr. Balfour," said he, presenting me by the arm.
+"David, here is my sister, Miss Grant, who is so good as keep my house
+for me, and will be very pleased if she can help you. And here," says
+he, turning to the three younger ladies, "here are my _three braw
+dauchters_. A fair question to ye, Mr. Davie: which of the three is the
+best favoured? And I wager he will never have the impudence to propound
+honest Alan Ramsay's answer!"
+
+Hereupon all three, and the old Miss Grant as well, cried out against
+this sally, which (as I was acquainted with the verses he referred to)
+brought shame into my own cheek. It seemed to me a citation unpardonable
+in a father, and I was amazed that these ladies could laugh even while
+they reproved, or made believe to.
+
+Under cover of this mirth, Prestongrange got forth of the chamber, and I
+was left, like a fish upon dry land, in that very unsuitable society. I
+could never deny, in looking back upon what followed, that I was
+eminently stockish; and I must say the ladies were well drilled to have
+so long a patience with me. The aunt indeed sat close at her embroidery,
+only looking now and again and smiling; but the misses, and especially
+the eldest, who was besides the most handsome, paid me a score of
+attentions which I was very ill able to repay. It was all in vain to
+tell myself I was a young fellow of some worth as well as good estate,
+and had no call to feel abashed before these lasses, the eldest not so
+much older than myself, and no one of them by any probability half as
+learned. Reasoning would not change the fact; and there were times when
+the colour came into my face to think I was shaved that day for the
+first time.
+
+The talk going, with all their endeavours, very heavily, the eldest took
+pity on my awkwardness, sat down to her instrument, of which she was a
+passed mistress, and entertained me for a while with playing and
+singing, both in the Scots and in the Italian manners; this put me more
+at my ease, and being reminded of Alan's air that he had taught me in
+the hole near Carriden, I made so bold as to whistle a bar or two, and
+ask if she knew that.
+
+She shook her head. "I never heard a note of it," said she. "Whistle it
+all through. And now once again," she added, after I had done so.
+
+Then she picked it out upon the keyboard, and (to my surprise) instantly
+enriched the same with well-sounding chords, and sang, as she played,
+with a very droll expression and broad accent:
+
+ "Haenae I got just the lilt of it?
+ Isnae this the tune that ye whustled?"
+
+"You see," she says, "I can do the poetry too, only it won't rhyme." And
+then again:
+
+ "I am Miss Grant, sib to the Advocate:
+ You, I believe, are Dauvit Balfour."
+
+I told her how much astonished I was by her genius.
+
+"And what do you call the name of it?" she asked.
+
+"I do not know the real name," said I. "I just call it _Alan's air_."
+
+She looked at me directly in the face. "I shall call it _David's air_,"
+said she; "though if it's the least like what your namesake of Israel
+played to Saul I would never wonder that the king got little good by it,
+for it's but melancholy music. Your other name I do not like; so, if you
+was ever wishing to hear your tune again you are to ask for it by mine."
+
+This was said with a significance that gave my heart a jog. "Why that,
+Miss Grant?" I asked.
+
+"Why," says she, "if ever you should come to get hanged, I will set your
+last dying speech and confession to that tune and sing it."
+
+This put it beyond a doubt that she was partly informed of my story and
+peril. How, or just how much, it was more difficult to guess. It was
+plain she knew there was something of danger in the name of Alan, and
+thus warned me to leave it out of reference; and plain she knew that I
+stood under some criminal suspicion. I judged besides that the harshness
+of her last speech (which besides she had followed up immediately with a
+very noisy piece of music) was to put an end to the present
+conversation. I stood beside her, affecting to listen and admire, but
+truly whirled away by my own thoughts. I have always found this young
+lady to be a lover of the mysterious; and certainly this first interview
+made a mystery that was beyond my plummet. One thing I learned long
+after, the hours of the Sunday had been well employed, the bank porter
+had been found and examined, my visit to Charles Stewart was discovered,
+and the deduction made that I was pretty deep with James and Alan, and
+most likely in a continued correspondence with the last. Hence this
+broad hint that was given me across the harpsichord.
+
+In the midst of the piece of music, one of the younger misses, who was
+at a window over the close, cried on her sisters to come quick, for
+there was "_Grey eyes_ again." The whole family trooped there at once,
+and crowded one another for a look. The window whither they ran was in
+an odd corner of that room, gave above the entrance door, and flanked up
+the close.
+
+"Come, Mr. Balfour," they cried, "come and see. She is the most
+beautiful creature! She hangs round the close-head these last days,
+always with some wretched-like gillies, and yet seems quite a lady."
+
+I had no need to look; neither did I look twice, or long. I was afraid
+she might have seen me there, looking down upon her from that chamber of
+music, and she without, and her father in the same house, perhaps
+begging for his life with tears, and myself come but newly from
+rejecting his petitions. But even that glance set me in a better conceit
+of myself, and much less awe of the young ladies. They were beautiful,
+that was beyond question, but Catriona was beautiful too, and had a kind
+of brightness in her like a coal of fire. As much as the others cast me
+down, she lifted me up. I remembered I had talked easily with her. If I
+could make no hand of it with these fine maids, it was perhaps something
+their own fault. My embarrassment began to be a little mingled and
+lightened with a sense of fun; and when the aunt smiled at me from her
+embroidery, and the three daughters unbent to me like a baby, all with
+"papa's orders" written on their faces, there were times when I could
+have found it in my heart to smile myself.
+
+Presently papa returned, the same kind, happy-like, pleasant-spoken man.
+
+"Now, girls," said he, "I must take Mr. Balfour away again; but I hope
+you have been able to persuade him to return where I shall be always
+gratified to find him."
+
+So they each made me a little farthing compliment, and I was led away.
+
+If this visit to the family had been meant to soften my resistance, it
+was the worst of failures. I was no such ass but what I understood how
+poor a figure I had made, and that the girls would be yawning their jaws
+off as soon as my stiff back was turned. I felt I had shown how little I
+had in me of what was soft and graceful; and I longed for a chance to
+prove that I had something of the other stuff, the stern and dangerous.
+
+Well, I was to be served to my desire, for the scene to which he was
+conducting me was of a different character.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+UMQUILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT
+
+
+There was a man waiting us in Prestongrange's study, whom I distasted at
+the first look, as we distaste a ferret or an earwig. He was bitter
+ugly, but seemed very much of a gentleman; had still manners, but
+capable of sudden leaps and violences; and a small voice, which could
+ring out shrill and dangerous when he so desired.
+
+The Advocate presented us in a familiar, friendly way.
+
+"Here, Fraser," said he, "here is Mr. Balfour whom we talked about. Mr.
+David, this is Mr. Symon Fraser, whom we used to call by another title,
+but that is an old song. Mr. Fraser has an errand to you."
+
+With that he stepped aside to his book-shelves, and made believe to
+consult a quarto volume in the far end.
+
+I was thus left (in a sense) alone with perhaps the last person in the
+world I had expected. There was no doubt upon the terms of introduction;
+this could be no other than the forfeited Master of Lovat and chief of
+the great clan Fraser. I knew he had led his men in the Rebellion; I
+knew his father's head--my old lord's, that grey fox of the
+mountains--to have fallen on the block for that offence, the lands of
+the family to have been seized, and their nobility attainted. I could
+not conceive what he should be doing in Grant's house; I could not
+conceive that he had been called to the bar, had eaten all his
+principles, and was now currying favour with the Government even to the
+extent of acting Advocate-Depute in the Appin murder.
+
+"Well, Mr. Balfour," said he, "what is all this I hear of ye?"
+
+"It would not become me to prejudge," said I, "but if the Advocate was
+your authority he is fully possessed of my opinions."
+
+"I may tell you I am engaged in the Appin case," he went on; "I am to
+appear under Prestongrange; and from my study of the precognitions I can
+assure you your opinions are erroneous. The guilt of Breck is manifest;
+and your testimony, in which you admit you saw him on the hill at the
+very moment, will certify his hanging."
+
+"It will be rather ill to hang him till you catch him," I observed. "And
+for other matters I very willingly leave you to your own impressions."
+
+"The Duke has been informed," he went on. "I have just come from his
+Grace, and he expressed himself before me with an honest freedom like
+the great nobleman he is. He spoke of you by name, Mr. Balfour, and
+declared his gratitude beforehand in case you would be led by those who
+understand your own interests and those of the country so much better
+than yourself. Gratitude is no empty expression in that mouth: _experto
+crede_. I daresay you know something of my name and clan, and the
+damnable example and lamented end of my late father, to say nothing of
+my own errata. Well, I have made my peace with that good Duke; he has
+intervened for me with our friend Prestongrange; and here I am with my
+foot in the stirrup again and some of the responsibility shared into my
+hand of prosecuting King George's enemies and avenging the late daring
+and barefaced insult to his Majesty."
+
+"Doubtless a proud position for your father's son," says I.
+
+He wagged his bald eyebrows at me. "You are pleased to make experiments
+in the ironical, I think," said he. "But I am here upon duty, I am here
+to discharge my errand in good faith, it is in vain you think to divert
+me. And let me tell you, for a young fellow of spirit and ambition like
+yourself, a good shove in the beginning will do more than ten years'
+drudgery. The shove is now at your command; choose what you will to be
+advanced in, the Duke will watch upon you with the affectionate
+disposition of a father."
+
+"I am thinking that I lack the docility of the son," says I.
+
+"And do you really suppose, sir, that the whole policy of this country
+is to be suffered to trip up and tumble down for an ill-mannered colt of
+a boy?" he cried. "This has been made a test case, all who would prosper
+in the future must put a shoulder to the wheel. Look at me! Do you
+suppose it is for my pleasure that I put myself in the highly invidious
+position of prosecuting a man that I have drawn the sword alongside of?
+The choice is not left me."
+
+"But I think, sir, that you forfeited your choice when you mixed in with
+that unnatural rebellion," I remarked. "My case is happily otherwise; I
+am a true man, and can look either the Duke or King George in the face
+without concern."
+
+"Is it so the wind sits?" says he. "I protest you are fallen in the
+worst sort of error. Prestongrange has been hitherto so civil (he tells
+me) as not to combat your allegations; but you must not think they are
+not looked upon with strong suspicion. You say you are innocent. My dear
+sir, the facts declare you guilty."
+
+"I was waiting for you there," said I.
+
+"The evidence of Mungo Campbell; your flight after the completion of the
+murder; your long course of secresy--my good young man!" said Mr. Symon,
+"here is enough evidence to hang a bullock, let be a David Balfour! I
+shall be upon that trial; my voice shall be raised; I shall then speak
+much otherwise from what I do to-day, and far less to your
+gratification, little as you like it now! Ah, you look white!" cries he.
+"I have found the key of your impudent heart. You look pale, your eyes
+waver, Mr. David! You see the grave and the gallows nearer by than you
+had fancied."
+
+"I own to a natural weakness," said I. "I think no shame for that. Shame
+. . ." I was going on.
+
+"Shame waits for you on the gibbet," he broke in.
+
+"Where I shall but be even'd with my lord your father," said I.
+
+"Aha, but not so!" he cried, "and you do not yet see to the bottom of
+this business. My father suffered in a great cause, and for dealing in
+the affairs of kings. You are to hang for a dirty murder about
+boddle-pieces. Your personal part in it, the treacherous one of holding
+the poor wretch in talk, your accomplices a pack of ragged Highland
+gillies. And it can be shown, my great Mr. Balfour--it can be shown, and
+it _will_ be shown, trust _me_ that has a finger in the pie--it can be
+shown, and shall be shown, that you were paid to do it. I think I can
+see the looks go round the court when I adduce my evidence, and it shall
+appear that you, a young man of education, let yourself be corrupted to
+this shocking act for a suit of cast clothes, a bottle of Highland
+spirits, and three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in copper money."
+
+There was a touch of the truth in these words that knocked
+me like a blow: clothes, a bottle of _usquebaugh_, and
+three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in change made up, indeed, the most of what
+Alan and I had carried from Aucharn; and I saw that some of James's
+people had been blabbing in their dungeons.
+
+"You see I know more than you fancied," he resumed in triumph. "And as
+for giving it this turn, great Mr. David, you must not suppose the
+Government of Great Britain and Ireland will ever be stuck for want of
+evidence. We have men here in prison who will swear out their lives as
+we direct them; as I direct, if you prefer the phrase. So now you are to
+guess your part of glory if you choose to die. On the one hand, life,
+wine, women, and a duke to be your hand-gun; on the other, a rope to
+your craig, and a gibbet to clatter your bones on, and the lousiest,
+lowest story to hand down to your namesakes in the future that was ever
+told about a hired assassin. And see here!" he cried, with a formidable
+shrill voice, "see this paper that I pull out of my pocket. Look at the
+name there: it is the name of the great David, I believe, the ink scarce
+dry yet. Can you guess its nature? It is the warrant for your arrest,
+which I have but to touch this bell beside me to have executed on the
+spot. Once in the Tolbooth upon this paper, may God help you, for the
+die is cast!"
+
+I must never deny that I was greatly horrified by so much baseness, and
+much unmanned by the immediacy and ugliness of my danger. Mr. Symon had
+already gloried in the changes of my hue; I make no doubt I was now no
+ruddier than my shirt; my speech besides trembled.
+
+"There is a gentleman in this room," cried I. "I appeal to him. I put my
+life and credit in his hands."
+
+Prestongrange shut his book with a snap. "I told you so, Symon," said
+he; "you have played your hand for all it was worth, and you have lost.
+Mr. David," he went on, "I wish you to believe it was by no choice of
+mine you were subjected to this proof. I wish you could understand how
+glad I am you should come forth from it with so much credit. You may not
+quite see how, but it is a little of a service to myself. For had our
+friend here been more successful than I was last night, it might have
+appeared that he was a better judge of men than I; it might have
+appeared we were altogether in the wrong situations, Mr. Symon and
+myself. And I know our friend Symon to be ambitious," says he, striking
+lightly on Fraser's shoulder. "As for this stage play, it is over; my
+sentiments are very much engaged in your behalf; and whatever issue we
+can find to this unfortunate affair, I shall make it my business to see
+it is adopted with tenderness to you."
+
+These were very good words, and I could see besides that there was
+little love, and perhaps a spice of genuine ill-will, between those two
+who were opposed to me. For all that, it was unmistakable this interview
+had been designed, perhaps rehearsed, with the consent of both; it was
+plain my adversaries were in earnest to try me by all methods; and now
+(persuasion, flattery, and menaces having been tried in vain) I could
+not but wonder what would be their next expedient. My eyes besides were
+still troubled, and my knees loose under me, with the distress of the
+late ordeal; and I could do no more than stammer the same form of words:
+"I put my life and credit in your hands."
+
+"Well, well," says he, "we must try to save them. And in the meanwhile
+let us return to gentler methods. You must not bear any grudge upon my
+friend, Mr. Symon, who did but speak by his brief. And even if you did
+conceive some malice against myself, who stood by and seemed rather to
+hold a candle, I must not let that extend to innocent members of my
+family. These are greatly engaged to see more of you, and I cannot
+consent to have my young women-folk disappointed. To-morrow they will be
+going to Hope Park, where I think it very proper you should make your
+bow. Call for me first, when I may possibly have something for your
+private hearing; then you shall be turned abroad again under the conduct
+of my misses; and until that time repeat to me your promise of secrecy."
+
+I had done better to have instantly refused, but in truth I was beside
+the power of reasoning; did as I was bid; took my leave I know not how;
+and when I was forth again in the close, and the door had shut behind
+me, was glad to lean on a house wall and wipe my face. That horrid
+apparition (as I may call it) of Mr. Symon rang in my memory, as a
+sudden noise rings after it is over on the ear. Tales of the man's
+father, of his falseness, of his manifold perpetual treacheries, rose
+before me from all that I had heard and read, and joined on with what I
+had just experienced of himself. Each time it occurred to me, the
+ingenious foulness of that calumny he had proposed to nail upon my
+character startled me afresh. The case of the man upon the gibbet by
+Leith Walk appeared scarce distinguishable from that I was now to
+consider as my own. To rob a child of so little more than nothing was
+certainly a paltry enterprise for two grown men; but my own tale, as it
+was to be represented in a court by Symon Fraser, appeared a fair second
+in every possible point of view of sordidness and cowardice.
+
+The voices of two of Prestongrange's liveried men upon his doorstep
+recalled me to myself.
+
+"Ha'e," said the one, "this billet as fast as ye can link to the
+captain."
+
+"Is that for the cateran back again?" asked the other.
+
+"It would seem sae," returned the first. "Him and Symon are seeking
+him."
+
+"I think Prestongrange is gane gyte," says the second. "He'll have James
+More in bed with him next."
+
+"Weel, it's neither your affair nor mine's," says the first.
+
+And they parted, the one upon his errand, and the other back into the
+house.
+
+This looked as ill as possible. I was scarce gone and they were sending
+already for James More, to whom I thought Mr. Symon must have pointed
+when he spoke of men in prison and ready to redeem their lives by all
+extremities. My scalp curdled among my hair, and the next moment the
+blood leaped in me to remember Catriona. Poor lass! her father stood to
+be hanged for pretty indefensible misconduct. What was yet more
+unpalatable, it now seemed he was prepared to save his four quarters by
+the worst of shame and the most foul of cowardly murders--murder by the
+false oath; and to complete our misfortunes, it seemed myself was picked
+out to be the victim.
+
+I began to walk swiftly and at random, conscious only of a desire for
+movement, air, and the open country.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOR
+
+
+I came forth, I vow I know not how, on the _Lang Dykes_.[12] This is a
+rural road which runs on the north side over against the city. Thence I
+could see the whole black length of it tail down, from where the castle
+stands upon its crags above the loch in a long line of spires and gable
+ends, and smoking chimneys, and at the sight my heart swelled in my
+bosom. My youth, as I have told, was already inured to dangers; but such
+danger as I had seen the face of but that morning, in the midst of what
+they call the safety of a town, shook me beyond experience. Peril of
+slavery, peril of shipwreck, peril of sword and shot, I had stood all of
+these without discredit; but the peril there was in the sharp voice and
+the fat face of Symon, properly Lord Lovat, daunted me wholly.
+
+I sat by the lake side in a place where the rushes went down into the
+water, and there steeped my wrists and laved my temples. If I could have
+done so with any remains of self-esteem I would now have fled from my
+foolhardy enterprise. But (call it courage or cowardice, and I believe
+it was both the one and the other) I decided I was ventured out beyond
+the possibility of a retreat. I had outfaced these men, I would continue
+to outface them; come what might, I would stand by the word spoken.
+
+The sense of my own constancy somewhat uplifted my spirits, but not
+much. At the best of it there was an icy place about my heart, and life
+seemed a black business to be at all engaged in. For two souls in
+particular my pity flowed. The one was myself, to be so friendless and
+lost among dangers. The other was the girl, the daughter of James More.
+I had seen but little of her; yet my view was taken and my judgment
+made. I thought her a lass of a clean honour, like a man's; I thought
+her one to die of a disgrace; and now I believed her father to be at
+that moment bargaining his vile life for mine. It made a bond in my
+thoughts betwixt the girl and me. I had seen her before only as a
+wayside appearance, though one that pleased me strangely; I saw her now
+in a sudden nearness of relation, as the daughter of my blood foe, and I
+might say, my murderer. I reflected it was hard I should be so plagued
+and persecuted all my days for other folk's affairs, and have no manner
+of pleasure myself. I got meals and a bed to sleep in when my concerns
+would suffer it; beyond that my wealth was of no help to me. If I was to
+hang, my days were like to be short; if I was not to hang but to escape
+out of this trouble, they might yet seem long to me ere I was done with
+them. Of a sudden her face appeared in my memory, the way I had first
+seen it, with the parted lips; at that, weakness came in my bosom and
+strength into my legs; and I set resolutely forward on the way to Dean.
+If I was to hang to-morrow, and it was sure enough I might very likely
+sleep that night in a dungeon, I determined I should hear and speak once
+more with Catriona.
+
+The exercise of walking and the thought of my destination braced me yet
+more, so that I began to pluck up a kind of spirit. In the village of
+Dean, where it sits in the bottom of a glen beside the river, I inquired
+my way of a miller's man, who sent me up the hill upon the farther side
+by a plain path, and so to a decent-like small house in a garden of
+lawns and apple-trees. My heart beat high as I stepped inside the garden
+hedge, but it fell low indeed when I came face to face with a grim and
+fierce old lady, walking there in a white mutch with a man's hat
+strapped upon the top of it.
+
+"What do ye come seeking here?" she asked.
+
+I told her I was after Miss Drummond.
+
+"And what may be your business with Miss Drummond?" says she.
+
+I told her I had met her on Saturday last, had been so fortunate as to
+render her a trifling service, and was come now on the young lady's
+invitation.
+
+"Oh, so you're Saxpence!" she cried, with a very sneering manner. "A
+braw gift, a bonny gentleman. And hae ye ony ither name and designation,
+or were ye bapteesed Saxpence?" she asked.
+
+I told my name.
+
+"Preserve me!" she cried. "Has Ebenezer gotten a son?"
+
+"No, ma'am," said I. "I am a son of Alexander's. It's I that am the
+Laird of Shaws."
+
+"Ye'll find your work cut out for ye to establish that," quoth she.
+
+"I perceive you know my uncle," said I; "and I daresay you may be the
+better pleased to hear that business is arranged."
+
+"And what brings ye here after Miss Drummond?" she pursued.
+
+"I'm come after my saxpence, mem," said I. "It's to be thought, being my
+uncle's nephew, I would be found a careful lad."
+
+"So ye have a spark of sleeness in ye," observed the old lady, with some
+approval. "I thought ye had just been a cuif--you and your saxpence, and
+your _lucky day_ and your _sake of Balwhidder_"--from which I was
+gratified to learn that Catriona had not forgotten some of our talk.
+"But all this is by the purpose," she resumed. "Am I to understand that
+ye come here keeping company?"
+
+"This is surely rather an early question," said I. "The maid is young,
+so am I, worse fortune. I have but seen her the once. I'll not deny," I
+added, making up my mind to try her with some frankness, "I'll not deny
+but she has run in my head a good deal since I met in with her. That is
+one thing; but it would be quite another, and I think I would look very
+like a fool, to commit myself."
+
+"You can speak out of your mouth, I see," said the old lady. "Praise
+God, and so can I! I was fool enough to take charge of this rogue's
+daughter: a fine charge I have gotten; but it's mine, and I'll carry it
+the way I want to. Do ye mean to tell me, Mr. Balfour of Shaws, that you
+would marry James More's daughter, and him hanged? Well, then, where
+there's no possible marriage there shall be no manner of carryings on,
+and take that for said. Lasses are bruckle things," she added, with a
+nod; "and though ye would never think it by my wrunkled chafts, I was a
+lassie mysel', and a bonny one."
+
+"Lady Allardyce," said I, "for that I suppose to be your name, you seem
+to do the two sides of the talking, which is a very poor manner to come
+to an agreement. You give me rather a home thrust when you ask if I
+would marry, at the gallows' foot, a young lady whom I have seen but the
+once. I have told you already I would never be so untenty as to commit
+myself. And yet I'll go some way with you. If I continue to like the
+lass as well as I have reason to expect, it will be something more than
+her father, or the gallows either, that keeps the two of us apart. As
+for my family, I found it by the wayside like a lost bawbee! I owe less
+than nothing to my uncle; and if ever I marry, it will be to please one
+person: that's myself."
+
+"I have heard this kind of talk before ye were born," said Mrs. Ogilvy,
+"which is perhaps the reason that I think of it so little. There's much
+to be considered. This James More is a kinsman of mine, to my shame be
+it spoken. But the better the family, the mair men hanged or heided,
+that's always been poor Scotland's story. And if it was just the
+hanging! For my part, I think I would be best pleased with James upon
+the gallows, which would be at least an end to him. Catrine's a good
+lass enough, and a good-hearted, and lets herself be deaved all day with
+a runt of an auld wife like me. But, ye see, there's the weak bit. She's
+daft about that long, false, fleeching beggar of a father of hers, and
+red-mad about the Gregara, and proscribed names, and King James, and a
+wheen blethers. And you might think ye could guide her, ye would find
+yourself sore mista'en. Ye say ye've seen her but the once..."
+
+"Spoke with her but the once, I should have said," I interrupted. "I saw
+her again this morning from a window at Prestongrange's."
+
+This I daresay I put in because it sounded well; but I was properly paid
+for my ostentation on the return.
+
+"What's this of it?" cries the old lady, with a sudden pucker of her
+face. "I think it was at the Advocate's door-cheek that ye met her
+first."
+
+I told her that was so.
+
+"H'm," she said; and then suddenly, upon rather a scolding tone, "I have
+your bare word for it," she cries, "as to who and what you are. By your
+way of it, you're Balfour of the Shaws; but for what I ken you may be
+Balfour of the Deevil's oxter. It's possible ye may come here for what
+ye say, and it's equally possible ye may come here for deil care what!
+I'm good enough whig to sit quiet, and to have keepit all my men-folk's
+heads upon their shoulders. But I'm not just a good enough whig to be
+made a fool of neither. And I tell you fairly, there's too much
+Advocate's door and Advocate's window here for a man that comes taigling
+after a Macgregor's daughter. Ye can tell that to the Advocate that sent
+ye, with my fond love. And I kiss my loof to ye, Mr. Balfour," says she,
+suiting the action to the word, "and a braw journey to ye back to where
+ye cam frae."
+
+"If you think me a spy," I broke out, and speech stuck in my throat. I
+stood and looked murder at the old lady for a space, then bowed and
+turned away.
+
+"Here! Hoots! The callant's in a creel!" she cried. "Think ye a spy?
+what else would I think ye--me that kens naething by ye? But I see that
+I was wrong; and as I cannot fight, I'll have to apologise. A bonny
+figure I would be with a broadsword. Ay! ay!" she went on, "you're none
+such a bad lad in your way; I think ye'll have some redeeming vices.
+But, oh, Davit Balfour, ye're damned countryfeed. Ye'll have to win over
+that, lad; ye'll have to soople your back-bone, and think a wee pickle
+less of your dainty self; and ye'll have to try to find out that
+women-folk are nae grenadiers. But that can never be. To your last day
+you'll ken no more of women-folk than what I do of sow-gelding."
+
+I had never been used with such expressions from a lady's tongue, the
+only two ladies I had known, Mrs. Campbell and my mother, being most
+devout and most particular women; and I suppose my amazement must have
+been depicted in my countenance, for Mrs. Ogilvy burst forth suddenly in
+a fit of laughter.
+
+"Keep me!" she cried, struggling with her mirth, "you have the finest
+timber face--and you to marry the daughter of a Hieland cateran! Davie,
+my dear, I think we'll have to make a match of it--if it was just to see
+the weans. And now," she went on, "there's no manner of service in your
+daidling here, for the young woman is from home, and it's my fear that
+the old woman is no suitable companion for your father's son. Forbye
+that I have nobody but myself to look after my reputation, and have been
+long enough alone with a sedooctive youth. And come back another day for
+your saxpence!" she cried after me as I left.
+
+My skirmish with this disconcerting lady gave my thoughts a boldness
+they had otherwise wanted. For two days the image of Catriona had mixed
+in all my meditations; she made their background, so that I scarce
+enjoyed my own company without a glint of her in a corner of my mind.
+But now she came immediately near; I seemed to touch her, whom I had
+never touched but the once; I let myself flow out to her in a happy
+weakness, and looking all about, and before and behind, saw the world
+like an undesirable desert, where men go as soldiers on a march,
+following their duty with what constancy they have, and Catriona alone
+there to offer me some pleasure of my days; I wondered at myself that I
+could dwell on such considerations in that time of my peril and
+disgrace; and when I remembered my youth I was ashamed. I had my studies
+to complete; I had to be called into some useful business; I had yet to
+take my part of service in a place where all must serve; I had yet to
+learn, and know, and prove myself a man; and I had so much sense as
+blush that I should be already tempted with these further-on and holier
+delights and duties. My education spoke home to me sharply; I was never
+brought up on sugar biscuits, but on the hard food of the truth. I knew
+that he was quite unfit to be a husband who was not prepared to be a
+father also; and for a boy like me to play the father was a mere
+derision.
+
+When I was in the midst of these thoughts and about half-way back to
+town I saw a figure coming to meet me, and the trouble of my heart was
+heightened. It seemed I had everything in the world to say to her, but
+nothing to say first; and remembering how tongue-tied I had been that
+morning at the Advocate's, I made sure that I would find myself struck
+dumb. But when she came up my fears fled away; not even the
+consciousness of what I had been privately thinking disconcerted me the
+least; and I found I could talk with her as easily and rationally as I
+might with Alan.
+
+"O!" she cried, "you have been seeking your sixpence: did you get it?"
+
+I told her no; but now I had met with her my walk was not in vain.
+"Though I have seen you to-day already," said I, and told her where and
+when.
+
+"I did not see you," she said. "My eyes are big, but there are better
+than mine at seeing far. Only I heard singing in the house."
+
+"That was Miss Grant," said I, "the eldest and the bonniest."
+
+"They say they are all beautiful," said she.
+
+"They think the same of you, Miss Drummond," I replied, "and were all
+crowding to the window to observe you."
+
+"It is a pity about my being so blind," said she, "or I might have seen
+them too. And you were in the house? You must have been having the fine
+time with the fine music and the pretty ladies."
+
+"There is just where you are wrong," said I; "for I was as uncouth as a
+sea-fish upon the brae of a mountain. The truth is that I am better
+fitted to go about with rudas men than pretty ladies."
+
+"Well, I would think so too, at all events!" said she, at which we both
+of us laughed.
+
+"It is a strange thing, now," said I. "I am not the least afraid with
+you, yet I could have run from the Miss Grants. And I was afraid of your
+cousin too."
+
+"O, I think any man will be afraid of her," she cried. "My father is
+afraid of her himself."
+
+The name of her father brought me to a stop. I looked at her as she
+walked by my side; I recalled the man, and the little I knew and the
+much I guessed of him; and comparing the one with the other, felt like a
+traitor to be silent.
+
+"Speaking of which," said I, "I met your father no later than this
+morning."
+
+"Did you?" she cried, with a voice of joy that seemed to mock at me.
+"You saw James More? You will have spoken with him, then?"
+
+"I did even that," said I.
+
+Then I think things went the worst way for me that was humanly possible.
+She gave me a look of mere gratitude. "Ah, thank you for that!" says
+she.
+
+"You thank me for very little," said I, and then stopped. But it seemed
+when I was holding back so much, something at least had to come out. "I
+spoke rather ill to him," said I; "I did not like him very much; I spoke
+him rather ill, and he was angry."
+
+"I think you had little to do then, and less to tell it to his
+daughter!" she cried out. "But those that do not love and cherish him I
+will not know."
+
+"I will take the freedom of a word yet," said I, beginning to tremble.
+"Perhaps neither your father nor I are in the best of good spirits at
+Prestongrange's. I daresay we both have anxious business there, for it's
+a dangerous house. I was sorry for him too, and spoke to him the first,
+if I could but have spoken the wiser. And for one thing, in my opinion,
+you will soon find that his affairs are mending."
+
+"It will not be through your friendship, I am thinking," said she; "and
+he is much made up to you for your sorrow."
+
+"Miss Drummond," cried I, "I am alone in this world...."
+
+"And I am not wondering at that," said she.
+
+"O, let me speak!" said I. "I will speak but the once, and then leave
+you, if you will, for ever. I came this day in the hopes of a kind word
+that I am sore in want of. I know that what I said must hurt you, and I
+knew it then. It would have been easy to have spoken smooth, easy to lie
+to you; can you not think how I was tempted to the same? Cannot you see
+the truth of my heart shine out?"
+
+"I think here is a great deal of work, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I think
+we will have met but the once, and will can part like gentle-folk."
+
+"O, let me have one to believe in me!" I pleaded, "I cannae bear it
+else. The whole world is clanned against me. How am I to go through with
+my dreadful fate? If there's to be none to believe in me I cannot do it.
+The man must just die, for I cannot do it."
+
+She had still looked straight in front of her, head in air; but at my
+words or the tone of my voice she came to a stop. "What is this you
+say?" she asked. "What are you talking of?"
+
+"It is my testimony which may save an innocent life," said I, "and they
+will not suffer me to bear it. What would you do yourself? You know what
+this is, whose father lies in danger. Would you desert the poor soul?
+They have tried all ways with me. They have sought to bribe me; they
+offered me hills and valleys. And to-day that sleuth-hound told me how I
+stood, and to what a length he would go to butcher and disgrace me. I am
+to be brought in a party to the murder; I am to have held Glenure in
+talk for money and old clothes; I am to be killed and shamed. If this is
+the way I am to fall, and me scarce a man--if this is the story to be
+told of me in all Scotland--if you are to believe it too, and my name is
+to be nothing but a by-word--Catriona, how can I go through with it? The
+thing's not possible; it's more than a man has in his heart."
+
+I poured my words out in a whirl, one upon the other; and when I stopped
+I found her gazing on me with a startled face.
+
+"Glenure! It is the Appin murder," she said softly, but with a very deep
+surprise.
+
+I had turned back to bear her company, and we were now come near the
+head of the brae above Dean village. At this word I stepped in front of
+her like one suddenly distracted.
+
+"For God's sake!" I cried, "for God's sake, what is this that I have
+done?" and carried my fists to my temples. "What made me do it? Sure, I
+am bewitched to say these things!"
+
+"In the name of heaven, what ails you now?" she cried.
+
+"I gave my honour," I groaned, "I gave my honour and now I have broke
+it. O, Catriona!"
+
+"I am asking you what it is," she said; "was it these things you should
+not have spoken? And do you think _I_ have no honour, then? or that I am
+one that would betray a friend? I hold up my right hand to you and
+swear."
+
+"O, I knew you would be true!" said I. "It's me--it's here. I that stood
+but this morning and out-faced them, that risked rather to die disgraced
+upon the gallows than do wrong--and a few hours after I throw my honour
+away by the roadside in common talk! 'There is one thing clear upon our
+interview,' says he, 'that I can rely on your pledged word.' Where is my
+word now? Who could believe me now? _You_ could not believe me. I am
+clean fallen down; I had best die!" All this I said with a weeping
+voice, but I had no tears in my body.
+
+"My heart is sore for you," said she, "but be sure you are too nice. I
+would not believe you, do you say? I would trust you with anything. And
+these men? I would not be thinking of them! Men who go about to entrap
+and to destroy you! Fy! this is no time to crouch. Look up! Do you not
+think I will be admiring you like a great hero of the good--and you a
+boy not much older than myself? And because you said a word too much in
+a friend's ear, that would die ere she betrayed you--to make such a
+matter! It is one thing that we must both forget."
+
+"Catriona," said I, looking at her, hang-dog, "is this true of it? Would
+ye trust me yet?"
+
+"Will you not believe the tears upon my face?" she cried. "It is the
+world I am thinking of you, Mr. David Balfour. Let them hang you; I will
+never forget, I will grow old and still remember you. I think it is
+great to die so; I will envy you that gallows."
+
+"And maybe all this while I am but a child frighted with bogles," said
+I. "Maybe they but make a mock of me."
+
+"It is what I must know," she said. "I must hear the whole. The harm is
+done at all events, and I must hear the whole."
+
+I had sat down on the wayside, where she took a place beside me, and I
+told her all that matter much as I have written it, my thoughts about
+her father's dealing being alone omitted.
+
+"Well," she said, when I had finished, "you are a hero, surely, and I
+never would have thought that same! And I think you are in peril, too.
+O, Symon Fraser! to think upon that man! For his life and the dirty
+money, to be dealing in such traffic!" And just then she called out
+aloud with a queer word that was common with her, and belongs, I
+believe, to her own language. "My torture!" says she, "look at the sun!"
+
+Indeed, it was already dipping towards the mountains.
+
+She bid me come again soon, gave me her hand, and left me in a turmoil
+of glad spirits. I delayed to go home to my lodging, for I had a terror
+of immediate arrest; but got some supper at a change house, and the
+better part of that night walked by myself in the barley-fields, and had
+such a sense of Catriona's presence that I seemed to bear her in my
+arms.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE BRAVO
+
+
+The next day, August 29th, I kept my appointment at the Advocate's in a
+coat that I had made to my own measure, and was but newly ready.
+
+"Aha," says Prestongrange, "you are very fine to-day; my misses are to
+have a fine cavalier. Come, I take that kind of you. I take that kind of
+you, Mr. David. O, we shall do very well yet, and I believe your
+troubles are nearly at an end."
+
+"You have news for me?" cried I.
+
+"Beyond anticipation," he replied. "Your testimony is after all to be
+received; and you may go, if you will, in my company to the trial, which
+is to be held at Inverary, Thursday, 21st _proximo_."
+
+I was too much amazed to find words.
+
+"In the meanwhile," he continued, "though I will not ask you to renew
+your pledge, I must caution you strictly to be reticent. To-morrow your
+precognition must be taken; and outside of that, do you know, I think
+least said will be soonest mended."
+
+"I shall try to go discreetly," said I. "I believe it is yourself that I
+must thank for this crowning mercy, and I do thank you gratefully. After
+yesterday, my lord, this is like the doors of Heaven. I cannot find it
+in my heart to get the thing believed."
+
+"Ah, but you must try and manage, you must try and manage to believe
+it," says he, soothing-like, "and I am very glad to hear your
+acknowledgment of obligation, for I think you may be able to repay me
+very shortly"--he coughed--"or even now. The matter is much changed.
+Your testimony, which I shall not trouble you for to-day, will doubtless
+alter the complexion of the case for all concerned, and this makes it
+less delicate for me to enter with you on a side issue."
+
+"My lord," I interrupted, "excuse me for interrupting you, but how has
+this been brought about? The obstacles you told me of on Saturday
+appeared even to me to be quite insurmountable; how has it been
+contrived?"
+
+"My dear Mr. David," said he, "it would never do for me to divulge (even
+to you, as you say) the councils of the Government; and you must content
+yourself, if you please, with the gross fact."
+
+He smiled upon me like a father as he spoke, playing the while with a
+new pen; methought it was impossible there could be any shadow of
+deception in the man: yet when he drew to him a sheet of paper, dipped
+his pen among the ink, and began again to address me, I was somehow not
+so certain, and fell instinctively into an attitude of guard.
+
+"There is a point I wish to touch upon," he began. "I purposely left it
+before upon one side, which need be now no longer necessary. This is
+not, of course, a part of your examination, which is to follow by
+another hand; this is a private interest of my own. You say you
+encountered Breck upon the hill?"
+
+"I did, my lord," said I.
+
+"This was immediately after the murder?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"Did you speak to him?"
+
+"I did."
+
+"You had known him before, I think?" says my lord, carelessly.
+
+"I cannot guess your reason for so thinking, my lord," I replied, "but
+such is the fact."
+
+"And when did you part with him again?" said he.
+
+"I reserve my answer," said I. "The question will be put to me at the
+assize."
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said he, "will you not understand that all this is
+without prejudice to yourself? I have promised you life and honour; and,
+believe me, I can keep my word. You are therefore clear of all anxiety.
+Alan, it appears, you suppose you can protect; and you talk to me of
+your gratitude, which I think (if you push me) is not ill-deserved.
+There are a great many different considerations all pointing the same
+way; and I will never be persuaded that you could not help us (if you
+chose) to put salt on Alan's tail."
+
+"My lord," said I, "I give you my word I do not so much as guess where
+Alan is."
+
+He paused a breath. "Nor how he might be found?" he asked.
+
+I sat before him like a log of wood.
+
+"And so much for your gratitude, Mr. David!" he observed. Again there
+was a piece of silence. "Well," said he, rising, "I am not fortunate,
+and we are a couple at cross purposes. Let us speak of it no more; you
+will receive notice when, where, and by whom we are to take your
+precognition. And in the meantime, my misses must be waiting you. They
+will never forgive me if I detain their cavalier."
+
+Into the hands of these graces I was accordingly offered up, and found
+them dressed beyond what I had thought possible, and looking fair as a
+posy.
+
+As we went forth from the doors a small circumstance occurred which came
+afterwards to look extremely big. I heard a whistle sound loud and brief
+like a signal, and looking all about, spied for one moment the red head
+of Neil of the Tom, the son of Duncan. The next moment he was gone
+again, nor could I see so much as the skirt-tail of Catriona, upon whom
+I naturally supposed him to be then attending.
+
+My three keepers led me out by Bristo and the Bruntsfield Links; whence
+a path carried us to Hope Park, a beautiful pleasance, laid with
+gravel-walks, furnished with seats and summer-sheds, and warded by a
+keeper.
+
+The way there was a little longsome; the two younger misses affected an
+air of genteel weariness that damped me cruelly, the eldest considered
+me with something that at times appeared like mirth; and though I
+thought I did myself more justice than the day before, it was not
+without some effort. Upon our reaching the park I was launched on a bevy
+of eight or ten young gentlemen (some of them cockaded officers, the
+rest chiefly advocates) who crowded to attend upon these beauties; and
+though I was presented to all of them in very good words, it seemed I
+was by all immediately forgotten. Young folk in a company are like to
+savage animals: they fall upon or scorn a stranger without civility, or
+I may say, humanity; and I am sure, if I had been among baboons, they
+would have shown me quite as much of both. Some of the advocates set up
+to be wits, and some of the soldiers to be rattles; and I could not tell
+which of these extremes annoyed me most. All had a manner of handling
+their swords and coat-skirts, for the which (in mere black envy) I could
+have kicked them from that park. I daresay, upon their side, they
+grudged me extremely the fine company in which I had arrived; and
+altogether I had soon fallen behind, and stepped stiffly in the rear of
+all that merriment with my own thoughts.
+
+From these I was recalled by one of the officers, Lieutenant Hector
+Duncansby, a gawky, leering, Highland boy, asking if my name was not
+"Palfour."
+
+I told him it was, not very kindly, for his manner was scant civil.
+
+"Ha, Palfour," says he, and then, repeating it, "Palfour, Palfour!"
+
+"I am afraid you do not like my name, sir," says I, annoyed with myself
+to be annoyed with such a rustical fellow.
+
+"No," says he, "but I wass thinking."
+
+"I would not advise you to make a practice of that, sir," says I. "I
+feel sure you would not find it to agree with you."
+
+"Tit you effer hear where Alan Grigor fand the tangs?" said he.
+
+I asked him what he could possibly mean, and he answered, with a
+heckling laugh, that he thought I must have found the poker in the same
+place and swallowed it.
+
+There could be no mistake about this, and my cheek burned.
+
+"Before I went about to put affronts on gentlemen," said I, "I think I
+would learn the English language first."
+
+He took me by the sleeve with a nod and a wink, and led me quietly
+outside Hope Park. But no sooner were we beyond the view of the
+promenaders, than the fashion of his countenance changed. "You tam
+lowland scoon'rel!" cries he, and hit me a buffet on the jaw with his
+closed fist.
+
+I paid him as good or better on the return; whereupon he stepped a
+little back and took off his hat to me decorously.
+
+"Enough plows I think," says he. "I will be the offended shentleman, for
+who effer heard of such suffeeciency as tell a shentlemans that is the
+king's officer he cannae speak Cot's English? We have swords at our
+hurdies, and here is the King's Park at hand. Will ye walk first, or let
+me show ye the way?"
+
+I returned his bow, told him to go first, and followed him. As he went I
+heard him grumble to himself about _Cot's English_ and the _King's
+coat_, so that I might have supposed him to be seriously offended. But
+his manner at the beginning of our interview was there to belie him. It
+was manifest he had come prepared to fasten a quarrel on me, right or
+wrong; manifest that I was taken in a fresh contrivance of my enemies;
+and to me (conscious as I was of my deficiencies) manifest enough that I
+should be the one to fall in our encounter.
+
+As we came into that rough rocky desert of the King's Park I was tempted
+half-a-dozen times to take to my heels and run for it, so loath was I to
+show my ignorance in fencing, and so much averse to die or even to be
+wounded. But I considered if their malice went as far as this, it would
+likely stick at nothing; and that to fall by the sword, however
+ungracefully, was still an improvement on the gallows. I considered
+besides that by the unguarded pertness of my words and the quickness of
+my blow I had put myself quite out of court; and that even if I ran, my
+adversary would, probably pursue and catch me, which would add disgrace
+to my misfortune. So that, taking all in all, I continued marching
+behind him, much as a man follows the hangman, and certainly with no
+more hope.
+
+We went about the end of the long craigs, and came into the Hunter's
+Bog. Here, on a piece of fair turf, my adversary drew. There was nobody
+there to see us but some birds; and no resource for me but to follow his
+example, and stand on guard with the best face I could display. It seems
+it was not good enough for Mr. Duncansby, who spied some flaw in my
+manoeuvres, paused, looked upon me sharply, and came off and on, and
+menaced me with his blade in the air. As I had seen no such proceedings
+from Alan, and was besides a good deal affected with the proximity of
+death, I grew quite bewildered, stood helpless, and could have longed to
+run away.
+
+"Fat, deil, ails her?" cries the lieutenant.
+
+And suddenly engaging, he twitched the sword out of my grasp and sent it
+flying far among the rushes.
+
+Twice was this manoeuvre repeated; and the third time when I brought
+back my humiliated weapon, I found he had returned his own to the
+scabbard, and stood awaiting me with a face of some anger, and his hands
+clasped under his skirt.
+
+"Pe tamned if I touch you!" he cried, and asked me bitterly what right I
+had to stand up before "shentlemans" when I did not know the back of a
+sword from the front of it.
+
+I answered that was the fault of my upbringing; and would he do me the
+justice to say I had given him all the satisfaction it was unfortunately
+in my power to offer, and had stood up like a man?
+
+"And that is the truth," said he. "I am fery prave myself, and pold as a
+lions. But to stand up there--and you ken naething of fence!--the way
+that you did, I declare it was peyond me. And I am sorry for the plow;
+though I declare I pelief your own was the elder brother, and my held
+still sings with it. And I declare if I had kent what way it wass, I
+would not put a hand to such a piece of pusiness."
+
+"That is handsomely said," I replied, "and I am sure you will not stand
+up a second time to be the actor for my private enemies."
+
+"Indeed, no, Palfour," said he; "and I think I was used extremely
+suffeeciently myself to be set up to fecht with an auld wife, or all the
+same as a bairn whateffer! And I will tell the Master so, and fecht him,
+by Cot, himself!"
+
+"And if you knew the nature of Mr. Symon's quarrel with me," said I,
+"you would be yet the more affronted to be mingled up with such
+affairs."
+
+He swore he could well believe it; that all the Lovats were made of the
+same meal and the devil was the miller that ground that; then suddenly
+shaking me by the hand, he vowed I was a pretty enough fellow after all,
+that it was a thousand pities I had been neglected, and that if he could
+find the time, he would give an eye himself to have me educated.
+
+"You can do me a better service than even what you propose," said I; and
+when he had asked its nature--"Come with me to the house of one of my
+enemies, and testify how I have carried myself this day," I told him.
+"That will be the true service. For though he has sent me a gallant
+adversary for the first, the thought in Mr. Symon's mind is merely
+murder. There will be a second and then a third; and by what you have
+seen of my cleverness with the cold steel, you can judge for yourself
+what is like to be upshot."
+
+"And I would not like it myself, if I was no more of a man than what you
+wass!" he cried. "But I will do you right, Palfour. Lead on!"
+
+If I had walked slowly on the way into that accursed park my heels were
+light enough on the way out. They kept time to a very good old air, that
+is as ancient as the Bible, and the words of it are: "_Surely the
+bitterness of death is passed_." I mind that I was extremely thirsty,
+and had a drink at Saint Margaret's well on the road down, and the
+sweetness of that water passed belief. We went through the sanctuary, up
+the Canongate, in by the Netherbow, and straight to Prestongrange's
+door, talking as we came and arranging the details of our affair. The
+footman owned his master was at home, but declared him engaged with
+other gentlemen on very private business, and his door forbidden.
+
+"My business is but for three minutes, and it cannot wait," said I. "You
+may say it is by no means private, and I shall be even glad to have some
+witnesses."
+
+As the man departed unwillingly enough upon this errand, we made so bold
+as to follow him to the antechamber, whence I could hear for a while the
+murmuring of several voices in the room within. The truth is, they were
+three at the one table--Prestongrange, Symon Fraser, and Mr. Erskine,
+Sheriff of Perth; and as they were met in consultation on the very
+business of the Appin murder, they were a little disturbed at my
+appearance, but decided to receive me.
+
+"Well, well, Mr. Balfour, and what brings you here again? and who is
+this you bring with you?" says Prestongrange.
+
+As for Fraser, he looked before him on the table.
+
+"He is here to bear a little testimony in my favour, my lord, which I
+think it very needful you should hear," said I, and turned to Duncansby.
+
+"I have only to say this," said the lieutenant, "that I stood up this
+day with Palfour in the Hunter's Pog, which I am now fery sorry for, and
+he behaved himself as pretty as a shentlemans could ask it. And I have
+creat respects for Palfour," he added.
+
+"I thank you for your honest expressions," said I.
+
+Whereupon Duncansby made his bow to the company, and left the chamber,
+as we had agreed upon before.
+
+"What have I to do with this?" says Prestongrange.
+
+"I will tell your lordship in two words," said I. "I have brought this
+gentleman, a King's officer, to do me so much justice. Now I think my
+character is covered, and until a certain date, which your lordship can
+very well supply, it will be quite in vain to despatch against me any
+more officers. I will not consent to fight my way through the garrison
+of the castle."
+
+The veins swelled on Prestongrange's brow, and he regarded me with fury.
+
+"I think the devil uncoupled this dog of a lad between my legs!" he
+cried; and then, turning fiercely on his neighbour, "This is some of
+your work, Symon," he said. "I spy your hand in the business, and, let
+me tell you, I resent it. It is disloyal, when we are agreed upon one
+expedient, to follow another in the dark. You are disloyal to me. What!
+you let me send this lad to the place with my very daughters! And
+because I let drop a word to you ... Fy, sir, keep your dishonours to
+yourself!"
+
+Symon was deadly pale. "I will be a kick-ball between you and the Duke
+no longer," he exclaimed. "Either come to an agreement, or come to a
+differ, and have it out among yourselves. But I will no longer fetch and
+carry, and get your contrary instructions, and be blamed by both. For if
+I were to tell you what I think of all your Hanover business it would
+make your head sing."
+
+But Sheriff Erskine had preserved his temper, and now intervened
+smoothly. "And in the meantime," says he, "I think we should tell Mr.
+Balfour that his character for valour is quite established. He may sleep
+in peace. Until the date he was so good as to refer to it shall be put
+to the proof no more."
+
+His coolness brought the others to their prudence; and they made haste,
+with a somewhat distracted civility, to pack me from the house.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE HEATHER ON FIRE
+
+
+When I left Prestongrange that afternoon I was for the first time angry.
+The Advocate had made a mock of me. He had pretended my testimony was to
+be received and myself respected; and in that very hour, not only was
+Symon practising against my life by the hands of the Highland soldier,
+but (as appeared from his own language) Prestongrange himself had some
+design in operation. I counted my enemies: Prestongrange with all the
+King's authority behind him; and the Duke with the power of the West
+Highlands; and the Lovat interest by their side to help them with so
+great a force in the north, and the whole clan of old Jacobite spies and
+traffickers. And when I remembered James More, and the red head of Neil
+the son of Duncan, I thought there was perhaps a fourth in the
+confederacy, and what remained of Rob Roy's old desperate sept of
+caterans would be banded against me with the others. One thing was
+requisite, some strong friend or wise adviser. The country must be full
+of such, both able and eager to support me, or Lovat and the Duke and
+Prestongrange had not been nosing for expedients; and it made me rage to
+think that I might brush against my champions in the street and be no
+wiser.
+
+And just then (like an answer) a gentleman brushed against me going by,
+gave me a meaning look, and turned into a close. I knew him with the
+tail of my eye--it was Stewart the Writer; and, blessing my good
+fortune, turned in to follow him. As soon as I had entered the close I
+saw him standing in the mouth of a stair, where he made me a signal and
+immediately vanished. Seven storeys up, there he was again in a house
+door, the which he locked behind us after we had entered. The house was
+quite dismantled, with not a stick of furniture; indeed, it was one of
+which Stewart had the letting in his hands.
+
+"We'll have to sit upon the floor," said he; "but we're safe here for
+the time being, and I've been wearying to see ye, Mr. Balfour."
+
+"How's it with Alan?'" I asked.
+
+"Brawly," said he. "Andie picks him up at Gillane Sands to-morrow,
+Wednesday. He was keen to say good-by to ye, but the way that things
+were going, I was feared the pair of ye was maybe best apart. And that
+brings me to the essential: how does your business speed?"
+
+"Why," said I, "I was told only this morning that my testimony was
+accepted, and I was to travel to Inverary with the Advocate, no less."
+
+"Hout awa!" cried Stewart. "I'll never believe that."
+
+"I have maybe a suspicion of my own," says I, "but I would like fine to
+hear your reasons."
+
+"Well, I tell ye fairly, I'm horn-mad," cries Stewart. "If my one hand
+could pull their Government down I would pluck it like a rotten apple.
+I'm doer for Appin and for James of the Glens; and, of course, it's my
+duty to defend my kinsman for his life. Hear how it goes with me, and
+I'll leave the judgment of it to yourself. The first thing they have to
+do is to get rid of Alan. They cannae bring in James as art and part
+until they've brought in Alan first as principal; that's sound law: they
+could never put the cart before the horse."
+
+"And how are they to bring in Alan till they can catch him?" says I.
+
+"Ah, but there is a way to evite that arrestment," said he. "Sound law,
+too. It would be a bonny thing if, by the escape of one ill-doer another
+was to go scatheless, and the remeid is to summon the principal and put
+him to outlawry for the non-compearance. Now there's four places where a
+person can be summoned: at his dwelling-house; at a place where he has
+resided forty days; at the head burgh of the shire where he ordinarily
+resorts; or lastly (if there be ground to think him forth of Scotland),
+_at the cross of Edinburgh, and the pier and shore of Leith, for sixty
+days_. The purpose of which last provision is evident upon its face:
+being that outgoing ships may have time to carry news of the
+transaction, and the summonsing be something other than a form. Now take
+the case of Alan. He has no dwelling-house that ever I could hear of; I
+would be obliged if anyone would show me where he has lived forty days
+together since the '45; there is no shire where he resorts whether
+ordinarily or extraordinarily; if he has a domicile at all, which I
+misdoubt, it must be with his regiment in France; and if he is not yet
+forth of Scotland (as we happen to know and they happen to guess) it
+must be evident to the most dull it's what he's aiming for. Where, then,
+and what way should he be summoned? I ask it at yourself, a layman."
+
+"You have given the very words," said I. "Here at the cross, and at the
+pier and shore of Leith, for sixty days."
+
+"Ye're a sounder Scots lawyer than Prestongrange, then!" cries the
+Writer. "He has had Alan summoned once; that was on the twenty-fifth,
+the day that we first met. Once, and done with it. And where? Where, but
+at the cross of Inverary, the head burgh of the Campbells. A word in
+your ear, Mr. Balfour--they're not seeking Alan."
+
+"What do you mean?" I cried. "Not seeking him?"
+
+"By the best that I can make of it," said he. "Not wanting to find him,
+in my poor thought. They think perhaps he might set up a fair defence,
+upon the back of which James, the man they're really after, might climb
+out. This is not a case, ye see, it's a conspiracy."
+
+"Yet I can tell you Prestongrange asked after Alan keenly," said I;
+"though, when I come to think of it, he was something of the easiest put
+by."
+
+"See that!" says he. "But there! I may be right or wrong, that's
+guesswork at the best, and let me get to my facts again. It comes to my
+ears that James and the witnesses--the witnesses, Mr. Balfour!--lay in
+close dungeons, and shackled forbye, in the military prison at Fort
+William; none allowed in to them, nor they to write. The witnesses, Mr.
+Balfour; heard ye ever the match of that? I assure ye, no old, crooked
+Stewart of the gang ever outfaced the law more impudently. It's clean in
+the two eyes of the Act of Parliament of 1700, anent wrongous
+imprisonment. No sooner did I get the news than I petitioned the Lord
+Justice Clerk. I have his word to-day. There's law for ye! here's
+justice!"
+
+He put a paper in my hand, that same mealy-mouthed, false-faced paper
+that was printed since in the pamphlet "by a bystander," for behoof (as
+the title says) of James's "poor widow and five children."
+
+"See," said Stewart, "he couldn't dare to refuse me access to my client,
+so he _recommends the commanding officer to let me in_. Recommends!--the
+Lord Justice Clerk of Scotland recommends. Is not the purpose of such
+language plain? They hope the officer may be so dull, or so very much
+the reverse, as to refuse the recommendation. I would have to make the
+journey back again betwixt here and Fort William. There would follow a
+fresh delay till I got fresh authority, and they had disavowed the
+officer--military man, notoriously ignorant of the law, and that--I ken
+the cant of it. Then the journey a third time; and there we should be on
+the immediate heels of the trial before I had received my first
+instruction. Am I not right to call this a conspiracy?"
+
+"It will bear that colour," said I.
+
+"And I'll go on to prove it you outright," said he. "They have the right
+to hold James in prison, yet they cannot deny me to visit him. They have
+no right to hold the witnesses; but am I to get a sight of them, that
+should be as free as the Lord Justice Clerk himself? See--read: _For the
+rest, refuses to give any orders to keepers of prisons who are not
+accused as having done anything contrary to the duties of their office_.
+Anything contrary! Sirs! And the Act of seventeen hunner! Mr. Balfour,
+this makes my heart to burst. The heather is on fire inside my wame."
+
+"And the plain English of that phrase," said I, "is that the witnesses
+are still to lie in prison and you are not to see them?"
+
+"And I am not to see them until Inverary, when the court is set!" cries
+he, "and then to hear Prestongrange upon _the anxious responsibilities
+of his office and the great facilities afforded the defence!_ But I'll
+begowk them there, Mr. David. I have a plan to waylay the witnesses upon
+the road, and see if I cannae get a little harle of justice out of the
+_military man notoriously ignorant of the law_ that shall command the
+party."
+
+It was actually so--it was actually on the wayside near Tynedrum, and by
+the connivance of a soldier officer, that Mr. Stewart first saw the
+witnesses upon the case.
+
+"There is nothing that would surprise me in this business," I remarked.
+
+"I'll surprise you ere I'm done!" cries he. "Do ye see this?"--producing
+a print still wet from the press. "This is the libel: see, there's
+Prestongrange's name to the list of witnesses, and I find no word of any
+Balfour. But here is not the question. Who do ye think paid for the
+printing of this paper?"
+
+"I suppose it would likely be King George," said I.
+
+"But it happens it was me!" he cried. "Not but it was printed by and for
+themselves, for the Grants and the Erskines, and yon thief of the black
+midnight, Symon Fraser. But could _I_ win to get a copy? No! I was to go
+blindfold to my defence; I was to hear the charges for the first time in
+court alongst the jury."
+
+"Is not this against the law?" I asked.
+
+"I cannot say so much," he replied. "It was a favour so natural and so
+constantly rendered (till this nonesuch business) that the law has never
+looked to it. And now admire the hand of Providence! A stranger is in
+Fleming's printing house, spies a proof on the floor, picks it up, and
+carries it to me. Of all things, it was just this libel. Whereupon I had
+it set again--printed at the expense of the defence: _sumptibus moesti
+rei_; heard ever man the like of it?--and here it is for anybody, the
+muckle secret out--all may see it now. But how do you think I would
+enjoy this, that has the life of my kinsman on my conscience?"
+
+"Troth, I think you would enjoy it ill," said I.
+
+"And now you see how it is," he concluded, "and why, when you tell me
+your evidence is to be let in, I laugh aloud in your face."
+
+It was now my turn. I laid before him in brief Mr. Symon's threats and
+offers, and the whole incident of the bravo, with the subsequent scene
+at Prestongrange's. Of my first talk, according to promise, I said
+nothing, nor indeed was it necessary. All the time I was talking Stewart
+nodded his head like a mechanical figure; and no sooner had my voice
+ceased, than he opened his mouth and gave me his opinion in two words,
+dwelling strong on both of them.
+
+"Disappear yourself," said he.
+
+"I do not take you," said I.
+
+"Then I'll carry you there," said he. "By my view of it you're to
+disappear whatever. O, that's outside debate. The Advocate, who is not
+without some spunks of a remainder decency, has wrung your life-safe out
+of Symon and the Duke. He has refused to put you on your trial, and
+refused to have you killed; and there is the clue to their ill words
+together, for Symon and the Duke can keep faith with neither friend nor
+enemy. Ye're not to be tried then, and ye're not to be murdered; but I'm
+in bitter error if ye're not to be kidnapped and carried away like the
+Lady Grange. Bet me what you please--there was their _expedient!_"
+
+"You make me think," said I, and told him of the whistle and the
+red-headed retainer, Neil.
+
+"Wherever James More is there's one big rogue, never be deceived on
+that," said he. "His father was none so ill a man, though a kenning on
+the wrong side of the law, and no friend to my family, that I should
+waste my breath to be defending him! But as for James he's a brock and a
+blagyard. I like the appearing of this red-headed Neil as little as
+yourself. It looks uncanny: fiegh! it smells bad. It was old Lovat that
+managed the Lady Grange affair, if young Lovat is to handle yours, it'll
+be all in the family. What's James More in prison for? The same offence:
+abduction. His men have had practice in the business. He'll be to lend
+them to be Symon's instruments; and the next thing we'll be hearing,
+James will have made his peace, or else he'll have escaped; and you'll
+be in Benbecula or Applecross."
+
+"Ye make a strong case," I admitted.
+
+"And what I want," he resumed, "is that you should disappear yourself
+ere they can get their hands upon ye. Lie quiet until just before the
+trial, and spring upon them at the last of it when they'll be looking
+for you least. This is always supposing, Mr. Balfour, that your evidence
+is worth so very great a measure of both risk and fash."
+
+"I will tell you one thing," said I. "I saw the murderer and it was not
+Alan."
+
+"Then, by God, my cousin's saved!" cried Stewart. "You have his life
+upon your tongue; and there's neither time, risk, nor money to be spared
+to bring you to the trial." He emptied his pockets on the floor. "Here
+is all that I have by me," he went on. "Take it, ye'll want it ere ye're
+through. Go straight down this close, there's a way out by there to the
+Lang Dykes, and by my will of it! see no more of Edinburgh till the
+clash is over."
+
+"Where am I to go, then?" I inquired.
+
+"And I wish that I could tell ye!" says he, "but all the places that I
+could send ye to, would be just the places they would seek. No, ye must
+fend for yourself, and God be your guiding! Five days before the trial,
+September the sixteen, get word to me at the _King's Arms_ in Stirling;
+and if ye've managed for yourself as long as that, I'll see that ye
+reach Inverary."
+
+"One thing more," said I. "Can I no see Alan?"
+
+He seemed boggled. "Hech, I would rather you wouldnae," said he. "But I
+can never deny that Alan is extremely keen of it, and is to lie this
+night by Silvermills on purpose. If you're sure that you're not
+followed, Mr. Balfour--but make sure of that--lie in a good place and
+watch your road for a clear hour before ye risk it. It would be a
+dreadful business if both you and him was to miscarry!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE RED-HEADED MAN
+
+
+It was about half-past three when I came forth on the Lang Dykes. Dean
+was where I wanted to go. Since Catriona dwelled there, and the Glengyle
+Macgregors appeared almost certainly to be employed against me, it was
+just one of the few places I should have kept away from; and being a
+very young man, and beginning to be very much in love, I turned my face
+in that direction without pause. As a salve to my conscience and common
+sense, however, I took a measure of precaution. Coming over the crown of
+a bit of a rise in the road, I clapped down suddenly among the barley
+and lay waiting. After a while, a man went by that looked to be a
+Highlandman, but I had never seen him till that hour. Presently after
+came Neil of the red head. The next to go past was a miller's cart, and
+after that nothing but manifest country people. Here was enough to have
+turned the most foolhardy from his purpose, but my inclination ran too
+strong the other way. I argued it out that if Neil was on that road, it
+was the right road to find him in, leading direct to his chief's
+daughter; as for the other Highlandman, if I was to be startled off by
+every Highlandman I saw, I would scarce reach anywhere. And having quite
+satisfied myself with this disingenuous debate, I made the better speed
+of it, and came a little after four to Mrs. Drummond-Ogilvy's.
+
+Both ladies were within the house; and upon my perceiving them together
+by the open door, I plucked off my hat and said, "Here was a lad come
+seeking saxpence," which I thought might please the dowager.
+
+Catriona ran out to greet me heartily, and, to my surprise, the old lady
+seemed scarce less forward than herself. I learned long afterwards that
+she had despatched a horseman by daylight to Rankeillor at the
+Queensferry, whom she knew to be the doer for Shaws, and had then in her
+pocket a letter from that good friend of mine, presenting, in the most
+favourable view, my character and prospects. But had I read it I could
+scarce have seen more clear in her designs. Maybe I was _countryfeed_;
+at least, I was not so much so as she thought; and it was plain enough,
+even to my homespun wits, that she was bent to hammer up a match between
+her cousin and a beardless boy that was something of a laird in Lothian.
+
+"Saxpence had better take his broth with us, Catrine," says she. "Run
+and tell the lasses."
+
+And for the little while we were alone was at a good deal of pains to
+flatter me; always cleverly, always with the appearance of a banter,
+still calling me Saxpence, but with such a turn that should rather
+uplift me in my own opinion. When Catriona returned the design became if
+possible more obvious, and she showed off the girl's advantages like a
+horse-couper with a horse. My face flamed that she should think me so
+obtuse. Now I would fancy the girl was being innocently made a show of,
+and then I could have beaten the old carline wife with a cudgel; and
+now, that perhaps these two had set their heads together to entrap me,
+and at that I sat and gloomed betwixt them like the very image of
+ill-will. At last the matchmaker had a better device, which was to leave
+the pair of us alone. When my suspicions are anyway roused it is
+sometimes a little the wrong side of easy to allay them. But though I
+knew what breed she was of, and that was a breed of thieves, I could
+never look in Catriona's face and disbelieve her.
+
+"I must not ask?" says she, eagerly, the same moment we were left alone.
+
+"Ah, but to-day I can talk with a free conscience," I replied. "I am
+lightened of my pledge, and indeed (after what has come and gone since
+morning) I would not have renewed it were it asked."
+
+"Tell me," she said. "My cousin will not be so long."
+
+So I told her the tale of the lieutenant from the first step to the last
+of it, making it as mirthful as I could, and, indeed, there was matter
+of mirth in that absurdity.
+
+"And I think you will be as little fitted for the rudas men as for the
+pretty ladies, after all!" says she, when I had done. "But what was your
+father that he could not learn you to draw the sword? It is most
+ungentle; I have not heard the match of that in anyone."
+
+"It is most misconvenient at least," said I; "and I think my father
+(honest man!) must have been wool-gathering to learn me Latin in the
+place of it. But you see I do the best I can, and just stand up like
+Lot's wife and let them hammer at me."
+
+"Do you know what makes me smile?" said she. "Well, it is this. I am
+made this way, that I should have been a man child. In my own thoughts
+it is so I am always; and I go on telling myself about this thing that
+is to befall and that. Then it comes to the place of the fighting, and
+it comes over me that I am only a girl at all events, and cannot hold a
+sword or give one good blow; and then I have to twist my story round
+about, so that the fighting is to stop, and yet me have the best of it,
+just like you and the lieutenant; and I am the boy that makes the fine
+speeches all through, like Mr. David Balfour."
+
+"You are a bloodthirsty maid," said I.
+
+"Well, I know it is good to sew and spin, and to make samplers," she
+said, "but if you were to do nothing else in the great world, I think
+you will say yourself it is a driech business; and it is not that I want
+to kill, I think. Did ever you kill anyone?"
+
+"That I have, as it chances. Two, no less, and me still a lad that
+should be at the college," said I. "But yet, in the look-back, I take no
+shame for it."
+
+"But how did you feel, then--after it?" she asked.
+
+"'Deed, I sat down and grat like a bairn," said I.
+
+"I know that, too," she cried. "I feel where these tears should come
+from. And at any rate, I would not wish to kill, only to be Catherine
+Douglas that put her arm through the staples of the bolt, where it was
+broken. That is my chief hero. Would you not love to die so--for your
+king?" she asked.
+
+"Troth," said I, "my affection for my king, God bless the puggy face of
+him, is under more control; and I thought I saw death so near to me this
+day already, that I am rather taken up with the notion of living."
+
+"Right," she said, "the right mind of a man! Only you must learn arms; I
+would not like to have a friend that cannot strike. But it will not have
+been with the sword that you killed these two?"
+
+"Indeed, no," said I, "but with a pair of pistols. And a fortunate thing
+it was the men were so near-hand to me, for I am about as clever with
+the pistols as I am with the sword."
+
+So then she drew from me the story of our battle in the brig, which I
+had omitted in my first account of my affairs.
+
+"Yes," said she, "you are brave. And your friend, I admire and love
+him."
+
+"Well, and I think any one would!" said I. "He has his faults like other
+folk; but he is brave and staunch and kind, God bless him! That will be
+a strange day when I forget Alan." And the thought of him, and that it
+was within my choice to speak with him that night, had almost overcome
+me.
+
+"And where will my head be gone that I have not told my news!" she
+cried, and spoke of a letter from her father, bearing that she might
+visit him to-morrow in the castle whither he was now transferred, and
+that his affairs were mending. "You do not like to hear it," said she.
+"Will you judge my father and not know him?"
+
+"I am a thousand miles from judging," I replied. "And I give you my word
+I do rejoice to know your heart is lightened. If my face fell at all, as
+I suppose it must, you will allow this is rather an ill day for
+compositions, and the people in power extremely ill persons to be
+compounding with. I have Symon Fraser extremely heavy on my stomach
+still."
+
+"Ah!" she cried, "you will not be evening these two; and you should bear
+in mind that Prestongrange and James More, my father, are of the one
+blood."
+
+"I never heard tell of that," said I.
+
+"It is rather singular how little you are acquainted with," said she.
+"One part may call themselves Grant, and one Macgregor, but they are
+still of the same clan. They are all the sons of Alpin, from whom, I
+think, our country has its name."
+
+"What country is that?" I asked.
+
+"My country and yours," said she.
+
+"This is my day for discoveries, I think," said I, "for I always thought
+the name of it was Scotland."
+
+"Scotland is the name of what you call Ireland," she replied. "But the
+old ancient true name of this place that we have our foot-soles on, and
+that our bones are made of, will be Alban. It was Alban they called it
+when our forefathers will be fighting for it against Rome and Alexander;
+and it is called so still in your own tongue that you forget."
+
+"Troth," said I, "and that I never learned!" For I lacked heart to take
+her up about the Macedonian.
+
+"But your fathers and mothers talked it, one generation with another,"
+said she. "And it was sung about the cradles before you or me were ever
+dreamed of; and your name remembers it still. Ah, if you could talk that
+language you would find me another girl. The heart speaks in that
+tongue."
+
+I had a meal with the two ladies, all very good, served in fine old
+plate, and the wine excellent, for it seems that Mrs. Ogilvy was rich.
+Our talk, too, was pleasant enough; but as soon as I saw the sun decline
+sharply and the shadows to run out long, I rose to take my leave. For my
+mind was now made up to say farewell to Alan; and it was needful I
+should see the trysting wood, and reconnoitre it, by daylight. Catriona
+came with me as far as to the garden gate.
+
+"It is long till I see you now?" she asked.
+
+"It is beyond my judging," I replied. "It will be long, it may be
+never."
+
+"It may be so," said she. "And you are sorry?"
+
+I bowed my head, looking upon her.
+
+"So am I, at all events," said she. "I have seen you but a small time,
+but I put you very high. You are true, you are brave; in time I think
+you will be more of a man yet. I will be proud to hear of that. If you
+should speed worse, if it will come to fall as we are afraid--O well!
+think you have the one friend. Long after you are dead and me an old
+wife, I will be telling the bairns about David Balfour, and my tears
+running. I will be telling how we parted, and what I said to you, and
+did to you. _God go with you and guide you, prays your little friend_:
+so I said--I will be telling them--and here is what I did."
+
+She took up my hand and kissed it. This so surprised my spirits that I
+cried out like one hurt. The colour came strong in her face, and she
+looked at me and nodded.
+
+"O yes, Mr. David," said she, "that is what I think of you. The heart
+goes with the lips."
+
+I could read in her face high spirit, and a chivalry like a brave
+child's; not anything besides. She kissed my hand, as she had kissed
+Prince Charlie's, with a higher passion than the common kind of clay has
+any sense of. Nothing before had taught me how deep I was her lover, nor
+how far I had yet to climb to make her think of me in such a character.
+Yet I could tell myself I had advanced some way, and that her heart had
+beat and her blood flowed at thoughts of me.
+
+After that honour she had done me I could offer no more trivial
+civility. It was even hard for me to speak; a certain lifting in her
+voice had knocked directly at the door of my own tears.
+
+"I praise God for your kindness, dear," said I. "Farewell, my little
+friend!" giving her that name which she had given to herself; with which
+I bowed and left her.
+
+My way was down the glen of the Leith River, towards Stockbridge and
+Silvermills. A path led in the foot of it, the water bickered and sang
+in the midst; the sunbeams overhead struck out of the west among long
+shadows and (as the valley turned) made like a new scene and a new world
+of it at every corner. With Catriona behind and Alan before me, I was
+like one lifted up. The place besides, and the hour, and the talking of
+the water, infinitely pleased me; and I lingered in my steps and looked
+before and behind me as I went. This was the cause, under providence,
+that I spied a little in my rear a red head among some bushes.
+
+Anger sprang in my heart, and I turned straight about and walked at a
+stiff pace to where I came from. The path lay close by the bushes where
+I had remarked the head. The cover came to the wayside, and as I passed
+I was all strung up to meet and to resist an onfall. No such thing
+befell, I went by unmeddled with; and at that fear increased upon me. It
+was still day indeed, but the place exceeding solitary. If my haunters
+had let slip that fair occasion I could but judge they aimed at
+something more than David Balfour. The lives of Alan and James weighed
+upon my spirit with the weight of two grown bullocks.
+
+Catriona was yet in the garden walking by herself.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "you see me back again."
+
+"With a changed face," said she.
+
+"I carry two men's lives besides my own," said I. "It would be a sin and
+a shame not to walk carefully. I was doubtful whether I did right to
+come here. I would like it ill, if it was by that means we were brought
+to harm."
+
+"I could tell you one that would be liking it less, and will like little
+enough to hear you talking at this very same time," she cried. "What
+have I done, at all events?"
+
+"O, you! you are not alone," I replied. "But since I went off I have
+been dogged again, and I can give you the name of him that follows me.
+It is Neil, son of Duncan, your man or your father's."
+
+"To be sure you are mistaken there," she said, with a white face. "Neil
+is in Edinburgh on errands from my father."
+
+"It is what I fear," said I, "the last of it. But for his being in
+Edinburgh I think I can show you another of that. For sure you have some
+signal, a signal of need, such as would bring him to your help, if he
+was anywhere within the reach of ears and legs?"
+
+"Why, how will you know that?" says she.
+
+"By means of a magical talisman God gave to me when I was born, and the
+name they call it by is Common-sense," said I. "Oblige me so far as to
+make your signal, and I will show you the red head of Neil."
+
+No doubt but I spoke bitter and sharp. My heart was bitter. I blamed
+myself and the girl and hated both of us: her for the vile crew that she
+was come of, myself for my wanton folly to have stuck my head in such a
+byke of wasps.
+
+Catriona set her fingers to her lips and whistled once, with an
+exceeding clear, strong, mounting note, as full as a ploughman's. A
+while we stood silent; and I was about to ask her to repeat the same,
+when I heard the sound of some one bursting through the bushes below on
+the braeside. I pointed in that direction with a smile, and presently
+Neil leaped into the garden. His eyes burned, and he had a black knife
+(as they call it on the Highland side) naked in his hand; but, seeing me
+beside his mistress, stood like a man struck.
+
+"He has come to your call," said I; "judge how near he was to Edinburgh,
+or what was the nature of your father's errands. Ask himself. If I am to
+lose my life, or the lives of those that hang by me, through the means
+of your clan, let me go where I have to go with my eyes open."
+
+She addressed him tremulously in the Gaelic. Remembering Alan's anxious
+civility in that particular, I could have laughed out loud for
+bitterness; here, sure, in the midst of these suspicions, was the hour
+she should have stuck by English.
+
+Twice or thrice they spoke together, and I could make out that Neil (for
+all his obsequiousness) was an angry man.
+
+Then she turned to me. "He swears it is not," she said.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "do you believe the man yourself?"
+
+She made a gesture like wringing the hands.
+
+"How will I can know?" she cried.
+
+"But I must find some means to know," said I. "I cannot continue to go
+dovering round in the black night with two men's lives at my girdle!
+Catriona, try to put yourself in my place, as I vow to God I try hard to
+put myself in yours. This is no kind of talk that should ever have
+fallen between me and you; no kind of talk; my heart is sick with it.
+See, keep him here till two of the morning, and I care not. Try him with
+that."
+
+They spoke together once more in the Gaelic.
+
+"He says he has James More my father's errand," said she. She was whiter
+than ever, and her voice faltered as she said it.
+
+"It is pretty plain now," said I, "and may God forgive the wicked!"
+
+She said never anything to that, but continued gazing at me with the
+same white face.
+
+"This is a fine business," said I again. "Am I to fall, then, and those
+two along with me?"
+
+"O, what am I to do?" she cried. "Could I go against my father's orders,
+and him in prison, in the danger of his life?"
+
+"But perhaps we go too fast," said I. "This may be a lie too. He may
+have no right orders; all may be contrived by Symon, and your father
+knowing nothing."
+
+She burst out weeping between the pair of us; and my heart smote me
+hard, for I thought this girl was in a dreadful situation.
+
+"Here," said I, "keep him but the one hour; and I'll chance it, and say
+God bless you."
+
+She put out her hand to me. "I will be needing one good word," she
+sobbed.
+
+"The full hour, then?" said I, keeping her hand in mine. "Three lives of
+it, my lass!"
+
+"The full hour!" she said, and cried aloud on her Redeemer to forgive
+her.
+
+I thought it no fit place for me, and fled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS
+
+
+I lost no time, but down through the valley and by Stockbrig and
+Silvermills as hard as I could stave. It was Alan's tryst to lie every
+night between twelve and two "in a bit scrog of wood by east of
+Silvermills and by south the south mill-lade." This I found easy enough,
+where it grew on a steep brae, with the mill-lade flowing swift and deep
+along the foot of it; and here I began to walk slower and to reflect
+more reasonably on my employment. I saw I had made but a fool's bargain
+with Catriona. It was not to be supposed that Neil was sent alone upon
+his errand, but perhaps he was the only man belonging to James More; in
+which case, I should have done all I could to hang Catriona's father,
+and nothing the least material to help myself. To tell the truth, I
+fancied neither one of these ideas. Suppose, by holding back Neil, the
+girl should have helped to hang her father, I thought she would never
+forgive herself this side of time. And suppose there were others
+pursuing me that moment, what kind of a gift was I come bringing to
+Alan? and how would I like that?
+
+I was up with the west end of that wood when these two considerations
+struck me like a cudgel. My feet stopped of themselves and my heart
+along with them. "What wild game is this that I have been playing?"
+thought I; and turned instantly upon my heels to go elsewhere.
+
+This brought my face to Silvermills; the path came past the village with
+a crook, but all plainly visible; and, Highland or Lowland, there was
+nobody stirring. Here was my advantage, here was just such a conjuncture
+as Stewart had counselled me to profit by, and I ran by the side of the
+mill-lade, fetched about beyond the east corner of the wood, threaded
+through the midst of it, and returned to the west selvage, whence I
+could again command the path, and yet be myself unseen. Again it was all
+empty, and my heart began to rise.
+
+For more than an hour I sat close in the border of the trees, and no
+hare or eagle could have kept a more particular watch. When that hour
+began the sun was already set, but the sky still all golden and the
+daylight clear; before the hour was done it had fallen to be half mirk,
+the images and distances of things were mingled, and observation began
+to be difficult. All that time not a foot of man had come east from
+Silvermills, and the few that had gone west were honest countryfolk and
+their wives upon the road to bed. If I were tracked by the most cunning
+spies in Europe, I judged it was beyond the course of nature they could
+have any jealousy of where I was; and going a little further home into
+the wood I lay down to wait for Alan.
+
+The strain of my attention had been great, for I had watched not the
+path only, but every bush and field within my vision. That was now at an
+end. The moon, which was in her first quarter, glinted a little in the
+wood; all round there was a stillness of the country; and as I lay there
+on my back, the next three or four hours, I had a fine occasion to
+review my conduct.
+
+Two things became plain to me first: that I had had no right to go that
+day to Dean, and (having gone there) had now no right to be lying where
+I was. This (where Alan was to come) was just the one wood in all broad
+Scotland that was, by every proper feeling, closed against me; I
+admitted that, and yet stayed on, wondering at myself. I thought of the
+measure with which I had meted to Catriona that same night; how I had
+prated of the two lives I carried, and had thus forced her to enjeopardy
+her father's; and how I was here exposing them again, it seemed in
+wantonness. A good conscience is eight parts of courage. No sooner had I
+lost conceit of my behaviour, than I seemed to stand disarmed amidst a
+throng of terrors. Of a sudden I sat up. How if I went now to
+Prestongrange, caught him (as I still easily might) before he slept, and
+made a full submission? Who could blame me? Not Stewart the writer; I
+had but to say that I was followed, despaired of getting clear, and so
+gave in. Not Catriona: here, too, I had my answer ready; that I could
+not bear she should expose her father. So, in a moment, I could lay all
+these troubles by, which were after all and truly none of mine; swim
+clear of the Appin murder; get forth out of handstroke of all the
+Stewarts and Campbells, all the whigs and tories, in the land; and live
+thenceforth to my own mind, and be able to enjoy and to improve my
+fortunes, and devote some hours of my youth to courting Catriona, which
+would be surely a more suitable occupation than to hide and run and be
+followed like a hunted thief, and begin over again the dreadful miseries
+of my escape with Alan.
+
+At first I thought no shame of this capitulation; I was only amazed I
+had not thought upon the thing and done it earlier; and began to inquire
+into the causes of the change. These I traced to my lowness of spirits,
+that back to my late recklessness, and that again to the common, old,
+public, disconsidered sin of self-indulgence. Instantly the text came in
+my head, "_How can Satan cast out Satan?_" What? (I thought) I had, by
+self-indulgence, and the following of pleasant paths, and the lure of a
+young maid, cast myself wholly out of conceit with my own character, and
+jeopardised the lives of James and Alan? And I was to seek the way out
+by the same road as I had entered in? No; the hurt that had been caused
+by self-indulgence must be cured by self-denial; the flesh I had
+pampered must be crucified. I looked about me for that course which I
+least liked to follow: this was to leave the wood without waiting to see
+Alan, and go forth again alone, in the dark and in the midst of my
+perplexed and dangerous fortunes.
+
+I have been the more careful to narrate this passage of my reflections,
+because I think it is of some utility, and may serve as an example to
+young men. But there is reason (they say) in planting kale, and even in
+ethic and religion, room for common sense. It was already close on
+Alan's hour, and the moon was down. If I left (as I could not very
+decently whistle to my spies to follow me) they might miss me in the
+dark and tack themselves to Alan by mistake. If I stayed, I could at the
+least of it set my friend upon his guard which might prove his mere
+salvation. I had adventured other peoples' safety in a course of
+self-indulgence; to have endangered them again, and now on a mere design
+of penance, would have been scarce rational. Accordingly, I had scarce
+risen from my place ere I sat down again, but already in a different
+frame of spirits, and equally marvelling at my past weakness and
+rejoicing in my present composure.
+
+Presently after came a crackling in the thicket. Putting my mouth near
+down to the ground, I whistled a note or two of Alan's air; an answer
+came, in the like guarded tone, and soon we had thralled together in the
+dark.
+
+"Is this you at last, Davie?" he whispered.
+
+"Just myself," said I.
+
+"God, man, but I've been wearying to see ye!" says he. "I've had the
+longest kind of a time. A' day, I've had my dwelling into the inside of
+a stack of hay, where I couldnae see the nebs of my ten fingers; and
+then two hours of it waiting here for you, and you never coming! Dod,
+and ye're none too soon the way it is, with me to sail the morn! The
+morn? what am I saying?--the day, I mean."
+
+"Ay, Alan, man, the day, sure enough," said I. "It's past twelve now,
+surely, and ye sail the day. This'll be a long road you have before
+you."
+
+"We'll have a long crack of it first," said he.
+
+"Well, indeed, and I have a good deal it will be telling you to hear,"
+said I.
+
+And I told him what behooved, making rather a jumble of it, but clear
+enough when done. He heard me out with very few questions, laughing here
+and there like a man delighted: and the sound of his laughing (above all
+there, in the dark, where neither one of us could see the other) was
+extraordinary friendly to my heart.
+
+"Ay, Davie, ye're a queer character," says he, when I had done: "a queer
+bitch after a', and I have no mind of meeting with the like of ye. As
+for your story, Prestongrange is a Whig like yoursel', so I'll say the
+less of him; and, dod! I believe he was the best friend ye had, if ye
+could only trust him. But Symon Fraser and James More are my ain kind of
+cattle, and I'll give them the name that they deserve. The muckle black
+de'il was father to the Frasers, a'body kens that; and as for the
+Gregara, I never could abye the reek of them since I could stotter on
+two feet. I bloodied the nose of one, I mind, when I was still so wambly
+on my legs that I cowped upon the top of him. A proud man was my father
+that day, God rest him! and I think he had the cause. I'll never can
+deny but what Robin was something of a piper," he added; "but as for
+James More, the de'il guide him for me!"
+
+"One thing we have to consider," said I. "Was Charles Stewart right or
+wrong? Is it only me they're after, or the pair of us?"
+
+"And what's your ain opinion, you that's a man of so much experience?"
+said he.
+
+"It passes me," said I.
+
+"And me too," says Alan. "Do ye think this lass would keep her word to
+ye?" he asked.
+
+"I do that," said I.
+
+"Well, there's nae telling," said he. "And anyway, that's over and done:
+he'll be joined to the rest of them lang syne."
+
+"How many would ye think there would be of them?" I asked.
+
+"That depends," said Alan. "If it was only you, they would likely send
+two-three lively, brisk young birkies, and if they thought that I was to
+appear in the employ, I daresay ten or twelve," said he.
+
+It was no use, I gave a little crack of laughter.
+
+"And I think your own two eyes will have seen me drive that number, or
+the double of it, nearer hand!" cries he.
+
+"It matters the less," said I, "because I am well rid of them for this
+time."
+
+"Nae doubt that's your opinion," said he; "but I wouldnae be the least
+surprised if they were hunkering this wood. Ye see, David man, they'll
+be Hieland folk. There'll be some Frasers, I'm thinking, and some of the
+Gregara; and I would never deny but what the both of them, and the
+Gregara in especial, were clever experienced persons. A man kens little
+till he's driven a spreagh of neat cattle (say) ten miles through a
+throng lowland country and the black soldiers maybe at his tail. It's
+there that I learned a great part of my penetration. And ye need nae
+tell me: it's better than war; which is the next best, however, though
+generally rather a bauchle of a business. Now the Gregara have had grand
+practice."
+
+"No doubt that's a branch of education that was left out with me," said
+I.
+
+"And I can see the marks of it upon ye constantly," said Alan. "But
+that's the strange thing about you folk of the college learning: ye're
+ignorant, and ye cannae see 't. Wae's me for my Greek and Hebrew; but,
+man, I ken that I dinnae ken them--there's the differ of it. Now, here's
+you. Ye lie on your wame a bittie in the bield of this wood, and ye tell
+me that ye've cuist off these Frasers and Macgregors. Why! _Because I
+couldnae see them_, says you. Ye blockhead, that's their livelihood."
+
+"Take the worst of it," said I, "and what are we to do?"
+
+"I am thinking of that same," said he. "We might twine. It wouldnae be
+greatly to my taste; and forbye that, I see reasons against it. First,
+it's now unco dark, and it's just humanly possible we might give them
+the clean slip. If we keep together, we make but the ae line of it; if
+we gang separate, we make twae of them: the more likelihood to stave in
+upon some of these gentry of yours. And then, second, if they keep the
+track of us, it may come to a fecht for it yet, Davie; and then, I'll
+confess I would be blythe to have you at my oxter, and I think you would
+be none the worse of having me at yours. So, by my way of it, we should
+creep out of this wood no further gone than just the inside of next
+minute, and hold away east for Gillane, where I'm to find my ship. It'll
+be like old days while it lasts, Davie; and (come the time) we'll have
+to think what you should be doing. I'm wae to leave ye here, wanting
+me."
+
+"Have with ye, then!" says I. "Do ye gang back where you were stopping."
+
+"De'il a fear!" said Alan. "They were good folks to me, but I think they
+would be a good deal disappointed if they saw my bonny face again. For
+(the way times go) I amnae just what ye could call a Walcome Guest.
+Which makes me the keener for your company, Mr. David Balfour of the
+Shaws, and set ye up! For, leave aside twa cracks here in the wood with
+Charlie Stewart, I have scarce said black or white since the day we
+parted at Corstorphine."
+
+With which he rose from his place, and we began to move quietly eastward
+through the wood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN
+
+
+It was likely between one and two; the moon (as I have said) was down; a
+strongish wind, carrying a heavy wrack of cloud, had set in suddenly
+from the west; and we began our movement in as black a night as ever a
+fugitive or a murderer wanted. The whiteness of the path guided us into
+the sleeping town of Broughton, thence through Picardy, and beside my
+old acquaintance the gibbet of the two thieves. A little beyond we made
+a useful beacon, which was a light in an upper window of Lochend.
+Steering by this, but a good deal at random, and with some trampling of
+the harvest, and stumbling and falling down upon the banks, we made our
+way across country, and won forth at last upon the linky, boggy muirland
+that they call the Figgate Whins. Here, under a bush of whin, we lay
+down the remainder of that night and slumbered.
+
+The day called us about five. A beautiful morning it was, the high
+westerly wind still blowing strong, but the clouds all blown away to
+Europe. Alan was already sitting up and smiling to himself. It was my
+first sight of my friend since we were parted, and I looked upon him
+with enjoyment. He had still the same big great-coat on his back; but
+(what was new) he had now a pair of knitted boot-hose drawn above the
+knee. Doubtless these were intended for disguise; but, as the day
+promised to be warm, he made a most unseasonable figure.
+
+"Well, Davie," said he, "is this no a bonny morning? Here is a day that
+looks the way that a day ought to. This is a great change of it from the
+belly of my haystack; and while you were there sottering and sleeping I
+have done a thing that maybe I do over seldom."
+
+"And what was that?" said I.
+
+"O, just said my prayers," said he.
+
+"And where are my gentry, as ye call them?" I asked.
+
+"Gude kens," says he; "and the short and the long of it is that we must
+take our chance of them. Up with your foot-soles, Davie! Forth, Fortune,
+once again of it! And a bonny walk we are like to have."
+
+So we went east by the beach of the sea, towards where the salt-pans
+were smoking in by the Esk mouth. No doubt there was a by-ordinary bonny
+blink of morning sun on Arthur's Seat and the green Pentlands; and the
+pleasantness of the day appeared to set Alan among nettles.
+
+"I feel like a gomeral," says he, "to be leaving Scotland on a day like
+this. It sticks in my head; I would maybe like it better to stay here
+and hing."
+
+"Ay, but ye wouldnae, Alan," said I.
+
+"No but what France is a good place too," he explained; "but it's some
+way no the same. It's brawer, I believe, but it's no Scotland. I like it
+fine when I'm there, man; yet I kind of weary for Scots divots and the
+Scots peat-reek."
+
+"If that's all you have to complain of, Alan, it's no such great
+affair," said I.
+
+"And it sets me ill to be complaining, whatever," said he, "and me but
+new out of yon de'il's haystack."
+
+"And so you were unco' weary of your haystack?" I asked.
+
+"Weary's nae word for it," said he. "I'm not just precisely a man that's
+easily cast down; but I do better with caller air and the lift above my
+head. I'm like the auld Black Douglas (wasnae't?) that likit better to
+hear the laverock sing than the mouse cheep. And yon place, ye see,
+Davie--whilk was a very suitable place to hide in, as I'm free to
+own--was pit mirk from dawn to gloaming. There were days (or nights, for
+how would I tell one from other?) that seemed to me as long as a long
+winter."
+
+"How did you know the hour to bide your tryst?" I asked.
+
+"The goodman brought me my meat and a drop brandy, and a candle-dowp to
+eat it by, about eleeven," said he. "So, when I had swallowed a bit, it
+would be time to be getting to the wood. There I lay and wearied for ye
+sore, Davie," says he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "and guessed when
+the two hours would be about by--unless Charlie Stewart would come and
+tell me on his watch--and then back to the dooms haystack. Na, it was a
+driech employ, and praise the Lord that I have warstled through with
+it!"
+
+"What did you do with yourself?" I asked.
+
+"Faith," said he, "the best I could! Whiles I played at the
+knucklebones. I'm an extraordinar good hand at the knucklebones, but
+it's a poor piece of business playing with naebody to admire ye. And
+whiles I would make songs."
+
+"What were they about?" says I.
+
+"O, about the deer and the heather," says he, "and about the ancient old
+chiefs that are all by with it long syne, and just about what songs are
+about in general. And then whiles I would make believe I had a set of
+pipes and I was playing. I played some grand springs, and I thought I
+played them awful bonny; I vow whiles that I could hear the squeal of
+them! But the great affair is that it's done with."
+
+With that he carried me again to my adventures, which he heard all over
+again with more particularity, and extraordinary approval, swearing at
+intervals that I was "a queer character of a callant."
+
+"So ye were frich'ened of Sym Fraser?" he asked once.
+
+"In troth was I!" cried I.
+
+"So would I have been, Davie," said he. "And that is indeed a dreidful
+man. But it is only proper to give the de'il his due; and I can tell you
+he is a most respectable person on the field of war."
+
+"Is he so brave?" I asked.
+
+"Brave!" said he. "He is as brave as my steel sword."
+
+The story of my duel set him beside himself.
+
+"To think of that!" he cried. "I showed ye the trick in Corrynakiegh
+too. And three times--three times disarmed! It's a disgrace upon my
+character that learned ye! Here, stand up, out with your airn; ye shall
+walk no step beyond this place upon the road till ye can do yoursel' and
+me mair credit."
+
+"Alan," said I, "this is midsummer madness. Here is no time for fencing
+lessons."
+
+"I cannae well say no to that," he admitted. "But three times, man! And
+you standing there like a straw bogle and rinning to fetch your ain
+sword like a doggie with a pocket-napkin! David, this man Duncansby must
+be something altogether by-ordinar! He maun be extraordinar skilly. If I
+had the time, I would gang straight back and try a turn at him mysel'.
+The man must be a provost."
+
+"You silly fellow," said I, "you forget it was just me."
+
+"Na," said he, "but three times!"
+
+"When ye ken yourself that I am fair incompetent," I cried.
+
+"Well, I never heard tell the equal of it," said he.
+
+"I promise you the one thing, Alan," said I. "The next time that we
+forgather, I'll be better learned. You shall not continue to bear the
+disgrace of a friend that cannot strike."
+
+"Ay, the next time!" says he. "And when will that be, I would like to
+ken?"
+
+"Well, Alan, I have had some thoughts of that, too," said I; "and my
+plan is this. It's my opinion to be called an advocate."
+
+"That's but a weary trade, Davie," says Alan, "and rather a blagyard one
+forby. Ye would be better in a king's coat than that."
+
+"And no doubt that would be the way to have us meet," cried I. "But as
+you'll be in King Lewie's coat, and I'll be in King Geordie's, we'll
+have a dainty meeting of it."
+
+"There's some sense in that," he admitted.
+
+"An advocate, then, it'll have to be," I continued, "and I think it a
+more suitable trade for a gentleman that was _three times_ disarmed. But
+the beauty of the thing is this: that one of the best colleges for that
+kind of learning--and the one where my kinsman, Pilrig, made his
+studies--is the college of Leyden in Holland. Now, what say you, Alan?
+Could not a cadet of _Royal Ecossais_ get a furlough, slip over the
+marches, and call in upon a Leyden student!"
+
+"Well, and I would think he could!" cried he. "Ye see, I stand well in
+with my colonel, Count Drummond-Melfort; and, what's mair to the
+purpose, I have a cousin of mine lieutenant-colonel in a regiment of the
+Scots-Dutch. Naething could be mair proper than what I would get a leave
+to see Lieutenant-Colonel Stewart of Halkett's. And Lord Melfort, who is
+a very scienteefic kind of a man, and writes books like Cæsar, would be
+doubtless very pleased to have the advantage of my observes."
+
+"Is Lord Melfort an author, then?" I asked, for much as Alan thought of
+soldiers, I thought more of the gentry that write books.
+
+"The very same, Davie," said he. "One would think a colonel would have
+something better to attend to. But what can I say that make songs?"
+
+"Well, then," said I, "it only remains you should give me an address to
+write you at in France; and as soon as I am got to Leyden I will send
+you mine."
+
+"The best will be to write me in the care of my chieftain," said he,
+"Charles Stewart, of Ardsheil, Esquire, at the town of Melons, in the
+Isle of France. It might take long, or it might take short, but it would
+aye get to my hands at the last of it."
+
+We had a haddock to our breakfast in Musselburgh, where it amused me
+vastly to hear Alan. His great-coat and boot-hose were extremely
+remarkable this warm morning, and perhaps some hint of an explanation
+had been wise; but Alan went into that matter like a business, or I
+should rather say, like a diversion. He engaged the goodwife of the
+house with some compliments upon the rizzoring of our haddocks; and the
+whole of the rest of our stay held her in talk about a cold he had taken
+on his stomach, gravely relating all manner of symptoms and sufferings,
+and hearing with a vast show of interest all the old wives' remedies she
+could supply him with in return.
+
+We left Musselburgh before the first ninepenny coach was due from
+Edinburgh, for (as Alan said) that was a rencounter we might very well
+avoid. The wind, although still high, was very mild, the sun shone
+strong, and Alan began to suffer in proportion. From Prestonpans he had
+me aside to the field of Gladsmuir, where he exerted himself a great
+deal more than needful to describe the stages of the battle. Thence, at
+his old round pace, we travelled to Cockenzie. Though they were building
+herring-busses there at Mrs. Cadell's, it seemed a desert-like,
+back-going town, about half full of ruined houses; but the ale-house was
+clean, and Alan, who was now in a glowing heat, must indulge himself
+with a bottle of ale, and carry on to the new luckie with the old story
+of the cold upon his stomach, only now the symptoms were all different.
+
+I sat listening; and it came in my mind that I had scarce ever heard him
+address three serious words to any woman, but he was always drolling and
+fleering and making a private mock of them, and yet brought to that
+business a remarkable degree of energy and interest. Something to this
+effect I remarked to him, when the good wife (as chanced) was called
+away.
+
+"What do ye want?" says he. "A man should aye put his best foot forrit
+with the womenkind; he should aye give them a bit of a story to divert
+them, the poor lambs! It's what ye should learn to attend to, David; ye
+should get the principles, it's like a trade. Now, if this had been a
+young lassie, or onyways bonnie, she would never have heard tell of my
+stomach, Davie. But aince they're too old to be seeking joes, they a'
+set up to be apotecaries. Why? What do I ken? They'll be just the way
+God made them, I suppose. But I think a man would be a gomeral that
+didnae give his attention to the same."
+
+And here, the luckie coming back, he turned from me as if with
+impatience to renew their former conversation. The lady had branched
+some while before from Alan's stomach to the case of a goodbrother of
+her own in Aberlady, whose last sickness and demise she was describing
+at extraordinary length. Sometimes it was merely dull, sometimes both
+dull and awful, for she talked with unction. The upshot was that I fell
+in a deep muse, looking forth of the window on the road, and scarce
+marking what I saw. Presently had any been looking they might have seen
+me to start.
+
+"We pit a fomentation to his feet," the goodwife was saying, "and a het
+stane to his wame, and we gied him hyssop and water of pennyroyal, and
+fine, clean balsam of sulphur for the hoast...."
+
+"Sir," says I, cutting very quietly in, "there's a friend of mine gone
+by the house."
+
+"Is that e'en sae?" replies Alan, as though it were a thing of
+small-account. And then, "Ye were saying, mem?" says he; and the
+wearyful wife went on.
+
+Presently, however, he paid her with a half-crown piece, and she must go
+forth after the change.
+
+"Was it him with the red head?" asked Alan.
+
+"Ye have it," said I.
+
+"What did I tell you in the wood?" he cried. "And yet it's strange he
+should be here too! Was he his lane?"
+
+"His lee-lane for what I could see," said I.
+
+"Did he gang by?" he asked.
+
+"Straight by," said I, "and looked neither to the right nor left."
+
+"And that's queerer yet," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind, Davie, that
+we should be stirring. But where to?--deil hae't! This is like old days
+fairly," cries he.
+
+"There is one big differ, though," said I, "that now we have money in
+our pockets."
+
+"And another big differ, Mr. Balfour," says he, "that now we have dogs
+at our tail. They're on the scent; they're in full cry, David. It's a
+bad business and be damned to it." And he sat thinking hard with a look
+of his that I knew well.
+
+"I'm saying, Luckie," says he, when the goodwife returned, "have ye a
+back road out of this change house?"
+
+She told him there was and where it led to.
+
+"Then, sir," says he to me, "I think that will be the shortest road for
+us. And here's good-bye to ye, my braw woman; and I'll no forget thon of
+the cinnamon water."
+
+We went out by way of the woman's kale yard, and up a lane among fields.
+Alan looked sharply to all sides, and seeing we were in a little hollow
+place of the country, out of view of men, sat down.
+
+"Now for a council of war, Davie," said he. "But first of all, a bit
+lesson to ye. Suppose that I had been like you, what would yon old wife
+have minded of the pair of us? Just that we had gone out by the back
+gate. And what does she mind now? A fine, canty, friendly, cracky man,
+that suffered with the stomach, poor body! and was real ta'en up about
+the goodbrother. O man, David, try and learn to have some kind of
+intelligence!"
+
+"I'll try, Alan," said I.
+
+"And now for him of the red head," says he; "was he gaun fast or slow?"
+
+"Betwixt and between," said I.
+
+"No kind of a hurry about the man?" he asked.
+
+"Never a sign of it," said I.
+
+"Nhm!" said Alan, "it looks queer. We saw nothing of them this morning
+on the Whins; he's passed us by, he doesnae seem to be looking, and yet
+here he is on our road! Dod, Davie, I begin to take a notion. I think
+it's no you they're seeking, I think it's me; and I think they ken fine
+where they're gaun."
+
+"They ken?" I asked.
+
+"I think Andie Scougal's sold me--him or his mate wha kent some part of
+the affair--or else Chairlie's clerk callant, which would be a pity
+too," says Alan; "and if you askit me for just my inward private
+conviction, I think there'll be heads cracked on Gillane sands."
+
+"Alan," I cried, "if you're at all right there'll be folk there and to
+spare. It'll be small service to crack heads."
+
+"It would aye be a satisfaction though," says Alan. "But bide a bit,
+bide a bit; I'm thinking--and thanks to this bonny westland wind, I
+believe I've still a chance of it. It's this way, Davie. I'm no trysted
+with this man Scougal till the gloaming comes. _But_," says he, "_if I
+can get a bit of a wind out of the west I'll be there long or that_," he
+says, "_and lie-to for ye behind the Isle of Fidra_. Now if your gentry
+kens the place, they ken the time forbye. Do ye see me coming, Davie?
+Thanks to Johnnie Cope and other red-coat gomerals, I should ken this
+country like the back of my hand; and if ye're ready for another bit run
+with Alan Breck, we'll can cast back inshore, and come down to the
+seaside again by Dirleton. If the ship's there, we'll try and get on
+board of her. If she's no there, I'll just have to get back to my weary
+haystack. But either way of it, I think we will leave your gentry
+whistling on their thumbs."
+
+"I believe there's some chance in it," said I. "Have on with ye, Alan!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+GILLANE SANDS
+
+
+I did not profit by Alan's pilotage as he had done by his marchings
+under General Cope; for I can scarce tell what way we went. It is my
+excuse that we travelled exceeding fast. Some part we ran, some trotted,
+and the rest walked at a vengeance of a pace. Twice, while we were at
+top speed, we ran against country-folk; but though we plumped into the
+first from round a corner, Alan was as ready as a loaded musket.
+
+"Hae ye seen my horse?" he gasped.
+
+"Na, man, I haenae seen nae horse the day," replied the countryman.
+
+And Alan spared the time to explain to him that we were travelling "ride
+and tie"; that our charger had escaped, and it was feared he had gone
+home to Linton. Not only that, but he expended some breath (of which he
+had not very much left) to curse his own misfortune and my stupidity
+which was said to be its cause.
+
+"Them that cannae tell the truth," he observed to myself as we went on
+again, "should be aye mindfu' to leave an honest, handy lee behind them.
+If folk dinnae ken what ye're doing, Davie, they're terrible taken up
+with it; but if they think they ken, they care nae mair for it than what
+I do for pease porridge."
+
+As we had first made inland, so our road came in the end to lie very
+near due north; the old Kirk of Aberlady for a landmark on the left; on
+the right, the top of the Berwick Law; and it was thus we struck the
+shore again, not far from Dirleton. From North Berwick west to Gillane
+Ness there runs a string of four small islets, Craiglieth, the Lamb,
+Fidra, and Eyebrough, notable by their diversity of size and shape.
+Fidra is the most particular, being a strange grey islet of two humps,
+made the more conspicuous by a piece of ruin; and I mind that (as we
+drew closer to it) by some door or window of these ruins the sea peeped
+through like a man's eye. Under the lee of Fidra there is a good
+anchorage in westerly winds, and there, from a far way off, we could see
+the _Thistle_ riding.
+
+The shore in face of these islets is altogether waste. Here is no
+dwelling of man, and scarce any passage, or at most of vagabond children
+running at their play. Gillane is a small place on the far side of the
+Ness, the folk of Dirleton go to their business in the inland fields,
+and those of North Berwick straight to the sea-fishing from their haven;
+so that few parts of the coast are lonelier. But I mind, as we crawled
+upon our bellies into that multiplicity of heights and hollows, keeping
+a bright eye upon all sides, and our hearts hammering at our ribs, there
+was such a shining of the sun and the sea, such a stir of the wind in
+the bent grass, and such a bustle of down-popping rabbits and up-flying
+gulls, that the desert seemed to me like a place alive. No doubt it was
+in all ways well chosen for a secret embarcation, if the secret had been
+kept; and even now that it was out, and the place watched, we were able
+to creep unperceived to the front of the sandhills, where they look down
+immediately on the beach and sea.
+
+But here Alan came to a full stop.
+
+"Davie," said he, "this is a kittle passage! As long as we lie here
+we're safe; but I'm nane sae muckle nearer to my ship or the coast of
+France. And as soon as we stand up and signal the brig, it's another
+matter. For where will your gentry be, think ye?"
+
+"Maybe they're no come yet," said I. "And even if they are, there's one
+clear matter in our favour. They'll be all arranged to take us, that's
+true. But they'll have arranged for our coming from the east, and here
+we are upon their west."
+
+"Ay," says Alan, "I wish we were in some force, and this was a battle,
+we would have bonnily out-manoeuvred them! But it isnae, Davit; and the
+way it is, is a wee thing less inspiring to Alan Breck. I swither,
+Davie."
+
+"Time flies, Alan," said I.
+
+"I ken that," said Alan. "I ken naething else, as the French folk say.
+But this is a dreidful case of heids or tails. O! if I could but ken
+where your gentry were!"
+
+"Alan," said I, "this is no like you. It's got to be now or never."
+
+ "This is no me, quo' he,"
+
+sang Alan, with a queer face betwixt shame and drollery.
+
+ "Neither you nor me, quo' he, neither you nor me,
+ Wow, na, Johnnie man! neither you nor me."
+
+And then of a sudden he stood straight up where he was, and with a
+handkerchief flying in his right hand, marched down upon the beach. I
+stood up myself, but lingered behind him, scanning the sandhills to the
+east. His appearance was at first unremarked: Scougal not expecting him
+so early, and _my gentry_ watching on the other side. Then they awoke on
+board the _Thistle_, and it seemed they had all in readiness, for there
+was scarce a second's bustle on the deck before we saw a skiff put round
+her stern and begin to pull lively for the coast. Almost at the same
+moment of time, and perhaps half a mile away towards Gillane Ness, the
+figure of a man appeared for a blink upon a sandhill, waving with his
+arms; and though he was gone again in the same flash, the gulls in that
+part continued a little longer to fly wild.
+
+Alan had not seen this, looking straight to seaward at the ship and
+skiff.
+
+"It maun be as it will!" said he, when I had told him. "Weel may yon
+boatie row, or my craig'll have to thole a raxing."
+
+That part of the beach was long and flat, and excellent walking when the
+tide was down; a little cressy burn flowed over it in one place to the
+sea; and the sandhills ran along the head of it like the rampart of a
+town. No eye of ours could spy what was passing behind there in the
+bents, no hurry of ours could mend the speed of the boat's coming: time
+stood still with us through that uncanny period of waiting.
+
+"There is one thing I would like to ken," says Alan. "I would like fine
+to ken these gentry's orders. We're worth four hunner pound the pair of
+us: how if they took the guns to us, Davie? They would get a bonny shot
+from the top of that lang sandy bank."
+
+"Morally impossible," said I. "The point is that they can have no guns.
+This thing has been gone about too secret; pistols they may have, but
+never guns."
+
+"I believe ye'll be in the right," says Alan. "For all which I am
+wearying a good deal for yon boat."
+
+And he snapped his fingers and whistled to it like a dog.
+
+It was now perhaps a third of the way in, and we ourselves already hard
+on the margin of the sea, so that the soft sand rose over my shoes.
+There was no more to do whatever but to wait, to look as much as we were
+able at the creeping nearer of the boat, and as little as we could
+manage at the long impenetrable front of the sandhills, over which the
+gulls twinkled and behind which our enemies were doubtless marshalling.
+
+"This is a fine, bright, caller place to get shot in," says Alan,
+suddenly; "and, man, I wish that I had your courage!"
+
+"Alan!" I cried, "what kind of talk is this of it? You're just made of
+courage; it's the character of the man, as I could prove myself if there
+was nobody else."
+
+"And you would be the more mistaken," said he. "What makes the differ
+with me is just my great penetration and knowledge of affairs. But for
+auld, cauld, dour, deidly courage, I am not fit to hold a candle to
+yourself. Look at us two here upon the sands. Here am I, fair hotching
+to be off; here's you (for all that I ken) in two minds of it whether
+you'll no stop. Do you think that I could do that, or would? No me!
+Firstly, because I havenae got the courage and wouldnae daur; and
+secondly, because I am a man of so much penetration and would see ye
+damned first."
+
+"It's there ye're coming, is it?" I cried. "Ah, man Alan, you can wile
+your old wives, but you never can wile me."
+
+Remembrance of my temptation in the wood made me strong as iron.
+
+"I have a tryst to keep," I continued. "I am trysted with your cousin
+Charlie; I have passed my word."
+
+"Braw trysts that you'll can keep," said Alan. "Ye'll just mistryst
+aince and for a' with the gentry in the bents. And what for?" he went on
+with an extreme threatening gravity. "Just tell me that, my mannie! Are
+ye to be speerited away like Lady Grange? Are they to drive a dirk in
+your inside and bury ye in the bents? Or is it to be the other way, and
+are they to bring ye in with James? Are they folk to be trustit? Would
+ye stick your head in the mouth of Sim Fraser and the ither Whigs?" he
+added with extraordinary bitterness.
+
+"Alan," cried I, "they're all rogues and liars, and I'm with ye there.
+The more reason there should be one decent man in such a land of
+thieves! My word is passed, and I'll stick to it. I said long syne to
+your kinswoman that I would stumble at no risk. Do ye mind of that?--the
+night Red Colin fell, it was. No more I will, then. Here I stop.
+Prestongrange promised me my life; if he's to be mansworn, here I'll
+have to die."
+
+"Aweel, aweel," said Alan.
+
+All this time we had seen or heard no more of our pursuers. In truth we
+had caught them unawares; their whole party (as I was to learn
+afterwards) had not yet reached the scene; what there was of them was
+spread among the bents towards Gillane. It was quite an affair to call
+them in and bring them over, and the boat was making speed. They were
+besides but cowardly fellows: a mere leash of Highland cattle thieves,
+of several clans, no gentleman there to be the captain: and the more
+they looked at Alan and me upon the beach, the less (I must suppose)
+they liked the looks of us.
+
+Whoever had betrayed Alan it was not the captain: he was in the skiff
+himself, steering and stirring up his oarsmen, like a man with his heart
+in his employ. Already he was near in, and the boat scouring--already
+Alan's face had flamed crimson with the excitement of his deliverance,
+when our friends in the bents, either in despair to see their prey
+escape them or with some hope of scaring Andie, raised suddenly a shrill
+cry of several voices.
+
+This sound, arising from what appeared to be a quite deserted coast, was
+really very daunting, and the men in the boat held water instantly.
+
+"What's this of it?" sings out the captain, for he was come within an
+easy hail.
+
+"Freens o' mine," says Alan, and began immediately to wade forth in the
+shallow water towards the boat. "Davie," he said, pausing, "Davie, are
+ye no coming? I am swier to leave ye."
+
+"Not a hair of me," said I.
+
+He stood part of a second where he was to his knees in the salt water,
+hesitating.
+
+"He that will to Cupar, maun to Cupar," said he, and swashing in deeper
+than his waist, was hauled into the skiff, which was immediately
+directed for the ship.
+
+I stood where he had left me, with my hands behind my back; Alan sat
+with his head turned watching me; and the boat drew smoothly away. Of a
+sudden I came the nearest hand to shedding tears, and seemed to myself
+the most deserted, solitary lad in Scotland. With that I turned my back
+upon the sea and faced the sand hills. There was no sight or sound of
+man; the sun shone on the wet sand and the dry, the wind blew in the
+bents, the gulls made a dreary piping. As I passed higher up the beach,
+the sand-lice were hopping nimbly about the stranded tangles. The devil
+any other sight or sound in that unchancy place. And yet I knew there
+were folk there, observing me, upon some secret purpose. They were no
+soldiers, or they would have fallen on and taken us ere now; doubtless
+they were some common rogues hired for my undoing, perhaps to kidnap,
+perhaps to murder me outright. From the position of those engaged, the
+first was the more likely; from what I knew of their character and
+ardency in this business, I thought the second very possible; and the
+blood ran cold about my heart.
+
+I had a mad idea to loosen my sword in the scabbard; for though I was
+very unfit to stand up like a gentleman blade to blade, I thought I
+could do some scathe in a random combat. But I perceived in time the
+folly of resistance. This was no doubt the joint "expedient" on which
+Prestongrange and Fraser were agreed. The first, I was very sure, had
+done something to secure my life; the second was pretty likely to have
+slipped in some contrary hints into the ears of Neil and his companions;
+and if I were to show bare steel I might play straight into the hands of
+my worst enemy and seal my own doom.
+
+These thoughts brought me to the head of the beach. I cast a look
+behind, the boat was nearing the brig, and Alan flew his handkerchief
+for a farewell, which I replied to with the waving of my hand. But Alan
+himself was shrunk to a small thing in my view, alongside of this pass
+that lay in front of me. I set my hat hard on my head, clenched my
+teeth, and went right before me up the face of the sand-wreath. It made
+a hard climb, being steep, and the sand like water underfoot. But I
+caught hold at last by the long bent grass on the brae-top, and pulled
+myself to a good footing. The same moment men stirred and stood up here
+and there, six or seven of them, ragged-like knaves, each with a dagger
+in his hand. The fair truth is, I shut my eyes and prayed. When I opened
+them again, the rogues were crept the least thing nearer without speech
+or hurry. Every eye was upon mine, which struck me with a strange
+sensation of their brightness, and of the fear with which they continued
+to approach me. I held out my hands empty: whereupon one asked, with a
+strong Highland brogue, if I surrendered.
+
+"Under protest," said I, "if ye ken what that means, which I misdoubt."
+
+At that word, they came all in upon me like a flight of birds upon a
+carrion, seized me, took my sword, and all the money from my pockets,
+bound me hand and foot with some strong line, and cast me on a tussock
+of bent. There they sat about their captive in a part of a circle and
+gazed upon him silently like something dangerous, perhaps a lion or a
+tiger on the spring. Presently this attention was relaxed. They drew
+nearer together, fell to speech in the Gaelic, and very cynically
+divided my property before my eyes. It was my diversion in this time
+that I could watch from my place the progress of my friend's escape. I
+saw the boat come to the brig and be hoisted in, the sails fill, and the
+ship pass out seaward behind the isles and by North Berwick.
+
+In the course of two hours or so, more and more ragged Highlandmen kept
+collecting, Neil among the first, until the party must have numbered
+near a score. With each new arrival there was a fresh bout of talk, that
+sounded like complaints and explanations; but I observed one thing, none
+of those that came late had any share in the division of my spoils. The
+last discussion was very violent and eager, so that once I thought they
+would have quarrelled; on the heels of which their company parted, the
+bulk of them returning westward in a troop, and only three, Neil and two
+others, remaining sentries on the prisoner.
+
+"I could name one who would be very ill pleased with your day's work,
+Neil Duncanson," said I, when the rest had moved away.
+
+He assured me in answer I should be tenderly used, for he knew he was
+"acquent wi' the leddy."
+
+This was all our talk, nor did any other son of man appear upon that
+portion of the coast until the sun had gone down among the Highland
+mountains, and the gloaming was beginning to grow dark. At which hour I
+was aware of a long, lean, bony-like Lothian man of a very swarthy
+countenance, that came towards us among the bents on a farm horse.
+
+"Lads," cried he, "hae ye a paper like this?" and held up one in his
+hand. Neil produced a second, which the new comer studied through a pair
+of horn spectacles, and saying all was right and we were the folk he was
+seeking, immediately dismounted. I was then set in his place, my feet
+tied under the horse's belly, and we set forth under the guidance of the
+Lowlander. His path must have been very well chosen, for we met but one
+pair--a pair of lovers--the whole way, and these, perhaps taking us to
+be free-traders, fled on our approach. We were at one time close at the
+foot of Berwick Law on the south side; at another, as we passed over
+some open hills, I spied the lights of a clachan and the old tower of a
+church among some trees not far off, but too far to cry for help, if I
+had dreamed of it. At last we came again within sound of the sea. There
+was moonlight, though not much; and by this I could see the three huge
+towers and broken battlements of Tantallon, that old chief place of the
+Red Douglases. The horse was picketed in the bottom of the ditch to
+graze, and I was led within, and forth into the court, and thence into a
+tumble-down stone hall. Here my conductors built a brisk fire in the
+midst of the pavement, for there was a chill in the night. My hands were
+loosed, I was set by the wall in the inner end, and (the Lowlander
+having produced provisions) I was given oatmeal bread and a pitcher of
+French brandy. This done, I was left once more alone with my three
+Highlandmen. They sat close by the fire drinking and talking; the wind
+blew in by the breaches, cast about the smoke and flames, and sang in
+the tops of the towers; I could hear the sea under the cliffs, and my
+mind being reassured as to my life, and my body and spirits wearied with
+the day's employment, I turned upon one side and slumbered.
+
+I had no means of guessing at what hour I was wakened, only the moon was
+down and the fire low. My feet were now loosed, and I was carried
+through the ruins and down the cliff-side by a precipitous path to where
+I found a fisher's boat in a haven of the rocks. This I was had on board
+of, and we began to put forth from the shore in a fine starlight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE BASS
+
+
+I had no thought where they were taking me; only looked here and there
+for the appearance of a ship; and there ran the while in my head a word
+of Ransome's--the _twenty-pounders_. If I were to be exposed a second
+time to that same former danger of the plantations, I judged it must
+turn ill with me; there was no second Alan, and no second shipwreck and
+spare yard to be expected now; and I saw myself hoe tobacco under the
+whip's lash. The thought chilled me; the air was sharp upon the water,
+the stretchers of the boat drenched with a cold dew; and I shivered in
+my place beside the steersman. This was the dark man whom I have called
+hitherto the Lowlander; his name was Dale, ordinarily called Black
+Andie. Feeling the thrill of my shiver, he very kindly handed me a rough
+jacket full of fish-scales, with which I was glad to cover myself.
+
+"I thank you for this kindness," said I, "and will make so free as to
+repay it with a warning. You take a high responsibility in this affair.
+You are not like these ignorant, barbarous Highlanders, but know what
+the law is and the risks of those that break it."
+
+"I am no just exactly what ye would ca' an extremist for the law," says
+he, "at the best of times; but in this business I act with a good
+warranty."
+
+"What are you going to do with me?" I asked.
+
+"Nae harm," said he, "nae harm ava'. Ye'll hae strong freens, I'm
+thinking. Ye'll be richt eneuch yet."
+
+There began to fall a greyness on the face of the sea; little dabs of
+pink and like coals of slow fire came in the east; and at the same time
+the geese awakened, and began crying about the top of the Bass. It is
+just the one crag of rock, as everybody knows, but great enough to carve
+a city from. The sea was extremely little, but there went a hollow
+plowter round the base of it. With the growing of the dawn I could see
+it clearer and clearer; the straight crags painted with sea-birds'
+droppings like a morning frost, the sloping top of it green with grass,
+the clan of white geese that cried about the sides, and the black,
+broken buildings of the prison sitting close on the sea's edge.
+
+At the sight the truth came in upon me in a clap.
+
+"It's there you're taking me!" I cried.
+
+"Just to the Bass, mannie," said he: "whaur the auld sants were afore
+ye, and I misdoubt if ye have come so fairly by your preeson."
+
+"But none dwells there now," I cried; "the place is long a ruin."
+
+"It'll be the mair pleisand a change for the solan geese, then," quoth
+Andie dryly.
+
+The day coming slowly brighter I observed on the bilge, among the big
+stones with which fisherfolk ballast their boats, several kegs and
+baskets, and a provision of fuel. All these were discharged upon the
+crag. Andie, myself, and my three Highlanders (I call them mine,
+although it was the other way about), landed along with them. The sun
+was not yet up when the boat moved away again, the noise of the oars on
+the thole-pins echoing from the cliffs, and left us in our singular
+reclusion.
+
+Andie Dale was the Prefect (as I would jocularly call him) of the Bass,
+being at once the shepherd and the gamekeeper of that small and rich
+estate. He had to mind the dozen or so of sheep that fed and fattened on
+the grass of the sloping part of it, like beasts grazing the roof of a
+cathedral. He had charge besides of the solan geese that roosted in the
+crags; and from these an extraordinary income is derived. The young are
+dainty eating, as much as two shillings a-piece being a common price,
+and paid willingly by epicures; even the grown birds are valuable for
+their oil and feathers; and a part of the minister's stipend of North
+Berwick is paid to this day in solan geese, which makes it (in some
+folks' eyes) a parish to be coveted. To perform these several
+businesses, as well as to protect the geese from poachers, Andie had
+frequent occasion to sleep and pass days together on the crag; and we
+found the man at home there like a farmer in his steading. Bidding us
+all shoulder some of the packages, a matter in which I made haste to
+bear a hand, he led us in by a locked gate, which was the only admission
+to the island, and through the ruins of the fortress, to the governor's
+house. There we saw, by the ashes in the chimney and a standing
+bed-place in one corner, that he made his usual occupation.
+
+This bed he now offered me to use, saying he supposed I would set up to
+be gentry.
+
+"My gentrice has nothing to do with where I lie," said I. "I bless God I
+have lain hard ere now, and can do the same again with thankfulness.
+While I am here, Mr. Andie, if that be your name, I will do my part and
+take my place beside the rest of you; and I ask you on the other hand to
+spare me your mockery, which I own I like ill."
+
+He grumbled a little at this speech, but seemed upon reflection to
+approve it. Indeed, he was a long-headed, sensible man, and a good Whig
+and Presbyterian; read daily in a pocket Bible, and was both able and
+eager to converse seriously on religion, leaning more than a little
+towards the Cameronian extremes. His morals were of a more doubtful
+colour. I found he was deep in the free trade, and used the ruins of
+Tantallon for a magazine of smuggled merchandise. As for a gauger, I do
+not believe he valued the life of one at half-a-farthing. But that part
+of the coast of Lothian is to this day as wild a place, and the commons
+there as rough a crew as any in Scotland.
+
+One incident of my imprisonment is made memorable by a consequence it
+had long after. There was a warship at this time stationed in the Firth,
+the _Seahorse_, Captain Palliser. It chanced she was cruising in the
+month of September, plying between Fife and Lothian, and sounding for
+sunk dangers. Early one fine morning she was seen about two miles to
+east of us, where she lowered a boat, and seemed to examine the Wildfire
+Rocks and Satan's Bush, famous dangers of that coast. And presently,
+after having got her boat again, she came before the wind and was headed
+directly for the Bass. This was very troublesome to Andie and the
+Highlanders; the whole business of my sequestration was designed for
+privacy, and here, with a navy captain perhaps blundering ashore, it
+looked to become public enough, if it were nothing worse. I was in a
+minority of one, I am no Alan to fall upon so many, and I was far from
+sure that a warship was the least likely to improve my condition. All
+which considered, I gave Andie my parole of good behaviour and
+obedience, and was had briskly to the summit of the rock, where we all
+lay down, at the cliff's edge, in different places of observation and
+concealment. The _Seahorse_ came straight on till I thought she would
+have struck, and we (looking giddily down) could see the ship's company
+at their quarters and hear the leadsman singing at the lead. Then she
+suddenly wore and let fly a volley of I know not how many great guns.
+The rock was shaken with the thunder of the sound, the smoke flowed over
+our heads, and the geese rose in number beyond computation or belief. To
+hear their screaming and to see the twinkling of their wings, made a
+most inimitable curiosity: and I suppose it was after this somewhat
+childish pleasure that Captain Palliser had come so near the Bass. He
+was to pay dear for it in time. During his approach I had the
+opportunity to make a remark upon the rigging of that ship by which I
+ever after knew it miles away; and this was a means (under Providence)
+of my averting from a friend a great calamity, and inflicting on Captain
+Palliser himself a sensible disappointment.
+
+All the time of my stay on the rock we lived well. We had small ale and
+brandy, and oatmeal of which we made our porridge night and morning. At
+times a boat came from the Castleton and brought us a quarter of mutton,
+for the sheep upon the rock we must not touch, these being specially fed
+to market. The geese were unfortunately out of season, and we let them
+be. We fished ourselves, and yet more often made the geese to fish for
+us: observing one when he had made a capture and scaring him from his
+prey ere he had swallowed it.
+
+The strange nature of this place, and the curiosities with which it
+abounded, held me busy and amused. Escape being impossible, I was
+allowed my entire liberty, and continually explored the surface of the
+isle wherever it might support the foot of man. The old garden of the
+prison was still to be observed, with flowers and pot-herbs running
+wild, and some ripe cherries on a bush. A little lower stood a chapel or
+a hermit's cell; who built or dwelt in it, none may know, and the
+thought of its age made a ground of many meditations. The prison too,
+where I now bivouacked with Highland cattle thieves, was a place full of
+history, both human and divine. I thought it strange so many saints and
+martyrs should have gone by there so recently, and left not so much as a
+leaf out of their Bibles, or a name carved upon the wall, while the
+rough soldier lads that mounted guard upon the battlements had filled
+the neighbourhood with their mementoes--broken tobacco-pipes for the
+most part, and that in a surprising plenty, but also metal buttons from
+their coats. There were times when I thought I could have heard the
+pious sound of psalms out of the martyrs' dungeons, and seen the
+soldiers tramp the ramparts with their glinting pipes, and the dawn
+rising behind them out of the North Sea.
+
+No doubt it was a good deal Andie and his tales that put these fancies
+in my head. He was extraordinary well acquainted with the story of the
+rock in all particulars, down to the names of private soldiers, his
+father having served there in that same capacity. He was gifted besides
+with a natural genius for narration, so that the people seemed to speak
+and the things to be done before your face. This gift of his and my
+assiduity to listen brought us the more close together. I could not
+honestly deny but what I liked him; I soon saw that he liked me; and
+indeed, from the first I had set myself out to capture his good will. An
+odd circumstance (to be told presently) effected this beyond my
+expectation; but even in early days we made a friendly pair to be a
+prisoner and his gaoler.
+
+I should trifle with my conscience if I pretended my stay upon the Bass
+was wholly disagreeable. It seemed to me a safe place, as though I was
+escaped there out of my troubles. No harm was to be offered me; a
+material impossibility, rock and the deep sea, prevented me from fresh
+attempts; I felt I had my life safe and my honour safe, and there were
+times when I allowed myself to gloat on them like stolen waters. At
+other times my thoughts were very different. I recalled how strong I had
+expressed myself both to Rankeillor and to Stewart; I reflected that my
+captivity upon the Bass, in view of a great part of the coasts of Fife
+and Lothian, was a thing I should be thought more likely to have
+invented than endured; and in the eyes of these two gentlemen, at least,
+I must pass for a boaster and a coward. Now I would take this lightly
+enough; tell myself that so long as I stood well with Catriona Drummond,
+the opinion of the rest of man was but moonshine and spilled water; and
+thence pass off into those meditations of a lover which are so
+delightful to himself and must always appear so surprisingly idle to a
+reader. But anon the fear would take me otherwise; I would be shaken
+with a perfect panic of self-esteem, and these supposed hard judgments
+appear an injustice impossible to be supported. With that another train
+of thought would be presented, and I had scarce begun to be concerned
+about men's judgments of myself, than I was haunted with the remembrance
+of James Stewart in his dungeon and the lamentations of his wife. Then,
+indeed, passion began to work in me; I could not forgive myself to sit
+there idle; it seemed (if I were a man at all) that I could fly or swim
+out of my place of safety; and it was in such humours and to amuse my
+self-reproaches that I would set the more particularly to win the good
+side of Andie Dale.
+
+At last, when we two were alone on the summit of the rock on a bright
+morning, I put in some hint about a bribe. He looked at me, cast back
+his head, and laughed out loud.
+
+"Ay, you're funny, Mr. Dale," said I, "but perhaps if you glance an eye
+upon that paper you may change your note."
+
+The stupid Highlanders had taken from me at the time of my seizure
+nothing but hard money, and the paper I now showed Andie was an
+acknowledgment from the British Linen Company for a considerable sum.
+
+He read it. "Troth, and ye're nane sae ill aff," said he.
+
+"I thought that would maybe vary your opinions," said I.
+
+"Hout!" said he. "It shaws me ye can bribe; but I'm no to be bribit."
+
+"We'll see about that yet a while," says I. "And first, I'll show you
+that I know what I am talking. You have orders to detain me here till
+Thursday, 21st September."
+
+"Ye're no a'thegether wrong either," says Andie. "I'm to let ye gang,
+bar orders contrair, on Saturday, the 23rd."
+
+I could not but feel there was something extremely insidious in this
+arrangement. That I was to reappear precisely in time to be too late
+would cast the more discredit on my tale, if I were minded to tell one;
+and this screwed me to fighting point.
+
+"Now then, Andie, you that kens the world, listen to me, and think while
+ye listen," said I. "I know there are great folks in the business, and I
+make no doubt you have their names to go upon. I have seen some of them
+myself since this affair began, and said my say into their faces too.
+But what kind of a crime would this be that I had committed? or what
+kind of a process is this that I am fallen under? To be apprehended by
+some ragged John-Hielandmen on August 30th, carried to a rickle of old
+stones that is now neither fort nor gaol (whatever it once was) but just
+the gamekeeper's lodge of the Bass Rock, and set free again, September
+23d, as secretly as I was first arrested--does that sound like law to
+you? or does it sound like justice? or does it not sound honestly like a
+piece of some low dirty intrigue, of which the very folk that meddle
+with it are ashamed?"
+
+"I canna gainsay ye, Shaws. It looks unco underhand," says Andie. "And
+werenae the folk guid sound Whigs and true-blue Presbyterians I would
+hae seen them ayont Jordan and Jeroozlem or I would have set hand to
+it."
+
+"The Master of Lovat'll be a braw Whig," says I, "and a grand
+Presbyterian."
+
+"I ken naething by him," said he. "I hae nae trokings wi' Lovats."
+
+"No, it'll be Prestongrange that you'll be dealing with," said I.
+
+"Ah, but I'll no tell ye that," said Andie.
+
+"Little need when I ken," was my retort.
+
+"There's just the ae thing ye can be fairly sure of, Shaws," says Andie.
+"And that is that (try as ye please) I'm no dealing wi' yoursel'; nor
+yet I amnae goin' to," he added.
+
+"Well, Andie, I see I'll have to be speak out plain with you," I
+replied. And I told him so much as I thought needful of the facts.
+
+He heard me out with serious interest, and when I had done, seemed to
+consider a little with himself.
+
+"Shaws," said he at last, "I deal with the naked hand. It's a queer
+tale, and no vary creditable, the way you tell it; and I'm far frae
+minting that is other than the way that ye believe it. As for yoursel',
+ye seems to me rather a dacent-like young man. But me, that's aulder and
+mair judeecious, see perhaps a wee bit further forrit in the job than
+what ye can dae. And here is the maitter clear and plain to ye. There'll
+be nae skaith to yoursel' if I keep ye here; far frae that, I think
+ye'll be a hantle better by it. There'll be nae skaith to the
+kintry--just ae mair Hielantman hangit--Gude kens, a guid riddance! On
+the ither hand it would be considerable skaith to me if I would let you
+free. Sae, speakin' as a guid Whig, an honest freen' to you, and an
+anxious freen' to my ainsel', the plain fact is that I think ye'll just
+have to bide here wi' Andie an' the solans."
+
+"Andie," said I, laying my hand upon his knee, "this Hielantman's
+innocent."
+
+"Ay, it's a peety about that," said he. "But ye see in this warld, the
+way God made it, we cannae just get a'thing that we want."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+
+
+I have yet said little of the Highlanders. They were all three of the
+followers of James More, which bound the accusation very tight about
+their master's neck. All understood a word or two of English; but Neil
+was the only one who judged he had enough of it for general converse, in
+which (when once he got embarked) his company was often tempted to the
+contrary opinion. They were tractable, simple creatures; showed much
+more courtesy than might have been expected from their raggedness and
+their uncouth appearance, and fell spontaneously to be like three
+servants for Andie and myself.
+
+Dwelling in that isolated place, in the old falling ruins of a prison,
+and among endless strange sounds of the sea and the sea-birds, I thought
+I perceived in them early the effects of superstitious fear. When there
+was nothing doing they would either lie and sleep, for which their
+appetite appeared insatiable, or Neil would entertain the others with
+stories which seemed always of a terrifying strain. If neither of these
+delights were within reach--if perhaps two were sleeping and the third
+could find no means to follow their example--I would see him sit and
+listen and look about him in a progression of uneasiness, starting, his
+face blenching, his hands clutched, a man strung like a bow. The nature
+of these fears I had never an occasion to find out, but the sight of
+them was catching, and the nature of the place that we were in
+favourable to alarms. I can find no word for it in the English, but
+Andie had an expression for it in the Scots from which he never varied.
+
+"Ay," he would say, "_it's an unco place, the Bass_." It is so I always
+think of it. It was an unco place by night, unco by day; and these were
+unco sounds, of the calling of the solans, and the plash of the sea and
+the rock echoes, that hung continually in our ears. It was chiefly so in
+moderate weather. When the waves were anyway great they roared about the
+rock like thunder and the drums of armies, dreadful but merry to hear;
+and it was in the calm days that a man could daunt himself with
+listening--not a Highlandman only, as I several times experimented on
+myself, so many still, hollow noises haunted and reverberated in the
+porches of the rock.
+
+This brings me to a story I heard, and a scene I took part in, which
+quite changed our terms of living, and had a great effect on my
+departure. It chanced one night I fell in a muse beside the fire and
+(that little air of Alan's coming back to my memory) began to whistle. A
+hand was laid upon my arm, and the voice of Neil bade me to stop, for it
+was not "canny musics."
+
+"Not canny?" I asked. "How can that be?"
+
+"Na," said he; "it will be made by a bogle and her wanting ta heid upon
+his body."[13]
+
+"Well," said I, "there can be no bogles here, Neil; for it's not likely
+they would fash themselves to frighten solan geese."
+
+"Ay?" says Andie, "is that what ye think of it? But I'll can tell ye
+there's been waur nor bogles here."
+
+"What's waur than bogles, Andie?" said I.
+
+"Warlocks," said he. "Or a warlock at the least of it. And that's a
+queer tale, too," he added. "And if ye would like, I'll tell it ye."
+
+To be sure we were all of the one mind, and even the Highlander that had
+the least English of the three set himself to listen with all his might.
+
+
+THE TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+
+My faither, Tam Dale, peace to his banes, was a wild, sploring lad in
+his young days, wi' little wisdom and less grace. He was fond of a lass
+and fond of a glass, and fond of a ran-dan; but I could never hear tell
+that he was muckle use for honest employment. Frae ae thing to anither,
+he listed at last for a sodger and was in the garrison of this fort,
+which was the first way that ony of the Dales cam to set foot upon the
+Bass. Sorrow upon that service! The governor brewed his ain ale; it
+seems it was the warst conceivable. The rock was proveesioned frae the
+shore with vivers, the thing was ill-guided, and there were whiles when
+they but to fish and shoot solans for their diet. To crown a', thir was
+the Days of the Persecution. The perishin' cauld chalmers were all
+occupeed wi' sants and martyrs, the saut of the yearth, of which it
+wasnae worthy. And though Tam Dale carried a firelock there, a single
+sodger, and liked a lass and a glass, as I was sayin', the mind of the
+man was mair just than set with his position. He had glints of the glory
+of the kirk; there were whiles when his dander rase to see the Lord's
+sants misguided, and shame covered him that he should be haulding a
+can'le (or carrying a firelock) in so black a business. There were
+nights of it when he was here on sentry, the place a' wheesht, the
+frosts o' winter maybe riving in the wa's, and he would hear are o' the
+prisoners strike up a psalm, and the rest join in, and the blessed
+sounds rising from the different chalmers--or dungeons, I would raither
+say--so that this auld craig in the sea was like a pairt of Heev'n.
+Black shame was on his saul; his sins hove up before him muckle as the
+Bass, and above a', that chief sin, that he should have a hand in
+hagging and hashing at Christ's Kirk. But the truth is that he resisted
+the spirit. Day cam, there were the rousing companions, and his guid
+resolves depairtit.
+
+In thir days, dwalled upon the Bass a man of God, Peden the Prophet was
+his name. Ye'll have heard tell of Prophet Peden. There was never the
+wale of him sinsyne, and it's a question wi' mony if there ever was his
+like afore. He was wild 's a peat-hag, fearsome to look at, fearsome to
+hear, his face like the day of judgment. The voice of him was like a
+solan's and dinnle'd in folks' lugs, and the words of him like coals of
+fire.
+
+Now there was a lass on the rock, and I think she had little to do, for
+it was nae place far dacent weemen; but it seems she was bonny, and her
+and Tam Dale were very well agreed. It befell that Peden was in the
+gairden his lane at the praying when Tam and the lass cam by; and what
+should the lassie do but mock with laughter at the sant's devotions? He
+rose and lookit at the twa o' them, and Tam's knees knoitered thegether
+at the look of him. But whan he spak, it was mair in sorrow than in
+anger. "Poor thing, poor thing!" says he, and it was the lass he lookit
+at. "I hear you skirl and laugh," he says, "but the Lord has a deid shot
+prepared for you, and at that surprising judgment ye shall skirl but the
+ae time!" Shortly thereafter she was daundering on the craigs wi'
+twa-three sodgers, and it was a blawy day. There cam a gowst of wind,
+claught her by the coats, and awa' wi' her bag and baggage. And it was
+remarked by the sodgers that she gied but the ae skirl.
+
+Nae doubt this judgment had some weicht upon Tam Dale; but it passed
+again and him none the better. Ae day he was flyting wi' anither
+sodger-lad. "Deil hae me!" quo' Tam, for he was a profane swearer. And
+there was Peden glowering at him, gash an' waefu'; Peden wi' his lang
+chafts an' luntin' een, the maud happed about his kist, and the hand of
+him held out wi' the black nails upon the finger-nebs--for he had nae
+care of the body. "Fy, fy, poor man!" cries he, "the poor fool man!
+_Deil hae me_, quo' he; an' I see the deil at his oxter." The conviction
+of guilt and grace cam in on Tam like the deep sea; he flang doun the
+pike that was in his hands--"I will nae mair lift arms against the cause
+o' Christ!" says he, and was as gude's word. There was a sair fyke in
+the beginning, but the governor, seeing him resolved, gied him his
+dischairge, and he went and dwallt and merried in North Berwick, and had
+aye a gude name with honest folk frae that day on.
+
+It was in the year seeventeen hunner and sax that the Bass cam in the
+hands o' the Da'rymples, and there was twa men soucht the chairge of it.
+Baith were weel qualified, for they had baith been sodgers in the
+garrison, and kent the gate to handle solans, and the seasons and values
+of them. Forby that they were baith--or they baith seemed--earnest
+professors and men of comely conversation. The first of them was just
+Tam Dale, my faither. The second was ane Lapraik, whom the folk ca'd Tod
+Lapraik maistly, but whether for his name or his nature I could never
+hear tell. Weel, Tam gaed to see Lapraik upon this business, and took
+me, that was a toddlin' laddie, by the hand. Tod had his dwallin' in the
+lang loan benorth the kirkyaird. It's a dark uncanny loan, forby that
+the kirk has aye had an ill name since the days o' James the Saxt and
+the deevil's cantrips played therein when the Queen was on the seas; and
+as for Tod's house, it was in the mirkest end, and was little liked by
+some that kenned the best. The door was on the sneck that day, and me
+and my faither gaed straucht in. Tod was a wabster to his trade; his
+loom stood in the but. There he sat, a muckle fat, white hash of a man
+like creish, wi' a kind of a holy smile that gart me scunner. The hand
+of him aye cawed the shuttle, but his een was steeked. We cried to him
+by his name, we skirled in the deid lug of him, we shook him by the
+shou'ther. Nae mainner o' service! There he sat on his dowp, an' cawed
+the shuttle and smiled like creish.
+
+"God be guid to us," says Tam Dale, "this is no canny!"
+
+He had jimp said the word, when Tod Lapraik cam to himsel'.
+
+"Is this you, Tam?" says he. "Haith, man! I'm blythe to see ye. I whiles
+fa' into a bit dwam like this," he says; "it's frae the stamach."
+
+Weel, they began to crack about the Bass and which of them twa was to
+get the warding o't, and by little and little cam to very ill words, and
+twined in anger. I mind weel, that as my faither and me gaed hame again,
+he cam ower and ower the same expression, how little he likit Tod
+Lapraik and his dwams.
+
+"Dwam!" says he. "I think folk hae brunt far dwams like yon."
+
+Aweel, my faither got the Bass and Tod had to go wantin'. It was
+remembered sinsyne what way he had ta'en the thing. "Tam," says he, "ye
+hae gotten the better o'me aince mair, and I hope," says he, "ye'll find
+at least a' that ye expeckit at the Bass." Which have since been thought
+remarkable expressions. At last the time came for Tam Dale to take young
+solans. This was a business he was weel used wi', he had been a
+craigsman frae a laddie, and trustit nane but himsel'. So there was he
+hingin' by a line an' speldering on the craig face, whaur it's hieest
+and steighest. Fower tenty lads were on the tap, hauldin' the line and
+mindin' for his signals. But whaur Tam hung there was naething but the
+craig, and the sea belaw, and the solans skirling and flying. It was a
+braw spring morn, and Tam whustled as he claught in the young geese.
+Mony's the time I heard him tell of this experience, and aye the swat
+ran upon the man.
+
+It chanced, ye see, that Tam keeked up, and he was awaur of a muckle
+solan, and the solan pyking at the line. He thocht this by-ordinar and
+outside the creature's habits. He minded that ropes was unco saft
+things, and the solan's neb and the Bass Rock unco hard, and that twa
+hunner feet were raither mair than he would care to fa'.
+
+"Shoo!" says Tam. "Awa', bird! Shoo, awa' wi' ye!" says he.
+
+The solan keekit doun into Tam's face, and there was something unco in
+the creature's ee. Just the ae keek it gied, and back to the rope. But
+now it wroucht and warstl't like a thing dementit. There never was the
+solan made that wroucht as that solan wroucht; and it seemed to
+understand it's employ brawly, birzing the saft rope between the neb of
+it and a crunkled jag o' stane.
+
+There gaed a cauld stend o' fear into Tam's heart. "This thing is nae
+bird," thinks he. His een turnt backward in his heid and the day gaed
+black about him. "If I get a dwam here," he thoucht, "it's by wi' Tam
+Dale." And he signalled for the lads to pu' him up.
+
+And it seemed the solan understood about signals. For nae sooner was the
+signal made than he let be the rope, spried his wings, squawked out
+loud, took a turn flying, and dashed straucht at Tam Dale's een. Tam had
+a knife, he gart the cauld steel glitter. And it seemed the solan
+understood about knives, for nae suner did the steel glint in the sun
+than he gied the ae squawk, but laigher, like a body disappointit, and
+flegged aff about the roundness of the craig, and Tam saw him nae mair.
+And as sune as that thing was gane, Tam's held drapt upon his shouther,
+and they pu'd him up like a deid corp, dadding on the craig.
+
+A dram of brandy (which he went never without) broucht him to his mind,
+or what was left of it. Up he sat.
+
+"Rin, Geordie, rin to the boat, mak' sure of the boat, man--rin!" he
+cries, "or yon solan 'll have it awa'," says he.
+
+The fower lads stared at ither, an' tried to whilly-wha him to be quiet.
+But naething, would satisfy Tam Dale, till ane o' them had startit on
+aheid to stand sentry on the boat. The ithers askit if he was for down
+again.
+
+"Na," says he, "and niether you nor me," says he, "and as sune as I can
+win to stand on my twa feet we'll be aff frae this craig o' Sawtan."
+
+Sure eneuch, nae time was lost, and that was ower muckle; for before
+they won to North Berwick Tam was in a crying fever. He lay a' the
+simmer; and wha was sae kind as come speiring for him, but Tod Lapraik!
+Folk thocht afterwards that ilka time Tod cam near the house the fever
+had worsened. I kenna for that; but what I ken the best, that was the
+end of it.
+
+It was about this time o' the year; my grandfaither was out at the white
+fishing; and like a bairn, I but to gang wi' him. We had a grand take, I
+mind, and the way that the fish lay broucht us near in by the Bass,
+whaur we forgaithered wi' anither boat that belanged to a man Sandie
+Fletcher in Castleton. He's no lang deid niether, or ye could spier at
+himsel'. Weel, Sandie hailed.
+
+"What's yon on the Bass?" says he.
+
+"On the Bass?" says grandfaither.
+
+"Ay," says Sandie, "on the green side o't."
+
+"Whatten kind of a thing?" says grandfaither. "There cannae be naething
+on the Bass but just the sheep."
+
+"It looks unco like a body," quo' Sandie, who was nearer in.
+
+"A body!" says we, and we nane of us likit that. For there was nae boat
+that could have broucht a man, and the key o' the prison yett hung ower
+my faither's held at hame in the press bed.
+
+We keept the twa boats closs for company, and crap in nearer hand.
+Grandfaither had a gless, for he had been a sailor, and the captain of a
+smack, and had lost her on the sands of Tay. And when we took the gless
+to it, sure eneuch there was a man. He was in a crunkle o' green brae, a
+wee below the chaipel, a' by his lee lane, and lowped and flang and
+danced like a daft quean at a waddin'.
+
+"It's Tod," says grandfaither, and passed the gless to Sandie.
+
+"Ay, it's him," says Sandie.
+
+"Or ane in the likeness o' him,'' says grandfaither.
+
+"Sma' is the differ," quo' Sandie. "De'il or warlock, I'll try the gun
+at him," quo' he, and broucht up a fowling-piece that he aye carried,
+for Sandie was a notable famous shot in all that country.
+
+"Haud your hand, Sandie," says grandfaither; "we maun see clearer
+first," says he, "or this may be a dear day's wark to the baith of us."
+
+"Hout!" says Sandie, "this is the Lord's judgments surely, and be damned
+to it!" says he.
+
+"Maybe ay, and maybe no," says my grandfaither, worthy man! "But have
+you a mind of the Procurator Fiscal, that I think ye'll have
+forgaithered wi' before," says he.
+
+This was ower true, and Sandie was a wee thing set ajee. "Aweel, Edie,"
+says he, "and what would be your way of it?"
+
+"Ou, just this," says grandfaither. "Let me that has the fastest boat
+gang back to North Berwick, and let you bide here and keep an eye on
+Thon. If I cannae find Lapraik, I'll join ye and the twa of us'll have a
+crack wi' him. But if Lapraik's at hame, I'll rin up the flag at the
+harbour, and ye can try Thon Thing wi' the gun."
+
+Aweel, so it was agreed between them twa. I was just a bairn, an' clum
+in Sandie's boat, whaur I thoucht I would see the best of the employ. My
+grandsire gied Sandie a siller tester to pit in his gun wi' the leid
+draps, bein' mair deidly again bogles. And then the ae boat set aff for
+North Berwick, an' the tither lay whaur it was and watched the wanchancy
+thing on the braeside.
+
+A' the time we lay there it lowped and flang and capered and span like a
+teetotum, and whiles we could hear it skelloch as it span. I hae seen
+lassies, the daft queans, that would lowp and dance a winter's nicht,
+and still be lowping and dancing when the winter's day cam in. But there
+would be folk there to hauld them company, and the lads to egg them on;
+and this thing was its lee-lane. And there would be a fiddler diddling
+his elbock in the chimney-side; and this thing had nae music but the
+skirling of the solans. And the lassies were bits o' young things wi'
+the reid life dinnling and stending in their members; and this was a
+muckle, fat, crieshy man, and him fa'n in the vale o' years. Say what ye
+like, I maun say what I believe. It was joy was in the creature's heart;
+the joy o' hell, I daursay: joy whatever. Mony a time I have askit
+mysel', why witches and warlocks should sell their sauls (whilk are
+their maist dear possessions) and be auld, duddy, wrunkl't wives or
+auld, feckless, doddered men; and then I mind upon Tod Lapraik dancing
+a' they hours by his lane in the black glory of his heart. Nae doubt
+they burn for it in muckle hell, but they have a grand time here of it,
+whatever!--and the Lord forgie us!
+
+Weel, at the hinder end, we saw the wee flag yirk up to the mast-held
+upon the harbour rocks. That was a' Sandie waited for. He up wi' the
+gun, took a deleeberate aim, an' pu'd the trigger. There cam' a bang and
+then ae waefu' skirl frae the Bass. And there were we rubbin' our een
+and lookin' at ither like daft folk. For wi' the bang and the skirl the
+thing had clean disappeared. The sun glintit, the wund blew, and there
+was the bare yaird whaur the Wonder had been lowping and flinging but ae
+second syne.
+
+The hale way hame I roared and grat wi' the terror of that dispensation.
+The grawn folk were nane sae muckle better; there was little said in
+Sandie's boat but just the name of God; and when we won in by the pier,
+the harbour rocks were fair black wi' the folk waitin' us. It seems they
+had fund Lapraik in ane of his dwams, cawing the shuttle and smiling. Ae
+lad they sent to hoist the flag, and the rest abode there in the
+wabster's house. You may be sure they liked it little; but it was a
+means of grace to severals that stood there praying in to themsel's (for
+nane cared to pray out loud) and looking on thon awesome thing as it
+cawed the shuttle. Syne, upon a suddenty, and wi' the ae driedfu'
+skelloch, Tod sprang up frae his hinderlands and fell forrit on the wab,
+a bluidy corp.
+
+When the corp was examined the leid draps hadnae played buff upon the
+warlock's body; sorrow a leid drap was to be fund; but there was
+grandfather's siller tester in the puddock's heart of him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Andie had scarce done when there befell a mighty silly affair that had
+its consequence. Neil, as I have said, was himself a great narrator. I
+have heard since that he knew all the stories in the Highlands; and
+thought much of himself, and was thought much of by others, on the
+strength of it. Now Andie's tale reminded him of one he had already
+heard.
+
+"She would ken that story afore," he said. "She was the story of Uistean
+More M'Gillie Phadrig and the Gavar Vore."
+
+"It is no sic a thing," cried Andie. "It is the story of my faither (now
+wi' God) and Tod Lapraik. And the same in your beard," says he; "and
+keep the tongue of ye inside your Hielant chafts!"
+
+In dealing with Highlanders it will be found, and has been shown in
+history, how well it goes with Lowland gentlefolk; but the thing appears
+scarce feasible for Lowland commons. I had already remarked that Andie
+was continually on the point of quarrelling with our three Macgregors,
+and now, sure enough, it was to come.
+
+"Thir will be no words to use to shentlemans," says Neil.
+
+"Shentlemans!" cries Andie. "Shentlemans, ye hielant stot! If God would
+give ye the grace to see yoursel' the way that ithers see ye, ye would
+throw your denner up."
+
+There came some kind of a Gaelic oath from Neil, and the black knife was
+in his hand that moment.
+
+There was no time to think; and I caught the Highlander by the leg, and
+had him down, and his armed hand pinned out, before I knew what I was
+doing. His comrades sprang to rescue him, Andie and I were without
+weapons, the Gregara three to two. It seemed we were beyond salvation,
+when Neil screamed in his own tongue, ordering the others back, and made
+his submission to myself in a manner the most abject, even giving me up
+his knife which (upon a repetition of his promises) I returned to him on
+the morrow.
+
+Two things I saw plain: the first, that I must not build too high on
+Andie, who had shrunk against the wall and stood there, as pale as
+death, till the affair was over; the second, the strength of my own
+position with the Highlanders, who must have received extraordinary
+charges to be tender of my safety. But if I thought Andie came not very
+well out in courage, I had no fault to find with him upon the account of
+gratitude. It was not so much that he troubled me with thanks, as that
+his whole mind and manner appeared changed; and as he preserved ever
+after a great timidity of our companions, he and I were yet more
+constantly together.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE MISSING WITNESS
+
+
+On the seventeenth, the day I was trysted with the Writer, I had much
+rebellion against fate. The thought of him waiting in the _King's Arms_,
+and of what he would think, and what he would say when next we met,
+tormented and oppressed me. The truth was unbelievable, so much I had to
+grant, and it seemed cruel hard I should be posted as a liar and a
+coward, and have never consciously omitted what it was possible that I
+should do. I repeated this form of words with a kind of bitter relish,
+and re-examined in that light the steps of my behaviour. It seemed I had
+behaved to James Stewart as a brother might; all the past was a picture
+that I could be proud of, and there was only the present to consider. I
+could not swim the sea, nor yet fly in the air, but there was always
+Andie. I had done him a service, he liked me; I had a lever there to
+work on; if it were just for decency, I must try once more with Andie.
+
+It was late afternoon; there was no sound in all the Bass but the lap
+and bubble of a very quiet sea; and my four companions were all crept
+apart, the three Macgregors higher on the rock, and Andie with his Bible
+to a sunny place among the ruins; there I found him in deep sleep, and,
+as soon as he was awake, appealed to him with some fervour of manner and
+a good show of argument.
+
+"If I thoucht it was to do guid to ye, Shaws!" said he, staring at me
+over his spectacles.
+
+"It's to save another," said I, "and to redeem my word. What would be
+more good than that? Do ye no mind the scripture, Andie? And you with
+the Book upon your lap! _What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole
+world?"_
+
+"Ay," said he, "that's grand for you. But where do I come in? I have my
+word to redeem the same's yoursel'. And what are ye asking me to do, but
+just to sell it ye for siller?"
+
+"Andie! have I named the name of siller?" cried I.
+
+"Ou, the name's naething," said he; "the thing is there, whatever. It
+just comes to this; if I am to service ye the way that you propose, I'll
+loss my lieihood. Then it's clear ye'll have to make it up to me, and a
+pickle mair, for your ain credit like. And what's that but just a bribe?
+And if even I was certain of the bribe! But by a' that I can learn, it's
+far frae that; and if _you_ were to hang, where would _I_ be? Na: the
+thing's no possible. And just awa' wi' ye like a bonny lad! and let
+Andie read his chapter."
+
+I remember I was at bottom a good deal gratified with this result; and
+the next humour I fell into was one (I had near said) of gratitude to
+Prestongrange, who had saved me, in this violent, illegal manner, out of
+the midst of my dangers, temptations, and perplexities. But this was
+both too flimsy and too cowardly to last me long, and the remembrance of
+James began to succeed to the possession of my spirits. The 21st, the
+day set for the trial, I passed in such misery of mind as I can scarce
+recall to have endured, save perhaps upon Isle Earraid only. Much of the
+time I lay on a braeside betwixt sleep and waking, my body motionless,
+my mind full of violent thoughts. Sometimes I slept indeed; but the
+court-house of Inverary and the prisoner glancing on all sides to find
+his missing witness, followed me in slumber; and I would wake again with
+a start to darkness of spirit and distress of body. I thought Andie
+seemed to observe me, but I paid him little heed. Verily, my bread was
+bitter to me, and my days a burthen.
+
+Early the next morning (Friday, 22nd) a boat came with provisions, and
+Andie placed a packet in my hand. The cover was without address but
+sealed with a Government seal. It enclosed two notes. "Mr. Balfour can
+now see for himself it is too late to meddle. His conduct will be
+observed and his discretion rewarded." So ran the first, which seemed to
+be laboriously writ with the left hand. There was certainly nothing in
+these expressions to compromise the writer, even if that person could be
+found; the seal, which formidably served instead of signature, was
+affixed to a separate sheet on which there was no scratch of writing;
+and I had to confess that (so far) my adversaries knew what they were
+doing, and to digest as well as I was able the threat that peeped under
+the promise.
+
+But the second enclosure was by far the more surprising. It was in a
+lady's hand of writ. "_Maister Dauvit Balfour is informed a friend was
+speiring for him, and her eyes were of the grey_," it ran--and seemed so
+extraordinary a piece to come to my hands at such a moment and under
+cover of a Government seal, that I stood stupid. Catriona's grey eyes
+shone in my remembrance. I thought, with a bound of pleasure, she must
+be the friend. But who should the writer be, to have her billet thus
+enclosed with Prestongrange's? And of all wonders, why was it thought
+needful to give me this pleasing but most inconsequential intelligence
+upon the Bass? For the writer, I could hit upon none possible except
+Miss Grant. Her family, I remembered, had remarked on Catriona's eyes
+and even named her for their colour; and she herself had been much in
+the habit to address me with a broad pronunciation, by way of a sniff, I
+supposed, at my rusticity. No doubt, besides, but she lived in the same
+house as this letter came from. So there remained but one step to be
+accounted for; and that was how Prestongrange should have permitted her
+at all in an affair so secret, or let her daft-like billet go in the
+same cover with his own. But even here I had a glimmering. For, first of
+all, there was something rather alarming about the young lady, and papa
+might be more under her domination than I knew. And second, there was
+the man's continual policy to be remembered, how his conduct had been
+continually mingled with caresses, and he had scarce ever, in the midst
+of so much contention, laid aside a mask of friendship. He must conceive
+that my imprisonment had incensed me. Perhaps this little jesting,
+friendly message was intended to disarm my rancour?
+
+I will be honest--and I think it did. I felt a sudden warmth towards
+that beautiful Miss Grant, that she should stoop to so much interest in
+my affairs. The summoning up of Catriona moved me of itself to milder
+and more cowardly counsels. If the Advocate knew of her and of our
+acquaintance--if I should please him by some of that "discretion" at
+which his letter pointed--to what might not this lead? _In vain is the
+net spread in the sight of any fowl_, the scripture says. Well, fowls
+must be wiser than folk! For I thought I perceived the policy, and yet
+fell in with it.
+
+I was in this frame, my heart beating, the grey eyes plain before me
+like two stars, when Andie broke in upon my musing.
+
+"I see ye hae gotten guid news," said he.
+
+I found him looking curiously in my face; with that, there came before
+me like a vision of James Stewart and the court of Inverary; and my mind
+turned at once like a door upon its hinges. Trials, I reflected,
+sometimes draw out longer than is looked for. Even if I came to Inverary
+just too late, something might yet be attempted in the interests of
+James--and in those of my own character, the best would be accomplished.
+In a moment, it seemed without thought, I had a plan devised.
+
+"Andie," said I, "is it still to be to-morrow?"
+
+He told me nothing was changed.
+
+"Was anything said about the hour?" I asked.
+
+He told me it was to be two o'clock afternoon.
+
+"And about the place?" I pursued.
+
+"Whatten place?" says Andie.
+
+"The place I'm to be landed at," said I.
+
+He owned there was nothing as to that.
+
+"Very well, then," I said, "this shall be mine to arrange. The wind is
+in the east, my road lies westward; keep your boat, I hire it; let us
+work up the Forth all day; and land me at two o'clock to-morrow at the
+westmost we'll can have reached."
+
+"Ye daft callant!" he cried, "ye would try for Inverary after a'!"
+
+"Just that, Andie," says I.
+
+"Weel, ye're ill to beat!" says he. "And I was kind o' sorry for ye a'
+day yesterday," he added. "Ye see, I was never entirely sure till then,
+which way of it ye really wantit."
+
+Here was a spur to a lame horse!
+
+"A word in your ear, Andie," said I. "This plan of mine has another
+advantage yet. We can leave these Hielandmen behind us on the rock, and
+one of your boats from the Castleton can bring them off to-morrow. Yon
+Neil has a queer eye when he regards you; maybe, if I was once out of
+the gate there might be knives again; these red-shanks are unco
+grudgeful. And if there should come to be any question, here is your
+excuse. Our lives were in danger by these savages; being answerable for
+my safety, you chose the part to bring me from their neighbourhood and
+detain me the rest of the time on board your boat; and do you know,
+Andie?" says I, with a smile, "I think it was very wisely chosen."
+
+"The truth is I have nae goo for Neil," says Andie, "nor he for me, I'm
+thinking; and I would like ill to come to my hands wi' the man. Tam
+Anster will make a better hand of it with the cattle onyway." (For this
+man, Anster, came from Fife, where the Gaelic is still spoken.) "Ay,
+ay!" says Andie, "Tam'll can deal with them the best. And troth! the
+mair I think of it, the less I see what way we would be required. The
+place--ay, feggs! they had forgot the place. Eh, Shaws, ye're a
+lang-heided chield when ye like! Forby that I'm awing ye my life," he
+added, with more solemnity, and offered me his hand upon the bargain.
+
+Whereupon, with scarce more words, we stepped suddenly on board the
+boat, cast off, and set the lug. The Gregara were then busy upon
+breakfast, for the cookery was their usual part; but, one of them
+stepping to the battlements, our flight was observed before we were
+twenty fathoms from the rock; and the three of them ran about the ruins
+and the landing-shelf, for all the world like ants about a broken nest,
+hailing and crying on us to return. We were still in both the lee and
+the shadow of the rock, which last lay broad upon the waters, but
+presently came forth in almost the same moment into the wind and
+sunshine; the sail filled, the boat heeled to the gunwale, and we swept
+immediately beyond sound of the men's voices. To what terrors they
+endured upon the rock, where they were now deserted without the
+countenance of any civilised person or so much as the protection of a
+Bible, no limit can be set; nor had they any brandy left to be their
+consolation, for even in the haste and secrecy of our departure Andie
+had managed to remove it.
+
+It was our first care to set Anster ashore in a cove by the Glenteithy
+Rocks, so that the deliverance of our maroons might be duly seen to the
+next day. Thence we kept away up Firth. The breeze, which was then so
+spirited, swiftly declined, but never wholly failed us. All day we kept
+moving, though often not much more; and it was after dark ere we were up
+with the Queensferry. To keep the letter of Andie's engagement (or what
+was left of it) I must remain on board, but I thought no harm to
+communicate with the shore in writing. On Prestongrange's cover, where
+the Government seal must have a good deal surprised my correspondent, I
+writ, by the boat's lantern, a few necessary words, and Andie carried
+them to Rankeillor. In about an hour he came aboard again, with a purse
+of money and the assurance that a good horse should be standing saddled
+for me by two to-morrow at Clackmannan Pool. This done, and the boat
+riding by her stone anchor, we lay down to sleep under the sail.
+
+We were in the Pool the next day long ere two; and there was nothing
+left for me but sit and wait. I felt little alacrity upon my errand. I
+would have been glad of any passable excuse to lay it down; but none
+being to be found, my uneasiness was no less great than if I had been
+running to some desired pleasure. By shortly after one the horse was at
+the waterside, and I could see a man walking it to and fro till I should
+land, which vastly swelled my impatience. Andie ran the moment of my
+liberation very fine, showing himself a man of his bare word, but scarce
+serving his employers with a heaped measure; and by about fifty seconds
+after two I was in the saddle and on the full stretch for Stirling. In a
+little more than an hour I had passed that town, and was already
+mounting Alan Water side, when the weather broke in a small tempest. The
+rain blinded me, the wind had nearly beat me from the saddle, and the
+first darkness of the night surprised me in a wilderness still some way
+east of Balwhidder, not very sure of my direction and mounted on a horse
+that began already to be weary.
+
+In the press of my hurry, and to be spared the delay and annoyance of a
+guide, I had followed (so far as it was possible for any horseman) the
+line of my journey with Alan. This I did with open eyes, foreseeing a
+great risk in it, which the tempest had now brought to a reality. The
+last that I knew of where I was, I think it must have been about Uam
+Var; the hour perhaps six at night. I must still think it great good
+fortune that I got about eleven to my destination, the house of Duncan
+Dhu. Where I had wandered in the interval perhaps the horse could tell.
+I know we were twice down, and once over the saddle and for a moment
+carried away in a roaring burn. Steed and rider were bemired up to the
+eyes.
+
+From Duncan I had news of the trial. It was followed in all these
+Highland regions with religious interest; news of it spread from
+Inverary as swift as men could travel; and I was rejoiced to learn that,
+up to a late hour that Saturday, it was not yet concluded; and all men
+began to suppose it must spread over to the Monday. Under the spur of
+this intelligence I would not sit to eat; but, Duncan having agreed to
+be my guide, took the road again on foot, with the piece in my hand and
+munching as I went. Duncan brought with him a flask of usquebaugh and a
+hand-lantern; which last enlightened us just so long as we could find
+houses where to rekindle it, for the thing leaked outrageously and blew
+out with every gust. The more part of the night we walked blindfold
+among sheets of rain, and day found us aimless on the mountains. Hard by
+we struck a hut on a burn-side, where we got a bite and a direction;
+and, a little before the end of the sermon, came to the kirk doors of
+Inverary.
+
+The rain had somewhat washed the upper parts of me, but I was still
+bogged as high as to the knees; I streamed water; I was so weary I could
+hardly limp, and my face was like a ghost's. I stood certainly more in
+need of a change of raiment and a bed to lie on, than of all the
+benefits in Christianity. For all which (being persuaded the chief point
+for me was to make myself immediately public) I set the door open,
+entered that church with the dirty Duncan at my tails, and finding a
+vacant place hard by, sat down.
+
+"Thirteenthly, my brethren, and in parenthesis, the law itself must be
+regarded as a means of grace," the minister was saying, in the voice of
+one delighting to pursue an argument.
+
+The sermon was in English on account of the assize. The judges were
+present with their armed attendants, the halberts glittered in a corner
+by the door, and the seats were thronged beyond custom with the array of
+lawyers. The text was in Romans 5th and 13th--the minister a skilled
+hand; and the whole of that able churchful--from Argyle, and my Lords
+Elchies and Kilkerran, down to the halbertmen that came in their
+attendance--was sunk with gathered brows in a profound critical
+attention. The minister himself and a sprinkling of those about the door
+observed our entrance at the moment and immediately forgot the same; the
+rest either did not hear or would not heed; and I sat there amongst my
+friends and enemies unremarked.
+
+The first that I singled out was Prestongrange. He sat well forward,
+like an eager horseman in the saddle, his lips moving with relish, his
+eyes glued on the minister: the doctrine was clearly to his mind.
+Charles Stewart, on the other hand, was half asleep, and looked harassed
+and pale. As for Symon Fraser, he appeared like a blot, and almost a
+scandal, in the midst of that attentive congregation, digging his hands
+in his pockets, shifting his legs, clearing his throat, rolling up his
+bald eyebrows and shooting out his eyes to right and left, now with a
+yawn, now with a secret smile. At times too, he would take the Bible in
+front of him, run it through, seem to read a bit, run it through again,
+and stop and yawn prodigiously: the whole as if for exercise.
+
+In the course of this restlessness his eye alighted on myself. He sat a
+second stupefied, than tore a half leaf out of the Bible, scrawled upon
+it with a pencil, and passed it with a whispered word to his next
+neighbor. The note came to Prestongrange, who gave me but the one look;
+thence it voyaged to the hands of Mr. Erskine; thence again to Argyle,
+where he sat between the other two lords of session, and his Grace
+turned and fixed me with an arrogant eye. The last of those interested
+to observe my presence was Charlie Stewart, and he too began to pencil
+and hand about despatches, none of which I was able to trace to their
+destination in the crowd.
+
+But the passage of these notes had aroused notice; all who were in the
+secret (or supposed themselves to be so) were whispering
+information--the rest questions; and the minister himself seemed quite
+discountenanced by the flutter in the church and sudden stir and
+whispering. His voice changed, he plainly faltered, nor did he again
+recover the easy conviction and full tones of his delivery. It would be
+a puzzle to him till his dying day, why a sermon that had gone with
+triumph through four parts, should thus miscarry in the fifth.
+
+As for me, I continued to sit there, very wet and weary, and a good deal
+anxious as to what should happen next, but greatly exulting in my
+success.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE MEMORIAL
+
+
+The last word of the blessing was scarce out of the minister's mouth
+before Stewart had me by the arm. We were the first to be forth of the
+church, and he made such extraordinary expedition that we were safe
+within the four walls of a house before the street had begun to be
+thronged with the home-going congregation.
+
+"Am I yet in time?" I asked.
+
+"Ay and no," said he. "The case is over; the jury is enclosed, and will
+be so kind as let us ken their view of it to-morrow in the morning, the
+same as I could have told it my own self three days ago before the play
+began. The thing has been public from the start. The panel kent it, '_Ye
+may do what ye will for me_,' whispers he two days ago. '_I ken my fate
+by what the Duke of Argyle has just said to Mr. Macintosh_.' O, it's
+been a scandal!
+
+ The great Argyle he gaed before,
+ He gart the cannons and guns to roar,
+
+and the very macer cried 'Cruachan!' But now that I have got you again
+I'll never despair. The oak shall go over the myrtle yet; we'll ding the
+Campbells yet in their own town. Praise God that I should see the day!"
+
+He was leaping with excitement, emptied out his mails upon the floor
+that I might have a change of clothes, and incommoded me with his
+assistance as I changed. What remained to be done, or how I was to do
+it, was what he never told me nor, I believe, so much as thought of.
+"We'll ding the Camphells yet!" that was still his overcome. And it was
+forced home upon my mind how this, that had the externals of a sober
+process of law, was in its essence a clan battle between savage clans. I
+thought my friend the Writer none of the least savage. Who, that had
+only seen him at a counsel's back before the Lord Ordinary or following
+a golf ball and laying down his clubs on Bruntsfield links, could have
+recognised for the same person this voluble and violent clansman?
+
+James Stewart's counsel were four in number--Sheriffs Brown of Colstoun
+and Miller, Mr. Robert Macintosh and Mr. Stewart younger of Stewart
+Hall. These were covenanted to dine with the Writer after sermon, and I
+was very obligingly included of the party. No sooner the cloth lifted,
+and the first bowl very artfully compounded by Sheriff Miller, than we
+fell to the subject in hand. I made a short narration of my seizure and
+captivity, and was then examined and re-examined upon the circumstances
+of the murder. It will be remembered this was the first time I had had
+my say out, or the matter at all handled, among lawyers; and the
+consequence was very dispiriting to the others and (I must own)
+disappointing to myself.
+
+"To sum up," said Colstoun, "you prove that Alan was on the spot; you
+have heard him proffer menaces against Glenure; and though you assure us
+he was not the man who fired, you leave a strong impression that he was
+in league with him, and consenting, perhaps immediately assisting, in
+the act. You show him besides, at the risk of his own liberty, actively
+furthering the criminal's escape. And the rest of your testimony (so far
+as the least material) depends on the bare word of Alan or of James, the
+two accused. In short, you do not at all break, but only lengthen by one
+personage, the chain that binds our client to the murderer; and I need
+scarcely say that the introduction of a third accomplice rather
+aggravates that appearance of a conspiracy which has been our stumbling
+block from the beginning."
+
+"I am of the same opinion," said Sheriff Miller. "I think we may all be
+very much obliged to Prestongrange for taking a most uncomfortable
+witness out of our way. And chiefly, I think, Mr. Balfour himself might
+be obliged. For you talk of a third accomplice, but Mr. Balfour (in my
+view) has very much the appearance of a fourth."
+
+"Allow me, sirs!" interposed Stewart the Writer. "There is another view.
+Here we have a witness--never fash whether material or not--a witness in
+this cause, kidnapped by that old, lawless, bandit crew of the Glengyle
+Macgregors, and sequestered for near upon a month in a bourock of old
+cold ruins on the Bass. Move that and see what dirt you fling on the
+proceedings! Sirs, this is a tale to make the world ring with! It would
+be strange, with such a grip as this, if we couldnae squeeze out a
+pardon for my client."
+
+"And suppose we took up Mr. Balfour's cause to-morrow?" said Stewart
+Hall. "I am much deceived or we should find so many impediments thrown
+in our path, as that James should have been hanged before we had found a
+court to hear us. This is a great scandal, but I suppose we have none of
+us forgot a greater still, I mean the matter of the Lady Grange. The
+woman was still in durance; my friend Mr. Hope of Rankeillor did what
+was humanly possible; and how did he speed? He never got a warrant!
+Well, it'll be the same now; the same weapons will be used. This is a
+scene, gentlemen, of clan animosity. The hatred of the name which I have
+the honor to bear, rages in high quarters. There is nothing here to be
+viewed but naked Campbell spite and scurvy Campbell intrigue."
+
+You may be sure this was to touch a welcome topic, and I sat for some
+time in the midst of my learned counsel, almost deaved with their talk
+but extremely little the wiser for its purport. The Writer was led into
+some hot expressions; Colstoun must take him up and set him right; the
+rest joined in on different sides, but all pretty noisy; the Duke of
+Argyle was beaten like a blanket; King George came in for a few digs in
+the by-going and a great deal of rather elaborate defence: and there was
+only one person that seemed to be forgotten, and that was James of the
+Glens.
+
+Through all this Mr. Miller sat quiet. He was a slip of an oldish
+gentleman, ruddy and twinkling; he spoke in a smooth rich voice, with an
+infinite effect of pawkiness, dealing out each word the way an actor
+does, to give the most expression possible; and even now, when he was
+silent, and sat there with his wig laid aside, his glass in both hands,
+his mouth funnily pursed, and his chin out, he seemed the mere picture
+of a merry slyness. It was plain he had a word to say, and waited for
+the fit occasion.
+
+It came presently. Colstoun had wound up one of his speeches with some
+expression of their duty to their client. His brother sheriff was
+pleased, I suppose, with the transition. He took the table in his
+confidence with a gesture and a look.
+
+"That suggests to me a consideration which seems overlooked," said he.
+"The interest of our client goes certainly before all, but the world
+does not come to an end with James Stewart." Whereat he cocked his eye.
+"I might condescend, _exempli gratia_, upon a Mr. George Brown, a Mr.
+Thomas Miller, and a Mr. David Balfour. Mr. David Balfour has a very
+good ground of complaint, and I think, gentlemen--if his story was
+properly red out--I think there would be a number of wigs on the green."
+
+The whole table turned to him with a common movement.
+
+"Properly handled and carefully red out, his is a story that could
+scarcely fail to have some consequence," he continued. "The whole
+administration of justice, from its highest officer downward, would be
+totally discredited; and it looks to me as if they would need to be
+replaced." He seemed to shine with cunning as he said it. "And I need
+not point out to ye that this of Mr. Balfour's would be a remarkable
+bonny cause to appear in," he added.
+
+Well, there they all were started on another hare; Mr. Balfour's cause,
+and what kind of speeches could be there delivered, and what officials
+could be thus turned out, and who would succeed to their positions. I
+shall give but the two specimens. It was proposed to approach Symon
+Fraser, whose testimony, if it could be obtained, could prove certainly
+fatal to Argyle and Prestongrange. Miller highly approved of the
+attempt. "We have here before us a dreeping roast," said he, "here is
+cut-and-come-again for all." And methought all licked their lips. The
+other was already near the end. Stewart the Writer was out of the body
+with, delight, smelling vengeance on his chief enemy, the Duke.
+
+"Gentlemen," cried he, charging his glass, "here is to Sheriff Miller.
+His legal abilities are known to all. His culinary, this bowl in front
+of us is here to speak for. But when it comes to the poleetical!"--cries
+he, and drains the glass.
+
+"Ay, but it will hardly prove politics in your meaning, my friend," said
+the gratified Miller. "A revolution, if you like, and I think I can
+promise you that historical writers shall date from Mr. Balfour's cause.
+But properly guided, Mr. Stewart, tenderly guided, it shall prove a
+peaceful revolution."
+
+"And if the damned Campbells get their ears rubbed, what care I?" cries
+Stewart, smiting down his fist.
+
+It will be thought I was not very well pleased with all this, though I
+could scarce forbear smiling at a kind of innocency in these old
+intriguers. But it was not my view to have undergone so many sorrows for
+the advancement of Sheriff Miller or to make a revolution in the
+Parliament House: and I interposed accordingly with as much simplicity
+of manner as I could assume.
+
+"I have to thank you, gentlemen, for your advice," said I. "And now I
+would like, by your leave, to set you two or three questions. There is
+one thing that has fallen rather on one side, for instance: Will this
+cause do any good to our friend James of the Glens?"
+
+They seemed all a hair set back, and gave various answers, but
+concurring practically in one point, that James had now no hope but in
+the King's mercy.
+
+"To proceed, then," said I, "will it do any good to Scotland? We have a
+saying that it is an ill bird that fouls his own nest. I remember
+hearing we had a riot in Edinburgh when I was an infant child, which
+gave occasion to the late Queen to call this country barbarous; and I
+always understood that we had rather lost than gained by that. Then came
+the year 'Forty-five, which made Scotland to be talked of everywhere;
+but I never heard it said we had anyway gained by the 'Forty-five. And
+now we come to this cause of Mr. Balfour's, as you call it. Sheriff
+Miller tells us historical writers are to date from it, and I would not
+wonder. It is only my fear they would date from it as a period of
+calamity and public reproach."
+
+The nimble-witted Miller had already smelt where I was travelling to,
+and made haste to get on the same road. "Forcibly put, Mr. Balfour,"
+says he. "A weighty observe, sir."
+
+"We have next to ask ourselves if it will be good for King George," I
+pursued. "Sheriff Miller appears pretty easy upon this; but I doubt you
+will scarce be able to pull down the house from under him, without his
+Majesty coming by a knock or two, one of which might easily prove
+fatal."
+
+I gave them a chance to answer, but none volunteered.
+
+"Of those for whom the case was to be profitable," I went on, "Sheriff
+Miller gave us the names of several, among the which he was good enough
+to mention mine. I hope he will pardon me if I think otherwise. I
+believe I hung not the least back in this affair while there was life to
+be saved; but I own I thought myself extremely hazarded, and I own I
+think it would be a pity for a young man, with some idea of coming to
+the bar, to ingrain upon himself the character of a turbulent, factious
+fellow before he was yet twenty. As for James, it seems--at this date of
+the proceedings, with the sentence as good as pronounced--he has no hope
+but in the King's mercy. May not his Majesty, then, be more pointedly
+addressed, the characters of these high officers sheltered from the
+public, and myself kept out of a position which I think spells ruin for
+me?"
+
+They all sat and gazed into their glasses, and I could see they found my
+attitude on the affair unpalatable. But Miller was ready at all events.
+
+"If I may be allowed to put our young friend's notion in more formal
+shape," says he, "I understand him to propose that we should embody the
+fact of his sequestration, and perhaps some heads of the testimony he
+was prepared to offer, in a memorial to the Crown. This plan has
+elements of success. It is as likely as any other (and perhaps likelier)
+to help our client. Perhaps his Majesty would have the goodness to feel
+a certain gratitude to all concerned in such a memorial, which might be
+construed into an expression of a very delicate loyalty; and I think, in
+the drafting of the same, this view might be brought forward."
+
+They all nodded to each other, not without sighs, for the former
+alternative was doubtless more after their inclination.
+
+"Paper then, Mr. Stewart, if you please," pursued Miller; "and I think
+it might very fittingly be signed by the five of us here present, as
+procurators for the 'condemned man.'"
+
+"It can do none of us any harm at least," says Colstoun, heaving another
+sigh, for he had seen himself Lord Advocate the last ten minutes.
+
+Thereupon they set themselves, not very enthusiastically, to draft the
+memorial--a process in the course of which they soon caught fire; and I
+had no more ado but to sit looking on and answer an occasional question.
+The paper was very well expressed; beginning with a recitation of the
+facts about myself, the reward offered for my apprehension, my
+surrender, the pressure brought to bear upon me; my sequestration; and
+my arrival at Inverary in time to be too late; going on to explain the
+reasons of loyalty and public interest for which it was agreed to waive
+any right of action; and winding up with a forcible appeal to the King's
+mercy on behalf of James.
+
+Methought I was a good deal sacrificed, and rather represented in the
+light of a firebrand of a fellow whom my cloud of lawyers had restrained
+with difficulty from extremes. But I let it pass, and made but the one
+suggestion, that I should be described as ready to deliver my own
+evidence and adduce that of others before any commission of inquiry--and
+the one demand, that I should be immediately furnished with a copy.
+
+Colstoun hummed and hawed. "This is a very confidential document," said
+he.
+
+"And my position towards Prestongrange is highly peculiar," I replied.
+"No question but I must have touched his heart at our first interview,
+so that he has since stood my friend consistently. But for him,
+gentlemen, I must now be lying dead or awaiting my sentence alongside
+poor James. For which reason I choose to communicate to him the fact of
+this memorial as soon as it is copied. You are to consider also that
+this step will make for my protection. I have enemies here accustomed to
+drive hard; his Grace is in his own country, Lovat by his side; and if
+there should hang any ambiguity over our proceedings, I think I might
+very well awake in gaol."
+
+Not finding any very ready answer to these considerations, my company of
+advisers were at the last persuaded to consent, and made only this
+condition that I was to lay the paper before Prestongrange with the
+express compliments of all concerned.
+
+The Advocate was at the castle dining with his Grace. By the hand of one
+of Colstoun's servants I sent him a billet asking for an interview, and
+received a summons to meet him at once in a private house of the town.
+Here I found him alone in a chamber; from his face there was nothing to
+be gleaned; yet I was not so unobservant but what I spied some halberts
+in the hall, and not so stupid but what I could gather he was prepared
+to arrest me there and then, should it appear advisable.
+
+"So, Mr. David, this is you?" said he.
+
+"Where I fear I am not overly welcome, my lord," said I. "And I would
+like before I go further to express my sense of your lordship's
+continued good offices, even should they now cease."
+
+"I have heard of your gratitude before," he replied drily, "and I think
+this can scarce be the matter you called me from my wine to listen to. I
+would remember also, if I were you, that you still stand on a very boggy
+foundation."
+
+"Not now, my lord, I think," said I; "and if your lordship will but
+glance an eye along this, you will perhaps think as I do."
+
+He read it sedulously through, frowning heavily; then turned back to one
+part and another which he seemed to weigh and compare the effect of. His
+face a little lightened.
+
+"This is not so bad but what it might be worse," said he; "though I am
+still likely to pay dear for my acquaintance with Mr. David Balfour."
+
+"Rather for your indulgence to that unlucky young man, my lord," said I.
+
+He still skimmed the paper, and all the while his spirits seemed to
+mend.
+
+"And to whom am I indebted for this?" he asked presently. "Other
+counsels must have been discussed, I think. Who was it proposed this
+private method? Was it Miller?"
+
+"My lord, it was myself," said I. "These gentlemen have shown me no such
+consideration, as that I should deny myself any credit I can fairly
+claim, or spare them any responsibility they should properly bear. And
+the mere truth is, that they were all in favour of a process which
+should have remarkable consequences in the Parliament House, and prove
+for them (in one of their own expressions) a dripping roast. Before I
+intervened, I think they were on the point of sharing out the different
+law appointments. Our friend Mr. Symon was to be taken in upon some
+composition."
+
+Prestongrange smiled. "These are our friends!" said he. "And what were
+your reasons for dissenting, Mr. David?"
+
+I told them without concealment, expressing, however, with more force
+and volume those which regarded Prestongrange himself.
+
+"You do me no more than justice," said he. "I have fought as hard in
+your interest as you have fought against mine. And how came you here
+to-day?" he asked. "As the case drew out, I began to grow uneasy that I
+had clipped the period so fine, and I was even expecting you to-morrow.
+But to-day--I never dreamed of it."
+
+I was not, of course, going to betray Andie.
+
+"I suspect there is some very weary cattle by the road," said I.
+
+"If I had known you were such a mosstrooper you should have tasted
+longer of the Bass," says he.
+
+"Speaking of which, my lord, I return your letter." And I gave him the
+enclosure in the counterfeit hand.
+
+"There was the cover also with the seal," said he.
+
+"I have it not," said I. "It bore naught but the address, and could not
+compromise a cat. The second enclosure I have, and with your permission,
+I desire to keep it."
+
+I thought he winced a little, but he said nothing to the point.
+"To-morrow," he resumed, "our business here is to be finished, and I
+proceed by Glasgow. I would be very glad to have you of my party, Mr.
+David."
+
+"My lord...." I began.
+
+"I do not deny it will be of service to me," he interrupted. "I desire
+even that, when we shall come to Edinburgh you should alight at my
+house. You have very warm friends in the Miss Grants, who will be
+overjoyed to have you to themselves. If you think I have been of use to
+you, you can thus easily repay me, and so far from losing, may reap some
+advantage by the way. It is not every strange young man who is presented
+in society by the King's Advocate."
+
+Often enough already (in our brief relations) this gentleman had caused
+my head to spin; no doubt but what for a moment he did so again now.
+Here was the old fiction still maintained of my particular favour with
+his daughters, one of whom had been so good as laugh at me, while the
+other two had scarce deigned to remark the fact of my existence. And now
+I was to ride with my lord to Glascow; I was to dwell with him in
+Edinburgh; I was to be brought into society under his protection! That
+he should have so much good-nature as to forgive me was surprising
+enough; that he could wish to take me up and serve me seemed impossible;
+and I began to seek for some ulterior meaning. One was plain. If I
+became his guest, repentance was excluded; I could never think better of
+my present design and bring any action. And besides, would not my
+presence in his house draw out the whole pungency of the memorial? For
+that complaint could not be very seriously regarded, if the person
+chiefly injured was the guest of the official most incriminated. As I
+thought upon this, I could not quite refrain from smiling.
+
+"This is in the nature of a countercheck to the memorial?" said I.
+
+"You are cunning, Mr. David," said he, "and you do not wholly guess
+wrong; the fact will be of use to me in my defence. Perhaps, however,
+you underrate my friendly sentiments, which are perfectly genuine. I
+have a respect for you, Mr. David, mingled with awe," says he, smiling.
+
+"I am more than willing, I am earnestly desirous to meet your wishes,"
+said I. "It is my design to be called to the bar, where your lordship's
+countenance would be invaluable; and I am besides sincerely grateful to
+yourself and family for different marks of interest and of indulgence.
+The difficulty is here. There is one point in which we pull two ways.
+You are trying to hang James Stewart, I am trying to save him. In so far
+as my riding with you would better your lordship's defence, I am at your
+lordship's orders; but in so far as it would help to hang James Stewart,
+you see me at a stick."
+
+I thought he swore to himself. "You should certainly be called; the bar
+is the true scene for your talents," says he, bitterly, and then fell a
+while silent. "I will tell you," he presently resumed, "there is no
+question of James Stewart, for or against. James is a dead man; his life
+is given and taken--bought (if you like it better) and sold; no memorial
+can help--no defalcation of a faithful Mr. David hurt him. Blow high,
+blow low, there will be no pardon for James Stewart: and take that for
+said! The question is now of myself: am I to stand or fall? and I do not
+deny to you that I am in some danger. But will Mr. David Balfour
+consider why? It is not because I have pushed the case unduly against
+James; for that, I am sure of condonation. And it is not because I have
+sequestered Mr. David on a rock, though it will pass under that colour;
+but because I did not take the ready and plain path, to which I was
+pressed repeatedly, and send Mr. David to his grave or to the gallows.
+Hence the scandal--hence this damned memorial," striking the paper on
+his leg. "My tenderness for you has brought me in this difficulty. I
+wish to know if your tenderness to your own conscience is too great to
+let you help me out of it?"
+
+No doubt but there was much of the truth in what he said; if James was
+past helping, whom was it more natural that I should turn to help than
+just the man before me, who had helped myself so often, and was even now
+setting me a pattern of patience? I was besides not only weary, but
+beginning to be ashamed of my perpetual attitude of suspicion and
+refusal.
+
+"If you will name the time and place, I will be punctually ready to
+attend your lordship," said I.
+
+He shook hands with me. "And I think my misses have some news for you,"
+says he, dismissing me.
+
+I came away, vastly pleased to have my peace made, yet a little
+concerned in conscience; nor could I help wondering, as I went back,
+whether, perhaps, I had not been a scruple too good-natured. But there
+was the fact, that this was a man that might have been my father, an
+able man, a great dignitary, and one that, in the hour of my need, had
+reached a hand to my assistance. I was in the better humour to enjoy the
+remainder of that evening, which I passed with the advocates, in
+excellent company no doubt, but perhaps with rather more than a
+sufficiency of punch: for though I went early to bed I have no clear
+mind of how I got there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE TEE'D BALL
+
+
+On the morrow, from the justices' private room, where none could see me,
+I heard the verdict given in and judgment rendered upon James. The
+Duke's words I am quite sure I have correctly; and since that famous
+passage has been made a subject of dispute, I may as well commemorate my
+version. Having referred to the year '45, the chief of the Campbells,
+sitting as Justice-General upon the bench, thus addressed the
+unfortunate Stewart before him: "If you had been successful in that
+rebellion, you might have been giving the law where you have now
+received the judgment of it; we, who are this day your judges, might
+have been tried before one of your mock courts of judicature; and then
+you might have been satiated with the blood of any name or clan to which
+you had an aversion."
+
+"This is to let the cat out of the bag, indeed," thought I. And that was
+the general impression. It was extraordinary how the young advocate lads
+took hold and made a mock of this speech, and how scarce a meal passed
+but what some one would get in the words: "And then you might have been
+satiated." Many songs were made in that time for the hour's diversion,
+and are near all forgot. I remember one began:
+
+ What do ye want the bluid of, bluid of?
+ Is it a name, or is it a clan,
+ Or is it an aefauld Hielandman,
+ That ye want the bluid of, bluid of?
+
+Another went to my old favourite air, _The House of Airlie_, and began
+thus:
+
+ It fell on a day when Argyle was on the bench,
+ That they served him a Stewart for his denner.
+
+And one of the verses ran:
+
+ Then up and spak the Duke, and flyted on his cook,
+ I regaird it as a sensible aspersion,
+ That I would sup ava', an' satiate my maw,
+ With the bluid of ony clan of my aversion.
+
+James was as fairly murdered as though the Duke had got a fowling-piece
+and stalked him. So much of course I knew: but others knew not so much,
+and were more affected by the items of scandal that came to light in the
+progress of the cause. One of the chief was certainly this sally of the
+justice's. It was run hard by another of a juryman, who had struck into
+the midst of Colstoun's speech for the defence with a "Pray, sir, cut it
+short, we are quite weary," which seemed the very excess of impudence
+and simplicity. But some of my new lawyer friends were still more
+staggered with an innovation that had disgraced and even vitiated the
+proceedings. One witness was never called. His name, indeed, was
+printed, where it may still be seen on the fourth page of the list:
+"James Drummond, _alias_ Macgregor, _alias_ James More, late tenant in
+Inveronachile"; and his precognition had been taken, as the manner is,
+in writing. He had remembered or invented (God help him) matter which
+was lead in James Stewart's shoes, and I saw was like to prove wings to
+his own. This testimony it was highly desirable to bring to the notice
+of the jury, without exposing the man himself to the perils of
+cross-examination; and the way it was brought about was a matter of
+surprise to all. For the paper was handed round (like a curiosity) in
+court; passed through the jury-box, where it did its work; and
+disappeared again (as though by accident) before it reached the counsel
+for the prisoner. This was counted a most insidious device; and that the
+name of James More should be mingled up with it filled me with shame for
+Catriona and concern for myself.
+
+The following day, Prestongrange and I, with a considerable company, set
+out for Glasgow, where (to my impatience) we continued to linger some
+time in a mixture of pleasure and affairs. I lodged with my lord, with
+whom I was encouraged to familiarity; had my place at entertainments;
+was presented to the chief guests; and altogether made more of than I
+thought accorded either with my parts or station; so that, on strangers
+being present, I would often blush for Prestongrange. It must be owned
+the view I had taken of the world in these last months was fit to cast a
+gloom upon my character. I had met many men, some of them leaders in
+Israel whether by their birth or talents; and who among them all had
+shown clean hands? As for the Browns and Millers, I had seen their
+self-seeking, I could never again respect them. Prestongrange was the
+best yet; he had saved me, had spared me rather, when others had it in
+their minds to murder me outright; but the blood of James lay at his
+door; and I thought his present dissimulation with myself a thing below
+pardon. That he should affect to find pleasure in my discourse almost
+surprised me out of my patience. I would sit and watch him with a kind
+of a slow fire of anger in my bowels. "Ah, friend, friend," I would
+think to myself, "if you were but through with this affair of the
+memorial, would you not kick me in the streets?" Here I did him, as
+events have proved, the most foul injustice; and I think he was at once
+far more sincere, and a far more artful performer than I supposed.
+
+But I had some warrant for my incredulity in the behaviour of that court
+of young advocates that hung about him in the hope of patronage. The
+sudden favour of a lad not previously heard of troubled them at first
+out of measure; but two days were not gone by before I found myself
+surrounded with flattery and attention. I was the same young man, and
+neither better nor bonnier, that they had rejected a month before; and
+now there was no civility too fine for me! The same, do I say? It was
+not so; and the byname by which I went behind my back confirmed it.
+Seeing me so firm with the Advocate, and persuaded that I was to fly
+high and far, they had taken a word from the golfing green, and called
+me _the Tee'd Ball_.[14] I was told I was now "one of themselves"; I was
+to taste of their soft lining, who had already made my own experience of
+the roughness of the outer husk; and the one, to whom I had been
+presented in Hope Park, was so assured as even to remind me of that
+meeting. I told him I had not the pleasure of remembering it.
+
+"Why," says he, "it was Miss Grant herself presented me! My name is
+so-and-so."
+
+"It may very well be, sir," said I, "but I have kept no mind of it."
+
+At which he desisted; and in the midst of the disgust that commonly
+overflowed my spirits I had a glisk of pleasure.
+
+But I have not patience to dwell upon that time at length. When I was in
+company with these young politics I was borne down with shame for myself
+and my own plain ways, and scorn for them and their duplicity. Of the
+two evils, I thought Prestongrange to be the least; and while I was
+always as stiff as buckram to the young bloods, I made rather a
+dissimulation of my hard feelings towards the Advocate, and was (in old
+Mr. Campbell's word) "soople to the laird." Himself commented on the
+difference, and bid me be more of my age, and make friends with my young
+comrades.
+
+I told him I was slow of making friends.
+
+"I will take the word back," said he. "But there is such a thing as
+_Fair gude e'en and fair gude day_, Mr. David. These are the same young
+men with whom you are to pass your days and get through life: your
+backwardness has a look of arrogance; and unless you can assume a little
+more lightness of manner, I fear you will meet difficulties in the
+path."
+
+"It will be an ill job to make a silk purse of a sow's ear," said I.
+
+On the morning of October 1st I was awakened by the clattering in of an
+express; and getting to my window almost before he had dismounted, I saw
+the messenger had ridden hard. Somewhile after I was called to
+Prestongrange, where he was sitting in his bedgown and nightcap, with
+his letters around him.
+
+"Mr. David," said he, "I have a piece of news for you. It concerns some
+friends of yours, of whom I sometimes think you are a little ashamed,
+for you have never referred to their existence."
+
+I suppose I blushed.
+
+"I see you understand, since you make the answering signal," said he.
+"And I must compliment you on your excellent taste in beauty. But do you
+know, Mr. David, this seems to me a very enterprising lass? She crops up
+from every side. The Government of Scotland appears unable to proceed
+for Mistress Katrine Drummond, which was somewhat the case (no great
+while back) with a certain Mr. David Balfour. Should not these make a
+good match? Her first intromission in politics--but I must not tell you
+that story, the authorities have decided you are to hear it otherwise
+and from a livelier narrator. This new example is more serious, however;
+and I am afraid I must alarm you with the intelligence that she is now
+in prison."
+
+I cried out.
+
+"Yes," said he, "the little lady is in prison. But I would not have you
+to despair. Unless you (with your friends and memorials) shall procure
+my downfall, she is to suffer nothing."
+
+"But what has she done? What is her offence?" I cried.
+
+"It might be almost construed a high treason," he returned, "for she has
+broke the King's Castle of Edinburgh."
+
+"The lady is much my friend," I said. "I know you would not work me if
+the thing were serious."
+
+"And yet it is serious in a sense," said he; "for this rogue of a
+Katrine--or Cateran, as we may call her--has set adrift again upon the
+world that very doubtful character, her papa."
+
+Here was one of my previsions justified: James More was once again at
+liberty. He had lent his men to keep me a prisoner; he had volunteered
+his testimony in the Appin case, and the same (no matter by what
+subterfuge) had been employed to influence the jury. Now came his
+reward, and he was free. It might please the authorities to give to it
+the colour of an escape; but I knew better--I knew it was the fulfilment
+of a bargain. The same course of thought relieved me of the least alarm
+for Catriona. She might be thought to have broke prison for her father;
+she might have believed so herself. But the chief hand in the whole
+business was that of Prestongrange; and I was sure, so far from letting
+her come to punishment, he would not suffer her to be even tried.
+Whereupon thus came out of me the not very politic ejaculation:
+
+"Ah! I was expecting that!"
+
+"You have at times a great deal of discretion too!" says Prestongrange.
+
+"And what is my lord pleased to mean by that?" I asked.
+
+"I was just marvelling," he replied, "that being so clever as to draw
+these inferences, you should not be clever enough to keep them to
+yourself. But I think you would like to hear the details of the affair.
+I have received two versions: and the least official is the more full
+and far the more entertaining, being from the lively pen of my eldest
+daughter. 'Here is all the town bizzing with a fine piece of work,' she
+writes, 'and what would make the thing more noted (if it were only
+known) the malefactor is a _protégée_ of his lordship my papa. I am sure
+your heart is too much in your duty (if it were nothing else) to have
+forgotten Grey Eyes. What does she do, but get a broad hat with the
+flaps open, a long hairy-like man's great-coat, and a big gravatt; kilt
+her coats up to _Gude kens whaur_, clap two pair of boot-hose upon her
+legs, take a pair of _clouted brogues_[15] in her hand, and off to the
+Castle? Here she gives herself out to be a soutar[16] in the employ of
+James More, and gets admitted to his cell, the lieutenant (who seems to
+have been full of pleasantry) making sport among his soldiers of the
+soutar's great-coat. Presently they hear disputation and the sound of
+blows inside. Out flies the cobbler, his coat flying, the flaps of his
+hat beat about his face, and the lieutenant and his soldiers mock at him
+as he runs off. They laughed not so hearty the next time they had
+occasion to visit the cell, and found nobody but a tall, pretty,
+grey-eyed lass in the female habit! As for the cobbler, he was "over the
+hills ayont Dumblane," and it's thought that poor Scotland will have to
+console herself without him. I drank Catriona's health this night in
+public. Indeed, the whole town admires her; and I think the beaux would
+wear bits of her garters in their button-holes if they could only get
+them. I would have gone to visit her in prison too, only I remembered in
+time I was papa's daughter; so I wrote her a billet instead, which I
+entrusted to the faithful Doig, and I hope you will admit I can be
+political when I please. The same faithful gomeral is to despatch this
+letter by the express along with those of the wiseacres, so that you may
+hear Tom Fool in company with Solomon. Talking of _gomerals_, do tell
+_Dauvit Balfour_. I would I could see the face of him at the thought of
+a long-legged lass in such a predicament! to say nothing of the levities
+of your affectionate daughter, and his respectful friend.' So my rascal
+signs herself!" continued Prestongrange. "And you see, Mr. David, it is
+quite true what I tell you, that my daughters regard you with the most
+affectionate playfulness."
+
+
+"The gomeral is much obliged," said I.
+
+"And was not this prettily done?" he went on. "Is not this Highland maid
+a piece of a heroine?"
+
+"I was always sure she had a great heart," said I. "And I wager she
+guessed nothing.... But I beg your pardon, this is to tread upon
+forbidden subjects."
+
+"I will go bail she did not," he returned, quite openly. "I will go bail
+she thought she was flying straight into King George's face."
+
+Remembrance of Catriona, and the thought of her lying in captivity,
+moved me strangely. I could see that even Prestongrange admired, and
+could not withhold his lips from smiling when he considered her
+behaviour. As for Miss Grant, for all her ill habit of mockery, her
+admiration shone out plain. A kind of a heat came on me.
+
+"I am not your lordship's daughter..." I began.
+
+"That I know of!" he put in smiling.
+
+"I speak like a fool," said I, "or rather I began wrong. It would
+doubtless be unwise in Mistress Grant to go to her in prison; but for
+me, I think I would look like a half-hearted friend if I did not fly
+there instantly."
+
+"So-ho, Mr. David," says he, "I thought that you and I were in a
+bargain?"
+
+"My lord," I said, "when I made that bargain I was a good deal affected
+by your goodness, but I'll never can deny that I was moved besides by my
+own interest. There was self-seeking in my heart, and I think shame of
+it now. It may be for your lordship's safety to say this fashious Davie
+Balfour is your friend and housemate. Say it then; I'll never contradict
+you. But as for your patronage, I give it all back. I ask but the one
+thing--let me go, and give me a pass to see her in her prison."
+
+He looked at me with a hard eye. "You put the cart before the horse, I
+think," says he. "That which I had given was a portion of my liking,
+which your thankless nature does not seem to have remarked. But for my
+patronage, it is not given, nor (to be exact) is it yet offered." He
+paused a bit. "And I warn you, you do not know yourself," he added.
+"Youth is a hasty season; you will think better of all this before a
+year."
+
+"Well, and I would like to be that kind of youth!" I cried. "I have seen
+too much of the other party, in these young advocates that fawn upon
+your lordship and are even at the pains to fawn on me. And I have seen
+it in the old ones also. They are all for by-ends, the whole clan of
+them! It's this that makes me seem to misdoubt your lordship's liking.
+Why would I think that you would like me? But ye told me yourself ye had
+an interest!"
+
+I stopped at this, confounded that I had run so far; he was observing me
+with a unfathomable face.
+
+"My lord, I ask your pardon," I resumed. "I have nothing in my chafts
+but a rough country tongue. I think it would be only decent-like if I
+would go to see my friend in her captivity; but I'm owing you my life,
+I'll never forget that; and-if it's for your lordship's good, here I'll
+stay. That's barely gratitude."
+
+"This might have been reached in fewer words," says Prestongrange,
+grimly. "It is easy, and it is at times gracious, to say a plain Scots
+'ay'."
+
+"Ah, but, my lord, I think ye take me not yet entirely!" cried I. "For
+_your_ sake, for my life-safe, and the kindness that ye say ye bear to
+me--for these, I'll consent; but not for any good that might be coming
+to myself. If I stand aside when this young maid is in her trial, it's a
+thing I will be noways advantaged by; I will lose by it, I will never
+gain. I would rather make a shipwreck wholly than to build on that
+foundation."
+
+He was a minute serious, then smiled. "You mind me of the man with the
+long nose," said he: "was you to look at the moon by a telescope, you
+would see David Balfour there! But you shall have your way of it. I will
+ask at you one service, and then set you free. My clerks are overdriven;
+be so good as copy me these few pages," says he, visibly swithering
+among some huge rolls of manuscripts, "and when that is done, I shall
+bid you God speed! I would never charge myself with Mr. David's
+conscience; and if you could cast some part of it (as you went by) in a
+moss hag, you would find yourself to ride much easier without it."
+
+"Perhaps not just entirely in the same direction though, my lord!" says
+I.
+
+"And you shall have the last word, too!" cries he gaily.
+
+Indeed he had some cause for gaiety, having now found the means to gain
+his purpose. To lessen the weight of the memorial, or to have a readier
+answer at his hand, he desired I should appear publicly in the character
+of his intimate. But if I were to appear with the same publicity as a
+visitor to Catriona in her prison the world would scarce stint to draw
+conclusions, and the true nature of James More's escape must become
+evident to all. This was the little problem I had set him of a sudden,
+and to which he had so briskly found an answer. I was to be tethered in
+Glasgow by that job of copying, which in mere outward decency I could
+not well refuse; and during these hours of my employment Catriona was
+privately got rid of. I think shame to write of this man that loaded me
+with so many goodnesses. He was kind to me as any father, yet I ever
+thought him as false as a cracked bell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES
+
+
+The copying was a weary business, the more so as I perceived very early
+there was no sort of urgency in the matters treated, and began very
+early to consider my employment a pretext. I had no sooner finished,
+than I got to horse, used what remained of daylight to the best purpose,
+and being at last fairly benighted, slept in a house by Almond-Water
+side. I was in the saddle again before the day, and the Edinburgh booths
+were just opening when I clattered in by the West Bow and drew up a
+smoking horse at my lord Advocate's door. I had a written word for Doig,
+my lord's private hand that was thought to be in all his secrets, a
+worthy, little plain man, all fat and snuff and self-sufficiency. Him I
+found already at his desk and already bedabbled with maccabaw, in the
+same anteroom where I rencountered with James More. He read the note
+scrupulously through like a chapter in his Bible.
+
+"H'm," says he, "ye come a wee thing ahint-hand, Mr. Balfour. The bird's
+flaen, we hae letten her out."
+
+"Miss Drummond is set free?" I cried.
+
+"Achy!" said he. "What would we keep her for, ye ken? To hae made a
+steer about the bairn would hae pleased naebody."
+
+"And where'll she be now?" says I.
+
+"Gude kens!" says Doig, with a shrug.
+
+"She'll have gone home to Lady Allardyce, I'm thinking," said I.
+
+"That'll be it," said he.
+
+"Then I'll gang there straight," says I.
+
+"But ye'll be for a bite or ye go?" said he.
+
+"Neither bite nor sup," said I. "I had a good waucht of milk in by
+Ratho."
+
+"Aweel, aweel," says Doig. "But ye'll can leave your horse here and your
+bags, for it seems we're to have your up-put."
+
+"Na, na," said I. "Tamson's mear[17] would never be the thing for me,
+this day of all days."
+
+Doig speaking somewhat broad, I had been led by imitation into an accent
+much more countrified than I was usually careful to affect, a good deal
+broader indeed than I have written it down; and I was the more ashamed
+when another voice joined in behind me with a scrap of a ballad:
+
+ "Gae saddle me the bonny black,
+ Gae saddle sune and mak' him ready,
+ For I will down the Gatehope-slack,
+ And a' to see my bonny leddy."
+
+The young lady, when I turned to her, stood in a morning gown, and her
+hands muffled in the same, as if to hold me at a distance. Yet I could
+not but think there was kindness in the eye with which she saw me.
+
+"My best respects to you, Mistress Grant," said I bowing.
+
+"The like to yourself, Mr. David," she replied, with a deep courtesy,
+"And I beg to remind you of an old musty saw, that meat and mass never
+hindered man. The mass I cannot afford you, for we are all good
+Protestants. But the meat I press on your attention. And I would not
+wonder but I could find something for your private ear that would be
+worth the stopping for."
+
+"Mistress Grant," said I, "I believe I am already your debtor for some
+merry words--and I think they were kind too--on a piece of unsigned
+paper."
+
+"Unsigned paper?" says she, and made a droll face, which was likewise
+wondrous beautiful, as of one trying to remember.
+
+"Or else I am the more deceived," I went on. "But to be sure, we shall
+have the time to speak of these, since your father is so good as to make
+me for a while your inmate; and the _gomeral_ begs you at this time only
+for the favour of his liberty."
+
+"You give yourself hard names," said she.
+
+"Mr. Doig and I would be blythe to take harder at your clever pen," says
+I.
+
+"Once more I have to admire the discretion of all men-folk," she
+replied. "But if you will not eat, off with you at once; you will be
+back the sooner, for you go on a fool's errand. Off with you, Mr.
+David," she continued, opening the door.
+
+ "He has lowpen on his bonny grey,
+ He rade the richt gate and the ready;
+ I trow he would neither stint nor stay,
+ Far he was seeking his bonny leddy."
+
+I did not wait to be twice bidden, and did justice to Miss Grant's
+citation on the way to Dean.
+
+Old Lady Allardyce walked there alone in the garden, in her hat and
+mutch, and having a silver-mounted staff of some black wood to lean
+upon. As I alighted from my horse, and drew near to her with _congees_,
+I could see the blood come in her face, and her head fling into the air
+like what I had conceived of empresses.
+
+"What brings you to my poor door?" she cried, speaking high through her
+nose. "I cannot bar it. The males of my house are dead and buried; I
+have neither son nor husband to stand in the gate for me; any beggar can
+pluck me by the baird[18]--and a baird there is, and that's the worst of
+it yet!" she added, partly to herself.
+
+I was extremely put out at this reception, and the last remark, which
+seemed like a daft wife's, left me near hand speechless.
+
+"I see I have fallen under your displeasure, ma'am," said I. "Yet I will
+still be so bold as ask after Mistress Drummond."
+
+She considered me with a burning eye, her lips pressed close together
+into twenty creases, her hand shaking on her staff. "This cows all!" she
+cried. "Ye come to me to spier for her! Would God I knew!"
+
+"She is not here?" I cried.
+
+She threw up her chin and made a step and a cry at me, so that I fell
+back incontinent.
+
+"Out upon your leeing throat!" she cried. "What! ye come and spier at
+me! She's in jyle, whaur ye took her to--that's all there is to it. And
+of a' the beings ever I beheld in breeks, to think it should be you! Ye
+timmer scoun'rel, if I had a male left to my name I would have your
+jaicket dustit till ye raired."
+
+I thought it not good to delay longer in that place because I remarked
+her passion to be rising. As I turned to the horse-post she even
+followed me; and I make no shame to confess that I rode away with the
+one stirrup on and scrambling for the other.
+
+As I knew no other quarter where I could push my inquiries, there was
+nothing left me but to return to the Advocate's. I was well received by
+the four ladies, who were now in company together, and must give the
+news of Prestongrange and what word went in the west country, at the
+most inordinate length and with great weariness to myself; while all the
+time that young lady, with whom I so much desired to be alone again,
+observed me quizzically and seemed to find pleasure in the sight of my
+impatience. At last, after I had endured a meal with them, and was come
+very near the point of appealing for an interview before her aunt, she
+went and stood by the music case, and picking out a tune, sang to it on
+a high key--"He that will not when he may, When he will he shall have
+nay." But this was the end of her rigours, and presently, after making
+some excuse of which I have no mind, she carried me away in private to
+her father's library. I should not fail to say that she was dressed to
+the nines, and appeared extraordinary handsome.
+
+"Now, Mr. David, sit ye down here and let us have a two-handed crack,"
+said she. "For I have much to tell you, and it appears besides that I
+have been grossly unjust to your good taste."
+
+"In what manner, Mistress Grant?" I asked. "I trust I have never seemed
+to fail in due respect."
+
+"I will be your surety, Mr. David," said she. "Your respect, whether to
+yourself or your poor neighbours, has been always and most fortunately
+beyond imitation. But that is by the question. You got a note from me?"
+she asked.
+
+"I was so bold as to suppose so upon inference," said I, "and it was
+kindly thought upon."
+
+"It must have prodigiously surprised you," said she. "But let us begin
+with the beginning. You have not perhaps forgot a day when you were so
+kind as to escort three very tedious misses to Hope Park? I have the
+less cause to forget it myself, because you was so particular obliging
+as to introduce me to some of the principles of the Latin grammar, a
+thing which wrote itself profoundly on my gratitude."
+
+"I fear I was sadly pedantical," said I, overcome with confusion at the
+memory. "You are only to consider I am quite unused with the society of
+ladies."
+
+"I will say the less about the grammar then," she replied. "But how came
+you to desert your charge? 'He has thrown her out, overboard, his ain
+dear Annie!'" she hummed; "and his ain dear Annie and her two sisters
+had to taigle home by theirselves like a string of green geese! It seems
+you returned to my papa's, where you showed yourself excessively
+martial, and then on to realms unknown, with an eye (it appears) to the
+Bass Rock; solan geese being perhaps more to your mind than bonny
+lasses."
+
+Through all this raillery there was something indulgent in the lady's
+eye which made me suppose there might be better coming.
+
+"You take a pleasure to torment me," said I, "and I make a very feckless
+plaything; but let me ask you to be more merciful. At this time there is
+but the one thing that I care to hear of, and that will be news of
+Catriona."
+
+"Do you call her by that name to her face, Mr. Balfour?" she asked.
+
+"In troth, and I am not very sure," I stammered.
+
+"I would not do so in any case to strangers," said Miss Grant. "And why
+are you so much immersed in the affairs of this young lady?"
+
+"I heard she was in prison," said I.
+
+"Well, and now you hear that she is out of it," she replied, "and what
+more would you have? She has no need of any further champion."
+
+"I may have the greater need of her, ma'am," said I.
+
+"Come, this is better!" says Miss Grant. "But look me fairly in the
+face; am I not bonnier than she?"
+
+"I would be the last to be denying it," said I. "There is not your
+marrow in all Scotland."
+
+"Well, here you have the pick of the two at your hand, and must needs
+speak of the other," said she. "This is never the way to please the
+ladies, Mr. Balfour."
+
+"But, mistress," said I, "there are surely other things besides mere
+beauty."
+
+"By which I am to understand that I am no better than I should be,
+perhaps?" she asked.
+
+"By which you will please understand that I am like the cock in the
+midden in the fable book," said I. "I see the braw jewel--and I like
+fine to see it too--but I have more need of the pickle corn."
+
+"Bravissimo!" she cried. "There is a word well said at last, and I will
+reward you for it with my story. That same night of your desertion I
+came late from a friend's house--where I was excessively admired,
+whatever you may think of it--and what should I hear but that a lass in
+a tartan screen desired to speak with me? She had been there an hour or
+better, said the servant-lass, and she grat in to herself as she sat
+waiting. I went to her direct; she rose as I came in, and I knew her at
+a look. '_Grey Eyes!_' says I to myself, but was more wise than to let
+on. _You will be Miss Grant at last?_ she says, rising and looking at me
+hard and pitiful. _Ay, it was true he said, you are bonny at all
+events.--The way God made me, my dear_, I said, _but I would be gey and
+obliged if ye could tell me what brought you here at such a time of the
+night--Lady_, she said, _we are kinsfolk, we are both come of the blood
+of the sons of Alpin.--My dear_, I replied, _I think no more of Alpin or
+his sons than what I do of a kale-stock. You have a better argument in
+these tears upon your bonny face_. And at that I was so weakminded as to
+kiss her, which is what you would like to do dearly, and I wager will
+never find the courage of. I say it was weakminded of me, for I knew no
+more of her than the outside; but it was the wisest stroke I could have
+hit upon. She is a very staunch, brave nature, but I think she has been
+little used with tenderness; and at that caress (though to say the
+truth, it was but lightly given) her heart went out to me. I will never
+betray the secrets of my sex, Mr. Davie; I will never tell you the way
+she turned me round her thumb, because it is the same she will use to
+twist yourself. Ay, it is a fine lass! She is as clean as hill well
+water."
+
+"She is e'en't!" I cried.
+
+"Well, then, she told me her concerns," pursued Miss Grant, "and in what
+a swither she was in about her papa, and what a taking about yourself,
+with very little cause, and in what a perplexity she had found herself
+after you was gone away. _And then I minded at long last,_ says she,
+_that we were kinswomen, and that Mr. David should have given you the
+name of the bonniest of the bonny, and I was thinking to myself 'If she
+is so bonny she will be good at all events; and I took up my foot soles
+out of that_. That was when I forgave yourself, Mr. Davie. When you was
+in my society, you seemed upon hot iron; by all marks, if ever I saw a
+young man that wanted to be gone, it was yourself, and I and my two
+sisters were the ladies you were so desirous to be gone from; and now it
+appeared you had given me some notice in the bygoing, and was so kind as
+to comment on my attractions! From that hour you may date our
+friendship, and I began to think with tenderness upon the Latin
+grammar."
+
+"You will have many hours to rally me in," said I, "and I think besides
+you do yourself injustice, I think it was Catriona turned your heart in
+my direction, she is too simple to perceive as you do the stiffness of
+her friend."
+
+"I would not like to wager upon that, Mr. David," said she. "The lasses
+have clear eyes. But at least she is your friend entirely, as I was to
+see. I carried her in to his lordship my papa; and his Advocacy, being
+in a favourable stage of claret, was so good as to receive the pair of
+us. _Here is Grey Eyes that you have been deaved with these days past_,
+said I, _she is come to prove that we spoke true, and I lay the
+prettiest lass in the three Lothians at your feet_--making a papistical
+reservation of myself. She suited her action to my words; down she went
+upon her knees to him--I would not like to swear but he saw two of her,
+which doubtless made her appeal the more irresistible, for you are all a
+pack of Mahomedans--told him what had passed that night, and how she had
+withheld her father's man from following of you, and what a case she was
+in about her father, and what a flutter for yourself; and begged with
+weeping for the lives of both of you (neither of which was in the
+slightest danger) till I vow I was proud of my sex because it was done
+so pretty, and ashamed for it because of the smallness of the occasion.
+She had not gone far, I assure you, before the Advocate was wholly
+sober, to see his inmost politics ravelled out by a young lass and
+discovered to the most unruly of his daughters. But we took him in hand,
+the pair of us, and brought that matter straight. Properly managed--and
+that means managed by me--there is no one to compare with my papa."
+
+"He has been a good man to me," said I.
+
+"Well, he was a good man to Katrine, and I was there to see to it," said
+she.
+
+"And she pled for me!" said I.
+
+"She did that, and very movingly," said Miss Grant. "I would not like to
+tell you what she said, I find you vain enough already."
+
+"God reward her for it!" cried I.
+
+"With Mr. David Balfour, I suppose?" says she.
+
+"You do me too much injustice at the last!" I cried. "I would tremble to
+think of her in such hard hands. Do you think I would presume, because
+she begged my life? She would do that for a new whelped puppy! I have
+had more than that to set me up, if you but ken'd. She kissed that hand
+of mine. Ay, but she did. And why? because she thought I was playing a
+brave part and might be going to my death. It was not for my sake, but I
+need not be telling that to you that cannot look at me without laughter.
+It was for the love of what she thought was bravery. I believe there is
+none but me and poor Prince Charlie had that honour done them. Was this
+not to make a god of me? and do you not think my heart would quake when
+I remember it?"
+
+"I do laugh at you a good deal, and a good deal more than is quite
+civil," said she; "but I will tell you one thing: if you speak to her
+like that, you have some glimmerings of a chance."
+
+"Me?" I cried, "I would never dare. I can speak to you, Miss Grant,
+because it's a matter of indifference what ye think of me. But her? no
+fear!" said I.
+
+"I think you have the largest feet in all broad Scotland," says she.
+
+"Troth, they are no very small," said I, looking down.
+
+"Ah, poor Catriona!" cried Miss Grant.
+
+And I could but stare upon her; for though I now see very well what she
+was driving at (and perhaps some justification for the same), I was
+never swift at the uptake in such flimsy talk.
+
+"Ah well, Mr. David," she said, "it goes sore against my conscience, but
+I see I shall have to be your speaking board. She shall know you came to
+her straight upon the news of her imprisonment; she shall know you would
+not pause to eat; and of your conversation she shall hear just so much
+as I think convenient for a maid of her age and inexperience. Believe
+me, you will be in that way much better served than you could serve
+yourself, for I will keep the big feet out of the platter."
+
+"You know where she is, then?" I exclaimed.
+
+"That I do, Mr. David, and will never tell," said she.
+
+"Why that?" I asked.
+
+"Well," she said, "I am a good friend, as you will soon discover; and
+the chief of those that I am a friend to is my papa. I assure you, you
+will never heat nor melt me out of that, so you may spare me your
+sheep's eyes; and adieu to your David-Balfourship for the now."
+
+"But there is yet one thing more," I cried. "There is one thing that
+must be stopped, being mere ruin to herself, and to me too."
+
+"Well," she said, "be brief, I have spent half the day on you already."
+
+"My Lady Allardyce believes," I began, "she supposes--she thinks that I
+abducted her."
+
+The colour came into Miss Grant's face, so that at first I was quite
+abashed to find her ear so delicate, till I bethought me she was
+struggling rather with mirth, a notion in which I was altogether
+confirmed by the shaking of her voice as she replied--
+
+"I will take up the defence of your reputation," said she. "You may
+leave it in my hands."
+
+And with that she withdrew out of the library.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY
+
+
+For about exactly two months I remained a guest in Prestongrange's
+family, where I bettered my acquaintance with the bench, the bar, and
+the flower of Edinburgh company. You are not to suppose my education was
+neglected, on the contrary I was kept extremely busy. I studied the
+French, so as to be more prepared to go to Leyden; I set myself to the
+fencing, and wrought hard, sometimes three hours in the day, with
+notable advancement; at the suggestion of my cousin, Pilrig, who was an
+apt musician, I was put to a singing class, and by the orders of my Miss
+Grant, to one for the dancing, at which. I must say I proved far from
+ornamental. However, all were good enough to say it gave me an address a
+little more genteel; and there is no question but I learned to manage my
+coat skirts and sword with more dexterity, and to stand in a room as
+though the same belonged to me. My clothes themselves were all earnestly
+re-ordered; and the most trifling circumstance, such as where I should
+tie my hair, or the colour of my ribbon, debated among the three misses
+like a thing of weight. One way with another, no doubt I was a good deal
+improved to look at, and acquired a bit of a modish air that would have
+surprised the good folks at Essendean.
+
+The two younger misses were very willing to discuss a point of my
+habiliment, because that was in the line of their chief thoughts. I
+cannot say that they appeared any other way conscious of my presence;
+and though always more than civil, with a kind of heartless cordiality,
+could not hide how much I wearied them. As for the aunt, she was a
+wonderful still woman; and I think she gave me much the same attention
+as she gave the rest of the family, which was little enough. The eldest
+daughter and the Advocate himself were thus my principal friends, and
+our familiarity was much increased by a pleasure that we took in common.
+Before the court met we spent a day or two at the house of Grange,
+living very nobly with an open table, and here it was that we three
+began to ride out together in the fields, a practice afterwards
+maintained in Edinburgh, so far as the Advocate's continual affairs
+permitted. When we were put in a good frame by the briskness of the
+exercise, the difficulties of the way, or the accidents of bad weather,
+my shyness wore entirely off; we forgot that we were strangers, and
+speech not being required, it flowed the more naturally on. Then it was
+that they had my story from me, bit by bit, from the time that I left
+Essendean, with my voyage and battle in the _Covenant_, wanderings in
+the heather, etc.; and from the interest they found in my adventures
+sprung the circumstance of a jaunt we made a little later on, a day when
+the courts were not sitting, and of which I will tell a trifle more at
+length.
+
+We took horse early, and passed first by the house of Shaws, where it
+stood smokeless in a great field of white frost, for it was yet early in
+the day. Here Prestongrange alighted down, gave me his horse, and
+proceeded alone to visit my uncle. My heart, I remember, swelled up
+bitter within me at the sight of that bare house and the thought of the
+old miser sitting chittering within in the cold kitchen.
+
+"There is my home," said I. "And my family."
+
+"Poor David Balfour!" said Miss Grant.
+
+What passed during the visit I have never heard; but it would doubtless
+not be very agreeable to Ebenezer; for when the Advocate came forth
+again his face was dark.
+
+"I think you will soon be the laird indeed, Mr. Davie," says he, turning
+half about with the one foot in the stirrup.
+
+"I will never pretend sorrow," said I; and, to say the truth, during his
+absence Miss Grant and I had been embellishing the place in fancy with
+plantations, parterres, and a terrace, much as I have since carried out
+in fact.
+
+Thence we pushed to the Queensferry, where Rankeillor gave us a good
+welcome, being indeed out of the body to receive so great a visitor.
+Here the Advocate was so unaffectedly good as to go quite fully over my
+affairs, sitting perhaps two hours with the Writer in his study, and
+expressing (I was told) a great esteem for myself and concern for my
+fortunes. To while this time, Miss Grant and I and young Rankeillor took
+boat and passed the Hope to Limekilns. Rankeillor made himself very
+ridiculous (and, I thought offensive) with his admiration for the young
+lady, and to my wonder (only it is so common a weakness of her sex) she
+seemed, if anything, to be a little gratified. One use it had: for when
+we were come to the other side, she laid her commands on him to mind the
+boat, while she and I passed a little further to the ale-house. This was
+her own thought, for she had been taken with my account of Alison
+Hastie, and desired to see the lass herself. We found her once more
+alone--indeed, I believe her father wrought all day in the fields--and
+she curtsied dutifully to the gentry-folk and the beautiful young lady
+in the riding coat.
+
+"Is this all the welcome I am to get?" said I, holding out my hand. "And
+have you no more memory of old friends?"
+
+"Keep me! wha's this of it?" she cried, and then, "God's truth, it's the
+tautit[19] laddie!"
+
+"The very same," says I.
+
+"Mony's the time I've thocht upon you and your freen, and blythe am I to
+see in your braws,"[20] she cried. "Though I kent ye were come to your
+ain folk by the grand present that ye sent me and that I thank ye for
+with a' my heart."
+
+"There," said Miss Grant to me, "run out by with ye, like a good bairn.
+I didnae come here to stand and hand a candle; it's her and me that are
+to crack."
+
+I suppose she stayed ten minutes in the house, but when she came forth I
+observed two things--that her eyes were reddened, and a silver brooch
+was gone out of her bosom. This very much affected me.
+
+"I never saw you so well adorned," said I.
+
+"O Davie man, dinna be a pompous gowk!" said she, and was more than
+usually sharp to me the remainder of the day.
+
+About candlelight we came home from this excursion.
+
+For a good while I heard nothing further of Catriona: my Miss Grant
+remaining quite impenetrable, and stopping my mouth with pleasantries.
+At last, one day that she returned from walking and found me alone in
+the parlour over my French, I thought there was something unusual in her
+looks; the colour heightened, the eyes sparkling high, and a bit of a
+smile continually bitten in as she regarded me. She seemed indeed like
+the very spirit of mischief, and walking briskly in the room, had soon
+involved me in a kind of quarrel over nothing and (at the least) with
+nothing intended on my side. I was like Christian in the slough; the
+more I tried to clamber out upon the side, the deeper I became involved;
+until at last I heard her declare, with a great deal of passion, that
+she would take that answer at the hands of none, and I must down upon my
+knees for pardon.
+
+The causelessness of all this fuff stirred my own bile. "I have said
+nothing you can properly object to," said I, "and as for my knees, that
+is an attitude I keep for God."
+
+"And as a goddess I am to be served!" she cried, shaking her brown locks
+at me and with a bright colour. "Every man that comes within waft of my
+petticoats shall use me so!"
+
+"I will go so far as ask your pardon for the fashion's sake, although I
+vow I know not why," I replied. "But for these play-acting postures, you
+can go to others."
+
+"O Davie!" she said. "Not if I was to beg you?"
+
+I bethought me I was fighting with a woman, which is the same as to say
+a child, and that upon a point entirely formal.
+
+"I think it a bairnly thing," I said, "not worthy in you to ask, or me
+to render. Yet I will not refuse you, neither," said I; "and the stain,
+if there be any, rests with yourself." And at that I kneeled fairly
+down.
+
+"There!" she cried. "There is the proper station, there is where I have
+been manoeuvring to bring you." And then, suddenly, "Kep,"[21] said she,
+flung me a folded billet, and ran from the apartment laughing.
+
+The billet had neither place nor date. "Dear Mr. David," it began, "I
+get your news continually by my cousin, Miss Grant, and it is a pleisand
+hearing. I am very well, in a good place, among good folk, but
+necessitated to be quite private, though I am hoping that at long last
+we may meet again. All your friendships have been told me by my loving
+cousin, who loves us both. She bids me to send you this writing, and
+oversees the same. I will be asking you to do all her commands, and rest
+your affectionate friend, Catriona Macgregor-Drummond. P.S.--Will you
+not see my cousin, Allardyce?"
+
+I think it not the least brave of my campaigns (as the soldiers say)
+that I should have done as I was here bidden and gone forthright to the
+house by Dean. But the old lady was now entirely changed and supple as a
+glove. By what means Miss Grant had brought this round I could never
+guess; I am sure at least, she dared not to appear openly in the affair,
+for her papa was compromised in it pretty deep. It was he, indeed, who
+had persuaded Catriona to leave, or rather, not to return, to her
+cousin's, placing her instead with a family of Gregorys, decent people,
+quite at the Advocate's disposition, and in whom she might have the more
+confidence because they were of her own clan and family. These kept her
+private till all was ripe, heated and helped her to attempt her father's
+rescue, and after she was discharged from prison received her again into
+the same secrecy. Thus Prestongrange obtained and used his instrument;
+nor did there leak out the smallest word of his acquaintance with the
+daughter of James More. There was some whispering, of course, upon the
+escape of that discredited person; but the Government replied by a show
+of rigour, one of the cell porters was flogged, the lieutenant of the
+guard (my poor friend, Duncansby) was broken of his rank, and as for
+Catriona, all men were well enough pleased that her fault should be
+passed by in silence.
+
+I could never induce Miss Grant to carry back an answer. "No," she would
+say, when I persisted, "I am going to keep the big feet out of the
+platter." This was the more hard to bear, as I was aware she saw my
+little friend many times in the week, and carried her my news whenever
+(as she said) I "had behaved myself." At last she treated me to what she
+called an indulgence, and I thought rather more of a banter. She was
+certainly a strong, almost a violent friend, to all she liked; chief
+among whom was a certain frail old gentlewoman, very blind, and very
+witty, who dwelt in the top of a tall land on a strait close, with a
+nest of linnets in a cage, and thronged all day with visitors. Miss
+Grant was very fond to carry me there and put me to entertain her friend
+with the narrative of my misfortunes; and Miss Tibbie Ramsay (that was
+her name) was particular kind, and told me a great deal that was worth
+knowledge of old folks and past affairs in Scotland. I should say that
+from her chamber window, and not three feet away, such is the straitness
+of that close, it was possible to look into a barred loophole lighting
+the stairway of the opposite house.
+
+Here, upon some pretext, Miss Grant left me one day alone with Miss
+Ramsay. I mind I thought that lady inattentive and like one preoccupied.
+I was besides yery uncomfortable, for the window, contrary to custom,
+was left open and the day was cold. All at once the voice of Miss Grant
+sounded in my ears as from a distance.
+
+"Here, Shaws!" she cried, "keek out of the window and see what I have
+broughten you."
+
+I think it was the prettiest sight that ever I beheld; the well of the
+close was all in clear shadow where a man could see distinctly, the
+walls very black and dingy; and there from the barred loophole I saw two
+faces smiling across at me--Miss Grant's and Catriona's.
+
+"There!" says Miss Grant, "I wanted her to see you in your braws like
+the lass of Limekilns. I wanted her to see what I could make of you,
+when I buckled to the job in earnest!"
+
+It came in my mind she had been more than common particular that day
+upon my dress: and I think that some of the same care had been bestowed
+upon Catriona. For so merry and sensible a lady, Miss Grant was
+certainly wonderful taken up with duds.
+
+"Catriona!" was all I could get out.
+
+As for her, she said nothing in the world, but only waved her hand and
+smiled to me, and was suddenly carried away again from before the
+loophole.
+
+The vision was no sooner lost than I ran to the house door, where I
+found I was locked in; thence back to Miss Ramsay, crying for the key,
+but might as well have cried upon the castle rock. She had passed her
+word, she said, and I must be a good lad. It was impossible to burst the
+door, even if it had been mannerly; it was impossible I should leap from
+the window, being seven storeys above ground. All I could do was to
+crane over the close and watch for their reappearance from the stair. It
+was little to see, being no more than the tops of their two heads each
+on a ridiculous bobbin of skirts, like to a pair of pincushions. Nor did
+Catriona so much as look up for a farewell; being prevented (as I heard
+afterwards) by Miss Grant, who told her folk were never seen to less
+advantage than from above downward.
+
+On the way home, as soon as I was set free, I upbraided Miss Grant with
+her cruelty.
+
+"I am sorry you was disappointed," says she demurely. "For my part I was
+very pleased. You looked better than I dreaded; you looked--if it will
+not make you vain--a mighty pretty young man when you appeared in the
+window. You are to remember that she could not see your feet," says she,
+with the manner of one reassuring me.
+
+"O!" cried I, "leave my feet be, they are no bigger than my neighbor's."
+
+"They are even smaller than some," said she, "but I speak in parables
+like a Hebrew prophet."
+
+"I marvel little they were sometimes stoned!" says I. "But you miserable
+girl, how could you do it? Why should you care to tantalise me with a
+moment?"
+
+"Love is like folk," says she, "it needs some kind of vivers."[22]
+
+"O, Barbara, let me see her properly!" I pleaded. "_You_ can, you see
+her when you please; let me have half an hour."
+
+"Who is it that is managing this love affair? You? Or me?" she asked,
+and as I continued to press her with my instances, fell back upon a
+deadly expedient: that of imitating the tones of my voice when I called
+on Catriona by name; with which, indeed, she held me in subjection for
+some days to follow.
+
+There was never the least word heard of the memorial, or none by me.
+Prestongrange and his grace the Lord President may have heard of it (for
+what I know) on the deafest sides of their heads; they kept it to
+themselves, at least; the public was none the wiser; and in course of
+time, on November 8th, and in the midst of a prodigious storm of wind
+and rain, poor James of the Glens was duly hanged at Lettermore by
+Balachulish.
+
+So there was the final upshot of my politics! Innocent men have perished
+before James, and are like to keep on perishing (in spite of all our
+wisdom) till the end of time. And till the end of time, young folk (who
+are not yet used with the duplicity of life and men) will struggle as I
+did, and make heroical resolves, and take long risks; and the course of
+events will push them upon the one side and go on like a marching army.
+James was hanged; and here was I dwelling in the house of Prestongrange,
+and grateful to him for his fatherly attention. He was hanged; and
+behold! When I met Mr. Symon in the causeway, I was fain to pull off my
+beaver to him like a good little boy before his dominie. He had been
+hanged by fraud and violence, and the world wagged along, and there was
+not a pennyweight of difference; and the villains of that horrid plot
+were decent, kind, respectable fathers of families, who went to kirk and
+took the sacrament!
+
+But I had had my view of that detestable business they call politics--I
+had seen it from behind, when it is all bones and blackness; and I was
+cured for life of any temptations to take part in it again. A plain,
+quiet, private path was that which I was ambitious to walk in, when I
+might keep my head out of the way of dangers and my conscience out of
+the road of temptation. For, upon a retrospect, it appeared I had not
+done so grandly, after all; but with the greatest possible amount of big
+speech and preparation, had accomplished nothing.
+
+The 25th of the same month, a ship was advertised to sail from Leith;
+and I was suddenly recommended to make up my mails for Leyden. To
+Prestongrange I could, of course, say nothing; for I had already been a
+long while sorning on his house and table. But with his daughter I was
+more open, bewailing my fate that I should be sent out of the country,
+and assuring her, unless she should bring me to farewell with Catriona,
+I would refuse at the last hour.
+
+"Have I not given you my advice?" she asked.
+
+"I know you have," said I, "and I know how much I am beholden to you
+already, and that I am bidden to obey your orders. But you must confess
+you are something too merry a lass at times to lippen[23] to entirely."
+
+"I will tell you, then," said she. "Be you on board at nine o'clock
+forenoon; the ship does not sail before one; keep your boat alongside;
+and if you are not pleased with my farewells when I shall send them, you
+can come ashore again and seek Katrine for yourself."
+
+Since I could make no more of her, I was fain to be content with this.
+
+The day came round at last when she and I were to separate. We had been
+extremely intimate and familiar; I was much in her debt; and what way we
+were to part was a thing that put me from my sleep, like the vails I was
+to give to the domestic servants. I knew she considered me too backward,
+and rather desired to rise in her opinion on that head. Besides which,
+after so much affection shown and (I believe) felt upon both sides, it
+would have looked cold-like to be anyways stiff. Accordingly, I got my
+courage up and my words ready, and the last chance we were like to be
+alone, asked pretty boldly to be allowed to salute her in farewell.
+
+"You forget yourself strangely, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I cannot call
+to mind that I had given you any right to presume on our acquaintancy."
+
+I stood before her like a stopped clock, and knew not what to think, far
+less to say, when of a sudden she cast her arms about my neck and kissed
+me with the best will in the world.
+
+"You inimitable bairn!" she cried. "Did you think that I would let us
+part like strangers? Because I can never keep my gravity at you five
+minutes on end, you must not dream I do not love you very well; I am all
+love and laughter, every time I cast an eye on you! And now I will give
+you an advice to conclude your education, which you will have need of
+before its very long. Never _ask_ women-folk. They're bound to answer
+'No'; God never made the lass that could resist the temptation. It's
+supposed by divines to be the curse of Eve; because she did not say it
+when the devil offered her the apple, her daughters can say nothing
+else."
+
+"Since I am so soon to lose my bonny professor," I began.
+
+"This is gallant, indeed," says she curtseying.
+
+"--I would put the one question," I went on; "May I ask a lass to marry
+me?"
+
+"You think you could not marry her without?" she asked. "Or else get her
+to offer?"
+
+"You see you cannot be serious," said I.
+
+"I shall be very serious in one thing, David," said she. "I shall always
+be your friend."
+
+As I got to my horse the next morning, the four ladies were all at the
+same window whence we had once looked down on Catriona, and all cried
+farewell and waved their pocket napkins as I rode away; one out of the
+four I knew was truly sorry; and at the thought of that, and how I had
+come to the door three months ago for the first time, sorrow and
+gratitude made a confusion in my mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+FATHER AND DAUGHTER
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND
+
+
+The ship lay at a single anchor, well outside the pier of Leith, so that
+all we passengers must come to it by the means of skiffs. This was very
+little troublesome, for the reason that the day was a flat calm, very
+frosty and cloudy, and with a low shifting fog upon the water. The body
+of the vessel was thus quite hid as I drew near, but the tall spars of
+her stood high and bright in a sunshine like the flickering of a fire.
+She proved to be a very roomy, commodious merchant, but somewhat blunt
+in the bows, and loaden extraordinary deep with salt, salted salmon, and
+fine white linen stockings for the Dutch. Upon my coming on board, the
+captain welcomed me, one Sang (out of Lesmahago, I believe), a very
+hearty, friendly tarpauling of a man, but at the moment in rather of a
+bustle. There had no other of the passengers yet appeared, so that I was
+left to walk about upon the deck, viewing the prospect and wondering a
+good deal what these farewells should be which I was promised.
+
+All Edinburgh and the Pentland Hills glinted above me in a kind of
+smuisty brightness, now and again overcome with blots of cloud; of Leith
+there was no more than the tops of chimneys visible, and on the face of
+the water, where the haar[24] lay, nothing at all. Out of this I was
+presently aware of a sound of oars pulling, and a little after (as if
+out of the smoke of a fire) a boat issued. There sat a grave man in the
+stern sheets, well muffled from the cold, and by his side a tall,
+pretty, tender figure of a maid that brought my heart to a stand. I had
+scarce the time to catch my breath in, and be ready to meet her, as she
+stepped upon the deck, smiling, and making my best bow, which was now
+vastly finer than some months before when I first made it to her
+ladyship. No doubt we were both a good deal changed; she seemed to have
+shot up taller, like a young, comely tree. She had now a kind of pretty
+backwardness that became her well, as of one that regarded herself more
+highly and was fairly woman; and for another thing, the hand of the same
+magician had been at work upon the pair of us, and Miss Grant had made
+us both _braw_, if she could make but the one _bonny_.
+
+The same cry, in words not very different, came from both of us, that
+the other was come in compliment to say farewell, and then we perceived
+in a flash we were to ship together.
+
+"O, why will not Baby have been telling me!" she cried; and then
+remembered a letter she had been given, on the condition of not opening
+it till she was well on board. Within was an enclosure for myself, and
+ran thus:
+
+
+ "DEAR DAVIE,--What do you think of my farewell? and what
+ do you say to your fellow-passenger? Did you kiss, or did you
+ ask? I was about to have signed here, but that would leave the
+ purport of my question doubtful; and in my own case _I ken the
+ answer_. So fill up here with good advice. Do not be too
+ blate,[25]
+ and for God's sake do not try to be too forward; nothing sets
+ you
+ worse. I am
+
+ "Your affectionate friend and governess,
+
+ "BARBARA GRANT."
+
+
+I wrote a word of answer and compliment on a leaf out of my pocketbook,
+put it in with another scratch from Catriona, sealed the whole with my
+new signet of the Balfour arms, and despatched it by the hand of
+Prestongrange's servant that still waited in my boat.
+
+Then we had time to look upon each other more at leisure, which we had
+not done for a piece of a minute before (upon a common impulse) we shook
+hands again.
+
+"Catriona!" said I; it seemed that was the first and last word of my
+eloquence.
+
+"You will be glad to see me again?" says she.
+
+"And I think that is an idle word," said I. "We are too deep friends to
+make speech upon such trifles."
+
+"Is she not the girl of all the world?" she cried again. "I was never
+knowing such a girl, so honest and so beautiful."
+
+"And yet she cared no more for Alpin than what she did for a
+kale-stock," said I.
+
+"Ah, she will say so indeed!" cries Catriona. "Yet it was for the name
+and the gentle kind blood that she took me up and was so good to me."
+
+"Well, I will tell you why it was," said I. "There are all sorts of
+people's faces in this world. There is Barbara's face, that everyone
+must look at and admire, and think her a fine, brave, merry girl. And
+then there is your face, which is quite different, I never knew how
+different till to-day. You cannot see yourself, and that is why you do
+not understand; but it was for the love of your face that she took you
+up and was so good to you. And everybody in the world would do the
+same."
+
+"Everybody?" says she.
+
+"Every living soul!" said I.
+
+"Ah, then, that will be why the soldiers at the castle took me up!" she
+cried.
+
+"Barbara has been teaching you to catch me," said I.
+
+"She will have taught me more than that at all events. She will have
+taught me a great deal about Mr. David--all the ill of him, and a little
+that was not so ill either now and then," she said, smiling. "She will
+have told me all there was of Mr. David, only just that he would sail
+upon this very same ship. And why is it you go?"
+
+I told her.
+
+"Ah, well," said she, "we will be some days in company and then (I
+suppose) good-bye for altogether! I go to meet my father at a place of
+the name of Helvoetsluys, and from there to France, to be exiles by the
+side of our chieftain."
+
+I could say no more than just "O!" the name of James More always drying
+up my very voice.
+
+She was quick to perceive it, and to guess some portion of my thought.
+
+"There is one thing I must be saying first of all, Mr. David," said she.
+"I think two of my kinsfolk have not behaved to you altogether very
+well. And the one of them two is James More, my father, and the other is
+the Laird of Prestongrange. Prestongrange will have spoken by himself,
+or his daughter in the place of him. But for James More, my father, I
+have this much to say: he lay shackled in a prison; he is a plain honest
+soldier and a plain Highland gentleman; what they would be after, he
+never would be guessing; but if he had understood it was to be some
+prejudice to a young gentleman like yourself, he would have died first.
+And for the sake of all your friendships, I will be asking you to pardon
+my father and family for that same mistake."
+
+"Catriona," said I, "what that mistake was I do not care to know. I know
+but the one thing, that you went to Prestongrange and begged my life
+upon your knees. O, I ken well it was for your father that you went, but
+when you were there you pleaded for me also. It is a thing I cannot
+speak of. There are two things I cannot think of in to myself; and the
+one is your good words when you called yourself my little friend, and
+the other that you pleaded for my life. Let us never speak more, we two,
+of pardon or offence."
+
+We stood after that silent, Catriona looking on the deck and I on her;
+and before there was more speech, a little wind having sprung up, in the
+nor'-west, they began to shake out the sails and heave in upon the
+anchor.
+
+There were six passengers besides our two selves, which made of it a
+full cabin. Three were solid merchants out of Leith, Kirkaldy, and
+Dundee, all engaged in the same adventure into High Germany; one was a
+Hollander returning; the rest worthy merchants' wives, to the charge of
+one of whom Catriona was recommended. Mrs. Grebbie (for that was her
+name) was by great good fortune heavily incommoded by the sea, and lay
+day and night on the broad of her back. We were besides the only
+creatures at all young on board the _Rose_, except a white-faced boy
+that did my old duty to attend upon the table; and it came about that
+Catriona and I were left almost entirely to ourselves. We had the next
+seats together at the table, where I waited on her with extraordinary
+pleasure. On deck, I made her a soft place with my cloak; and the
+weather being singularly fine for that season, with bright frosty days
+and nights, a steady, gentle wind, and scarce a sheet started all the
+way through the North Sea, we sat there (only now and again walking to
+and fro for warmth) from the first blink of the sun till eight or nine
+at night under the clear stars. The merchants or Captain Sang would
+sometimes glance and smile upon us, or pass a merry word or two and give
+us the go-by again; but the most part of the time they were deep in
+herring and chintzes and linen, or in computations of the slowness of
+the passage, and left us to our own concerns, which were very little
+important to any but ourselves.
+
+At the first, we had a great deal to say, and thought ourselves pretty
+witty; and I was at a little pains to be the _beau_, and she (I believe)
+to play the young lady of experience. But soon we grew plainer with each
+other; I laid aside my high, clipped English (what little there was of
+it) and forgot to make my Edinburgh bows and scrapes; she upon her side,
+fell into a sort of kind familiarity; and we dwelt together like those
+of the same household, only (upon my side) with a more deep emotion.
+About the same time, the bottom seemed to fall out of our conversation,
+and neither one of us the less pleased. Whiles she would tell me old
+wives' tales, of which she had a wonderful variety, many of them from my
+friend red-headed Niel. She told them very pretty, and they were pretty
+enough childish tales; but the pleasure to myself was in the sound of
+her voice, and the thought that she was telling and I listening. Whiles,
+again, we would sit entirely silent, not communicating even with a look,
+and tasting pleasure enough in the sweetness of that neighbourhood. I
+speak here only for myself. Of what was in the maid's mind, I am not
+very sure that ever I asked myself; and what was in my own, I was afraid
+to consider. I need make no secret of it now, either to myself or to the
+reader: I was fallen totally in love. She came between me and the sun.
+She had grown suddenly taller, as I say, but with a wholesome growth;
+she seemed all health, and lightness, and brave spirits; and I thought
+she walked like a young deer, and stood like a birch upon the mountains.
+It was enough for me to sit near by her on the deck; and I declare I
+scarce spent two thoughts upon the future, and was so well content with
+what I then enjoyed that I was never at the pains to imagine any further
+step; unless perhaps that I would be sometimes tempted to take her hand
+in mine and hold it there. But I was too like a miser of what joys I had
+and would venture nothing on a hazard.
+
+What we spoke was usually of ourselves or of each other, so that if
+anyone had been at so much pains as overhear us, he must have supposed
+us the most egotistical persons in the world. It befell one day when we
+were at this practice, that we came on a discourse of friends and
+friendship, and I think now that we were sailing near the wind. We said
+what a fine thing friendship was, and how little we had guessed of it,
+and how it made life a new thing, and a thousand covered things of the
+same kind that will have been said, since the foundation of the world,
+by young folk in the same predicament. Then we remarked upon the
+strangeness of that circumstance, that friends came together in the
+beginning as if they were there for the first time, and yet each had
+been alive a good while, losing time with other people.
+
+"It is not much that I have done," said she, "and I could be telling you
+the five-fifths of it in two-three words. It is only a girl I am, and
+what can befall a girl, at all events? But I went with the clan in the
+year '45. The men marched with swords and firelocks, and some of them in
+brigades in the same set of tartan; they were not backward at the
+marching, I can tell you. And there were gentlemen from the Low Country,
+with their tenants mounted and trumpets to sound, and there was a grand
+skirling of war-pipes. I rode on a little Highland horse on the right
+hand of my father, James More, and of Glengyle himself. And here is one
+fine thing that I remember, that Glengyle kissed me in the face, because
+(says he) 'my kinswoman, you are the only lady of the clan that has come
+out,' and me a little maid of maybe twelve years old! I saw Prince
+Charlie too, and the blue eyes of him; he was pretty indeed! I had his
+hand to kiss in the front of the army. O, well, these were the good
+days, but it is all like a dream that I have seen and then awakened. It
+went what way you very well know; and these were the worst days of all,
+when the red-coat soldiers were out, and my father and my uncles lay in
+the hill, and I was to be carrying them their meat in the middle night,
+or at the short side of day when the cocks crow. Yes, I have walked in
+the night, many's the time, and my heart great in me for terror of the
+darkness. It is a strange thing I will never have been meddled with a
+bogle; but they say a maid goes safe. Next there was my uncle's
+marriage, and that was a dreadful affair beyond all. Jean Kay was that
+woman's name; and she had me in the room with her that night at
+Inversnaid, the night we took her from her friends in the old, ancient
+manner. She would and she wouldn't; she was for marrying Rob the one
+minute, and the next she would be for none of him. I will never have
+seen such a feckless creature of a woman; surely all there was of her
+would tell her ay or no. Well, she was a widow, and I can never be
+thinking a widow a good woman."
+
+"Catriona!" says I, "how do you make out that?"
+
+"I do not know," said she; "I am only telling you the seeming in my
+heart. And then to marry a new man! Fy! But that was her; and she was
+married again upon my Uncle Robin, and went with him awhile to kirk and
+market; and then wearied, or else her friends got claught of her and
+talked her round, or maybe she turned ashamed; at the least of it, she
+ran away, and went back to her own folk, and said we had held her in the
+lake, and I will never tell you all what. I have never thought much of
+any females since that day. And so in the end my father, James More,
+came to be cast in prison, and you know the rest of it as well as me."
+
+"And through all you had no friends?" said I.
+
+"No," said she; "I have been pretty chief with two-three lasses on the
+braes, but not to call it friends."
+
+"Well, mine is a plain tale," said I. "I never had a friend to my name
+till I met in with you."
+
+"And that brave Mr. Stewart?" she asked.
+
+"O, yes, I was forgetting him," I said. "But he is a man, and that is
+very different."
+
+"I would think so," said she. "O, yes, it is quite different."
+
+"And then there was one other," said I. "I once thought I had a friend,
+but it proved a disappointment."
+
+She asked me who she was?
+
+"It was a he, then," said I. "We were the two best lads at my father's
+school, and we thought we loved each other dearly. Well, the time came
+when he went to Glasgow to a merchant's house, that was his second
+cousin once removed; and wrote me two-three times by the carrier; and
+then he found new friends, and I might write till I was tired, he took
+no notice. Eh, Catriona, it took me a long while to forgive the world.
+There is not anything more bitter than to lose a fancied friend."
+
+Then she began to question me close upon his looks and character, for we
+were each a great deal concerned in all that touched the other; till at
+last, in a very evil hour, I minded of his letters and went and fetched
+the bundle from the cabin.
+
+"Here are his letters," said I, "and all the letters that ever I got.
+That will be the last I'll can tell of myself; you know the lave[26] as
+well as I do."
+
+"Will you let me read them, then?" says she.
+
+I told her, _if she would be at the pains_; and she bade me go away and
+she would read them from the one end to the other. Now, in this bundle
+that I gave her, there were packed together not only all the letters of
+my false friend, but one or two of Mr. Campbell's when he was in town at
+the Assembly, and to make a complete roll of all that ever was written
+to me, Catriona's little word, and the two I had received from Miss
+Grant, one when I was on the Bass and one on board that ship. But of
+these last I had no particular mind at the moment.
+
+I was in that state of subjection to the thought of my friend that it
+mattered not what I did, nor scarce whether I was in her presence or out
+of it; I had caught her like some kind of a noble fever that lived
+continually in my bosom, by night and by day, and whether I was waking
+or asleep. So it befell that after I was come into the fore-part of the
+ship where the broad bows splashed into the billows, I was in no such
+hurry to return as you might fancy; rather prolonged my absence like a
+variety in pleasure. I do not think I am by nature much of an Epicurean;
+and there had come till then so small a share of pleasure in my way that
+I might be excused perhaps to dwell on it unduly.
+
+When I returned to her again, I had a faint, painful impression as of a
+buckle slipped, so coldly she returned the packet.
+
+"You have read them?" said I; and I thought my voice sounded not wholly
+natural, for I was turning in my mind for what could ail her.
+
+"Did you mean me to read all?" she asked.
+
+I told her "Yes," with a drooping voice.
+
+"The last of them as well?" said she.
+
+I knew where we were now; yet I would not lie to her either. "I gave
+them all without after-thought," I said, "as I supposed that you would
+read them. I see no harm in any."
+
+"I will be differently made," said she. "I thank God I am differently
+made. It was not a fit letter to be shown me. It was not fit to be
+written."
+
+"I think you are speaking of your own friend, Barbara Grant?" said I.
+
+"There will not be anything as bitter as to lose a fancied friend," said
+she, quoting my own expression.
+
+"I think it is sometimes the friendship that was fancied!" I cried.
+"What kind of justice do you call this, to blame me for some words that
+a tomfool of a madcap lass has written down upon a piece of paper? You
+know yourself with what respect I have behaved--and would do always."
+
+"Yet you would show me that same letter!" says she. "I want no such
+friends. I can be doing very well, Mr. Balfour, without her--or you."
+
+"This is your fine gratitude!" says I.
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," said she. "I will be asking you to take
+away your--letters." She seemed to choke upon the word, so that it
+sounded like an oath.
+
+"You shall never ask twice," said I; picked up that bundle, walked a
+little way forward and cast them as far as possible into the sea. For a
+very little more, I could have cast myself after them.
+
+The rest of the day I walked up and down raging. There were few names so
+ill but what I gave her them in my own mind before the sun went down.
+All that I had ever heard of Highland pride seemed quite outdone; that a
+girl (scarce grown) should resent so trifling an allusion, and that from
+her next friend, that she had near wearied me with praising of! I had
+bitter, sharp, hard thoughts of her, like an angry boy's. If I had
+kissed her indeed (I thought), perhaps she would have taken it pretty
+well; and only because it had been written down, and with a spice of
+jocularity, up she must fuff in this ridiculous passion. It seemed to me
+there was a want of penetration in the female sex, to make angels weep
+over the case of the poor men.
+
+We were side by side again at supper, and what a change was there! She
+was like curdled milk to me; her face was like a wooden doll's; I could
+have indifferently smitten her or grovelled at her feet, but she gave me
+not the least occasion to do either. No sooner the meal done than she
+betook herself to attend on Mrs. Gebbie, which I think she had a little
+neglected heretofore. But she was to make up for lost time, and in what
+remained of the passage was extraordinary assiduous with the old lady,
+and on deck began to make a great deal more than I thought wise of
+Captain Sang. Not but what the captain seemed a worthy, fatherly man;
+but I hated to behold her in the least familiarity with anyone except
+myself.
+
+Altogether, she was so quick to avoid me, and so constant to keep
+herself surrounded with others, that I must watch a long while before I
+could find my opportunity; and after it was found, I made not much of
+it, as you are now to hear.
+
+"I have no guess how I have offended," said I; "it should scarce be
+beyond pardon, then. O, try if you can pardon me."
+
+"I have no pardon to give," said she; and the words seemed to come out
+of her throat like marbles. "I will be very much obliged for all your
+friendships." And she made me an eight part of a curtsey.
+
+But I had schooled myself beforehand to say more, and I was going to say
+it too.
+
+"There is one thing," said I. "If I have shocked your particularity by
+the showing of that letter, it cannot touch Miss Grant. She wrote not to
+you, but to a poor, common, ordinary lad, who might have had more sense
+than show it. If you are to blame me--"
+
+"I will advise you to say no more about that girl, at all events!" said
+Catriona. "It is her I will never look the road of, not if she lay
+dying." She turned away from me, and suddenly back. "Will you swear you
+will have no more to deal with her?" she cried.
+
+"Indeed, and I will never be so unjust then," said I; "nor yet so
+ungrateful."
+
+And now it was I that turned away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HELVOETSLUYS
+
+
+The weather in the end considerably worsened; the wind sang in the
+shrouds, the sea swelled higher, and the ship began to labour and cry
+out among the billows. The song of the leadsman in the chains was now
+scarce ceasing, for we thrid all the way among shoals. About nine in the
+morning, in a burst of wintry sun between two squalls of hail, I had my
+first look of Holland--a line of windmills birling in the breeze. It was
+besides my first knowledge of these daft-like contrivances, which gave
+me a near sense of foreign travel and a new world and life. We came to
+an anchor about half-past eleven, outside the harbour of Helvoetsluys,
+in a place where the sea sometimes broke and the ship pitched
+outrageously. You may be sure we were all on deck save Mrs. Gebbie, some
+of us in cloaks, others mantled in the ship's tarpaulins, all clinging
+on by ropes, and jesting the most like old sailor-folk that we could
+imitate.
+
+Presently a boat, that was backed like a partan-crab, came gingerly
+alongside, and the skipper of it hailed our master in the Dutch. Thence
+Captain Sang turned, very troubled like, to Catriona; and the rest of us
+crowding about, the nature of the difficulty was made plain to all. The
+_Rose_ was bound to the port of Rotterdam, whither the other passengers
+were in a great impatience to arrive, in view of a conveyance due to
+leave that very evening in the direction of the Upper Germany. This,
+with the present half-gale of wind, the captain (if no time were lost)
+declared himself still capable to save. Now James More had trysted in
+Helvoet with his daughter, and the captain had engaged to call before
+the port and place her (according to the custom) in a shore boat. There
+was the boat, to be sure, and there was Catriona ready: but both our
+master and the patroon of the boat scrupled at the risk, and the first
+was in no humour to delay.
+
+"Your father," said he, "would be gey an little pleased if we was to
+break a leg to ye, Miss Drummond, let-a-be drowning of you. Take my way
+of it," says he, "and come on-by with the rest of us here to Rotterdam.
+Ye can get a passage down the Maes in a sailing scoot as far to the
+Brill, and thence on again, by a place in a rattel-waggon, back to
+Helvoet."
+
+But Catriona would hear of no change. She looked white-like as she
+beheld the bursting of the sprays, the green seas that sometimes poured
+upon the forecastle, and the perpetual bounding and swooping of the boat
+among the billows; but she stood firmly by her father's orders. "My
+father, James More, will have arranged it so," was her first word and
+her last. I thought it very idle and indeed wanton in the girl to be so
+literal and stand opposite to so much kind advice; but the fact is she
+had a very good reason, if she would have told us. Sailing scoots and
+rattel-waggons are excellent things; only the use of them must first be
+paid for, and all she was possessed of in the world was just two
+shillings and a penny halfpenny sterling. So it fell out that captain
+and passengers, not knowing of her destitution--and she being too proud
+to tell them--spoke in vain.
+
+"But you ken nae French and nae Dutch neither," said one.
+
+"It is very true," says she, "but since the year '46 there are so many
+of the honest Scots abroad that I will be doing very well, I thank you."
+
+There was a pretty country simplicity in this that made some laugh,
+others looked the more sorry, and Mr. Gebbie fall outright in a passion.
+I believe he knew it was his duty (his wife having accepted charge of
+the girl) to have gone ashore with her and seen her safe; nothing would
+have induced him to have done so, since it must have involved the loss
+of his conveyance; and I think he made it up to his conscience by the
+loudness of his voice. At least he broke out upon Captain Sang, raging
+and saying the thing was a disgrace; that it was mere death to try to
+leave the ship, and at any event we could not cast down an innocent maid
+in a boatful of nasty Holland fishers, and leave her to her fate. I was
+thinking something of the same; took the mate upon one side, arranged
+with him to send on my chests by track-scoot to an address I had in
+Leyden, and stood up and signalled to the fishers.
+
+"I will go ashore with the young lady, Captain Sang," said I. "It is all
+one what way I go to Leyden;" and leaped at the same time into the boat,
+which I managed not so elegantly but what I fell with two of the fishers
+in the bilge.
+
+From the boat the business appeared yet more precarious than from the
+ship, she stood so high over us, swung down so swift, and menaced us so
+perpetually with her plunging and passaging upon the anchor cable. I
+began to think I had made a fool's bargain, that it was merely
+impossible Catriona should be got on board to me, and that I stood to be
+set ashore at Helvoet all by myself and with no hope of any reward but
+the pleasure of embracing James More, if I should want to. But this was
+to reckon without the lass's courage. She had seen me leap with very
+little appearance (however much reality) of hesitation; to be sure, she
+was not to be beat by her discarded friend. Up she stood on the bulwarks
+and held by a stay, the wind blowing in her petticoats, which made the
+enterprise more dangerous and gave us rather more of a view of her
+stockings than would be thought genteel in cities. There was no minute
+lost, and scarce time given for any to interfere if they had wished the
+same. I stood up on the other side and spread my arms; the ship swung
+down on us, the patroon humoured his boat nearer in than was perhaps
+wholly safe, and Catriona leaped into the air. I was so happy as to
+catch her, and the fishers readily supporting us, escaped a fall. She
+held to me a moment very tight, breathing quick and deep; thence (she
+still clinging to me with both hands) we were passed aft to our places
+by the steersman; and Captain Sang and all the crew and passengers
+cheering and crying farewell, the boat was put about for shore.
+
+As soon as Catriona came a little to herself she unhanded me suddenly
+but said no word. No more did I; and indeed the whistling of the wind
+and the breaching of the sprays made it no time for speech; and our crew
+not only toiled excessively but made extremely little way, so that the
+_Rose_ had got her anchor and was off again before we had approached the
+harbour mouth.
+
+We were no sooner in smooth water than the patroon, according to their
+beastly Hollands custom, stopped his boat and required of us our fares.
+Two guilders was the man's demand, between three and four shillings
+English money, for each passenger. But at this Catriona began to cry out
+with a vast deal of agitation. She had asked of Captain Sang, she said,
+and the fare was but an English shilling. "Do you think I will have come
+on board and not ask first?" cries she. The patroon scolded back upon
+her in a lingo where the oaths were English and the rest right Hollands;
+till at last (seeing her near tears) I privately slipped in the rogue's
+hand six shillings, whereupon he was obliging enough to receive from her
+the other shilling without more complaint. No doubt I was a good deal
+nettled and ashamed. I like to see folk thrifty but not with so much
+passion; and I daresay it would be rather coldly that I asked her, as
+the boat moved on again for shore, where it was that she was trysted
+with her father.
+
+"He is to be inquired of at the house of one Sprott, an honest Scotch
+merchant," says she; and then with the same breath, "I am wishing to
+thank you very much--you are a brave friend to me."
+
+"It will be time enough when I get you to your father," said I, little
+thinking that I spoke so true. "I can tell him a fine tale of a loyal
+daughter."
+
+"O, I do not think I will be a loyal girl, at all events," she cried,
+with a great deal of painfulness in the expression. "I do not think my
+heart is true."
+
+"Yet there are very few that would have made that leap, and all to obey
+a father's orders," I observed.
+
+"I cannot have you to be thinking of me so," she cried again. "When you
+had done that same, how would I stop behind? And at all events that was
+not all the reasons." Whereupon, with a burning face, she told me the
+plain truth upon her poverty.
+
+"Good guide us!" cried I, "what kind of daft-like proceeding is this, to
+let yourself be launched on the continent of Europe with an empty
+purse--I count it hardly decent--scant decent!" I cried.
+
+"You forget James More, my father, is a poor gentleman," said she. "He
+is a hunted exile."
+
+"But I think not all your friends are hunted exiles," I exclaimed. "And
+was this fair to them that care for you? Was it fair to me? was it fair
+to Miss Grant that counselled you to go, and would be driven fair
+horn-mad if she could hear of it? Was it even fair to these Gregory folk
+that you were living with, and used you lovingly? It's a blessing you
+have fallen in my hands! Suppose your father hindered by an accident,
+what would become of you here, and you your lee-alone in a strange
+place? The thought of the thing frightens me," I said.
+
+"I will have lied to all of them," she replied. "I will have told them
+all that I had plenty. I told _her_ too. I could not be lowering James
+More to them."
+
+I found out later on that she must have lowered him in the very dust,
+for the lie was originally the father's not the daughter's, and she thus
+obliged to persevere in it for the man's reputation. But at the time I
+was ignorant of this, and the mere thought of her destitution and the
+perils in which she must have fallen, had ruffled me almost beyond
+reason.
+
+"Well, well, well," said I, "you will have to learn more sense."
+
+I left her mails for the moment in an inn upon the shore, where I got a
+direction for Sprott's house in my new French, and we walked there--it
+was some little way--beholding the place with wonder as we went. Indeed,
+there was much for Scots folk to admire; canals and trees being
+intermingled with the houses; the houses, each within itself, of a brave
+red brick, the colour of a rose, with steps and benches of blue marble
+at the cheek of every door, and the whole town so clean you might have
+dined upon the causeway. Sprott was within, upon his ledgers, in a low
+parlour, very neat and clean, and set out with china and pictures and a
+globe of the earth in a brass frame. He was a big-chafted, ruddy, lusty
+man, with a crooked hard look to him; and he made us not that much
+civility as offer us a seat.
+
+"Is James More Macgregor now in Helvoet, sir?" says I.
+
+"I ken nobody by such a name," says he, impatient-like.
+
+"Since you are so particular," says I, "I will amend my question, and
+ask you where we are to find in Helvoet one James Drummond, _alias_
+Macgregor, _alias_ James More, late tenant in Iveronachile?"
+
+"Sir," says he, "he may be in Hell for what I ken, and for my part I
+wish he was."
+
+"The young lady is that gentleman's daughter, sir," said I, "before
+whom, I think you will agree with me, it is not very becoming to discuss
+his character."
+
+"I have nothing to make either with him, or her, or you!" cries he in
+his gross voice.
+
+"Under your favour, Mr. Sprott," said I, "this young lady is come from
+Scotland seeking him, and by whatever mistake, was given the name of
+your house for a direction. An error it seems to have been, but I think
+this places both you and me--who am but her fellow-traveller by
+accident--under a strong obligation to help our countrywoman."
+
+"Will you ding me daft?" he cries. "I tell ye I ken naething and care
+less either for him or his breed. I tell ye the man owes me money."
+
+"That may very well be, sir," said I, who was now rather more angry than
+himself. "At least I owe you nothing; the young lady is under my
+protection; and I am neither at all used with these manners, nor in the
+least content with them."
+
+As I said this, and without particularly thinking what I did, I drew a
+step or two nearer to his table; thus striking, by mere good fortune, on
+the only argument that could at all affect the man. The blood left his
+lusty countenance.
+
+"For the Lord's sake dinna be hasty, sir!" he cried. "I am truly wishfu'
+no to be offensive. But ye ken, sir, I'm like a wheen guid-natured,
+honest, canty auld fallows--my bark is waur nor my bite. To hear me, ye
+micht whiles fancy I was a wee thing dour; but na, na! its a kind auld
+fellow at heart, Sandie Sprott! And ye could never imagine the fyke and
+fash this man has been to me."
+
+"Very good, sir," said I. "Then I will make that much freedom with your
+kindness, as trouble you for your last news of Mr. Drummond."
+
+"You're welcome, sir!" said he. "As for the young leddy (my respec's to
+her!) he'll just have clean forgotten her. I ken the man, ye see; I have
+lost siller by him ere now. He thinks of naebody but just himsel'; clan,
+king, or dauchter, if he can get his wameful, he would give them a' the
+go-by! ay, or his correspondent either. For there is a sense in whilk I
+may be nearly almost said to be his correspondent. The fact is, we are
+employed thegether in a business affair, and I think it's like to turn
+out a dear affair for Sandie Sprott. The man's as guid's my pairtner,
+and I give ye my mere word I ken naething by where he is. He micht be
+coming here to Helvoet; he micht come here the morn, he michtnae come
+for a twalmonth; I would wonder at naething--or just at the ae thing,
+and that's if he was to pay me my siller. Ye see what way I stand with
+it; and it's clear I'm no very likely to meddle up with the young leddy,
+as ye ca' her. She cannae stop here, that's ae thing certain sure. Dod,
+sir, I'm a lone man! If I was to tak her in, its highly possible the
+hellicat would try and gar me marry her when he turned up."
+
+"Enough of this talk," said I. "I will take the young lady among better
+friends. Give me pen, ink, and paper, and I will leave here for James
+More the address of my correspondent in Leyden. He can inquire from me
+where he is to seek his daughter."
+
+This word I wrote and sealed; which while I was doing, Sprott of his own
+motion made a welcome offer, to charge himself with Miss Drummond's
+mails, and even send a porter for them to the inn. I advanced him to
+that effect a dollar or two to be a cover, and he gave me an
+acknowledgment in writing of the sum.
+
+Whereupon (I giving my arm to Catriona) we left the house of this
+unpalatable rascal. She had said no word throughout, leaving me to judge
+and speak in her place; I, upon my side, had been careful not to
+embarrass her by a glance; and even now although my heart still glowed
+inside of me with shame and anger, I made it my affair to seem quite
+easy.
+
+"Now," said I, "let us get back to yon same inn where they can speak the
+French, have a piece of dinner, and inquire for conveyances to
+Rotterdam. I will never be easy till I have you safe again in the hands
+of Mrs. Gebbie."
+
+"I suppose it will have to be," said Catriona, "though whoever will be
+pleased, I do not think it will be her. And I will remind you this once
+again that I have but one shilling, and three baubees."
+
+"And just this once again," said I, "I will remind you it was a blessing
+that I came alongst with you."
+
+"What else would I be thinking all this time!" says she, and I thought
+weighed a little on my arm. "It is you that are the good friend to me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+TRAVELS IN HOLLAND
+
+
+The rattel-wagon, which is a kind of a long wagon set with benches,
+carried us in four hours of travel to the great city of Rotterdam. It
+was long past dark by then, but the streets pretty brightly lighted and
+thronged with the wild-like, outlandish characters--bearded Hebrews,
+black men, and the hordes of courtesans, most indecently adorned with
+finery and stopping seamen by their very sleeves; the clash of talk
+about us made our heads to whirl; and what was the most unexpected of
+all, we appeared to be no more struck with all these foreigners than
+they with us. I made the best face I could, for the lass's sake and my
+own credit; but the truth is I felt like a lost sheep, and my heart beat
+in my bosom with anxiety. Once or twice I inquired after the harbor or
+the berth of the ship _Rose_; but either fell on some who spoke only
+Hollands, or my own French failed me. Trying a street at a venture, I
+came upon a lane of lighted houses, the doors and windows thronged with
+wauf-like painted women; these jostled and mocked upon us as we passed,
+and I was thankful we had nothing of their language. A little after we
+issued forth upon an open place along the harbour.
+
+"We shall be doing now," cries I, as soon as I spied masts. "Let us walk
+here by the harbour. We are sure to meet some that has the English, and
+at the best of it we may light upon that very ship."
+
+We did the next best, as happened; for about nine of the evening, whom
+should we walk into the arms of but Captain Sang? He told us they had
+made their run in the most incredible brief time, the wind holding
+strong until they reached port; by which means his passengers were all
+gone already on their further travels. It was impossible to chase after
+the Gebbies into High Germany, and we had no other acquaintance to fall
+back upon but Captain Sang himself. It was the more gratifying to find
+the man friendly and wishful to assist. He made it a small affair to
+find some good plain family of merchants, where Catriona might harbour
+till the _Rose_ was loaden; declared he would then blithely carry her
+back to Leith for nothing and see her safe in the hands of Mr. Gregory;
+and in the meanwhile carried us to a late ordinary for the meal we stood
+in need of. He seemed extremely friendly, as I say, but what surprised
+me a good deal, rather boisterous in the bargain; and the cause of this
+was soon to appear. For at the ordinary, calling for Rhenish wine and
+drinking of it deep, he soon became unutterably tipsy. In, this case, as
+too common with all men, but especially with those of his rough trade,
+what little sense or manners he possessed deserted him; and he behaved
+himself so scandalous to the young lady, jesting most ill-favoredly at
+the figure she had made on the ship's rail, that I had no resource but
+carry her suddenly away.
+
+She came out of that ordinary clinging to me close. "Take me away,
+David," she said. "_You_ keep me. I am not afraid with you."
+
+"And have no cause, my little friend!" cried I, and could have found it
+in my heart to weep.
+
+"Where will you be taking me?" she said again. "Don't leave me at all
+events, never leave me."
+
+"Where am I taking you indeed?" says I stopping, for I had been staving
+on ahead in mere blindness. "I must stop and think. But I'll not leave
+you, Catriona; the Lord do so to me, and more also, if I should fail or
+fash you."
+
+She crept closer in to me by way of a reply.
+
+"Here," I said, "is the stillest place that we have hit on yet in this
+busy byke of a city. Let us sit down here under yon tree and consider of
+our course."
+
+That tree (which I am little like to forget) stood hard by the harbour
+side. It was a black night, but lights were in the houses, and nearer
+hand in the quiet ships; there was a shining of the city on the one
+hand, and a buzz hung over it of many thousands walking and talking; on
+the other, it was dark and the water bubbled on the sides. I spread my
+cloak upon a builder's stone, and made her sit there; she would have
+kept her hold upon me, for she still shook with the late affronts; but I
+wanted to think clear, disengaged myself, and paced to and fro before
+her, in the manner of what we call a smuggler's walk, belabouring my
+brains for any remedy. By the course of these scattering thoughts I was
+brought suddenly face to face with a remembrance that, in the heat and
+haste of our departure, I had left Captain Sang to pay the ordinary. At
+this I began to laugh out loud, for I thought the man well served; and
+at the same time, by an instinctive movement, carried my hand to the
+pocket where my money was. I suppose it was in the lane where the women
+jostled us; but there is only the one thing certain, that my purse was
+gone.
+
+"You will have thought of something good," said she, observing me to
+pause.
+
+At the pinch we were in, my mind became suddenly clear as a perspective
+glass, and I saw there was no choice of methods. I had not one doit of
+coin, but in my pocket-book I had still my letter on the Leyden
+merchant; and there was now but the one way to get to Leyden, and that
+was to walk on our two feet.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I know you're brave and I believe you're strong, do
+you think you could walk thirty miles on a plain road?" We found it, I
+believe, scarce the two-thirds of that, but such was my notion of the
+distance.
+
+"David," she said, "if you will just keep near, I will go anywhere and
+do anything. The courage of my heart, it is all broken. Do not be
+leaving me in this horrible country by myself, and I will do all else."
+
+"Can you start now and march all night?" said I.
+
+"I will do all that you can ask of me," she said, "and never ask you
+why. I have been a bad ungrateful girl to you; and do what you please
+with me now! And I think Miss Barbara Grant is the best lady in the
+world," she added, "and I do not see what she would deny you for at all
+events."
+
+This was Greek and Hebrew to me; but I had other matters to consider,
+and the first of these was to get clear of that city on the Leyden road.
+It proved a cruel problem; and it may have been one or two at night ere
+we had solved it. Once beyond the houses, there was neither moon or
+stars to guide us; only the whiteness of the way in the midst and a
+blackness of an alley on both hands. The walking was besides made most
+extraordinary difficult by a plain black frost that fell suddenly in the
+small hours and turned that highway into one long slide.
+
+"Well, Catriona," said I, "here we are like the king's sons and the old
+wives' daughters in your daft-like Highland tales. Soon we'll be going
+over the '_seven Bens, the seven glens, and the seven mountain moors_.'"
+Which was a common byword or overcome in these tales of hers that had
+stuck in my memory.
+
+"Ah," says she, "but here are no glens or mountains! Though I will never
+be denying but what the trees and some of the plain places hereabouts
+are very pretty. But our country is the best yet."
+
+"I wish we could say as much for our own folk," says I, recalling Sprott
+and Sang, and perhaps James More himself.
+
+"I will never complain of the country of my friend," said she, and spoke
+it out with an accent so particular that I seemed to see the look upon
+her face.
+
+I caught in my breath sharp and came near falling (for my pains) on the
+black ice.
+
+"I do not know what _you_ think, Catriona," said I, when I was a little
+recovered, "but this has been the best day yet! I think shame to say it,
+when you have met in with such misfortunes and disfavours; but for me,
+it has been the best day yet."
+
+"It was a good day when you showed me so much love," said she.
+
+"And yet I think shame to be happy too," I went on, "and you here on the
+road in the black night."
+
+"Where in the great world would I be else?" she cried. "I am thinking I
+am safest where I am with you."
+
+"I am quite forgiven, then?" I asked.
+
+"Will you not forgive me that time so much as not to take it in your
+mouth again?" she cried. "There's is nothing in this heart to you but
+thanks. But I will be honest too," she added, with a kind of suddenness,
+"and I'll never can forgive that girl."
+
+"Is this Miss Grant again?" said I. "You said yourself she was the best
+lady in the world."
+
+"So she will be, indeed!" says Catriona. "But I will never forgive her
+for all that. I will never, never forgive her, and let me hear tell of
+her no more."
+
+"Well," said I, "this beats all that ever came to my knowledge; and I
+wonder that you can indulge yourself in such bairnly whims. Here is a
+young lady that was the best friend in the world to the both of us, that
+learned us how to dress ourselves, and in a great manner how to behave,
+as anyone can see that knew us both before and after."
+
+But Catriona stopped square in the midst of the highway.
+
+"It is this way of it," said she. "Either you will go on to speak of
+her, and I will go back to yon town, and let come of it what God
+pleases! Or else you will do me that politeness to talk of other
+things."
+
+I was the most nonplussed person in this world; but I bethought me that
+she depended altogether on my help, that she was of the frail sex and
+not so much beyond a child, and it was for me to be wise for the pair of
+us.
+
+"My dear girl," said I, "I can make neither head nor tails of this; but
+God forbid that I should do anything to set you on the jee. As for
+talking of Miss Grant I have no such a mind to it, and I believe it was
+yourself began it. My only design (if I took you up at all) was for your
+own improvement, for I hate the very look of injustice. Not that I do
+not wish you to have a good pride and a nice female delicacy; they
+become you well; but here you show them to excess."
+
+"Well, then, have you done?" said she.
+
+"I have done," said I.
+
+"A very good thing," said she, and we went on again, but now in silence.
+
+It was an eerie employment to walk in the gross night, beholding only
+shadows and hearing nought but our own steps. At first, I believe our
+hearts burned against each other with a deal of enmity; but the darkness
+and the cold, and the silence, which only the cocks sometimes
+interrupted, or sometimes the farmyard dogs, had pretty soon brought
+down our pride to the dust; and for my own particular, I would have
+jumped at any decent opening for speech.
+
+Before the day peeped, came on a warmish rain, and the frost was all
+wiped away from among our feet. I took my cloak to her and sought to hap
+her in the same; she bade me, rather impatiently, to keep it.
+
+"Indeed and I will do no such thing," said I. "Here am I, a great, ugly
+lad that has seen all kinds of weather, and here are you a tender,
+pretty maid! My dear, you would not put me to a shame?"
+
+Without more words she let me cover her; which as I was doing in the
+darkness, I let my hand rest a moment on her shoulder, almost like an
+embrace.
+
+"You must try to be more patient of your friend," said I.
+
+I thought she seemed to lean the least thing in the world against my
+bosom, or perhaps it was but fancy.
+
+"There will be no end to your goodness," said she.
+
+And we went on again in silence; but now all was changed; and the
+happiness that was in my heart was like a fire in a great chimney.
+
+The rain passed ere day; it was but a sloppy morning as we came into the
+town of Delft. The red gabled houses made a handsome show on either hand
+of a canal; the servant lassies were out slestering and scrubbing at the
+very stones upon the public highway; smoke rose from a hundred kitchens;
+and it came in upon me strongly it was time to break our fasts.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I believe you have yet a shilling and three
+baubees?"
+
+"Are you wanting it?" said she, and passed me her purse. "I am wishing
+it was five pounds! What will you want it for?"
+
+"And what have we been walking for all night, like a pair of waif
+Egyptians?" says I. "Just because I was robbed of my purse and all I
+possessed in that unchancy town of Rotterdam. I will tell you of it now,
+because I think the worst is over, but we have still a good tramp before
+us till we get to where my money is, and if you would not buy me a piece
+of bread, I were like to go fasting."
+
+She looked at me with open eyes. By the light of the new day she was all
+black and pale for weariness, so that my heart smote me for her. But as
+for her, she broke out laughing.
+
+"My torture! are we beggars then?" she cried. "You too? O, I could have
+wished for this same thing! And I am glad to buy your breakfast to you.
+But it would be pleisand if I would have had to dance to get a meal to
+you! For I believe they are not very well acquainted with our manner of
+dancing over here, and might be paying for the curiosity of that sight."
+
+I could have kissed her for that word, not with a lover's mind, but in a
+heat of admiration. For it always warms a man to see a woman brave.
+
+We got a drink of milk from a country wife but new come to the town, and
+in a baker's, a piece of excellent, hot, sweet-smelling bread, which we
+ate upon the road as we went on. That road from Delft to the Hague is
+just five miles of a fine avenue shaded with trees, a canal on the one
+hand, on the other excellent pastures of cattle. It was pleasant here
+indeed.
+
+"And now, Davie," said she, "what will you do with me at all events?"
+
+"It is what we have to speak of," said I, "and the sooner yet the
+better. I can come by money in Leyden; that will be all well. But the
+trouble is how to dispose of you until your father come. I thought last
+night you seemed a little sweir to part from me?"
+
+"It will be more than seeming then," said she.
+
+"You are a very young maid," said I, "and I am but a very young callant.
+This is a great piece of difficulty. What way are we to manage? Unless,
+indeed, you could pass to be my sister?"
+
+"And what for no?" said she, "if you would let me!"
+
+"I wish you were so, indeed!" I cried. "I would be a fine man if I had
+such a sister. But the rub is that you are Catriona Drummond."
+
+"And now I will be Catrine Balfour," she said. "And who is to ken? They
+are all strange folk here."
+
+"If you think that it would do," says I. "I own it troubles me. I would
+like it very ill, if I advised you at all wrong."
+
+"David, I have no friend here but you," she said.
+
+"The mere truth is, I am too young to be your friend," said I. "I am too
+young to advise you, or you to be advised. I see not what else we are to
+do, and yet I ought to warn you."
+
+"I will have no choice left," said she. "My father James More has not
+used me very well, and it is not the first time. I am cast upon your
+hands like a sack of barley meal, and have nothing else to think of but
+your pleasure. If you will have me, good and well. If you will not"--she
+turned and touched her hand upon my arm--"David, I am afraid," said she.
+
+"No, but I ought to warn you," I began; and then bethought me that I was
+the bearer of the purse, and it would never do to seem too churlish.
+"Catriona," said I, "don't misunderstand me: I am just trying to do my
+duty by you, girl! Here am I going alone to this strange city, to be a
+solitary student there; and here is this chance arisen that you might
+dwell with me a bit, and be like my sister: you can surely understand
+this much, my dear, that I would just love to have you?"
+
+"Well, and here I am," said she. "So that's soon settled."
+
+I know I was in duty bounden to have spoke more plain. I know this was a
+great blot on my character for which I was lucky that I did not pay more
+dear. But I minded how easy her delicacy had been startled with a word
+of kissing her in Barbara's letter; now that she depended on me, how was
+I to be more bold? Besides, the truth is, I could see no other feasible
+method to dispose of her. And I daresay inclination pulled me very
+strong.
+
+A little beyond the Hague she fell very lame and made the rest of the
+distance heavily enough. Twice she must rest by the wayside, which she
+did with pretty apologies, calling herself a shame to the Highlands and
+the race she came of, and nothing but a hindrance to myself. It was her
+excuse, she said, that she was not much used with walking shod. I would
+have had her strip off her shoes and stockings and go barefoot. But she
+pointed out to me that the women of that country, even in the landward
+roads, appeared to be all shod.
+
+"I must not be disgracing my brother," said she, and was very merry with
+it all, although her face told tales of her.
+
+There is a garden in that city we were bound to, sanded below with clean
+sand, the trees meeting overhead, some of them trimmed, some pleached,
+and the whole place beautified with alleys and arbours. Here I left
+Catriona, and went forward by myself to find my correspondent. There I
+drew on my credit, and asked to be recommended to some decent, retired
+lodging. My baggage not being yet arrived, I told him I supposed I
+should require his caution with the people of the house; and explained
+that, my sister being come for a while to keep house with me, I should
+be wanting two chambers. This was all very well; but the trouble was
+that Mr. Balfour in his letter of recommendation had condescended on a
+great deal of particulars, and never a word of any sister in the case. I
+could see my Dutchman was extremely suspicious; and viewing me over the
+rims of a great pair of spectacles--he was a poor, frail body, and
+reminded me of an infirm rabbit--he began to question me close.
+
+Here I fell in a panic. Suppose he accept my tale (thinks I), suppose he
+invite my sister to his house, and that I bring her. I shall have a fine
+ravelled pirn to unwind, and may end by disgracing both the lassie and
+myself. Thereupon I began hastily to expound to him my sister's
+character. She was of a bashful disposition, it appeared, and so
+extremely fearful of meeting strangers that I had left her at that
+moment sitting in a public place alone. And then, being launched upon
+the stream of falsehood, I must do like all the rest of the world in the
+same circumstance, and plunge in deeper than was any service; adding
+some altogether needless particulars of Miss Balfour's ill-health and
+retirement during childhood. In the midst of which I awoke to a sense of
+my behaviour, and was turned to one blush.
+
+The old gentleman was not so much deceived but what he discovered a
+willingness to be quit of me. But he was first of all a man of business;
+and knowing that my money was good enough, however it might be with my
+conduct, he was so far obliging as to send his son to be my guide and
+caution in the matter of a lodging. This implied my presenting of the
+young man to Catriona. The poor, pretty child was much recovered with
+resting, looked and behaved to perfection, and took my arm and gave me
+the name of brother more easily than I could answer her. But there was
+one misfortune: thinking to help, she was rather towardly than otherwise
+to my Dutchman. And I could not but reflect that Miss Balfour had rather
+suddenly outgrown her bashfulness. And there was another thing, the
+difference of our speech. I had the Low Country tongue and dwelled upon
+my words; she had a hill voice, spoke with something of an English
+accent, only far more delightful, and was scarce quite fit to be called
+a deacon in the craft of talking English grammar; so that, for a brother
+and sister, we made a most uneven pair. But the young Hollander was a
+heavy dog, without so much spirit in his belly as to remark her
+prettiness, for which I scorned him. And as soon as he had found a cover
+to our heads, he left us alone, which was the greater service of the
+two.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS
+
+
+The place found was in the upper part of a house backed on a canal. We
+had two rooms, the second entering from the first; each had a chimney
+built out into the floor in the Dutch manner; and being alongside, each
+had the same prospect from the window of the top of a tree below us in a
+little court, of a piece of the canal, and of houses in the Hollands
+architecture and a church spire upon the further side. A full set of
+bells hung in that spire and made delightful music; and when there was
+any sun at all, it shone direct in our two chambers. From a tavern hard
+by we had good meals sent in.
+
+The first night we were both pretty weary, and she extremely so. There
+was little talk between us, and I packed her off to her bed as soon as
+she had eaten. The first thing in the morning I wrote word to Sprott to
+have her mails sent on, together with a line to Alan at his chief's; and
+had the same dispatched, and her breakfast ready, ere I waked her. I was
+a little abashed when she came forth in her one habit, and the mud of
+the way upon her stockings. By what inquiries I had made, it seemed a
+good few days must pass before her mails could come to hand in Leyden,
+and it was plainly needful she must have a shift of things. She was
+unwilling at first that I should go to that expense; but I reminded her
+she was now a rich man's sister and must appear suitably in the part,
+and we had not got to the second merchant's before she was entirely
+charmed into the spirit of the thing, and her eyes shining. It pleased
+me to see her so innocent and thorough in this pleasure. What was more
+extraordinary was the passion into which I fell on it myself; being
+never satisfied that I had bought her enough or fine enough, and never
+weary of beholding her in different attires. Indeed, I began to
+understand some little of Miss Grant's immersion in that interest of
+clothes; for the truth is, when you have the ground of a beautiful
+person to adorn, the whole business becomes beautiful. The Dutch
+chintzes I should say were extraordinary cheap and fine; but I would be
+ashamed to set down what I paid for stockings to her. Altogether I spent
+so great a sum upon this pleasuring (as I may call it) that I was
+ashamed for a great while to spend more; and by way of a set off, I left
+our chambers pretty bare. If we had beds, if Catriona was a little braw,
+and I had light to see her by, we were richly enough lodged for me.
+
+By the end of this merchandising I was glad to leave her at the door
+with all our purchases, and go for a long walk alone in which to read
+myself a lecture. Here had I taken under my roof, and as good as to my
+bosom, a young lass extremely beautiful, and whose innocence was her
+peril. My talk with the old Dutchman, and the lies to which I was
+constrained, had already given me a sense of how my conduct must appear
+to others; and now, after the strong admiration I had just experienced
+and the immoderacy with which I had continued my vain purchases, I began
+to think of it myself as very hasarded. I bethought me, if I had a
+sister indeed, whether I would so expose her; then, judging the case too
+problematical, I varied my question into this, whether I would so trust
+Catriona in the hands of any other Christian being: the answer to which
+made my face to burn. The more cause, since I had been entrapped and had
+entrapped the girl into an undue situation, that I should behave in it
+with scrupulous nicety. She depended on me wholly for her bread and
+shelter; in case I should alarm her delicacy, she had no retreat.
+Besides, I was her host and her protector; and the more irregularly I
+had fallen in these positions, the less excuse for me if I should profit
+by the same to forward even the most honest suit; for with the
+opportunities that I enjoyed, and which no wise parent would have
+suffered for a moment, even the most honest suit would be unfair. I saw
+I must be extremely hold-off in my relations; and yet not too much so
+neither; for if I had no right to appear at all in the character of a
+suitor, I must yet appear continually, and if possible agreeably, in
+that of host. It was plain I should require a great deal of tact and
+conduct, perhaps more than my years afforded. But I had rushed in where
+angels might have feared to tread, and there was no way out of that
+position, save by behaving right while I was in it. I made a set of
+rules for my guidance; prayed for strength to be enabled to observe
+them, and as a more human aid to the same end purchased a study book in
+law. This being all that I could think of, I relaxed from these grave
+considerations; whereupon my mind bubbled at once into an effervescency
+of pleasing spirits, and it was like one treading on air that I turned
+homeward. As I thought that name of home, and recalled the image of that
+figure awaiting me between four walls, my heart beat upon my bosom.
+
+My troubles began with my return. She ran to greet me with an obvious
+and affecting pleasure. She was clad, besides, entirely in the new
+clothes that I had bought for her; looked in them beyond expression
+well; and must walk about and drop me curtseys to display them and to be
+admired. I am sure I did it with an ill grace, for I thought to have
+choked upon the words.
+
+"Well," she said, "if you will not be caring for my pretty clothes, see
+what I have done with our two chambers." And she showed me the place all
+very finely swept and the fires glowing in the two chimneys.
+
+I was glad of a chance to seem a little more severe than I quite felt.
+"Catriona," said I, "I am very much displeased with you, and you must
+never again lay a hand upon my room. One of us two must have the rule
+while we are here together; it is most fit it should be I who am both
+the man and the elder; and I give you that for my command."
+
+She dropped me one of her curtseys which were extraordinary taking. "If
+you will be cross," said she, "I must be making pretty manners at you,
+Davie. I will be very obedient, as I should be when every stitch upon
+all there is of me belongs to you. But you will not be very cross
+either, because now I have not anyone else."
+
+This struck me hard, and I made haste, in a kind of penitence, to blot
+out all the good effect of my last speech. In this direction, progress
+was more easy, being down hill; she led me forward, smiling; at the
+sight of her, in the brightness of the fire and with her pretty becks
+and looks, my heart was altogether melted. We made our meal with
+infinite mirth and tenderness; and the two seemed to be commingled into
+one, so that our very laughter sounded like a kindness.
+
+In the midst of which I awoke to better recollections, made a lame word
+of excuse, and set myself boorishly to my studies. It was a substantial,
+instructive book that I had bought, by the late Dr. Heineccius, in which
+I was to do a great deal of reading these next days, and often very glad
+that I had no one to question me of what I read. Methought she bit her
+lip at me a little, and that cut me. Indeed it left her wholly solitary,
+the more as she was very little of a reader, and had never a book. But
+what was I to do?
+
+So the rest of the evening flowed by almost without speech.
+
+I could have beat myself. I could not lie in my bed that night for rage
+and repentance, but walked to and fro on my bare feet till I was nearly
+perished, for the chimney was gone out and the frost keen. The thought
+of her in the next room, the thought that she might even hear me as I
+walked, the remembrance of my churlishness and that I must continue to
+practise the same ungrateful course or be dishonoured, put me beside my
+reason. I stood like a man between Scylla and Charybdis: _What must she
+think of me_? was my one thought that softened me continually into
+weakness. _What is to become of us_? the other which steeled me again to
+resolution. This was my first night of wakefulness and divided counsels,
+of which I was now to pass many, pacing like a madman, sometimes weeping
+like a childish boy, sometimes praying (I would fain hope) like a
+Christian.
+
+But prayer is not very difficult, and the hitch comes in practice. In
+her presence, and above all if I allowed any beginning of familiarity, I
+found I had very little command of what should follow. But to sit all
+day in the same room with her, and feign to be engaged upon Heineccius,
+surpassed my strength. So that I fell instead upon the expedient of
+absenting myself so much as I was able; taking out classes and sitting
+there regularly, often with small attention, the test of which I found
+the other day in a note-book of that period, where I had left off to
+follow an edifying lecture and actually scribbled in my book some very
+ill verses, though the Latinity is rather better than I thought I could
+ever have compassed. The evil of this course was unhappily near as great
+as its advantage. I had the less time of trial, but I believe, while
+that time lasted, I was tried the more extremely. For she being so much
+left to solitude, she came to greet my return with an increasing fervour
+that came nigh to overmaster me. These friendly offers I must
+barbarously cast back; and my rejection sometimes wounded her so cruelly
+that I must unbend and seek to make it up to her in kindness. So that
+our time passed in ups and downs, tiffs and disappointments, upon the
+which I could almost say (if it may be said with reverence) that I was
+crucified.
+
+The base of my trouble was Catriona's extraordinary innocence, at which
+I was not so much surprised as filled with pity and admiration. She
+seemed to have no thought of our position, no sense of my struggles;
+welcomed any mark of my weakness with responsive joy; and when I was
+drove again to my retrenchments, did not always dissemble her chagrin.
+There were times when I have thought to myself, 'If she were over head
+in love, and set her cap to catch me, she would scarce behave much
+otherwise;' and then I would fall again into wonder at the simplicity of
+woman, from whom I felt (in these moments) that I was not worthy to be
+descended.
+
+There was one point in particular on which our warfare turned, and of
+all things, this was the question of her clothes. My baggage had soon
+followed me from Rotterdam, and hers from Helvoet. She had now, as it
+were, two wardrobes; and it grew to be understood between us (I could
+never tell how) that when she was friendly she would wear my clothes,
+and when otherwise her own. It was meant for a buffet, and (as it were)
+the renunciation of her gratitude; and I felt it so in my bosom, but was
+generally more wise than to appear to have observed the circumstance.
+
+Once, indeed, I was betrayed into a childishness greater than her own;
+it fell in this way. On my return from classes, thinking upon her
+devoutly with a great deal of love and a good deal of annoyance in the
+bargain, the annoyance began to fade away out of my mind; and spying in
+a window one of those forced flowers, of which the Hollanders are so
+skilled in the artifice, I gave way to an impulse and bought it for
+Catriona. I do not know the name of that flower, but it was of the pink
+colour, and I thought she would admire the same, and carried it home to
+her with a wonderful soft heart. I had left her in my clothes, and when
+I returned to find her all changed and a face to match, I cast but the
+one look at her from head to foot, ground my teeth together, flung the
+window open, and my flower into the court, and then (between rage and
+prudence) myself out of that room again, of which I slammed the door as
+I went out.
+
+On the steep stair I came near falling, and this brought me to myself,
+so that I began at once to see the folly of my conduct. I went, not into
+the street as I had purposed, but to the house court, which was always a
+solitary place, and where I saw my flower (that had cost me vastly more
+than it was worth) hanging in the leafless tree. I stood by the side of
+the canal, and looked upon the ice. Country people went by on their
+skates, and I envied them. I could see no way out of the pickle I was
+in: no way so much as to return to the room I had just left. No doubt
+was in my mind but I had now betrayed the secret of my feelings; and to
+make things worse, I had shown at the same time (and that with wretched
+boyishness) incivility to my helpless guest.
+
+I suppose she must have seen me from the open window. It did not seem to
+me that I had stood there very long before I heard the crunching of
+footsteps on the frozen snow, and turning somewhat angrily (for I was in
+no spirit to be interrupted) saw Catriona drawing near. She was all
+changed again, to the clocked stockings.
+
+"Are we not to have our walk to-day?" said she.
+
+I was looking at her in a maze. "Where is your brooch?" says I.
+
+She carried her hand to her bosom and coloured high. "I will have
+forgotten it," said she. "I will run upstairs for it quick, and then
+surely we'll can have our walk?"
+
+There was a note of pleading in that last that staggered me; I had
+neither words nor voice to utter them; I could do no more than nod by
+way of answer; and the moment she had left me, climbed into the tree and
+recovered my flower, which on her return I offered her.
+
+"I bought it for you, Catriona," said I.
+
+She fixed it in the midst of her bosom with the brooch, I could have
+thought tenderly.
+
+"It is none the better of my handling," said I again, and blushed.
+
+"I will be liking it none the worse, you may be sure of that," said she.
+
+We did not speak so much that day, she seemed a thought on the reserve
+though not unkindly. As for me, all the time of our walking, and after
+we came home, and I had seen her put my flower into a pot of water, I
+was thinking to myself what puzzles women were. I was thinking, the one
+moment, it was the most stupid thing on earth she should not have
+perceived my love; and the next, that she had certainly perceived it
+long ago, and (being a wise girl with the fine female instinct of
+propriety) concealed her knowledge.
+
+We had our walk daily. Out in the streets I felt more safe; I relaxed a
+little in my guardedness; and for one thing, there was no Heineccius.
+This made these periods not only a relief to myself, but a particular
+pleasure to my poor child. When I came back about the hour appointed, I
+would generally find her ready dressed and glowing with anticipation.
+She would prolong their duration to the extreme, seeming to dread (as I
+did myself) the hour of the return; and there is scarce a field or
+waterside near Leyden, scarce a street or lane there, where we have not
+lingered. Outside of these, I bade her confine herself entirely to our
+lodgings; this in the fear of her encountering any acquaintance, which
+would have rendered our position very difficult. From the same
+apprehension I would never suffer her to attend church, nor even go
+myself; but made some kind of shift to hold worship privately in our own
+chamber--I hope with an honest, but I am quite sure with a very much
+divided mind. Indeed, there was scarce anything that more affected me,
+than thus to kneel down alone with her before God like man and wife.
+
+One day it was snowing downright hard. I had thought it not possible
+that we should venture forth, and was surprised to find her waiting for
+me ready dressed.
+
+"I will not be doing without my walk," she cried. "You are never a good
+boy, Davie, in the house; I will never be caring for you only in the
+open air. I think we two will better turn Egyptian and dwell by the
+roadside."
+
+That was the best walk yet of all of them; she clung near to me in the
+falling snow; it beat about and melted on us, and the drops stood upon
+her bright cheeks like tears and ran into her smiling mouth. Strength
+seemed to come upon me with the sight like a giant's; I thought I could
+have caught her up and run with her into the uttermost places in the
+earth; and we spoke together all that time beyond belief for freedom and
+sweetness.
+
+It was the dark night when we came to the house door. She pressed my arm
+upon her bosom. "Thank you kindly for these same good hours," said she,
+on a deep note of her voice.
+
+The concern in which I fell instantly on this address, put me with the
+same swiftness on my guard; and we were no sooner in the chamber, and
+the light made, than she beheld the old, dour, stubborn countenance of
+the student of Heineccius. Doubtless she was more than usually hurt; and
+I know for myself, I found it more than usually difficult to maintain my
+strangeness. Even at the meal, I durst scarce unbuckle and scarce lift
+my eyes to her; and it was no sooner over than I fell again to my
+civilian, with more seeming abstraction and less understanding than
+before. Methought, as I-read, I could hear my heart strike like an
+eight-day clock. Hard as I feigned to study, there was still some of my
+eyesight that spilled beyond the book upon Catriona. She sat on the
+floor by the side of my great mail, and the chimney lighted her up, and
+shone and blinked upon her, and made her glow and darken through a
+wonder of fine hues. Now she would be gazing in the fire, and then again
+at me; and at that I would be plunged in a terror of myself, and turn
+the pages of Heineccius like a man looking for the text in church.
+
+Suddenly she called out aloud, "O, why does not my father come?" she
+cried, and fell at once into a storm of tears.
+
+I leaped up, flung Heineccius fairly into the fire, ran to her side, and
+cast an arm around her sobbing body.
+
+She put me from her sharply. "You do not love your friend," says she. "I
+could be so happy too, if you would let me!" And then, "O, what will I
+have done that you should hate me so?"
+
+"Hate you!" cries I, and held her firm. "You blind lass, can you not see
+a little in my wretched heart? Do you think when I set there, reading in
+that fool-book that I have just burned and be damned to it, I take ever
+the least thought of any stricken thing but just yourself? Night after
+night I could have grat to see you sitting there your lone. And what was
+I to do? You are here under my honour; would you punish me for that? Is
+it for that that you would spurn a loving servant?"
+
+At the word, with a small, sudden motion, she clung near to me. I raised
+her face to mine, I kissed it, and she bowed her brow upon my bosom,
+clasping me tight. I sat in a mere whirl like a man drunken. Then I
+heard her voice sound very small and muffled in my clothes.
+
+"Did you kiss her truly?" she asked.
+
+There went through me so great a heave of surprise that I was all shook
+with it.
+
+"Miss Grant!" I cried, all in a disorder. "Yes, I asked her to kiss me
+good-bye, the which she did."
+
+"Ah, well!" said she, "you have kissed me too, at all events."
+
+At the strangeness and sweetness of that word, I saw where we had
+fallen; rose, and set her on her feet.
+
+"This will never do," said I. "This will never, never do. O Catrine,
+Catrine!" Then there came a pause in which I was debarred from any
+speaking. And then, "Go away to your bed," said I. "Go away to your bed
+and leave me."
+
+She turned to obey me like a little child, and the next I knew of it,
+had stopped in the very doorway.
+
+"Good night, Davie!" said she.
+
+"And O, good night, my love!" I cried, with a great outbreak of my soul,
+and caught her to me again, so that it seemed I must have broken her.
+The next moment I had thrust her from the room, shut to the door even
+with violence, and stood alone.
+
+The milk was spilt now, the word was out and the truth told. I had crept
+like an untrusty man into the poor maid's affections; she was in my hand
+like any frail, innocent thing to make or mar; and what weapon of
+defence was left me? It seemed like a symbol that Heinoccius, my old
+protection, was now burned. I repented, yet could not find it in my
+heart to blame myself for that great failure. It seemed not possible to
+have resisted the boldness of her innocence or that last temptation of
+her weeping. And all that I had to excuse me did but make my sin appear
+the greater--it was upon a nature so defenceless, and with such
+advantages of the position, that I seemed to have practised.
+
+What was to become of us now? It seemed we could no longer dwell in the
+one place. But where was I to go? or where she? Without either choice or
+fault of ours, life had conspired to wall us together in that narrow
+place. I had a wild thought of marrying out of hand; and the next moment
+put it from me with revolt. She was a child, she could not tell her own
+heart; I had surprised her weakness, I must never go on to build on that
+surprisal; I must keep her not only clear of reproach, but free as she
+had come to me.
+
+Down I sat before the fire, and reflected, and repented, and beat my
+brains in vain for any means of escape. About two of the morning, there
+were three red embers left and the house and all the city was asleep,
+when I was aware of a small sound of weeping in the next room. She
+thought that I slept, the poor soul; she regretted her weakness--and
+what perhaps (God help her!) she called her forwardness--and in the dead
+of the night solaced herself with tears. Tender and bitter feelings,
+love and penitence and pity struggled in my soul; it seemed I was under
+bond to heal that weeping.
+
+"O, try to forgive me!" I cried out, "try, try to forgive me. Let us
+forget it all, let us try if we'll no can forget it!"
+
+There came no answer, but the sobbing ceased. I stood a long while with
+my hands still clasped as I had spoken; then the cold of the night laid
+hold upon me with a shudder, and I think my reason reawakened.
+
+"You can make no hand of this, Davie," thinks I. "To bed with you like a
+wise lad, and try if you can sleep. To-morrow you may see your way."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE
+
+
+I was called on the morrow out of a late and troubled slumber by a
+knocking on my door, ran to open it, and had almost swooned with the
+contrariety of my feelings, mostly painful; for on the threshold, in a
+rough wrapraseal and an extraordinary big laced hat, there stood James
+More.
+
+I ought to have been glad perhaps without admixture, for there was a
+sense in which the man came like an answer to prayer. I had been saying
+till my head was weary that Catriona and I must separate, and looking
+till my head ached for any possible means of separation. Here were the
+means come to me upon two legs, and joy was the hindmost of my thoughts.
+It is to be considered, however, that even if the weight of the future
+were lifted off me by the man's arrival, the present heaved up the more
+black and menacing; so that, as I first stood before him in my shirt and
+breeches, I believe I took a leaping step backward like a person shot.
+
+"Ah," said he, "I have found you, Mr. Balfour." And offered me his
+large, fine hand, the which (recovering at the same time my post in the
+doorway, as if with some thought of resistance) I took him by
+doubtfully. "It is a remarkable circumstance how our affairs appear to
+intermingle," he continued. "I am owing you an apology for an
+unfortunate intrusion upon yours, which I suffered myself to be
+entrapped into by my confidence in that false-face, Prestongrange; I
+think shame to own to you that I was ever trusting to a lawyer." He
+shrugged his shoulders with a very French air. "But indeed the man is
+very plausible," says he. "And now it seems that you have busied
+yourself handsomely in the matter of my daughter, for whose direction I
+was remitted to yourself."
+
+"I think, sir," said I, with a very painful air, "that it will be
+necessary we two should have an explanation."
+
+"There is nothing amiss?" he asked. "My agent, Mr. Sprott--"
+
+"For God's sake moderate your voice!" I cried. "She must not hear till
+we have had an explanation."
+
+"She is in this place?" cries he.
+
+"That is her chamber door," said I.
+
+"You are here with her alone?" he asked.
+
+"And who else would I have got to stay with us?" cries I.
+
+I will do him the justice to admit that he turned pale.
+
+"This is very unusual," said he. "This is a very unusual circumstance.
+You are right, we must hold an explanation."
+
+So saying, he passed me by, and I must own the tall old rogue appeared
+at that moment extraordinary dignified. He had now, for the first time,
+the view of my chamber, which I scanned (I may say) with his eyes. A bit
+of morning sun glinted in by the window pane, and showed it off; my bed,
+my mails, and washing dish, with some disorder of my clothes, and the
+unlighted chimney, made the only plenishing; no mistake but it looked
+bare and cold, and the most unsuitable, beggarly place conceivable to
+harbour a young lady. At the same time came in on my mind the
+recollection of the clothes that I had bought for her; and I thought
+this contrast of poverty and prodigality bore an ill appearance.
+
+He looked all about the chamber for a seat, and finding nothing else to
+his purpose except my bed, took a place upon the side of it; where,
+after I had closed the door, I could not very well avoid joining him.
+For however this extraordinary interview might end, it must pass if
+possible without waking Catriona; and the one thing needful was that we
+should sit close and talk low. But I can scarce picture what a pair we
+made; he in his great coat which the coldness of my chamber made
+extremely suitable; I shivering in my shirt and breeks; he with very
+much the air of a judge; and I (whatever I looked) with very much the
+feelings of a man who has heard the last trumpet.
+
+"Well?" says he.
+
+And "Well" I began, but found myself unable to go further.
+
+"You tell me she is here?" said he again, but now with a spice of
+impatiency that seemed to brace me up.
+
+"She is in this house," said I, "and I knew the circumstance would be
+called unusual. But you are to consider how very unusual the whole
+business was from the beginning. Here is a young lady landed on the
+coast of Europe with two shillings and a penny halfpenny. She is
+directed to yon man Sprott in Helvoet. I hear you call him your agent.
+All I can say is he could do nothing but damn and swear at the mere
+mention of your name, and I must fee him out of my own pocket even to
+receive the custody of her effects, You speak of unusual circumstances,
+Mr. Drummond, if that be the name you prefer. Here was a circumstance,
+if you like, to which it was barbarity to have exposed her."
+
+"But this is what I cannot understand the least," said James. "My
+daughter was placed into the charge of some responsible persons, whose
+names I have forgot."
+
+"Gebbie was the name," said I; "and there is no doubt that Mr. Gebbie
+should have gone ashore with her at Helvoet. But he did not, Mr.
+Drummond; and I think you might praise God that I was there to offer in
+his place."
+
+"I shall have a word to say to Mr. Gebbie before done," said he. "As for
+yourself, I think it might have occurred that you were somewhat young
+for such a post."
+
+"But the choice was not between me and somebody else, it was between me
+and nobody," I cried. "Nobody offered in my place, and I must say I
+think you show a very small degree of gratitude to me that did."
+
+"I shall wait until I understand my obligation a little more in the
+particular," says he.
+
+"Indeed, and I think it stares you in the face, then," said I. "Your
+child was deserted, she was clean flung away in the midst of Europe,
+with scarce two shillings, and not two words of any language spoken
+there: I must say, a bonny business! I brought her to this place. I gave
+her the name and the tenderness due to a sister. All this has not gone
+without expense, but that I scarce need to hint at. They were services
+due to the young lady's character which I respect; and I think it would
+be a bonny business too, if I was to be singing her praises to her
+father."
+
+"You are a young man," he began.
+
+"So I hear you tell me," said I, with a good deal of heat.
+
+"You are a very young man," he repeated, "or you would have understood
+the significancy of the step."
+
+"I think you speak very much at your ease," cried I. "What else was I to
+do? It is a fact I might have hired some decent, poor woman to be a
+third to us, and I declare I never thought of it until this moment! But
+where was I to find her, that am a foreigner myself? And let me point
+out to your observation, Mr. Drummond, that it would have cost me money
+out of my pocket. For here is just what it comes to, that I had to pay
+through the nose for your neglect; and there is only the one story to
+it, just that you were so unloving and so careless as to have lost your
+daughter."
+
+"He that lives in a glass house should not be casting stones," says he;
+"and we will finish inquiring into the behaviour of Miss Drummond,
+before we go on to sit in judgment on her father."
+
+"But I will be entrapped into no such attitude," said I. "The character
+of Miss Drummond is far above inquiry, as her father ought to know. So
+is mine, and I am telling you that. There are but the two ways of it
+open. The one is to express your thanks to me as one gentleman to
+another, and to say no more. The other (if you are so difficult as to be
+still dissatisfied) is to pay me that which I have expended and be
+done."
+
+He seemed to soothe me with a hand in the air.
+
+"There, there," said he. "You go too fast, you go too fast, Mr. Balfour.
+It is a good thing that I have learned to be more patient. And I believe
+you forget that I have yet to see my daughter."
+
+I began to be a little relieved upon this speech and a change in the
+man's manner that I spied in him as soon as the name of money fell
+between us.
+
+"I was thinking it would be more fit--if you will excuse the plainness
+of my dressing in your presence--that I should go forth and leave you to
+encounter her alone?" said I.
+
+"What I would have looked for at your hands!" says he; and there was no
+mistake but what he said it civilly.
+
+I thought this better and better still, and as I began to pull on my
+hose, recalling the man's impudent mendicancy at Prestongrange's, I
+determined to pursue what seemed to be my victory.
+
+"If you have any mind to stay some while in Leyden," said I, "this room
+is very much at your disposal, and I can easy find another for myself:
+in which way we shall have the least amount of flitting possible, there
+being only one to change."
+
+"Why, sir," said he, making his bosom big, "I think no shame of a
+poverty I have come by in the service of my king; I make no secret that
+my affairs are quite involved; and for the moment, it would be even
+impossible for me to undertake a journey."
+
+"Until you have occasion to communicate with your friends," said I,
+"perhaps it might be convenient for you (as of course it would be
+honourable to myself) if you were to regard yourself in the light of my
+guest?"
+
+"Sir," said he, "when an offer is frankly made, I think I honour myself
+most to imitate that frankness. Your hand, Mr. David; you have the
+character that I respect the most; you are one of those from whom a
+gentleman can take a favour and no more words about it. I am an old
+soldier," he went on, looking rather disgusted-like around my chamber,
+"and you need not fear I shall prove burthensome. I have ate too often
+at a dyke-side, drank of the ditch, and had no roof but the rain."
+
+"I should be telling you," said I, "that our breakfasts are sent
+customarily in about this time of morning. I propose I should go now to
+the tavern, and bid them add a cover for yourself and delay the meal the
+matter of an hour, which will give you an interval to meet your daughter
+in."
+
+Methought his nostrils wagged at this. "O, an hour," says he. "That is
+perhaps superfluous. Half an hour, Mr. David, or say twenty minutes; I
+shall do very well in that. And by the way," he adds, detaining me by
+the coat, "what is it you drink in the morning, whether ale or wine?"
+
+"To be frank with you, sir," says I, "I drink nothing else but spare,
+cold water?"
+
+"Tut-tut," says he, "that is fair destruction to the stomach, take an
+old campaigner's word for it. Our country spirit at home is perhaps the
+most entirely wholesome; but as that is not come-at-able, Rhenish or a
+white wine of Burgundy will be next best."
+
+"I shall make it my business to see you are supplied," said I.
+
+"Why, very good," said he, "and we shall make a man of you yet, Mr.
+David."
+
+By this time, I can hardly say that I was minding him at all, beyond an
+odd thought of the kind of father-in-law that he was like to prove; and
+all my cares centred about the lass his daughter, to whom I determined
+to convey some warning of her visitor. I stepped to the door
+accordingly, and cried through the panels, knocking thereon at the same
+time: "Miss Drummond, here is your father come at last."
+
+With that I went forth upon my errand, having (by two words)
+extraordinarily damaged my affairs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE THREESOME
+
+
+Whether or not I was to be so much blamed, or rather perhaps pitied, I
+must leave others to judge of. My shrewdness (of which I have a good
+deal, too) seems not so great with the ladies. No doubt, at the moment
+when I awaked her, I was thinking a good deal of the effect upon James
+More; and similarly when I returned and we were all sat down to
+breakfast, I continued to behave to the young lady with deference and
+distance; as I still think to have been most wise. Her father had cast
+doubts upon the innocence of my friendship; and these, it was my first
+business to allay. But there is a kind of an excuse for Catriona also.
+We had shared in a scene of some tenderness and passion, and given and
+received caresses; I had thrust her from me with violence; I had called
+aloud upon her in the night from the one room to the other; she had
+passed hours of wakefulness and weeping; and it is not to be supposed I
+had been absent from her pillow thoughts. Upon the back of this, to be
+awaked, with unaccustomed formality, under the name of Miss Drummond,
+and to be thenceforth used with a great deal of distance and respect,
+led her entirely in error on my private sentiments; and she was indeed
+so incredibly abused as to imagine me repentant and trying to draw off!
+
+The trouble betwixt us seems to have been this: that whereas I (since I
+had first set eyes on his great hat) thought singly of James More, his
+return and suspicions, she made so little of these that I may say she
+scarce remarked them, and all her troubles and doings regarded what had
+passed between us in the night before. This is partly to be explained by
+the innocence and boldness of her character; and partly because James
+More, having sped so ill in his interview with me, or had his mouth
+closed by my invitation, said no word to her upon the subject. At the
+breakfast, accordingly, it soon appeared we were at cross purposes. I
+had looked to find her in clothes of her own: I found her (as if her
+father were forgotten) wearing some of the best that I had bought for
+her and which she knew (or thought) that I admired her in. I had looked
+to find her imitate my affectation of distance, and be most precise and
+formal; instead I found her flushed and wild-like, with eyes
+extraordinary bright, and a painful and varying expression, calling me
+by name with a sort of appeal of tenderness, and referring and deferring
+to my thoughts and wishes like an anxious or a suspected wife.
+
+But this was not for long. As I beheld her so regardless of her own
+interests, which I had jeopardised and was now endeavoring to recover, I
+redoubled my own boldness in the manner of a lesson to the girl. The
+more she came forward, the further I drew back; the more she betrayed
+the closeness of our intimacy, the more pointedly civil I became, until
+even her father (if he had not been so engrossed with eating) might have
+observed the opposition. In the midst of which, of a sudden, she became
+wholly changed, and I told myself, with a good deal of relief, that she
+had took the hint at last.
+
+All day I was at my classes or in quest of my new lodging; and though
+the hour of our customary walk hung miserably on my hands, I cannot say
+but I was happy on the whole to find my way cleared, the girl again in
+proper keeping, the father satisfied or at least acquiescent, and myself
+free to prosecute my love with honour. At supper, as at all our meals,
+it was James More that did the talking. No doubt but he talked well, if
+anyone could have believed him. But I will speak of him presently more
+at large. The meal at an end, he rose, got his great coat, and looking
+(as I thought) at me, observed he had affairs abroad. I took this for a
+hint that I was to be going also, and got up; whereupon the girl, who
+had scarce given me greeting at my entrance, turned her eyes on me wide
+open, with a look that bade me stay. I stood between them like a fish
+out of water, turning from one to the other; neither seemed to observe
+me, she gazing on the floor, he buttoning his coat: which vastly swelled
+my embarrassment. This appearance of indifferency argued, upon her side,
+a good deal of anger very near to burst out. Upon his, I thought it
+horribly alarming; I made sure there was a tempest brewing there; and
+considering that to be the chief peril, turned towards him and put
+myself (so to speak) in the man's hands.
+
+"Can I do anything for _you_, Mr. Drummond?" says I.
+
+He stifled a yawn, which again I thought to be duplicity. "Why, Mr.
+David," said he, "since you are so obliging as to propose it, you might
+show me the way to a certain tavern" (of which he gave the name) "where
+I hope to fall in with some old companions in arms."
+
+There was no more to say, and I got my hat and cloak to bear him
+company.
+
+"And as for you," he says to his daughter, "you had best go to your bed.
+I shall be late home, and _Early to bed and early to rise, gars bonny
+lasses have bright eyes."_
+
+Whereupon he kissed her with a good deal of tenderness, and ushered me
+before him from the door. This was so done (I thought on purpose) that
+it was scarce possible there should be any parting salutation; but I
+observed she did not look at me, and set it down to terror of James
+More.
+
+It was some distance to that tavern. He talked all the way of matters
+which did not interest me the smallest, and at the door dismissed me
+with empty manners. Thence I walked to my new lodging, where I had not
+so much as a chimney to hold me warm, and no society but my own
+thoughts. These were still bright enough; I did not so much as dream
+that Catriona was turned against me; I thought we were like folk
+pledged; I thought we had been too near and spoke too warmly to be
+severed, least of all by what were only steps in a most needful policy.
+And the chief of my concern was only the kind of father-in-law that I
+was getting, which was not at all the kind I would have chosen: and the
+matter of how soon I ought to speak to him, which was a delicate point
+on several sides. In the first place, when I thought how young I was, I
+blushed all over, and could almost have found it in my heart to have
+desisted; only that if once I let them go from Leyden without
+explanation, I might lose her altogether. And in the second place, there
+was our very irregular situation to be kept in view, and the rather
+scant measure of satisfaction I had given James More that morning. I
+concluded, on the whole, that delay would not hurt anything, yet I would
+not delay too long neither; and got to my cold bed with a full heart.
+
+The next day, as James More seemed a little on the complaining hand in
+the matter of my chamber, I offered to have in more furniture; and
+coming in the afternoon, with porters bringing chairs and tables, found
+the girl once more left to herself. She greeted me on my admission
+civilly, but withdrew at once to her own room, of which she shut the
+door. I made my disposition, and paid and dismissed the men so that she
+might hear them go, when I supposed she would at once come forth again
+to speak to me. I waited yet awhile, then knocked upon her door.
+
+"Catriona!" said I.
+
+The door was opened so quickly, even before I had the word out, that I
+thought she must have stood behind it listening. She remained there in
+the interval quite still; but she had a look that I cannot put a name
+on, as of one in a bitter trouble.
+
+"Are we not to have our walk to-day either?" so I faltered.
+
+"I am thanking you," said she. "I will not be caring much to walk, now
+that my father is come home."
+
+"But I think he has gone out himself and left you here alone," said I.
+
+"And do you think that was very kindly said?" she asked.
+
+"It was not unkindly meant," I replied. "What ails you, Catriona? What
+have I done to you that you should turn from me like this?"
+
+"I do not turn from you at all," she said, speaking very carefully. "I
+will ever be grateful to my friend that was good to me; I will ever be
+his friend in all that I am able. But now that my father James More is
+come again, there is a difference to be made, and I think there are some
+things said and done that would be better to be forgotten. But I will
+ever be your friend in all that I am able, and if that is not all that
+. . . if it is not so much. . . . Not that you will be caring! But I would
+not have you think of me too hard. It was true what you said to me, that
+I was too young to be advised, and I am hoping you will remember I was
+just a child. I would not like to lose your friendship, at all events."
+
+She began this very pale; but before she was done, the blood was in her
+face like scarlet, so that not her words only, but her face and the
+trembling of her very hands, besought me to be gentle. I saw for the
+first time, how very wrong I had done to place the child in that
+position, where she had been entrapped into a moment's weakness, and now
+stood before me like a person shamed.
+
+"Miss Drummond," I said, and stuck, and made the same beginning once
+again, "I wish you could see into my heart," I cried. "You would read
+there that my respect is undiminished. If that were possible, I should
+say it was increased. This is but the result of the mistake we made; and
+had to come; and the less said of it now the better. Of all of our life
+here, I promise you it shall never pass my lips; I would like to promise
+you too that I would never think of it, but it's a memory that will be
+always dear to me. And as for a friend, you have one here that would die
+for you."
+
+"I am thanking you," said she.
+
+We stood awhile silent, and my sorrow for myself began to get the upper
+hand; for here were all my dreams come to a sad tumble, and my love
+lost, and myself alone again in the world as at the beginning.
+
+"Well," said I, "we shall be friends always, that's a certain thing. But
+this is a kind of a farewell too: it's a kind of a farewell after all; I
+shall always ken Miss Drummond, but this is a farewell to my Catriona."
+
+I looked at her; I could hardly say I saw her, but she seemed to grow
+great and brighten in my eyes; and with that I suppose I must have lost
+my head, for I called out her name again and made a step at her with my
+hands reached forth.
+
+She shrank back like a person struck, her face flamed; but the blood
+sprang no faster up into her cheeks, than what it flowed back upon my
+own heart, at sight of it, with penitence and concern. I found no words
+to excuse myself, but bowed before her very deep, and went my ways out
+of the house with death in my bosom.
+
+I think it was about five days that followed without any change. I saw
+her scarce ever but at meals, and then of course in the company of James
+More. If we were alone even for a moment, I made it my devoir to behave
+the more distantly and to multiply respectful attentions, having always
+in my mind's eye that picture of the girl shrinking and flaming in a
+blush, and in my heart more pity for her than I could depict in words. I
+was sorry enough for myself, I need not dwell on that, having fallen all
+my length and more than all my height in a few seconds; but, indeed, I
+was near as sorry for the girl, and sorry enough to be scarce angry with
+her save by fits and starts. Her plea was good: she was but a child; she
+had been placed in an unfair position; if she had deceived herself and
+me, it was no more than was to have been looked for.
+
+And for another thing she was now very much alone. Her father, when he
+was by, was rather a caressing parent; but he was very easy led away by
+his affairs and pleasures, neglected her without compunction or remark,
+spent his nights in taverns when he had the money, which was more often
+than I could at all account for; and even in the course of these few
+days, failed once to come to a meal, which Catriona and I were at last
+compelled to partake of without him. It was the evening meal, and I left
+immediately that I had eaten, observing I supposed she would prefer to
+be alone; to which she agreed and (strange as it may seem) I quite
+believed her. Indeed, I thought myself but an eyesore to the girl, and a
+reminder of a moment's weakness that she now abhorred to think of. So
+she must sit alone in that room where she and I had been so merry, and
+in the blink of that chimney whose light had shone upon our many
+difficult and tender moments. There she must sit alone, and think of
+herself as of a maid who had most unmaidenly proffered her affections
+and had the same rejected. And in the meanwhile I would be alone some
+other place, and reading myself (whenever I was tempted to be angry)
+lessons upon human frailty and female delicacy. And altogether I suppose
+there were never two poor fools made themselves more unhappy in a
+greater misconception.
+
+As for James, he paid not so much heed to us, or to anything in nature
+but his pocket, and his belly, and his own prating talk. Before twelve
+hours were gone he had raised a small loan of me; before thirty, he had
+asked for a second and been refused. Money and refusal he took with the
+same kind of high good-nature. Indeed, he had an outside air of
+magnanimity that was very well fitted to impose upon a daughter; and the
+light in which he was constantly presented in his talk, and the man's
+fine presence and great ways went together pretty harmoniously. So that
+a man that had no business with him, and either very little penetration
+or a furious deal of prejudice, might almost have been taken in. To me,
+after my first two interviews, he was as plain as print; I saw him to be
+perfectly selfish, with a perfect innocency in the same; and I would
+harken to his swaggering talk (of arms, and "an old soldier," and "a
+poor Highland gentleman," and "the strength of my country and my
+friends") as I might to the babbling of a parrot.
+
+The odd thing was that I fancy he believed some part of it himself, or
+did at times; I think he was so false all through that he scarce knew
+when he was lying; and for one thing, his moments of dejection must have
+been wholly genuine. There were times when he would be the most silent,
+affectionate, clinging creature possible, holding Catriona's hand like a
+big baby, and begging of me not to leave if I had any love to him; of
+which, indeed, I had none, but all the more to his daughter. He would
+press and indeed beseech us to entertain him with our talk, a thing very
+difficult in the state of our relations; and again break forth in
+pitiable regrets for his own land and friends, or into Gaelic singing.
+
+"This is one of the melancholy airs of my native land," he would say.
+"You may think it strange to see a soldier weep, and indeed it is to
+make a near friend of you," says he. "But the notes of this singing are
+in my blood, and the words come out of my heart. And when I mind upon my
+red mountains and the wild birds calling there, and the brave streams of
+water running down, I would scarce think shame to weep before my
+enemies." Then he would sing again, and translate to me pieces of the
+song, with a great deal of boggling and much expressed contempt against
+the English language. "It says here," he would say, "that the sun is
+gone down, and the battle is at an end, and the brave chiefs are
+defeated. And it tells here how the stars see them fleeing into strange
+countries or lying dead on the red mountain; and they will never more
+shout the call of battle or wash their feet in the streams of the
+valley. But if you had only some of this language, you would weep also
+because the words of it are beyond all expression, and it is mere
+mockery to tell you it in English."
+
+Well, I thought there was a good deal of mockery in the business, one
+way and another; and yet, there was some feeling too, for which I hated
+him, I think, the worst of all. And it used to cut me to the quick to
+see Catriona so much concerned for the old rogue, and weeping herself to
+see him weep, when I was sure one-half of his distress flowed from his
+last night's drinking in some tavern. There were times when I was
+tempted to lend him a round sum, and see the last of him for good; but
+this would have been to see the last of Catriona as well, for which I
+was scarcely so prepared; and besides, it went against my conscience to
+squander my good money on one who was so little of a husband.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+A TWOSOME
+
+
+I believe it was about the fifth day, and I know at least that James was
+in one of his fits of gloom, when I received three letters. The first
+was from Alan, offering to visit me in Leyden; the other two were out of
+Scotland and prompted by the same affair, which was the death of my
+uncle and my own complete accession to my rights. Rankeillor's was, of
+course, wholly in the business view; Miss Grant's was like herself, a
+little more witty than wise, full of blame to me for not having written
+(though how was I to write with such intelligence?) and of rallying talk
+about Catriona, which it cut me to the quick to read in her very
+presence.
+
+For it was of course in my own rooms that I found them, when I came to
+dinner, so that I was surprised out of my news in the very first moment
+of reading it. This made a welcome diversion for all three of us, nor
+could any have foreseen the ill consequences that ensued. It was
+accident that brought the three letters the same day, and that gave them
+into my hand in the same room with James More; and of all the events
+that flowed from that accident, and which I might have prevented if I
+had held my tongue, the truth is that they were preordained before
+Agricola came into Scotland or Abraham set out upon his travels.
+
+The first that I opened was naturally Alan's; and what more natural than
+that I should comment on his design to visit me? but I observed James to
+sit up with an air of immediate attention.
+
+"Is that not Alan Breck that was suspected of the Appin accident?" he
+inquired.
+
+I told him, "Ay," it was the same; and he withheld me some time from my
+other letters, asking of our acquaintance, of Alan's manner of life in
+France, of which I knew very little, and further of his visit as now
+proposed.
+
+"All we forfeited folk hang a little together," he explained, "and
+besides I know the gentleman: and though his descent is not the thing,
+and indeed he has no true right to use the name of Stewart, he was very
+much admired in the day of Drummossie. He did there like a soldier; if
+some that need not be named had done as well, the upshot need not have
+been so melancholy to remember. There were two that did their best that
+day, and it makes a bond between the pair of us," says he.
+
+I could scarce refrain from shooting out my tongue at him, and could
+almost have wished that Alan had been there to have inquired a little
+further into that mention of his birth. Though, they tell me, the same
+was indeed not wholly regular.
+
+Meanwhile, I had opened Miss Grant's, and could not withhold an
+exclamation.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, forgetting, the first time since her father was
+arrived, to address her by a handle, "I am come into my kingdom fairly,
+I am the laird of Shaws indeed--my uncle is dead at last."
+
+She clapped her hands together leaping from her seat. The next moment it
+must have come over both of us at once what little cause of joy was left
+to either, and we stood opposite, staring on each other sadly.
+
+But James showed himself a ready hypocrite. "My daughter," says he, "is
+this how my cousin learned you to behave? Mr. David has lost a near
+friend, and we should first condole with him on his bereavement."
+
+"Troth, sir," said I, turning to him in a kind of anger, "I can make no
+such faces. His death is as blythe news as ever I got."
+
+"It's a good soldier's philosophy," says James. "'Tis the way of flesh,
+we must all go, all go. And if the gentleman was so far from your
+favour, why, very well! But we may at least congratulate you on your
+accession to your estates."
+
+"Nor can I say that either," I replied, with the same heat. "It is a
+good estate; what matters that to a lone man that has enough already? I
+had a good revenue before in my frugality; and but for the man's
+death--which gratifies me, shame to me that must confess it!--I see not
+how anyone is to be bettered by this change."
+
+"Come, come," said he, "you are more affected than you let on, or you
+would never make yourself out so lonely. Here are three letters; that
+means three that wish you well; and I could name two more, here in this
+very chamber. I have known you not so very long, but Catriona, when we
+are alone, is never done with the singing of your praises."
+
+She looked up at him, a little wild at that; and he slid off at once
+into another matter, the extent of my estate, which (during the most of
+the dinner time) he continued to dwell upon with interest. But it was to
+no purpose he dissembled; he had touched the matter with too gross a
+hand: and I knew what to expect. Dinner was scarce ate when he plainly
+discovered his designs. He reminded Catriona of an errand, and bid her
+attend to it. "I do not see you should be gone beyond the hour," he
+added, "and friend David will be good enough to bear me company till you
+return." She made haste to obey him without words. I do not know if she
+understood, I believe not; but I was completely satisfied, and sat
+strengthening my mind for what should follow.
+
+The door had scarce closed behind her departure, when the man leaned
+back in his chair and addressed me with a good affectation of easiness.
+Only the one thing betrayed him and that was his face; which suddenly
+shone all over with fine points of sweat.
+
+"I am rather glad to have a word alone with you," says he, "because in
+our first interview there were some expressions you misapprehended and I
+have long meant to set you right upon. My daughter stands beyond doubt.
+So do you, and I would make that good with my sword against all
+gainsayers. But, my dear David, this world is a censorious place--as who
+should know it better than myself, who have lived ever since the days of
+my late departed father, God sain him! in a perfect spate of calumnies?
+We have to face to that; you and me have to consider of that; we have to
+consider of that." And he wagged his head like a minister in a pulpit.
+
+"To what effect, Mr. Drummond?" said I. "I would be obliged to you if
+you would approach your point."
+
+"Ay, ay," says he, laughing, "like your character indeed! and what I
+most admire in it. But the point, my worthy fellow, is sometimes in a
+kittle bit." He filled a glass of wine. "Though between you and me, that
+are such fast friends, it need not bother us long. The point, I need
+scarcely tell you, is my daughter. And the first thing is that I have no
+thought in my mind of blaming you. In the unfortunate circumstances,
+what could you do else? 'Deed, and I cannot tell."
+
+"I thank you for that," said I, pretty close upon my guard.
+
+"I have besides studied your character," he went on; "your talents are
+fair; you seem to have a moderate competence; which does no harm; and
+one thing with another, I am very happy to have to announce to you that
+I have decided on the latter of the two ways open."
+
+"I am afraid I am dull," said I. "What ways are these?"
+
+He bent his brows upon me formidably and uncrossed his legs. "Why, sir,"
+says he, "I think I need scarce describe them to a gentleman of your
+condition; either that I should cut your throat or that you should marry
+my daughter."
+
+"You are pleased to be quite plain at last," said I.
+
+"And I believe I have been plain from the beginning!" cries he
+robustiously. "I am a careful parent, Mr. Balfour; but I thank God, a
+patient and deleeberate man. There is many a father, sir, that would
+have hirsled you at once either to the altar or the field. My esteem for
+your character--"
+
+"Mr. Drummond," I interrupted, "if you have any esteem for me at all, I
+will beg of you to moderate your voice. It is quite needless to rowt at
+a gentleman in the same chamber with yourself and lending you his best
+attention."
+
+"Why, very true," says he, with an immediate change. "And you must
+excuse the agitations of a parent."
+
+"I understand you then," I continued--"for I will take no note of your
+other alternative, which perhaps it was a pity you let fall--I
+understand you rather to offer me encouragement in case I should desire
+to apply for your daughter's hand?"
+
+"It is not possible to express my meaning better," said he, "and I see
+we shall do well together."
+
+"That remains to be yet seen," said I. "But so much I need make no
+secret of, that I bear the lady you refer to the most tender affection,
+and I could not fancy, even in a dream, a better fortune than to get
+her."
+
+"I was sure of it, I felt certain of you, David," he cried, and reached
+out his hand to me.
+
+I put it by. "You go too fast, Mr. Drummond," said I. "There are
+conditions to be made; and there is a difficulty in the path, which I
+see not entirely how we shall come over. I have told you that, upon my
+side, there is no objection to the marriage, but I have good reason to
+believe there will be much on the young lady's."
+
+"This is all beside the mark," says he. "I will engage for her
+acceptance."
+
+"I think you forget, Mr. Drummond," said I, "that, even in dealing with
+myself you have been betrayed into two-three unpalatable expressions. I
+will have none such employed to the young lady. I am here to speak and
+think for the two of us; and I give you to understand that I would no
+more let a wife be forced upon myself, than what I would let a husband
+be forced on the young lady."
+
+He sat and glowered at me like one in doubt and a good deal of temper.
+
+"So that this is to be the way of it," I concluded. "I will marry Miss
+Drummond, and that blythely, if she is entirely willing. But if there be
+the least unwillingness, as I have reason to fear--marry her will I
+never."
+
+"Well, well," said he, "this is a small affair. As soon as she returns I
+will sound her a bit, and hope to reassure you----"
+
+But I cut in again. "Not a finger of you, Mr. Drummond, or I cry off,
+and you can seek a husband to your daughter somewhere else," said I. "It
+is I that am to be the only dealer and the only judge. I shall satisfy
+myself exactly; and none else shall anyways meddle--you the least of
+all."
+
+"Upon my word, sir!" he exclaimed, "and who are you to be the judge?"
+
+"The bridegroom, I believe," said I.
+
+"This is to quibble," he cried. "You turn your back upon the facts. The
+girl, my daughter, has no choice left to exercise. Her character is
+gone."
+
+"And I ask your pardon," said I, "but while this matter lies between her
+and you and me, that is not so."
+
+"What security have I!" he cried. "Am I to let my daughter's reputation
+depend upon a chance?"
+
+"You should have thought of all this long ago," said I, "before you were
+so misguided as to lose her; and not afterwards, when it is quite too
+late. I refuse to regard myself as any way accountable for your neglect,
+and I will be browbeat by no man living. My mind is quite made up, and
+come what may, I will not depart from it a hair's breadth. You and me
+are to sit here in company till her return; upon which, without either
+word or look from you, she and I are to go forth again to hold our talk.
+If she can satisfy me that she is willing to this step, I will then make
+it; and if she cannot, I will not."
+
+He leaped out of his seat like a man stung. "I can spy your manoeuvre,"
+he cried; "you would work upon her to refuse!"
+
+"Maybe ay, and maybe no," said I. "That is the way it is to be,
+whatever."
+
+"And if I refuse?" cries he.
+
+"Then, Mr. Drummond, it will have to come to the throat-cutting," said
+I.
+
+What with the size of the man, his great length of arm in which he came
+near rivalling his father, and his reputed skill at weapons, I did not
+use this word without some trepidation, to say nothing at all of the
+circumstance that he was Catriona's father. But I might have spared
+myself alarms. From the poorness of my lodging--he does not seem to have
+remarked his daughter's dresses, which were indeed all equally new to
+him--and from the fact that I had shown myself averse to lend, he had
+embraced a strong idea of my poverty. The sudden news of my estate
+convinced him of his error, and he had made but the one bound of it on
+this fresh venture, to which he was now so wedded, that I believe he
+would have suffered anything rather than fall to the alternative of
+fighting.
+
+A little while longer he continued to dispute with me until I hit upon a
+word that silenced him.
+
+"If I find you so averse to let me see the lady by herself," said I, "I
+must suppose you have very good grounds to think me in the right about
+her unwillingness."
+
+He gabbled some kind of an excuse.
+
+"But all this is very exhausting to both of our tempers," I added, "and
+I think we would do better to preserve a judicious silence."
+
+The which we did until the girl returned, and I must suppose would have
+cut a very ridiculous figure, had there been any there to view us.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE
+
+
+I opened the door to Catriona and stopped her on the threshold.
+
+"Your father wishes us to take our walk," said I.
+
+She looked to James More, who nodded, and at that, like a trained
+soldier, she turned to go with me.
+
+We took one of our old ways, where we had gone often together, and been
+more happy than I can tell of in the past. I came a half a step behind,
+so that I could watch her unobserved. The knocking of her little shoes
+upon the way sounded extraordinary pretty and sad; and I thought it a
+strange moment that I should be so near both ends of it at once, and
+walk in the midst between two destinies, and could not tell whether I
+was hearing these steps for the last time, or whether the sound of them
+was to go in and out with me till death should part us.
+
+She avoided even to look at me, only walked before her, like one who had
+a guess of what was coming. I saw I must speak soon before my courage
+was run out, but where to begin I knew not. In this painful situation,
+when the girl was as good as forced into my arms and had already
+besought my forbearance, any excess of pressure must have seemed
+indecent; yet to avoid it wholly would have a very cold-like appearance.
+Between these extremes I stood helpless, and could have bit my fingers;
+so that, when at last I managed to speak at all, it may be said I spoke
+at random.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I am in a very painful situation; or rather, so we
+are both; and I would be a good deal obliged to you if you would promise
+to let me speak through first of all, and not to interrupt till I have
+done."
+
+She promised me that simply.
+
+"Well," said I, "this that I have got to say is very difficult, and I
+know very well I have no right to be saying it. After what passed
+between the two of us last Friday, I have no manner of right. We have
+got so ravelled up (and all by my fault) that I know very well the least
+I could do is just to hold my tongue, which was what I intended fully,
+and there was nothing further from my thoughts than to have troubled you
+again. But, my dear, it has become merely necessary, and no way by it.
+You see, this estate of mine has fallen in, which makes me rather a
+better match; and the--the business would not have quite the same
+ridiculous-like appearance that it would before. Besides which, it's
+supposed that our affairs have got so much ravelled up (as I was saying)
+that it would be better to let them be the way they are. In my view,
+this part of the thing is vastly exaggerate, and if I were you I would
+not wear two thoughts on it. Only it's right I should mention the same,
+because there's no doubt it has some influence on James More. Then I
+think we were none so unhappy when we dwelt together in this town
+before. I think we did pretty well together. If you would look back, my
+dear--"
+
+"I will look neither back nor forward," she interrupted. "Tell me the
+one thing: this is my father's doing?"
+
+"He approves of it," said I. "He approved that I should ask your hand in
+marriage," and was going on again with somewhat more of an appeal upon
+her feelings; but she marked me not, and struck into the midst.
+
+"He told you to!" she cried. "It is no sense denying it, you said
+yourself that there was nothing farther from your thoughts. He told you
+to."
+
+"He spoke of it the first, if that is what you mean," I began.
+
+She was walking ever the faster, and looking fair in front of her; but
+at this she made a little noise in her head, and I thought she would
+have run.
+
+"Without which," I went on, "after what you said last Friday, I would
+never have been so troublesome as make the offer. But when he as good as
+asked me, what was I to do?"
+
+She stopped and turned round upon me.
+
+"Well, it is refused at all events," she cried, "and there will be an
+end of that."
+
+And she began to walk forward.
+
+"I suppose I could expect no better," said I, "but I think you might try
+to be a little kind to me for the last end of it. I see not why you
+should be harsh. I have loved you very well, Catriona--no harm that I
+should call you so for the last time. I have done the best that I could
+manage, I am trying the same still, and only vexed that I can do no
+better. It is a strange thing to me that you can take any pleasure to be
+hard to me."
+
+"I am not thinking of you," she said, "I am thinking of that man, my
+father."
+
+"Well, and that way, too!" said I. "I can be of use to you that way,
+too; I will have to be. It is very needful, my dear, that we should
+consult about your father; for the way this talk has gone, an angry man
+will be James More."
+
+She stopped again. "It is because I am disgraced?" she asked.
+
+"That is what he is thinking," I replied, "but I have told you already
+to make nought of it."
+
+"It will be all one to me," she cried. "I prefer to be disgraced!"
+
+I did not know very well what to answer, and stood silent.
+
+There seemed to be something working in her bosom after that last cry;
+presently she broke out, "And what is the meaning of all this? Why is
+all this shame loundered on my head? How could you dare it, David
+Balfour?"
+
+"My dear," said I, "what else was I to do?"
+
+"I am not your dear," she said, "and I defy you to be calling me these
+words."
+
+"I am not thinking of my words," said I. "My heart bleeds for you, Miss
+Drummond. Whatever I may say, be sure you have my pity in your difficult
+position. But there is just the one thing that I wish you would bear in
+view, if it was only long enough to discuss it quietly; for there is
+going to be a collieshangie when we two get home. Take my word for it,
+it will need the two of us to make this matter end in peace."
+
+"Ay," said she. There sprang a patch of red in either of her cheeks.
+"Was he for fighting you?" said she.
+
+"Well, he was that," said I.
+
+She gave a dreadful kind of laugh. "At all events, it is complete!" she
+cried. And then turning on me: "My father and I are a fine pair," she
+said, "but I am thanking the good God there will be somebody worse than
+what we are. I am thanking the good God that he has let me see you so.
+There will never be the girl made that would not scorn you."
+
+I had borne a good deal pretty patiently, but this was over the mark.
+
+"You have no right to speak to me like that," said I. "What have I done
+but to be good to you, or try to? And here is my repayment! O, it is too
+much."
+
+She kept looking at me with a hateful smile. "Coward!" said she.
+
+"The word in your throat and in your father's!" I cried. "I have dared
+him this day already in your interest. I will dare him again, the nasty
+pole-cat; little I care which of us should fall! Come," said I, "back to
+the house with us; let us be done with it, let me be done with the whole
+Hieland crew of you! You will see what you think when I am dead."
+
+She shook her head at me with that same smile I could have struck her
+for.
+
+"O, smile away!" I cried. "I have seen your bonny father smile on the
+wrong side this day. Not that I mean he was afraid, of course," I added
+hastily, "but he preferred the other way of it."
+
+"What is this?" she asked.
+
+"When I offered to draw with him," said I.
+
+"You offered to draw upon James More?" she cried.
+
+"And I did so," said I, "and found him backward enough, or how would we
+be here?"
+
+"There is a meaning upon this," said she. "What is it you are meaning?"
+
+"He was to make you take me," I replied, "and I would not have it. I
+said you should be free, and I must speak with you alone; little I
+supposed it would be such a speaking! '_And what if I refuse_?' says
+he.--'_Then it must come to the throat cutting_,' says I, '_for I will
+no more have a husband forced on that young lady than what I would have
+a wife forced upon myself_.' These were my words, they were a friend's
+words; bonnily have I been paid for them! Now you have refused me of
+your own clear free will, and there lives no father in the Highlands, or
+out of them, that can force on this marriage. I will see that your
+wishes are respected; I will make the same my business, as I have all
+through. But I think you might have that decency as to affect some
+gratitude. 'Deed, and I thought you knew me better! I have not behaved
+quite well to you, but that was weakness. And to think me a coward and
+such a coward as that--O, my lass, there was a stab for the last of it!"
+
+"Davie, how would I guess?" she cried. "O, this is a dreadful business!
+Me and mine,"--she gave a kind of wretched cry at the word--"me and mine
+are not fit to speak to you. O, I could be kneeling down to you in the
+street, I could be kissing your hands for your forgiveness!"
+
+"I will keep the kisses I have got from you already," cried I. "I will
+keep the ones I wanted and that were something worth; I will not be
+kissed in penitence."
+
+"What can you be thinking of this miserable girl?" says she.
+
+"What I am trying to tell you all this while!" said I, "that you had
+best leave me alone, whom you can make no more unhappy if you tried, and
+turn your attention to James More, your father, with whom you are like
+to have a queer pirn to wind."
+
+"O, that I must be going out into the world alone with such a man!" she
+cried, and seemed to catch herself in with a great effort. "But trouble
+yourself no more for that," said she. "He does not know what kind of
+nature is in my heart. He will pay me dear for this day of it; dear,
+dear, will he pay."
+
+She turned, and began to go home and I to accompany her. At which she
+stopped.
+
+"I will be going alone," she said. "It is alone I must be seeing him."
+
+Some little while I raged about the streets, and told myself I was the
+worst used lad in Christendom. Anger choked me; it was all very well for
+me to breathe deep; it seemed there was not air enough about Leyden to
+supply me, and I thought I would have burst like a man at the bottom of
+the sea. I stopped and laughed at myself at a street corner a minute
+together, laughing out loud, so that a passenger looked at me, which
+brought me to myself.
+
+"Well," I thought, "I have been a gull and a ninny and a soft Tommy long
+enough. Time it was done. Here is a good lesson to have nothing to do
+with that accursed sex, that was the ruin of the man in the beginning
+and will be so to the end. God knows I was happy enough before ever I
+saw her; God knows I can be happy enough again when I have seen the last
+of her."
+
+That seemed to me the chief affair: to see them go. I dwelled upon the
+idea fiercely; and presently slipped on, in a kind of malevolence, to
+consider how very poorly they were like to fare when Davie Balfour was
+no longer by to be their milk-cow; at which, to my own very great
+surprise, the disposition of my mind turned bottom up. I was still
+angry; I still hated her; and yet I thought I owed it to myself that she
+should suffer nothing.
+
+This carried me home again at once, where I found the mails drawn out
+and ready fastened by the door, and the father and daughter with every
+mark upon them of a recent disagreement. Catriona was like a wooden
+doll; James More breathed hard, his face was dotted with white spots,
+and his nose upon one side. As soon as I came in, the girl looked at him
+with a steady, clear, dark look that might very well have been followed
+by a blow. It was a hint that was more contemptuous than a command, and
+I was surprised to see James More accept it. It was plain he had had a
+master talking-to; and I could see there must be more of the devil in
+the girl than I had guessed, and more good-humor about the man than I
+had given him the credit of.
+
+He began, at least, calling me Mr. Balfour, and plainly speaking from a
+lesson; but he got not very far, for at the first pompous swell of his
+voice, Catriona cut in.
+
+"I will tell you what James More is meaning," said she. "He means we
+have come to you, beggar-folk, and have not behaved to you very well,
+and we are ashamed of our ingratitude and ill-behaviour. Now we are
+wanting to go away and be forgotten; and my father will have guided his
+gear so ill, that we cannot even do that unless you will give us some
+more alms. For that is what we are, at all events, beggar-folk and
+sorners."
+
+"By your leave, Miss Drummond," said I, "I must speak to your father by
+myself."
+
+She went into her own room and shut the door, without a word or a look.
+
+"You must excuse her, Mr. Balfour," says James More. "She has no
+delicacy."
+
+"I am not here to discuss that with you," said I, "but to be quit of
+you. And to that end I must talk of your position. Now, Mr. Drummond, I
+have kept the run of your affairs more closely than you bargained for. I
+know you had money of your own when you were borrowing mine. I know you
+have had more since you were here in Leyden, though you concealed it
+even from your daughter."
+
+"I bid you beware. I will stand no more baiting," he broke out. "I am
+sick of her and you. What kind of a damned trade is this to be a parent!
+I have had expressions used to me----" There he broke off. "Sir, this is
+the heart of a soldier and a parent," he went on again, laying his hand
+on his bosom, "outraged in both characters--and I bid you beware."
+
+"If you would have let me finish," says I, "you would have found I spoke
+for your advantage."
+
+"My dear friend," he cried, "I know I might have relied upon the
+generosity of your character."
+
+"Man! will you let me speak?" said I. "The fact is that I cannot win to
+find out if you are rich or poor. But it is my idea that your means, as
+they are mysterious in their source, so they are something insufficient
+in amount; and I do not choose your daughter to be lacking. If I durst
+speak to herself, you may be certain I would never dream of trusting it
+to you; because I know you like the back of my hand, and all your
+blustering talk is that much wind to me. However, I believe in your way
+you do still care something for your daughter after all; and I must just
+be doing with that ground of confidence, such as it is."
+
+Whereupon, I arranged with him that he was to communicate with me, as to
+his whereabouts and Catriona's welfare, in consideration of which I was
+to serve him a small stipend.
+
+He heard the business out with a great deal of eagerness; and when it
+was done, "My dear fellow, my dear son," he cried out, "this is more
+like yourself than any of it yet! I will serve you with a soldier's
+faithfulness----"
+
+"Let me hear no more of it!" says I. "You have got me to that pitch that
+the bare name of soldier rises on my stomach. Our traffic is settled; I
+am now going forth and will return in one half-hour, when I expect to
+find my chambers purged of you."
+
+I gave them good measure of time; it was my one fear that I might see
+Catriona again, because tears and weakness were ready in my heart, and I
+cherished my anger like a piece of dignity. Perhaps an hour went by; the
+sun had gone down, a little wisp of a new moon was following it across a
+scarlet sunset; already there were stars in the east, and in my
+chambers, when at last I entered them, the night lay blue. I lit a taper
+and reviewed the rooms; in the first there remained nothing so much as
+to awake a memory of those who were gone; but in the second, in a corner
+of the floor, I spied a little heap that brought my heart into my mouth.
+She had left behind at her departure all that ever she had of me. It was
+the blow that I felt sorest, perhaps because it was the last; and I fell
+upon that pile of clothing and behaved myself more foolish than I care
+to tell of.
+
+Late in the night, in a strict frost, and my teeth chattering, I came
+again by some portion of my manhood and considered with myself. The
+sight of these poor frocks and ribbons, and her shifts, and the clocked
+stockings, was not to be endured; and if I were to recover any constancy
+of mind, I saw I must be rid of them ere the morning. It was my first
+thought to have made a fire and burned them; but my disposition has
+always been opposed to wastery, for one thing; and for another, to have
+burned these things that she had worn so close upon her body, seemed in
+the nature of a cruelty. There was a corner cupboard in that chamber;
+there I determined to bestow them. The which I did and made it a long
+business, folding them with very little skill indeed but the more care;
+and sometimes dropping them with my tears. All the heart was gone out of
+me, I was weary as though I had run miles, and sore like one beaten;
+when, as I was folding a kerchief that she wore often at her neck, I
+observed there was a corner neatly cut from it. It was a kerchief of a
+very pretty hue, on which I had frequently remarked; and once that she
+had it on, I remembered telling her (by way of a banter) that she wore
+my colours. There came a glow of hope and like a tide of sweetness in my
+bosom; and the next moment I was plunged back in a fresh despair. For
+there was the corner crumpled in a knot and cast down by itself in
+another part of the floor.
+
+But when I argued with myself, I grew more hopeful. She had cut that
+corner off in some childish freak that was manifestly tender; that she
+had cast it away again was little to be wondered at; and I was inclined
+to dwell more upon the first than upon the second, and to be more
+pleased that she had ever conceived the idea of that keepsake, than
+concerned because she had flung it from her in an hour of natural
+resentment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+WE MEET IN DUNKIRK
+
+
+Altogether, then, I was scarce so miserable the next days but what I had
+many hopeful and happy snatches; threw myself with a good deal of
+constancy upon my studies; and made out to endure the time till Alan
+should arrive, or I might hear word of Catriona by the means of James
+More. I had altogether three letters in the time of our separation. One
+was to announce their arrival in the town of Dunkirk in France, from
+which place James shortly after started alone upon a private mission.
+This was to England and to see Lord Holderness; and it has always been a
+bitter thought that my good money helped to pay the charges of the same.
+But he has need of a long spoon who sups with the deil, or James More
+either. During this absence, the time was to fall due for another
+letter; and as the letter was the condition of his stipend, he had been
+so careful as prepare it beforehand and leave it with Catriona to be
+despatched. The fact of our correspondence aroused her suspicions, and
+he was no sooner gone than she had burst the seal. What I received began
+accordingly in the writing of James More:
+
+"My dear Sir,--Your esteemed favour came to hand duly, and I have to
+acknowledge the inclosure according to agreement. It shall be all
+faithfully expended on my daughter, who is well, and desires to be
+remembered to her dear friend. I find her in rather a melancholy
+disposition, but trusts in the mercy of Grod to see her re-established.
+Our manner of life is very much alone, but we solace ourselves with the
+melancholy tunes of our native mountains, and by walking upon the margin
+of the sea that lies next to Scotland. It was better days with me when I
+lay with five wounds upon my body on the field of Gladsmuir. I have found
+employment here in the _haras_ of a French nobleman, where my experience
+is valued. But, my dear Sir, the wages are so exceedingly unsuitable that
+I would be ashamed to mention them, which makes your remittances the more
+necessary to my daughter's comfort, though I daresay the sight of old
+friends would be still better.
+
+"My dear Sir, "Your affectionate obedient servant,
+
+"JAMES MACGREGOR DRUMMOND."
+
+Below it began again in the hand of Catriona:--
+
+ "Do not be believing him, it is all lies together.
+ "C.M.D."
+
+Not only did she add this postcript, but I think she must have come near
+suppressing the letter; for it came long after date, and was closely
+followed by the third. In the time betwixt them, Alan had arrived, and
+made another life to me with his merry conversation; I had been
+presented to his cousin of the Scots-Dutch, a man that drank more than I
+could have thought possible and was not otherwise of interest; I had
+been entertained to many jovial dinners and given some myself, all with
+no great change upon my sorrow; and we two (by which I mean Alan and
+myself, and not at all the cousin) had discussed a good deal the nature
+of my relations with James More and his daughter. I was naturally
+diffident to give particulars; and this disposition was not anyway
+lessened by the nature of Alan's commentary upon those I gave.
+
+"I cannae make head nor tail of it," he would say, "but it sticks in my
+mind ye've made a gowk of yourself. There's few people that has had more
+experience than Alan Breck; and I can never call to mind to have heard
+tell of a lassie like this one of yours. The way that you tell it, the
+thing's fair impossible. Ye must have made a terrible hash of the
+business, David."
+
+"There are whiles that I am of the same mind," said I.
+
+"The strange thing is that ye seem to have a kind of a fancy for her
+too!" said Alan.
+
+"The biggest kind, Alan," said I, "and I think I'll take it to my grave
+with me."
+
+"Well, ye beat me, whatever!" he would conclude.
+
+I showed him the letter with Catriona's postcript. "And here again!" he
+cried. "Impossible to deny a kind of decency to this Catriona, and sense
+forby! As for James More, the man's as boss as a drum; he's just a wame
+and a wheen words; though I'll can never deny that he fought reasonably
+well at Gladsmuir, and it's true what he says here about the five
+wounds. But the loss of him is that the man's boss."
+
+"Ye see, Alan," said I, "it goes against the grain with me to leave the
+maid in such poor hands."
+
+"Ye couldnae weel find poorer," he admitted. "But what are ye to do with
+it? It's this way about a man and a woman, ye see, Davie: The weemenfolk
+have got no kind of reason to them. Either they like the man, and then
+a' goes fine; or else they just detest him, and ye may spare your
+breath--ye can do naething. There's just the two sets of them--them that
+would sell their coats for ye, and them that never look the road ye're
+on. That's a' that there is to women; and you seem to be such a gomeral
+that ye cannae tell the tane frae the tither."
+
+"Well, and I'm afraid that's true for me," said I.
+
+"And yet there's naething easier!" cried Alan. "I could easy learn ye
+the science of the thing; but ye seem to me to be born blind, and
+there's where the diffeeculty comes in!"
+
+"And can _you_ no help me?" I asked, "you that's so clever at the
+trade?"
+
+"Ye see, David, I wasnae here," said he. "I'm like a field officer that
+has naebody but blind men for scouts and _éclaireurs_; and what would he
+ken? But it sticks in my mind that ye'll have made some kind of bauchle;
+and if I was you, I would have a try at her again."
+
+"Would ye so, man Alan?" said I.
+
+"I would e'en't," says he.
+
+The third letter came to my hand while we were deep in some such talk;
+and it will be seen how pat it fell to the occasion. James professed to
+be in some concern upon his daughter's health, which I believe was never
+better; abounded in kind expressions to myself; and finally proposed
+that I should visit them at Dunkirk.
+
+"You will now be enjoying the society of my old comrade, Mr. Stewart,"
+he wrote. "Why not accompany him so far in his return to France? I have
+something very particular for Mr. Stewart's ear; and, at any rate, I
+would be pleased to meet in with an old fellow-soldier and one so mettle
+as himself. As for you, my dear sir, my daughter and I would be proud to
+receive our benefactor, whom we regard as a brother and a son. The
+French nobleman has proved a person of the most filthy avarice of
+character, and I have been necessitate to leave the _haras_. You will
+find us, in consequence, a little poorly lodged in the _auberge_ of a
+man Bazin on the dunes; but the situation is caller, and I make no doubt
+but we might spend some very pleasant days, when Mr. Stewart and I could
+recall our services, and you and my daughter divert yourselves in a
+manner more befitting your age. I beg at least that Mr. Stewart would
+come here; my business with him opens a very wide door."
+
+"What does the man want with me?" cried Alan, when he had read. "What he
+wants with you is clear enough--it's siller. But what can he want with
+Alan Breck?"
+
+"O, it'll be just an excuse," said I. "He is still after this marriage,
+which I wish from my heart that we could bring about. And he asks you
+because he thinks I would be less likely to come wanting you."
+
+"Well, I wish that I kent," says Alan. "Him and me were never onyways
+pack; we used to girn at ither like a pair of pipers. 'Something for my
+ear,' quo' he! I'll maybe have something for his hinder end, before
+we're through with it. Dod, I'm thinking it would be a kind of a
+divertisement to gang and see what he'll be after! Forby that I could
+see your lassie then. What say ye, Davie? Will ye ride with Alan?"
+
+You may be sure I was not backward, and Alan's furlough running towards
+an end, we set forth presently upon this joint adventure.
+
+It was near dark of a January day when we rode at last into the town of
+Dunkirk. We left our horses at the post, and found a guide to Bazin's
+Inn, which lay beyond the walls. Night was quite fallen, so that we were
+the last to leave that fortress, and heard the doors of it close behind
+us as we passed the bridge. On the other side there lay a lighted
+suburb, which we thridded for a while, then turned into a dark lane, and
+presently found ourselves wading in the night among deep sand where we
+could hear a bullering of the sea. We travelled in this fashion for some
+while, following our conductor mostly by the sound of his voice; and I
+had begun to think he was perhaps misleading us, when we came to the top
+of a small brae, and there appeared out of the darkness a dim light in a
+window.
+
+"_Voilà l'auberge à, Bazin_," says the guide.
+
+Alan smacked his lips. "An unco lonely bit," said he, and I thought by
+his tone he was not wholly pleased.
+
+A little after, and we stood in the lower storey of the house, which was
+all in the one apartment, with a stair leading to the chambers at the
+side, benches and tables by the wall, the cooking fire at the one end of
+it, and shelves of bottles and the cellar-trap at the other. Here Bazin,
+who was an ill-looking, big man, told us the Scottish gentleman was gone
+abroad he knew not where, but the young lady was above, and he would
+call her down to us.
+
+I took from my breast the kerchief wanting the corner, and knotted it
+about my throat. I could hear my heart go; and Alan patting me on the
+shoulder with some of his laughable expressions, I could scarce refrain
+from a sharp word. But the time was not long to wait. I heard her step
+pass overhead, and saw her on the stair. This she descended very
+quietly, and greeted me with a pale face and certain seeming of
+earnestness, or uneasiness, in her manner that extremely dashed me.
+
+"My father, James More, will be here soon. He will be very pleased to
+see you," she said. And then of a sudden her face flamed, her eyes
+lightened, the speech stopped upon her lips; and I made sure she had
+observed the kerchief. It was only for a breath that she was
+discomposed; but methought it was with a new animation that she turned
+to welcome Alan. "And you will be his friend Alan Breck?" she cried.
+"Many is the dozen times I will have heard him tell of you; and I love
+you already for all your bravery and goodness."
+
+"Well, well," says Alan, holding her hand in his and viewing her, "and
+so this is the young lady at the last of it! David, you're an awful poor
+hand of a description."
+
+I do not know that ever I heard him speak so straight to people's
+hearts; the sound of his voice was like song.
+
+"What? will he have been describing me?" she cried.
+
+"Little else of it since I ever came out of France!" says he, "forby a
+bit of speciment one night in Scotland in a shaw of wood by Silvermills.
+But cheer up, my dear! ye're bonnier than what he said. And now there's
+one thing sure: you and me are to be a pair of friends. I'm a kind of a
+henchman to Davie here; I'm like a tyke at his heels; and whatever he
+cares for, I've got to care for too--and by the holy airn! they've got
+to care for me! So now you can see what way you stand with Alan Breck,
+and ye'll find ye'll hardly lose on the transaction. He's no very
+bonnie, my dear, but he's leal to them he loves."
+
+"I thank you with my heart for your good words," said she. "I have that
+honour for a brave, honest man that I cannot find any to be answering
+with."
+
+Using travellers' freedom, we spared to wait for James More, and sat
+down to meat, we threesome. Alan had Catriona sit by him and wait upon
+his wants: he made her drink first out of his glass, he surrounded her
+with continual kind gallantries, and yet never gave me the most small
+occasion to be jealous; and he kept the talk so much in his own hand,
+and that in so merry a note, that neither she nor I remembered to be
+embarrassed. If any one had seen us there, it must have been supposed
+that Alan was the old friend and I the stranger. Indeed, I had often
+cause to love and to admire the man, but I never loved or admired him
+better than that night; and I could not help remarking to myself (what I
+was sometimes rather in danger of forgetting) that he had not only much
+experience of life, but in his own way a great deal of natural ability
+besides. As for Catriona she seemed quite carried away; her laugh was
+like a peal of bells, her face gay as a May morning; and I own, although
+I was very well pleased, yet I was a little sad also, and thought myself
+a dull, stockish character in comparison of my friend, and very unfit to
+come into a young maid's life, and perhaps ding down her gaiety.
+
+But if that was like to be my part, I found at least that I was not
+alone in it; for, James More returning suddenly, the girl was changed
+into a piece of stone. Through the rest of that evening, until she made
+an excuse and slipped to bed, I kept an eye upon her without cease: and
+I can bear testimony that she never smiled, scarce spoke, and looked
+mostly on the board in front of her. So that I really marvelled to see
+so much devotion (as it used to be) changed into the very sickness of
+hate.
+
+Of James More it is unnecessary to say much; you know the man already,
+what there was to know of him; and I am weary of writing out his lies.
+Enough that he drank a great deal, and told us very little that was to
+any possible purpose. As for the business with Alan, that was to be
+reserved for the morrow and his private hearing.
+
+It was the more easy to be put off, because Alan and I were pretty weary
+with our day's ride, and sat not very late after Catriona.
+
+We were soon alone in a chamber where we were to make shift with a
+single bed. Alan looked on me with a queer smile.
+
+"Ye muckle ass!" said he.
+
+"What do ye mean by that?" I cried.
+
+"Mean? What do I mean? It's extraordinar, David man," says he, "that you
+should be so mortal stupit."
+
+Again I begged him to speak out.
+
+"Well, it's this of it," said he. "I told ye there were the two kinds of
+women--them that would sell their shifts for ye, and the others. Just
+you try for yoursel', my bonny man I But what's that neepkin at your
+craig?"
+
+I told him.
+
+"I thocht it was something there about," said he.
+
+Nor would he say another word though I besieged him long with
+importunities.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP
+
+
+Daylight showed us how solitary the inn stood. It was plainly hard upon
+the sea, yet out of all view of it, and beset on every side with scabbit
+hills of sand. There was, indeed, only one thing in the nature of a
+prospect, where there stood out over a brae the two sails of a windmill,
+like an ass's ears, but with the ass quite hidden. It was strange (after
+the wind rose, for at first it was dead calm) to see the turning and
+following of each other of these great sails behind the hillock. Scarce
+any road came by there; but a number of footways travelled among the
+bents in all directions up to Mr. Bazin's door. The truth is, he was a
+man of many trades, not any one of them honest, and the position of his
+inn was the best of his livelihood. Smugglers frequented it; political
+agents and forfeited persons bound across the water came there to await
+their passages; and I daresay there was worse behind, for a whole family
+might have been butchered in that house and nobody the wiser.
+
+I slept little and ill. Long ere it was day, I had slipped from beside
+my bedfellow, and was warming myself at the fire or walking to and fro
+before the door. Dawn broke mighty sullen; but a little after, sprang up
+a wind out of the west, which burst the clouds, let through the sun, and
+set the mill to the turning. There was something of spring in the
+sunshine, or else it was in my heart; and the appearing of the great
+sails one after another from behind the hill, diverted me extremely. At
+times I could hear a creak of the machinery; and by half-past eight of
+the day, Catriona began to sing in the house. At this I would have cast
+my hat in the air; and I thought this dreary, desert place was like a
+paradise.
+
+For all which, as the day drew on and nobody came near, I began to be
+aware of an uneasiness that I could scarce explain. It seemed there was
+trouble afoot; the sails of the windmill, as they came up and went down
+over the hill, were like persons spying; and outside of all fancy, it
+was surely a strange neighbourhood and house for a young lady to be
+brought to dwell in.
+
+At breakfast, which we took late, it was manifest that James More was in
+some danger or perplexity; manifest that Alan was alive to the same, and
+watched him close; and this appearance of duplicity upon the one side
+and vigilance upon the other, held me on live coals. The meal was no
+sooner over than James seemed to come to a resolve, and began to make
+apologies. He had an appointment of a private nature in the town (it was
+with the French nobleman, he told me) and we would please excuse him
+till about noon. Meanwhile, he carried his daughter aside to the far end
+of the room, where he seemed to speak rather earnestly and she to listen
+without much inclination.
+
+"I am caring less and less about this man James," said Alan. "There's
+something no right with the man James, and I wouldnae wonder but what
+Alan Breck would give an eye to him this day. I would like fine to see
+yon French nobleman, Davie; and I daresay you could find an employ to
+yoursel, and that would be to speer at the lassie for some news of your
+affair. Just tell it to her plainly--tell her ye're a muckle ass at the
+off-set; and then, if I were you, and ye could do it naitural, I would
+just mint to her I was in some kind of a danger; a' weemenfolk likes
+that."
+
+"I cannae lee, Alan, I cannae do it naitural," says I, mocking him.
+
+"The more fool you!" says he. "Then ye'll can tell her that I
+recommended it; that'll set her to the laughing; and I wouldnae wonder
+but what that was the next best. But see to the pair of them! If I
+didnae feel just sure of the lassie, and that she was awful pleased and
+chief with Alan, I would think there was some kind of hocus-pocus about
+yon."
+
+"And is she so pleased with ye, then, Alan?" I asked.
+
+"She thinks a heap of me," says he. "And I'm no like you: I'm one that
+can tell. That she does--she thinks a heap of Alan. And troth! I'm
+thinking a good deal of him mysel; and with your permission, Shaws, I'll
+be getting a wee yont amang the bents, so that I can see what way James
+goes."
+
+One after another went, till I was left alone beside the breakfast
+table; James to Dunkirk, Alan dogging him, Catriona up the stairs to her
+own chamber. I could very well understand how she should avoid to be
+alone with me; yet was none the better pleased with it for that, and
+bent my mind to entrap her to an interview before the men returned. Upon
+the whole, the best appeared to me to do like Alan. If I was out of view
+among the sand hills, the fine morning would decoy her out; and once I
+had her in the open, I could please myself.
+
+No sooner said than done; nor was I long under the bield of a hillock
+before she appeared at the inn door, looked here and there, and (seeing
+nobody) set out by a path that led directly seaward, and by which I
+followed her. I was in no haste to make my presence known; the further
+she went I made sure of the longer hearing to my suit; and the ground
+being all sandy, it was easy to follow her unheard. The path rose and
+came at last to the head of a knowe. Thence I had a picture for the
+first time of what a desolate wilderness that inn stood hidden in; where
+was no man to be seen, nor any house of man, except just Bazin's and the
+windmill. Only a little further on, the sea appeared and two or three
+ships upon it, pretty as a drawing. One of these was extremely close in
+to be so great a vessel; and I was aware of a shock of new suspicion,
+when I recognized the trim of the _Seahorse_. What should an English
+ship be doing so near in France? Why was Alan brought into her
+neighbourhood, and that in a place so far from any hope of rescue? and
+was it by accident, or by design, that the daughter of James More should
+walk that day to the seaside?
+
+Presently I came forth behind her in the front of the sand hills and
+above the beach. It was here long and solitary; with a man-o'-war's boat
+drawn up about the middle of the prospect, and an officer in charge and
+pacing the sands like one who waited. I sat immediately down where the
+rough grass a good deal covered me, and looked for what should follow.
+Catriona went straight to the boat; the officer met her with civilities;
+they had ten words together; I saw a letter changing hands; and there
+was Catriona returning. At the same time, as if this was all her
+business on the Continent, the boat shoved off and was headed for the
+_Seahorse_. But I observed the officer to remain behind and disappear
+among the bents.
+
+I liked the business little; and the more I considered of it, liked it
+less. Was it Alan the officer was seeking? or Catriona? She drew near
+with her head down, looking constantly on the sand, and made so tender a
+picture that I could not bear to doubt her innocency. The next, she
+raised her face and recognised me; seemed to hesitate, and then came on
+again, but more slowly, and I thought with a changed colour. And at that
+thought, all else that was upon my bosom--fears, suspicions, the care of
+my friend's life--was clean swallowed up; and I rose to my feet and
+stood waiting her in a drunkenness of hope.
+
+I gave her "good-morning" as she came up, which she returned with a good
+deal of composure.
+
+"Will you forgive my having followed you?" said I.
+
+"I know you are always meaning kindly," she replied; and then, with a
+little outburst, "But why will you be sending money to that man? It must
+not be."
+
+"I never sent it for him," said I, "but for you, as you know well."
+
+"And you have no right to be sending it to either one of us," said she.
+"David, it is not right."
+
+"It is not, it is all wrong," said I; "and I pray God he will help this
+dull fellow (if it be at all possible), to make it better. Catriona,
+this is no kind of life for you to lead, and I ask your pardon for the
+word, but yon man is no fit father to take care of you."
+
+"Do not be speaking of him, even!" was her cry.
+
+"And I need speak of him no more, it is not of him that I am thinking,
+O, be sure of that!" says I. "I think of the one thing. I have been
+alone now this long time in Leyden; and when I was by way of at my
+studies, still I was thinking of that. Next Alan came, and I went among
+soldier-men to their big dinners; and still I had the same thought. And
+it was the same before, when I had her there beside me. Catriona, do you
+see this napkin at my throat? You cut a corner from it once and then
+cast it from you. They're _your_ colours now; I wear them in my heart.
+My dear, I cannot want you. O, try to put up with me!"
+
+I stepped before her so as to intercept her walking on.
+
+"Try to put up with me," I was saying, "try and bear me with a little."
+
+Still she had never the word, and a fear began to rise in me like a fear
+of death.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, gazing on her hard, "is it a mistake again? Am I
+quite lost?"
+
+She raised her face to me, breathless.
+
+"Do you want me, Davie, truly?" said she, and I scarce could hear her
+say it.
+
+"I do that," said I. "O, sure you know it--I do that."
+
+"I have nothing left to give or to keep back," said she. "I was all
+yours from the first day, if you would have had a gift of me!" she said.
+
+This was on the summit of a brae; the place was windy and conspicuous,
+we were to be seen there even from the English ship; but I kneeled down
+before her in the sand, and embraced her knees, and burst into that
+storm of weeping that I thought it must have broken me. All thought was
+wholly beaten from my mind by the vehemency of my discomposure. I knew
+not where I was, I had forgot why I was happy; only I knew she stooped,
+and I felt her cherish me to her face and bosom, and heard her words out
+of a whirl.
+
+"Davie," she was saying, "O, Davie, is this what you think of me? Is it
+so that you were caring for poor me? O, Davie, Davie!"
+
+With that she wept also, and our tears were commingled in a perfect
+gladness.
+
+It might have been ten in the day before I came to a clear sense of what
+a mercy had befallen me; and sitting over against her, with her hands in
+mine, gazed in her face, and laughed out loud for pleasure like a child,
+and called her foolish and kind names. I have never seen the place look
+so pretty as these bents by Dunkirk; and the windmill sails, as they
+bobbed over the knowe, were like a tune of music.
+
+I know not how much longer we might have continued to forget all else
+besides ourselves, had I not chanced upon a reference to her father,
+which brought us to reality.
+
+"My little friend," I was calling her again and again, rejoicing to
+summon up the past by the sound of it, and to gaze across on her, and to
+be a little distant--"My little friend, now you are mine altogether;
+mine for good, my little friend; and that man's no longer at all."
+
+There came a sudden whiteness in her face, she plucked her hands from
+mine.
+
+"Davie, take me away from him!" she cried. "There's something wrong;
+he's not true. There will be something wrong; I have a dreadful terror
+here at my heart. What will he be wanting at all events with that King's
+ship? What will this word be saying?" And she held the letter forth. "My
+mind misgives me, it will be some ill to Alan. Open it, Davie--open it
+and see."
+
+I took it, and looked at it, and shook my head.
+
+"No," said I, "it goes against me, I cannot open a man's letter."
+
+"Not to save your friend?" she cried.
+
+"I cannae tell," said I. "I think not. If I was only sure!"
+
+"And you have but to break the seal!" said she.
+
+"I know it," said I, "but the thing goes against me."
+
+"Give it here," said she, "and I will open it myself."
+
+"Nor you neither," said I. "You least of all. It concerns your father,
+and his honour, dear, which we are both misdoubting. No question but the
+place is dangerous-like, and the English ship being here, and your
+father having word of it, and yon officer that stayed ashore! He would
+not be alone either; there must be more along with him; I daresay we are
+spied upon this minute. Ay, no doubt, the letter should be opened; but
+somehow, not by you nor me."
+
+I was about this far with it, and my spirit very much overcome with a
+sense of danger and hidden enemies, when I spied Alan, come back again
+from following James and walking by himself among the sand hills. He was
+in his soldier's coat, of course, and mighty fine; but I could not avoid
+to shudder when I thought how little that jacket would avail him, if he
+were once caught and flung in a skiff, and carried on board of the
+_Seahorse_, a deserter, a rebel, and now a condemned murderer.
+
+"There," said I, "there is the man that has the best right to open it:
+or not, as he thinks fit."
+
+With which I called upon his name, and we both stood up to be a mark for
+him.
+
+"If it is so--if it be more disgrace--will you can bear it?" she asked,
+looking upon me with a burning eye.
+
+"I was asked something of the same question when I had seen you but the
+once," said I. "What do you think I answered? That if I liked you as I
+thought I did--and O, but I like you better!--I would marry you at his
+gallows' foot."
+
+The blood rose in her face; she came close up and pressed upon me,
+holding my hand: and it was so that we awaited Alan.
+
+He came with one of his queer smiles. "What was I telling ye, David?"
+says he.
+
+"There is a time for all things, Alan," said I, "and this time is
+serious. How have you sped? You can speak out plain before this friend
+of ours."
+
+"I have been upon a fool's errand," said he.
+
+"I doubt we have done better than you, then," said I; "and, at least,
+here is a great deal of matter that you must judge of. Do you see that?"
+I went on, pointing to the ship. "That is the _Seahorse_, Captain
+Palliser."
+
+"I should ken her, too," says Alan. "I had fyke enough with her when she
+was stationed in the Forth. But what ails the man to come so close?"
+
+"I will tell you why he came there first," said I. "It was to bring this
+letter to James More. Why he stops here now that it's delivered, what
+it's likely to be about, why there's an officer hiding in the bents, and
+whether or not it's probable that he's alone--I would rather you
+considered for yourself."
+
+"A letter to James More?" said he.
+
+"The same," said I.
+
+"Well, and I can tell ye more than that," said Alan. "For last night
+when you were fast asleep, I heard the man colloquing with some one in
+the French, and then the door of that inn to be opened and shut."
+
+"Alan!" cried I, "you slept all night, and I am here to prove it."
+
+"Ay, but I would never trust Alan whether he was asleep or waking!" says
+he. "But the business looks bad. Let's see the letter."
+
+I gave it him.
+
+"Catriona," said he, "ye'll have to excuse me, my dear; but there's
+nothing less than my fine bones upon the cast of it, and I'll have to
+break this seal."
+
+"It is my wish," said Catriona.
+
+He opened it, glanced it through, and flung his hand in the air.
+
+"The stinking brock!" says he, and crammed the paper in his pocket.
+"Here, let's get our things thegether. This place is fair death to me."
+And he began to walk towards the inn.
+
+It was Catriona who spoke the first. "He has sold you?" she asked.
+
+"Sold me, my dear," said Alan. "But thanks to you and Davie, I'll can
+jink him yet. Just let me win upon my horse!" he added.
+
+"Catriona must come with us," said I. "She can have no more traffic with
+that man. She and I are to be married." At which she pressed my hand to
+her side.
+
+"Are ye there with it?" says Alan, looking back. "The best day's work
+that ever either of ye did yet I And I'm bound to say, my dawtie, ye
+make a real, bonny couple."
+
+The way that he was following brought us close in by the windmill, where
+I was aware of a man in seaman's trousers, who seemed to be spying from
+behind it. Only, of course, we took him in the rear.
+
+"See, Alan!" said I.
+
+"Wheesht!" said he, "this is my affairs."
+
+The man was, no doubt, a little deafened by the clattering of the mill,
+and we got up close before he noticed. Then he turned, and we saw he was
+a big fellow with a mahogany face.
+
+"I think, sir," says Alan, "that you speak the English?"
+
+"_Non, monsieur_," says he, with an incredible bad accent.
+
+"_Non, monsieur_," cries Alan, mocking him. "Is that how they learn you
+French on the _Seahorse?_ Ye muckle, gutsey hash, here's a Scots boot to
+your English hurdies!"
+
+And bounding on him before he could escape, he dealt the man a kick that
+laid him on his nose. Then he stood, with a savage smile, and watched
+him scramble to his feet and scamper off into the sand hills.
+
+"But it's high time I was clear of these empty bents!" said Alan; and
+continued his way at top speed and we still following, to the back door
+of Bazin's inn.
+
+It chanced that as we entered by the one door we came face to face with
+James More entering by the other.
+
+"Here!" said I to Catriona, "quick! upstairs with you and make your
+packets; this is no fit scene for you."
+
+In the meanwhile James and Alan had met in the midst of the long room.
+She passed them close by to reach the stairs; and after she was some way
+up I saw her turn and glance at them again, though without pausing.
+Indeed, they were worth looking at. Alan wore as they met one of his
+best appearances of courtesy and friendliness, yet with something
+eminently warlike, so that James smelled danger off the man, as folk
+smell fire in a house, and stood prepared for accidents.
+
+Time pressed. Alan's situation in that solitary place, and his enemies
+about him, might have daunted Cæsar. It made no change in him; and it
+was in his old spirit of mockery and daffing that he began the
+interview.
+
+"A braw good day to ye again, Mr. Drummond," said he. "What'll yon
+business of yours be just about?"
+
+"Why, the thing being private, and rather of a long story," says James,
+"I think it will keep very well till we have eaten."
+
+"I'm none so sure of that," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind it's either
+now or never; for the fact is me and Mr. Balfour here have gotten a
+line, and we're thinking of the road."
+
+I saw a little surprise in James's eye; but he held himself stoutly.
+
+"I have but the one word to say to cure you of that," said he, "and that
+is the name of my business."
+
+"Say it then," says Alan. "Hout! wha minds for Davie?"
+
+"It is a matter that would make us both rich men," said James.
+
+"Do ye tell me that?" cries Alan.
+
+"I do, sir," said James. "The plain fact is that it is Cluny's
+Treasure."
+
+"No!" cried Alan. "Have ye got word of it?"
+
+"I ken the place, Mr. Stewart, and can take you there," said James.
+
+"This crowns all!" says Alan. "Well, and I'm glad I came to Dunkirk. And
+so this was your business, was it? Halvers, I'm thinking?"
+
+"That is the business, sir," says James.
+
+"Well, well," says Alan; and then in the same tone of childlike
+interest, "It has naething to do with the _Seahorse_, then?" he asked.
+
+"With what?" says James.
+
+"Or the lad that I have just kicked the bottom of behind yon windmill?"
+pursued Alan. "Hut, man! have done with your lees! I have Palliser's
+letter here in my pouch. You're by with it, James More. You can never
+show your face again with dacent folk."
+
+James was taken all aback with it. He stood a second, motionless and
+white, then swelled with the living anger.
+
+"Do you talk to me, you bastard?" he roared out.
+
+"Ye glee'd swine!" cried Alan, and hit him a sounding buffet on the
+mouth, and the next wink of time their blades clashed together.
+
+At the first sound of the bare steel I instinctively leaped back from
+the collision. The next I saw, James parried a thrust so nearly that I
+thought him killed; and it lowed up in my mind that this was the girl's
+father, and in a manner almost my own, and I drew and ran in to sever
+them.
+
+"Keep back, Davie! Are ye daft? Damn ye, keep back!" roared Alan. "Your
+blood be on your ain heid then!"
+
+I beat their blades down twice. I was knocked reeling against the wall;
+I was back again betwixt them. They took no heed of me, thrusting at
+each other like two furies. I can never think how I avoided being
+stabbed myself or stabbing one of these two Rodomonts, and the whole
+business turned about me like a piece of a dream; in the midst of which
+I heard a great cry from the stair, and Catriona sprang before her
+father. In the same moment the point of my sword encountered something
+yielding. It came back to me reddened. I saw the blood flow on the
+girl's kerchief, and stood sick.
+
+"Will you be killing him before my eyes, and me his daughter after all?"
+she cried.
+
+"My dear, I have done with him," said Alan, and went and sat on a table,
+with his arms crossed and the sword naked in his hand.
+
+Awhile she stood before the man, panting, with big eyes, then swung
+suddenly about and faced him.
+
+"Begone!" was her word, "take your shame out of my sight; leave me with
+clean folk. I am a daughter of Alpin! Shame of the sons of Alpin,
+begone!"
+
+It was said with so much passion as awoke me from the horror of my own
+bloodied sword. The two stood facing, she with the red stain on her
+kerchief, he white as a rag. I knew him well enough--I knew it must have
+pierced him in the quick place of his soul; but he betook himself to a
+bravado air.
+
+"Why," says he, sheathing his sword, though still with a bright eye on
+Alan, "if this brawl is over I will but get my portmanteau---"
+
+"There goes no pockmantie out of this place except with me," says Alan.
+
+"Sir!" cries James.
+
+"James More," says Alan, "this lady daughter of yours is to marry my
+friend Davie, upon the which account I let you pack with a hale carcase.
+But take you my advice of it and get that carcase out of harm's way or
+ower late. Little as you suppose it, there are leemits to my temper."
+
+"Be damned, sir, but my money's there!" said James.
+
+"I'm vexed about that, too," says Alan, with his funny face, "but now,
+ye see, it's mines." And then with more gravity, "Be you advised, James
+More, you leave this house."
+
+James seemed to cast about for a moment in his mind; but it's to be
+thought he had enough of Alan's swordsmanship, for he suddenly put off
+his hat to us and (with a face like one of the damned) bade us farewell
+in a series. With which he was gone.
+
+At the same time a spell was lifted from me.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, "it was me--it was my sword. O, are ye much hurt?"
+
+"I know it, Davie, I am loving you for the pain of it; it was done
+defending that bad man, my father. See!" she said, and showed me a
+bleeding scratch, "see, you have made a man of me now. I will carry a
+wound like an old soldier."
+
+Joy that she should be so little hurt, and the love of her brave nature,
+transported me. I embraced her, I kissed the wound.
+
+"And am I to be out of the kissing, me that never lost a chance?" says
+Alan; and putting me aside and taking Catriona by either shoulder, "My
+dear," he said, "you're a true daughter of Alpin. By all accounts, he
+was a very fine man, and he may weel be proud of you. If ever I was to
+get married, it's the marrow of you I would be seeking for a mother to
+my sons. And I bear a king's name and speak the truth."
+
+He said it with a serious heat of admiration that was honey to the girl,
+and through her, to me. It seemed to wipe us clean of all James More's
+disgraces. And the next moment he was just himself again.
+
+"And now by your leave, my dawties," said he, "this is a' very bonny;
+but Alan Breck'll be a wee thing nearer to the gallows than he's caring
+for; and Dod! I think this is a grand place to be leaving."
+
+The word recalled us to some wisdom. Alan ran upstairs and returned with
+our saddle-bags and James More's portmanteau; I picked up Catriona's
+bundle where she had dropped it on the stair; and we were setting forth
+out of that dangerous house, when Bazin stopped the way with cries and
+gesticulations. He had whipped under a table when the swords were drawn,
+but now he was as bold as a lion. There was his bill to be settled,
+there was a chair broken, Alan had sat among his dinner things, James
+More had fled.
+
+"Here," I cried, "pay yourself," and flung him down some Lewie d'ors;
+for I thought it was no time to be accounting.
+
+He sprang upon that money, and we passed him by, and ran forth into the
+open. Upon three sides of the house were seamen hasting and closing in;
+a little nearer to us James More waved his hat as if to hurry them; and
+right behind him, like some foolish person holding up its hands, were
+the sails of the windmill turning.
+
+Alan gave but the one glance, and laid himself down to run. He carried a
+great weight in James More's portmanteau; but I think he would as soon
+have lost his life as cast away that booty which was his revenge; and he
+ran so that I was distressed to follow him, and marvelled and exulted to
+see the girl bounding at my side.
+
+As soon as we appeared, they cast off all disguise upon the other side;
+and the seamen pursued us with shouts and view-hullohs. We had a start
+of some two hundred yards, and they were but bandy-legged tarpaulins
+after all, that could not hope to better us at such an exercise. I
+suppose they were armed, but did not care to use their pistols on French
+ground. And as soon as I perceived that we not only held our advantage
+but drew a little away, I began to feel quite easy of the issue. For all
+which, it was a hot, brisk bit of work, so long as it lasted; Dunkirk
+was still far off; and when we popped over a knowe, and found a company
+of the garrison marching on the other side on some manoeuvre, I could
+very well understand the word that Alan had.
+
+He stopped running at once; and mopping at his brow, "They're a real
+bonny folk, the French nation," says he.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+No sooner were we safe within the walls of Dunkirk than we held a very
+necessary council-of-war on our position. We had taken a daughter from
+her father at the sword's point; any judge would give her back to him at
+once, and by all likelihood clap me and Alan into jail; and though we
+had an argument upon our side in Captain Palisser's letter, neither
+Catriona nor I were very keen to be using it in public. Upon all
+accounts it seemed the most prudent to carry the girl to Paris to the
+hands of her own chieftain, Macgregor of Bohaldie, who would be very
+willing to help his kinswoman, on the one hand, and not at all anxious
+to dishonour James upon the other.
+
+We made but a slow journey of it up, for Catriona was not so good at the
+riding as the running, and had scarce sat in a saddle since the
+'Forty-five. But we made it out at last, reached Paris early of a
+Sabbath morning, and made all speed, under Alan's guidance, to find
+Bohaldie. He was finely lodged, and lived in a good style, having a
+pension in the Scots Fund, as well as private means; greeted Catriona
+like one of his own house, and seemed altogether very civil and
+discreet, but not particularly open. We asked of the news of James More.
+"Poor James!" said he, and shook his head and smiled, so that I thought
+he knew further than he meant to tell. Then we showed him Palisser's
+letter, and he drew a long face at that.
+
+"Poor James!" said he again. "Well, there are worse folk than James
+More, too. But this is dreadful bad. Tut, tut, he must have forgot
+himself entirely! This is a most undesirable letter. But, for all that,
+gentlemen, I cannot see what we would want to make it public for. It's
+an ill bird that fouls his own nest, and we are all Scots folk and all
+Hieland."
+
+Upon this we were all agreed, save perhaps Alan; and still more upon the
+question of our marriage, which Bohaldie took in his own hands, as
+though there had been no such person as James More, and gave Catriona
+away with very pretty manners and agreeable compliments in French. It
+was not till all was over, and our healths drunk, that he told us James
+was in that city, whither he had preceded us some days, and where he now
+lay sick, and like to die. I thought I saw by my wife's face what way
+her inclination pointed.
+
+"And let us go see him, then," said I.
+
+"If it is your pleasure," said Catriona. These were early days.
+
+He was lodged in the same quarter of the city with his chief, in a great
+house upon a corner; and we were guided up to the garret where he lay by
+the sound of Highland piping. It seemed he had just borrowed a set of
+them from Bohaldie to amuse his sickness; though he was no such hand as
+was his brother Rob, he made good music of the kind; and it was strange
+to observe the French folk crowding on the stairs, and some of them
+laughing. He lay propped in a pallet. The first look of him I saw he was
+upon his last business; and, doubtless, this was a strange place for him
+to die in. But even now I find I can scarce dwell upon his end with
+patience. Doubtless, Bohaldie had prepared him; he seemed to know we
+were married, complimented us on the event, and gave us a benediction
+like a patriarch.
+
+"I have been never understood," said he. "I forgive you both without an
+after-thought;" after which he spoke for all the world in his old
+manner, was so obliging as to play us a tune or two upon his pipes, and
+borrowed a small sum before I left. I could not trace even a hint of
+shame in any part of his behaviour; but he was great upon forgiveness;
+it seemed always fresh to him. I think he forgave me every time we met;
+and when after some four days he passed away in a kind of odour of
+affectionate sanctity, I could have torn my hair out for exasperation. I
+had him buried; but what to put upon his tomb was quite beyond me, till
+at last I considered the date would look best alone.
+
+I thought it wiser to resign all thoughts of Leyden, where we had
+appeared once as brother and sister, and it would certainly look strange
+to return in a new character. Scotland would be doing for us; and
+thither, after I had recovered that which I had left behind, we sailed
+in a Low Country ship.
+
+And now, Miss Barbara Balfour (to set the ladies first) and Mr. Alan
+Balfour, younger of Shaws, here is the story brought fairly to an end. A
+great many of the folk that took a part in it, you will find (if you
+think well) that you have seen and spoken with. Alison Hastie in
+Limekilns was the lass that rocked your cradle when you were too small
+to know of it, and walked abroad with you in the policy when you were
+bigger. That very fine great lady that is Miss Barbara's name-mamma is
+no other than the same Miss Grant that made so much a fool of David
+Balfour in the house of the Lord Advocate. And I wonder whether you
+remember a little, lean, lively gentleman in a scratchwig and a
+wraprascal, that came to Shaws very late of a dark night, and whom you
+were awakened out of your beds and brought down to the dining-hall to be
+presented to, by the name of Mr. Jamieson? Or has Alan forgotten what he
+did at Mr. Jamieson's request--a most disloyal act--for which, by the
+letter of the law, he might be hanged--no less than drinking the king's
+health _across the water_? These were strange doings in a good Whig
+house! But Mr. Jamieson is a man privileged, and might set fire to my
+corn-barn; and the name they know him by now in France is the Chevalier
+Stewart.
+
+As for Davie and Catriona, I shall watch you pretty close in the next
+days, and see if you are so bold as to be laughing at papa and mamma. It
+is true we were not so wise as we might have been, and made a great deal
+of sorrow out of nothing; but you will find as you grow up that even the
+artful Miss Barbara, and even the valiant Mr. Alan will be not so very
+much wiser than their parents. For the life of man upon this world of
+ours is a funny business. They talk of the angels weeping; but I think
+they must more often be holding their sides, as they look on; and there
+was one thing I determined to do when I began this long story, and that
+was to tell out everything as it befell.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Footnote 1: Conspicuous.
+
+Footnote 2: Country.
+
+Footnote 3: The Fairies.
+
+Footnote 4: Flatteries.
+
+Footnote 5: Trust to.
+
+Footnote 6: This must have reference to Dr. Cameron on his first
+visit.--D.B.
+
+Footnote 7: Sweethearts.
+
+Footnote 8: Child.
+
+Footnote 9: Palm.
+
+Footnote 10: Gallows.
+
+Footnote 11: My Catechism.
+
+Footnote 12: Now Prince's Street.
+
+Footnote 13: A learned folklorist of my acquaintance hereby identifies
+Alan's air. It has been printed (it seems) in Campbell's _Tales of the
+West Highlands_, Vol. II., p. 91. Upon examination it would really seem
+as if Miss Grant's unrhymed doggrel (see chapter V.) would fit with a
+little humouring to the notes in question.
+
+Footnote 14: A ball placed upon a little mound for convenience of
+striking.
+
+Footnote 15: Patched shoes.
+
+Footnote 16: Shoemaker.
+
+Footnote 17: Tamson's mare, to go afoot.
+
+Footnote 18: Beard.
+
+Footnote 19: Ragged.
+
+Footnote 20: Fine things.
+
+Footnote 21: Catch.
+
+Footnote 22: Victuals.
+
+Footnote 23: Trust.
+
+Footnote 24: Sea fog.
+
+Footnote 25: Bashful.
+
+Footnote 26: Rest.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of David Balfour, Second Part
+by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
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+
+
+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's David Balfour, Second Part, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: David Balfour, Second Part
+ Being Memoirs Of His Adventures At Home And Abroad, The Second Part:
+ In Which Are Set Forth His Misfortunes Anent The Appin Murder;
+ His Troubles With Lord Advocate Grant; Captivity On The Bass
+ Rock; Journey Into Holland And France; And Singular Relations
+ With James More Drummond Or Macgregor, A Son Of The Notorious
+ Rob Roy, And His Daughter Catriona
+
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+Release Date: November 23, 2004 [EBook #14133]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVID BALFOUR, SECOND PART ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Kevin Handy, John Hagerson, and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<a name="balfour001"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour001.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: SHE DROPPED ME ONE OF HER CURTSEYS, WHICH
+WERE EXTRAORDINARY TAKING" src="images/balfour001sm.jpg" height="762" width="525" /></a><br />
+
+SHE DROPPED ME
+ONE OF HER CURTSEYS, WHICH WERE EXTRAORDINARY TAKING
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+<h4>There are several editions of this ebook in the Project Gutenberg collection. Various characteristics of each ebook are listed to aid in selecting the preferred file.<br />Click on any of the filenumbers below to quickly view each ebook.
+</h4>
+
+
+<table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto" cellpadding="4" border="3">
+
+<tr><td>
+ <b><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/30870/30870-h/30870-h.htm">
+30870</a> </b> </td><td>(A Table of Contents; No illustrations)
+</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+ <b><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/589/589-h/589-h.htm">
+589</a></b></td><td>(No illustrations and No Table of Contents)
+</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>
+ <b><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/14133/14133-h/14133-h.htm">
+14133</a></b> </td><td>(An illustrated HTML file with a Table of Contents)
+</td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+
+
+<h1>DAVID BALFOUR</h1>
+<br />
+<h2>Being Memoirs of his Adventures at home
+and Abroad</h2>
+<br />
+<h3>THE SECOND PART: <i>In which are set forth his Misfortunes
+anent the</i> APPIN <i>Murder; his Troubles with Lord Advocate</i>
+GRANT; <i>Captivity on the Bass Rock; Journey into Holland
+and France; and Singular Relations with</i> JAMES MORE
+DRUMMOND <i>or</i> MACGREGOR, <i>a Son of the notorious</i> ROB
+ROY, <i>and his Daughter</i> CATRIONA</h3>
+<br />
+<h3>WRITTEN BY HIMSELF</h3>
+<h4>AND NOW SET FORTH BY</h4>
+<h2>ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON</h2>
+<br />
+<h3><i>ILLUSTRATED</i></h3>
+<br />
+<br />
+<h4>NEW YORK</h4>
+<h4>CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS</h4>
+<h4>1905</h4>
+
+<h4>COPYRIGHT, 1893, BY</h4>
+<h4>CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS</h4>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2>DEDICATION</h2> <h3>To</h3> <h3>CHARLES BAXTER, <i>Writer to the
+Signet</i>.</h3>
+
+<p>MY DEAR CHARLES,</p>
+
+<p>It is the fate of sequels to disappoint those who have waited for them;
+and, my David having been left to kick his heels for more than a lustre in
+the British Linen Company's office, must expect his late reappearance to be
+greeted with hoots, if not with missiles. Yet, when I remember the days of
+our explorations, I am not without hope. There should be left in our native
+city some seed of the elect; some long-legged, hot-headed youth must repeat
+to-day our dreams and wanderings of so many years ago; he will relish the
+pleasure, which should have been ours, to follow among named streets and
+numbered houses the country walks of David Balfour, to identify Dean, and
+Silvermills, and Broughton, and Hope Park and Pilrig, and poor old
+Lochend--if it still be standing, and the Figgate Whins--if there be any of
+them left; or to push (on a long holiday) so far afield as Gillane or the
+Bass. So, perhaps, his eye shall be opened to behold the series of the
+generations, and he shall weigh with surprise his momentous and nugatory
+gift of life.</p>
+
+<p>You are still--as when first I saw, as when I last addressed you--in the
+venerable city which I must always think of as my home. And I have come so
+far; and the sights and thoughts of my youth pursue me; and I see like a
+vision the youth of my father, and of his father, and the whole stream of
+lives flowing down there, far in the north, with the sound of laughter and
+tears, to cast me out in the end, as by a sudden freshet, on those ultimate
+islands. And I admire and bow my head before the romance of destiny.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+R.L.S.<br />
+<br />
+VAILIMA,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;UPOLU,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;SAMOA,<br />
+
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1902.<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CONTENTS'></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<blockquote>
+<a href='#Part_I'>Part I</a><br />
+<br />
+<i>THE LORD ADVOCATE</i><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_I'>I. A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_II'>II. THE HIGHLAND WRITER</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_III'>III. I GO TO PILRIG</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_IV'>IV. LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_V'>V. IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VI'>VI. UMQHILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VII'>VII. I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOUR</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_VIII'>VIII. THE BRAVO</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_IX'>IX. THE HEATHER ON FIRE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_X'>X. THE RED-HEADED MAN</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XI'>XI. THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XII'>XII. ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIII'>XIII. GILLANE SANDS</a><br
+/>
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIV'>XIV. THE BASS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XV'>XV. BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVI'>XVI. THE MISSING WITNESS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVII'>XVII. THE MEMORIAL</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XVIII'>XVIII. THE TEE'D BALL</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XIX'>XIX. I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XX'>XX. I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#Part_II'>Part II</a><br />
+<br />
+<i>FATHER AND DAUGHTER</i><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXI'>XXI. THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXII'>XXII. HELVOETSLUYS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXIII'>XXIII. TRAVELS IN HOLLAND</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXIV'>XXIV. FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXV'>XXV. THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXVI'>XXVI. THE THREESOME</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXVII'>XXVII. A TWOSOME</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXVIII'>XXVIII. IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXIX'>XXIX. WE MEET IN DUNKIRK</a><br />
+<a href='#CHAPTER_XXX'>XXX. THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP</a><br />
+<a href='#CONCLUSION'>XXXI. CONCLUSION</a><br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote>
+<a href='#balfour001'>"SHE DROPPED ME ONE OF HER CURTSEYS, WHICH WERE
+EXTRAORDINARY TAKING"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour002'>"'WHAT DID THEY SUFFER FOR?' I ASKED?"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour003'>"'TIT YOU EFFER HEAR WHERE ALAN GRIGOR FAND THE
+TANGS,' SAID HE"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour004'>"'THE GOODMAN BROUGHT ME MY MEAT AND A DROP
+BRANDY, AND A CANDLE-DOWP TO EAT IT BY, ABOUT
+ELEEVEN,' SAID HE"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour005'>"'THERE HE SAT, A MUCKLE FAT, WHITE HASH OF A MAN
+LIKE CREISH'"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour006'>"'THERE IS NOTHING HERE TO BE VIEWED BUT NAKED
+CAMPBELL SPITE AND SCURVY CAMPBELL INTRIGUE'"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour007'>"UP SHE STOOD ON THE BULWARKS AND HELD BY A
+STAY"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour008'>"'YOU TELL ME SHE IS HERE?' SAID HE AGAIN"</a><br />
+<br />
+<a href='#balfour009'>"'KEEP BACK, DAVIE! ARE YE DAFT?'"</a><br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1"></a>[pg 1]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='Part_I'></a>Part I</h2>
+
+<h2>THE LORD ADVOCATE</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_I'></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK</h3>
+
+
+<p>The 25th day of August, 1751, about two in the afternoon, I, David
+Balfour, came forth of the British Linen Company, a porter attending me
+with a bag of money, and some of the chief of these merchants bowing me
+from their doors. Two days before, and even so late as yestermorning, I was
+like a beggarman by the wayside, clad in rags, brought down to my last
+shillings, my companion a condemned traitor, a price set on my own head for
+a crime with the news of which the country rang. To-day I was served heir
+to my position in life, a landed laird, a bank porter by me carrying my
+gold, recommendations in my pocket, and (in the words of the saying) the
+ball directly at my foot.</p>
+
+<p>There were two circumstances that served me as ballast to so much sail.
+The first was the very difficult <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2"
+id="Page_2"></a>[pg 2]</span>and deadly business I had still to handle; the
+second, the place that I was in. The tall, black city, and the numbers and
+movement and noise of so many folk, made a new world for me, after the
+moorland braes, the sea-sands, and the still country-sides that I had
+frequented up to then. The throng of the citizens in particular abashed me.
+Rankeillor's son was short and small in the girth; his clothes scarce held
+on me; and it was plain I was ill qualified to strut in the front of a
+bank-porter. It was plain, if I did so, I should but set folk laughing, and
+(what was worse in my case) set them asking questions. So that I behooved
+to come by some clothes of my own, and in the meanwhile to walk by the
+porter's side, and put my hand on his arm as though we were a pair of
+friends.</p>
+
+<p>At a merchant's in the Luckenbooths, I had myself fitted out: none too
+fine, for I had no idea to appear like a beggar on horseback; but comely
+and responsible, so that servants should respect me. Thence to an
+armourer's, where I got a plain sword, to suit with my degree in life. I
+felt safer with the weapon, though (for one so ignorant of defence) it
+might be called an added danger. The porter, who was naturally a man of
+some experience, judged my accoutrement to be well chosen.</p>
+
+<p>"Naething kenspeckle,"<sup><a href="#fn1" name="rfn1">[1]</a></sup> said
+he, "plain, dacent claes. As for the rapier, nae doubt it sits wi' your
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3"></a>[pg 3]</span>degree;
+but an I had been you, I would hae waired my siller better-gates than
+that." And proposed I should buy winter-hosen from a wife in the
+Cowgate-back, that was a cousin of his own, and made them "extraordinar
+endurable."</p>
+
+<p>But I had other matters on my hand more pressing. Here I was in this
+old, black city, which was for all the world like a rabbit-warren, not only
+by the number of its indwellers, but the complication of its passages and
+holes. It was indeed a place where no stranger had a chance to find a
+friend, let be another stranger. Suppose him even to hit on the right
+close, people dwelt so thronged in these tall houses, he might very well
+seek a day before he chanced on the right door. The ordinary course was to
+hire a lad they called a <i>caddie</i>, who was like a guide or pilot, led
+you where you had occasion, and (your errands being done) brought you again
+where you were lodging. But these caddies, being always employed in the
+same sort of services, and having it for obligation to be well informed of
+every house and person in the city, had grown to form a brotherhood of
+spies; and I knew from tales of Mr. Campbell's how they communicated one
+with another, what a rage of curiosity they conceived as to their
+employer's business, and how they were like eyes and fingers to the police.
+It would be a piece of little wisdom, the way I was now placed, to tack
+such a ferret to my tails. I had three visits to make, all immediately
+needful: to my kinsman Mr. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4"
+id="Page_4"></a>[pg 4]</span>Balfour of Pilrig, to Stewart the Writer that
+was Appin's agent, and to William Grant Esquire of Prestongrange, Lord
+Advocate of Scotland. Mr. Balfour's was a non-committal visit; and besides
+(Pilrig being in the country) I made bold to find way to it myself, with
+the help of my two legs and a Scots tongue. But the rest were in a
+different case. Not only was the visit to Appin's agent, in the midst of
+the cry about the Appin murder, dangerous in itself, but it was highly
+inconsistent with the other. I was like to have a bad enough time of it
+with my Lord Advocate Grant, the best of ways; but to go to him hot-foot
+from Appin's agent, was little likely to mend my own affairs, and might
+prove the mere ruin of friend Alan's. The whole thing, besides, gave me a
+look of running with the hare and hunting with the hounds that was little
+to my fancy. I determined, therefore, to be done at once with Mr. Stewart
+and the whole Jacobitical side of my business, and to profit for that
+purpose by the guidance of the porter at my side. But it chanced I had
+scarce given him the address, when there came a sprinkle of rain--nothing
+to hurt, only for my new clothes--and we took shelter under a pend at the
+head of a close or alley.</p>
+
+<p>Being strange to what I saw, I stepped a little farther in. The narrow
+paved way descended swiftly. Prodigious tall houses sprang upon each side
+and bulged out, one story beyond another, as they rose. At the top <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></a>[pg 5]</span>only a ribbon
+of sky showed in. By what I could spy in the windows, and by the
+respectable persons that passed out and in, I saw the houses to be very
+well occupied; and the whole appearance of the place interested me like a
+tale.</p>
+
+<p>I was still gazing, when there came a sudden brisk tramp of feet in time
+and clash of steel behind me. Turning quickly, I was aware of a party of
+armed soldiers, and, in their midst, a tall man in a great-coat. He walked
+with a stoop that was like a piece of courtesy, genteel and insinuating: he
+waved his hands plausibly as he went, and his face was sly and handsome. I
+thought his eye took me in, but could not meet it. This procession went by
+to a door in the close, which a serving-man in a fine livery set open; and
+two of the soldier-lads carried the prisoner within, the rest lingering
+with their firelocks by the door.</p>
+
+<p>There can nothing pass in the streets of a city without some following
+of idle folk and children. It was so now; but the more part melted away
+incontinent until but three were left. One was a girl; she was dressed like
+a lady, and had a screen of the Drummond colours on her head; but her
+comrades or (I should say) followers were ragged gillies, such as I had
+seen the matches of by the dozen in my Highland journey. They all spoke
+together earnestly in Gaelic, the sound of which was pleasant in my ears
+for the sake of Alan; and though the rain was by again, and my porter <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></a>[pg 6]</span>plucked at me
+to be going, I even drew nearer where they were, to listen. The lady
+scolded sharply, the others making apologies and cringeing before her, so
+that I made sure she was come of a chief's house. All the while the three
+of them sought in their pockets, and by what I could make out, they had the
+matter of half a farthing among the party; which made me smile a little to
+see all Highland folk alike for fine obeisances and empty sporrans.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced the girl turned suddenly about, so that I saw her face for
+the first time. There is no greater wonder than the way the face of a young
+woman fits in a man's mind, and stays there, and he could never tell you
+why; it just seems it was the thing he wanted. She had wonderful bright
+eyes like stars, and I daresay the eyes had a part in it; but what I
+remember the most clearly was the way her lips were a trifle open as she
+turned. And whatever was the cause, I stood there staring like a fool. On
+her side, as she had not known there was anyone so near, she looked at me a
+little longer, and perhaps with more surprise, than was entirely civil.</p>
+
+<p>It went through my country head she might be wondering at my new
+clothes; with that, I blushed to my hair, and at the sight of my colouring
+it's to be supposed she drew her own conclusions, for she moved her gillies
+farther down the close, and they fell again to this dispute where I could
+hear no more of it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></a>[pg 7]</span>I
+had often admired a lassie before then, if scarce so sudden and strong; and
+it was rather my disposition to withdraw than to come forward, for I was
+much in fear of mockery from the womenkind. You would have thought I had
+now all the more reason to pursue my common practice, since I had met this
+young lady in the city street, seemingly following a prisoner, and
+accompanied with two very ragged, indecent-like Highlandmen. But there was
+here a different ingredient; it was plain the girl thought I had been
+prying in her secrets; and with my new clothes and sword, and at the top of
+my new fortunes, this was more than I could swallow. The beggar on
+horseback could not bear to be thrust down so low, or at the least of it,
+not by this young lady.</p>
+
+<p>I followed, accordingly, and took off my new hat to her, the best that I
+was able.</p>
+
+<p>"Madam," said I, "I think it only fair to myself to let you understand I
+have no Gaelic. It is true I was listening, for I have friends of my own
+across the Highland line, and the sound of that tongue comes friendly; but
+for your private affairs, if you had spoken Greek, I might have had more
+guess at them."</p>
+
+<p>She made me a little, distant curtsey. "There is no harm done," said
+she, with a pretty accent, most like the English (but more agreeable). "A
+cat may look at a king."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not mean to offend," said I. "I have no skill <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></a>[pg 8]</span>of city
+manners; I never before this day set foot inside the doors of Edinburgh.
+Take me for a country lad--it's what I am; and I would rather I told you
+than you found it out."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, it will be a very unusual thing for strangers to be speaking to
+each other on the causeway," she replied. "But if you are landward<sup><a
+href="#fn2" name="rfn2">[2]</a></sup> bred it will be different. I am as
+landward as yourself; I am Highland as you see, and think myself the
+farther from my home."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not yet a week since I passed the line," said I. "Less than a
+week ago I was on the Braes of Balwhidder."</p>
+
+<p>"Balwhither?" she cries; "come ye from Balwhither? The name of it makes
+all there is of me rejoice. You will not have been long there, and not
+known some of our friends or family?"</p>
+
+<p>"I lived with a very honest, kind man called Duncan Dhu Maclaren," I
+replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Well I know Duncan, and you give him the true name!" she said; "and if
+he is an honest man, his wife is honest indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said I, "they are fine people, and the place is a bonny
+place."</p>
+
+<p>"Where in the great world is such another?" she cries; "I am loving the
+smell of that place and the roots that grew there."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></a>[pg 9]</span>I
+was infinitely taken with the spirit of the maid. "I could be wishing I had
+brought you a spray of that heather," says I. "And though I did ill to
+speak with you at the first, now it seems we have common acquaintance, I
+make it my petition you will not forget me. David Balfour is the name I am
+known by. This is my lucky day when I have just come into a landed estate
+and am not very long out of a deadly peril. I wish you would keep my name
+in mind for the sake of Balquidder," said I, "and I will yours for the sake
+of my lucky day."</p>
+
+<p>"My name is not spoken," she replied, with a great deal of haughtiness.
+"More than a hundred years it has not gone upon men's tongues, save for a
+blink. I am nameless like the Folk of Peace.<sup><a href="#fn3"
+name="rfn3">[3]</a></sup> Catriona Drummond is the one I use."</p>
+
+<p>Now indeed I knew where I was standing. In all broad Scotland there was
+but the one name proscribed, and that was the name of the Macgregors. Yet
+so far from fleeing this undesirable acquaintancy, I plunged the deeper
+in.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been sitting with one who was in the same case with yourself,"
+said I, "and I think he will be one of your friends. They called him Robin
+Oig."</p>
+
+<p>"Did ye so?" cries she. "Ye met Rob?"</p>
+
+<p>"I passed the night with him," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a fowl of the night," said she.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></a>[pg
+10]</span>"There was a set of pipes there," I went on, "so you may judge if
+the time passed."</p>
+
+<p>"You should be no enemy, at all events," said she. "That was his brother
+there a moment since, with the red soldiers round him. It is him that I
+call father."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it so?" cried I. "Are you a daughter of James More's?"</p>
+
+<p>"All the daughter that he has," says she: "the daughter of a prisoner;
+that I should forget it so, even for one hour, to talk with strangers!"</p>
+
+<p>Here one of the gillies addressed her in what he had of English, to know
+what "she" (meaning by that himself) was to do about "ta sneeshin." I took
+some note of him for a short, bandy-legged, red-haired, big-headed man,
+that I was to know more of to my cost.</p>
+
+<p>"There can be none the day, Neil," she replied. "How will you get
+'sneeshin,' wanting siller? It will teach you another time to be more
+careful; and I think James More will not be very well pleased with Neil of
+the Tom."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Drummond," I said, "I told you I was in my lucky day. Here I am,
+and a bank-porter at my tail. And remember I have had the hospitality of
+your own country of Balwhidder."</p>
+
+<p>"It was not one of my people gave it," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well," said I, "but I am owing your uncle at least for some springs
+upon the pipes. Besides which, I have offered myself to be your friend, and
+you have <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></a>[pg
+11]</span>been so forgetful that you did not refuse me in the proper
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"If it had been a great sum, it might have done you honour," said she.
+"But I will tell you what this is. James More lies shackled in prison; but
+this time past, they will be bringing him down here daily to the
+Advocate's..."</p>
+
+<p>"The Advocate's?" I cried. "Is that . . . ?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is the house of the Lord Advocate, Grant of Prestongrange," said
+she. "There they bring my father one time and another, for what purpose I
+have no thought in my mind; but it seems there is some hope dawned for him.
+All this same time they will not let me be seeing him, nor yet him write;
+and we wait upon the King's street to catch him; and now we give him his
+snuff as he goes by, and now something else. And here is this son of
+trouble, Neil, son of Duncan, has lost my fourpenny-piece that was to buy
+that snuff, and James More must go wanting, and will think his daughter has
+forgotten him."</p>
+
+<p>I took sixpence from my pocket, gave it to Neil, and bade him go about
+his errand. Then to her, "That sixpence came with me by Balwhidder," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" she said, "you are a friend to the Gregara!"</p>
+
+<p>"I would not like to deceive you either," said I. "I know very little of
+the Gregara and less of James More and his doings; but since the while I
+have been standing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12"
+id="Page_12"></a>[pg 12]</span>in this close, I seem to know something of
+yourself; and if you will just say 'a friend to Miss Catriona' I will see
+you are the less cheated."</p>
+
+<p>"The one cannot be without the other," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I will even try," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And what will you be thinking of myself?" she cried, "to be holding my
+hand to the first stranger!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking nothing but that you are a good daughter," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not be without repaying it," she said; "where is it you
+stop?"</p>
+
+<p>"To tell the truth, I am stopping nowhere yet," said I, "being not full
+three hours in the city; but if you will give me your direction, I will be
+so bold as come seeking my sixpence for myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Will I can trust you for that?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"You have little fear," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"James More could not bear it else," said she. "I stop beyond the
+village of Dean, on the north side of the water, with Mrs. Drummond-Ogilvy
+of Allardyce, who is my near friend and will be glad to thank you."</p>
+
+<p>"You are to see me then, so soon as what I have to do permits," said I;
+and the remembrance of Alan rolling in again upon my mind, I made haste to
+say farewell.</p>
+
+<p>I could not but think, even as I did so, that we had made extraordinary
+free upon short acquaintance, and that a really wise young lady would have
+shown herself <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></a>[pg
+13]</span>more backward. I think it was the bank-porter that put me from
+this ungallant train of thought.</p>
+
+<p>"I thoucht ye had been a lad of some kind o' sense," he began, shooting
+out his lips. "Ye're no likely to gang far this gate. A fule and his
+siller's shune parted. Eh, but ye're a green callant!" he cried, "an' a
+veecious, tae! Cleikin' up wi' baubee-joes!"</p>
+
+<p>"If you dare to speak of the young lady ..." I began.</p>
+
+<p>"Leddy!" he cried. "Haud us and safe us, whatten leddy? Ca' <i>thon</i>
+a leddy? The toun's fu' o' them. Leddies! Man, it's weel seen ye're no very
+acquant in Embro'!"</p>
+
+<p>A clap of anger took me.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," said I, "lead me where I told you, and keep your foul mouth
+shut!"</p>
+
+<p>He did not wholly obey me, for though he no more addressed me directly,
+he sang at me as he went in a very impudent manner of innuendo, and with an
+exceedingly ill voice and ear--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"As Mally Lee cam doun the street, her capuchin did flee.<br />
+She cuist a look ahint her to see her negligee,<br />
+And we're a' gaun east and wast, we're a' gaun ajee,<br />
+We're a' gaun east and wast courtin' Mally Lee."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></a>[pg 14]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_II'></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE HIGHLAND WRITER</h3>
+
+
+<p>Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer dwelt at the top of the longest stair
+that ever mason set a hand to; fifteen flights of it, no less; and when I
+had come to his door, and a clerk had opened it, and told me his master was
+within, I had scarce breath enough to send my porter packing.</p>
+
+<p>"Awa' east and wast wi' ye!" said I, took the money bag out of his
+hands, and followed the clerk in.</p>
+
+<p>The outer room was an office with the clerk's chair at a table spread
+with law papers. In the inner chamber, which opened from it, a little brisk
+man sat poring on a deed, from which he scarce raised his eyes upon my
+entrance; indeed, he still kept his finger in the place, as though prepared
+to show me out and fall again to his studies. This pleased me little
+enough; and what pleased me less, I thought the clerk was in a good posture
+to overhear what should pass between us.</p>
+
+<p>I asked if he was Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer.</p>
+
+<p>"The same," says he; "and if the question is equally fair, who may you
+be yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"You never heard tell of my name nor of me <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></a>[pg 15]</span>either," said I, "but I bring
+you a token from a friend that you know well. That you know well," I
+repeated, lowering my voice, "but maybe are not just so keen to hear from
+at this present being. And the bits of business that I have to propone to
+you are rather in the nature of being confidential. In short, I would like
+to think we were quite private."</p>
+
+<p>He rose without more words, casting down his paper like a man
+ill-pleased, sent forth his clerk of an errand, and shut to the house-door
+behind him.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, sir," said he, returning, "speak out your mind and fear nothing;
+though before you begin," he cries out, "I tell you mine misgives me! I
+tell you beforehand, ye're either a Stewart or a Stewart sent ye. A good
+name it is, and one it would ill-become my father's son to lightly. But I
+begin to grue at the sound of it."</p>
+
+<p>"My name is called Balfour," said I, "David Balfour of Shaws. As for him
+that sent me, I will let his token speak." And I showed the silver
+button.</p>
+
+<p>"Put it in your pocket, sir!" cries he, "Ye need name no names. The
+deevil's buckie, I ken the button of him! And de'il hae't! Where is he
+now?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him I knew not where Alan was, but he had some sure place (or
+thought he had) about the north side, where he was to lie until a ship was
+found for him; and how and where he had appointed to be spoken with.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></a>[pg
+16]</span>"It's been always my opinion that I would hang in a tow for this
+family of mine," he cried, "and, dod! I believe the day's come now! Get a
+ship for him, quot' he! And who's to pay for it? The man's daft!"</p>
+
+<p>"That is my part of the affair, Mr. Stewart," said I. "Here is a bag of
+good money, and if more be wanted, more is to be had where it came
+from."</p>
+
+<p>"I needn't ask your politics," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye need not," said I, smiling, "for I'm as big a Whig as grows."</p>
+
+<p>"Stop a bit, stop a bit," says Mr. Stewart. "What's all this? A Whig?
+Then why are you here with Alan's button? and what kind of a black-foot
+traffic is this that I find ye out in, Mr. Whig? Here is a forfeited rebel
+and an accused murderer, with two hundred pounds on his life, and ye ask me
+to meddle in his business, and then tell me ye're a Whig! I have no mind of
+any such Whigs before, though I've kent plenty of them."</p>
+
+<p>"He's a forfeited rebel, the more's the pity," said I, "for the man's my
+friend." I can only wish he had been better guided. And an accused
+murderer, that he is too, for his misfortune; but wrongfully accused."</p>
+
+<p>"I hear you say so," said Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>"More than you are to hear me say so, before long," said I. "Alan Breck
+is innocent, and so is James."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" says he, "the two cases hang together. If Alan is out, James can
+never be in."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></a>[pg
+17]</span>Hereupon I told him briefly of my acquaintance with Alan, of the
+accident that brought me present at the Appin murder, and the various
+passages of our escape among the heather, and my recovery of my estate.
+"So, sir, you have now the whole train of these events," I went on, "and
+can see for yourself how I come to be so much mingled up with the affairs
+of your family and friends, which (for all of our sakes) I wish had been
+plainer and less bloody. You can see for yourself, too, that I have certain
+pieces of business depending, which were scarcely fit to lay before a
+lawyer chosen at random. No more remains, but to ask if you will undertake
+my service?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no great mind to it; but coming as you do with Alan's button,
+the choice is scarcely left me," said he. "What are your instructions?" he
+added, and took up his pen.</p>
+
+<p>"The first point is to smuggle Alan forth of this country," said I, "but
+I need not be repeating that."</p>
+
+<p>"I am little likely to forget it," said Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>"The next thing is the bit money I am owing to Cluny," I went on. "It
+would be ill for me to find a conveyance, but that should be no stick to
+you. It was two pounds five shillings and three-halfpence farthing
+sterling."</p>
+
+<p>He noted it.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said I, "there's a Mr. Henderland, a licensed preacher and
+missionary in Ardgour, that I would like <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></a>[pg 18]</span>well to get some snuff into
+the hands of; and as I daresay you keep touch with your friends in Appin
+(so near by), it's a job you could doubtless overtake with the other."</p>
+
+<p>"How much snuff are we to say?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was thinking of two pounds," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Two," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Then there's the lass Alison Hastie, in Limekilns," said I. "Her that
+helped Alan and me across the Forth. I was thinking if I could get her a
+good Sunday gown, such as she could wear with decency in her degree, it
+would be an ease to my conscience: for the mere truth is, we owe her our
+two lives."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see you are thrifty, Mr. Balfour," says he, making his
+notes.</p>
+
+<p>"I would think shame to be otherwise the first day of my fortune," said
+I. "And now, if you will compute the outlay and your own proper charges, I
+would be glad to know if I could get some spending-money back. It's not
+that I grudge the whole of it to get Alan safe; it's not that I lack more;
+but having drawn so much the one day, I think it would have a very ill
+appearance if I was back again seeking, the next. Only be sure you have
+enough," I added, "for I am very undesirous to meet with you again."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I'm pleased to see you're cautious too," said the Writer.
+"But I think ye take a risk to lay so considerable a sum at my
+discretion."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a>[pg
+19]</span>He said this with a plain sneer.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have to run the hazard," I replied. "O, and there's another
+service I would ask, and that's to direct me to a lodging, for I have no
+roof to my head. But it must be a lodging I may seem to have hit upon by
+accident, for it would never do if the Lord Advocate were to get any
+jealousy of our acquaintance."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye may set your weary spirit at rest," said he. "I will never name your
+name, sir; and it's my belief the Advocate is still so much to be
+sympathised with that he doesnae ken of your existence."</p>
+
+<p>I saw I had got to the wrong side of the man.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a braw day coming for him, then," said I, "for he'll have to
+learn of it on the deaf side of his head no later than to-morrow, when I
+call on him."</p>
+
+<p>"When ye <i>call</i> on him!" repeated Mr. Stewart. "Am I daft, or are
+you? What takes ye near the Advocate?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, just to give myself up," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Balfour," he cried, "are ye making a mock of me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," said I, "though I think you have allowed yourself some such
+freedom with myself. But I give you to understand once and for all that I
+am in no jesting spirit."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor yet me," says Stewart. "And I give you to understand (if that's to
+be the word) that I like the looks of your behaviour less and less. You
+come here to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a>[pg
+20]</span>me with all sorts of propositions, which will put me in a train
+of very doubtful acts and bring me among very undesirable persons this many
+a day to come. And then you tell me you're going straight out of my office
+to make your peace with the Advocate! Alan's button here or Alan's button
+there, the four quarters of Alan wouldnae bribe me further in."</p>
+
+<p>"I would take it with a little more temper," said I, "and perhaps we can
+avoid what you object to. I can see no way for it but to give myself up,
+but perhaps you can see another; and if you could, I could never deny but
+what I would be rather relieved. For I think my traffic with his lordship
+is little likely to agree with my health. There's just the one thing clear,
+that I have to give my evidence; for I hope it'll save Alan's character
+(what's left of it), and James's neck, which is the more immediate."</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a breathing-space, and then, "My man," said he,
+"you'll never be allowed to give such evidence."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have to see about that," said I; "I'm stiff-necked when I
+like."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye muckle ass!" cried Stewart, "it's James they want; James has got to
+hang--Alan too, if they could catch him--but James whatever! Go near the
+Advocate with any such business, and you'll see! he'll find a way to muzzle
+ye."</p>
+
+<p>"I think better of the Advocate than that," said I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></a>[pg
+21]</span>"The Advocate be damned!" cries he. "It's the Campbells, man!
+You'll have the whole clanjamfry of them on your back; and so will the
+Advocate too, poor body! It's extraordinar ye cannot see where ye stand! If
+there's no fair way to stop your gab, there's a foul one gaping. They can
+put ye in the dock, do ye no see that?" he cried, and stabbed me with one
+finger in the leg.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said I, "I was told that same no further back than this morning by
+another lawyer."</p>
+
+<p>"And who was he?" asked Stewart. "He spoke sense at least."</p>
+
+<p>I told I must be excused from naming him, for he was a decent stout old
+Whig, and had little mind to be mixed up in such affairs.</p>
+
+<p>"I think all the world seems to be mixed up in it!" cries Stewart. "But
+what said you?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him what had passed between Rankeillor and myself before the
+house of Shaws.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and so ye will hang!" said he. "Ye'll hang beside James Stewart.
+There's your fortune told."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope better of it yet than that," said I; "but I could never deny
+there was a risk."</p>
+
+<p>"Risk!" says he, and then sat silent again. "I ought to thank you for
+your staunchness to my friends, to whom you show a very good spirit," he
+says, "if you have the strength to stand by it. But I warn you that you're
+wading deep. I wouldn't put myself in your <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></a>[pg 22]</span>place (me that's a Stewart
+born!) for all the Stewarts that ever there were since Noah. Risk? ay, I
+take over-many, but to be tried in court before a Campbell jury and a
+Campbell judge, and that in a Campbell country and upon a Campbell
+quarrel--think what you like of me, Balfour, it's beyond me."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a different way of thinking, I suppose," said I; "I was brought up
+to this one by my father before me."</p>
+
+<p>"Glory to his bones! he has left a decent son to his name," says he.
+"Yet I would not have you judge me over-sorely. My case is dooms hard. See,
+sir! ye tell me ye're a Whig: I wonder what I am. No Whig to be sure; I
+couldnae be just that. But--laigh in your ear, man--I'm maybe no very keen
+on the other side."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that a fact?" cried I. "It's what I would think of a man of your
+intelligence."</p>
+
+<p>"Hut! none of your whillywhas!"<sup><a href="#fn4"
+name="rfn4">[4]</a></sup> cries he. "There's intelligence upon both sides.
+But for my private part I have no particular desire to harm King George;
+and as for King James, God bless him! he does very well for me across the
+water. I'm a lawyer, ye see: fond of my books and my bottle, a good plea, a
+well-drawn deed, a crack in the Parliament House with other lawyer bodies,
+and perhaps a turn at the golf on a Saturday at e'en. Where do ye come in
+with your Hieland plaids and claymores?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></a>[pg
+23]</span>"Well," said I, "it's a fact ye have little of the wild
+Highlandman."</p>
+
+<p>"Little?" quoth he. "Nothing, man! And yet I'm Hieland born, and when
+the clan pipes, who but me has to dance? The clan and the name, that goes
+by all. It's just what you said yourself; my father learned it to me, and a
+bonny trade I have of it. Treason and traitors, and the smuggling of them
+out and in; and the French recruiting, weary fall it! and the smuggling
+through of the recruits; and their pleas--a sorrow of their pleas! Here
+haye I been moving one for young Ardshiel, my cousin; claimed the estate
+under the marriage contract--a forfeited estate! I told them it was
+nonsense: muckle they cared! And there was I cocking behind a yadvocate
+that liked the business as little as myself, for it was fair ruin to the
+pair of us--a black mark, <i>disaffected</i>, branded on our hurdies, like
+folk's names upon their kye! And what can I do? I'm a Stewart, ye see, and
+must fend for my clan and family. Then no later by than yesterday there was
+one of our Stewart lads carried to the Castle. What for? I ken fine: Act of
+1736: recruiting for King Lewie. And you'll see, he'll whistle me in to be
+his lawyer, and there'll be another black mark on my chara'ter! I tell you
+fair: if I but kent the heid of a Hebrew word from the hurdies of it be
+dammed but I would fling the whole thing up and turn minister!"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></a>[pg
+24]</span>"It's rather a hard position," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Dooms hard!" cries he. "And that's what makes me think so much of
+ye--you that's no Stewart--to stick your head so deep in Stewart business.
+And for what, I do not know; unless it was the sense of duty."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope it will be that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," says he, "it's a grand quality. But here is my clerk back; and,
+by your leave, we'll pick a bit of dinner, all the three of us. When that's
+done, I'll give you the direction of a very decent man, that'll be very
+fain to have you for a lodger. And I'll fill your pockets to ye, forbye,
+out of your ain bag. For this business'll not be near as dear as ye
+suppose--not even the ship part of it."</p>
+
+<p>I made him a sign that his clerk was within hearing.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoot, ye neednae mind for Robbie," cries he. "A Stewart too, puir
+deevil! and has smuggled out more French recruits and trafficking Papists
+than what he has hairs upon his face. Why, it's Robin that manages that
+branch of my affairs. Who will we have now, Rob, for across the water?"</p>
+
+<p>"There'll be Andie Scougal, in the <i>Thristle</i>," replied Rob. "I saw
+Hoseason the other day, but it seems he's wanting the ship. Then there'll
+be Tarn Stobo; but I'm none so sure of Tam. I've seen him colloguing with
+some gey queer acquaintances; and if <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></a>[pg 25]</span>it was anybody important, I
+would give Tam the go-by."</p>
+
+<p>"The head's worth two hundred pounds, Robin," said Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>"Gosh, that'll no be Alan Breck?" cried the clerk.</p>
+
+<p>"Just Alan," said his master.</p>
+
+<p>"Weary winds! that's sayrious," cried Robin. "I'll try Andie then;
+Andie'll be the best."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems it's quite a big business," I observed.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Balfour, there's no end to it," said Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a name your clerk mentioned," I went on: "Hoseason. That must
+be my man, I think: Hoseason, of the brig <i>Covenant</i>. Would you set
+your trust on him?"</p>
+
+<p>"He didnae behave very well to you and Alan," said Mr. Stewart; "but my
+mind of the man in general is rather otherwise. If he had taken Alan on
+board his ship on an agreement, it's my notion he would have proved a just
+dealer. How say ye, Rob?"</p>
+
+<p>"No more honest skipper in the trade than Eli," said the clerk. "I would
+lippen to<sup><a href="#fn5" name="rfn5">[5]</a></sup> Eli's word--ay, if
+it was the Chevalier, or Appin himsel'," he added.</p>
+
+<p>"And it was him that brought the doctor, wasnae't?" asked the
+master.</p>
+
+<p>"He was the very man," said the clerk.</p>
+
+<p>"And I think he took the doctor back?" says Stewart.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></a>[pg
+26]</span>"Ay, with his sporran full!" cried Robin. "And Eli kent of
+that!"<sup><a href="#fn6" name="rfn6">[6]</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>"Well, it seems it's hard to ken folk rightly," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"That was just what I forgot when ye came in, Mr. Balfour!" says the
+Writer.</p>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27"></a>[pg 27]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_III'></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>I GO TO PILRIG</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next morning, I was no sooner awake in my new lodging than I was up
+and into my new clothes; and no sooner the breakfast swallowed, than I was
+forth on my adventures. Alan, I could hope, was fended for; James was like
+to be a more difficult affair, and I could not but think that enterprise
+might cost me dear, even as everybody said to whom I had opened my opinion.
+It seemed I was come to the top of the mountain only to cast myself down;
+that I had clambered up, through so many and hard trials, to be rich, to be
+recognised, to wear city clothes and a sword to my side, all to commit mere
+suicide at the last end of it, and the worst kind of suicide besides, which
+is to get hanged at the King's charges.</p>
+
+<p>What was I doing it for? I asked, as I went down the High Street and out
+north by Leith Wynd. First I said it was to save James Stewart, and no
+doubt the memory of his distress, and his wife's cries, and a word or so I
+had let drop on that occasion worked upon me strongly. At the same time I
+reflected that it was (or ought to be) the most indifferent matter to my
+father's <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28"></a>[pg
+28]</span>son, whether James died in his bed or from a scaffold. He was
+Alan's cousin, to be sure; but so far as regarded Alan, the best thing
+would be to lie low, and let the King, and his Grace of Argyll, and the
+corbie crows, pick the bones of his kinsman their own way. Nor could I
+forget that, while we were all in the pot together, James had shown no such
+particular anxiety whether for Alan or me.</p>
+
+<p>Next it came upon me I was acting for the sake of justice: and I thought
+that a fine word, and reasoned it out that (since we dwelt in polities, at
+some discomfort to each one of us) the main thing of all must still be
+justice, and the death of any innocent man a wound upon the whole
+community. Next, again, it was the Accuser of the Brethren that gave me a
+turn of his argument; bid me think shame for pretending myself concerned in
+these high matters, and told me I was but a prating vain child, who had
+spoken big words to Rankeillor and to Stewart, and held myself bound upon
+my vanity to make good that boastfulness. Nay, and he hit me with the other
+end of the stick; for he accused me of a kind of artful cowardice, going
+about at the expense of a little risk to purchase greater safety. No doubt,
+until I had declared and cleared myself, I might any day encounter Mungo
+Campbell or the sheriff's officer, and be recognised, and dragged into the
+Appin murder by the heels; and, no doubt, in case I could manage my
+declaration with success, I should breathe more free for <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29"></a>[pg 29]</span>ever
+after. But when I looked this argument full in the face I could see nothing
+to be ashamed of. As for the rest, "Here are the two roads," I thought,
+"and both go to the same place. It's unjust that James should hang if I can
+save him; and it would be ridiculous in me to have talked so much and then
+do nothing. It's lucky for James of the Glens that I have boasted
+beforehand; and none so unlucky for myself, because now I'm committed to do
+right. I have the name of a gentleman and the means of one; it would be a
+poor discovery that I was wanting in the essence." And then I thought this
+was a Pagan spirit, and said a prayer in to myself, asking for what courage
+I might lack, and that I might go straight to my duty like a soldier to
+battle, and come off again scatheless as so many do.</p>
+
+<p>This train of reasoning brought me to a more resolved complexion; though
+it was far from closing up my sense of the dangers that surrounded me, nor
+of how very apt I was (if I went on) to stumble on the ladder of the
+gallows. It was a plain, fair morning, but the wind in the east. The little
+chill of it sang in my blood, and gave me a feeling of the autumn, and the
+dead leaves, and dead folks' bodies in their graves. It seemed the devil
+was in it, if I was to die in that tide of my fortunes and for other folks'
+affairs. On the top of the Calton Hill, though it was not the customary
+time of year for that diversion, some children were crying and running with
+their kites. These toys appeared very plain against the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30"></a>[pg 30]</span>sky; I
+remarked a great one soar on the wind to a high altitude and then plump
+among the whins; and I thought to myself at sight of it, "There goes
+Davie."</p>
+
+<p>My way lay over Mouter's Hill, and through an end of a clachan on the
+braeside among fields. There was a whirr of looms in it went from house to
+house; bees bummed in the gardens; the neighbours that I saw at the
+doorsteps talked in a strange tongue; and I found out later that this was
+Picardy, a village where the French weavers wrought for the Linen Company.
+Here I got a fresh direction for Pilrig, my destination; and a little
+beyond, on the wayside, came by a gibbet and two men hanged in chains. They
+were dipped in tar, as the manner is; the wind span them, the chains
+clattered, and the birds hung about the uncanny jumping-jacks and cried.
+The sight coming on me suddenly, like an illustration of my fears, I could
+scarce be done with examining it and drinking in discomfort. And as I thus
+turned and turned about the gibbet, what should I strike on, but a weird
+old wife, that sat behind a leg of it, and nodded, and talked aloud to
+herself with becks and courtesies.</p>
+
+<p>"Who are these two, mother?" I asked, and pointed to the corpses.</p>
+
+<p>"A blessing on your precious face!" she cried. "Twa joes<sup><a
+href="#fn7" name="rfn7">[7]</a></sup> o' mine: just twa o' my old joes, my
+hinny dear."</p>
+
+
+<a name="balfour002"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour002.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: WHAT DID THEY SUFFER FOR? I ASKED" src="images/balfour002sm.jpg" height="565" width="383" /></a>
+<br />WHAT DID THEY SUFFER FOR? I ASKED
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31"></a>[pg
+31]</span>"What did they suffer for?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, just for the guid cause," said she. "Aften I spaed to them the way
+that it would end. Twa shillin' Scots; no pickle mair; and there are twa
+bonny callants hingin' for 't! They took it frae a wean<sup><a href="#fn8"
+name="rfn8">[8]</a></sup> belanged to Brouchton."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay!" said I to myself, and not to the daft limmer, "and did they come
+to such a figure for so poor a business? This is to lose all indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"Gie's your loof,<sup><a href="#fn9" name="rfn9">[9]</a></sup> hinny,"
+says she, "and let me spae your weird to ye."</p>
+
+<p>"No, mother," said I, "I see far enough the way I am. It's an unco thing
+to see too far in front."</p>
+
+<p>"I read it in your bree," she said. "There's a bonnie lassie that has
+bricht een, and there's a wee man in a braw coat, and a big man in a
+pouthered wig, and there's the shadow of the wuddy,<sup><a href="#fn10"
+name="rfn10">[10]</a></sup> joe, that lies braid across your path. Gie's
+your loof, hinny, and let Auld Merren spae it to ye bonny."</p>
+
+<p>The two chance shots that seemed to point at Alan and the daughter of
+James More, struck me hard; and I fled from the eldritch creature, casting
+her a baubee, which she continued to sit and play with under the moving
+shadows of the hanged.</p>
+
+<p>My way down the causeway of Leith Walk would have been more pleasant to
+me but for this encounter. The old rampart ran among fields, the like of
+them <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32"></a>[pg
+32]</span>I had never seen for artfulness of agriculture; I was pleased,
+besides, to be so far in the still countryside; but the shackles of the
+gibbet clattered in my head; and the mops and mows of the old witch, and
+the thought of the dead men, hag-rode my spirits. To hang on a gallows,
+that seemed a hard case; and whether a man came to hang there for two
+shillings Scots, or (as Mr. Stewart had it) from the sense of duty, once he
+was tarred and shackled and hung up, the difference seemed small. There
+might David Balfour hang, and other lads pass on their errands and think
+light of him; and old daft limmers sit at leg-foot and spae their fortunes;
+and the clean genty maids go by, and look to the other side, and hold a
+nose. I saw them plain, and they had grey eyes, and their screens upon
+their heads were of the Drummond colours.</p>
+
+<p>I was thus in the poorest of spirits, though still pretty resolved, when
+I came in view of Pilrig, a pleasant gabled house set by the walkside among
+some brave young woods. The laird's horse was standing saddled at the door
+as I came up, but himself was in the study, where he received me in the
+midst of learned works and musical instruments, for he was not only a deep
+philosopher but much of a musician. He greeted me at first pretty well, and
+when he had read Rankeillor's letter, placed himself obligingly at my
+disposal.</p>
+
+<p>"And what is it, cousin David?" says he--"since it appears that we are
+cousins--what is this that I can <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33"
+id="Page_33"></a>[pg 33]</span>do for you? A word to Prestongrange?
+Doubtless that is easily given. But what should be the word?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Balfour," said I, "if I were to tell you my whole story the way it
+fell out, it's my opinion (and it was Rankeillor's before me) that you
+would be very little made up with it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to hear this of you, kinsman," says he.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not take that at your hands, Mr. Balfour," said I; "I have
+nothing to my charge to make me sorry, or you for me, but just the common
+infirmities of mankind. 'The guilt of Adam's first sin, the want of
+original righteousness, and the corruption of my whole nature,' so much I
+must answer for, and I hope I have been taught where to look for help," I
+said; for I judged from the look of the man he would think the better of me
+if I knew my questions.<sup><a href="#fn11" name="rfn11">[11]</a></sup>
+"But in the way of worldly honour I have no great stumble to reproach
+myself with; and my difficulties have befallen me very much against my will
+and (by all that I can see) without my fault. My trouble is to have become
+dipped in a political complication, which it is judged you would be blythe
+to avoid a knowledge of."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, very well, Mr. David," he replied, "I am pleased to see you are
+all that Rankeillor represented. And for what you say of political
+complications, you do me no more than justice. It is my study to be beyond
+suspicion, and indeed outside the field of it. The <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></a>[pg 34]</span>question is," says he, "how,
+if I am to know nothing of the matter, I can very well assist you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sir," said I, "I propose you should write to his lordship, that I
+am a young man of reasonable good family and of good means: both of which I
+believe to be the case."</p>
+
+<p>"I have Rankeillor's word for it," said Mr. Balfour, "and I count that a
+warrandice against all deadly."</p>
+
+<p>"To which you might add (if you will take my word for so much) that I am
+a good churchman, loyal to King George, and so brought up," I went on.</p>
+
+<p>"None of which will do you any harm," said Mr. Balfour.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you might go on to say that I sought his lordship on a matter of
+great moment, connected with His Majesty's service and the administration
+of justice," I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"As I am not to hear the matter," says the laird, "I will not take upon
+myself to qualify its weight. 'Great moment' therefore falls, and 'moment'
+along with it. For the rest, I might express myself much as you
+propose."</p>
+
+<p>"And then, sir," said I, and rubbed my neck a little with my thumb,
+"then I would be very desirous if you could slip in a word that might
+perhaps tell for my protection."</p>
+
+<p>"Protection?" says he. "For your protection? Here is a phrase that
+somewhat dampens me. If the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35"
+id="Page_35"></a>[pg 35]</span>matter be so dangerous, I own I would be a
+little loath to move in it blindfold."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe I could indicate in two words where the thing sticks," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps that would be the best," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's the Appin murder," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He held up both the hands. "Sirs! sirs!" cried he.</p>
+
+<p>I thought by the expression of his face and voice that I had lost my
+helper.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me explain ..." I began.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you kindly, I will hear no more of it," says he. "I decline
+<i>in toto</i> to hear more of it. For your name's sake and Rankeillor's,
+and perhaps a little for your own, I will do what I can to help you; but I
+will hear no more upon the facts. And it is my first clear duty to warn
+you. These are deep waters, Mr. David, and you are a young man. Be cautious
+and think twice."</p>
+
+<p>"It is to be supposed I will have thought oftener than that, Mr.
+Balfour," said I, "and I will direct your attention again to Rankeillor's
+letter, where (I hope and believe) he has registered his approval of that
+which I design."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," said he; and then again, "Well, well! I will do what I can
+for you." Therewith he took a pen and paper, sat awhile in thought, and
+began to write with much consideration. "I understand that <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a>[pg 36]</span>Rankeillor
+approves of what you have in mind?" he asked presently.</p>
+
+<p>"After some discussion, sir, he bade me to go forward in God's name,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"That is the name to go in," said Mr. Balfour, and resumed his writing.
+Presently, he signed, re-read what he had written, and addressed me again.
+"Now here, Mr. David," said he, "is a letter of introduction, which I will
+seal without closing, and give into your hands open, as the form requires.
+But since I am acting in the dark, I will just read it to you, so that you
+may see if it will secure your end--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"PILRIG, <i>August 26th</i>, 1751.
+
+<p>"MY LORD,--This is to bring to your notice my namesake and</p>
+cousin, David Balfour Esquire of Shaws, a young gentleman
+of unblemished descent and good estate. He has enjoyed besides
+the more valuable advantages of a godly training, and his political
+principles are all that your lordship can desire. I am not in
+Mr. Balfour's confidence, but I understand him to have a matter
+to declare, touching His Majesty's service and the administration
+of justice: purposes for which your lordship's zeal is known.
+I should add that the young gentleman's intention is known to
+and approved by some of his friends, who will watch with hopeful
+anxiety the event of his success or failure.'
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>"Whereupon," continued Mr. Balfour, "I have subscribed myself with the
+usual compliments. You observe I have said 'some of your friends;' I hope
+you can justify my plural?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></a>[pg
+37]</span>"Perfectly, sir; my purpose is known and approved by more than
+one," said I. "And your letter, which I take a pleasure to thank you for,
+is all I could have hoped."</p>
+
+<p>"It was all I could squeeze out," said he; "and from what I know of the
+matter you design to meddle in, I can only pray God that it may prove
+sufficient."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></a>[pg 38]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_IV'></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE</h3>
+
+
+<p>My kinsman kept me to a meal, "for the honour of the roof," he said; and
+I believe I made the better speed on my return. I had no thought but to be
+done with the next stage, and have myself fully committed; to a person
+circumstanced as I was, the appearance of closing a door on hesitation and
+temptation was itself extremely tempting; and I was the more disappointed,
+when I came to Prestongrange's house, to be informed he was abroad. I
+believe it was true at the moment, and for some hours after; and then I
+have no doubt the Advocate came home again, and enjoyed himself in a
+neighbouring chamber among friends, while perhaps the very fact of my
+arrival was forgotten. I would have gone away a dozen times, only for this
+strong drawing to have done with my declaration out of hand and be able to
+lay me down to sleep with a free conscience. At first I read, for the
+little cabinet where I was left contained a variety of books. But I fear I
+read with little profit; and the weather falling cloudy, the dusk coming up
+earlier than usual, and my cabinet <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39"
+id="Page_39"></a>[pg 39]</span>being lighted with but a loophole of a
+window, I was at last obliged to desist from this diversion (such as it
+was), and pass the rest of my time of waiting in a very burthensome
+vacuity. The sound of people talking in a naer chamber, the pleasant note
+of a harpsichord, and once the voice of a lady singing, bore me a kind of
+company.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know the hour, but the darkness was long come, when the door of
+the cabinet opened, and I was aware, by the light behind him, of a tall
+figure of a man upon the threshold. I rose at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Is anybody there?" he asked. "Who is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am bearer of a letter from the laird of Pilrig to the Lord Advocate,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been here long?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I would not like to hazard an estimate of how many hours," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the first I hear of it," he replied, with a chuckle. "The lads
+must have forgotten you. But you are in the bit at last, for I am
+Prestongrange."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he passed before me into the next room, whither (upon his
+sign) I followed him, and where he lit a candle and took his place before a
+business-table. It was a long room, of a good proportion, wholly lined with
+books. That small spark of light in a corner struck out the man's handsome
+person and strong face. He was flushed, his eye watered and sparkled, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></a>[pg 40]</span>and before
+he sat down I observed him to sway back and forth. No doubt he had been
+supping liberally; but his mind and tongue were under full control.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, sit ye down," said he, "and let us see Pilrig's letter."</p>
+
+<p>He glanced it through in the beginning carelessly, looking up and bowing
+when he came to my name; but at the last words I thought I observed his
+attention to redouble, and I made sure he read them twice. All this while
+you are to suppose my heart was beating, for I had now crossed my Rubicon
+and was come fairly on the field of battle.</p>
+
+<p>"I am pleased to make your acquaintance, Mr. Balfour," he said, when he
+had done. "Let me offer you a glass of claret."</p>
+
+<p>"Under your favour, my lord, I think it would scarce be fair on me,"
+said I. "I have come here, as the letter will have mentioned, on a business
+of some gravity to myself; and as I am little used with wine, I might be
+the sooner affected."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall be the judge," said he. "But if you will permit, I believe I
+will even have the bottle in myself."</p>
+
+<p>He touched a bell, and the footman came, as at a signal, bringing wine
+and glasses.</p>
+
+<p>"You are sure you will not join me?" asked the Advocate. "Well, here is
+to our better acquaintance! In what way can I serve you?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a>[pg
+41]</span>"I should perhaps begin by telling you, my lord, that I am here
+at your own pressing invitation," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You have the advantage of me somewhere," said he, "for I profess I
+think I never heard of you before this evening."</p>
+
+<p>"Right, my lord; the name is indeed new to you," said I. "And yet you
+have been for some time extremely wishful to make my acquaintance, and have
+declared the same in public."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would afford me a clue," says he. "I am no Daniel."</p>
+
+<p>"It will perhaps serve for such," said I, "that if I was in a jesting
+humour--which is far from the case--I believe I might lay a claim on your
+lordship for two hundred pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"In what sense?" he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"In the sense of rewards offered for my person," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He thrust away his glass once and for all, and sat straight up in the
+chair where he had been previously lolling. "What am I to understand?" said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>A tall strong lad of about eighteen</i>," I quoted, "<i>speaks like
+a Lowlander, and has no beard</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"I recognise those words," said he, "which, if you have come here with
+any ill-judged intention of amusing yourself, are like to prove extremely
+prejudicial to your safety."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42"></a>[pg
+42]</span>"My purpose in this," I replied, "is just entirely as serious as
+life and death, and you have understood me perfectly. I am the boy who was
+speaking with Glenure when he was shot."</p>
+
+<p>"I can only suppose (seeing you here) that you claim to be innocent,"
+said he.</p>
+
+<p>"The inference is clear," I said. "I am a very loyal subject to King
+George, but if I had anything to reproach myself with, I would have had
+more discretion than to walk into your den."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of that," said he. "This horrid crime, Mr. Balfour, is of a
+dye which cannot permit any clemency. Blood has been barbarously shed. It
+has been shed in direct opposition to his Majesty and our whole frame of
+laws, by those who are their known and public oppugnants. I take a very
+high sense of this. I will not deny that I consider the crime as directly
+personal to his Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"And unfortunately, my lord," I added a little drily, "directly personal
+to another great personage who may be nameless."</p>
+
+<p>"If you mean anything by those words, I must tell you I consider them
+unfit for a good subject; and were they spoke publicly I should make it my
+business to take note of them," said he. "You do not appear to me to
+recognise the gravity of your situation, or you would be more careful not
+to pejorate the same by words which glance upon the purity of justice.
+Justice, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43"></a>[pg
+43]</span>in this country, and in my poor hands, is no respecter of
+persons."</p>
+
+<p>"You give me too great a share in my own speech, my lord," said I. "I
+did but repeat the common talk of the country, which I have heard
+everywhere, and from men of all opinions as I came along."</p>
+
+<p>"When you are come to more discretion you will understand such talk is
+not to be listened to, how much less repeated," says the Advocate. "But I
+acquit you of an ill intention. That nobleman, whom we all honour and who
+has indeed been wounded in a near place by the late barbarity, sits too
+high to be reached by these aspersions. The Duke of Argyle--you see that I
+deal plainly with you--takes it to heart as I do, and as we are both bound
+to do by our judicial functions and the service of his Majesty; and I could
+wish that all hands, in this ill age, were equally clean of family rancour.
+But from the accident that this is a Campbell who has fallen martyr to his
+duty--as who else but the Campbells have ever put themselves foremost on
+that path? I may say it, who am no Campbell--and that the chief of that
+great house happens (for all our advantages) to be the present head of the
+College of Justice, small minds and disaffected tongues are set agog in
+every changehouse in the country; and I find a young gentleman like Mr.
+Balfour so ill-advised as to make himself their echo." So much he spoke
+with a very oratorical delivery, as if in court, and then <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a>[pg 44]</span>declined
+again upon the manner of a gentleman. "All this apart," said he. "It now
+remains that I should learn what I am to do with you."</p>
+
+<p>"I had thought it was rather I that should learn the same from your
+lordship," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, true," says the Advocate. "But, you see, you come to me well
+recommended. There is a good honest Whig name to this letter," says he,
+picking it up a moment from the table. "And--extra-judicially, Mr.
+Balfour--there is always the possibility of some arrangement. I tell you,
+and I tell you beforehand that you may be the more upon your guard, your
+fate lies with me singly. In such a matter (be it said with reverence) I am
+more powerful than the king's Majesty; and should you please me--and of
+course satisfy my conscience--in what remains to be held of our interview,
+I tell you it may remain between ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning how?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, I mean it thus, Mr. Balfour," said he, "that if you give
+satisfaction, no soul need know so much as that you visited my house; and
+you may observe that I do not even call my clerk."</p>
+
+<p>I saw what way he was driving. "I suppose it is needless anyone should
+be informed upon my visit," said I, "though the precise nature of my gains
+by that I cannot see. I am not at all ashamed of coming here."</p>
+
+<p>"And have no cause to be," says he, encouragingly. "Nor yet (if you are
+careful) to fear the consequences."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a>[pg
+45]</span>"My lord," said I, "speaking under your correction, I am not very
+easy to be frightened."</p>
+
+<p>"And I am sure I do not seek to frighten you," says he. "But to the
+interrogation; and let me warn you to volunteer nothing beyond the
+questions I shall ask you. It may consist very immediately with your
+safety. I have a great discretion, it is true, but there are bounds to
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall try to follow your lordship's advice," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He spread a sheet of paper on the table and wrote a heading. "It appears
+you were present, by the way, in the wood of Lettermore at the moment of
+the fatal shot," he began. "Was this by accident?"</p>
+
+<p>"By accident," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"How came you in speech with Colin Campbell?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was inquiring my way of him to Aucharn," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>I observed he did not write this answer down.</p>
+
+<p>"H'm, true," said he, "I had forgotten that. And do you know, Mr.
+Balfour, I would dwell, if I were you, as little as might be on your
+relations with these Stewarts? It might be found to complicate our
+business. I am not yet inclined to regard these matters as essential."</p>
+
+<p>"I had thought, my lord, that all points of fact were equally material
+in such a case," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget we are now trying these Stewarts," he <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></a>[pg 46]</span>replied,
+with great significance. "If we should ever come to be trying you, it will
+be very different; and I shall press these very questions that I am now
+willing to glide upon. But to resume: I have it here in Mr. Mungo
+Campbell's precognition that you ran immediately up the brae. How came
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not immediately, my lord, and the cause was my seeing of the
+murderer."</p>
+
+<p>"You saw him, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"As plain as I see your lordship, though not so near hand."</p>
+
+<p>"You know him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should know him again."</p>
+
+<p>"In your pursuit you were not so fortunate, then, as to overtake
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was not."</p>
+
+<p>"Was he alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was alone."</p>
+
+<p>"There was no one else in that neighbourhood?"</p>
+
+<p>"Alan Breck Stewart was not far off, in a piece of a wood."</p>
+
+<p>The Advocate laid his pen down. "I think we are playing at cross
+purposes," said he, "which you will find to prove a very ill amusement for
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I content myself with following your lordship's advice, and answering
+what I am asked," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Be so wise as to bethink yourself in time," said he. "I use you with
+the most anxious tenderness, which <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47"
+id="Page_47"></a>[pg 47]</span>you scarce seem to appreciate, and which
+(unless you be more careful) may prove to be in vain."</p>
+
+<p>"I do appreciate your tenderness, but conceive it to be mistaken," I
+replied, with something of a falter, for I saw we were come to grips at
+last. "I am here to lay before you certain information, by which I shall
+convince you Alan had no hand whatever in the killing of Glenure."</p>
+
+<p>The Advocate appeared for a moment at a stick, sitting with pursed lips,
+and blinking his eyes upon me like an angry cat. "Mr. Balfour," he said at
+last, "I tell you pointedly you go an ill way for your own interests."</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," I said, "I am as free of the charge of considering my own
+interests in this matter as your lordship. As God judges me, I have but the
+one design, and that is to see justice executed and the innocent go clear.
+If in pursuit of that I come to fall under your lordship's displeasure, I
+must bear it as I may."</p>
+
+<p>At this he rose from his chair, lit a second candle, and for a while
+gazed upon me steadily. I was surprised to see a great change of gravity
+fallen upon his face, and I could have almost thought he was a little
+pale.</p>
+
+<p>"You are either very simple, or extremely the reverse, and I see that I
+must deal with you more confidentially," says he. "This is a political
+case--ah, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></a>[pg
+48]</span>yes, Mr. Balfour! whether we like it or no, the case is
+political--and I tremble when I think what issues may depend from it. To a
+political case, I need scarce tell a young man of your education, we
+approach with very different thoughts from one which is criminal only.
+<i>Salus populi suprema lex</i> is a maxim susceptible of great abuse, but
+it has that force which we find elsewhere only in the laws of nature: I
+mean it has the force of necessity. I will open this out to you, if you
+will allow me, at more length. You would have me believe--"</p>
+
+<p>"Under your pardon, my lord, I would have you to believe nothing but
+that which I can prove," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Tut! tut! young gentleman," says he, "be not so pragmatical, and suffer
+a man who might be your father (if it was nothing more) to employ his own
+imperfect language, and express his own poor thoughts, even when they have
+the misfortune not to coincide with Mr. Balfour's. You would have me to
+believe Breck innocent. I would think this of little account, the more so
+as we cannot catch our man. But the matter of Breck's innocence shoots
+beyond itself. Once admitted, it would destroy the whole presumptions of
+our case against another and a very different criminal; a man grown old in
+treason, already twice in arms against his king and already twice forgiven;
+a fomenter of discontent, and (whoever may have fired the shot) the
+unmistakable original of the deed in <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></a>[pg 49]</span>question. I need not tell you
+that I mean James Stewart."</p>
+
+<p>"And I can just say plainly that the innocence of Alan and of James is
+what I am here to declare in private to your lordship, and what I am
+prepared to establish at the trial by my testimony," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"To which I can only answer by an equal plainness, Mr. Balfour," said
+he, "that (in that case) your testimony will not be called by me, and I
+desire you to withhold it altogether."</p>
+
+<p>"You are at the head of Justice in this country," I cried, "and you
+propose to me a crime!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am a man nursing with both hands the interests of this country," he
+replied, "and I press on you a political necessity. Patriotism is not
+always moral in the formal sense. You might be glad of it, I think: it is
+your own protection; the facts are heavy against you; and if I am still
+trying to except you from a very dangerous place, it is in part of course
+because I am not insensible to your honesty in coming here; in part because
+of Pilrig's letter; but in part, and in chief part, because I regard in
+this matter my political duty first and my judicial duty only second. For
+the same reason--I repeat it to you in the same frank words--I do not want
+your testimony."</p>
+
+<p>"I desire not to be thought to make a repartee, when I express only the
+plain sense of our position," said I. "But if your lordship has no need of
+my testimony, I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50"
+id="Page_50"></a>[pg 50]</span>believe the other side would be extremely
+blythe to get it."</p>
+
+<p>Prestongrange arose and began to pace to and fro in the room. "You are
+not so young," he said, "but what you must remember very clearly the year
+'45 and the shock that went about the country. I read in Pilrig's letter
+that you are sound in Kirk and State. Who saved them in that fatal year? I
+do not refer to his Royal Highness and his ramrods, which were extremely
+useful in their day; but the country had been saved and the field won
+before ever Cumberland came upon Drummossie. Who saved it? I repeat; who
+saved the Protestant religion and the whole frame of our civil
+institutions? The late Lord President Culloden, for one; he played a man's
+part, and small thanks he got for it--even as I, whom you see before you,
+straining every nerve in the same service, look for no reward beyond the
+conscience of my duties done. After the President, who else? You know the
+answer as well as I do; 'tis partly a scandal, and you glanced at it
+yourself, and I reproved you for it, when you first came in. It was the
+Duke and the great clan of Campbell. Now here is a Campbell foully
+murdered, and that in the King's service. The Duke and I are Highlanders.
+But we are Highlanders civilised, and it is not so with the great mass of
+our clans and families. They have still savage virtues and defects. They
+are still barbarians, like these Stewarts; <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></a>[pg 51]</span>only the Campbells were
+barbarians on the right side, and the Stewarts were barbarians on the
+wrong. Now be you the judge. The Campbells expect vengeance. If they do not
+get it--if this man James escape--there will be trouble with the Campbells.
+That means disturbance in the Highlands, which are uneasy and very far from
+being disarmed: the disarming is a farce...."</p>
+
+<p>"I can bear you out in that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Disturbance in the Highlands makes the hour of our old watchful enemy,"
+pursued his lordship, holding out a finger as he paced; "and I give you my
+word we may have a '45 again with the Campbells on the other side. To
+protect the life of this man Stewart--which is forfeit already on
+half-a-dozen different counts if not on this--do you propose to plunge your
+country in war, to jeopardise the faith of your fathers, and to expose the
+lives and fortunes of how many thousand innocent persons? . . . These are
+considerations that weigh with me, and that I hope will weigh no less with
+yourself, Mr. Balfour, as a lover of your country, good government, and
+religious truth."</p>
+
+<p>"You deal with me very frankly, and I thank you for it," said I. "I will
+try on my side to be no less honest. I believe your policy to be sound. I
+believe these deep duties may lie upon your lordship; I believe you may
+have laid them on your conscience when you took the oaths of the high
+office which you <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52"
+id="Page_52"></a>[pg 52]</span>hold. But for me, who am just a plain
+man--or scarce a man yet--the plain duties must suffice. I can think but of
+two things, of a poor soul in the immediate and unjust danger of a shameful
+death, and of the cries and tears of his wife that still tingle in my head.
+I cannot see beyond, my lord. It's the way that I am made. If the country
+has to fall, it has to fall. And I pray God, if this be wilful blindness,
+that he may enlighten me before too late."</p>
+
+<p>He had heard me motionless, and stood so a while longer.</p>
+
+<p>"This is an unexpected obstacle," says he, aloud, but to himself.</p>
+
+<p>"And how is your lordship to dispose of me?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"If I wished," said he, "you know that you might sleep in gaol?"</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," says I, "I have slept in worse places."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my boy," said he, "there is one thing appears very plainly from
+our interview, that I may rely on your pledged word. Give me your honour
+that you will be wholly secret, not only on what has passed to-night, but
+in the matter of the Appin case, and I let you go free."</p>
+
+<p>"I will give it till to-morrow or any other near day that you may please
+to set," said I. "I would not be thought too wily; but if I gave the
+promise without qualification, your lordship would have attained his
+end."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></a>[pg
+53]</span>"I had no thought to entrap you," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure of that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see," he continued. "To-morrow is the Sabbath. Come to me on
+Monday by eight in the morning, and give me your promise until then."</p>
+
+<p>"Freely given, my lord," said I. "And with regard to what has fallen
+from yourself, I will give it for as long as it shall please God to spare
+your days."</p>
+
+<p>"You will observe," he said next, "that I have made no employment of
+menaces."</p>
+
+<p>"It was like your lordship's nobility," said I. "Yet I am not altogether
+so dull but what I can perceive the nature of those you have not
+uttered."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said he, "good-night to you. May you sleep well, for I think it
+is more than I am like to do."</p>
+
+<p>With that he sighed, took up a candle, and gave me his conveyance as far
+as the street door.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></a>[pg 54]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_V'></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next day, Sabbath, August 27th, I had the occasion I had long looked
+forward to, to hear some of the famous Edinburgh preachers, all well known
+to me already by the report of Mr. Campbell. Alas! and I might just as well
+have been at Essendean, and sitting under Mr. Campbell's worthy self! the
+turmoil of my thoughts, which dwelt continually on the interview with
+Prestongrange, inhibiting me from all attention. I was indeed much less
+impressed by the reasoning of the divines than by the spectacle of the
+thronged congregation in the churches, like what I imagined of a theatre or
+(in my then disposition) of an assize of trial; above all at the West Kirk,
+with its three tiers of galleries, where I went in the vain hope that I
+might see Miss Drummond.</p>
+
+<p>On the Monday I betook me for the first time to a barber's, and was very
+well pleased with the result. Thence to the Advocate's, where the red coats
+of the soldiers showed again about his door, making a bright place in the
+close. I looked about for the young lady <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></a>[pg 55]</span>and her gillies; there was
+never a sign of them. But I was no sooner shown into the cabinet or
+antechamber, where I had spent so wearyful a time upon the Saturday, than I
+was aware of the tall figure of James More in a corner. He seemed a prey to
+a painful uneasiness, reaching forth his feet and hands, and his eyes
+speeding here and there without rest about the walls of the small chamber,
+which recalled to me with a sense of pity the man's wretched situation. I
+suppose it was partly this, and partly my strong continuing interest in his
+daughter, that moved me to accost him.</p>
+
+<p>"Give you a good-morning, sir," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And a good-morning to you, sir," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"You bide tryst with Prestongrange?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I do, sir, and I pray your business with that gentleman be more
+agreeable than mine," was his reply.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope at least that yours will be brief, for I suppose you pass before
+me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"All pass before me," he said, with a shrug and a gesture upward of the
+open hands. "It was not always so, sir, but times change. It was not so
+when the sword was in the scale, young gentleman, and the virtues of the
+soldier might sustain themselves."</p>
+
+<p>There came a kind of Highland snuffle out of the man that raised my
+dander strangely.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Macgregor," said I, "I understand the main thing for a
+soldier is to be silent, and the first of his virtues never to
+complain."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></a>[pg
+56]</span>"You have my name, I perceive"--he bowed to me with his arms
+crossed--"though it's one I must not use myself. Well, there is a
+publicity--I have shown my face and told my name too often in the beards of
+my enemies. I must not wonder if both should be known to many that I know
+not."</p>
+
+<p>"That you know not in the least, sir," said I, "nor yet anybody else;
+but the name I am called, if you care to hear it, is Balfour."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a good name," he replied, civilly; "there are many decent folk
+that use it. And now that I call to mind, there was a young gentleman, your
+namesake, that marched surgeon in the year '45 with my battalion."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that would be a brother to Balfour of Baith," said I, for I
+was ready for the surgeon now.</p>
+
+<p>"The same, sir," said James More. "And since I have been fellow-soldier
+with your kinsman, you must suffer me to grasp your hand."</p>
+
+<p>He shook hands with me long and tenderly, beaming on me the while as
+though he had found a brother.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" says he, "these are changed days since your cousin and I heard the
+balls whistle in our lugs."</p>
+
+<p>"I think he was a very far-away cousin," said I, drily, "and I ought to
+tell you that I never clapped eyes upon the man."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," said he, "it makes no change. And you--I do not think you
+were out yourself, sir--I have <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57"
+id="Page_57"></a>[pg 57]</span>no clear mind of your face, which is one not
+probable to be forgotten."</p>
+
+<p>"In the year you refer to, Mr. Macgregor, I was getting skelped in the
+parish school," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"So young!" cries he. "Ah, then you will never be able to think what
+this meeting is to me. In the hour of my adversity, and in the house of my
+enemy, to meet in with the blood of an old brother-in-arms--it heartens me,
+Mr. Balfour, like the skirling of the Highland pipes! Sir, this is a sad
+look-back that many of us have to make: some with falling tears. I have
+lived in my own country like a king; my sword, my mountains, and the faith
+of my friends and kinsmen sufficed for me. Now I lie in a stinking dungeon;
+and do you know, Mr. Balfour," he went on, taking my arm and beginning to
+lead me about, "do you know, sir, that I lack mere necessaries? The malice
+of my foes has quite sequestered my resources. I lie, as you know, sir, on
+a trumped-up charge, of which I am as innocent as yourself. They dare not
+bring me to my trial, and in the meanwhile I am held naked in my prison. I
+could have wished it was your cousin I had met, or his brother Baith
+himself. Either would, I know, have been rejoiced to help me; while a
+comparative stranger like yourself--"</p>
+
+<p>I would be ashamed to set down all he poured out to me in this beggarly
+vein, or the very short and grudging answers that I made to him. There were
+times <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a>[pg
+58]</span>when I was tempted to stop his mouth with some small change; but
+whether it was from shame or pride--whether it was for my own sake or
+Catriona's--whether it was because I thought him no fit father for his
+daughter, or because I resented that grossness of immediate falsity that
+clung about the man himself--the thing was clean beyond me. And I was still
+being wheedled and preached to, and still being marched to and fro, three
+steps and a turn, in that small chamber, and had already, by some very
+short replies, highly incensed, although not finally discouraged, my
+beggar, when Prestongrange appeared in the doorway and bade me eagerly into
+his big chamber.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a moment's engagement," said he; "and that you may not sit
+empty-handed I am going to present you to my three braw daughters, of whom
+perhaps you may have heard, for I think they are more famous than papa.
+This way."</p>
+
+<p>He led me into another long room above, where a dry old lady sat at a
+frame of embroidery, and the three handsomest young women (I suppose) in
+Scotland stood together by a window.</p>
+
+<p>"This is my new friend, Mr. Balfour," said he, presenting me by the arm.
+"David, here is my sister, Miss Grant, who is so good as keep my house for
+me, and will be very pleased if she can help you. And here," says he,
+turning to the three younger ladies, "here are my <i>three braw
+dauchters</i>. A fair question <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59"
+id="Page_59"></a>[pg 59]</span>to ye, Mr. Davie: which of the three is the
+best favoured? And I wager he will never have the impudence to propound
+honest Alan Ramsay's answer!"</p>
+
+<p>Hereupon all three, and the old Miss Grant as well, cried out against
+this sally, which (as I was acquainted with the verses he referred to)
+brought shame into my own cheek. It seemed to me a citation unpardonable in
+a father, and I was amazed that these ladies could laugh even while they
+reproved, or made believe to.</p>
+
+<p>Under cover of this mirth, Prestongrange got forth of the chamber, and I
+was left, like a fish upon dry land, in that very unsuitable society. I
+could never deny, in looking back upon what followed, that I was eminently
+stockish; and I must say the ladies were well drilled to have so long a
+patience with me. The aunt indeed sat close at her embroidery, only looking
+now and again and smiling; but the misses, and especially the eldest, who
+was besides the most handsome, paid me a score of attentions which I was
+very ill able to repay. It was all in vain to tell myself I was a young
+fellow of some worth as well as good estate, and had no call to feel
+abashed before these lasses, the eldest not so much older than myself, and
+no one of them by any probability half as learned. Reasoning would not
+change the fact; and there were times when the colour came into my face to
+think I was shaved that day for the first time.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></a>[pg
+60]</span>The talk going, with all their endeavours, very heavily, the
+eldest took pity on my awkwardness, sat down to her instrument, of which
+she was a passed mistress, and entertained me for a while with playing and
+singing, both in the Scots and in the Italian manners; this put me more at
+my ease, and being reminded of Alan's air that he had taught me in the hole
+near Carriden, I made so bold as to whistle a bar or two, and ask if she
+knew that.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. "I never heard a note of it," said she. "Whistle it
+all through. And now once again," she added, after I had done so.</p>
+
+<p>Then she picked it out upon the keyboard, and (to my surprise) instantly
+enriched the same with well-sounding chords, and sang, as she played, with
+a very droll expression and broad accent:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"Haenae I got just the lilt of it?<br />
+Isnae this the tune that ye whustled?"<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>"You see," she says, "I can do the poetry too, only it won't rhyme." And
+then again:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"I am Miss Grant, sib to the Advocate:<br />
+You, I believe, are Dauvit Balfour."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I told her how much astonished I was by her genius.</p>
+
+<p>"And what do you call the name of it?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know the real name," said I. "I just call it <i>Alan's
+air</i>."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me directly in the face. "I shall call <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></a>[pg 61]</span>it
+<i>David's air</i>," said she; "though if it's the least like what your
+namesake of Israel played to Saul I would never wonder that the king got
+little good by it, for it's but melancholy music. Your other name I do not
+like; so, if you was ever wishing to hear your tune again you are to ask
+for it by mine."</p>
+
+<p>This was said with a significance that gave my heart a jog. "Why that,
+Miss Grant?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," says she, "if ever you should come to get hanged, I will set your
+last dying speech and confession to that tune and sing it."</p>
+
+<p>This put it beyond a doubt that she was partly informed of my story and
+peril. How, or just how much, it was more difficult to guess. It was plain
+she knew there was something of danger in the name of Alan, and thus warned
+me to leave it out of reference; and plain she knew that I stood under some
+criminal suspicion. I judged besides that the harshness of her last speech
+(which besides she had followed up immediately with a very noisy piece of
+music) was to put an end to the present conversation. I stood beside her,
+affecting to listen and admire, but truly whirled away by my own thoughts.
+I have always found this young lady to be a lover of the mysterious; and
+certainly this first interview made a mystery that was beyond my plummet.
+One thing I learned long after, the hours of the Sunday had been well
+employed, the bank porter had been found and examined, my visit to Charles
+Stewart was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></a>[pg
+62]</span>discovered, and the deduction made that I was pretty deep with
+James and Alan, and most likely in a continued correspondence with the
+last. Hence this broad hint that was given me across the harpsichord.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the piece of music, one of the younger misses, who was
+at a window over the close, cried on her sisters to come quick, for there
+was "<i>Grey eyes</i> again." The whole family trooped there at once, and
+crowded one another for a look. The window whither they ran was in an odd
+corner of that room, gave above the entrance door, and flanked up the
+close.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Mr. Balfour," they cried, "come and see. She is the most
+beautiful creature! She hangs round the close-head these last days, always
+with some wretched-like gillies, and yet seems quite a lady."</p>
+
+<p>I had no need to look; neither did I look twice, or long. I was afraid
+she might have seen me there, looking down upon her from that chamber of
+music, and she without, and her father in the same house, perhaps begging
+for his life with tears, and myself come but newly from rejecting his
+petitions. But even that glance set me in a better conceit of myself, and
+much less awe of the young ladies. They were beautiful, that was beyond
+question, but Catriona was beautiful too, and had a kind of brightness in
+her like a coal of fire. As much as the others cast me down, she lifted me
+up. I remembered I had talked easily with her. If I could make no hand of
+it with these fine maids, it was perhaps <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></a>[pg 63]</span>something their own fault. My
+embarrassment began to be a little mingled and lightened with a sense of
+fun; and when the aunt smiled at me from her embroidery, and the three
+daughters unbent to me like a baby, all with "papa's orders" written on
+their faces, there were times when I could have found it in my heart to
+smile myself.</p>
+
+<p>Presently papa returned, the same kind, happy-like, pleasant-spoken
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, girls," said he, "I must take Mr. Balfour away again; but I hope
+you have been able to persuade him to return where I shall be always
+gratified to find him."</p>
+
+<p>So they each made me a little farthing compliment, and I was led
+away.</p>
+
+<p>If this visit to the family had been meant to soften my resistance, it
+was the worst of failures. I was no such ass but what I understood how poor
+a figure I had made, and that the girls would be yawning their jaws off as
+soon as my stiff back was turned. I felt I had shown how little I had in me
+of what was soft and graceful; and I longed for a chance to prove that I
+had something of the other stuff, the stern and dangerous.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I was to be served to my desire, for the scene to which he was
+conducting me was of a different character.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></a>[pg 64]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VI'></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>UMQUILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT</h3>
+
+
+<p>There was a man waiting us in Prestongrange's study, whom I distasted at
+the first look, as we distaste a ferret or an earwig. He was bitter ugly,
+but seemed very much of a gentleman; had still manners, but capable of
+sudden leaps and violences; and a small voice, which could ring out shrill
+and dangerous when he so desired.</p>
+
+<p>The Advocate presented us in a familiar, friendly way.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Fraser," said he, "here is Mr. Balfour whom we talked about. Mr.
+David, this is Mr. Symon Fraser, whom we used to call by another title, but
+that is an old song. Mr. Fraser has an errand to you."</p>
+
+<p>With that he stepped aside to his book-shelves, and made believe to
+consult a quarto volume in the far end.</p>
+
+<p>I was thus left (in a sense) alone with perhaps the last person in the
+world I had expected. There was no doubt upon the terms of introduction;
+this could be no other than the forfeited Master of Lovat and chief of the
+great clan Fraser. I knew he had led his men in <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></a>[pg 65]</span>the Rebellion; I knew his
+father's head--my old lord's, that grey fox of the mountains--to have
+fallen on the block for that offence, the lands of the family to have been
+seized, and their nobility attainted. I could not conceive what he should
+be doing in Grant's house; I could not conceive that he had been called to
+the bar, had eaten all his principles, and was now currying favour with the
+Government even to the extent of acting Advocate-Depute in the Appin
+murder.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Mr. Balfour," said he, "what is all this I hear of ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"It would not become me to prejudge," said I, "but if the Advocate was
+your authority he is fully possessed of my opinions."</p>
+
+<p>"I may tell you I am engaged in the Appin case," he went on; "I am to
+appear under Prestongrange; and from my study of the precognitions I can
+assure you your opinions are erroneous. The guilt of Breck is manifest; and
+your testimony, in which you admit you saw him on the hill at the very
+moment, will certify his hanging."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be rather ill to hang him till you catch him," I observed. "And
+for other matters I very willingly leave you to your own impressions."</p>
+
+<p>"The Duke has been informed," he went on. "I have just come from his
+Grace, and he expressed himself before me with an honest freedom like the
+great nobleman he is. He spoke of you by name, Mr. Balfour, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></a>[pg 66]</span>and
+declared his gratitude beforehand in case you would be led by those who
+understand your own interests and those of the country so much better than
+yourself. Gratitude is no empty expression in that mouth: <i>experto
+crede</i>. I daresay you know something of my name and clan, and the
+damnable example and lamented end of my late father, to say nothing of my
+own errata. Well, I have made my peace with that good Duke; he has
+intervened for me with our friend Prestongrange; and here I am with my foot
+in the stirrup again and some of the responsibility shared into my hand of
+prosecuting King George's enemies and avenging the late daring and
+barefaced insult to his Majesty."</p>
+
+<p>"Doubtless a proud position for your father's son," says I.</p>
+
+<p>He wagged his bald eyebrows at me. "You are pleased to make experiments
+in the ironical, I think," said he. "But I am here upon duty, I am here to
+discharge my errand in good faith, it is in vain you think to divert me.
+And let me tell you, for a young fellow of spirit and ambition like
+yourself, a good shove in the beginning will do more than ten years'
+drudgery. The shove is now at your command; choose what you will to be
+advanced in, the Duke will watch upon you with the affectionate disposition
+of a father."</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking that I lack the docility of the son," says I.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you really suppose, sir, that the whole policy <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></a>[pg 67]</span>of this
+country is to be suffered to trip up and tumble down for an ill-mannered
+colt of a boy?" he cried. "This has been made a test case, all who would
+prosper in the future must put a shoulder to the wheel. Look at me! Do you
+suppose it is for my pleasure that I put myself in the highly invidious
+position of prosecuting a man that I have drawn the sword alongside of? The
+choice is not left me."</p>
+
+<p>"But I think, sir, that you forfeited your choice when you mixed in with
+that unnatural rebellion," I remarked. "My case is happily otherwise; I am
+a true man, and can look either the Duke or King George in the face without
+concern."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it so the wind sits?" says he. "I protest you are fallen in the
+worst sort of error. Prestongrange has been hitherto so civil (he tells me)
+as not to combat your allegations; but you must not think they are not
+looked upon with strong suspicion. You say you are innocent. My dear sir,
+the facts declare you guilty."</p>
+
+<p>"I was waiting for you there," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"The evidence of Mungo Campbell; your flight after the completion of the
+murder; your long course of secresy--my good young man!" said Mr. Symon,
+"here is enough evidence to hang a bullock, let be a David Balfour! I shall
+be upon that trial; my voice shall be raised; I shall then speak much
+otherwise from what I do to-day, and far less to your gratification, little
+as you like it now! Ah, you look white!" cries he. "I have <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></a>[pg 68]</span>found the
+key of your impudent heart. You look pale, your eyes waver, Mr. David! You
+see the grave and the gallows nearer by than you had fancied."</p>
+
+<p>"I own to a natural weakness," said I. "I think no shame for that. Shame
+. . ." I was going on.</p>
+
+<p>"Shame waits for you on the gibbet," he broke in.</p>
+
+<p>"Where I shall but be even'd with my lord your father," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Aha, but not so!" he cried, "and you do not yet see to the bottom of
+this business. My father suffered in a great cause, and for dealing in the
+affairs of kings. You are to hang for a dirty murder about boddle-pieces.
+Your personal part in it, the treacherous one of holding the poor wretch in
+talk, your accomplices a pack of ragged Highland gillies. And it can be
+shown, my great Mr. Balfour--it can be shown, and it <i>will</i> be shown,
+trust <i>me</i> that has a finger in the pie--it can be shown, and shall be
+shown, that you were paid to do it. I think I can see the looks go round
+the court when I adduce my evidence, and it shall appear that you, a young
+man of education, let yourself be corrupted to this shocking act for a suit
+of cast clothes, a bottle of Highland spirits, and
+three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in copper money."</p>
+
+<p>There was a touch of the truth in these words that knocked me like a
+blow: clothes, a bottle of <i>usquebaugh</i>, and
+three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in change <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></a>[pg 69]</span>made up, indeed, the most of
+what Alan and I had carried from Aucharn; and I saw that some of James's
+people had been blabbing in their dungeons.</p>
+
+<p>"You see I know more than you fancied," he resumed in triumph. "And as
+for giving it this turn, great Mr. David, you must not suppose the
+Government of Great Britain and Ireland will ever be stuck for want of
+evidence. We have men here in prison who will swear out their lives as we
+direct them; as I direct, if you prefer the phrase. So now you are to guess
+your part of glory if you choose to die. On the one hand, life, wine,
+women, and a duke to be your hand-gun; on the other, a rope to your craig,
+and a gibbet to clatter your bones on, and the lousiest, lowest story to
+hand down to your namesakes in the future that was ever told about a hired
+assassin. And see here!" he cried, with a formidable shrill voice, "see
+this paper that I pull out of my pocket. Look at the name there: it is the
+name of the great David, I believe, the ink scarce dry yet. Can you guess
+its nature? It is the warrant for your arrest, which I have but to touch
+this bell beside me to have executed on the spot. Once in the Tolbooth upon
+this paper, may God help you, for the die is cast!"</p>
+
+<p>I must never deny that I was greatly horrified by so much baseness, and
+much unmanned by the immediacy and ugliness of my danger. Mr. Symon had
+already gloried in the changes of my hue; I make no doubt I <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></a>[pg 70]</span>was now no
+ruddier than my shirt; my speech besides trembled.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a gentleman in this room," cried I. "I appeal to him. I put my
+life and credit in his hands."</p>
+
+<p>Prestongrange shut his book with a snap. "I told you so, Symon," said
+he; "you have played your hand for all it was worth, and you have lost. Mr.
+David," he went on, "I wish you to believe it was by no choice of mine you
+were subjected to this proof. I wish you could understand how glad I am you
+should come forth from it with so much credit. You may not quite see how,
+but it is a little of a service to myself. For had our friend here been
+more successful than I was last night, it might have appeared that he was a
+better judge of men than I; it might have appeared we were altogether in
+the wrong situations, Mr. Symon and myself. And I know our friend Symon to
+be ambitious," says he, striking lightly on Fraser's shoulder. "As for this
+stage play, it is over; my sentiments are very much engaged in your behalf;
+and whatever issue we can find to this unfortunate affair, I shall make it
+my business to see it is adopted with tenderness to you."</p>
+
+<p>These were very good words, and I could see besides that there was
+little love, and perhaps a spice of genuine ill-will, between those two who
+were opposed to me. For all that, it was unmistakable this interview had
+been designed, perhaps rehearsed, with the consent of <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></a>[pg 71]</span>both; it
+was plain my adversaries were in earnest to try me by all methods; and now
+(persuasion, flattery, and menaces having been tried in vain) I could not
+but wonder what would be their next expedient. My eyes besides were still
+troubled, and my knees loose under me, with the distress of the late
+ordeal; and I could do no more than stammer the same form of words: "I put
+my life and credit in your hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," says he, "we must try to save them. And in the meanwhile
+let us return to gentler methods. You must not bear any grudge upon my
+friend, Mr. Symon, who did but speak by his brief. And even if you did
+conceive some malice against myself, who stood by and seemed rather to hold
+a candle, I must not let that extend to innocent members of my family.
+These are greatly engaged to see more of you, and I cannot consent to have
+my young women-folk disappointed. To-morrow they will be going to Hope
+Park, where I think it very proper you should make your bow. Call for me
+first, when I may possibly have something for your private hearing; then
+you shall be turned abroad again under the conduct of my misses; and until
+that time repeat to me your promise of secrecy."</p>
+
+<p>I had done better to have instantly refused, but in truth I was beside
+the power of reasoning; did as I was bid; took my leave I know not how; and
+when I was forth again in the close, and the door had shut behind me, was
+glad to lean on a house wall and wipe my face. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></a>[pg 72]</span>That horrid apparition (as I
+may call it) of Mr. Symon rang in my memory, as a sudden noise rings after
+it is over on the ear. Tales of the man's father, of his falseness, of his
+manifold perpetual treacheries, rose before me from all that I had heard
+and read, and joined on with what I had just experienced of himself. Each
+time it occurred to me, the ingenious foulness of that calumny he had
+proposed to nail upon my character startled me afresh. The case of the man
+upon the gibbet by Leith Walk appeared scarce distinguishable from that I
+was now to consider as my own. To rob a child of so little more than
+nothing was certainly a paltry enterprise for two grown men; but my own
+tale, as it was to be represented in a court by Symon Fraser, appeared a
+fair second in every possible point of view of sordidness and
+cowardice.</p>
+
+<p>The voices of two of Prestongrange's liveried men upon his doorstep
+recalled me to myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha'e," said the one, "this billet as fast as ye can link to the
+captain."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that for the cateran back again?" asked the other.</p>
+
+<p>"It would seem sae," returned the first. "Him and Symon are seeking
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"I think Prestongrange is gane gyte," says the second. "He'll have James
+More in bed with him next."</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, it's neither your affair nor mine's," says the first.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></a>[pg
+73]</span>And they parted, the one upon his errand, and the other back into
+the house.</p>
+
+<p>This looked as ill as possible. I was scarce gone and they were sending
+already for James More, to whom I thought Mr. Symon must have pointed when
+he spoke of men in prison and ready to redeem their lives by all
+extremities. My scalp curdled among my hair, and the next moment the blood
+leaped in me to remember Catriona. Poor lass! her father stood to be hanged
+for pretty indefensible misconduct. What was yet more unpalatable, it now
+seemed he was prepared to save his four quarters by the worst of shame and
+the most foul of cowardly murders--murder by the false oath; and to
+complete our misfortunes, it seemed myself was picked out to be the
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>I began to walk swiftly and at random, conscious only of a desire for
+movement, air, and the open country.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></a>[pg 74]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VII'></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOR</h3>
+
+
+<p>I came forth, I vow I know not how, on the <i>Lang Dykes</i>.<sup><a
+href="#fn12" name="rfn12">[12]</a></sup> This is a rural road which runs on
+the north side over against the city. Thence I could see the whole black
+length of it tail down, from where the castle stands upon its crags above
+the loch in a long line of spires and gable ends, and smoking chimneys, and
+at the sight my heart swelled in my bosom. My youth, as I have told, was
+already inured to dangers; but such danger as I had seen the face of but
+that morning, in the midst of what they call the safety of a town, shook me
+beyond experience. Peril of slavery, peril of shipwreck, peril of sword and
+shot, I had stood all of these without discredit; but the peril there was
+in the sharp voice and the fat face of Symon, properly Lord Lovat, daunted
+me wholly.</p>
+
+<p>I sat by the lake side in a place where the rushes went down into the
+water, and there steeped my wrists and laved my temples. If I could have
+done so with any remains of self-esteem I would now have fled from my
+foolhardy enterprise. But (call it courage or <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></a>[pg 75]</span>cowardice, and I believe it
+was both the one and the other) I decided I was ventured out beyond the
+possibility of a retreat. I had outfaced these men, I would continue to
+outface them; come what might, I would stand by the word spoken.</p>
+
+<p>The sense of my own constancy somewhat uplifted my spirits, but not
+much. At the best of it there was an icy place about my heart, and life
+seemed a black business to be at all engaged in. For two souls in
+particular my pity flowed. The one was myself, to be so friendless and lost
+among dangers. The other was the girl, the daughter of James More. I had
+seen but little of her; yet my view was taken and my judgment made. I
+thought her a lass of a clean honour, like a man's; I thought her one to
+die of a disgrace; and now I believed her father to be at that moment
+bargaining his vile life for mine. It made a bond in my thoughts betwixt
+the girl and me. I had seen her before only as a wayside appearance, though
+one that pleased me strangely; I saw her now in a sudden nearness of
+relation, as the daughter of my blood foe, and I might say, my murderer. I
+reflected it was hard I should be so plagued and persecuted all my days for
+other folk's affairs, and have no manner of pleasure myself. I got meals
+and a bed to sleep in when my concerns would suffer it; beyond that my
+wealth was of no help to me. If I was to hang, my days were like to be
+short; if I was not to hang but to escape out of this trouble, they <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></a>[pg 76]</span>might yet
+seem long to me ere I was done with them. Of a sudden her face appeared in
+my memory, the way I had first seen it, with the parted lips; at that,
+weakness came in my bosom and strength into my legs; and I set resolutely
+forward on the way to Dean. If I was to hang to-morrow, and it was sure
+enough I might very likely sleep that night in a dungeon, I determined I
+should hear and speak once more with Catriona.</p>
+
+<p>The exercise of walking and the thought of my destination braced me yet
+more, so that I began to pluck up a kind of spirit. In the village of Dean,
+where it sits in the bottom of a glen beside the river, I inquired my way
+of a miller's man, who sent me up the hill upon the farther side by a plain
+path, and so to a decent-like small house in a garden of lawns and
+apple-trees. My heart beat high as I stepped inside the garden hedge, but
+it fell low indeed when I came face to face with a grim and fierce old
+lady, walking there in a white mutch with a man's hat strapped upon the top
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>"What do ye come seeking here?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>I told her I was after Miss Drummond.</p>
+
+<p>"And what may be your business with Miss Drummond?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>I told her I had met her on Saturday last, had been so fortunate as to
+render her a trifling service, and was come now on the young lady's
+invitation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, so you're Saxpence!" she cried, with a very sneering manner. "A
+braw gift, a bonny gentleman. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77"
+id="Page_77"></a>[pg 77]</span>And hae ye ony ither name and designation,
+or were ye bapteesed Saxpence?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>I told my name.</p>
+
+<p>"Preserve me!" she cried. "Has Ebenezer gotten a son?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, ma'am," said I. "I am a son of Alexander's. It's I that am the
+Laird of Shaws."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye'll find your work cut out for ye to establish that," quoth she.</p>
+
+<p>"I perceive you know my uncle," said I; "and I daresay you may be the
+better pleased to hear that business is arranged."</p>
+
+<p>"And what brings ye here after Miss Drummond?" she pursued.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm come after my saxpence, mem," said I. "It's to be thought, being my
+uncle's nephew, I would be found a careful lad."</p>
+
+<p>"So ye have a spark of sleeness in ye," observed the old lady, with some
+approval. "I thought ye had just been a cuif--you and your saxpence, and
+your <i>lucky day</i> and your <i>sake of Balwhidder</i>"--from which I was
+gratified to learn that Catriona had not forgotten some of our talk. "But
+all this is by the purpose," she resumed. "Am I to understand that ye come
+here keeping company?"</p>
+
+<p>"This is surely rather an early question," said I. "The maid is young,
+so am I, worse fortune. I have but seen her the once. I'll not deny," I
+added, making <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></a>[pg
+78]</span>up my mind to try her with some frankness, "I'll not deny but she
+has run in my head a good deal since I met in with her. That is one thing;
+but it would be quite another, and I think I would look very like a fool,
+to commit myself."</p>
+
+<p>"You can speak out of your mouth, I see," said the old lady. "Praise
+God, and so can I! I was fool enough to take charge of this rogue's
+daughter: a fine charge I have gotten; but it's mine, and I'll carry it the
+way I want to. Do ye mean to tell me, Mr. Balfour of Shaws, that you would
+marry James More's daughter, and him hanged? Well, then, where there's no
+possible marriage there shall be no manner of carryings on, and take that
+for said. Lasses are bruckle things," she added, with a nod; "and though ye
+would never think it by my wrunkled chafts, I was a lassie mysel', and a
+bonny one."</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Allardyce," said I, "for that I suppose to be your name, you seem
+to do the two sides of the talking, which is a very poor manner to come to
+an agreement. You give me rather a home thrust when you ask if I would
+marry, at the gallows' foot, a young lady whom I have seen but the once. I
+have told you already I would never be so untenty as to commit myself. And
+yet I'll go some way with you. If I continue to like the lass as well as I
+have reason to expect, it will be something more than her father, or the
+gallows either, that keeps the two of us apart. As for my family, I found
+it by <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></a>[pg
+79]</span>the wayside like a lost bawbee! I owe less than nothing to my
+uncle; and if ever I marry, it will be to please one person: that's
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard this kind of talk before ye were born," said Mrs. Ogilvy,
+"which is perhaps the reason that I think of it so little. There's much to
+be considered. This James More is a kinsman of mine, to my shame be it
+spoken. But the better the family, the mair men hanged or heided, that's
+always been poor Scotland's story. And if it was just the hanging! For my
+part, I think I would be best pleased with James upon the gallows, which
+would be at least an end to him. Catrine's a good lass enough, and a
+good-hearted, and lets herself be deaved all day with a runt of an auld
+wife like me. But, ye see, there's the weak bit. She's daft about that
+long, false, fleeching beggar of a father of hers, and red-mad about the
+Gregara, and proscribed names, and King James, and a wheen blethers. And
+you might think ye could guide her, ye would find yourself sore mista'en.
+Ye say ye've seen her but the once..."</p>
+
+<p>"Spoke with her but the once, I should have said," I interrupted. "I saw
+her again this morning from a window at Prestongrange's."</p>
+
+<p>This I daresay I put in because it sounded well; but I was properly paid
+for my ostentation on the return.</p>
+
+<p>"What's this of it?" cries the old lady, with a sudden <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></a>[pg 80]</span>pucker of
+her face. "I think it was at the Advocate's door-cheek that ye met her
+first."</p>
+
+<p>I told her that was so.</p>
+
+<p>"H'm," she said; and then suddenly, upon rather a scolding tone, "I have
+your bare word for it," she cries, "as to who and what you are. By your way
+of it, you're Balfour of the Shaws; but for what I ken you may be Balfour
+of the Deevil's oxter. It's possible ye may come here for what ye say, and
+it's equally possible ye may come here for deil care what! I'm good enough
+whig to sit quiet, and to have keepit all my men-folk's heads upon their
+shoulders. But I'm not just a good enough whig to be made a fool of
+neither. And I tell you fairly, there's too much Advocate's door and
+Advocate's window here for a man that comes taigling after a Macgregor's
+daughter. Ye can tell that to the Advocate that sent ye, with my fond love.
+And I kiss my loof to ye, Mr. Balfour," says she, suiting the action to the
+word, "and a braw journey to ye back to where ye cam frae."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think me a spy," I broke out, and speech stuck in my throat. I
+stood and looked murder at the old lady for a space, then bowed and turned
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Here! Hoots! The callant's in a creel!" she cried. "Think ye a spy?
+what else would I think ye--me that kens naething by ye? But I see that I
+was wrong; and as I cannot fight, I'll have to apologise. A bonny figure I
+would be with a broadsword. Ay! <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81"
+id="Page_81"></a>[pg 81]</span>ay!" she went on, "you're none such a bad
+lad in your way; I think ye'll have some redeeming vices. But, oh, Davit
+Balfour, ye're damned countryfeed. Ye'll have to win over that, lad; ye'll
+have to soople your back-bone, and think a wee pickle less of your dainty
+self; and ye'll have to try to find out that women-folk are nae grenadiers.
+But that can never be. To your last day you'll ken no more of women-folk
+than what I do of sow-gelding."</p>
+
+<p>I had never been used with such expressions from a lady's tongue, the
+only two ladies I had known, Mrs. Campbell and my mother, being most devout
+and most particular women; and I suppose my amazement must have been
+depicted in my countenance, for Mrs. Ogilvy burst forth suddenly in a fit
+of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep me!" she cried, struggling with her mirth, "you have the finest
+timber face--and you to marry the daughter of a Hieland cateran! Davie, my
+dear, I think we'll have to make a match of it--if it was just to see the
+weans. And now," she went on, "there's no manner of service in your
+daidling here, for the young woman is from home, and it's my fear that the
+old woman is no suitable companion for your father's son. Forbye that I
+have nobody but myself to look after my reputation, and have been long
+enough alone with a sedooctive youth. And come back another day for your
+saxpence!" she cried after me as I left.</p>
+
+<p>My skirmish with this disconcerting lady gave my <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></a>[pg 82]</span>thoughts a
+boldness they had otherwise wanted. For two days the image of Catriona had
+mixed in all my meditations; she made their background, so that I scarce
+enjoyed my own company without a glint of her in a corner of my mind. But
+now she came immediately near; I seemed to touch her, whom I had never
+touched but the once; I let myself flow out to her in a happy weakness, and
+looking all about, and before and behind, saw the world like an undesirable
+desert, where men go as soldiers on a march, following their duty with what
+constancy they have, and Catriona alone there to offer me some pleasure of
+my days; I wondered at myself that I could dwell on such considerations in
+that time of my peril and disgrace; and when I remembered my youth I was
+ashamed. I had my studies to complete; I had to be called into some useful
+business; I had yet to take my part of service in a place where all must
+serve; I had yet to learn, and know, and prove myself a man; and I had so
+much sense as blush that I should be already tempted with these further-on
+and holier delights and duties. My education spoke home to me sharply; I
+was never brought up on sugar biscuits, but on the hard food of the truth.
+I knew that he was quite unfit to be a husband who was not prepared to be a
+father also; and for a boy like me to play the father was a mere
+derision.</p>
+
+<p>When I was in the midst of these thoughts and about <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83"></a>[pg 83]</span>half-way
+back to town I saw a figure coming to meet me, and the trouble of my heart
+was heightened. It seemed I had everything in the world to say to her, but
+nothing to say first; and remembering how tongue-tied I had been that
+morning at the Advocate's, I made sure that I would find myself struck
+dumb. But when she came up my fears fled away; not even the consciousness
+of what I had been privately thinking disconcerted me the least; and I
+found I could talk with her as easily and rationally as I might with
+Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"O!" she cried, "you have been seeking your sixpence: did you get
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>I told her no; but now I had met with her my walk was not in vain.
+"Though I have seen you to-day already," said I, and told her where and
+when.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not see you," she said. "My eyes are big, but there are better
+than mine at seeing far. Only I heard singing in the house."</p>
+
+<p>"That was Miss Grant," said I, "the eldest and the bonniest."</p>
+
+<p>"They say they are all beautiful," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"They think the same of you, Miss Drummond," I replied, "and were all
+crowding to the window to observe you."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pity about my being so blind," said she, "or I might have seen
+them too. And you were in the house? You must have been having the fine
+time with the fine music and the pretty ladies."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a>[pg
+84]</span>"There is just where you are wrong," said I; "for I was as
+uncouth as a sea-fish upon the brae of a mountain. The truth is that I am
+better fitted to go about with rudas men than pretty ladies."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I would think so too, at all events!" said she, at which we both
+of us laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a strange thing, now," said I. "I am not the least afraid with
+you, yet I could have run from the Miss Grants. And I was afraid of your
+cousin too."</p>
+
+<p>"O, I think any man will be afraid of her," she cried. "My father is
+afraid of her himself."</p>
+
+<p>The name of her father brought me to a stop. I looked at her as she
+walked by my side; I recalled the man, and the little I knew and the much I
+guessed of him; and comparing the one with the other, felt like a traitor
+to be silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Speaking of which," said I, "I met your father no later than this
+morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you?" she cried, with a voice of joy that seemed to mock at me.
+"You saw James More? You will have spoken with him, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did even that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>Then I think things went the worst way for me that was humanly possible.
+She gave me a look of mere gratitude. "Ah, thank you for that!" says
+she.</p>
+
+<p>"You thank me for very little," said I, and then stopped. But it seemed
+when I was holding back so <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85"
+id="Page_85"></a>[pg 85]</span>much, something at least had to come out. "I
+spoke rather ill to him," said I; "I did not like him very much; I spoke
+him rather ill, and he was angry."</p>
+
+<p>"I think you had little to do then, and less to tell it to his
+daughter!" she cried out. "But those that do not love and cherish him I
+will not know."</p>
+
+<p>"I will take the freedom of a word yet," said I, beginning to tremble.
+"Perhaps neither your father nor I are in the best of good spirits at
+Prestongrange's. I daresay we both have anxious business there, for it's a
+dangerous house. I was sorry for him too, and spoke to him the first, if I
+could but have spoken the wiser. And for one thing, in my opinion, you will
+soon find that his affairs are mending."</p>
+
+<p>"It will not be through your friendship, I am thinking," said she; "and
+he is much made up to you for your sorrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Drummond," cried I, "I am alone in this world...."</p>
+
+<p>"And I am not wondering at that," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"O, let me speak!" said I. "I will speak but the once, and then leave
+you, if you will, for ever. I came this day in the hopes of a kind word
+that I am sore in want of. I know that what I said must hurt you, and I
+knew it then. It would have been easy to have spoken smooth, easy to lie to
+you; can you not think how I was tempted to the same? Cannot you see the
+truth of my heart shine out?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86"></a>[pg
+86]</span>"I think here is a great deal of work, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I
+think we will have met but the once, and will can part like
+gentle-folk."</p>
+
+<p>"O, let me have one to believe in me!" I pleaded, "I cannae bear it
+else. The whole world is clanned against me. How am I to go through with my
+dreadful fate? If there's to be none to believe in me I cannot do it. The
+man must just die, for I cannot do it."</p>
+
+<p>She had still looked straight in front of her, head in air; but at my
+words or the tone of my voice she came to a stop. "What is this you say?"
+she asked. "What are you talking of?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is my testimony which may save an innocent life," said I, "and they
+will not suffer me to bear it. What would you do yourself? You know what
+this is, whose father lies in danger. Would you desert the poor soul? They
+have tried all ways with me. They have sought to bribe me; they offered me
+hills and valleys. And to-day that sleuth-hound told me how I stood, and to
+what a length he would go to butcher and disgrace me. I am to be brought in
+a party to the murder; I am to have held Glenure in talk for money and old
+clothes; I am to be killed and shamed. If this is the way I am to fall, and
+me scarce a man--if this is the story to be told of me in all Scotland--if
+you are to believe it too, and my name is to be nothing but a
+by-word--Catriona, how can I go through with it? <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_87" id="Page_87"></a>[pg 87]</span>The thing's not possible;
+it's more than a man has in his heart."</p>
+
+<p>I poured my words out in a whirl, one upon the other; and when I stopped
+I found her gazing on me with a startled face.</p>
+
+<p>"Glenure! It is the Appin murder," she said softly, but with a very deep
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>I had turned back to bear her company, and we were now come near the
+head of the brae above Dean village. At this word I stepped in front of her
+like one suddenly distracted.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake!" I cried, "for God's sake, what is this that I have
+done?" and carried my fists to my temples. "What made me do it? Sure, I am
+bewitched to say these things!"</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of heaven, what ails you now?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"I gave my honour," I groaned, "I gave my honour and now I have broke
+it. O, Catriona!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am asking you what it is," she said; "was it these things you should
+not have spoken? And do you think <i>I</i> have no honour, then? or that I
+am one that would betray a friend? I hold up my right hand to you and
+swear."</p>
+
+<p>"O, I knew you would be true!" said I. "It's me--it's here. I that stood
+but this morning and out-faced them, that risked rather to die disgraced
+upon the gallows than do wrong--and a few hours after I throw <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88"></a>[pg 88]</span>my honour
+away by the roadside in common talk! 'There is one thing clear upon our
+interview,' says he, 'that I can rely on your pledged word.' Where is my
+word now? Who could believe me now? <i>You</i> could not believe me. I am
+clean fallen down; I had best die!" All this I said with a weeping voice,
+but I had no tears in my body.</p>
+
+<p>"My heart is sore for you," said she, "but be sure you are too nice. I
+would not believe you, do you say? I would trust you with anything. And
+these men? I would not be thinking of them! Men who go about to entrap and
+to destroy you! Fy! this is no time to crouch. Look up! Do you not think I
+will be admiring you like a great hero of the good--and you a boy not much
+older than myself? And because you said a word too much in a friend's ear,
+that would die ere she betrayed you--to make such a matter! It is one thing
+that we must both forget."</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, looking at her, hang-dog, "is this true of it? Would
+ye trust me yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you not believe the tears upon my face?" she cried. "It is the
+world I am thinking of you, Mr. David Balfour. Let them hang you; I will
+never forget, I will grow old and still remember you. I think it is great
+to die so; I will envy you that gallows."</p>
+
+<p>"And maybe all this while I am but a child frighted with bogles," said
+I. "Maybe they but make a mock of me."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89"></a>[pg
+89]</span>"It is what I must know," she said. "I must hear the whole. The
+harm is done at all events, and I must hear the whole."</p>
+
+<p>I had sat down on the wayside, where she took a place beside me, and I
+told her all that matter much as I have written it, my thoughts about her
+father's dealing being alone omitted.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, when I had finished, "you are a hero, surely, and I
+never would have thought that same! And I think you are in peril, too. O,
+Symon Fraser! to think upon that man! For his life and the dirty money, to
+be dealing in such traffic!" And just then she called out aloud with a
+queer word that was common with her, and belongs, I believe, to her own
+language. "My torture!" says she, "look at the sun!"</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, it was already dipping towards the mountains.</p>
+
+<p>She bid me come again soon, gave me her hand, and left me in a turmoil
+of glad spirits. I delayed to go home to my lodging, for I had a terror of
+immediate arrest; but got some supper at a change house, and the better
+part of that night walked by myself in the barley-fields, and had such a
+sense of Catriona's presence that I seemed to bear her in my arms.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90"></a>[pg 90]</span><hr
+/>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_VIII'></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BRAVO</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next day, August 29th, I kept my appointment at the Advocate's in a
+coat that I had made to my own measure, and was but newly ready.</p>
+
+<p>"Aha," says Prestongrange, "you are very fine to-day; my misses are to
+have a fine cavalier. Come, I take that kind of you. I take that kind of
+you, Mr. David. O, we shall do very well yet, and I believe your troubles
+are nearly at an end."</p>
+
+<p>"You have news for me?" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"Beyond anticipation," he replied. "Your testimony is after all to be
+received; and you may go, if you will, in my company to the trial, which is
+to be held at Inverary, Thursday, 21st <i>proximo</i>."</p>
+
+<p>I was too much amazed to find words.</p>
+
+<p>"In the meanwhile," he continued, "though I will not ask you to renew
+your pledge, I must caution you strictly to be reticent. To-morrow your
+precognition must be taken; and outside of that, do you know, I think least
+said will be soonest mended."</p>
+
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour003"></a>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour003.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: TIT YOU EFFER HEAR WHERE ALAN GRIGOR FAND
+THE TANGS? SAID HE" src="images/balfour003sm.jpg" height="571" width="382" /></a>
+<br />TIT YOU EFFER HEAR
+WHERE ALAN GRIGOR FAND THE TANGS? SAID HE
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+<p>"I shall try to go discreetly," said I. "I believe it is yourself that I
+must thank for this crowning mercy, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91"
+id="Page_91"></a>[pg 91]</span>and I do thank you gratefully. After
+yesterday, my lord, this is like the doors of Heaven. I cannot find it in
+my heart to get the thing believed."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but you must try and manage, you must try and manage to believe
+it," says he, soothing-like, "and I am very glad to hear your
+acknowledgment of obligation, for I think you may be able to repay me very
+shortly"--he coughed--"or even now. The matter is much changed. Your
+testimony, which I shall not trouble you for to-day, will doubtless alter
+the complexion of the case for all concerned, and this makes it less
+delicate for me to enter with you on a side issue."</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," I interrupted, "excuse me for interrupting you, but how has
+this been brought about? The obstacles you told me of on Saturday appeared
+even to me to be quite insurmountable; how has it been contrived?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Mr. David," said he, "it would never do for me to divulge (even
+to you, as you say) the councils of the Government; and you must content
+yourself, if you please, with the gross fact."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled upon me like a father as he spoke, playing the while with a
+new pen; methought it was impossible there could be any shadow of deception
+in the man: yet when he drew to him a sheet of paper, dipped his pen among
+the ink, and began again to address me, I was somehow not so certain, and
+fell instinctively into an attitude of guard.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92"></a>[pg
+92]</span>"There is a point I wish to touch upon," he began. "I purposely
+left it before upon one side, which need be now no longer necessary. This
+is not, of course, a part of your examination, which is to follow by
+another hand; this is a private interest of my own. You say you encountered
+Breck upon the hill?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did, my lord," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"This was immediately after the murder?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you speak to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I did."</p>
+
+<p>"You had known him before, I think?" says my lord, carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot guess your reason for so thinking, my lord," I replied, "but
+such is the fact."</p>
+
+<p>"And when did you part with him again?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I reserve my answer," said I. "The question will be put to me at the
+assize."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Balfour," said he, "will you not understand that all this is
+without prejudice to yourself? I have promised you life and honour; and,
+believe me, I can keep my word. You are therefore clear of all anxiety.
+Alan, it appears, you suppose you can protect; and you talk to me of your
+gratitude, which I think (if you push me) is not ill-deserved. There are a
+great many different considerations all pointing the same way; and I will
+never be persuaded that you could not help us (if you chose) to put salt on
+Alan's tail."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93"></a>[pg
+93]</span>"My lord," said I, "I give you my word I do not so much as guess
+where Alan is."</p>
+
+<p>He paused a breath. "Nor how he might be found?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>I sat before him like a log of wood.</p>
+
+<p>"And so much for your gratitude, Mr. David!" he observed. Again there
+was a piece of silence. "Well," said he, rising, "I am not fortunate, and
+we are a couple at cross purposes. Let us speak of it no more; you will
+receive notice when, where, and by whom we are to take your precognition.
+And in the meantime, my misses must be waiting you. They will never forgive
+me if I detain their cavalier."</p>
+
+<p>Into the hands of these graces I was accordingly offered up, and found
+them dressed beyond what I had thought possible, and looking fair as a
+posy.</p>
+
+<p>As we went forth from the doors a small circumstance occurred which came
+afterwards to look extremely big. I heard a whistle sound loud and brief
+like a signal, and looking all about, spied for one moment the red head of
+Neil of the Tom, the son of Duncan. The next moment he was gone again, nor
+could I see so much as the skirt-tail of Catriona, upon whom I naturally
+supposed him to be then attending.</p>
+
+<p>My three keepers led me out by Bristo and the Bruntsfield Links; whence
+a path carried us to Hope Park, a beautiful pleasance, laid with
+gravel-walks, furnished with seats and summer-sheds, and warded by a
+keeper.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94"></a>[pg
+94]</span>The way there was a little longsome; the two younger misses
+affected an air of genteel weariness that damped me cruelly, the eldest
+considered me with something that at times appeared like mirth; and though
+I thought I did myself more justice than the day before, it was not without
+some effort. Upon our reaching the park I was launched on a bevy of eight
+or ten young gentlemen (some of them cockaded officers, the rest chiefly
+advocates) who crowded to attend upon these beauties; and though I was
+presented to all of them in very good words, it seemed I was by all
+immediately forgotten. Young folk in a company are like to savage animals:
+they fall upon or scorn a stranger without civility, or I may say,
+humanity; and I am sure, if I had been among baboons, they would have shown
+me quite as much of both. Some of the advocates set up to be wits, and some
+of the soldiers to be rattles; and I could not tell which of these extremes
+annoyed me most. All had a manner of handling their swords and coat-skirts,
+for the which (in mere black envy) I could have kicked them from that park.
+I daresay, upon their side, they grudged me extremely the fine company in
+which I had arrived; and altogether I had soon fallen behind, and stepped
+stiffly in the rear of all that merriment with my own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>From these I was recalled by one of the officers, Lieutenant Hector
+Duncansby, a gawky, leering, Highland boy, asking if my name was not
+"Palfour."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95"></a>[pg 95]</span>I
+told him it was, not very kindly, for his manner was scant civil.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha, Palfour," says he, and then, repeating it, "Palfour, Palfour!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid you do not like my name, sir," says I, annoyed with myself
+to be annoyed with such a rustical fellow.</p>
+
+<p>"No," says he, "but I wass thinking."</p>
+
+<p>"I would not advise you to make a practice of that, sir," says I. "I
+feel sure you would not find it to agree with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Tit you effer hear where Alan Grigor fand the tangs?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him what he could possibly mean, and he answered, with a
+heckling laugh, that he thought I must have found the poker in the same
+place and swallowed it.</p>
+
+<p>There could be no mistake about this, and my cheek burned.</p>
+
+<p>"Before I went about to put affronts on gentlemen," said I, "I think I
+would learn the English language first."</p>
+
+<p>He took me by the sleeve with a nod and a wink, and led me quietly
+outside Hope Park. But no sooner were we beyond the view of the
+promenaders, than the fashion of his countenance changed. "You tam lowland
+scoon'rel!" cries he, and hit me a buffet on the jaw with his closed
+fist.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96"></a>[pg 96]</span>I
+paid him as good or better on the return; whereupon he stepped a little
+back and took off his hat to me decorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Enough plows I think," says he. "I will be the offended shentleman, for
+who effer heard of such suffeeciency as tell a shentlemans that is the
+king's officer he cannae speak Cot's English? We have swords at our
+hurdies, and here is the King's Park at hand. Will ye walk first, or let me
+show ye the way?"</p>
+
+<p>I returned his bow, told him to go first, and followed him. As he went I
+heard him grumble to himself about <i>Cot's English</i> and the <i>King's
+coat</i>, so that I might have supposed him to be seriously offended. But
+his manner at the beginning of our interview was there to belie him. It was
+manifest he had come prepared to fasten a quarrel on me, right or wrong;
+manifest that I was taken in a fresh contrivance of my enemies; and to me
+(conscious as I was of my deficiencies) manifest enough that I should be
+the one to fall in our encounter.</p>
+
+<p>As we came into that rough rocky desert of the King's Park I was tempted
+half-a-dozen times to take to my heels and run for it, so loath was I to
+show my ignorance in fencing, and so much averse to die or even to be
+wounded. But I considered if their malice went as far as this, it would
+likely stick at nothing; and that to fall by the sword, however
+ungracefully, was still an improvement on the gallows. I considered besides
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97"></a>[pg 97]</span>that
+by the unguarded pertness of my words and the quickness of my blow I had
+put myself quite out of court; and that even if I ran, my adversary would,
+probably pursue and catch me, which would add disgrace to my misfortune. So
+that, taking all in all, I continued marching behind him, much as a man
+follows the hangman, and certainly with no more hope.</p>
+
+<p>We went about the end of the long craigs, and came into the Hunter's
+Bog. Here, on a piece of fair turf, my adversary drew. There was nobody
+there to see us but some birds; and no resource for me but to follow his
+example, and stand on guard with the best face I could display. It seems it
+was not good enough for Mr. Duncansby, who spied some flaw in my
+manoeuvres, paused, looked upon me sharply, and came off and on, and
+menaced me with his blade in the air. As I had seen no such proceedings
+from Alan, and was besides a good deal affected with the proximity of
+death, I grew quite bewildered, stood helpless, and could have longed to
+run away.</p>
+
+<p>"Fat, deil, ails her?" cries the lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>And suddenly engaging, he twitched the sword out of my grasp and sent it
+flying far among the rushes.</p>
+
+<p>Twice was this manoeuvre repeated; and the third time when I brought
+back my humiliated weapon, I found he had returned his own to the scabbard,
+and stood awaiting me with a face of some anger, and his hands clasped
+under his skirt.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98"></a>[pg
+98]</span>"Pe tamned if I touch you!" he cried, and asked me bitterly what
+right I had to stand up before "shentlemans" when I did not know the back
+of a sword from the front of it.</p>
+
+<p>I answered that was the fault of my upbringing; and would he do me the
+justice to say I had given him all the satisfaction it was unfortunately in
+my power to offer, and had stood up like a man?</p>
+
+<p>"And that is the truth," said he. "I am fery prave myself, and pold as a
+lions. But to stand up there--and you ken naething of fence!--the way that
+you did, I declare it was peyond me. And I am sorry for the plow; though I
+declare I pelief your own was the elder brother, and my held still sings
+with it. And I declare if I had kent what way it wass, I would not put a
+hand to such a piece of pusiness."</p>
+
+<p>"That is handsomely said," I replied, "and I am sure you will not stand
+up a second time to be the actor for my private enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, no, Palfour," said he; "and I think I was used extremely
+suffeeciently myself to be set up to fecht with an auld wife, or all the
+same as a bairn whateffer! And I will tell the Master so, and fecht him, by
+Cot, himself!"</p>
+
+<p>"And if you knew the nature of Mr. Symon's quarrel with me," said I,
+"you would be yet the more affronted to be mingled up with such
+affairs."</p>
+
+<p>He swore he could well believe it; that all the Lovats <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99"></a>[pg 99]</span>were made
+of the same meal and the devil was the miller that ground that; then
+suddenly shaking me by the hand, he vowed I was a pretty enough fellow
+after all, that it was a thousand pities I had been neglected, and that if
+he could find the time, he would give an eye himself to have me
+educated.</p>
+
+<p>"You can do me a better service than even what you propose," said I; and
+when he had asked its nature--"Come with me to the house of one of my
+enemies, and testify how I have carried myself this day," I told him. "That
+will be the true service. For though he has sent me a gallant adversary for
+the first, the thought in Mr. Symon's mind is merely murder. There will be
+a second and then a third; and by what you have seen of my cleverness with
+the cold steel, you can judge for yourself what is like to be upshot."</p>
+
+<p>"And I would not like it myself, if I was no more of a man than what you
+wass!" he cried. "But I will do you right, Palfour. Lead on!"</p>
+
+<p>If I had walked slowly on the way into that accursed park my heels were
+light enough on the way out. They kept time to a very good old air, that is
+as ancient as the Bible, and the words of it are: "<i>Surely the bitterness
+of death is passed</i>." I mind that I was extremely thirsty, and had a
+drink at Saint Margaret's well on the road down, and the sweetness of that
+water passed belief. We went through the sanctuary, up the Canongate, in by
+the Netherbow, and straight to Prestongrange's <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_100" id="Page_100"></a>[pg 100]</span>door, talking as we came
+and arranging the details of our affair. The footman owned his master was
+at home, but declared him engaged with other gentlemen on very private
+business, and his door forbidden.</p>
+
+<p>"My business is but for three minutes, and it cannot wait," said I. "You
+may say it is by no means private, and I shall be even glad to have some
+witnesses."</p>
+
+<p>As the man departed unwillingly enough upon this errand, we made so bold
+as to follow him to the antechamber, whence I could hear for a while the
+murmuring of several voices in the room within. The truth is, they were
+three at the one table--Prestongrange, Symon Fraser, and Mr. Erskine,
+Sheriff of Perth; and as they were met in consultation on the very business
+of the Appin murder, they were a little disturbed at my appearance, but
+decided to receive me.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well, Mr. Balfour, and what brings you here again? and who is
+this you bring with you?" says Prestongrange.</p>
+
+<p>As for Fraser, he looked before him on the table.</p>
+
+<p>"He is here to bear a little testimony in my favour, my lord, which I
+think it very needful you should hear," said I, and turned to
+Duncansby.</p>
+
+<p>"I have only to say this," said the lieutenant, "that I stood up this
+day with Palfour in the Hunter's Pog, which I am now fery sorry for, and he
+behaved himself as pretty as a shentlemans could ask it. And I have creat
+respects for Palfour," he added.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101"></a>[pg
+101]</span>"I thank you for your honest expressions," said I.</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon Duncansby made his bow to the company, and left the chamber,
+as we had agreed upon before.</p>
+
+<p>"What have I to do with this?" says Prestongrange.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell your lordship in two words," said I. "I have brought this
+gentleman, a King's officer, to do me so much justice. Now I think my
+character is covered, and until a certain date, which your lordship can
+very well supply, it will be quite in vain to despatch against me any more
+officers. I will not consent to fight my way through the garrison of the
+castle."</p>
+
+<p>The veins swelled on Prestongrange's brow, and he regarded me with
+fury.</p>
+
+<p>"I think the devil uncoupled this dog of a lad between my legs!" he
+cried; and then, turning fiercely on his neighbour, "This is some of your
+work, Symon," he said. "I spy your hand in the business, and, let me tell
+you, I resent it. It is disloyal, when we are agreed upon one expedient, to
+follow another in the dark. You are disloyal to me. What! you let me send
+this lad to the place with my very daughters! And because I let drop a word
+to you ... Fy, sir, keep your dishonours to yourself!"</p>
+
+<p>Symon was deadly pale. "I will be a kick-ball between you and the Duke
+no longer," he exclaimed. "Either come to an agreement, or come to a
+differ, and have it out among yourselves. But I will no longer fetch and
+carry, and get your contrary instructions, and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_102" id="Page_102"></a>[pg 102]</span>be blamed by both. For if
+I were to tell you what I think of all your Hanover business it would make
+your head sing."</p>
+
+<p>But Sheriff Erskine had preserved his temper, and now intervened
+smoothly. "And in the meantime," says he, "I think we should tell Mr.
+Balfour that his character for valour is quite established. He may sleep in
+peace. Until the date he was so good as to refer to it shall be put to the
+proof no more."</p>
+
+<p>His coolness brought the others to their prudence; and they made haste,
+with a somewhat distracted civility, to pack me from the house.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></a>[pg
+103]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_IX'></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE HEATHER ON FIRE</h3>
+
+
+<p>When I left Prestongrange that afternoon I was for the first time angry.
+The Advocate had made a mock of me. He had pretended my testimony was to be
+received and myself respected; and in that very hour, not only was Symon
+practising against my life by the hands of the Highland soldier, but (as
+appeared from his own language) Prestongrange himself had some design in
+operation. I counted my enemies: Prestongrange with all the King's
+authority behind him; and the Duke with the power of the West Highlands;
+and the Lovat interest by their side to help them with so great a force in
+the north, and the whole clan of old Jacobite spies and traffickers. And
+when I remembered James More, and the red head of Neil the son of Duncan, I
+thought there was perhaps a fourth in the confederacy, and what remained of
+Rob Roy's old desperate sept of caterans would be banded against me with
+the others. One thing was requisite, some strong friend or wise adviser.
+The country must be full of such, both able and eager to support me, or
+Lovat and the Duke <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104"
+id="Page_104"></a>[pg 104]</span>and Prestongrange had not been nosing for
+expedients; and it made me rage to think that I might brush against my
+champions in the street and be no wiser.</p>
+
+<p>And just then (like an answer) a gentleman brushed against me going by,
+gave me a meaning look, and turned into a close. I knew him with the tail
+of my eye--it was Stewart the Writer; and, blessing my good fortune, turned
+in to follow him. As soon as I had entered the close I saw him standing in
+the mouth of a stair, where he made me a signal and immediately vanished.
+Seven storeys up, there he was again in a house door, the which he locked
+behind us after we had entered. The house was quite dismantled, with not a
+stick of furniture; indeed, it was one of which Stewart had the letting in
+his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have to sit upon the floor," said he; "but we're safe here for
+the time being, and I've been wearying to see ye, Mr. Balfour."</p>
+
+<p>"How's it with Alan?'" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Brawly," said he. "Andie picks him up at Gillane Sands to-morrow,
+Wednesday. He was keen to say good-by to ye, but the way that things were
+going, I was feared the pair of ye was maybe best apart. And that brings me
+to the essential: how does your business speed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why," said I, "I was told only this morning that my testimony was
+accepted, and I was to travel to Inverary with the Advocate, no less."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></a>[pg
+105]</span>"Hout awa!" cried Stewart. "I'll never believe that."</p>
+
+<p>"I have maybe a suspicion of my own," says I, "but I would like fine to
+hear your reasons."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I tell ye fairly, I'm horn-mad," cries Stewart. "If my one hand
+could pull their Government down I would pluck it like a rotten apple. I'm
+doer for Appin and for James of the Glens; and, of course, it's my duty to
+defend my kinsman for his life. Hear how it goes with me, and I'll leave
+the judgment of it to yourself. The first thing they have to do is to get
+rid of Alan. They cannae bring in James as art and part until they've
+brought in Alan first as principal; that's sound law: they could never put
+the cart before the horse."</p>
+
+<p>"And how are they to bring in Alan till they can catch him?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but there is a way to evite that arrestment," said he. "Sound law,
+too. It would be a bonny thing if, by the escape of one ill-doer another
+was to go scatheless, and the remeid is to summon the principal and put him
+to outlawry for the non-compearance. Now there's four places where a person
+can be summoned: at his dwelling-house; at a place where he has resided
+forty days; at the head burgh of the shire where he ordinarily resorts; or
+lastly (if there be ground to think him forth of Scotland), <i>at the cross
+of Edinburgh, and the pier and shore of Leith, for sixty days</i>. The
+purpose of which <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106"
+id="Page_106"></a>[pg 106]</span>last provision is evident upon its face:
+being that outgoing ships may have time to carry news of the transaction,
+and the summonsing be something other than a form. Now take the case of
+Alan. He has no dwelling-house that ever I could hear of; I would be
+obliged if anyone would show me where he has lived forty days together
+since the '45; there is no shire where he resorts whether ordinarily or
+extraordinarily; if he has a domicile at all, which I misdoubt, it must be
+with his regiment in France; and if he is not yet forth of Scotland (as we
+happen to know and they happen to guess) it must be evident to the most
+dull it's what he's aiming for. Where, then, and what way should he be
+summoned? I ask it at yourself, a layman."</p>
+
+<p>"You have given the very words," said I. "Here at the cross, and at the
+pier and shore of Leith, for sixty days."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye're a sounder Scots lawyer than Prestongrange, then!" cries the
+Writer. "He has had Alan summoned once; that was on the twenty-fifth, the
+day that we first met. Once, and done with it. And where? Where, but at the
+cross of Inverary, the head burgh of the Campbells. A word in your ear, Mr.
+Balfour--they're not seeking Alan."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" I cried. "Not seeking him?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the best that I can make of it," said he. "Not wanting to find him,
+in my poor thought. They think <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107"
+id="Page_107"></a>[pg 107]</span>perhaps he might set up a fair defence,
+upon the back of which James, the man they're really after, might climb
+out. This is not a case, ye see, it's a conspiracy."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet I can tell you Prestongrange asked after Alan keenly," said I;
+"though, when I come to think of it, he was something of the easiest put
+by."</p>
+
+<p>"See that!" says he. "But there! I may be right or wrong, that's
+guesswork at the best, and let me get to my facts again. It comes to my
+ears that James and the witnesses--the witnesses, Mr. Balfour!--lay in
+close dungeons, and shackled forbye, in the military prison at Fort
+William; none allowed in to them, nor they to write. The witnesses, Mr.
+Balfour; heard ye ever the match of that? I assure ye, no old, crooked
+Stewart of the gang ever outfaced the law more impudently. It's clean in
+the two eyes of the Act of Parliament of 1700, anent wrongous imprisonment.
+No sooner did I get the news than I petitioned the Lord Justice Clerk. I
+have his word to-day. There's law for ye! here's justice!"</p>
+
+<p>He put a paper in my hand, that same mealy-mouthed, false-faced paper
+that was printed since in the pamphlet "by a bystander," for behoof (as the
+title says) of James's "poor widow and five children."</p>
+
+<p>"See," said Stewart, "he couldn't dare to refuse me access to my client,
+so he <i>recommends the commanding officer to let me in</i>.
+Recommends!--the Lord <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108"
+id="Page_108"></a>[pg 108]</span>Justice Clerk of Scotland recommends. Is
+not the purpose of such language plain? They hope the officer may be so
+dull, or so very much the reverse, as to refuse the recommendation. I would
+have to make the journey back again betwixt here and Fort William. There
+would follow a fresh delay till I got fresh authority, and they had
+disavowed the officer--military man, notoriously ignorant of the law, and
+that--I ken the cant of it. Then the journey a third time; and there we
+should be on the immediate heels of the trial before I had received my
+first instruction. Am I not right to call this a conspiracy?"</p>
+
+<p>"It will bear that colour," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And I'll go on to prove it you outright," said he. "They have the right
+to hold James in prison, yet they cannot deny me to visit him. They have no
+right to hold the witnesses; but am I to get a sight of them, that should
+be as free as the Lord Justice Clerk himself? See--read: <i>For the rest,
+refuses to give any orders to keepers of prisons who are not accused as
+having done anything contrary to the duties of their office</i>. Anything
+contrary! Sirs! And the Act of seventeen hunner! Mr. Balfour, this makes my
+heart to burst. The heather is on fire inside my wame."</p>
+
+<p>"And the plain English of that phrase," said I, "is that the witnesses
+are still to lie in prison and you are not to see them?"</p>
+
+<p>"And I am not to see them until Inverary, when the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></a>[pg 109]</span>court
+is set!" cries he, "and then to hear Prestongrange upon <i>the anxious
+responsibilities of his office and the great facilities afforded the
+defence!</i> But I'll begowk them there, Mr. David. I have a plan to waylay
+the witnesses upon the road, and see if I cannae get a little harle of
+justice out of the <i>military man notoriously ignorant of the law</i> that
+shall command the party."</p>
+
+<p>It was actually so--it was actually on the wayside near Tynedrum, and by
+the connivance of a soldier officer, that Mr. Stewart first saw the
+witnesses upon the case.</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing that would surprise me in this business," I
+remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll surprise you ere I'm done!" cries he. "Do ye see this?"--producing
+a print still wet from the press. "This is the libel: see, there's
+Prestongrange's name to the list of witnesses, and I find no word of any
+Balfour. But here is not the question. Who do ye think paid for the
+printing of this paper?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it would likely be King George," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"But it happens it was me!" he cried. "Not but it was printed by and for
+themselves, for the Grants and the Erskines, and yon thief of the black
+midnight, Symon Fraser. But could <i>I</i> win to get a copy? No! I was to
+go blindfold to my defence; I was to hear the charges for the first time in
+court alongst the jury."</p>
+
+<p>"Is not this against the law?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot say so much," he replied. "It was a <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></a>[pg 110]</span>favour so natural and so
+constantly rendered (till this nonesuch business) that the law has never
+looked to it. And now admire the hand of Providence! A stranger is in
+Fleming's printing house, spies a proof on the floor, picks it up, and
+carries it to me. Of all things, it was just this libel. Whereupon I had it
+set again--printed at the expense of the defence: <i>sumptibus moesti
+rei</i>; heard ever man the like of it?--and here it is for anybody, the
+muckle secret out--all may see it now. But how do you think I would enjoy
+this, that has the life of my kinsman on my conscience?"</p>
+
+<p>"Troth, I think you would enjoy it ill," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And now you see how it is," he concluded, "and why, when you tell me
+your evidence is to be let in, I laugh aloud in your face."</p>
+
+<p>It was now my turn. I laid before him in brief Mr. Symon's threats and
+offers, and the whole incident of the bravo, with the subsequent scene at
+Prestongrange's. Of my first talk, according to promise, I said nothing,
+nor indeed was it necessary. All the time I was talking Stewart nodded his
+head like a mechanical figure; and no sooner had my voice ceased, than he
+opened his mouth and gave me his opinion in two words, dwelling strong on
+both of them.</p>
+
+<p>"Disappear yourself," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not take you," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll carry you there," said he. "By my view of it you're to
+disappear whatever. O, that's outside <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></a>[pg 111]</span>debate. The Advocate, who
+is not without some spunks of a remainder decency, has wrung your life-safe
+out of Symon and the Duke. He has refused to put you on your trial, and
+refused to have you killed; and there is the clue to their ill words
+together, for Symon and the Duke can keep faith with neither friend nor
+enemy. Ye're not to be tried then, and ye're not to be murdered; but I'm in
+bitter error if ye're not to be kidnapped and carried away like the Lady
+Grange. Bet me what you please--there was their <i>expedient!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"You make me think," said I, and told him of the whistle and the
+red-headed retainer, Neil.</p>
+
+<p>"Wherever James More is there's one big rogue, never be deceived on
+that," said he. "His father was none so ill a man, though a kenning on the
+wrong side of the law, and no friend to my family, that I should waste my
+breath to be defending him! But as for James he's a brock and a blagyard. I
+like the appearing of this red-headed Neil as little as yourself. It looks
+uncanny: fiegh! it smells bad. It was old Lovat that managed the Lady
+Grange affair, if young Lovat is to handle yours, it'll be all in the
+family. What's James More in prison for? The same offence: abduction. His
+men have had practice in the business. He'll be to lend them to be Symon's
+instruments; and the next thing we'll be hearing, James will have made his
+peace, or else he'll have escaped; and you'll be in Benbecula or
+Applecross."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></a>[pg
+112]</span>"Ye make a strong case," I admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"And what I want," he resumed, "is that you should disappear yourself
+ere they can get their hands upon ye. Lie quiet until just before the
+trial, and spring upon them at the last of it when they'll be looking for
+you least. This is always supposing, Mr. Balfour, that your evidence is
+worth so very great a measure of both risk and fash."</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you one thing," said I. "I saw the murderer and it was not
+Alan."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, by God, my cousin's saved!" cried Stewart. "You have his life
+upon your tongue; and there's neither time, risk, nor money to be spared to
+bring you to the trial." He emptied his pockets on the floor. "Here is all
+that I have by me," he went on. "Take it, ye'll want it ere ye're through.
+Go straight down this close, there's a way out by there to the Lang Dykes,
+and by my will of it! see no more of Edinburgh till the clash is over."</p>
+
+<p>"Where am I to go, then?" I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"And I wish that I could tell ye!" says he, "but all the places that I
+could send ye to, would be just the places they would seek. No, ye must
+fend for yourself, and God be your guiding! Five days before the trial,
+September the sixteen, get word to me at the <i>King's Arms</i> in
+Stirling; and if ye've managed for yourself as long as that, I'll see that
+ye reach Inverary."</p>
+
+<p>"One thing more," said I. "Can I no see Alan?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></a>[pg
+113]</span>He seemed boggled. "Hech, I would rather you wouldnae," said he.
+"But I can never deny that Alan is extremely keen of it, and is to lie this
+night by Silvermills on purpose. If you're sure that you're not followed,
+Mr. Balfour--but make sure of that--lie in a good place and watch your road
+for a clear hour before ye risk it. It would be a dreadful business if both
+you and him was to miscarry!"</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></a>[pg
+114]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_X'></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RED-HEADED MAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was about half-past three when I came forth on the Lang Dykes. Dean
+was where I wanted to go. Since Catriona dwelled there, and the Glengyle
+Macgregors appeared almost certainly to be employed against me, it was just
+one of the few places I should have kept away from; and being a very young
+man, and beginning to be very much in love, I turned my face in that
+direction without pause. As a salve to my conscience and common sense,
+however, I took a measure of precaution. Coming over the crown of a bit of
+a rise in the road, I clapped down suddenly among the barley and lay
+waiting. After a while, a man went by that looked to be a Highlandman, but
+I had never seen him till that hour. Presently after came Neil of the red
+head. The next to go past was a miller's cart, and after that nothing but
+manifest country people. Here was enough to have turned the most foolhardy
+from his purpose, but my inclination ran too strong the other way. I argued
+it out that if Neil was on that road, it was the right road to find him in,
+leading <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></a>[pg
+115]</span>direct to his chief's daughter; as for the other Highlandman, if
+I was to be startled off by every Highlandman I saw, I would scarce reach
+anywhere. And having quite satisfied myself with this disingenuous debate,
+I made the better speed of it, and came a little after four to Mrs.
+Drummond-Ogilvy's.</p>
+
+<p>Both ladies were within the house; and upon my perceiving them together
+by the open door, I plucked off my hat and said, "Here was a lad come
+seeking saxpence," which I thought might please the dowager.</p>
+
+<p>Catriona ran out to greet me heartily, and, to my surprise, the old lady
+seemed scarce less forward than herself. I learned long afterwards that she
+had despatched a horseman by daylight to Rankeillor at the Queensferry,
+whom she knew to be the doer for Shaws, and had then in her pocket a letter
+from that good friend of mine, presenting, in the most favourable view, my
+character and prospects. But had I read it I could scarce have seen more
+clear in her designs. Maybe I was <i>countryfeed</i>; at least, I was not
+so much so as she thought; and it was plain enough, even to my homespun
+wits, that she was bent to hammer up a match between her cousin and a
+beardless boy that was something of a laird in Lothian.</p>
+
+<p>"Saxpence had better take his broth with us, Catrine," says she. "Run
+and tell the lasses."</p>
+
+<p>And for the little while we were alone was at a good deal of pains to
+flatter me; always cleverly, always <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></a>[pg 116]</span>with the appearance of a
+banter, still calling me Saxpence, but with such a turn that should rather
+uplift me in my own opinion. When Catriona returned the design became if
+possible more obvious, and she showed off the girl's advantages like a
+horse-couper with a horse. My face flamed that she should think me so
+obtuse. Now I would fancy the girl was being innocently made a show of, and
+then I could have beaten the old carline wife with a cudgel; and now, that
+perhaps these two had set their heads together to entrap me, and at that I
+sat and gloomed betwixt them like the very image of ill-will. At last the
+matchmaker had a better device, which was to leave the pair of us alone.
+When my suspicions are anyway roused it is sometimes a little the wrong
+side of easy to allay them. But though I knew what breed she was of, and
+that was a breed of thieves, I could never look in Catriona's face and
+disbelieve her.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not ask?" says she, eagerly, the same moment we were left
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but to-day I can talk with a free conscience," I replied. "I am
+lightened of my pledge, and indeed (after what has come and gone since
+morning) I would not have renewed it were it asked."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," she said. "My cousin will not be so long."</p>
+
+<p>So I told her the tale of the lieutenant from the first step to the last
+of it, making it as mirthful as I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117"
+id="Page_117"></a>[pg 117]</span>could, and, indeed, there was matter of
+mirth in that absurdity.</p>
+
+<p>"And I think you will be as little fitted for the rudas men as for the
+pretty ladies, after all!" says she, when I had done. "But what was your
+father that he could not learn you to draw the sword? It is most ungentle;
+I have not heard the match of that in anyone."</p>
+
+<p>"It is most misconvenient at least," said I; "and I think my father
+(honest man!) must have been wool-gathering to learn me Latin in the place
+of it. But you see I do the best I can, and just stand up like Lot's wife
+and let them hammer at me."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know what makes me smile?" said she. "Well, it is this. I am
+made this way, that I should have been a man child. In my own thoughts it
+is so I am always; and I go on telling myself about this thing that is to
+befall and that. Then it comes to the place of the fighting, and it comes
+over me that I am only a girl at all events, and cannot hold a sword or
+give one good blow; and then I have to twist my story round about, so that
+the fighting is to stop, and yet me have the best of it, just like you and
+the lieutenant; and I am the boy that makes the fine speeches all through,
+like Mr. David Balfour."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a bloodthirsty maid," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I know it is good to sew and spin, and to make samplers," she
+said, "but if you were to do <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118"
+id="Page_118"></a>[pg 118]</span>nothing else in the great world, I think
+you will say yourself it is a driech business; and it is not that I want to
+kill, I think. Did ever you kill anyone?"</p>
+
+<p>"That I have, as it chances. Two, no less, and me still a lad that
+should be at the college," said I. "But yet, in the look-back, I take no
+shame for it."</p>
+
+<p>"But how did you feel, then--after it?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"'Deed, I sat down and grat like a bairn," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that, too," she cried. "I feel where these tears should come
+from. And at any rate, I would not wish to kill, only to be Catherine
+Douglas that put her arm through the staples of the bolt, where it was
+broken. That is my chief hero. Would you not love to die so--for your
+king?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Troth," said I, "my affection for my king, God bless the puggy face of
+him, is under more control; and I thought I saw death so near to me this
+day already, that I am rather taken up with the notion of living."</p>
+
+<p>"Right," she said, "the right mind of a man! Only you must learn arms; I
+would not like to have a friend that cannot strike. But it will not have
+been with the sword that you killed these two?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, no," said I, "but with a pair of pistols. And a fortunate thing
+it was the men were so near-hand to me, for I am about as clever with the
+pistols as I am with the sword."</p>
+
+<p>So then she drew from me the story of our battle <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></a>[pg 119]</span>in the
+brig, which I had omitted in my first account of my affairs.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said she, "you are brave. And your friend, I admire and love
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I think any one would!" said I. "He has his faults like other
+folk; but he is brave and staunch and kind, God bless him! That will be a
+strange day when I forget Alan." And the thought of him, and that it was
+within my choice to speak with him that night, had almost overcome me.</p>
+
+<p>"And where will my head be gone that I have not told my news!" she
+cried, and spoke of a letter from her father, bearing that she might visit
+him to-morrow in the castle whither he was now transferred, and that his
+affairs were mending. "You do not like to hear it," said she. "Will you
+judge my father and not know him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am a thousand miles from judging," I replied. "And I give you my word
+I do rejoice to know your heart is lightened. If my face fell at all, as I
+suppose it must, you will allow this is rather an ill day for compositions,
+and the people in power extremely ill persons to be compounding with. I
+have Symon Fraser extremely heavy on my stomach still."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" she cried, "you will not be evening these two; and you should bear
+in mind that Prestongrange and James More, my father, are of the one
+blood."</p>
+
+<p>"I never heard tell of that," said I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></a>[pg
+120]</span>"It is rather singular how little you are acquainted with," said
+she. "One part may call themselves Grant, and one Macgregor, but they are
+still of the same clan. They are all the sons of Alpin, from whom, I think,
+our country has its name."</p>
+
+<p>"What country is that?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"My country and yours," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"This is my day for discoveries, I think," said I, "for I always thought
+the name of it was Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>"Scotland is the name of what you call Ireland," she replied. "But the
+old ancient true name of this place that we have our foot-soles on, and
+that our bones are made of, will be Alban. It was Alban they called it when
+our forefathers will be fighting for it against Rome and Alexander; and it
+is called so still in your own tongue that you forget."</p>
+
+<p>"Troth," said I, "and that I never learned!" For I lacked heart to take
+her up about the Macedonian.</p>
+
+<p>"But your fathers and mothers talked it, one generation with another,"
+said she. "And it was sung about the cradles before you or me were ever
+dreamed of; and your name remembers it still. Ah, if you could talk that
+language you would find me another girl. The heart speaks in that
+tongue."</p>
+
+<p>I had a meal with the two ladies, all very good, served in fine old
+plate, and the wine excellent, for it seems that Mrs. Ogilvy was rich. Our
+talk, too, was pleasant enough; but as soon as I saw the sun decline <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></a>[pg 121]</span>sharply
+and the shadows to run out long, I rose to take my leave. For my mind was
+now made up to say farewell to Alan; and it was needful I should see the
+trysting wood, and reconnoitre it, by daylight. Catriona came with me as
+far as to the garden gate.</p>
+
+<p>"It is long till I see you now?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It is beyond my judging," I replied. "It will be long, it may be
+never."</p>
+
+<p>"It may be so," said she. "And you are sorry?"</p>
+
+<p>I bowed my head, looking upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"So am I, at all events," said she. "I have seen you but a small time,
+but I put you very high. You are true, you are brave; in time I think you
+will be more of a man yet. I will be proud to hear of that. If you should
+speed worse, if it will come to fall as we are afraid--O well! think you
+have the one friend. Long after you are dead and me an old wife, I will be
+telling the bairns about David Balfour, and my tears running. I will be
+telling how we parted, and what I said to you, and did to you. <i>God go
+with you and guide you, prays your little friend</i>: so I said--I will be
+telling them--and here is what I did."</p>
+
+<p>She took up my hand and kissed it. This so surprised my spirits that I
+cried out like one hurt. The colour came strong in her face, and she looked
+at me and nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"O yes, Mr. David," said she, "that is what I think of you. The heart
+goes with the lips."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></a>[pg
+122]</span>I could read in her face high spirit, and a chivalry like a
+brave child's; not anything besides. She kissed my hand, as she had kissed
+Prince Charlie's, with a higher passion than the common kind of clay has
+any sense of. Nothing before had taught me how deep I was her lover, nor
+how far I had yet to climb to make her think of me in such a character. Yet
+I could tell myself I had advanced some way, and that her heart had beat
+and her blood flowed at thoughts of me.</p>
+
+<p>After that honour she had done me I could offer no more trivial
+civility. It was even hard for me to speak; a certain lifting in her voice
+had knocked directly at the door of my own tears.</p>
+
+<p>"I praise God for your kindness, dear," said I. "Farewell, my little
+friend!" giving her that name which she had given to herself; with which I
+bowed and left her.</p>
+
+<p>My way was down the glen of the Leith River, towards Stockbridge and
+Silvermills. A path led in the foot of it, the water bickered and sang in
+the midst; the sunbeams overhead struck out of the west among long shadows
+and (as the valley turned) made like a new scene and a new world of it at
+every corner. With Catriona behind and Alan before me, I was like one
+lifted up. The place besides, and the hour, and the talking of the water,
+infinitely pleased me; and I lingered in my steps and looked before and
+behind me as I went. This was the cause, under providence, that <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></a>[pg 123]</span>I spied
+a little in my rear a red head among some bushes.</p>
+
+<p>Anger sprang in my heart, and I turned straight about and walked at a
+stiff pace to where I came from. The path lay close by the bushes where I
+had remarked the head. The cover came to the wayside, and as I passed I was
+all strung up to meet and to resist an onfall. No such thing befell, I went
+by unmeddled with; and at that fear increased upon me. It was still day
+indeed, but the place exceeding solitary. If my haunters had let slip that
+fair occasion I could but judge they aimed at something more than David
+Balfour. The lives of Alan and James weighed upon my spirit with the weight
+of two grown bullocks.</p>
+
+<p>Catriona was yet in the garden walking by herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "you see me back again."</p>
+
+<p>"With a changed face," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I carry two men's lives besides my own," said I. "It would be a sin and
+a shame not to walk carefully. I was doubtful whether I did right to come
+here. I would like it ill, if it was by that means we were brought to
+harm."</p>
+
+<p>"I could tell you one that would be liking it less, and will like little
+enough to hear you talking at this very same time," she cried. "What have I
+done, at all events?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, you! you are not alone," I replied. "But since I went off I have
+been dogged again, and I can give you <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></a>[pg 124]</span>the name of him that
+follows me. It is Neil, son of Duncan, your man or your father's."</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure you are mistaken there," she said, with a white face. "Neil
+is in Edinburgh on errands from my father."</p>
+
+<p>"It is what I fear," said I, "the last of it. But for his being in
+Edinburgh I think I can show you another of that. For sure you have some
+signal, a signal of need, such as would bring him to your help, if he was
+anywhere within the reach of ears and legs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, how will you know that?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>"By means of a magical talisman God gave to me when I was born, and the
+name they call it by is Common-sense," said I. "Oblige me so far as to make
+your signal, and I will show you the red head of Neil."</p>
+
+<p>No doubt but I spoke bitter and sharp. My heart was bitter. I blamed
+myself and the girl and hated both of us: her for the vile crew that she
+was come of, myself for my wanton folly to have stuck my head in such a
+byke of wasps.</p>
+
+<p>Catriona set her fingers to her lips and whistled once, with an
+exceeding clear, strong, mounting note, as full as a ploughman's. A while
+we stood silent; and I was about to ask her to repeat the same, when I
+heard the sound of some one bursting through the bushes below on the
+braeside. I pointed in that direction with a smile, and presently Neil
+leaped into the garden. His eyes burned, and he had a black <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></a>[pg 125]</span>knife
+(as they call it on the Highland side) naked in his hand; but, seeing me
+beside his mistress, stood like a man struck.</p>
+
+<p>"He has come to your call," said I; "judge how near he was to Edinburgh,
+or what was the nature of your father's errands. Ask himself. If I am to
+lose my life, or the lives of those that hang by me, through the means of
+your clan, let me go where I have to go with my eyes open."</p>
+
+<p>She addressed him tremulously in the Gaelic. Remembering Alan's anxious
+civility in that particular, I could have laughed out loud for bitterness;
+here, sure, in the midst of these suspicions, was the hour she should have
+stuck by English.</p>
+
+<p>Twice or thrice they spoke together, and I could make out that Neil (for
+all his obsequiousness) was an angry man.</p>
+
+<p>Then she turned to me. "He swears it is not," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "do you believe the man yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>She made a gesture like wringing the hands.</p>
+
+<p>"How will I can know?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"But I must find some means to know," said I. "I cannot continue to go
+dovering round in the black night with two men's lives at my girdle!
+Catriona, try to put yourself in my place, as I vow to God I try hard to
+put myself in yours. This is no kind of talk that <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></a>[pg 126]</span>should ever have fallen
+between me and you; no kind of talk; my heart is sick with it. See, keep
+him here till two of the morning, and I care not. Try him with that."</p>
+
+<p>They spoke together once more in the Gaelic.</p>
+
+<p>"He says he has James More my father's errand," said she. She was whiter
+than ever, and her voice faltered as she said it.</p>
+
+<p>"It is pretty plain now," said I, "and may God forgive the wicked!"</p>
+
+<p>She said never anything to that, but continued gazing at me with the
+same white face.</p>
+
+<p>"This is a fine business," said I again. "Am I to fall, then, and those
+two along with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, what am I to do?" she cried. "Could I go against my father's orders,
+and him in prison, in the danger of his life?"</p>
+
+<p>"But perhaps we go too fast," said I. "This may be a lie too. He may
+have no right orders; all may be contrived by Symon, and your father
+knowing nothing."</p>
+
+<p>She burst out weeping between the pair of us; and my heart smote me
+hard, for I thought this girl was in a dreadful situation.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," said I, "keep him but the one hour; and I'll chance it, and say
+God bless you."</p>
+
+<p>She put out her hand to me. "I will be needing one good word," she
+sobbed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></a>[pg
+127]</span>"The full hour, then?" said I, keeping her hand in mine. "Three
+lives of it, my lass!"</p>
+
+<p>"The full hour!" she said, and cried aloud on her Redeemer to forgive
+her.</p>
+
+<p>I thought it no fit place for me, and fled.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></a>[pg
+128]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XI'></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS</h3>
+
+
+<p>I lost no time, but down through the valley and by Stockbrig and
+Silvermills as hard as I could stave. It was Alan's tryst to lie every
+night between twelve and two "in a bit scrog of wood by east of Silvermills
+and by south the south mill-lade." This I found easy enough, where it grew
+on a steep brae, with the mill-lade flowing swift and deep along the foot
+of it; and here I began to walk slower and to reflect more reasonably on my
+employment. I saw I had made but a fool's bargain with Catriona. It was not
+to be supposed that Neil was sent alone upon his errand, but perhaps he was
+the only man belonging to James More; in which case, I should have done all
+I could to hang Catriona's father, and nothing the least material to help
+myself. To tell the truth, I fancied neither one of these ideas. Suppose,
+by holding back Neil, the girl should have helped to hang her father, I
+thought she would never forgive herself this side of time. And suppose
+there were others pursuing me that moment, what kind of a gift was I come
+bringing to Alan? and how would I like that?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></a>[pg
+129]</span>I was up with the west end of that wood when these two
+considerations struck me like a cudgel. My feet stopped of themselves and
+my heart along with them. "What wild game is this that I have been
+playing?" thought I; and turned instantly upon my heels to go
+elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>This brought my face to Silvermills; the path came past the village with
+a crook, but all plainly visible; and, Highland or Lowland, there was
+nobody stirring. Here was my advantage, here was just such a conjuncture as
+Stewart had counselled me to profit by, and I ran by the side of the
+mill-lade, fetched about beyond the east corner of the wood, threaded
+through the midst of it, and returned to the west selvage, whence I could
+again command the path, and yet be myself unseen. Again it was all empty,
+and my heart began to rise.</p>
+
+<p>For more than an hour I sat close in the border of the trees, and no
+hare or eagle could have kept a more particular watch. When that hour began
+the sun was already set, but the sky still all golden and the daylight
+clear; before the hour was done it had fallen to be half mirk, the images
+and distances of things were mingled, and observation began to be
+difficult. All that time not a foot of man had come east from Silvermills,
+and the few that had gone west were honest countryfolk and their wives upon
+the road to bed. If I were tracked by the most cunning spies in Europe, I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></a>[pg
+130]</span>judged it was beyond the course of nature they could have any
+jealousy of where I was; and going a little further home into the wood I
+lay down to wait for Alan.</p>
+
+<p>The strain of my attention had been great, for I had watched not the
+path only, but every bush and field within my vision. That was now at an
+end. The moon, which was in her first quarter, glinted a little in the
+wood; all round there was a stillness of the country; and as I lay there on
+my back, the next three or four hours, I had a fine occasion to review my
+conduct.</p>
+
+<p>Two things became plain to me first: that I had had no right to go that
+day to Dean, and (having gone there) had now no right to be lying where I
+was. This (where Alan was to come) was just the one wood in all broad
+Scotland that was, by every proper feeling, closed against me; I admitted
+that, and yet stayed on, wondering at myself. I thought of the measure with
+which I had meted to Catriona that same night; how I had prated of the two
+lives I carried, and had thus forced her to enjeopardy her father's; and
+how I was here exposing them again, it seemed in wantonness. A good
+conscience is eight parts of courage. No sooner had I lost conceit of my
+behaviour, than I seemed to stand disarmed amidst a throng of terrors. Of a
+sudden I sat up. How if I went now to Prestongrange, caught him (as I still
+easily might) before he slept, and made a full submission? Who could blame
+me? Not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></a>[pg
+131]</span>Stewart the writer; I had but to say that I was followed,
+despaired of getting clear, and so gave in. Not Catriona: here, too, I had
+my answer ready; that I could not bear she should expose her father. So, in
+a moment, I could lay all these troubles by, which were after all and truly
+none of mine; swim clear of the Appin murder; get forth out of handstroke
+of all the Stewarts and Campbells, all the whigs and tories, in the land;
+and live thenceforth to my own mind, and be able to enjoy and to improve my
+fortunes, and devote some hours of my youth to courting Catriona, which
+would be surely a more suitable occupation than to hide and run and be
+followed like a hunted thief, and begin over again the dreadful miseries of
+my escape with Alan.</p>
+
+<p>At first I thought no shame of this capitulation; I was only amazed I
+had not thought upon the thing and done it earlier; and began to inquire
+into the causes of the change. These I traced to my lowness of spirits,
+that back to my late recklessness, and that again to the common, old,
+public, disconsidered sin of self-indulgence. Instantly the text came in my
+head, "<i>How can Satan cast out Satan?</i>" What? (I thought) I had, by
+self-indulgence, and the following of pleasant paths, and the lure of a
+young maid, cast myself wholly out of conceit with my own character, and
+jeopardised the lives of James and Alan? And I was to seek the way out by
+the same road as I had <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132"
+id="Page_132"></a>[pg 132]</span>entered in? No; the hurt that had been
+caused by self-indulgence must be cured by self-denial; the flesh I had
+pampered must be crucified. I looked about me for that course which I least
+liked to follow: this was to leave the wood without waiting to see Alan,
+and go forth again alone, in the dark and in the midst of my perplexed and
+dangerous fortunes.</p>
+
+<p>I have been the more careful to narrate this passage of my reflections,
+because I think it is of some utility, and may serve as an example to young
+men. But there is reason (they say) in planting kale, and even in ethic and
+religion, room for common sense. It was already close on Alan's hour, and
+the moon was down. If I left (as I could not very decently whistle to my
+spies to follow me) they might miss me in the dark and tack themselves to
+Alan by mistake. If I stayed, I could at the least of it set my friend upon
+his guard which might prove his mere salvation. I had adventured other
+peoples' safety in a course of self-indulgence; to have endangered them
+again, and now on a mere design of penance, would have been scarce
+rational. Accordingly, I had scarce risen from my place ere I sat down
+again, but already in a different frame of spirits, and equally marvelling
+at my past weakness and rejoicing in my present composure.</p>
+
+<p>Presently after came a crackling in the thicket. Putting my mouth near
+down to the ground, I whistled a note or two of Alan's air; an answer came,
+in the like <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></a>[pg
+133]</span>guarded tone, and soon we had thralled together in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this you at last, Davie?" he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"Just myself," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"God, man, but I've been wearying to see ye!" says he. "I've had the
+longest kind of a time. A' day, I've had my dwelling into the inside of a
+stack of hay, where I couldnae see the nebs of my ten fingers; and then two
+hours of it waiting here for you, and you never coming! Dod, and ye're none
+too soon the way it is, with me to sail the morn! The morn? what am I
+saying?--the day, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, Alan, man, the day, sure enough," said I. "It's past twelve now,
+surely, and ye sail the day. This'll be a long road you have before
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have a long crack of it first," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, indeed, and I have a good deal it will be telling you to hear,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>And I told him what behooved, making rather a jumble of it, but clear
+enough when done. He heard me out with very few questions, laughing here
+and there like a man delighted: and the sound of his laughing (above all
+there, in the dark, where neither one of us could see the other) was
+extraordinary friendly to my heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, Davie, ye're a queer character," says he, when I had done: "a queer
+bitch after a', and I have no mind of meeting with the like of ye. As for
+your <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></a>[pg
+134]</span>story, Prestongrange is a Whig like yoursel', so I'll say the
+less of him; and, dod! I believe he was the best friend ye had, if ye could
+only trust him. But Symon Fraser and James More are my ain kind of cattle,
+and I'll give them the name that they deserve. The muckle black de'il was
+father to the Frasers, a'body kens that; and as for the Gregara, I never
+could abye the reek of them since I could stotter on two feet. I bloodied
+the nose of one, I mind, when I was still so wambly on my legs that I
+cowped upon the top of him. A proud man was my father that day, God rest
+him! and I think he had the cause. I'll never can deny but what Robin was
+something of a piper," he added; "but as for James More, the de'il guide
+him for me!"</p>
+
+<p>"One thing we have to consider," said I. "Was Charles Stewart right or
+wrong? Is it only me they're after, or the pair of us?"</p>
+
+<p>"And what's your ain opinion, you that's a man of so much experience?"
+said he.</p>
+
+<p>"It passes me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And me too," says Alan. "Do ye think this lass would keep her word to
+ye?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I do that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there's nae telling," said he. "And anyway, that's over and done:
+he'll be joined to the rest of them lang syne."</p>
+
+<p>"How many would ye think there would be of them?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></a>[pg
+135]</span>"That depends," said Alan. "If it was only you, they would
+likely send two-three lively, brisk young birkies, and if they thought that
+I was to appear in the employ, I daresay ten or twelve," said he.</p>
+
+<p>It was no use, I gave a little crack of laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"And I think your own two eyes will have seen me drive that number, or
+the double of it, nearer hand!" cries he.</p>
+
+<p>"It matters the less," said I, "because I am well rid of them for this
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"Nae doubt that's your opinion," said he; "but I wouldnae be the least
+surprised if they were hunkering this wood. Ye see, David man, they'll be
+Hieland folk. There'll be some Frasers, I'm thinking, and some of the
+Gregara; and I would never deny but what the both of them, and the Gregara
+in especial, were clever experienced persons. A man kens little till he's
+driven a spreagh of neat cattle (say) ten miles through a throng lowland
+country and the black soldiers maybe at his tail. It's there that I learned
+a great part of my penetration. And ye need nae tell me: it's better than
+war; which is the next best, however, though generally rather a bauchle of
+a business. Now the Gregara have had grand practice."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt that's a branch of education that was left out with me," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"And I can see the marks of it upon ye constantly," said Alan. "But
+that's the strange thing about you <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136"
+id="Page_136"></a>[pg 136]</span>folk of the college learning: ye're
+ignorant, and ye cannae see 't. Wae's me for my Greek and Hebrew; but, man,
+I ken that I dinnae ken them--there's the differ of it. Now, here's you. Ye
+lie on your wame a bittie in the bield of this wood, and ye tell me that
+ye've cuist off these Frasers and Macgregors. Why! <i>Because I couldnae
+see them</i>, says you. Ye blockhead, that's their livelihood."</p>
+
+<p>"Take the worst of it," said I, "and what are we to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking of that same," said he. "We might twine. It wouldnae be
+greatly to my taste; and forbye that, I see reasons against it. First, it's
+now unco dark, and it's just humanly possible we might give them the clean
+slip. If we keep together, we make but the ae line of it; if we gang
+separate, we make twae of them: the more likelihood to stave in upon some
+of these gentry of yours. And then, second, if they keep the track of us,
+it may come to a fecht for it yet, Davie; and then, I'll confess I would be
+blythe to have you at my oxter, and I think you would be none the worse of
+having me at yours. So, by my way of it, we should creep out of this wood
+no further gone than just the inside of next minute, and hold away east for
+Gillane, where I'm to find my ship. It'll be like old days while it lasts,
+Davie; and (come the time) we'll have to think what you should be doing.
+I'm wae to leave ye here, wanting me."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></a>[pg
+137]</span>"Have with ye, then!" says I. "Do ye gang back where you were
+stopping."</p>
+
+<p>"De'il a fear!" said Alan. "They were good folks to me, but I think they
+would be a good deal disappointed if they saw my bonny face again. For (the
+way times go) I amnae just what ye could call a Walcome Guest. Which makes
+me the keener for your company, Mr. David Balfour of the Shaws, and set ye
+up! For, leave aside twa cracks here in the wood with Charlie Stewart, I
+have scarce said black or white since the day we parted at
+Corstorphine."</p>
+
+<p>With which he rose from his place, and we began to move quietly eastward
+through the wood.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></a>[pg
+138]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XII'></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>It was likely between one and two; the moon (as I have said) was down; a
+strongish wind, carrying a heavy wrack of cloud, had set in suddenly from
+the west; and we began our movement in as black a night as ever a fugitive
+or a murderer wanted. The whiteness of the path guided us into the sleeping
+town of Broughton, thence through Picardy, and beside my old acquaintance
+the gibbet of the two thieves. A little beyond we made a useful beacon,
+which was a light in an upper window of Lochend. Steering by this, but a
+good deal at random, and with some trampling of the harvest, and stumbling
+and falling down upon the banks, we made our way across country, and won
+forth at last upon the linky, boggy muirland that they call the Figgate
+Whins. Here, under a bush of whin, we lay down the remainder of that night
+and slumbered.</p>
+
+<p>The day called us about five. A beautiful morning it was, the high
+westerly wind still blowing strong, but the clouds all blown away to
+Europe. Alan was already sitting up and smiling to himself. It was my first
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></a>[pg
+139]</span>sight of my friend since we were parted, and I looked upon him
+with enjoyment. He had still the same big great-coat on his back; but (what
+was new) he had now a pair of knitted boot-hose drawn above the knee.
+Doubtless these were intended for disguise; but, as the day promised to be
+warm, he made a most unseasonable figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Davie," said he, "is this no a bonny morning? Here is a day that
+looks the way that a day ought to. This is a great change of it from the
+belly of my haystack; and while you were there sottering and sleeping I
+have done a thing that maybe I do over seldom."</p>
+
+<p>"And what was that?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"O, just said my prayers," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"And where are my gentry, as ye call them?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Gude kens," says he; "and the short and the long of it is that we must
+take our chance of them. Up with your foot-soles, Davie! Forth, Fortune,
+once again of it! And a bonny walk we are like to have."</p>
+
+<p>So we went east by the beach of the sea, towards where the salt-pans
+were smoking in by the Esk mouth. No doubt there was a by-ordinary bonny
+blink of morning sun on Arthur's Seat and the green Pentlands; and the
+pleasantness of the day appeared to set Alan among nettles.</p>
+
+<p>"I feel like a gomeral," says he, "to be leaving Scotland <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></a>[pg 140]</span>on a
+day like this. It sticks in my head; I would maybe like it better to stay
+here and hing."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but ye wouldnae, Alan," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"No but what France is a good place too," he explained; "but it's some
+way no the same. It's brawer, I believe, but it's no Scotland. I like it
+fine when I'm there, man; yet I kind of weary for Scots divots and the
+Scots peat-reek."</p>
+
+<p>"If that's all you have to complain of, Alan, it's no such great
+affair," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And it sets me ill to be complaining, whatever," said he, "and me but
+new out of yon de'il's haystack."</p>
+
+<p>"And so you were unco' weary of your haystack?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Weary's nae word for it," said he. "I'm not just precisely a man that's
+easily cast down; but I do better with caller air and the lift above my
+head. I'm like the auld Black Douglas (wasnae't?) that likit better to hear
+the laverock sing than the mouse cheep. And yon place, ye see, Davie--whilk
+was a very suitable place to hide in, as I'm free to own--was pit mirk from
+dawn to gloaming. There were days (or nights, for how would I tell one from
+other?) that seemed to me as long as a long winter."</p>
+
+<p>"How did you know the hour to bide your tryst?" I asked.</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour004"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour004.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: THE GOODMAN BROUGHT ME MY MEAT AND A DROP
+BRANDY, AND A CANDLE-DOWP TO EAT IT BY, ABOUT ELEEVEN, SAID HE" src="images/balfour004sm.jpg" height="562" width="382" /></a>
+<br />THE GOODMAN BROUGHT ME MY MEAT AND A DROP
+BRANDY, AND A CANDLE-DOWP TO EAT IT BY, ABOUT ELEEVEN, SAID HE
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+<p>"The goodman brought me my meat and a drop <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></a>[pg 141]</span>brandy, and a candle-dowp
+to eat it by, about eleeven," said he. "So, when I had swallowed a bit, it
+would be time to be getting to the wood. There I lay and wearied for ye
+sore, Davie," says he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "and guessed when
+the two hours would be about by--unless Charlie Stewart would come and tell
+me on his watch--and then back to the dooms haystack. Na, it was a driech
+employ, and praise the Lord that I have warstled through with it!"</p>
+
+<p>"What did you do with yourself?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Faith," said he, "the best I could! Whiles I played at the
+knucklebones. I'm an extraordinar good hand at the knucklebones, but it's a
+poor piece of business playing with naebody to admire ye. And whiles I
+would make songs."</p>
+
+<p>"What were they about?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"O, about the deer and the heather," says he, "and about the ancient old
+chiefs that are all by with it long syne, and just about what songs are
+about in general. And then whiles I would make believe I had a set of pipes
+and I was playing. I played some grand springs, and I thought I played them
+awful bonny; I vow whiles that I could hear the squeal of them! But the
+great affair is that it's done with."</p>
+
+<p>With that he carried me again to my adventures, which he heard all over
+again with more particularity, and extraordinary approval, swearing at
+intervals that I was "a queer character of a callant."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></a>[pg
+142]</span>"So ye were frich'ened of Sym Fraser?" he asked once.</p>
+
+<p>"In troth was I!" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"So would I have been, Davie," said he. "And that is indeed a dreidful
+man. But it is only proper to give the de'il his due; and I can tell you he
+is a most respectable person on the field of war."</p>
+
+<p>"Is he so brave?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Brave!" said he. "He is as brave as my steel sword."</p>
+
+<p>The story of my duel set him beside himself.</p>
+
+<p>"To think of that!" he cried. "I showed ye the trick in Corrynakiegh
+too. And three times--three times disarmed! It's a disgrace upon my
+character that learned ye! Here, stand up, out with your airn; ye shall
+walk no step beyond this place upon the road till ye can do yoursel' and me
+mair credit."</p>
+
+<p>"Alan," said I, "this is midsummer madness. Here is no time for fencing
+lessons."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannae well say no to that," he admitted. "But three times, man! And
+you standing there like a straw bogle and rinning to fetch your ain sword
+like a doggie with a pocket-napkin! David, this man Duncansby must be
+something altogether by-ordinar! He maun be extraordinar skilly. If I had
+the time, I would gang straight back and try a turn at him mysel'. The man
+must be a provost."</p>
+
+<p>"You silly fellow," said I, "you forget it was just me."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></a>[pg
+143]</span>"Na," said he, "but three times!"</p>
+
+<p>"When ye ken yourself that I am fair incompetent," I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I never heard tell the equal of it," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I promise you the one thing, Alan," said I. "The next time that we
+forgather, I'll be better learned. You shall not continue to bear the
+disgrace of a friend that cannot strike."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, the next time!" says he. "And when will that be, I would like to
+ken?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Alan, I have had some thoughts of that, too," said I; "and my
+plan is this. It's my opinion to be called an advocate."</p>
+
+<p>"That's but a weary trade, Davie," says Alan, "and rather a blagyard one
+forby. Ye would be better in a king's coat than that."</p>
+
+<p>"And no doubt that would be the way to have us meet," cried I. "But as
+you'll be in King Lewie's coat, and I'll be in King Geordie's, we'll have a
+dainty meeting of it."</p>
+
+<p>"There's some sense in that," he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"An advocate, then, it'll have to be," I continued, "and I think it a
+more suitable trade for a gentleman that was <i>three times</i> disarmed.
+But the beauty of the thing is this: that one of the best colleges for that
+kind of learning--and the one where my kinsman, Pilrig, made his
+studies--is the college of Leyden in Holland. Now, what say you, Alan?
+Could not a cadet of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144"
+id="Page_144"></a>[pg 144]</span><i>Royal Ecossais</i> get a furlough, slip
+over the marches, and call in upon a Leyden student!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I would think he could!" cried he. "Ye see, I stand well in
+with my colonel, Count Drummond-Melfort; and, what's mair to the purpose, I
+have a cousin of mine lieutenant-colonel in a regiment of the Scots-Dutch.
+Naething could be mair proper than what I would get a leave to see
+Lieutenant-Colonel Stewart of Halkett's. And Lord Melfort, who is a very
+scienteefic kind of a man, and writes books like C&aelig;sar, would be
+doubtless very pleased to have the advantage of my observes."</p>
+
+<p>"Is Lord Melfort an author, then?" I asked, for much as Alan thought of
+soldiers, I thought more of the gentry that write books.</p>
+
+<p>"The very same, Davie," said he. "One would think a colonel would have
+something better to attend to. But what can I say that make songs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then," said I, "it only remains you should give me an address to
+write you at in France; and as soon as I am got to Leyden I will send you
+mine."</p>
+
+<p>"The best will be to write me in the care of my chieftain," said he,
+"Charles Stewart, of Ardsheil, Esquire, at the town of Melons, in the Isle
+of France. It might take long, or it might take short, but it would aye get
+to my hands at the last of it."</p>
+
+<p>We had a haddock to our breakfast in Musselburgh, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></a>[pg 145]</span>where
+it amused me vastly to hear Alan. His great-coat and boot-hose were
+extremely remarkable this warm morning, and perhaps some hint of an
+explanation had been wise; but Alan went into that matter like a business,
+or I should rather say, like a diversion. He engaged the goodwife of the
+house with some compliments upon the rizzoring of our haddocks; and the
+whole of the rest of our stay held her in talk about a cold he had taken on
+his stomach, gravely relating all manner of symptoms and sufferings, and
+hearing with a vast show of interest all the old wives' remedies she could
+supply him with in return.</p>
+
+<p>We left Musselburgh before the first ninepenny coach was due from
+Edinburgh, for (as Alan said) that was a rencounter we might very well
+avoid. The wind, although still high, was very mild, the sun shone strong,
+and Alan began to suffer in proportion. From Prestonpans he had me aside to
+the field of Gladsmuir, where he exerted himself a great deal more than
+needful to describe the stages of the battle. Thence, at his old round
+pace, we travelled to Cockenzie. Though they were building herring-busses
+there at Mrs. Cadell's, it seemed a desert-like, back-going town, about
+half full of ruined houses; but the ale-house was clean, and Alan, who was
+now in a glowing heat, must indulge himself with a bottle of ale, and carry
+on to the new luckie with the old story of the cold upon his stomach, only
+now the symptoms were all different.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></a>[pg
+146]</span>I sat listening; and it came in my mind that I had scarce ever
+heard him address three serious words to any woman, but he was always
+drolling and fleering and making a private mock of them, and yet brought to
+that business a remarkable degree of energy and interest. Something to this
+effect I remarked to him, when the good wife (as chanced) was called
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"What do ye want?" says he. "A man should aye put his best foot forrit
+with the womenkind; he should aye give them a bit of a story to divert
+them, the poor lambs! It's what ye should learn to attend to, David; ye
+should get the principles, it's like a trade. Now, if this had been a young
+lassie, or onyways bonnie, she would never have heard tell of my stomach,
+Davie. But aince they're too old to be seeking joes, they a' set up to be
+apotecaries. Why? What do I ken? They'll be just the way God made them, I
+suppose. But I think a man would be a gomeral that didnae give his
+attention to the same."</p>
+
+<p>And here, the luckie coming back, he turned from me as if with
+impatience to renew their former conversation. The lady had branched some
+while before from Alan's stomach to the case of a goodbrother of her own in
+Aberlady, whose last sickness and demise she was describing at
+extraordinary length. Sometimes it was merely dull, sometimes both dull and
+awful, for she talked with unction. The upshot was that I fell in a deep
+muse, looking forth of the window on the road, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></a>[pg 147]</span>and scarce marking what I
+saw. Presently had any been looking they might have seen me to start.</p>
+
+<p>"We pit a fomentation to his feet," the goodwife was saying, "and a het
+stane to his wame, and we gied him hyssop and water of pennyroyal, and
+fine, clean balsam of sulphur for the hoast...."</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," says I, cutting very quietly in, "there's a friend of mine gone
+by the house."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that e'en sae?" replies Alan, as though it were a thing of
+small-account. And then, "Ye were saying, mem?" says he; and the wearyful
+wife went on.</p>
+
+<p>Presently, however, he paid her with a half-crown piece, and she must go
+forth after the change.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it him with the red head?" asked Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye have it," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"What did I tell you in the wood?" he cried. "And yet it's strange he
+should be here too! Was he his lane?"</p>
+
+<p>"His lee-lane for what I could see," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Did he gang by?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Straight by," said I, "and looked neither to the right nor left."</p>
+
+<p>"And that's queerer yet," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind, Davie, that
+we should be stirring. But where to?--deil hae't! This is like old days
+fairly," cries he.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one big differ, though," said I, "that now we have money in
+our pockets."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148"></a>[pg
+148]</span>"And another big differ, Mr. Balfour," says he, "that now we
+have dogs at our tail. They're on the scent; they're in full cry, David.
+It's a bad business and be damned to it." And he sat thinking hard with a
+look of his that I knew well.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm saying, Luckie," says he, when the goodwife returned, "have ye a
+back road out of this change house?"</p>
+
+<p>She told him there was and where it led to.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, sir," says he to me, "I think that will be the shortest road for
+us. And here's good-bye to ye, my braw woman; and I'll no forget thon of
+the cinnamon water."</p>
+
+<p>We went out by way of the woman's kale yard, and up a lane among fields.
+Alan looked sharply to all sides, and seeing we were in a little hollow
+place of the country, out of view of men, sat down.</p>
+
+<p>"Now for a council of war, Davie," said he. "But first of all, a bit
+lesson to ye. Suppose that I had been like you, what would yon old wife
+have minded of the pair of us? Just that we had gone out by the back gate.
+And what does she mind now? A fine, canty, friendly, cracky man, that
+suffered with the stomach, poor body! and was real ta'en up about the
+goodbrother. O man, David, try and learn to have some kind of
+intelligence!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll try, Alan," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And now for him of the red head," says he; "was he gaun fast or
+slow?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149"></a>[pg
+149]</span>"Betwixt and between," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"No kind of a hurry about the man?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Never a sign of it," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Nhm!" said Alan, "it looks queer. We saw nothing of them this morning
+on the Whins; he's passed us by, he doesnae seem to be looking, and yet
+here he is on our road! Dod, Davie, I begin to take a notion. I think it's
+no you they're seeking, I think it's me; and I think they ken fine where
+they're gaun."</p>
+
+<p>"They ken?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I think Andie Scougal's sold me--him or his mate wha kent some part of
+the affair--or else Chairlie's clerk callant, which would be a pity too,"
+says Alan; "and if you askit me for just my inward private conviction, I
+think there'll be heads cracked on Gillane sands."</p>
+
+<p>"Alan," I cried, "if you're at all right there'll be folk there and to
+spare. It'll be small service to crack heads."</p>
+
+<p>"It would aye be a satisfaction though," says Alan. "But bide a bit,
+bide a bit; I'm thinking--and thanks to this bonny westland wind, I believe
+I've still a chance of it. It's this way, Davie. I'm no trysted with this
+man Scougal till the gloaming comes. <i>But</i>," says he, "<i>if I can get
+a bit of a wind out of the west I'll be there long or that</i>," he says,
+"<i>and lie-to for ye behind the Isle of Fidra</i>. Now if your gentry kens
+the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150"></a>[pg
+150]</span>place, they ken the time forbye. Do ye see me coming, Davie?
+Thanks to Johnnie Cope and other red-coat gomerals, I should ken this
+country like the back of my hand; and if ye're ready for another bit run
+with Alan Breck, we'll can cast back inshore, and come down to the seaside
+again by Dirleton. If the ship's there, we'll try and get on board of her.
+If she's no there, I'll just have to get back to my weary haystack. But
+either way of it, I think we will leave your gentry whistling on their
+thumbs."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe there's some chance in it," said I. "Have on with ye,
+Alan!"</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151"></a>[pg
+151]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIII'></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>GILLANE SANDS</h3>
+
+
+<p>I did not profit by Alan's pilotage as he had done by his marchings
+under General Cope; for I can scarce tell what way we went. It is my excuse
+that we travelled exceeding fast. Some part we ran, some trotted, and the
+rest walked at a vengeance of a pace. Twice, while we were at top speed, we
+ran against country-folk; but though we plumped into the first from round a
+corner, Alan was as ready as a loaded musket.</p>
+
+<p>"Hae ye seen my horse?" he gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"Na, man, I haenae seen nae horse the day," replied the countryman.</p>
+
+<p>And Alan spared the time to explain to him that we were travelling "ride
+and tie"; that our charger had escaped, and it was feared he had gone home
+to Linton. Not only that, but he expended some breath (of which he had not
+very much left) to curse his own misfortune and my stupidity which was said
+to be its cause.</p>
+
+<p>"Them that cannae tell the truth," he observed to myself as we went on
+again, "should be aye mindfu' to leave an honest, handy lee behind them. If
+folk <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152"></a>[pg
+152]</span>dinnae ken what ye're doing, Davie, they're terrible taken up
+with it; but if they think they ken, they care nae mair for it than what I
+do for pease porridge."</p>
+
+<p>As we had first made inland, so our road came in the end to lie very
+near due north; the old Kirk of Aberlady for a landmark on the left; on the
+right, the top of the Berwick Law; and it was thus we struck the shore
+again, not far from Dirleton. From North Berwick west to Gillane Ness there
+runs a string of four small islets, Craiglieth, the Lamb, Fidra, and
+Eyebrough, notable by their diversity of size and shape. Fidra is the most
+particular, being a strange grey islet of two humps, made the more
+conspicuous by a piece of ruin; and I mind that (as we drew closer to it)
+by some door or window of these ruins the sea peeped through like a man's
+eye. Under the lee of Fidra there is a good anchorage in westerly winds,
+and there, from a far way off, we could see the <i>Thistle</i> riding.</p>
+
+<p>The shore in face of these islets is altogether waste. Here is no
+dwelling of man, and scarce any passage, or at most of vagabond children
+running at their play. Gillane is a small place on the far side of the
+Ness, the folk of Dirleton go to their business in the inland fields, and
+those of North Berwick straight to the sea-fishing from their haven; so
+that few parts of the coast are lonelier. But I mind, as we crawled upon
+our bellies into that multiplicity of heights and hollows, keeping a bright
+eye upon all sides, and our <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153"
+id="Page_153"></a>[pg 153]</span>hearts hammering at our ribs, there was
+such a shining of the sun and the sea, such a stir of the wind in the bent
+grass, and such a bustle of down-popping rabbits and up-flying gulls, that
+the desert seemed to me like a place alive. No doubt it was in all ways
+well chosen for a secret embarcation, if the secret had been kept; and even
+now that it was out, and the place watched, we were able to creep
+unperceived to the front of the sandhills, where they look down immediately
+on the beach and sea.</p>
+
+<p>But here Alan came to a full stop.</p>
+
+<p>"Davie," said he, "this is a kittle passage! As long as we lie here
+we're safe; but I'm nane sae muckle nearer to my ship or the coast of
+France. And as soon as we stand up and signal the brig, it's another
+matter. For where will your gentry be, think ye?"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe they're no come yet," said I. "And even if they are, there's one
+clear matter in our favour. They'll be all arranged to take us, that's
+true. But they'll have arranged for our coming from the east, and here we
+are upon their west."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," says Alan, "I wish we were in some force, and this was a battle,
+we would have bonnily out-manoeuvred them! But it isnae, Davit; and the way
+it is, is a wee thing less inspiring to Alan Breck. I swither, Davie."</p>
+
+<p>"Time flies, Alan," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I ken that," said Alan. "I ken naething else, as <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154"></a>[pg 154]</span>the
+French folk say. But this is a dreidful case of heids or tails. O! if I
+could but ken where your gentry were!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alan," said I, "this is no like you. It's got to be now or never."</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"This is no me, quo' he,"<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>sang Alan, with a queer face betwixt shame and drollery.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"Neither you nor me, quo' he, neither you nor me,<br />
+Wow, na, Johnnie man! neither you nor me."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And then of a sudden he stood straight up where he was, and with a
+handkerchief flying in his right hand, marched down upon the beach. I stood
+up myself, but lingered behind him, scanning the sandhills to the east. His
+appearance was at first unremarked: Scougal not expecting him so early, and
+<i>my gentry</i> watching on the other side. Then they awoke on board the
+<i>Thistle</i>, and it seemed they had all in readiness, for there was
+scarce a second's bustle on the deck before we saw a skiff put round her
+stern and begin to pull lively for the coast. Almost at the same moment of
+time, and perhaps half a mile away towards Gillane Ness, the figure of a
+man appeared for a blink upon a sandhill, waving with his arms; and though
+he was gone again in the same flash, the gulls in that part continued a
+little longer to fly wild.</p>
+
+<p>Alan had not seen this, looking straight to seaward at the ship and
+skiff.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155"></a>[pg
+155]</span>"It maun be as it will!" said he, when I had told him. "Weel may
+yon boatie row, or my craig'll have to thole a raxing."</p>
+
+<p>That part of the beach was long and flat, and excellent walking when the
+tide was down; a little cressy burn flowed over it in one place to the sea;
+and the sandhills ran along the head of it like the rampart of a town. No
+eye of ours could spy what was passing behind there in the bents, no hurry
+of ours could mend the speed of the boat's coming: time stood still with us
+through that uncanny period of waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one thing I would like to ken," says Alan. "I would like fine
+to ken these gentry's orders. We're worth four hunner pound the pair of us:
+how if they took the guns to us, Davie? They would get a bonny shot from
+the top of that lang sandy bank."</p>
+
+<p>"Morally impossible," said I. "The point is that they can have no guns.
+This thing has been gone about too secret; pistols they may have, but never
+guns."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe ye'll be in the right," says Alan. "For all which I am
+wearying a good deal for yon boat."</p>
+
+<p>And he snapped his fingers and whistled to it like a dog.</p>
+
+<p>It was now perhaps a third of the way in, and we ourselves already hard
+on the margin of the sea, so that the soft sand rose over my shoes. There
+was no more to do whatever but to wait, to look as much as we were <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156"></a>[pg 156]</span>able at
+the creeping nearer of the boat, and as little as we could manage at the
+long impenetrable front of the sandhills, over which the gulls twinkled and
+behind which our enemies were doubtless marshalling.</p>
+
+<p>"This is a fine, bright, caller place to get shot in," says Alan,
+suddenly; "and, man, I wish that I had your courage!"</p>
+
+<p>"Alan!" I cried, "what kind of talk is this of it? You're just made of
+courage; it's the character of the man, as I could prove myself if there
+was nobody else."</p>
+
+<p>"And you would be the more mistaken," said he. "What makes the differ
+with me is just my great penetration and knowledge of affairs. But for
+auld, cauld, dour, deidly courage, I am not fit to hold a candle to
+yourself. Look at us two here upon the sands. Here am I, fair hotching to
+be off; here's you (for all that I ken) in two minds of it whether you'll
+no stop. Do you think that I could do that, or would? No me! Firstly,
+because I havenae got the courage and wouldnae daur; and secondly, because
+I am a man of so much penetration and would see ye damned first."</p>
+
+<p>"It's there ye're coming, is it?" I cried. "Ah, man Alan, you can wile
+your old wives, but you never can wile me."</p>
+
+<p>Remembrance of my temptation in the wood made me strong as iron.</p>
+
+<p>"I have a tryst to keep," I continued. "I am <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_157" id="Page_157"></a>[pg 157]</span>trysted with your cousin
+Charlie; I have passed my word."</p>
+
+<p>"Braw trysts that you'll can keep," said Alan. "Ye'll just mistryst
+aince and for a' with the gentry in the bents. And what for?" he went on
+with an extreme threatening gravity. "Just tell me that, my mannie! Are ye
+to be speerited away like Lady Grange? Are they to drive a dirk in your
+inside and bury ye in the bents? Or is it to be the other way, and are they
+to bring ye in with James? Are they folk to be trustit? Would ye stick your
+head in the mouth of Sim Fraser and the ither Whigs?" he added with
+extraordinary bitterness.</p>
+
+<p>"Alan," cried I, "they're all rogues and liars, and I'm with ye there.
+The more reason there should be one decent man in such a land of thieves!
+My word is passed, and I'll stick to it. I said long syne to your kinswoman
+that I would stumble at no risk. Do ye mind of that?--the night Red Colin
+fell, it was. No more I will, then. Here I stop. Prestongrange promised me
+my life; if he's to be mansworn, here I'll have to die."</p>
+
+<p>"Aweel, aweel," said Alan.</p>
+
+<p>All this time we had seen or heard no more of our pursuers. In truth we
+had caught them unawares; their whole party (as I was to learn afterwards)
+had not yet reached the scene; what there was of them was spread among the
+bents towards Gillane. It was quite an affair to call them in and bring
+them over, and the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158"
+id="Page_158"></a>[pg 158]</span>boat was making speed. They were besides
+but cowardly fellows: a mere leash of Highland cattle thieves, of several
+clans, no gentleman there to be the captain: and the more they looked at
+Alan and me upon the beach, the less (I must suppose) they liked the looks
+of us.</p>
+
+<p>Whoever had betrayed Alan it was not the captain: he was in the skiff
+himself, steering and stirring up his oarsmen, like a man with his heart in
+his employ. Already he was near in, and the boat scouring--already Alan's
+face had flamed crimson with the excitement of his deliverance, when our
+friends in the bents, either in despair to see their prey escape them or
+with some hope of scaring Andie, raised suddenly a shrill cry of several
+voices.</p>
+
+<p>This sound, arising from what appeared to be a quite deserted coast, was
+really very daunting, and the men in the boat held water instantly.</p>
+
+<p>"What's this of it?" sings out the captain, for he was come within an
+easy hail.</p>
+
+<p>"Freens o' mine," says Alan, and began immediately to wade forth in the
+shallow water towards the boat. "Davie," he said, pausing, "Davie, are ye
+no coming? I am swier to leave ye."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a hair of me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He stood part of a second where he was to his knees in the salt water,
+hesitating.</p>
+
+<p>"He that will to Cupar, maun to Cupar," said he, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></a>[pg 159]</span>and
+swashing in deeper than his waist, was hauled into the skiff, which was
+immediately directed for the ship.</p>
+
+<p>I stood where he had left me, with my hands behind my back; Alan sat
+with his head turned watching me; and the boat drew smoothly away. Of a
+sudden I came the nearest hand to shedding tears, and seemed to myself the
+most deserted, solitary lad in Scotland. With that I turned my back upon
+the sea and faced the sand hills. There was no sight or sound of man; the
+sun shone on the wet sand and the dry, the wind blew in the bents, the
+gulls made a dreary piping. As I passed higher up the beach, the sand-lice
+were hopping nimbly about the stranded tangles. The devil any other sight
+or sound in that unchancy place. And yet I knew there were folk there,
+observing me, upon some secret purpose. They were no soldiers, or they
+would have fallen on and taken us ere now; doubtless they were some common
+rogues hired for my undoing, perhaps to kidnap, perhaps to murder me
+outright. From the position of those engaged, the first was the more
+likely; from what I knew of their character and ardency in this business, I
+thought the second very possible; and the blood ran cold about my
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>I had a mad idea to loosen my sword in the scabbard; for though I was
+very unfit to stand up like a gentleman blade to blade, I thought I could
+do some scathe in a random combat. But I perceived in time the folly of
+resistance. This was no doubt the joint "expedient" <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></a>[pg 160]</span>on
+which Prestongrange and Fraser were agreed. The first, I was very sure, had
+done something to secure my life; the second was pretty likely to have
+slipped in some contrary hints into the ears of Neil and his companions;
+and if I were to show bare steel I might play straight into the hands of my
+worst enemy and seal my own doom.</p>
+
+<p>These thoughts brought me to the head of the beach. I cast a look
+behind, the boat was nearing the brig, and Alan flew his handkerchief for a
+farewell, which I replied to with the waving of my hand. But Alan himself
+was shrunk to a small thing in my view, alongside of this pass that lay in
+front of me. I set my hat hard on my head, clenched my teeth, and went
+right before me up the face of the sand-wreath. It made a hard climb, being
+steep, and the sand like water underfoot. But I caught hold at last by the
+long bent grass on the brae-top, and pulled myself to a good footing. The
+same moment men stirred and stood up here and there, six or seven of them,
+ragged-like knaves, each with a dagger in his hand. The fair truth is, I
+shut my eyes and prayed. When I opened them again, the rogues were crept
+the least thing nearer without speech or hurry. Every eye was upon mine,
+which struck me with a strange sensation of their brightness, and of the
+fear with which they continued to approach me. I held out my hands empty:
+whereupon one asked, with a strong Highland brogue, if I surrendered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></a>[pg
+161]</span>"Under protest," said I, "if ye ken what that means, which I
+misdoubt."</p>
+
+<p>At that word, they came all in upon me like a flight of birds upon a
+carrion, seized me, took my sword, and all the money from my pockets, bound
+me hand and foot with some strong line, and cast me on a tussock of bent.
+There they sat about their captive in a part of a circle and gazed upon him
+silently like something dangerous, perhaps a lion or a tiger on the spring.
+Presently this attention was relaxed. They drew nearer together, fell to
+speech in the Gaelic, and very cynically divided my property before my
+eyes. It was my diversion in this time that I could watch from my place the
+progress of my friend's escape. I saw the boat come to the brig and be
+hoisted in, the sails fill, and the ship pass out seaward behind the isles
+and by North Berwick.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of two hours or so, more and more ragged Highlandmen kept
+collecting, Neil among the first, until the party must have numbered near a
+score. With each new arrival there was a fresh bout of talk, that sounded
+like complaints and explanations; but I observed one thing, none of those
+that came late had any share in the division of my spoils. The last
+discussion was very violent and eager, so that once I thought they would
+have quarrelled; on the heels of which their company parted, the bulk of
+them returning westward in a troop, and only three, Neil and two others,
+remaining sentries on the prisoner.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></a>[pg
+162]</span>"I could name one who would be very ill pleased with your day's
+work, Neil Duncanson," said I, when the rest had moved away.</p>
+
+<p>He assured me in answer I should be tenderly used, for he knew he was
+"acquent wi' the leddy."</p>
+
+<p>This was all our talk, nor did any other son of man appear upon that
+portion of the coast until the sun had gone down among the Highland
+mountains, and the gloaming was beginning to grow dark. At which hour I was
+aware of a long, lean, bony-like Lothian man of a very swarthy countenance,
+that came towards us among the bents on a farm horse.</p>
+
+<p>"Lads," cried he, "hae ye a paper like this?" and held up one in his
+hand. Neil produced a second, which the new comer studied through a pair of
+horn spectacles, and saying all was right and we were the folk he was
+seeking, immediately dismounted. I was then set in his place, my feet tied
+under the horse's belly, and we set forth under the guidance of the
+Lowlander. His path must have been very well chosen, for we met but one
+pair--a pair of lovers--the whole way, and these, perhaps taking us to be
+free-traders, fled on our approach. We were at one time close at the foot
+of Berwick Law on the south side; at another, as we passed over some open
+hills, I spied the lights of a clachan and the old tower of a church among
+some trees not far off, but too far to cry for help, if I had dreamed of
+it. At last we came again within sound of <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></a>[pg 163]</span>the sea. There was
+moonlight, though not much; and by this I could see the three huge towers
+and broken battlements of Tantallon, that old chief place of the Red
+Douglases. The horse was picketed in the bottom of the ditch to graze, and
+I was led within, and forth into the court, and thence into a tumble-down
+stone hall. Here my conductors built a brisk fire in the midst of the
+pavement, for there was a chill in the night. My hands were loosed, I was
+set by the wall in the inner end, and (the Lowlander having produced
+provisions) I was given oatmeal bread and a pitcher of French brandy. This
+done, I was left once more alone with my three Highlandmen. They sat close
+by the fire drinking and talking; the wind blew in by the breaches, cast
+about the smoke and flames, and sang in the tops of the towers; I could
+hear the sea under the cliffs, and my mind being reassured as to my life,
+and my body and spirits wearied with the day's employment, I turned upon
+one side and slumbered.</p>
+
+<p>I had no means of guessing at what hour I was wakened, only the moon was
+down and the fire low. My feet were now loosed, and I was carried through
+the ruins and down the cliff-side by a precipitous path to where I found a
+fisher's boat in a haven of the rocks. This I was had on board of, and we
+began to put forth from the shore in a fine starlight.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></a>[pg
+164]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIV'></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BASS</h3>
+
+
+<p>I had no thought where they were taking me; only looked here and there
+for the appearance of a ship; and there ran the while in my head a word of
+Ransome's--the <i>twenty-pounders</i>. If I were to be exposed a second
+time to that same former danger of the plantations, I judged it must turn
+ill with me; there was no second Alan, and no second shipwreck and spare
+yard to be expected now; and I saw myself hoe tobacco under the whip's
+lash. The thought chilled me; the air was sharp upon the water, the
+stretchers of the boat drenched with a cold dew; and I shivered in my place
+beside the steersman. This was the dark man whom I have called hitherto the
+Lowlander; his name was Dale, ordinarily called Black Andie. Feeling the
+thrill of my shiver, he very kindly handed me a rough jacket full of
+fish-scales, with which I was glad to cover myself.</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you for this kindness," said I, "and will make so free as to
+repay it with a warning. You take a high responsibility in this affair. You
+are not like <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></a>[pg
+165]</span>these ignorant, barbarous Highlanders, but know what the law is
+and the risks of those that break it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am no just exactly what ye would ca' an extremist for the law," says
+he, "at the best of times; but in this business I act with a good
+warranty."</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do with me?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Nae harm," said he, "nae harm ava'. Ye'll hae strong freens, I'm
+thinking. Ye'll be richt eneuch yet."</p>
+
+<p>There began to fall a greyness on the face of the sea; little dabs of
+pink and like coals of slow fire came in the east; and at the same time the
+geese awakened, and began crying about the top of the Bass. It is just the
+one crag of rock, as everybody knows, but great enough to carve a city
+from. The sea was extremely little, but there went a hollow plowter round
+the base of it. With the growing of the dawn I could see it clearer and
+clearer; the straight crags painted with sea-birds' droppings like a
+morning frost, the sloping top of it green with grass, the clan of white
+geese that cried about the sides, and the black, broken buildings of the
+prison sitting close on the sea's edge.</p>
+
+<p>At the sight the truth came in upon me in a clap.</p>
+
+<p>"It's there you're taking me!" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Just to the Bass, mannie," said he: "whaur the auld sants were afore
+ye, and I misdoubt if ye have come so fairly by your preeson."</p>
+
+<p>"But none dwells there now," I cried; "the place is long a ruin."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></a>[pg
+166]</span>"It'll be the mair pleisand a change for the solan geese, then,"
+quoth Andie dryly.</p>
+
+<p>The day coming slowly brighter I observed on the bilge, among the big
+stones with which fisherfolk ballast their boats, several kegs and baskets,
+and a provision of fuel. All these were discharged upon the crag. Andie,
+myself, and my three Highlanders (I call them mine, although it was the
+other way about), landed along with them. The sun was not yet up when the
+boat moved away again, the noise of the oars on the thole-pins echoing from
+the cliffs, and left us in our singular reclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Andie Dale was the Prefect (as I would jocularly call him) of the Bass,
+being at once the shepherd and the gamekeeper of that small and rich
+estate. He had to mind the dozen or so of sheep that fed and fattened on
+the grass of the sloping part of it, like beasts grazing the roof of a
+cathedral. He had charge besides of the solan geese that roosted in the
+crags; and from these an extraordinary income is derived. The young are
+dainty eating, as much as two shillings a-piece being a common price, and
+paid willingly by epicures; even the grown birds are valuable for their oil
+and feathers; and a part of the minister's stipend of North Berwick is paid
+to this day in solan geese, which makes it (in some folks' eyes) a parish
+to be coveted. To perform these several businesses, as well as to protect
+the geese from poachers, Andie had frequent occasion <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></a>[pg 167]</span>to
+sleep and pass days together on the crag; and we found the man at home
+there like a farmer in his steading. Bidding us all shoulder some of the
+packages, a matter in which I made haste to bear a hand, he led us in by a
+locked gate, which was the only admission to the island, and through the
+ruins of the fortress, to the governor's house. There we saw, by the ashes
+in the chimney and a standing bed-place in one corner, that he made his
+usual occupation.</p>
+
+<p>This bed he now offered me to use, saying he supposed I would set up to
+be gentry.</p>
+
+<p>"My gentrice has nothing to do with where I lie," said I. "I bless God I
+have lain hard ere now, and can do the same again with thankfulness. While
+I am here, Mr. Andie, if that be your name, I will do my part and take my
+place beside the rest of you; and I ask you on the other hand to spare me
+your mockery, which I own I like ill."</p>
+
+<p>He grumbled a little at this speech, but seemed upon reflection to
+approve it. Indeed, he was a long-headed, sensible man, and a good Whig and
+Presbyterian; read daily in a pocket Bible, and was both able and eager to
+converse seriously on religion, leaning more than a little towards the
+Cameronian extremes. His morals were of a more doubtful colour. I found he
+was deep in the free trade, and used the ruins of Tantallon for a magazine
+of smuggled merchandise. As for a gauger, I do not believe he valued the
+life of one at half-a-farthing. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168"
+id="Page_168"></a>[pg 168]</span>But that part of the coast of Lothian is
+to this day as wild a place, and the commons there as rough a crew as any
+in Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>One incident of my imprisonment is made memorable by a consequence it
+had long after. There was a warship at this time stationed in the Firth,
+the <i>Seahorse</i>, Captain Palliser. It chanced she was cruising in the
+month of September, plying between Fife and Lothian, and sounding for sunk
+dangers. Early one fine morning she was seen about two miles to east of us,
+where she lowered a boat, and seemed to examine the Wildfire Rocks and
+Satan's Bush, famous dangers of that coast. And presently, after having got
+her boat again, she came before the wind and was headed directly for the
+Bass. This was very troublesome to Andie and the Highlanders; the whole
+business of my sequestration was designed for privacy, and here, with a
+navy captain perhaps blundering ashore, it looked to become public enough,
+if it were nothing worse. I was in a minority of one, I am no Alan to fall
+upon so many, and I was far from sure that a warship was the least likely
+to improve my condition. All which considered, I gave Andie my parole of
+good behaviour and obedience, and was had briskly to the summit of the
+rock, where we all lay down, at the cliff's edge, in different places of
+observation and concealment. The <i>Seahorse</i> came straight on till I
+thought she would have struck, and we (looking giddily down) could see the
+ship's company at their <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169"
+id="Page_169"></a>[pg 169]</span>quarters and hear the leadsman singing at
+the lead. Then she suddenly wore and let fly a volley of I know not how
+many great guns. The rock was shaken with the thunder of the sound, the
+smoke flowed over our heads, and the geese rose in number beyond
+computation or belief. To hear their screaming and to see the twinkling of
+their wings, made a most inimitable curiosity: and I suppose it was after
+this somewhat childish pleasure that Captain Palliser had come so near the
+Bass. He was to pay dear for it in time. During his approach I had the
+opportunity to make a remark upon the rigging of that ship by which I ever
+after knew it miles away; and this was a means (under Providence) of my
+averting from a friend a great calamity, and inflicting on Captain Palliser
+himself a sensible disappointment.</p>
+
+<p>All the time of my stay on the rock we lived well. We had small ale and
+brandy, and oatmeal of which we made our porridge night and morning. At
+times a boat came from the Castleton and brought us a quarter of mutton,
+for the sheep upon the rock we must not touch, these being specially fed to
+market. The geese were unfortunately out of season, and we let them be. We
+fished ourselves, and yet more often made the geese to fish for us:
+observing one when he had made a capture and scaring him from his prey ere
+he had swallowed it.</p>
+
+<p>The strange nature of this place, and the curiosities with which it
+abounded, held me busy and amused. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170"
+id="Page_170"></a>[pg 170]</span>Escape being impossible, I was allowed my
+entire liberty, and continually explored the surface of the isle wherever
+it might support the foot of man. The old garden of the prison was still to
+be observed, with flowers and pot-herbs running wild, and some ripe
+cherries on a bush. A little lower stood a chapel or a hermit's cell; who
+built or dwelt in it, none may know, and the thought of its age made a
+ground of many meditations. The prison too, where I now bivouacked with
+Highland cattle thieves, was a place full of history, both human and
+divine. I thought it strange so many saints and martyrs should have gone by
+there so recently, and left not so much as a leaf out of their Bibles, or a
+name carved upon the wall, while the rough soldier lads that mounted guard
+upon the battlements had filled the neighbourhood with their
+mementoes--broken tobacco-pipes for the most part, and that in a surprising
+plenty, but also metal buttons from their coats. There were times when I
+thought I could have heard the pious sound of psalms out of the martyrs'
+dungeons, and seen the soldiers tramp the ramparts with their glinting
+pipes, and the dawn rising behind them out of the North Sea.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt it was a good deal Andie and his tales that put these fancies
+in my head. He was extraordinary well acquainted with the story of the rock
+in all particulars, down to the names of private soldiers, his father
+having served there in that same capacity. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></a>[pg 171]</span>He was gifted besides with
+a natural genius for narration, so that the people seemed to speak and the
+things to be done before your face. This gift of his and my assiduity to
+listen brought us the more close together. I could not honestly deny but
+what I liked him; I soon saw that he liked me; and indeed, from the first I
+had set myself out to capture his good will. An odd circumstance (to be
+told presently) effected this beyond my expectation; but even in early days
+we made a friendly pair to be a prisoner and his gaoler.</p>
+
+<p>I should trifle with my conscience if I pretended my stay upon the Bass
+was wholly disagreeable. It seemed to me a safe place, as though I was
+escaped there out of my troubles. No harm was to be offered me; a material
+impossibility, rock and the deep sea, prevented me from fresh attempts; I
+felt I had my life safe and my honour safe, and there were times when I
+allowed myself to gloat on them like stolen waters. At other times my
+thoughts were very different. I recalled how strong I had expressed myself
+both to Rankeillor and to Stewart; I reflected that my captivity upon the
+Bass, in view of a great part of the coasts of Fife and Lothian, was a
+thing I should be thought more likely to have invented than endured; and in
+the eyes of these two gentlemen, at least, I must pass for a boaster and a
+coward. Now I would take this lightly enough; tell myself that so <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></a>[pg 172]</span>long as
+I stood well with Catriona Drummond, the opinion of the rest of man was but
+moonshine and spilled water; and thence pass off into those meditations of
+a lover which are so delightful to himself and must always appear so
+surprisingly idle to a reader. But anon the fear would take me otherwise; I
+would be shaken with a perfect panic of self-esteem, and these supposed
+hard judgments appear an injustice impossible to be supported. With that
+another train of thought would be presented, and I had scarce begun to be
+concerned about men's judgments of myself, than I was haunted with the
+remembrance of James Stewart in his dungeon and the lamentations of his
+wife. Then, indeed, passion began to work in me; I could not forgive myself
+to sit there idle; it seemed (if I were a man at all) that I could fly or
+swim out of my place of safety; and it was in such humours and to amuse my
+self-reproaches that I would set the more particularly to win the good side
+of Andie Dale.</p>
+
+<p>At last, when we two were alone on the summit of the rock on a bright
+morning, I put in some hint about a bribe. He looked at me, cast back his
+head, and laughed out loud.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, you're funny, Mr. Dale," said I, "but perhaps if you glance an eye
+upon that paper you may change your note."</p>
+
+<p>The stupid Highlanders had taken from me at the time of my seizure
+nothing but hard money, and the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173"
+id="Page_173"></a>[pg 173]</span>paper I now showed Andie was an
+acknowledgment from the British Linen Company for a considerable sum.</p>
+
+<p>He read it. "Troth, and ye're nane sae ill aff," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought that would maybe vary your opinions," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Hout!" said he. "It shaws me ye can bribe; but I'm no to be
+bribit."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll see about that yet a while," says I. "And first, I'll show you
+that I know what I am talking. You have orders to detain me here till
+Thursday, 21st September."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye're no a'thegether wrong either," says Andie. "I'm to let ye gang,
+bar orders contrair, on Saturday, the 23rd."</p>
+
+<p>I could not but feel there was something extremely insidious in this
+arrangement. That I was to reappear precisely in time to be too late would
+cast the more discredit on my tale, if I were minded to tell one; and this
+screwed me to fighting point.</p>
+
+<p>"Now then, Andie, you that kens the world, listen to me, and think while
+ye listen," said I. "I know there are great folks in the business, and I
+make no doubt you have their names to go upon. I have seen some of them
+myself since this affair began, and said my say into their faces too. But
+what kind of a crime would this be that I had committed? or what kind of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></a>[pg
+174]</span>process is this that I am fallen under? To be apprehended by
+some ragged John-Hielandmen on August 30th, carried to a rickle of old
+stones that is now neither fort nor gaol (whatever it once was) but just
+the gamekeeper's lodge of the Bass Rock, and set free again, September 23d,
+as secretly as I was first arrested--does that sound like law to you? or
+does it sound like justice? or does it not sound honestly like a piece of
+some low dirty intrigue, of which the very folk that meddle with it are
+ashamed?"</p>
+
+<p>"I canna gainsay ye, Shaws. It looks unco underhand," says Andie. "And
+werenae the folk guid sound Whigs and true-blue Presbyterians I would hae
+seen them ayont Jordan and Jeroozlem or I would have set hand to it."</p>
+
+<p>"The Master of Lovat'll be a braw Whig," says I, "and a grand
+Presbyterian."</p>
+
+<p>"I ken naething by him," said he. "I hae nae trokings wi' Lovats."</p>
+
+<p>"No, it'll be Prestongrange that you'll be dealing with," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but I'll no tell ye that," said Andie.</p>
+
+<p>"Little need when I ken," was my retort.</p>
+
+<p>"There's just the ae thing ye can be fairly sure of, Shaws," says Andie.
+"And that is that (try as ye please) I'm no dealing wi' yoursel'; nor yet I
+amnae goin' to," he added.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Andie, I see I'll have to be speak out plain <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></a>[pg 175]</span>with
+you," I replied. And I told him so much as I thought needful of the
+facts.</p>
+
+<p>He heard me out with serious interest, and when I had done, seemed to
+consider a little with himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Shaws," said he at last, "I deal with the naked hand. It's a queer
+tale, and no vary creditable, the way you tell it; and I'm far frae minting
+that is other than the way that ye believe it. As for yoursel', ye seems to
+me rather a dacent-like young man. But me, that's aulder and mair
+judeecious, see perhaps a wee bit further forrit in the job than what ye
+can dae. And here is the maitter clear and plain to ye. There'll be nae
+skaith to yoursel' if I keep ye here; far frae that, I think ye'll be a
+hantle better by it. There'll be nae skaith to the kintry--just ae mair
+Hielantman hangit--Gude kens, a guid riddance! On the ither hand it would
+be considerable skaith to me if I would let you free. Sae, speakin' as a
+guid Whig, an honest freen' to you, and an anxious freen' to my ainsel',
+the plain fact is that I think ye'll just have to bide here wi' Andie an'
+the solans."</p>
+
+<p>"Andie," said I, laying my hand upon his knee, "this Hielantman's
+innocent."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, it's a peety about that," said he. "But ye see in this warld, the
+way God made it, we cannae just get a'thing that we want."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></a>[pg
+176]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XV'></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK</h3>
+
+
+<p>I have yet said little of the Highlanders. They were all three of the
+followers of James More, which bound the accusation very tight about their
+master's neck. All understood a word or two of English; but Neil was the
+only one who judged he had enough of it for general converse, in which
+(when once he got embarked) his company was often tempted to the contrary
+opinion. They were tractable, simple creatures; showed much more courtesy
+than might have been expected from their raggedness and their uncouth
+appearance, and fell spontaneously to be like three servants for Andie and
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>Dwelling in that isolated place, in the old falling ruins of a prison,
+and among endless strange sounds of the sea and the sea-birds, I thought I
+perceived in them early the effects of superstitious fear. When there was
+nothing doing they would either lie and sleep, for which their appetite
+appeared insatiable, or Neil would entertain the others with stories which
+seemed always of a terrifying strain. If neither of these delights were
+within reach--if perhaps two were <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177"
+id="Page_177"></a>[pg 177]</span>sleeping and the third could find no means
+to follow their example--I would see him sit and listen and look about him
+in a progression of uneasiness, starting, his face blenching, his hands
+clutched, a man strung like a bow. The nature of these fears I had never an
+occasion to find out, but the sight of them was catching, and the nature of
+the place that we were in favourable to alarms. I can find no word for it
+in the English, but Andie had an expression for it in the Scots from which
+he never varied.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," he would say, "<i>it's an unco place, the Bass</i>." It is so I
+always think of it. It was an unco place by night, unco by day; and these
+were unco sounds, of the calling of the solans, and the plash of the sea
+and the rock echoes, that hung continually in our ears. It was chiefly so
+in moderate weather. When the waves were anyway great they roared about the
+rock like thunder and the drums of armies, dreadful but merry to hear; and
+it was in the calm days that a man could daunt himself with listening--not
+a Highlandman only, as I several times experimented on myself, so many
+still, hollow noises haunted and reverberated in the porches of the
+rock.</p>
+
+<p>This brings me to a story I heard, and a scene I took part in, which
+quite changed our terms of living, and had a great effect on my departure.
+It chanced one night I fell in a muse beside the fire and (that little air
+of Alan's coming back to my memory) began <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></a>[pg 178]</span>to whistle. A hand was
+laid upon my arm, and the voice of Neil bade me to stop, for it was not
+"canny musics."</p>
+
+<p>"Not canny?" I asked. "How can that be?"</p>
+
+<p>"Na," said he; "it will be made by a bogle and her wanting ta heid upon
+his body."<sup><a href="#fn13" name="rfn13">[13]</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "there can be no bogles here, Neil; for it's not likely
+they would fash themselves to frighten solan geese."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay?" says Andie, "is that what ye think of it? But I'll can tell ye
+there's been waur nor bogles here."</p>
+
+<p>"What's waur than bogles, Andie?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Warlocks," said he. "Or a warlock at the least of it. And that's a
+queer tale, too," he added. "And if ye would like, I'll tell it ye."</p>
+
+<p>To be sure we were all of the one mind, and even the Highlander that had
+the least English of the three set himself to listen with all his
+might.</p>
+
+
+<h4>THE TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK</h4>
+
+<p>My faither, Tam Dale, peace to his banes, was a wild, sploring lad in
+his young days, wi' little wisdom and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></a>[pg 179]</span>less grace. He was fond of
+a lass and fond of a glass, and fond of a ran-dan; but I could never hear
+tell that he was muckle use for honest employment. Frae ae thing to
+anither, he listed at last for a sodger and was in the garrison of this
+fort, which was the first way that ony of the Dales cam to set foot upon
+the Bass. Sorrow upon that service! The governor brewed his ain ale; it
+seems it was the warst conceivable. The rock was proveesioned frae the
+shore with vivers, the thing was ill-guided, and there were whiles when
+they but to fish and shoot solans for their diet. To crown a', thir was the
+Days of the Persecution. The perishin' cauld chalmers were all occupeed wi'
+sants and martyrs, the saut of the yearth, of which it wasnae worthy. And
+though Tam Dale carried a firelock there, a single sodger, and liked a lass
+and a glass, as I was sayin', the mind of the man was mair just than set
+with his position. He had glints of the glory of the kirk; there were
+whiles when his dander rase to see the Lord's sants misguided, and shame
+covered him that he should be haulding a can'le (or carrying a firelock) in
+so black a business. There were nights of it when he was here on sentry,
+the place a' wheesht, the frosts o' winter maybe riving in the wa's, and he
+would hear are o' the prisoners strike up a psalm, and the rest join in,
+and the blessed sounds rising from the different chalmers--or dungeons, I
+would raither say--so that this auld craig in the sea was like a pairt of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></a>[pg
+180]</span>Heev'n. Black shame was on his saul; his sins hove up before him
+muckle as the Bass, and above a', that chief sin, that he should have a
+hand in hagging and hashing at Christ's Kirk. But the truth is that he
+resisted the spirit. Day cam, there were the rousing companions, and his
+guid resolves depairtit.</p>
+
+<p>In thir days, dwalled upon the Bass a man of God, Peden the Prophet was
+his name. Ye'll have heard tell of Prophet Peden. There was never the wale
+of him sinsyne, and it's a question wi' mony if there ever was his like
+afore. He was wild 's a peat-hag, fearsome to look at, fearsome to hear,
+his face like the day of judgment. The voice of him was like a solan's and
+dinnle'd in folks' lugs, and the words of him like coals of fire.</p>
+
+<p>Now there was a lass on the rock, and I think she had little to do, for
+it was nae place far dacent weemen; but it seems she was bonny, and her and
+Tam Dale were very well agreed. It befell that Peden was in the gairden his
+lane at the praying when Tam and the lass cam by; and what should the
+lassie do but mock with laughter at the sant's devotions? He rose and
+lookit at the twa o' them, and Tam's knees knoitered thegether at the look
+of him. But whan he spak, it was mair in sorrow than in anger. "Poor thing,
+poor thing!" says he, and it was the lass he lookit at. "I hear you skirl
+and laugh," he says, "but the Lord has a deid shot prepared for you, and at
+that surprising judgment <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181"
+id="Page_181"></a>[pg 181]</span>ye shall skirl but the ae time!" Shortly
+thereafter she was daundering on the craigs wi' twa-three sodgers, and it
+was a blawy day. There cam a gowst of wind, claught her by the coats, and
+awa' wi' her bag and baggage. And it was remarked by the sodgers that she
+gied but the ae skirl.</p>
+
+<p>Nae doubt this judgment had some weicht upon Tam Dale; but it passed
+again and him none the better. Ae day he was flyting wi' anither
+sodger-lad. "Deil hae me!" quo' Tam, for he was a profane swearer. And
+there was Peden glowering at him, gash an' waefu'; Peden wi' his lang
+chafts an' luntin' een, the maud happed about his kist, and the hand of him
+held out wi' the black nails upon the finger-nebs--for he had nae care of
+the body. "Fy, fy, poor man!" cries he, "the poor fool man! <i>Deil hae
+me</i>, quo' he; an' I see the deil at his oxter." The conviction of guilt
+and grace cam in on Tam like the deep sea; he flang doun the pike that was
+in his hands--"I will nae mair lift arms against the cause o' Christ!" says
+he, and was as gude's word. There was a sair fyke in the beginning, but the
+governor, seeing him resolved, gied him his dischairge, and he went and
+dwallt and merried in North Berwick, and had aye a gude name with honest
+folk frae that day on.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the year seeventeen hunner and sax that the Bass cam in the
+hands o' the Da'rymples, and there was twa men soucht the chairge of it.
+Baith were weel <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182"
+id="Page_182"></a>[pg 182]</span>qualified, for they had baith been sodgers
+in the garrison, and kent the gate to handle solans, and the seasons and
+values of them. Forby that they were baith--or they baith seemed--earnest
+professors and men of comely conversation. The first of them was just Tam
+Dale, my faither. The second was ane Lapraik, whom the folk ca'd Tod
+Lapraik maistly, but whether for his name or his nature I could never hear
+tell. Weel, Tam gaed to see Lapraik upon this business, and took me, that
+was a toddlin' laddie, by the hand. Tod had his dwallin' in the lang loan
+benorth the kirkyaird. It's a dark uncanny loan, forby that the kirk has
+aye had an ill name since the days o' James the Saxt and the deevil's
+cantrips played therein when the Queen was on the seas; and as for Tod's
+house, it was in the mirkest end, and was little liked by some that kenned
+the best. The door was on the sneck that day, and me and my faither gaed
+straucht in. Tod was a wabster to his trade; his loom stood in the but.
+There he sat, a muckle fat, white hash of a man like creish, wi' a kind of
+a holy smile that gart me scunner. The hand of him aye cawed the shuttle,
+but his een was steeked. We cried to him by his name, we skirled in the
+deid lug of him, we shook him by the shou'ther. Nae mainner o' service!
+There he sat on his dowp, an' cawed the shuttle and smiled like creish.</p>
+
+<p>"God be guid to us," says Tam Dale, "this is no canny!"</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour005"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour005.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: THERE HE SAT, A MUCKLE FAT, WHITE HASH OF A
+MAN LIKE CREISH" src="images/balfour005sm.jpg" height="546" width="380" /></a>
+<br />THERE HE SAT, A MUCKLE
+FAT, WHITE HASH OF A MAN LIKE CREISH
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></a>[pg
+183]</span>He had jimp said the word, when Tod Lapraik cam to himsel'.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this you, Tam?" says he. "Haith, man! I'm blythe to see ye. I whiles
+fa' into a bit dwam like this," he says; "it's frae the stamach."</p>
+
+<p>Weel, they began to crack about the Bass and which of them twa was to
+get the warding o't, and by little and little cam to very ill words, and
+twined in anger. I mind weel, that as my faither and me gaed hame again, he
+cam ower and ower the same expression, how little he likit Tod Lapraik and
+his dwams.</p>
+
+<p>"Dwam!" says he. "I think folk hae brunt far dwams like yon."</p>
+
+<p>Aweel, my faither got the Bass and Tod had to go wantin'. It was
+remembered sinsyne what way he had ta'en the thing. "Tam," says he, "ye hae
+gotten the better o'me aince mair, and I hope," says he, "ye'll find at
+least a' that ye expeckit at the Bass." Which have since been thought
+remarkable expressions. At last the time came for Tam Dale to take young
+solans. This was a business he was weel used wi', he had been a craigsman
+frae a laddie, and trustit nane but himsel'. So there was he hingin' by a
+line an' speldering on the craig face, whaur it's hieest and steighest.
+Fower tenty lads were on the tap, hauldin' the line and mindin' for his
+signals. But whaur Tam hung there was naething but the craig, and the sea
+belaw, and the solans skirling and flying. It was a braw spring morn, and
+Tam <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></a>[pg
+184]</span>whustled as he claught in the young geese. Mony's the time I
+heard him tell of this experience, and aye the swat ran upon the man.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced, ye see, that Tam keeked up, and he was awaur of a muckle
+solan, and the solan pyking at the line. He thocht this by-ordinar and
+outside the creature's habits. He minded that ropes was unco saft things,
+and the solan's neb and the Bass Rock unco hard, and that twa hunner feet
+were raither mair than he would care to fa'.</p>
+
+<p>"Shoo!" says Tam. "Awa', bird! Shoo, awa' wi' ye!" says he.</p>
+
+<p>The solan keekit doun into Tam's face, and there was something unco in
+the creature's ee. Just the ae keek it gied, and back to the rope. But now
+it wroucht and warstl't like a thing dementit. There never was the solan
+made that wroucht as that solan wroucht; and it seemed to understand it's
+employ brawly, birzing the saft rope between the neb of it and a crunkled
+jag o' stane.</p>
+
+<p>There gaed a cauld stend o' fear into Tam's heart. "This thing is nae
+bird," thinks he. His een turnt backward in his heid and the day gaed black
+about him. "If I get a dwam here," he thoucht, "it's by wi' Tam Dale." And
+he signalled for the lads to pu' him up.</p>
+
+<p>And it seemed the solan understood about signals. For nae sooner was the
+signal made than he let be the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185"
+id="Page_185"></a>[pg 185]</span>rope, spried his wings, squawked out loud,
+took a turn flying, and dashed straucht at Tam Dale's een. Tam had a knife,
+he gart the cauld steel glitter. And it seemed the solan understood about
+knives, for nae suner did the steel glint in the sun than he gied the ae
+squawk, but laigher, like a body disappointit, and flegged aff about the
+roundness of the craig, and Tam saw him nae mair. And as sune as that thing
+was gane, Tam's held drapt upon his shouther, and they pu'd him up like a
+deid corp, dadding on the craig.</p>
+
+<p>A dram of brandy (which he went never without) broucht him to his mind,
+or what was left of it. Up he sat.</p>
+
+<p>"Rin, Geordie, rin to the boat, mak' sure of the boat, man--rin!" he
+cries, "or yon solan 'll have it awa'," says he.</p>
+
+<p>The fower lads stared at ither, an' tried to whilly-wha him to be quiet.
+But naething, would satisfy Tam Dale, till ane o' them had startit on aheid
+to stand sentry on the boat. The ithers askit if he was for down again.</p>
+
+<p>"Na," says he, "and niether you nor me," says he, "and as sune as I can
+win to stand on my twa feet we'll be aff frae this craig o' Sawtan."</p>
+
+<p>Sure eneuch, nae time was lost, and that was ower muckle; for before
+they won to North Berwick Tam was in a crying fever. He lay a' the simmer;
+and wha was sae kind as come speiring for him, but Tod <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></a>[pg
+186]</span>Lapraik! Folk thocht afterwards that ilka time Tod cam near the
+house the fever had worsened. I kenna for that; but what I ken the best,
+that was the end of it.</p>
+
+<p>It was about this time o' the year; my grandfaither was out at the white
+fishing; and like a bairn, I but to gang wi' him. We had a grand take, I
+mind, and the way that the fish lay broucht us near in by the Bass, whaur
+we forgaithered wi' anither boat that belanged to a man Sandie Fletcher in
+Castleton. He's no lang deid niether, or ye could spier at himsel'. Weel,
+Sandie hailed.</p>
+
+<p>"What's yon on the Bass?" says he.</p>
+
+<p>"On the Bass?" says grandfaither.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," says Sandie, "on the green side o't."</p>
+
+<p>"Whatten kind of a thing?" says grandfaither. "There cannae be naething
+on the Bass but just the sheep."</p>
+
+<p>"It looks unco like a body," quo' Sandie, who was nearer in.</p>
+
+<p>"A body!" says we, and we nane of us likit that. For there was nae boat
+that could have broucht a man, and the key o' the prison yett hung ower my
+faither's held at hame in the press bed.</p>
+
+<p>We keept the twa boats closs for company, and crap in nearer hand.
+Grandfaither had a gless, for he had been a sailor, and the captain of a
+smack, and had lost her on the sands of Tay. And when we took the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></a>[pg 187]</span>gless
+to it, sure eneuch there was a man. He was in a crunkle o' green brae, a
+wee below the chaipel, a' by his lee lane, and lowped and flang and danced
+like a daft quean at a waddin'.</p>
+
+<p>"It's Tod," says grandfaither, and passed the gless to Sandie.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, it's him," says Sandie.</p>
+
+<p>"Or ane in the likeness o' him,'' says grandfaither.</p>
+
+<p>"Sma' is the differ," quo' Sandie. "De'il or warlock, I'll try the gun
+at him," quo' he, and broucht up a fowling-piece that he aye carried, for
+Sandie was a notable famous shot in all that country.</p>
+
+<p>"Haud your hand, Sandie," says grandfaither; "we maun see clearer
+first," says he, "or this may be a dear day's wark to the baith of us."</p>
+
+<p>"Hout!" says Sandie, "this is the Lord's judgments surely, and be damned
+to it!" says he.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe ay, and maybe no," says my grandfaither, worthy man! "But have
+you a mind of the Procurator Fiscal, that I think ye'll have forgaithered
+wi' before," says he.</p>
+
+<p>This was ower true, and Sandie was a wee thing set ajee. "Aweel, Edie,"
+says he, "and what would be your way of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, just this," says grandfaither. "Let me that has the fastest boat
+gang back to North Berwick, and let you bide here and keep an eye on Thon.
+If I cannae find Lapraik, I'll join ye and the twa of us'll <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></a>[pg 188]</span>have a
+crack wi' him. But if Lapraik's at hame, I'll rin up the flag at the
+harbour, and ye can try Thon Thing wi' the gun."</p>
+
+<p>Aweel, so it was agreed between them twa. I was just a bairn, an' clum
+in Sandie's boat, whaur I thoucht I would see the best of the employ. My
+grandsire gied Sandie a siller tester to pit in his gun wi' the leid draps,
+bein' mair deidly again bogles. And then the ae boat set aff for North
+Berwick, an' the tither lay whaur it was and watched the wanchancy thing on
+the braeside.</p>
+
+<p>A' the time we lay there it lowped and flang and capered and span like a
+teetotum, and whiles we could hear it skelloch as it span. I hae seen
+lassies, the daft queans, that would lowp and dance a winter's nicht, and
+still be lowping and dancing when the winter's day cam in. But there would
+be folk there to hauld them company, and the lads to egg them on; and this
+thing was its lee-lane. And there would be a fiddler diddling his elbock in
+the chimney-side; and this thing had nae music but the skirling of the
+solans. And the lassies were bits o' young things wi' the reid life
+dinnling and stending in their members; and this was a muckle, fat, crieshy
+man, and him fa'n in the vale o' years. Say what ye like, I maun say what I
+believe. It was joy was in the creature's heart; the joy o' hell, I
+daursay: joy whatever. Mony a time I have askit mysel', why witches and
+warlocks should <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189"
+id="Page_189"></a>[pg 189]</span>sell their sauls (whilk are their maist
+dear possessions) and be auld, duddy, wrunkl't wives or auld, feckless,
+doddered men; and then I mind upon Tod Lapraik dancing a' they hours by his
+lane in the black glory of his heart. Nae doubt they burn for it in muckle
+hell, but they have a grand time here of it, whatever!--and the Lord forgie
+us!</p>
+
+<p>Weel, at the hinder end, we saw the wee flag yirk up to the mast-held
+upon the harbour rocks. That was a' Sandie waited for. He up wi' the gun,
+took a deleeberate aim, an' pu'd the trigger. There cam' a bang and then ae
+waefu' skirl frae the Bass. And there were we rubbin' our een and lookin'
+at ither like daft folk. For wi' the bang and the skirl the thing had clean
+disappeared. The sun glintit, the wund blew, and there was the bare yaird
+whaur the Wonder had been lowping and flinging but ae second syne.</p>
+
+<p>The hale way hame I roared and grat wi' the terror of that dispensation.
+The grawn folk were nane sae muckle better; there was little said in
+Sandie's boat but just the name of God; and when we won in by the pier, the
+harbour rocks were fair black wi' the folk waitin' us. It seems they had
+fund Lapraik in ane of his dwams, cawing the shuttle and smiling. Ae lad
+they sent to hoist the flag, and the rest abode there in the wabster's
+house. You may be sure they liked it little; but it was a means of grace to
+severals that stood there praying in to themsel's (for nane cared to pray
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></a>[pg
+190]</span>out loud) and looking on thon awesome thing as it cawed the
+shuttle. Syne, upon a suddenty, and wi' the ae driedfu' skelloch, Tod
+sprang up frae his hinderlands and fell forrit on the wab, a bluidy
+corp.</p>
+
+<p>When the corp was examined the leid draps hadnae played buff upon the
+warlock's body; sorrow a leid drap was to be fund; but there was
+grandfather's siller tester in the puddock's heart of him.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Andie had scarce done when there befell a mighty silly affair that had
+its consequence. Neil, as I have said, was himself a great narrator. I have
+heard since that he knew all the stories in the Highlands; and thought much
+of himself, and was thought much of by others, on the strength of it. Now
+Andie's tale reminded him of one he had already heard.</p>
+
+<p>"She would ken that story afore," he said. "She was the story of Uistean
+More M'Gillie Phadrig and the Gavar Vore."</p>
+
+<p>"It is no sic a thing," cried Andie. "It is the story of my faither (now
+wi' God) and Tod Lapraik. And the same in your beard," says he; "and keep
+the tongue of ye inside your Hielant chafts!"</p>
+
+<p>In dealing with Highlanders it will be found, and has been shown in
+history, how well it goes with Lowland gentlefolk; but the thing appears
+scarce feasible for Lowland commons. I had already remarked that Andie was
+continually on the point of quarrelling with <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></a>[pg 191]</span>our three Macgregors, and
+now, sure enough, it was to come.</p>
+
+<p>"Thir will be no words to use to shentlemans," says Neil.</p>
+
+<p>"Shentlemans!" cries Andie. "Shentlemans, ye hielant stot! If God would
+give ye the grace to see yoursel' the way that ithers see ye, ye would
+throw your denner up."</p>
+
+<p>There came some kind of a Gaelic oath from Neil, and the black knife was
+in his hand that moment.</p>
+
+<p>There was no time to think; and I caught the Highlander by the leg, and
+had him down, and his armed hand pinned out, before I knew what I was
+doing. His comrades sprang to rescue him, Andie and I were without weapons,
+the Gregara three to two. It seemed we were beyond salvation, when Neil
+screamed in his own tongue, ordering the others back, and made his
+submission to myself in a manner the most abject, even giving me up his
+knife which (upon a repetition of his promises) I returned to him on the
+morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Two things I saw plain: the first, that I must not build too high on
+Andie, who had shrunk against the wall and stood there, as pale as death,
+till the affair was over; the second, the strength of my own position with
+the Highlanders, who must have received extraordinary charges to be tender
+of my safety. But if I thought Andie came not very well out in courage, I
+had no fault to find with him upon the account of gratitude. It <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></a>[pg 192]</span>was not
+so much that he troubled me with thanks, as that his whole mind and manner
+appeared changed; and as he preserved ever after a great timidity of our
+companions, he and I were yet more constantly together.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></a>[pg
+193]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVI'></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MISSING WITNESS</h3>
+
+
+<p>On the seventeenth, the day I was trysted with the Writer, I had much
+rebellion against fate. The thought of him waiting in the <i>King's
+Arms</i>, and of what he would think, and what he would say when next we
+met, tormented and oppressed me. The truth was unbelievable, so much I had
+to grant, and it seemed cruel hard I should be posted as a liar and a
+coward, and have never consciously omitted what it was possible that I
+should do. I repeated this form of words with a kind of bitter relish, and
+re-examined in that light the steps of my behaviour. It seemed I had
+behaved to James Stewart as a brother might; all the past was a picture
+that I could be proud of, and there was only the present to consider. I
+could not swim the sea, nor yet fly in the air, but there was always Andie.
+I had done him a service, he liked me; I had a lever there to work on; if
+it were just for decency, I must try once more with Andie.</p>
+
+<p>It was late afternoon; there was no sound in all the Bass but the lap
+and bubble of a very quiet sea; and my four companions were all crept
+apart, the three <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194"
+id="Page_194"></a>[pg 194]</span>Macgregors higher on the rock, and Andie
+with his Bible to a sunny place among the ruins; there I found him in deep
+sleep, and, as soon as he was awake, appealed to him with some fervour of
+manner and a good show of argument.</p>
+
+<p>"If I thoucht it was to do guid to ye, Shaws!" said he, staring at me
+over his spectacles.</p>
+
+<p>"It's to save another," said I, "and to redeem my word. What would be
+more good than that? Do ye no mind the scripture, Andie? And you with the
+Book upon your lap! <i>What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole
+world?"</i></p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said he, "that's grand for you. But where do I come in? I have my
+word to redeem the same's yoursel'. And what are ye asking me to do, but
+just to sell it ye for siller?"</p>
+
+<p>"Andie! have I named the name of siller?" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ou, the name's naething," said he; "the thing is there, whatever. It
+just comes to this; if I am to service ye the way that you propose, I'll
+loss my lieihood. Then it's clear ye'll have to make it up to me, and a
+pickle mair, for your ain credit like. And what's that but just a bribe?
+And if even I was certain of the bribe! But by a' that I can learn, it's
+far frae that; and if <i>you</i> were to hang, where would <i>I</i> be? Na:
+the thing's no possible. And just awa' wi' ye like a bonny lad! and let
+Andie read his chapter."</p>
+
+<p>I remember I was at bottom a good deal gratified with <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></a>[pg 195]</span>this
+result; and the next humour I fell into was one (I had near said) of
+gratitude to Prestongrange, who had saved me, in this violent, illegal
+manner, out of the midst of my dangers, temptations, and perplexities. But
+this was both too flimsy and too cowardly to last me long, and the
+remembrance of James began to succeed to the possession of my spirits. The
+21st, the day set for the trial, I passed in such misery of mind as I can
+scarce recall to have endured, save perhaps upon Isle Earraid only. Much of
+the time I lay on a braeside betwixt sleep and waking, my body motionless,
+my mind full of violent thoughts. Sometimes I slept indeed; but the
+court-house of Inverary and the prisoner glancing on all sides to find his
+missing witness, followed me in slumber; and I would wake again with a
+start to darkness of spirit and distress of body. I thought Andie seemed to
+observe me, but I paid him little heed. Verily, my bread was bitter to me,
+and my days a burthen.</p>
+
+<p>Early the next morning (Friday, 22nd) a boat came with provisions, and
+Andie placed a packet in my hand. The cover was without address but sealed
+with a Government seal. It enclosed two notes. "Mr. Balfour can now see for
+himself it is too late to meddle. His conduct will be observed and his
+discretion rewarded." So ran the first, which seemed to be laboriously writ
+with the left hand. There was certainly nothing in these expressions to
+compromise the writer, even if that <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></a>[pg 196]</span>person could be found; the
+seal, which formidably served instead of signature, was affixed to a
+separate sheet on which there was no scratch of writing; and I had to
+confess that (so far) my adversaries knew what they were doing, and to
+digest as well as I was able the threat that peeped under the promise.</p>
+
+<p>But the second enclosure was by far the more surprising. It was in a
+lady's hand of writ. "<i>Maister Dauvit Balfour is informed a friend was
+speiring for him, and her eyes were of the grey</i>," it ran--and seemed so
+extraordinary a piece to come to my hands at such a moment and under cover
+of a Government seal, that I stood stupid. Catriona's grey eyes shone in my
+remembrance. I thought, with a bound of pleasure, she must be the friend.
+But who should the writer be, to have her billet thus enclosed with
+Prestongrange's? And of all wonders, why was it thought needful to give me
+this pleasing but most inconsequential intelligence upon the Bass? For the
+writer, I could hit upon none possible except Miss Grant. Her family, I
+remembered, had remarked on Catriona's eyes and even named her for their
+colour; and she herself had been much in the habit to address me with a
+broad pronunciation, by way of a sniff, I supposed, at my rusticity. No
+doubt, besides, but she lived in the same house as this letter came from.
+So there remained but one step to be accounted for; and that was how
+Prestongrange should have permitted her at all in an affair so secret, or
+let <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></a>[pg
+197]</span>her daft-like billet go in the same cover with his own. But even
+here I had a glimmering. For, first of all, there was something rather
+alarming about the young lady, and papa might be more under her domination
+than I knew. And second, there was the man's continual policy to be
+remembered, how his conduct had been continually mingled with caresses, and
+he had scarce ever, in the midst of so much contention, laid aside a mask
+of friendship. He must conceive that my imprisonment had incensed me.
+Perhaps this little jesting, friendly message was intended to disarm my
+rancour?</p>
+
+<p>I will be honest--and I think it did. I felt a sudden warmth towards
+that beautiful Miss Grant, that she should stoop to so much interest in my
+affairs. The summoning up of Catriona moved me of itself to milder and more
+cowardly counsels. If the Advocate knew of her and of our acquaintance--if
+I should please him by some of that "discretion" at which his letter
+pointed--to what might not this lead? <i>In vain is the net spread in the
+sight of any fowl</i>, the scripture says. Well, fowls must be wiser than
+folk! For I thought I perceived the policy, and yet fell in with it.</p>
+
+<p>I was in this frame, my heart beating, the grey eyes plain before me
+like two stars, when Andie broke in upon my musing.</p>
+
+<p>"I see ye hae gotten guid news," said he.</p>
+
+<p>I found him looking curiously in my face; with that, there came before
+me like a vision of James Stewart and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></a>[pg 198]</span>the court of Inverary; and
+my mind turned at once like a door upon its hinges. Trials, I reflected,
+sometimes draw out longer than is looked for. Even if I came to Inverary
+just too late, something might yet be attempted in the interests of
+James--and in those of my own character, the best would be accomplished. In
+a moment, it seemed without thought, I had a plan devised.</p>
+
+<p>"Andie," said I, "is it still to be to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>He told me nothing was changed.</p>
+
+<p>"Was anything said about the hour?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>He told me it was to be two o'clock afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>"And about the place?" I pursued.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatten place?" says Andie.</p>
+
+<p>"The place I'm to be landed at," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He owned there was nothing as to that.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then," I said, "this shall be mine to arrange. The wind is
+in the east, my road lies westward; keep your boat, I hire it; let us work
+up the Forth all day; and land me at two o'clock to-morrow at the westmost
+we'll can have reached."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye daft callant!" he cried, "ye would try for Inverary after a'!"</p>
+
+<p>"Just that, Andie," says I.</p>
+
+<p>"Weel, ye're ill to beat!" says he. "And I was kind o' sorry for ye a'
+day yesterday," he added. "Ye see, I was never entirely sure till then,
+which way of it ye really wantit."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></a>[pg
+199]</span>Here was a spur to a lame horse!</p>
+
+<p>"A word in your ear, Andie," said I. "This plan of mine has another
+advantage yet. We can leave these Hielandmen behind us on the rock, and one
+of your boats from the Castleton can bring them off to-morrow. Yon Neil has
+a queer eye when he regards you; maybe, if I was once out of the gate there
+might be knives again; these red-shanks are unco grudgeful. And if there
+should come to be any question, here is your excuse. Our lives were in
+danger by these savages; being answerable for my safety, you chose the part
+to bring me from their neighbourhood and detain me the rest of the time on
+board your boat; and do you know, Andie?" says I, with a smile, "I think it
+was very wisely chosen."</p>
+
+<p>"The truth is I have nae goo for Neil," says Andie, "nor he for me, I'm
+thinking; and I would like ill to come to my hands wi' the man. Tam Anster
+will make a better hand of it with the cattle onyway." (For this man,
+Anster, came from Fife, where the Gaelic is still spoken.) "Ay, ay!" says
+Andie, "Tam'll can deal with them the best. And troth! the mair I think of
+it, the less I see what way we would be required. The place--ay, feggs!
+they had forgot the place. Eh, Shaws, ye're a lang-heided chield when ye
+like! Forby that I'm awing ye my life," he added, with more solemnity, and
+offered me his hand upon the bargain.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></a>[pg
+200]</span>Whereupon, with scarce more words, we stepped suddenly on board
+the boat, cast off, and set the lug. The Gregara were then busy upon
+breakfast, for the cookery was their usual part; but, one of them stepping
+to the battlements, our flight was observed before we were twenty fathoms
+from the rock; and the three of them ran about the ruins and the
+landing-shelf, for all the world like ants about a broken nest, hailing and
+crying on us to return. We were still in both the lee and the shadow of the
+rock, which last lay broad upon the waters, but presently came forth in
+almost the same moment into the wind and sunshine; the sail filled, the
+boat heeled to the gunwale, and we swept immediately beyond sound of the
+men's voices. To what terrors they endured upon the rock, where they were
+now deserted without the countenance of any civilised person or so much as
+the protection of a Bible, no limit can be set; nor had they any brandy
+left to be their consolation, for even in the haste and secrecy of our
+departure Andie had managed to remove it.</p>
+
+<p>It was our first care to set Anster ashore in a cove by the Glenteithy
+Rocks, so that the deliverance of our maroons might be duly seen to the
+next day. Thence we kept away up Firth. The breeze, which was then so
+spirited, swiftly declined, but never wholly failed us. All day we kept
+moving, though often not much more; and it was after dark ere we were up
+with the Queensferry. To keep the letter of Andie's engagement (or <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></a>[pg 201]</span>what
+was left of it) I must remain on board, but I thought no harm to
+communicate with the shore in writing. On Prestongrange's cover, where the
+Government seal must have a good deal surprised my correspondent, I writ,
+by the boat's lantern, a few necessary words, and Andie carried them to
+Rankeillor. In about an hour he came aboard again, with a purse of money
+and the assurance that a good horse should be standing saddled for me by
+two to-morrow at Clackmannan Pool. This done, and the boat riding by her
+stone anchor, we lay down to sleep under the sail.</p>
+
+<p>We were in the Pool the next day long ere two; and there was nothing
+left for me but sit and wait. I felt little alacrity upon my errand. I
+would have been glad of any passable excuse to lay it down; but none being
+to be found, my uneasiness was no less great than if I had been running to
+some desired pleasure. By shortly after one the horse was at the waterside,
+and I could see a man walking it to and fro till I should land, which
+vastly swelled my impatience. Andie ran the moment of my liberation very
+fine, showing himself a man of his bare word, but scarce serving his
+employers with a heaped measure; and by about fifty seconds after two I was
+in the saddle and on the full stretch for Stirling. In a little more than
+an hour I had passed that town, and was already mounting Alan Water side,
+when the weather broke in a small tempest. The rain blinded me, the wind
+had nearly beat me from the saddle, and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></a>[pg 202]</span>the first darkness of the
+night surprised me in a wilderness still some way east of Balwhidder, not
+very sure of my direction and mounted on a horse that began already to be
+weary.</p>
+
+<p>In the press of my hurry, and to be spared the delay and annoyance of a
+guide, I had followed (so far as it was possible for any horseman) the line
+of my journey with Alan. This I did with open eyes, foreseeing a great risk
+in it, which the tempest had now brought to a reality. The last that I knew
+of where I was, I think it must have been about Uam Var; the hour perhaps
+six at night. I must still think it great good fortune that I got about
+eleven to my destination, the house of Duncan Dhu. Where I had wandered in
+the interval perhaps the horse could tell. I know we were twice down, and
+once over the saddle and for a moment carried away in a roaring burn. Steed
+and rider were bemired up to the eyes.</p>
+
+<p>From Duncan I had news of the trial. It was followed in all these
+Highland regions with religious interest; news of it spread from Inverary
+as swift as men could travel; and I was rejoiced to learn that, up to a
+late hour that Saturday, it was not yet concluded; and all men began to
+suppose it must spread over to the Monday. Under the spur of this
+intelligence I would not sit to eat; but, Duncan having agreed to be my
+guide, took the road again on foot, with the piece in my hand and munching
+as I went. Duncan brought with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203"
+id="Page_203"></a>[pg 203]</span>him a flask of usquebaugh and a
+hand-lantern; which last enlightened us just so long as we could find
+houses where to rekindle it, for the thing leaked outrageously and blew out
+with every gust. The more part of the night we walked blindfold among
+sheets of rain, and day found us aimless on the mountains. Hard by we
+struck a hut on a burn-side, where we got a bite and a direction; and, a
+little before the end of the sermon, came to the kirk doors of
+Inverary.</p>
+
+<p>The rain had somewhat washed the upper parts of me, but I was still
+bogged as high as to the knees; I streamed water; I was so weary I could
+hardly limp, and my face was like a ghost's. I stood certainly more in need
+of a change of raiment and a bed to lie on, than of all the benefits in
+Christianity. For all which (being persuaded the chief point for me was to
+make myself immediately public) I set the door open, entered that church
+with the dirty Duncan at my tails, and finding a vacant place hard by, sat
+down.</p>
+
+<p>"Thirteenthly, my brethren, and in parenthesis, the law itself must be
+regarded as a means of grace," the minister was saying, in the voice of one
+delighting to pursue an argument.</p>
+
+<p>The sermon was in English on account of the assize. The judges were
+present with their armed attendants, the halberts glittered in a corner by
+the door, and the seats were thronged beyond custom with the array of
+lawyers. The text was in Romans 5th and 13th--the <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></a>[pg 204]</span>minister a skilled hand;
+and the whole of that able churchful--from Argyle, and my Lords Elchies and
+Kilkerran, down to the halbertmen that came in their attendance--was sunk
+with gathered brows in a profound critical attention. The minister himself
+and a sprinkling of those about the door observed our entrance at the
+moment and immediately forgot the same; the rest either did not hear or
+would not heed; and I sat there amongst my friends and enemies
+unremarked.</p>
+
+<p>The first that I singled out was Prestongrange. He sat well forward,
+like an eager horseman in the saddle, his lips moving with relish, his eyes
+glued on the minister: the doctrine was clearly to his mind. Charles
+Stewart, on the other hand, was half asleep, and looked harassed and pale.
+As for Symon Fraser, he appeared like a blot, and almost a scandal, in the
+midst of that attentive congregation, digging his hands in his pockets,
+shifting his legs, clearing his throat, rolling up his bald eyebrows and
+shooting out his eyes to right and left, now with a yawn, now with a secret
+smile. At times too, he would take the Bible in front of him, run it
+through, seem to read a bit, run it through again, and stop and yawn
+prodigiously: the whole as if for exercise.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of this restlessness his eye alighted on myself. He sat a
+second stupefied, than tore a half leaf out of the Bible, scrawled upon it
+with a pencil, and passed it with a whispered word to his next neighbor.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></a>[pg
+205]</span>The note came to Prestongrange, who gave me but the one look;
+thence it voyaged to the hands of Mr. Erskine; thence again to Argyle,
+where he sat between the other two lords of session, and his Grace turned
+and fixed me with an arrogant eye. The last of those interested to observe
+my presence was Charlie Stewart, and he too began to pencil and hand about
+despatches, none of which I was able to trace to their destination in the
+crowd.</p>
+
+<p>But the passage of these notes had aroused notice; all who were in the
+secret (or supposed themselves to be so) were whispering information--the
+rest questions; and the minister himself seemed quite discountenanced by
+the flutter in the church and sudden stir and whispering. His voice
+changed, he plainly faltered, nor did he again recover the easy conviction
+and full tones of his delivery. It would be a puzzle to him till his dying
+day, why a sermon that had gone with triumph through four parts, should
+thus miscarry in the fifth.</p>
+
+<p>As for me, I continued to sit there, very wet and weary, and a good deal
+anxious as to what should happen next, but greatly exulting in my
+success.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></a>[pg
+206]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVII'></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MEMORIAL</h3>
+
+
+<p>The last word of the blessing was scarce out of the minister's mouth
+before Stewart had me by the arm. We were the first to be forth of the
+church, and he made such extraordinary expedition that we were safe within
+the four walls of a house before the street had begun to be thronged with
+the home-going congregation.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I yet in time?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay and no," said he. "The case is over; the jury is enclosed, and will
+be so kind as let us ken their view of it to-morrow in the morning, the
+same as I could have told it my own self three days ago before the play
+began. The thing has been public from the start. The panel kent it, '<i>Ye
+may do what ye will for me</i>,' whispers he two days ago. '<i>I ken my
+fate by what the Duke of Argyle has just said to Mr. Macintosh</i>.' O,
+it's been a scandal!</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+The great Argyle he gaed before,<br />
+He gart the cannons and guns to roar,<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>and the very macer cried 'Cruachan!' But now that <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></a>[pg 207]</span>I have
+got you again I'll never despair. The oak shall go over the myrtle yet;
+we'll ding the Campbells yet in their own town. Praise God that I should
+see the day!"</p>
+
+<p>He was leaping with excitement, emptied out his mails upon the floor
+that I might have a change of clothes, and incommoded me with his
+assistance as I changed. What remained to be done, or how I was to do it,
+was what he never told me nor, I believe, so much as thought of. "We'll
+ding the Camphells yet!" that was still his overcome. And it was forced
+home upon my mind how this, that had the externals of a sober process of
+law, was in its essence a clan battle between savage clans. I thought my
+friend the Writer none of the least savage. Who, that had only seen him at
+a counsel's back before the Lord Ordinary or following a golf ball and
+laying down his clubs on Bruntsfield links, could have recognised for the
+same person this voluble and violent clansman?</p>
+
+<p>James Stewart's counsel were four in number--Sheriffs Brown of Colstoun
+and Miller, Mr. Robert Macintosh and Mr. Stewart younger of Stewart Hall.
+These were covenanted to dine with the Writer after sermon, and I was very
+obligingly included of the party. No sooner the cloth lifted, and the first
+bowl very artfully compounded by Sheriff Miller, than we fell to the
+subject in hand. I made a short narration of my seizure and captivity, and
+was then examined <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208"
+id="Page_208"></a>[pg 208]</span>and re-examined upon the circumstances of
+the murder. It will be remembered this was the first time I had had my say
+out, or the matter at all handled, among lawyers; and the consequence was
+very dispiriting to the others and (I must own) disappointing to
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>"To sum up," said Colstoun, "you prove that Alan was on the spot; you
+have heard him proffer menaces against Glenure; and though you assure us he
+was not the man who fired, you leave a strong impression that he was in
+league with him, and consenting, perhaps immediately assisting, in the act.
+You show him besides, at the risk of his own liberty, actively furthering
+the criminal's escape. And the rest of your testimony (so far as the least
+material) depends on the bare word of Alan or of James, the two accused. In
+short, you do not at all break, but only lengthen by one personage, the
+chain that binds our client to the murderer; and I need scarcely say that
+the introduction of a third accomplice rather aggravates that appearance of
+a conspiracy which has been our stumbling block from the beginning."</p>
+
+<p>"I am of the same opinion," said Sheriff Miller. "I think we may all be
+very much obliged to Prestongrange for taking a most uncomfortable witness
+out of our way. And chiefly, I think, Mr. Balfour himself might be obliged.
+For you talk of a third accomplice, but Mr. Balfour (in my view) has very
+much the appearance of a fourth."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></a>[pg
+209]</span>"Allow me, sirs!" interposed Stewart the Writer. "There is
+another view. Here we have a witness--never fash whether material or not--a
+witness in this cause, kidnapped by that old, lawless, bandit crew of the
+Glengyle Macgregors, and sequestered for near upon a month in a bourock of
+old cold ruins on the Bass. Move that and see what dirt you fling on the
+proceedings! Sirs, this is a tale to make the world ring with! It would be
+strange, with such a grip as this, if we couldnae squeeze out a pardon for
+my client."</p>
+
+<p>"And suppose we took up Mr. Balfour's cause to-morrow?" said Stewart
+Hall. "I am much deceived or we should find so many impediments thrown in
+our path, as that James should have been hanged before we had found a court
+to hear us. This is a great scandal, but I suppose we have none of us
+forgot a greater still, I mean the matter of the Lady Grange. The woman was
+still in durance; my friend Mr. Hope of Rankeillor did what was humanly
+possible; and how did he speed? He never got a warrant! Well, it'll be the
+same now; the same weapons will be used. This is a scene, gentlemen, of
+clan animosity. The hatred of the name which I have the honor to bear,
+rages in high quarters. There is nothing here to be viewed but naked
+Campbell spite and scurvy Campbell intrigue."</p>
+
+<p>You may be sure this was to touch a welcome topic, and I sat for some
+time in the midst of my learned <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210"
+id="Page_210"></a>[pg 210]</span>counsel, almost deaved with their talk but
+extremely little the wiser for its purport. The Writer was led into some
+hot expressions; Colstoun must take him up and set him right; the rest
+joined in on different sides, but all pretty noisy; the Duke of Argyle was
+beaten like a blanket; King George came in for a few digs in the by-going
+and a great deal of rather elaborate defence: and there was only one person
+that seemed to be forgotten, and that was James of the Glens.</p>
+
+<p>Through all this Mr. Miller sat quiet. He was a slip of an oldish
+gentleman, ruddy and twinkling; he spoke in a smooth rich voice, with an
+infinite effect of pawkiness, dealing out each word the way an actor does,
+to give the most expression possible; and even now, when he was silent, and
+sat there with his wig laid aside, his glass in both hands, his mouth
+funnily pursed, and his chin out, he seemed the mere picture of a merry
+slyness. It was plain he had a word to say, and waited for the fit
+occasion.</p>
+
+<p>It came presently. Colstoun had wound up one of his speeches with some
+expression of their duty to their client. His brother sheriff was pleased,
+I suppose, with the transition. He took the table in his confidence with a
+gesture and a look.</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour006"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour006.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: THERE IS NOTHING HERE TO BE VIEWED BUT NAKED
+CAMPBELL SPITE AND SCURVY CAMPBELL INTRIGUE" src="images/balfour006sm.jpg" height="558" width="387" /></a>
+<br />THERE IS NOTHING HERE TO BE VIEWED BUT NAKED CAMPBELL SPITE AND SCURVY
+CAMPBELL INTRIGUE
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+<p>"That suggests to me a consideration which seems overlooked," said he.
+"The interest of our client goes certainly before all, but the world does
+not come to an end with James Stewart." Whereat he cocked his eye. <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></a>[pg 211]</span>"I
+might condescend, <i>exempli gratia</i>, upon a Mr. George Brown, a Mr.
+Thomas Miller, and a Mr. David Balfour. Mr. David Balfour has a very good
+ground of complaint, and I think, gentlemen--if his story was properly red
+out--I think there would be a number of wigs on the green."</p>
+
+<p>The whole table turned to him with a common movement.</p>
+
+<p>"Properly handled and carefully red out, his is a story that could
+scarcely fail to have some consequence," he continued. "The whole
+administration of justice, from its highest officer downward, would be
+totally discredited; and it looks to me as if they would need to be
+replaced." He seemed to shine with cunning as he said it. "And I need not
+point out to ye that this of Mr. Balfour's would be a remarkable bonny
+cause to appear in," he added.</p>
+
+<p>Well, there they all were started on another hare; Mr. Balfour's cause,
+and what kind of speeches could be there delivered, and what officials
+could be thus turned out, and who would succeed to their positions. I shall
+give but the two specimens. It was proposed to approach Symon Fraser, whose
+testimony, if it could be obtained, could prove certainly fatal to Argyle
+and Prestongrange. Miller highly approved of the attempt. "We have here
+before us a dreeping roast," said he, "here is cut-and-come-again for all."
+And methought all licked their lips. The other was already near the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212"></a>[pg 212]</span>end.
+Stewart the Writer was out of the body with, delight, smelling vengeance on
+his chief enemy, the Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," cried he, charging his glass, "here is to Sheriff Miller.
+His legal abilities are known to all. His culinary, this bowl in front of
+us is here to speak for. But when it comes to the poleetical!"--cries he,
+and drains the glass.</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but it will hardly prove politics in your meaning, my friend," said
+the gratified Miller. "A revolution, if you like, and I think I can promise
+you that historical writers shall date from Mr. Balfour's cause. But
+properly guided, Mr. Stewart, tenderly guided, it shall prove a peaceful
+revolution."</p>
+
+<p>"And if the damned Campbells get their ears rubbed, what care I?" cries
+Stewart, smiting down his fist.</p>
+
+<p>It will be thought I was not very well pleased with all this, though I
+could scarce forbear smiling at a kind of innocency in these old
+intriguers. But it was not my view to have undergone so many sorrows for
+the advancement of Sheriff Miller or to make a revolution in the Parliament
+House: and I interposed accordingly with as much simplicity of manner as I
+could assume.</p>
+
+<p>"I have to thank you, gentlemen, for your advice," said I. "And now I
+would like, by your leave, to set you two or three questions. There is one
+thing that has fallen rather on one side, for instance: Will this cause do
+any good to our friend James of the Glens?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213"></a>[pg
+213]</span>They seemed all a hair set back, and gave various answers, but
+concurring practically in one point, that James had now no hope but in the
+King's mercy.</p>
+
+<p>"To proceed, then," said I, "will it do any good to Scotland? We have a
+saying that it is an ill bird that fouls his own nest. I remember hearing
+we had a riot in Edinburgh when I was an infant child, which gave occasion
+to the late Queen to call this country barbarous; and I always understood
+that we had rather lost than gained by that. Then came the year
+'Forty-five, which made Scotland to be talked of everywhere; but I never
+heard it said we had anyway gained by the 'Forty-five. And now we come to
+this cause of Mr. Balfour's, as you call it. Sheriff Miller tells us
+historical writers are to date from it, and I would not wonder. It is only
+my fear they would date from it as a period of calamity and public
+reproach."</p>
+
+<p>The nimble-witted Miller had already smelt where I was travelling to,
+and made haste to get on the same road. "Forcibly put, Mr. Balfour," says
+he. "A weighty observe, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"We have next to ask ourselves if it will be good for King George," I
+pursued. "Sheriff Miller appears pretty easy upon this; but I doubt you
+will scarce be able to pull down the house from under him, without his
+Majesty coming by a knock or two, one of which might easily prove
+fatal."</p>
+
+<p>I gave them a chance to answer, but none volunteered.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214"></a>[pg
+214]</span>"Of those for whom the case was to be profitable," I went on,
+"Sheriff Miller gave us the names of several, among the which he was good
+enough to mention mine. I hope he will pardon me if I think otherwise. I
+believe I hung not the least back in this affair while there was life to be
+saved; but I own I thought myself extremely hazarded, and I own I think it
+would be a pity for a young man, with some idea of coming to the bar, to
+ingrain upon himself the character of a turbulent, factious fellow before
+he was yet twenty. As for James, it seems--at this date of the proceedings,
+with the sentence as good as pronounced--he has no hope but in the King's
+mercy. May not his Majesty, then, be more pointedly addressed, the
+characters of these high officers sheltered from the public, and myself
+kept out of a position which I think spells ruin for me?"</p>
+
+<p>They all sat and gazed into their glasses, and I could see they found my
+attitude on the affair unpalatable. But Miller was ready at all events.</p>
+
+<p>"If I may be allowed to put our young friend's notion in more formal
+shape," says he, "I understand him to propose that we should embody the
+fact of his sequestration, and perhaps some heads of the testimony he was
+prepared to offer, in a memorial to the Crown. This plan has elements of
+success. It is as likely as any other (and perhaps likelier) to help our
+client. Perhaps his Majesty would have the goodness to feel a certain
+gratitude to all concerned in such a memorial, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_215" id="Page_215"></a>[pg 215]</span>which might be construed
+into an expression of a very delicate loyalty; and I think, in the drafting
+of the same, this view might be brought forward."</p>
+
+<p>They all nodded to each other, not without sighs, for the former
+alternative was doubtless more after their inclination.</p>
+
+<p>"Paper then, Mr. Stewart, if you please," pursued Miller; "and I think
+it might very fittingly be signed by the five of us here present, as
+procurators for the 'condemned man.'"</p>
+
+<p>"It can do none of us any harm at least," says Colstoun, heaving another
+sigh, for he had seen himself Lord Advocate the last ten minutes.</p>
+
+<p>Thereupon they set themselves, not very enthusiastically, to draft the
+memorial--a process in the course of which they soon caught fire; and I had
+no more ado but to sit looking on and answer an occasional question. The
+paper was very well expressed; beginning with a recitation of the facts
+about myself, the reward offered for my apprehension, my surrender, the
+pressure brought to bear upon me; my sequestration; and my arrival at
+Inverary in time to be too late; going on to explain the reasons of loyalty
+and public interest for which it was agreed to waive any right of action;
+and winding up with a forcible appeal to the King's mercy on behalf of
+James.</p>
+
+<p>Methought I was a good deal sacrificed, and rather represented in the
+light of a firebrand of a fellow whom <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></a>[pg 216]</span>my cloud of lawyers had
+restrained with difficulty from extremes. But I let it pass, and made but
+the one suggestion, that I should be described as ready to deliver my own
+evidence and adduce that of others before any commission of inquiry--and
+the one demand, that I should be immediately furnished with a copy.</p>
+
+<p>Colstoun hummed and hawed. "This is a very confidential document," said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"And my position towards Prestongrange is highly peculiar," I replied.
+"No question but I must have touched his heart at our first interview, so
+that he has since stood my friend consistently. But for him, gentlemen, I
+must now be lying dead or awaiting my sentence alongside poor James. For
+which reason I choose to communicate to him the fact of this memorial as
+soon as it is copied. You are to consider also that this step will make for
+my protection. I have enemies here accustomed to drive hard; his Grace is
+in his own country, Lovat by his side; and if there should hang any
+ambiguity over our proceedings, I think I might very well awake in
+gaol."</p>
+
+<p>Not finding any very ready answer to these considerations, my company of
+advisers were at the last persuaded to consent, and made only this
+condition that I was to lay the paper before Prestongrange with the express
+compliments of all concerned.</p>
+
+<p>The Advocate was at the castle dining with his Grace. By the hand of one
+of Colstoun's servants I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217"
+id="Page_217"></a>[pg 217]</span>sent him a billet asking for an interview,
+and received a summons to meet him at once in a private house of the town.
+Here I found him alone in a chamber; from his face there was nothing to be
+gleaned; yet I was not so unobservant but what I spied some halberts in the
+hall, and not so stupid but what I could gather he was prepared to arrest
+me there and then, should it appear advisable.</p>
+
+<p>"So, Mr. David, this is you?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Where I fear I am not overly welcome, my lord," said I. "And I would
+like before I go further to express my sense of your lordship's continued
+good offices, even should they now cease."</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard of your gratitude before," he replied drily, "and I think
+this can scarce be the matter you called me from my wine to listen to. I
+would remember also, if I were you, that you still stand on a very boggy
+foundation."</p>
+
+<p>"Not now, my lord, I think," said I; "and if your lordship will but
+glance an eye along this, you will perhaps think as I do."</p>
+
+<p>He read it sedulously through, frowning heavily; then turned back to one
+part and another which he seemed to weigh and compare the effect of. His
+face a little lightened.</p>
+
+<p>"This is not so bad but what it might be worse," said he; "though I am
+still likely to pay dear for my acquaintance with Mr. David Balfour."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218"></a>[pg
+218]</span>"Rather for your indulgence to that unlucky young man, my lord,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>He still skimmed the paper, and all the while his spirits seemed to
+mend.</p>
+
+<p>"And to whom am I indebted for this?" he asked presently. "Other
+counsels must have been discussed, I think. Who was it proposed this
+private method? Was it Miller?"</p>
+
+<p>"My lord, it was myself," said I. "These gentlemen have shown me no such
+consideration, as that I should deny myself any credit I can fairly claim,
+or spare them any responsibility they should properly bear. And the mere
+truth is, that they were all in favour of a process which should have
+remarkable consequences in the Parliament House, and prove for them (in one
+of their own expressions) a dripping roast. Before I intervened, I think
+they were on the point of sharing out the different law appointments. Our
+friend Mr. Symon was to be taken in upon some composition."</p>
+
+<p>Prestongrange smiled. "These are our friends!" said he. "And what were
+your reasons for dissenting, Mr. David?"</p>
+
+<p>I told them without concealment, expressing, however, with more force
+and volume those which regarded Prestongrange himself.</p>
+
+<p>"You do me no more than justice," said he. "I have fought as hard in
+your interest as you have fought <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219"
+id="Page_219"></a>[pg 219]</span>against mine. And how came you here
+to-day?" he asked. "As the case drew out, I began to grow uneasy that I had
+clipped the period so fine, and I was even expecting you to-morrow. But
+to-day--I never dreamed of it."</p>
+
+<p>I was not, of course, going to betray Andie.</p>
+
+<p>"I suspect there is some very weary cattle by the road," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"If I had known you were such a mosstrooper you should have tasted
+longer of the Bass," says he.</p>
+
+<p>"Speaking of which, my lord, I return your letter." And I gave him the
+enclosure in the counterfeit hand.</p>
+
+<p>"There was the cover also with the seal," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I have it not," said I. "It bore naught but the address, and could not
+compromise a cat. The second enclosure I have, and with your permission, I
+desire to keep it."</p>
+
+<p>I thought he winced a little, but he said nothing to the point.
+"To-morrow," he resumed, "our business here is to be finished, and I
+proceed by Glasgow. I would be very glad to have you of my party, Mr.
+David."</p>
+
+<p>"My lord...." I began.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not deny it will be of service to me," he interrupted. "I desire
+even that, when we shall come to Edinburgh you should alight at my house.
+You have very warm friends in the Miss Grants, who will be overjoyed to
+have you to themselves. If you think <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_220" id="Page_220"></a>[pg 220]</span>I have been of use to you,
+you can thus easily repay me, and so far from losing, may reap some
+advantage by the way. It is not every strange young man who is presented in
+society by the King's Advocate."</p>
+
+<p>Often enough already (in our brief relations) this gentleman had caused
+my head to spin; no doubt but what for a moment he did so again now. Here
+was the old fiction still maintained of my particular favour with his
+daughters, one of whom had been so good as laugh at me, while the other two
+had scarce deigned to remark the fact of my existence. And now I was to
+ride with my lord to Glascow; I was to dwell with him in Edinburgh; I was
+to be brought into society under his protection! That he should have so
+much good-nature as to forgive me was surprising enough; that he could wish
+to take me up and serve me seemed impossible; and I began to seek for some
+ulterior meaning. One was plain. If I became his guest, repentance was
+excluded; I could never think better of my present design and bring any
+action. And besides, would not my presence in his house draw out the whole
+pungency of the memorial? For that complaint could not be very seriously
+regarded, if the person chiefly injured was the guest of the official most
+incriminated. As I thought upon this, I could not quite refrain from
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"This is in the nature of a countercheck to the memorial?" said I.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221"></a>[pg
+221]</span>"You are cunning, Mr. David," said he, "and you do not wholly
+guess wrong; the fact will be of use to me in my defence. Perhaps, however,
+you underrate my friendly sentiments, which are perfectly genuine. I have a
+respect for you, Mr. David, mingled with awe," says he, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"I am more than willing, I am earnestly desirous to meet your wishes,"
+said I. "It is my design to be called to the bar, where your lordship's
+countenance would be invaluable; and I am besides sincerely grateful to
+yourself and family for different marks of interest and of indulgence. The
+difficulty is here. There is one point in which we pull two ways. You are
+trying to hang James Stewart, I am trying to save him. In so far as my
+riding with you would better your lordship's defence, I am at your
+lordship's orders; but in so far as it would help to hang James Stewart,
+you see me at a stick."</p>
+
+<p>I thought he swore to himself. "You should certainly be called; the bar
+is the true scene for your talents," says he, bitterly, and then fell a
+while silent. "I will tell you," he presently resumed, "there is no
+question of James Stewart, for or against. James is a dead man; his life is
+given and taken--bought (if you like it better) and sold; no memorial can
+help--no defalcation of a faithful Mr. David hurt him. Blow high, blow low,
+there will be no pardon for James Stewart: and take that for said! The
+question is now <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222"
+id="Page_222"></a>[pg 222]</span>of myself: am I to stand or fall? and I do
+not deny to you that I am in some danger. But will Mr. David Balfour
+consider why? It is not because I have pushed the case unduly against
+James; for that, I am sure of condonation. And it is not because I have
+sequestered Mr. David on a rock, though it will pass under that colour; but
+because I did not take the ready and plain path, to which I was pressed
+repeatedly, and send Mr. David to his grave or to the gallows. Hence the
+scandal--hence this damned memorial," striking the paper on his leg. "My
+tenderness for you has brought me in this difficulty. I wish to know if
+your tenderness to your own conscience is too great to let you help me out
+of it?"</p>
+
+<p>No doubt but there was much of the truth in what he said; if James was
+past helping, whom was it more natural that I should turn to help than just
+the man before me, who had helped myself so often, and was even now setting
+me a pattern of patience? I was besides not only weary, but beginning to be
+ashamed of my perpetual attitude of suspicion and refusal.</p>
+
+<p>"If you will name the time and place, I will be punctually ready to
+attend your lordship," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He shook hands with me. "And I think my misses have some news for you,"
+says he, dismissing me.</p>
+
+<p>I came away, vastly pleased to have my peace made, yet a little
+concerned in conscience; nor could I help wondering, as I went back,
+whether, perhaps, I had <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223"
+id="Page_223"></a>[pg 223]</span>not been a scruple too good-natured. But
+there was the fact, that this was a man that might have been my father, an
+able man, a great dignitary, and one that, in the hour of my need, had
+reached a hand to my assistance. I was in the better humour to enjoy the
+remainder of that evening, which I passed with the advocates, in excellent
+company no doubt, but perhaps with rather more than a sufficiency of punch:
+for though I went early to bed I have no clear mind of how I got there.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224"></a>[pg
+224]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XVIII'></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE TEE'D BALL</h3>
+
+
+<p>On the morrow, from the justices' private room, where none could see me,
+I heard the verdict given in and judgment rendered upon James. The Duke's
+words I am quite sure I have correctly; and since that famous passage has
+been made a subject of dispute, I may as well commemorate my version.
+Having referred to the year '45, the chief of the Campbells, sitting as
+Justice-General upon the bench, thus addressed the unfortunate Stewart
+before him: "If you had been successful in that rebellion, you might have
+been giving the law where you have now received the judgment of it; we, who
+are this day your judges, might have been tried before one of your mock
+courts of judicature; and then you might have been satiated with the blood
+of any name or clan to which you had an aversion."</p>
+
+<p>"This is to let the cat out of the bag, indeed," thought I. And that was
+the general impression. It was extraordinary how the young advocate lads
+took hold and made a mock of this speech, and how scarce a meal passed but
+what some one would get in the words: "And then you might have been
+satiated." Many <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225"
+id="Page_225"></a>[pg 225]</span>songs were made in that time for the
+hour's diversion, and are near all forgot. I remember one began:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+What do ye want the bluid of, bluid of?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is it a name, or is it a clan,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or is it an aefauld Hielandman,<br />
+That ye want the bluid of, bluid of?<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Another went to my old favourite air, <i>The House of Airlie</i>, and
+began thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+It fell on a day when Argyle was on the bench,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That they served him a Stewart for his denner.<br
+/>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And one of the verses ran:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+Then up and spak the Duke, and flyted on his cook,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I regaird it as a sensible aspersion,<br />
+That I would sup ava', an' satiate my maw,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With the bluid of ony clan of my aversion.<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>James was as fairly murdered as though the Duke had got a fowling-piece
+and stalked him. So much of course I knew: but others knew not so much, and
+were more affected by the items of scandal that came to light in the
+progress of the cause. One of the chief was certainly this sally of the
+justice's. It was run hard by another of a juryman, who had struck into the
+midst of Colstoun's speech for the defence with a "Pray, sir, cut it short,
+we are quite weary," which seemed the very excess of impudence and
+simplicity. But some of my new lawyer friends were still more staggered
+with an innovation that had disgraced and even vitiated the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></a>[pg
+226]</span>proceedings. One witness was never called. His name, indeed, was
+printed, where it may still be seen on the fourth page of the list: "James
+Drummond, <i>alias</i> Macgregor, <i>alias</i> James More, late tenant in
+Inveronachile"; and his precognition had been taken, as the manner is, in
+writing. He had remembered or invented (God help him) matter which was lead
+in James Stewart's shoes, and I saw was like to prove wings to his own.
+This testimony it was highly desirable to bring to the notice of the jury,
+without exposing the man himself to the perils of cross-examination; and
+the way it was brought about was a matter of surprise to all. For the paper
+was handed round (like a curiosity) in court; passed through the jury-box,
+where it did its work; and disappeared again (as though by accident) before
+it reached the counsel for the prisoner. This was counted a most insidious
+device; and that the name of James More should be mingled up with it filled
+me with shame for Catriona and concern for myself.</p>
+
+<p>The following day, Prestongrange and I, with a considerable company, set
+out for Glasgow, where (to my impatience) we continued to linger some time
+in a mixture of pleasure and affairs. I lodged with my lord, with whom I
+was encouraged to familiarity; had my place at entertainments; was
+presented to the chief guests; and altogether made more of than I thought
+accorded either with my parts or station; so that, on strangers being
+present, I would often blush for Prestongrange. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></a>[pg 227]</span>It must be owned the view
+I had taken of the world in these last months was fit to cast a gloom upon
+my character. I had met many men, some of them leaders in Israel whether by
+their birth or talents; and who among them all had shown clean hands? As
+for the Browns and Millers, I had seen their self-seeking, I could never
+again respect them. Prestongrange was the best yet; he had saved me, had
+spared me rather, when others had it in their minds to murder me outright;
+but the blood of James lay at his door; and I thought his present
+dissimulation with myself a thing below pardon. That he should affect to
+find pleasure in my discourse almost surprised me out of my patience. I
+would sit and watch him with a kind of a slow fire of anger in my bowels.
+"Ah, friend, friend," I would think to myself, "if you were but through
+with this affair of the memorial, would you not kick me in the streets?"
+Here I did him, as events have proved, the most foul injustice; and I think
+he was at once far more sincere, and a far more artful performer than I
+supposed.</p>
+
+<p>But I had some warrant for my incredulity in the behaviour of that court
+of young advocates that hung about him in the hope of patronage. The sudden
+favour of a lad not previously heard of troubled them at first out of
+measure; but two days were not gone by before I found myself surrounded
+with flattery and attention. I was the same young man, and neither <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></a>[pg 228]</span>better
+nor bonnier, that they had rejected a month before; and now there was no
+civility too fine for me! The same, do I say? It was not so; and the byname
+by which I went behind my back confirmed it. Seeing me so firm with the
+Advocate, and persuaded that I was to fly high and far, they had taken a
+word from the golfing green, and called me <i>the Tee'd Ball</i>.<sup><a
+href="#fn14" name="rfn14">[14]</a></sup> I was told I was now "one of
+themselves"; I was to taste of their soft lining, who had already made my
+own experience of the roughness of the outer husk; and the one, to whom I
+had been presented in Hope Park, was so assured as even to remind me of
+that meeting. I told him I had not the pleasure of remembering it.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," says he, "it was Miss Grant herself presented me! My name is
+so-and-so."</p>
+
+<p>"It may very well be, sir," said I, "but I have kept no mind of it."</p>
+
+<p>At which he desisted; and in the midst of the disgust that commonly
+overflowed my spirits I had a glisk of pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>But I have not patience to dwell upon that time at length. When I was in
+company with these young politics I was borne down with shame for myself
+and my own plain ways, and scorn for them and their duplicity. Of the two
+evils, I thought Prestongrange to be the least; and while I was always as
+stiff as buckram to the young bloods, I made rather a dissimulation <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></a>[pg 229]</span>of my
+hard feelings towards the Advocate, and was (in old Mr. Campbell's word)
+"soople to the laird." Himself commented on the difference, and bid me be
+more of my age, and make friends with my young comrades.</p>
+
+<p>I told him I was slow of making friends.</p>
+
+<p>"I will take the word back," said he. "But there is such a thing as
+<i>Fair gude e'en and fair gude day</i>, Mr. David. These are the same
+young men with whom you are to pass your days and get through life: your
+backwardness has a look of arrogance; and unless you can assume a little
+more lightness of manner, I fear you will meet difficulties in the
+path."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be an ill job to make a silk purse of a sow's ear," said I.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of October 1st I was awakened by the clattering in of an
+express; and getting to my window almost before he had dismounted, I saw
+the messenger had ridden hard. Somewhile after I was called to
+Prestongrange, where he was sitting in his bedgown and nightcap, with his
+letters around him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. David," said he, "I have a piece of news for you. It concerns some
+friends of yours, of whom I sometimes think you are a little ashamed, for
+you have never referred to their existence."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I blushed.</p>
+
+<p>"I see you understand, since you make the answering signal," said he.
+"And I must compliment you on your excellent taste in beauty. But do you
+know, Mr. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></a>[pg
+230]</span>David, this seems to me a very enterprising lass? She crops up
+from every side. The Government of Scotland appears unable to proceed for
+Mistress Katrine Drummond, which was somewhat the case (no great while
+back) with a certain Mr. David Balfour. Should not these make a good match?
+Her first intromission in politics--but I must not tell you that story, the
+authorities have decided you are to hear it otherwise and from a livelier
+narrator. This new example is more serious, however; and I am afraid I must
+alarm you with the intelligence that she is now in prison."</p>
+
+<p>I cried out.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said he, "the little lady is in prison. But I would not have you
+to despair. Unless you (with your friends and memorials) shall procure my
+downfall, she is to suffer nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"But what has she done? What is her offence?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"It might be almost construed a high treason," he returned, "for she has
+broke the King's Castle of Edinburgh."</p>
+
+<p>"The lady is much my friend," I said. "I know you would not work me if
+the thing were serious."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet it is serious in a sense," said he; "for this rogue of a
+Katrine--or Cateran, as we may call her--has set adrift again upon the
+world that very doubtful character, her papa."</p>
+
+<p>Here was one of my previsions justified: James <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></a>[pg 231]</span>More was once again at
+liberty. He had lent his men to keep me a prisoner; he had volunteered his
+testimony in the Appin case, and the same (no matter by what subterfuge)
+had been employed to influence the jury. Now came his reward, and he was
+free. It might please the authorities to give to it the colour of an
+escape; but I knew better--I knew it was the fulfilment of a bargain. The
+same course of thought relieved me of the least alarm for Catriona. She
+might be thought to have broke prison for her father; she might have
+believed so herself. But the chief hand in the whole business was that of
+Prestongrange; and I was sure, so far from letting her come to punishment,
+he would not suffer her to be even tried. Whereupon thus came out of me the
+not very politic ejaculation:</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! I was expecting that!"</p>
+
+<p>"You have at times a great deal of discretion too!" says
+Prestongrange.</p>
+
+<p>"And what is my lord pleased to mean by that?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was just marvelling," he replied, "that being so clever as to draw
+these inferences, you should not be clever enough to keep them to yourself.
+But I think you would like to hear the details of the affair. I have
+received two versions: and the least official is the more full and far the
+more entertaining, being from the lively pen of my eldest daughter. 'Here
+is all the town bizzing with a fine piece of work,' she writes, 'and <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></a>[pg 232]</span>what
+would make the thing more noted (if it were only known) the malefactor is a
+<i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;e</i> of his lordship my papa. I am sure your heart
+is too much in your duty (if it were nothing else) to have forgotten Grey
+Eyes. What does she do, but get a broad hat with the flaps open, a long
+hairy-like man's great-coat, and a big gravatt; kilt her coats up to
+<i>Gude kens whaur</i>, clap two pair of boot-hose upon her legs, take a
+pair of <i>clouted brogues</i><sup><a href="#fn15"
+name="rfn15">[15]</a></sup> in her hand, and off to the Castle? Here she
+gives herself out to be a soutar<sup><a href="#fn16"
+name="rfn16">[16]</a></sup> in the employ of James More, and gets admitted
+to his cell, the lieutenant (who seems to have been full of pleasantry)
+making sport among his soldiers of the soutar's great-coat. Presently they
+hear disputation and the sound of blows inside. Out flies the cobbler, his
+coat flying, the flaps of his hat beat about his face, and the lieutenant
+and his soldiers mock at him as he runs off. They laughed not so hearty the
+next time they had occasion to visit the cell, and found nobody but a tall,
+pretty, grey-eyed lass in the female habit! As for the cobbler, he was
+"over the hills ayont Dumblane," and it's thought that poor Scotland will
+have to console herself without him. I drank Catriona's health this night
+in public. Indeed, the whole town admires her; and I think the beaux would
+wear bits of her garters in their button-holes if they could only get them.
+I would have gone to visit her in prison too, only I remembered <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></a>[pg 233]</span>in time
+I was papa's daughter; so I wrote her a billet instead, which I entrusted
+to the faithful Doig, and I hope you will admit I can be political when I
+please. The same faithful gomeral is to despatch this letter by the express
+along with those of the wiseacres, so that you may hear Tom Fool in company
+with Solomon. Talking of <i>gomerals</i>, do tell <i>Dauvit Balfour</i>. I
+would I could see the face of him at the thought of a long-legged lass in
+such a predicament! to say nothing of the levities of your affectionate
+daughter, and his respectful friend.' So my rascal signs herself!"
+continued Prestongrange. "And you see, Mr. David, it is quite true what I
+tell you, that my daughters regard you with the most affectionate
+playfulness."</p>
+
+
+<p>"The gomeral is much obliged," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And was not this prettily done?" he went on. "Is not this Highland maid
+a piece of a heroine?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was always sure she had a great heart," said I. "And I wager she
+guessed nothing.... But I beg your pardon, this is to tread upon forbidden
+subjects."</p>
+
+<p>"I will go bail she did not," he returned, quite openly. "I will go bail
+she thought she was flying straight into King George's face."</p>
+
+<p>Remembrance of Catriona, and the thought of her lying in captivity,
+moved me strangely. I could see that even Prestongrange admired, and could
+not withhold his lips from smiling when he considered her behaviour. As for
+Miss Grant, for all her ill habit of <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></a>[pg 234]</span>mockery, her admiration
+shone out plain. A kind of a heat came on me.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not your lordship's daughter..." I began.</p>
+
+<p>"That I know of!" he put in smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"I speak like a fool," said I, "or rather I began wrong. It would
+doubtless be unwise in Mistress Grant to go to her in prison; but for me, I
+think I would look like a half-hearted friend if I did not fly there
+instantly."</p>
+
+<p>"So-ho, Mr. David," says he, "I thought that you and I were in a
+bargain?"</p>
+
+<p>"My lord," I said, "when I made that bargain I was a good deal affected
+by your goodness, but I'll never can deny that I was moved besides by my
+own interest. There was self-seeking in my heart, and I think shame of it
+now. It may be for your lordship's safety to say this fashious Davie
+Balfour is your friend and housemate. Say it then; I'll never contradict
+you. But as for your patronage, I give it all back. I ask but the one
+thing--let me go, and give me a pass to see her in her prison."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at me with a hard eye. "You put the cart before the horse, I
+think," says he. "That which I had given was a portion of my liking, which
+your thankless nature does not seem to have remarked. But for my patronage,
+it is not given, nor (to be exact) is it yet offered." He paused a bit.
+"And I warn you, you do not know yourself," he added. "Youth is a <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235"></a>[pg 235]</span>hasty
+season; you will think better of all this before a year."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I would like to be that kind of youth!" I cried. "I have seen
+too much of the other party, in these young advocates that fawn upon your
+lordship and are even at the pains to fawn on me. And I have seen it in the
+old ones also. They are all for by-ends, the whole clan of them! It's this
+that makes me seem to misdoubt your lordship's liking. Why would I think
+that you would like me? But ye told me yourself ye had an interest!"</p>
+
+<p>I stopped at this, confounded that I had run so far; he was observing me
+with a unfathomable face.</p>
+
+<p>"My lord, I ask your pardon," I resumed. "I have nothing in my chafts
+but a rough country tongue. I think it would be only decent-like if I would
+go to see my friend in her captivity; but I'm owing you my life, I'll never
+forget that; and-if it's for your lordship's good, here I'll stay. That's
+barely gratitude."</p>
+
+<p>"This might have been reached in fewer words," says Prestongrange,
+grimly. "It is easy, and it is at times gracious, to say a plain Scots
+'ay'."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but, my lord, I think ye take me not yet entirely!" cried I. "For
+<i>your</i> sake, for my life-safe, and the kindness that ye say ye bear to
+me--for these, I'll consent; but not for any good that might be coming to
+myself. If I stand aside when this young maid <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></a>[pg 236]</span>is in her trial, it's a
+thing I will be noways advantaged by; I will lose by it, I will never gain.
+I would rather make a shipwreck wholly than to build on that
+foundation."</p>
+
+<p>He was a minute serious, then smiled. "You mind me of the man with the
+long nose," said he: "was you to look at the moon by a telescope, you would
+see David Balfour there! But you shall have your way of it. I will ask at
+you one service, and then set you free. My clerks are overdriven; be so
+good as copy me these few pages," says he, visibly swithering among some
+huge rolls of manuscripts, "and when that is done, I shall bid you God
+speed! I would never charge myself with Mr. David's conscience; and if you
+could cast some part of it (as you went by) in a moss hag, you would find
+yourself to ride much easier without it."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not just entirely in the same direction though, my lord!" says
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"And you shall have the last word, too!" cries he gaily.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed he had some cause for gaiety, having now found the means to gain
+his purpose. To lessen the weight of the memorial, or to have a readier
+answer at his hand, he desired I should appear publicly in the character of
+his intimate. But if I were to appear with the same publicity as a visitor
+to Catriona in her prison the world would scarce stint to draw conclusions,
+and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237"></a>[pg
+237]</span>the true nature of James More's escape must become evident to
+all. This was the little problem I had set him of a sudden, and to which he
+had so briskly found an answer. I was to be tethered in Glasgow by that job
+of copying, which in mere outward decency I could not well refuse; and
+during these hours of my employment Catriona was privately got rid of. I
+think shame to write of this man that loaded me with so many goodnesses. He
+was kind to me as any father, yet I ever thought him as false as a cracked
+bell.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238"></a>[pg
+238]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XIX'></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h3>I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES</h3>
+
+
+<p>The copying was a weary business, the more so as I perceived very early
+there was no sort of urgency in the matters treated, and began very early
+to consider my employment a pretext. I had no sooner finished, than I got
+to horse, used what remained of daylight to the best purpose, and being at
+last fairly benighted, slept in a house by Almond-Water side. I was in the
+saddle again before the day, and the Edinburgh booths were just opening
+when I clattered in by the West Bow and drew up a smoking horse at my lord
+Advocate's door. I had a written word for Doig, my lord's private hand that
+was thought to be in all his secrets, a worthy, little plain man, all fat
+and snuff and self-sufficiency. Him I found already at his desk and already
+bedabbled with maccabaw, in the same anteroom where I rencountered with
+James More. He read the note scrupulously through like a chapter in his
+Bible.</p>
+
+<p>"H'm," says he, "ye come a wee thing ahint-hand, Mr. Balfour. The bird's
+flaen, we hae letten her out."</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Drummond is set free?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></a>[pg
+239]</span>"Achy!" said he. "What would we keep her for, ye ken? To hae
+made a steer about the bairn would hae pleased naebody."</p>
+
+<p>"And where'll she be now?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"Gude kens!" says Doig, with a shrug.</p>
+
+<p>"She'll have gone home to Lady Allardyce, I'm thinking," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"That'll be it," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll gang there straight," says I.</p>
+
+<p>"But ye'll be for a bite or ye go?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither bite nor sup," said I. "I had a good waucht of milk in by
+Ratho."</p>
+
+<p>"Aweel, aweel," says Doig. "But ye'll can leave your horse here and your
+bags, for it seems we're to have your up-put."</p>
+
+<p>"Na, na," said I. "Tamson's mear<sup><a href="#fn17"
+name="rfn17">[17]</a></sup> would never be the thing for me, this day of
+all days."</p>
+
+<p>Doig speaking somewhat broad, I had been led by imitation into an accent
+much more countrified than I was usually careful to affect, a good deal
+broader indeed than I have written it down; and I was the more ashamed when
+another voice joined in behind me with a scrap of a ballad:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"Gae saddle me the bonny black,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gae saddle sune and mak' him ready,<br />
+For I will down the Gatehope-slack,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And a' to see my bonny leddy."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></a>[pg
+240]</span>The young lady, when I turned to her, stood in a morning gown,
+and her hands muffled in the same, as if to hold me at a distance. Yet I
+could not but think there was kindness in the eye with which she saw
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"My best respects to you, Mistress Grant," said I bowing.</p>
+
+<p>"The like to yourself, Mr. David," she replied, with a deep courtesy,
+"And I beg to remind you of an old musty saw, that meat and mass never
+hindered man. The mass I cannot afford you, for we are all good
+Protestants. But the meat I press on your attention. And I would not wonder
+but I could find something for your private ear that would be worth the
+stopping for."</p>
+
+<p>"Mistress Grant," said I, "I believe I am already your debtor for some
+merry words--and I think they were kind too--on a piece of unsigned
+paper."</p>
+
+<p>"Unsigned paper?" says she, and made a droll face, which was likewise
+wondrous beautiful, as of one trying to remember.</p>
+
+<p>"Or else I am the more deceived," I went on. "But to be sure, we shall
+have the time to speak of these, since your father is so good as to make me
+for a while your inmate; and the <i>gomeral</i> begs you at this time only
+for the favour of his liberty."</p>
+
+<p>"You give yourself hard names," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Doig and I would be blythe to take harder at your clever pen," says
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"Once more I have to admire the discretion of all <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></a>[pg
+241]</span>men-folk," she replied. "But if you will not eat, off with you
+at once; you will be back the sooner, for you go on a fool's errand. Off
+with you, Mr. David," she continued, opening the door.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"He has lowpen on his bonny grey,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He rade the richt gate and the ready;<br />
+I trow he would neither stint nor stay,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Far he was seeking his bonny leddy."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I did not wait to be twice bidden, and did justice to Miss Grant's
+citation on the way to Dean.</p>
+
+<p>Old Lady Allardyce walked there alone in the garden, in her hat and
+mutch, and having a silver-mounted staff of some black wood to lean upon.
+As I alighted from my horse, and drew near to her with <i>congees</i>, I
+could see the blood come in her face, and her head fling into the air like
+what I had conceived of empresses.</p>
+
+<p>"What brings you to my poor door?" she cried, speaking high through her
+nose. "I cannot bar it. The males of my house are dead and buried; I have
+neither son nor husband to stand in the gate for me; any beggar can pluck
+me by the baird<sup><a href="#fn18" name="rfn18">[18]</a></sup>--and a
+baird there is, and that's the worst of it yet!" she added, partly to
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>I was extremely put out at this reception, and the last remark, which
+seemed like a daft wife's, left me near hand speechless.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></a>[pg
+242]</span>"I see I have fallen under your displeasure, ma'am," said I.
+"Yet I will still be so bold as ask after Mistress Drummond."</p>
+
+<p>She considered me with a burning eye, her lips pressed close together
+into twenty creases, her hand shaking on her staff. "This cows all!" she
+cried. "Ye come to me to spier for her! Would God I knew!"</p>
+
+<p>"She is not here?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>She threw up her chin and made a step and a cry at me, so that I fell
+back incontinent.</p>
+
+<p>"Out upon your leeing throat!" she cried. "What! ye come and spier at
+me! She's in jyle, whaur ye took her to--that's all there is to it. And of
+a' the beings ever I beheld in breeks, to think it should be you! Ye timmer
+scoun'rel, if I had a male left to my name I would have your jaicket dustit
+till ye raired."</p>
+
+<p>I thought it not good to delay longer in that place because I remarked
+her passion to be rising. As I turned to the horse-post she even followed
+me; and I make no shame to confess that I rode away with the one stirrup on
+and scrambling for the other.</p>
+
+<p>As I knew no other quarter where I could push my inquiries, there was
+nothing left me but to return to the Advocate's. I was well received by the
+four ladies, who were now in company together, and must give the news of
+Prestongrange and what word went in the west country, at the most
+inordinate length and with great <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243"
+id="Page_243"></a>[pg 243]</span>weariness to myself; while all the time
+that young lady, with whom I so much desired to be alone again, observed me
+quizzically and seemed to find pleasure in the sight of my impatience. At
+last, after I had endured a meal with them, and was come very near the
+point of appealing for an interview before her aunt, she went and stood by
+the music case, and picking out a tune, sang to it on a high key--"He that
+will not when he may, When he will he shall have nay." But this was the end
+of her rigours, and presently, after making some excuse of which I have no
+mind, she carried me away in private to her father's library. I should not
+fail to say that she was dressed to the nines, and appeared extraordinary
+handsome.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Mr. David, sit ye down here and let us have a two-handed crack,"
+said she. "For I have much to tell you, and it appears besides that I have
+been grossly unjust to your good taste."</p>
+
+<p>"In what manner, Mistress Grant?" I asked. "I trust I have never seemed
+to fail in due respect."</p>
+
+<p>"I will be your surety, Mr. David," said she. "Your respect, whether to
+yourself or your poor neighbours, has been always and most fortunately
+beyond imitation. But that is by the question. You got a note from me?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was so bold as to suppose so upon inference," said I, "and it was
+kindly thought upon."</p>
+
+<p>"It must have prodigiously surprised you," said she. <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244"></a>[pg 244]</span>"But
+let us begin with the beginning. You have not perhaps forgot a day when you
+were so kind as to escort three very tedious misses to Hope Park? I have
+the less cause to forget it myself, because you was so particular obliging
+as to introduce me to some of the principles of the Latin grammar, a thing
+which wrote itself profoundly on my gratitude."</p>
+
+<p>"I fear I was sadly pedantical," said I, overcome with confusion at the
+memory. "You are only to consider I am quite unused with the society of
+ladies."</p>
+
+<p>"I will say the less about the grammar then," she replied. "But how came
+you to desert your charge? 'He has thrown her out, overboard, his ain dear
+Annie!'" she hummed; "and his ain dear Annie and her two sisters had to
+taigle home by theirselves like a string of green geese! It seems you
+returned to my papa's, where you showed yourself excessively martial, and
+then on to realms unknown, with an eye (it appears) to the Bass Rock; solan
+geese being perhaps more to your mind than bonny lasses."</p>
+
+<p>Through all this raillery there was something indulgent in the lady's
+eye which made me suppose there might be better coming.</p>
+
+<p>"You take a pleasure to torment me," said I, "and I make a very feckless
+plaything; but let me ask you to be more merciful. At this time there is
+but the one thing that I care to hear of, and that will be news of
+Catriona."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245"></a>[pg
+245]</span>"Do you call her by that name to her face, Mr. Balfour?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"In troth, and I am not very sure," I stammered.</p>
+
+<p>"I would not do so in any case to strangers," said Miss Grant. "And why
+are you so much immersed in the affairs of this young lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"I heard she was in prison," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and now you hear that she is out of it," she replied, "and what
+more would you have? She has no need of any further champion."</p>
+
+<p>"I may have the greater need of her, ma'am," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, this is better!" says Miss Grant. "But look me fairly in the
+face; am I not bonnier than she?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would be the last to be denying it," said I. "There is not your
+marrow in all Scotland."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, here you have the pick of the two at your hand, and must needs
+speak of the other," said she. "This is never the way to please the ladies,
+Mr. Balfour."</p>
+
+<p>"But, mistress," said I, "there are surely other things besides mere
+beauty."</p>
+
+<p>"By which I am to understand that I am no better than I should be,
+perhaps?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"By which you will please understand that I am like the cock in the
+midden in the fable book," said I. "I see the braw jewel--and I like fine
+to see it too--but I have more need of the pickle corn."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246"></a>[pg
+246]</span>"Bravissimo!" she cried. "There is a word well said at last, and
+I will reward you for it with my story. That same night of your desertion I
+came late from a friend's house--where I was excessively admired, whatever
+you may think of it--and what should I hear but that a lass in a tartan
+screen desired to speak with me? She had been there an hour or better, said
+the servant-lass, and she grat in to herself as she sat waiting. I went to
+her direct; she rose as I came in, and I knew her at a look. '<i>Grey
+Eyes!</i>' says I to myself, but was more wise than to let on. <i>You will
+be Miss Grant at last?</i> she says, rising and looking at me hard and
+pitiful. <i>Ay, it was true he said, you are bonny at all events.--The way
+God made me, my dear</i>, I said, <i>but I would be gey and obliged if ye
+could tell me what brought you here at such a time of the night--Lady</i>,
+she said, <i>we are kinsfolk, we are both come of the blood of the sons of
+Alpin.--My dear</i>, I replied, <i>I think no more of Alpin or his sons
+than what I do of a kale-stock. You have a better argument in these tears
+upon your bonny face</i>. And at that I was so weakminded as to kiss her,
+which is what you would like to do dearly, and I wager will never find the
+courage of. I say it was weakminded of me, for I knew no more of her than
+the outside; but it was the wisest stroke I could have hit upon. She is a
+very staunch, brave nature, but I think she has been little used with
+tenderness; and at that caress (though to say the truth, it was but <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247"></a>[pg 247]</span>lightly
+given) her heart went out to me. I will never betray the secrets of my sex,
+Mr. Davie; I will never tell you the way she turned me round her thumb,
+because it is the same she will use to twist yourself. Ay, it is a fine
+lass! She is as clean as hill well water."</p>
+
+<p>"She is e'en't!" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, she told me her concerns," pursued Miss Grant, "and in what
+a swither she was in about her papa, and what a taking about yourself, with
+very little cause, and in what a perplexity she had found herself after you
+was gone away. <i>And then I minded at long last,</i> says she, <i>that we
+were kinswomen, and that Mr. David should have given you the name of the
+bonniest of the bonny, and I was thinking to myself 'If she is so bonny she
+will be good at all events; and I took up my foot soles out of that</i>.
+That was when I forgave yourself, Mr. Davie. When you was in my society,
+you seemed upon hot iron; by all marks, if ever I saw a young man that
+wanted to be gone, it was yourself, and I and my two sisters were the
+ladies you were so desirous to be gone from; and now it appeared you had
+given me some notice in the bygoing, and was so kind as to comment on my
+attractions! From that hour you may date our friendship, and I began to
+think with tenderness upon the Latin grammar."</p>
+
+<p>"You will have many hours to rally me in," said I, "and I think besides
+you do yourself injustice, I think <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248"
+id="Page_248"></a>[pg 248]</span>it was Catriona turned your heart in my
+direction, she is too simple to perceive as you do the stiffness of her
+friend."</p>
+
+<p>"I would not like to wager upon that, Mr. David," said she. "The lasses
+have clear eyes. But at least she is your friend entirely, as I was to see.
+I carried her in to his lordship my papa; and his Advocacy, being in a
+favourable stage of claret, was so good as to receive the pair of us.
+<i>Here is Grey Eyes that you have been deaved with these days past</i>,
+said I, <i>she is come to prove that we spoke true, and I lay the prettiest
+lass in the three Lothians at your feet</i>--making a papistical
+reservation of myself. She suited her action to my words; down she went
+upon her knees to him--I would not like to swear but he saw two of her,
+which doubtless made her appeal the more irresistible, for you are all a
+pack of Mahomedans--told him what had passed that night, and how she had
+withheld her father's man from following of you, and what a case she was in
+about her father, and what a flutter for yourself; and begged with weeping
+for the lives of both of you (neither of which was in the slightest danger)
+till I vow I was proud of my sex because it was done so pretty, and ashamed
+for it because of the smallness of the occasion. She had not gone far, I
+assure you, before the Advocate was wholly sober, to see his inmost
+politics ravelled out by a young lass and discovered to the most unruly of
+his daughters. But we took him in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249"
+id="Page_249"></a>[pg 249]</span>hand, the pair of us, and brought that
+matter straight. Properly managed--and that means managed by me--there is
+no one to compare with my papa."</p>
+
+<p>"He has been a good man to me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he was a good man to Katrine, and I was there to see to it," said
+she.</p>
+
+<p>"And she pled for me!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"She did that, and very movingly," said Miss Grant. "I would not like to
+tell you what she said, I find you vain enough already."</p>
+
+<p>"God reward her for it!" cried I.</p>
+
+<p>"With Mr. David Balfour, I suppose?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>"You do me too much injustice at the last!" I cried. "I would tremble to
+think of her in such hard hands. Do you think I would presume, because she
+begged my life? She would do that for a new whelped puppy! I have had more
+than that to set me up, if you but ken'd. She kissed that hand of mine. Ay,
+but she did. And why? because she thought I was playing a brave part and
+might be going to my death. It was not for my sake, but I need not be
+telling that to you that cannot look at me without laughter. It was for the
+love of what she thought was bravery. I believe there is none but me and
+poor Prince Charlie had that honour done them. Was this not to make a god
+of me? and do you not think my heart would quake when I remember it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do laugh at you a good deal, and a good deal <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_250" id="Page_250"></a>[pg 250]</span>more than is quite civil,"
+said she; "but I will tell you one thing: if you speak to her like that,
+you have some glimmerings of a chance."</p>
+
+<p>"Me?" I cried, "I would never dare. I can speak to you, Miss Grant,
+because it's a matter of indifference what ye think of me. But her? no
+fear!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you have the largest feet in all broad Scotland," says she.</p>
+
+<p>"Troth, they are no very small," said I, looking down.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, poor Catriona!" cried Miss Grant.</p>
+
+<p>And I could but stare upon her; for though I now see very well what she
+was driving at (and perhaps some justification for the same), I was never
+swift at the uptake in such flimsy talk.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah well, Mr. David," she said, "it goes sore against my conscience, but
+I see I shall have to be your speaking board. She shall know you came to
+her straight upon the news of her imprisonment; she shall know you would
+not pause to eat; and of your conversation she shall hear just so much as I
+think convenient for a maid of her age and inexperience. Believe me, you
+will be in that way much better served than you could serve yourself, for I
+will keep the big feet out of the platter."</p>
+
+<p>"You know where she is, then?" I exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"That I do, Mr. David, and will never tell," said she.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251"></a>[pg
+251]</span>"Why that?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, "I am a good friend, as you will soon discover; and
+the chief of those that I am a friend to is my papa. I assure you, you will
+never heat nor melt me out of that, so you may spare me your sheep's eyes;
+and adieu to your David-Balfourship for the now."</p>
+
+<p>"But there is yet one thing more," I cried. "There is one thing that
+must be stopped, being mere ruin to herself, and to me too."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, "be brief, I have spent half the day on you
+already."</p>
+
+<p>"My Lady Allardyce believes," I began, "she supposes--she thinks that I
+abducted her."</p>
+
+<p>The colour came into Miss Grant's face, so that at first I was quite
+abashed to find her ear so delicate, till I bethought me she was struggling
+rather with mirth, a notion in which I was altogether confirmed by the
+shaking of her voice as she replied--</p>
+
+<p>"I will take up the defence of your reputation," said she. "You may
+leave it in my hands."</p>
+
+<p>And with that she withdrew out of the library.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252"></a>[pg
+252]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XX'></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<h3>I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY</h3>
+
+
+<p>For about exactly two months I remained a guest in Prestongrange's
+family, where I bettered my acquaintance with the bench, the bar, and the
+flower of Edinburgh company. You are not to suppose my education was
+neglected, on the contrary I was kept extremely busy. I studied the French,
+so as to be more prepared to go to Leyden; I set myself to the fencing, and
+wrought hard, sometimes three hours in the day, with notable advancement;
+at the suggestion of my cousin, Pilrig, who was an apt musician, I was put
+to a singing class, and by the orders of my Miss Grant, to one for the
+dancing, at which. I must say I proved far from ornamental. However, all
+were good enough to say it gave me an address a little more genteel; and
+there is no question but I learned to manage my coat skirts and sword with
+more dexterity, and to stand in a room as though the same belonged to me.
+My clothes themselves were all earnestly re-ordered; and the most trifling
+circumstance, such as where I should tie my hair, or the colour of my
+ribbon, debated among the three misses like a thing of weight. One way with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253"></a>[pg
+253]</span>another, no doubt I was a good deal improved to look at, and
+acquired a bit of a modish air that would have surprised the good folks at
+Essendean.</p>
+
+<p>The two younger misses were very willing to discuss a point of my
+habiliment, because that was in the line of their chief thoughts. I cannot
+say that they appeared any other way conscious of my presence; and though
+always more than civil, with a kind of heartless cordiality, could not hide
+how much I wearied them. As for the aunt, she was a wonderful still woman;
+and I think she gave me much the same attention as she gave the rest of the
+family, which was little enough. The eldest daughter and the Advocate
+himself were thus my principal friends, and our familiarity was much
+increased by a pleasure that we took in common. Before the court met we
+spent a day or two at the house of Grange, living very nobly with an open
+table, and here it was that we three began to ride out together in the
+fields, a practice afterwards maintained in Edinburgh, so far as the
+Advocate's continual affairs permitted. When we were put in a good frame by
+the briskness of the exercise, the difficulties of the way, or the
+accidents of bad weather, my shyness wore entirely off; we forgot that we
+were strangers, and speech not being required, it flowed the more naturally
+on. Then it was that they had my story from me, bit by bit, from the time
+that I left Essendean, with my voyage and battle in the <i>Covenant</i>,
+wanderings in the heather, etc.; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254"
+id="Page_254"></a>[pg 254]</span>and from the interest they found in my
+adventures sprung the circumstance of a jaunt we made a little later on, a
+day when the courts were not sitting, and of which I will tell a trifle
+more at length.</p>
+
+<p>We took horse early, and passed first by the house of Shaws, where it
+stood smokeless in a great field of white frost, for it was yet early in
+the day. Here Prestongrange alighted down, gave me his horse, and proceeded
+alone to visit my uncle. My heart, I remember, swelled up bitter within me
+at the sight of that bare house and the thought of the old miser sitting
+chittering within in the cold kitchen.</p>
+
+<p>"There is my home," said I. "And my family."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor David Balfour!" said Miss Grant.</p>
+
+<p>What passed during the visit I have never heard; but it would doubtless
+not be very agreeable to Ebenezer; for when the Advocate came forth again
+his face was dark.</p>
+
+<p>"I think you will soon be the laird indeed, Mr. Davie," says he, turning
+half about with the one foot in the stirrup.</p>
+
+<p>"I will never pretend sorrow," said I; and, to say the truth, during his
+absence Miss Grant and I had been embellishing the place in fancy with
+plantations, parterres, and a terrace, much as I have since carried out in
+fact.</p>
+
+<p>Thence we pushed to the Queensferry, where Rankeillor gave us a good
+welcome, being indeed out of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255"
+id="Page_255"></a>[pg 255]</span>body to receive so great a visitor. Here
+the Advocate was so unaffectedly good as to go quite fully over my affairs,
+sitting perhaps two hours with the Writer in his study, and expressing (I
+was told) a great esteem for myself and concern for my fortunes. To while
+this time, Miss Grant and I and young Rankeillor took boat and passed the
+Hope to Limekilns. Rankeillor made himself very ridiculous (and, I thought
+offensive) with his admiration for the young lady, and to my wonder (only
+it is so common a weakness of her sex) she seemed, if anything, to be a
+little gratified. One use it had: for when we were come to the other side,
+she laid her commands on him to mind the boat, while she and I passed a
+little further to the ale-house. This was her own thought, for she had been
+taken with my account of Alison Hastie, and desired to see the lass
+herself. We found her once more alone--indeed, I believe her father wrought
+all day in the fields--and she curtsied dutifully to the gentry-folk and
+the beautiful young lady in the riding coat.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this all the welcome I am to get?" said I, holding out my hand. "And
+have you no more memory of old friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"Keep me! wha's this of it?" she cried, and then, "God's truth, it's the
+tautit<sup><a href="#fn19" name="rfn19">[19]</a></sup> laddie!"</p>
+
+<p>"The very same," says I.</p>
+
+<p>"Mony's the time I've thocht upon you and your <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_256" id="Page_256"></a>[pg 256]</span>freen, and blythe am I to
+see in your braws,"<sup><a href="#fn20" name="rfn20">[20]</a></sup> she
+cried. "Though I kent ye were come to your ain folk by the grand present
+that ye sent me and that I thank ye for with a' my heart."</p>
+
+<p>"There," said Miss Grant to me, "run out by with ye, like a good bairn.
+I didnae come here to stand and hand a candle; it's her and me that are to
+crack."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose she stayed ten minutes in the house, but when she came forth I
+observed two things--that her eyes were reddened, and a silver brooch was
+gone out of her bosom. This very much affected me.</p>
+
+<p>"I never saw you so well adorned," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"O Davie man, dinna be a pompous gowk!" said she, and was more than
+usually sharp to me the remainder of the day.</p>
+
+<p>About candlelight we came home from this excursion.</p>
+
+<p>For a good while I heard nothing further of Catriona: my Miss Grant
+remaining quite impenetrable, and stopping my mouth with pleasantries. At
+last, one day that she returned from walking and found me alone in the
+parlour over my French, I thought there was something unusual in her looks;
+the colour heightened, the eyes sparkling high, and a bit of a smile
+continually bitten in as she regarded me. She seemed indeed like the very
+spirit of mischief, and walking briskly in the room, had soon involved me
+in a kind of quarrel over nothing and (at the least) with nothing intended
+on my <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257"></a>[pg
+257]</span>side. I was like Christian in the slough; the more I tried to
+clamber out upon the side, the deeper I became involved; until at last I
+heard her declare, with a great deal of passion, that she would take that
+answer at the hands of none, and I must down upon my knees for pardon.</p>
+
+<p>The causelessness of all this fuff stirred my own bile. "I have said
+nothing you can properly object to," said I, "and as for my knees, that is
+an attitude I keep for God."</p>
+
+<p>"And as a goddess I am to be served!" she cried, shaking her brown locks
+at me and with a bright colour. "Every man that comes within waft of my
+petticoats shall use me so!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will go so far as ask your pardon for the fashion's sake, although I
+vow I know not why," I replied. "But for these play-acting postures, you
+can go to others."</p>
+
+<p>"O Davie!" she said. "Not if I was to beg you?"</p>
+
+<p>I bethought me I was fighting with a woman, which is the same as to say
+a child, and that upon a point entirely formal.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it a bairnly thing," I said, "not worthy in you to ask, or me
+to render. Yet I will not refuse you, neither," said I; "and the stain, if
+there be any, rests with yourself." And at that I kneeled fairly down.</p>
+
+<p>"There!" she cried. "There is the proper station, there is where I have
+been manoeuvring to bring you." <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258"
+id="Page_258"></a>[pg 258]</span>And then, suddenly, "Kep,"<sup><a
+href="#fn21" name="rfn21">[21]</a></sup> said she, flung me a folded
+billet, and ran from the apartment laughing.</p>
+
+<p>The billet had neither place nor date. "Dear Mr. David," it began, "I
+get your news continually by my cousin, Miss Grant, and it is a pleisand
+hearing. I am very well, in a good place, among good folk, but necessitated
+to be quite private, though I am hoping that at long last we may meet
+again. All your friendships have been told me by my loving cousin, who
+loves us both. She bids me to send you this writing, and oversees the same.
+I will be asking you to do all her commands, and rest your affectionate
+friend, Catriona Macgregor-Drummond. P.S.--Will you not see my cousin,
+Allardyce?"</p>
+
+<p>I think it not the least brave of my campaigns (as the soldiers say)
+that I should have done as I was here bidden and gone forthright to the
+house by Dean. But the old lady was now entirely changed and supple as a
+glove. By what means Miss Grant had brought this round I could never guess;
+I am sure at least, she dared not to appear openly in the affair, for her
+papa was compromised in it pretty deep. It was he, indeed, who had
+persuaded Catriona to leave, or rather, not to return, to her cousin's,
+placing her instead with a family of Gregorys, decent people, quite at the
+Advocate's disposition, and in whom she might have the more confidence
+because they were of her own clan and family. <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_259" id="Page_259"></a>[pg 259]</span>These kept her private
+till all was ripe, heated and helped her to attempt her father's rescue,
+and after she was discharged from prison received her again into the same
+secrecy. Thus Prestongrange obtained and used his instrument; nor did there
+leak out the smallest word of his acquaintance with the daughter of James
+More. There was some whispering, of course, upon the escape of that
+discredited person; but the Government replied by a show of rigour, one of
+the cell porters was flogged, the lieutenant of the guard (my poor friend,
+Duncansby) was broken of his rank, and as for Catriona, all men were well
+enough pleased that her fault should be passed by in silence.</p>
+
+<p>I could never induce Miss Grant to carry back an answer. "No," she would
+say, when I persisted, "I am going to keep the big feet out of the
+platter." This was the more hard to bear, as I was aware she saw my little
+friend many times in the week, and carried her my news whenever (as she
+said) I "had behaved myself." At last she treated me to what she called an
+indulgence, and I thought rather more of a banter. She was certainly a
+strong, almost a violent friend, to all she liked; chief among whom was a
+certain frail old gentlewoman, very blind, and very witty, who dwelt in the
+top of a tall land on a strait close, with a nest of linnets in a cage, and
+thronged all day with visitors. Miss Grant was very fond to carry me there
+and put me to entertain her friend with the narrative of my misfortunes;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></a>[pg
+260]</span>and Miss Tibbie Ramsay (that was her name) was particular kind,
+and told me a great deal that was worth knowledge of old folks and past
+affairs in Scotland. I should say that from her chamber window, and not
+three feet away, such is the straitness of that close, it was possible to
+look into a barred loophole lighting the stairway of the opposite
+house.</p>
+
+<p>Here, upon some pretext, Miss Grant left me one day alone with Miss
+Ramsay. I mind I thought that lady inattentive and like one preoccupied. I
+was besides yery uncomfortable, for the window, contrary to custom, was
+left open and the day was cold. All at once the voice of Miss Grant sounded
+in my ears as from a distance.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Shaws!" she cried, "keek out of the window and see what I have
+broughten you."</p>
+
+<p>I think it was the prettiest sight that ever I beheld; the well of the
+close was all in clear shadow where a man could see distinctly, the walls
+very black and dingy; and there from the barred loophole I saw two faces
+smiling across at me--Miss Grant's and Catriona's.</p>
+
+<p>"There!" says Miss Grant, "I wanted her to see you in your braws like
+the lass of Limekilns. I wanted her to see what I could make of you, when I
+buckled to the job in earnest!"</p>
+
+<p>It came in my mind she had been more than common particular that day
+upon my dress: and I think that some of the same care had been bestowed
+upon Catriona. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261"
+id="Page_261"></a>[pg 261]</span>For so merry and sensible a lady, Miss
+Grant was certainly wonderful taken up with duds.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona!" was all I could get out.</p>
+
+<p>As for her, she said nothing in the world, but only waved her hand and
+smiled to me, and was suddenly carried away again from before the
+loophole.</p>
+
+<p>The vision was no sooner lost than I ran to the house door, where I
+found I was locked in; thence back to Miss Ramsay, crying for the key, but
+might as well have cried upon the castle rock. She had passed her word, she
+said, and I must be a good lad. It was impossible to burst the door, even
+if it had been mannerly; it was impossible I should leap from the window,
+being seven storeys above ground. All I could do was to crane over the
+close and watch for their reappearance from the stair. It was little to
+see, being no more than the tops of their two heads each on a ridiculous
+bobbin of skirts, like to a pair of pincushions. Nor did Catriona so much
+as look up for a farewell; being prevented (as I heard afterwards) by Miss
+Grant, who told her folk were never seen to less advantage than from above
+downward.</p>
+
+<p>On the way home, as soon as I was set free, I upbraided Miss Grant with
+her cruelty.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry you was disappointed," says she demurely. "For my part I was
+very pleased. You looked better than I dreaded; you looked--if it will not
+make you vain--a mighty pretty young man when you appeared <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262"></a>[pg 262]</span>in the
+window. You are to remember that she could not see your feet," says she,
+with the manner of one reassuring me.</p>
+
+<p>"O!" cried I, "leave my feet be, they are no bigger than my
+neighbor's."</p>
+
+<p>"They are even smaller than some," said she, "but I speak in parables
+like a Hebrew prophet."</p>
+
+<p>"I marvel little they were sometimes stoned!" says I. "But you miserable
+girl, how could you do it? Why should you care to tantalise me with a
+moment?"</p>
+
+<p>"Love is like folk," says she, "it needs some kind of vivers."<sup><a
+href="#fn22" name="rfn22">[22]</a></sup></p>
+
+<p>"O, Barbara, let me see her properly!" I pleaded. "<i>You</i> can, you
+see her when you please; let me have half an hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it that is managing this love affair? You? Or me?" she asked,
+and as I continued to press her with my instances, fell back upon a deadly
+expedient: that of imitating the tones of my voice when I called on
+Catriona by name; with which, indeed, she held me in subjection for some
+days to follow.</p>
+
+<p>There was never the least word heard of the memorial, or none by me.
+Prestongrange and his grace the Lord President may have heard of it (for
+what I know) on the deafest sides of their heads; they kept it to
+themselves, at least; the public was none the wiser; and in course of time,
+on November 8th, and in the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263"
+id="Page_263"></a>[pg 263]</span>midst of a prodigious storm of wind and
+rain, poor James of the Glens was duly hanged at Lettermore by
+Balachulish.</p>
+
+<p>So there was the final upshot of my politics! Innocent men have perished
+before James, and are like to keep on perishing (in spite of all our
+wisdom) till the end of time. And till the end of time, young folk (who are
+not yet used with the duplicity of life and men) will struggle as I did,
+and make heroical resolves, and take long risks; and the course of events
+will push them upon the one side and go on like a marching army. James was
+hanged; and here was I dwelling in the house of Prestongrange, and grateful
+to him for his fatherly attention. He was hanged; and behold! When I met
+Mr. Symon in the causeway, I was fain to pull off my beaver to him like a
+good little boy before his dominie. He had been hanged by fraud and
+violence, and the world wagged along, and there was not a pennyweight of
+difference; and the villains of that horrid plot were decent, kind,
+respectable fathers of families, who went to kirk and took the
+sacrament!</p>
+
+<p>But I had had my view of that detestable business they call politics--I
+had seen it from behind, when it is all bones and blackness; and I was
+cured for life of any temptations to take part in it again. A plain, quiet,
+private path was that which I was ambitious to walk in, when I might keep
+my head out of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264"
+id="Page_264"></a>[pg 264]</span>way of dangers and my conscience out of
+the road of temptation. For, upon a retrospect, it appeared I had not done
+so grandly, after all; but with the greatest possible amount of big speech
+and preparation, had accomplished nothing.</p>
+
+<p>The 25th of the same month, a ship was advertised to sail from Leith;
+and I was suddenly recommended to make up my mails for Leyden. To
+Prestongrange I could, of course, say nothing; for I had already been a
+long while sorning on his house and table. But with his daughter I was more
+open, bewailing my fate that I should be sent out of the country, and
+assuring her, unless she should bring me to farewell with Catriona, I would
+refuse at the last hour.</p>
+
+<p>"Have I not given you my advice?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I know you have," said I, "and I know how much I am beholden to you
+already, and that I am bidden to obey your orders. But you must confess you
+are something too merry a lass at times to lippen<sup><a href="#fn23"
+name="rfn23">[23]</a></sup> to entirely."</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you, then," said she. "Be you on board at nine o'clock
+forenoon; the ship does not sail before one; keep your boat alongside; and
+if you are not pleased with my farewells when I shall send them, you can
+come ashore again and seek Katrine for yourself."</p>
+
+<p>Since I could make no more of her, I was fain to be content with
+this.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265"></a>[pg
+265]</span>The day came round at last when she and I were to separate. We
+had been extremely intimate and familiar; I was much in her debt; and what
+way we were to part was a thing that put me from my sleep, like the vails I
+was to give to the domestic servants. I knew she considered me too
+backward, and rather desired to rise in her opinion on that head. Besides
+which, after so much affection shown and (I believe) felt upon both sides,
+it would have looked cold-like to be anyways stiff. Accordingly, I got my
+courage up and my words ready, and the last chance we were like to be
+alone, asked pretty boldly to be allowed to salute her in farewell.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget yourself strangely, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I cannot call
+to mind that I had given you any right to presume on our acquaintancy."</p>
+
+<p>I stood before her like a stopped clock, and knew not what to think, far
+less to say, when of a sudden she cast her arms about my neck and kissed me
+with the best will in the world.</p>
+
+<p>"You inimitable bairn!" she cried. "Did you think that I would let us
+part like strangers? Because I can never keep my gravity at you five
+minutes on end, you must not dream I do not love you very well; I am all
+love and laughter, every time I cast an eye on you! And now I will give you
+an advice to conclude your education, which you will have need of before
+its very long. Never <i>ask</i> women-folk. They're <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266"></a>[pg 266]</span>bound
+to answer 'No'; God never made the lass that could resist the temptation.
+It's supposed by divines to be the curse of Eve; because she did not say it
+when the devil offered her the apple, her daughters can say nothing
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"Since I am so soon to lose my bonny professor," I began.</p>
+
+<p>"This is gallant, indeed," says she curtseying.</p>
+
+<p>"--I would put the one question," I went on; "May I ask a lass to marry
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"You think you could not marry her without?" she asked. "Or else get her
+to offer?"</p>
+
+<p>"You see you cannot be serious," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be very serious in one thing, David," said she. "I shall always
+be your friend."</p>
+
+<p>As I got to my horse the next morning, the four ladies were all at the
+same window whence we had once looked down on Catriona, and all cried
+farewell and waved their pocket napkins as I rode away; one out of the four
+I knew was truly sorry; and at the thought of that, and how I had come to
+the door three months ago for the first time, sorrow and gratitude made a
+confusion in my mind.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267"></a>[pg
+267]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='Part_II'></a>Part II</h2>
+
+<h3>FATHER AND DAUGHTER</h3>
+
+<hr />
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXI'></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND</h3>
+
+
+<p>The ship lay at a single anchor, well outside the pier of Leith, so that
+all we passengers must come to it by the means of skiffs. This was very
+little troublesome, for the reason that the day was a flat calm, very
+frosty and cloudy, and with a low shifting fog upon the water. The body of
+the vessel was thus quite hid as I drew near, but the tall spars of her
+stood high and bright in a sunshine like the flickering of a fire. She
+proved to be a very roomy, commodious merchant, but somewhat blunt in the
+bows, and loaden extraordinary deep with salt, salted salmon, and fine
+white linen stockings for the Dutch. Upon my coming on board, the captain
+welcomed me, one Sang (out of Lesmahago, I believe), a very hearty,
+friendly tarpauling of a man, but at the moment in rather of a bustle.
+There had no other of the passengers yet appeared, so that I was left to
+walk about upon the deck, viewing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268"
+id="Page_268"></a>[pg 268]</span>the prospect and wondering a good deal
+what these farewells should be which I was promised.</p>
+
+<p>All Edinburgh and the Pentland Hills glinted above me in a kind of
+smuisty brightness, now and again overcome with blots of cloud; of Leith
+there was no more than the tops of chimneys visible, and on the face of the
+water, where the haar<sup><a href="#fn24" name="rfn24">[24]</a></sup> lay,
+nothing at all. Out of this I was presently aware of a sound of oars
+pulling, and a little after (as if out of the smoke of a fire) a boat
+issued. There sat a grave man in the stern sheets, well muffled from the
+cold, and by his side a tall, pretty, tender figure of a maid that brought
+my heart to a stand. I had scarce the time to catch my breath in, and be
+ready to meet her, as she stepped upon the deck, smiling, and making my
+best bow, which was now vastly finer than some months before when I first
+made it to her ladyship. No doubt we were both a good deal changed; she
+seemed to have shot up taller, like a young, comely tree. She had now a
+kind of pretty backwardness that became her well, as of one that regarded
+herself more highly and was fairly woman; and for another thing, the hand
+of the same magician had been at work upon the pair of us, and Miss Grant
+had made us both <i>braw</i>, if she could make but the one
+<i>bonny</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The same cry, in words not very different, came from both of us, that
+the other was come in compliment to <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_269" id="Page_269"></a>[pg 269]</span>say farewell, and then we
+perceived in a flash we were to ship together.</p>
+
+<p>"O, why will not Baby have been telling me!" she cried; and then
+remembered a letter she had been given, on the condition of not opening it
+till she was well on board. Within was an enclosure for myself, and ran
+thus:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"DEAR DAVIE,--What do you think of my farewell? and what
+do you say to your fellow-passenger? Did you kiss, or did you
+ask? I was about to have signed here, but that would leave the
+purport of my question doubtful; and in my own case <i>I ken the
+answer</i>. So fill up here with good advice. Do not be too blate,<sup><a
+href="#fn25" name="rfn25">[25]</a></sup>
+and for God's sake do not try to be too forward; nothing sets you
+worse. I am
+
+<p>"Your affectionate friend and governess,</p>
+
+<p>"BARBARA GRANT."</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>I wrote a word of answer and compliment on a leaf out of my pocketbook,
+put it in with another scratch from Catriona, sealed the whole with my new
+signet of the Balfour arms, and despatched it by the hand of
+Prestongrange's servant that still waited in my boat.</p>
+
+<p>Then we had time to look upon each other more at leisure, which we had
+not done for a piece of a minute before (upon a common impulse) we shook
+hands again.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona!" said I; it seemed that was the first and last word of my
+eloquence.</p>
+
+<p>"You will be glad to see me again?" says she.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270"></a>[pg
+270]</span>"And I think that is an idle word," said I. "We are too deep
+friends to make speech upon such trifles."</p>
+
+<p>"Is she not the girl of all the world?" she cried again. "I was never
+knowing such a girl, so honest and so beautiful."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet she cared no more for Alpin than what she did for a
+kale-stock," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, she will say so indeed!" cries Catriona. "Yet it was for the name
+and the gentle kind blood that she took me up and was so good to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I will tell you why it was," said I. "There are all sorts of
+people's faces in this world. There is Barbara's face, that everyone must
+look at and admire, and think her a fine, brave, merry girl. And then there
+is your face, which is quite different, I never knew how different till
+to-day. You cannot see yourself, and that is why you do not understand; but
+it was for the love of your face that she took you up and was so good to
+you. And everybody in the world would do the same."</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>"Every living soul!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, then, that will be why the soldiers at the castle took me up!" she
+cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Barbara has been teaching you to catch me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"She will have taught me more than that at all events. She will have
+taught me a great deal about Mr. David--all the ill of him, and a little
+that was not so ill either now and then," she said, smiling. "She will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271"></a>[pg
+271]</span>have told me all there was of Mr. David, only just that he would
+sail upon this very same ship. And why is it you go?"</p>
+
+<p>I told her.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well," said she, "we will be some days in company and then (I
+suppose) good-bye for altogether! I go to meet my father at a place of the
+name of Helvoetsluys, and from there to France, to be exiles by the side of
+our chieftain."</p>
+
+<p>I could say no more than just "O!" the name of James More always drying
+up my very voice.</p>
+
+<p>She was quick to perceive it, and to guess some portion of my
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one thing I must be saying first of all, Mr. David," said she.
+"I think two of my kinsfolk have not behaved to you altogether very well.
+And the one of them two is James More, my father, and the other is the
+Laird of Prestongrange. Prestongrange will have spoken by himself, or his
+daughter in the place of him. But for James More, my father, I have this
+much to say: he lay shackled in a prison; he is a plain honest soldier and
+a plain Highland gentleman; what they would be after, he never would be
+guessing; but if he had understood it was to be some prejudice to a young
+gentleman like yourself, he would have died first. And for the sake of all
+your friendships, I will be asking you to pardon my father and family for
+that same mistake."</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "what that mistake was I do not <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272"></a>[pg 272]</span>care to
+know. I know but the one thing, that you went to Prestongrange and begged
+my life upon your knees. O, I ken well it was for your father that you
+went, but when you were there you pleaded for me also. It is a thing I
+cannot speak of. There are two things I cannot think of in to myself; and
+the one is your good words when you called yourself my little friend, and
+the other that you pleaded for my life. Let us never speak more, we two, of
+pardon or offence."</p>
+
+<p>We stood after that silent, Catriona looking on the deck and I on her;
+and before there was more speech, a little wind having sprung up, in the
+nor'-west, they began to shake out the sails and heave in upon the
+anchor.</p>
+
+<p>There were six passengers besides our two selves, which made of it a
+full cabin. Three were solid merchants out of Leith, Kirkaldy, and Dundee,
+all engaged in the same adventure into High Germany; one was a Hollander
+returning; the rest worthy merchants' wives, to the charge of one of whom
+Catriona was recommended. Mrs. Grebbie (for that was her name) was by great
+good fortune heavily incommoded by the sea, and lay day and night on the
+broad of her back. We were besides the only creatures at all young on board
+the <i>Rose</i>, except a white-faced boy that did my old duty to attend
+upon the table; and it came about that Catriona and I were left almost
+entirely to ourselves. We had the next seats together at the table, where I
+waited on her with extraordinary pleasure. On deck, I made her a soft place
+with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273"></a>[pg
+273]</span>my cloak; and the weather being singularly fine for that season,
+with bright frosty days and nights, a steady, gentle wind, and scarce a
+sheet started all the way through the North Sea, we sat there (only now and
+again walking to and fro for warmth) from the first blink of the sun till
+eight or nine at night under the clear stars. The merchants or Captain Sang
+would sometimes glance and smile upon us, or pass a merry word or two and
+give us the go-by again; but the most part of the time they were deep in
+herring and chintzes and linen, or in computations of the slowness of the
+passage, and left us to our own concerns, which were very little important
+to any but ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>At the first, we had a great deal to say, and thought ourselves pretty
+witty; and I was at a little pains to be the <i>beau</i>, and she (I
+believe) to play the young lady of experience. But soon we grew plainer
+with each other; I laid aside my high, clipped English (what little there
+was of it) and forgot to make my Edinburgh bows and scrapes; she upon her
+side, fell into a sort of kind familiarity; and we dwelt together like
+those of the same household, only (upon my side) with a more deep emotion.
+About the same time, the bottom seemed to fall out of our conversation, and
+neither one of us the less pleased. Whiles she would tell me old wives'
+tales, of which she had a wonderful variety, many of them from my friend
+red-headed Niel. She told them very pretty, and they were pretty enough
+childish tales; but <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274"
+id="Page_274"></a>[pg 274]</span>the pleasure to myself was in the sound of
+her voice, and the thought that she was telling and I listening. Whiles,
+again, we would sit entirely silent, not communicating even with a look,
+and tasting pleasure enough in the sweetness of that neighbourhood. I speak
+here only for myself. Of what was in the maid's mind, I am not very sure
+that ever I asked myself; and what was in my own, I was afraid to consider.
+I need make no secret of it now, either to myself or to the reader: I was
+fallen totally in love. She came between me and the sun. She had grown
+suddenly taller, as I say, but with a wholesome growth; she seemed all
+health, and lightness, and brave spirits; and I thought she walked like a
+young deer, and stood like a birch upon the mountains. It was enough for me
+to sit near by her on the deck; and I declare I scarce spent two thoughts
+upon the future, and was so well content with what I then enjoyed that I
+was never at the pains to imagine any further step; unless perhaps that I
+would be sometimes tempted to take her hand in mine and hold it there. But
+I was too like a miser of what joys I had and would venture nothing on a
+hazard.</p>
+
+<p>What we spoke was usually of ourselves or of each other, so that if
+anyone had been at so much pains as overhear us, he must have supposed us
+the most egotistical persons in the world. It befell one day when we were
+at this practice, that we came on a discourse of friends and friendship,
+and I think now that we were <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275"
+id="Page_275"></a>[pg 275]</span>sailing near the wind. We said what a fine
+thing friendship was, and how little we had guessed of it, and how it made
+life a new thing, and a thousand covered things of the same kind that will
+have been said, since the foundation of the world, by young folk in the
+same predicament. Then we remarked upon the strangeness of that
+circumstance, that friends came together in the beginning as if they were
+there for the first time, and yet each had been alive a good while, losing
+time with other people.</p>
+
+<p>"It is not much that I have done," said she, "and I could be telling you
+the five-fifths of it in two-three words. It is only a girl I am, and what
+can befall a girl, at all events? But I went with the clan in the year '45.
+The men marched with swords and firelocks, and some of them in brigades in
+the same set of tartan; they were not backward at the marching, I can tell
+you. And there were gentlemen from the Low Country, with their tenants
+mounted and trumpets to sound, and there was a grand skirling of war-pipes.
+I rode on a little Highland horse on the right hand of my father, James
+More, and of Glengyle himself. And here is one fine thing that I remember,
+that Glengyle kissed me in the face, because (says he) 'my kinswoman, you
+are the only lady of the clan that has come out,' and me a little maid of
+maybe twelve years old! I saw Prince Charlie too, and the blue eyes of him;
+he was pretty indeed! I had his hand to kiss in <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_276" id="Page_276"></a>[pg 276]</span>the front of the army. O,
+well, these were the good days, but it is all like a dream that I have seen
+and then awakened. It went what way you very well know; and these were the
+worst days of all, when the red-coat soldiers were out, and my father and
+my uncles lay in the hill, and I was to be carrying them their meat in the
+middle night, or at the short side of day when the cocks crow. Yes, I have
+walked in the night, many's the time, and my heart great in me for terror
+of the darkness. It is a strange thing I will never have been meddled with
+a bogle; but they say a maid goes safe. Next there was my uncle's marriage,
+and that was a dreadful affair beyond all. Jean Kay was that woman's name;
+and she had me in the room with her that night at Inversnaid, the night we
+took her from her friends in the old, ancient manner. She would and she
+wouldn't; she was for marrying Rob the one minute, and the next she would
+be for none of him. I will never have seen such a feckless creature of a
+woman; surely all there was of her would tell her ay or no. Well, she was a
+widow, and I can never be thinking a widow a good woman."</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona!" says I, "how do you make out that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know," said she; "I am only telling you the seeming in my
+heart. And then to marry a new man! Fy! But that was her; and she was
+married again upon my Uncle Robin, and went with him awhile to kirk and
+market; and then wearied, or else her <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_277" id="Page_277"></a>[pg 277]</span>friends got claught of her
+and talked her round, or maybe she turned ashamed; at the least of it, she
+ran away, and went back to her own folk, and said we had held her in the
+lake, and I will never tell you all what. I have never thought much of any
+females since that day. And so in the end my father, James More, came to be
+cast in prison, and you know the rest of it as well as me."</p>
+
+<p>"And through all you had no friends?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said she; "I have been pretty chief with two-three lasses on the
+braes, but not to call it friends."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, mine is a plain tale," said I. "I never had a friend to my name
+till I met in with you."</p>
+
+<p>"And that brave Mr. Stewart?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"O, yes, I was forgetting him," I said. "But he is a man, and that is
+very different."</p>
+
+<p>"I would think so," said she. "O, yes, it is quite different."</p>
+
+<p>"And then there was one other," said I. "I once thought I had a friend,
+but it proved a disappointment."</p>
+
+<p>She asked me who she was?</p>
+
+<p>"It was a he, then," said I. "We were the two best lads at my father's
+school, and we thought we loved each other dearly. Well, the time came when
+he went to Glasgow to a merchant's house, that was his second cousin once
+removed; and wrote me two-three times by <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_278" id="Page_278"></a>[pg 278]</span>the carrier; and then he
+found new friends, and I might write till I was tired, he took no notice.
+Eh, Catriona, it took me a long while to forgive the world. There is not
+anything more bitter than to lose a fancied friend."</p>
+
+<p>Then she began to question me close upon his looks and character, for we
+were each a great deal concerned in all that touched the other; till at
+last, in a very evil hour, I minded of his letters and went and fetched the
+bundle from the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>"Here are his letters," said I, "and all the letters that ever I got.
+That will be the last I'll can tell of myself; you know the lave<sup><a
+href="#fn26" name="rfn26">[26]</a></sup> as well as I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you let me read them, then?" says she.</p>
+
+<p>I told her, <i>if she would be at the pains</i>; and she bade me go away
+and she would read them from the one end to the other. Now, in this bundle
+that I gave her, there were packed together not only all the letters of my
+false friend, but one or two of Mr. Campbell's when he was in town at the
+Assembly, and to make a complete roll of all that ever was written to me,
+Catriona's little word, and the two I had received from Miss Grant, one
+when I was on the Bass and one on board that ship. But of these last I had
+no particular mind at the moment.</p>
+
+<p>I was in that state of subjection to the thought of my friend that it
+mattered not what I did, nor scarce <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_279" id="Page_279"></a>[pg 279]</span>whether I was in her
+presence or out of it; I had caught her like some kind of a noble fever
+that lived continually in my bosom, by night and by day, and whether I was
+waking or asleep. So it befell that after I was come into the fore-part of
+the ship where the broad bows splashed into the billows, I was in no such
+hurry to return as you might fancy; rather prolonged my absence like a
+variety in pleasure. I do not think I am by nature much of an Epicurean;
+and there had come till then so small a share of pleasure in my way that I
+might be excused perhaps to dwell on it unduly.</p>
+
+<p>When I returned to her again, I had a faint, painful impression as of a
+buckle slipped, so coldly she returned the packet.</p>
+
+<p>"You have read them?" said I; and I thought my voice sounded not wholly
+natural, for I was turning in my mind for what could ail her.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you mean me to read all?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>I told her "Yes," with a drooping voice.</p>
+
+<p>"The last of them as well?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>I knew where we were now; yet I would not lie to her either. "I gave
+them all without after-thought," I said, "as I supposed that you would read
+them. I see no harm in any."</p>
+
+<p>"I will be differently made," said she. "I thank God I am differently
+made. It was not a fit letter to be shown me. It was not fit to be
+written."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280"></a>[pg
+280]</span>"I think you are speaking of your own friend, Barbara Grant?"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"There will not be anything as bitter as to lose a fancied friend," said
+she, quoting my own expression.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it is sometimes the friendship that was fancied!" I cried.
+"What kind of justice do you call this, to blame me for some words that a
+tomfool of a madcap lass has written down upon a piece of paper? You know
+yourself with what respect I have behaved--and would do always."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you would show me that same letter!" says she. "I want no such
+friends. I can be doing very well, Mr. Balfour, without her--or you."</p>
+
+<p>"This is your fine gratitude!" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very much obliged to you," said she. "I will be asking you to take
+away your--letters." She seemed to choke upon the word, so that it sounded
+like an oath.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall never ask twice," said I; picked up that bundle, walked a
+little way forward and cast them as far as possible into the sea. For a
+very little more, I could have cast myself after them.</p>
+
+<p>The rest of the day I walked up and down raging. There were few names so
+ill but what I gave her them in my own mind before the sun went down. All
+that I had ever heard of Highland pride seemed quite outdone; that a girl
+(scarce grown) should resent so trifling an allusion, and that from her
+next friend, that she <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281"
+id="Page_281"></a>[pg 281]</span>had near wearied me with praising of! I
+had bitter, sharp, hard thoughts of her, like an angry boy's. If I had
+kissed her indeed (I thought), perhaps she would have taken it pretty well;
+and only because it had been written down, and with a spice of jocularity,
+up she must fuff in this ridiculous passion. It seemed to me there was a
+want of penetration in the female sex, to make angels weep over the case of
+the poor men.</p>
+
+<p>We were side by side again at supper, and what a change was there! She
+was like curdled milk to me; her face was like a wooden doll's; I could
+have indifferently smitten her or grovelled at her feet, but she gave me
+not the least occasion to do either. No sooner the meal done than she
+betook herself to attend on Mrs. Gebbie, which I think she had a little
+neglected heretofore. But she was to make up for lost time, and in what
+remained of the passage was extraordinary assiduous with the old lady, and
+on deck began to make a great deal more than I thought wise of Captain
+Sang. Not but what the captain seemed a worthy, fatherly man; but I hated
+to behold her in the least familiarity with anyone except myself.</p>
+
+<p>Altogether, she was so quick to avoid me, and so constant to keep
+herself surrounded with others, that I must watch a long while before I
+could find my opportunity; and after it was found, I made not much of it,
+as you are now to hear.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282"></a>[pg
+282]</span>"I have no guess how I have offended," said I; "it should scarce
+be beyond pardon, then. O, try if you can pardon me."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no pardon to give," said she; and the words seemed to come out
+of her throat like marbles. "I will be very much obliged for all your
+friendships." And she made me an eight part of a curtsey.</p>
+
+<p>But I had schooled myself beforehand to say more, and I was going to say
+it too.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one thing," said I. "If I have shocked your particularity by
+the showing of that letter, it cannot touch Miss Grant. She wrote not to
+you, but to a poor, common, ordinary lad, who might have had more sense
+than show it. If you are to blame me--"</p>
+
+<p>"I will advise you to say no more about that girl, at all events!" said
+Catriona. "It is her I will never look the road of, not if she lay dying."
+She turned away from me, and suddenly back. "Will you swear you will have
+no more to deal with her?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, and I will never be so unjust then," said I; "nor yet so
+ungrateful."</p>
+
+<p>And now it was I that turned away.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283"></a>[pg
+283]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXII'></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h3>HELVOETSLUYS</h3>
+
+
+<p>The weather in the end considerably worsened; the wind sang in the
+shrouds, the sea swelled higher, and the ship began to labour and cry out
+among the billows. The song of the leadsman in the chains was now scarce
+ceasing, for we thrid all the way among shoals. About nine in the morning,
+in a burst of wintry sun between two squalls of hail, I had my first look
+of Holland--a line of windmills birling in the breeze. It was besides my
+first knowledge of these daft-like contrivances, which gave me a near sense
+of foreign travel and a new world and life. We came to an anchor about
+half-past eleven, outside the harbour of Helvoetsluys, in a place where the
+sea sometimes broke and the ship pitched outrageously. You may be sure we
+were all on deck save Mrs. Gebbie, some of us in cloaks, others mantled in
+the ship's tarpaulins, all clinging on by ropes, and jesting the most like
+old sailor-folk that we could imitate.</p>
+
+<p>Presently a boat, that was backed like a partan-crab, came gingerly
+alongside, and the skipper of it hailed our master in the Dutch. Thence
+Captain Sang <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284"></a>[pg
+284]</span>turned, very troubled like, to Catriona; and the rest of us
+crowding about, the nature of the difficulty was made plain to all. The
+<i>Rose</i> was bound to the port of Rotterdam, whither the other
+passengers were in a great impatience to arrive, in view of a conveyance
+due to leave that very evening in the direction of the Upper Germany. This,
+with the present half-gale of wind, the captain (if no time were lost)
+declared himself still capable to save. Now James More had trysted in
+Helvoet with his daughter, and the captain had engaged to call before the
+port and place her (according to the custom) in a shore boat. There was the
+boat, to be sure, and there was Catriona ready: but both our master and the
+patroon of the boat scrupled at the risk, and the first was in no humour to
+delay.</p>
+
+<p>"Your father," said he, "would be gey an little pleased if we was to
+break a leg to ye, Miss Drummond, let-a-be drowning of you. Take my way of
+it," says he, "and come on-by with the rest of us here to Rotterdam. Ye can
+get a passage down the Maes in a sailing scoot as far to the Brill, and
+thence on again, by a place in a rattel-waggon, back to Helvoet."</p>
+
+<p>But Catriona would hear of no change. She looked white-like as she
+beheld the bursting of the sprays, the green seas that sometimes poured
+upon the forecastle, and the perpetual bounding and swooping of the boat
+among the billows; but she stood firmly by her father's orders. "My father,
+James More, will have arranged <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285"
+id="Page_285"></a>[pg 285]</span>it so," was her first word and her last. I
+thought it very idle and indeed wanton in the girl to be so literal and
+stand opposite to so much kind advice; but the fact is she had a very good
+reason, if she would have told us. Sailing scoots and rattel-waggons are
+excellent things; only the use of them must first be paid for, and all she
+was possessed of in the world was just two shillings and a penny halfpenny
+sterling. So it fell out that captain and passengers, not knowing of her
+destitution--and she being too proud to tell them--spoke in vain.</p>
+
+<p>"But you ken nae French and nae Dutch neither," said one.</p>
+
+<p>"It is very true," says she, "but since the year '46 there are so many
+of the honest Scots abroad that I will be doing very well, I thank
+you."</p>
+
+<p>There was a pretty country simplicity in this that made some laugh,
+others looked the more sorry, and Mr. Gebbie fall outright in a passion. I
+believe he knew it was his duty (his wife having accepted charge of the
+girl) to have gone ashore with her and seen her safe; nothing would have
+induced him to have done so, since it must have involved the loss of his
+conveyance; and I think he made it up to his conscience by the loudness of
+his voice. At least he broke out upon Captain Sang, raging and saying the
+thing was a disgrace; that it was mere death to try to leave the ship, and
+at any event we could not cast down an innocent maid in a boatful of nasty
+Holland fishers, and leave <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286"
+id="Page_286"></a>[pg 286]</span>her to her fate. I was thinking something
+of the same; took the mate upon one side, arranged with him to send on my
+chests by track-scoot to an address I had in Leyden, and stood up and
+signalled to the fishers.</p>
+
+<p>"I will go ashore with the young lady, Captain Sang," said I. "It is all
+one what way I go to Leyden;" and leaped at the same time into the boat,
+which I managed not so elegantly but what I fell with two of the fishers in
+the bilge.</p>
+
+<p>From the boat the business appeared yet more precarious than from the
+ship, she stood so high over us, swung down so swift, and menaced us so
+perpetually with her plunging and passaging upon the anchor cable. I began
+to think I had made a fool's bargain, that it was merely impossible
+Catriona should be got on board to me, and that I stood to be set ashore at
+Helvoet all by myself and with no hope of any reward but the pleasure of
+embracing James More, if I should want to. But this was to reckon without
+the lass's courage. She had seen me leap with very little appearance
+(however much reality) of hesitation; to be sure, she was not to be beat by
+her discarded friend. Up she stood on the bulwarks and held by a stay, the
+wind blowing in her petticoats, which made the enterprise more dangerous
+and gave us rather more of a view of her stockings than would be thought
+genteel in cities. There was no minute lost, and scarce time given for any
+to interfere if they had wished the same. I stood up on the other <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287"></a>[pg 287]</span>side
+and spread my arms; the ship swung down on us, the patroon humoured his
+boat nearer in than was perhaps wholly safe, and Catriona leaped into the
+air. I was so happy as to catch her, and the fishers readily supporting us,
+escaped a fall. She held to me a moment very tight, breathing quick and
+deep; thence (she still clinging to me with both hands) we were passed aft
+to our places by the steersman; and Captain Sang and all the crew and
+passengers cheering and crying farewell, the boat was put about for
+shore.</p>
+
+
+<a name="balfour007"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour007.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: UP SHE STOOD ON THE BULWARKS AND HELD BY A
+STAY" src="images/balfour007sm.jpg" height="554" width="387" /></a>
+<br />UP SHE STOOD ON THE BULWARKS AND
+HELD BY A STAY
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+<p>As soon as Catriona came a little to herself she unhanded me suddenly
+but said no word. No more did I; and indeed the whistling of the wind and
+the breaching of the sprays made it no time for speech; and our crew not
+only toiled excessively but made extremely little way, so that the
+<i>Rose</i> had got her anchor and was off again before we had approached
+the harbour mouth.</p>
+
+<p>We were no sooner in smooth water than the patroon, according to their
+beastly Hollands custom, stopped his boat and required of us our fares. Two
+guilders was the man's demand, between three and four shillings English
+money, for each passenger. But at this Catriona began to cry out with a
+vast deal of agitation. She had asked of Captain Sang, she said, and the
+fare was but an English shilling. "Do you think I will have come on board
+and not ask first?" cries she. The patroon scolded back upon her in a lingo
+where the oaths <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288"
+id="Page_288"></a>[pg 288]</span>were English and the rest right Hollands;
+till at last (seeing her near tears) I privately slipped in the rogue's
+hand six shillings, whereupon he was obliging enough to receive from her
+the other shilling without more complaint. No doubt I was a good deal
+nettled and ashamed. I like to see folk thrifty but not with so much
+passion; and I daresay it would be rather coldly that I asked her, as the
+boat moved on again for shore, where it was that she was trysted with her
+father.</p>
+
+<p>"He is to be inquired of at the house of one Sprott, an honest Scotch
+merchant," says she; and then with the same breath, "I am wishing to thank
+you very much--you are a brave friend to me."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be time enough when I get you to your father," said I, little
+thinking that I spoke so true. "I can tell him a fine tale of a loyal
+daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"O, I do not think I will be a loyal girl, at all events," she cried,
+with a great deal of painfulness in the expression. "I do not think my
+heart is true."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet there are very few that would have made that leap, and all to obey
+a father's orders," I observed.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot have you to be thinking of me so," she cried again. "When you
+had done that same, how would I stop behind? And at all events that was not
+all the reasons." Whereupon, with a burning face, she told me the plain
+truth upon her poverty.</p>
+
+<p>"Good guide us!" cried I, "what kind of daft-like proceeding is this, to
+let yourself be launched on the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289"
+id="Page_289"></a>[pg 289]</span>continent of Europe with an empty purse--I
+count it hardly decent--scant decent!" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"You forget James More, my father, is a poor gentleman," said she. "He
+is a hunted exile."</p>
+
+<p>"But I think not all your friends are hunted exiles," I exclaimed. "And
+was this fair to them that care for you? Was it fair to me? was it fair to
+Miss Grant that counselled you to go, and would be driven fair horn-mad if
+she could hear of it? Was it even fair to these Gregory folk that you were
+living with, and used you lovingly? It's a blessing you have fallen in my
+hands! Suppose your father hindered by an accident, what would become of
+you here, and you your lee-alone in a strange place? The thought of the
+thing frightens me," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"I will have lied to all of them," she replied. "I will have told them
+all that I had plenty. I told <i>her</i> too. I could not be lowering James
+More to them."</p>
+
+<p>I found out later on that she must have lowered him in the very dust,
+for the lie was originally the father's not the daughter's, and she thus
+obliged to persevere in it for the man's reputation. But at the time I was
+ignorant of this, and the mere thought of her destitution and the perils in
+which she must have fallen, had ruffled me almost beyond reason.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well, well," said I, "you will have to learn more sense."</p>
+
+<p>I left her mails for the moment in an inn upon the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></a>[pg 290]</span>shore,
+where I got a direction for Sprott's house in my new French, and we walked
+there--it was some little way--beholding the place with wonder as we went.
+Indeed, there was much for Scots folk to admire; canals and trees being
+intermingled with the houses; the houses, each within itself, of a brave
+red brick, the colour of a rose, with steps and benches of blue marble at
+the cheek of every door, and the whole town so clean you might have dined
+upon the causeway. Sprott was within, upon his ledgers, in a low parlour,
+very neat and clean, and set out with china and pictures and a globe of the
+earth in a brass frame. He was a big-chafted, ruddy, lusty man, with a
+crooked hard look to him; and he made us not that much civility as offer us
+a seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Is James More Macgregor now in Helvoet, sir?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>"I ken nobody by such a name," says he, impatient-like.</p>
+
+<p>"Since you are so particular," says I, "I will amend my question, and
+ask you where we are to find in Helvoet one James Drummond, <i>alias</i>
+Macgregor, <i>alias</i> James More, late tenant in Iveronachile?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," says he, "he may be in Hell for what I ken, and for my part I
+wish he was."</p>
+
+<p>"The young lady is that gentleman's daughter, sir," said I, "before
+whom, I think you will agree with me, it is not very becoming to discuss
+his character."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291"></a>[pg
+291]</span>"I have nothing to make either with him, or her, or you!" cries
+he in his gross voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Under your favour, Mr. Sprott," said I, "this young lady is come from
+Scotland seeking him, and by whatever mistake, was given the name of your
+house for a direction. An error it seems to have been, but I think this
+places both you and me--who am but her fellow-traveller by accident--under
+a strong obligation to help our countrywoman."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you ding me daft?" he cries. "I tell ye I ken naething and care
+less either for him or his breed. I tell ye the man owes me money."</p>
+
+<p>"That may very well be, sir," said I, who was now rather more angry than
+himself. "At least I owe you nothing; the young lady is under my
+protection; and I am neither at all used with these manners, nor in the
+least content with them."</p>
+
+<p>As I said this, and without particularly thinking what I did, I drew a
+step or two nearer to his table; thus striking, by mere good fortune, on
+the only argument that could at all affect the man. The blood left his
+lusty countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"For the Lord's sake dinna be hasty, sir!" he cried. "I am truly wishfu'
+no to be offensive. But ye ken, sir, I'm like a wheen guid-natured, honest,
+canty auld fallows--my bark is waur nor my bite. To hear me, ye micht
+whiles fancy I was a wee thing dour; but na, na! its a kind auld fellow at
+heart, Sandie Sprott! <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292"
+id="Page_292"></a>[pg 292]</span>And ye could never imagine the fyke and
+fash this man has been to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good, sir," said I. "Then I will make that much freedom with your
+kindness, as trouble you for your last news of Mr. Drummond."</p>
+
+<p>"You're welcome, sir!" said he. "As for the young leddy (my respec's to
+her!) he'll just have clean forgotten her. I ken the man, ye see; I have
+lost siller by him ere now. He thinks of naebody but just himsel'; clan,
+king, or dauchter, if he can get his wameful, he would give them a' the
+go-by! ay, or his correspondent either. For there is a sense in whilk I may
+be nearly almost said to be his correspondent. The fact is, we are employed
+thegether in a business affair, and I think it's like to turn out a dear
+affair for Sandie Sprott. The man's as guid's my pairtner, and I give ye my
+mere word I ken naething by where he is. He micht be coming here to
+Helvoet; he micht come here the morn, he michtnae come for a twalmonth; I
+would wonder at naething--or just at the ae thing, and that's if he was to
+pay me my siller. Ye see what way I stand with it; and it's clear I'm no
+very likely to meddle up with the young leddy, as ye ca' her. She cannae
+stop here, that's ae thing certain sure. Dod, sir, I'm a lone man! If I was
+to tak her in, its highly possible the hellicat would try and gar me marry
+her when he turned up."</p>
+
+<p>"Enough of this talk," said I. "I will take the <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></a>[pg 293]</span>young lady among better
+friends. Give me pen, ink, and paper, and I will leave here for James More
+the address of my correspondent in Leyden. He can inquire from me where he
+is to seek his daughter."</p>
+
+<p>This word I wrote and sealed; which while I was doing, Sprott of his own
+motion made a welcome offer, to charge himself with Miss Drummond's mails,
+and even send a porter for them to the inn. I advanced him to that effect a
+dollar or two to be a cover, and he gave me an acknowledgment in writing of
+the sum.</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon (I giving my arm to Catriona) we left the house of this
+unpalatable rascal. She had said no word throughout, leaving me to judge
+and speak in her place; I, upon my side, had been careful not to embarrass
+her by a glance; and even now although my heart still glowed inside of me
+with shame and anger, I made it my affair to seem quite easy.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said I, "let us get back to yon same inn where they can speak the
+French, have a piece of dinner, and inquire for conveyances to Rotterdam. I
+will never be easy till I have you safe again in the hands of Mrs.
+Gebbie."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose it will have to be," said Catriona, "though whoever will be
+pleased, I do not think it will be her. And I will remind you this once
+again that I have but one shilling, and three baubees."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></a>[pg
+294]</span>"And just this once again," said I, "I will remind you it was a
+blessing that I came alongst with you."</p>
+
+<p>"What else would I be thinking all this time!" says she, and I thought
+weighed a little on my arm. "It is you that are the good friend to me."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></a>[pg
+295]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXIII'></a>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>TRAVELS IN HOLLAND</h3>
+
+
+<p>The rattel-wagon, which is a kind of a long wagon set with benches,
+carried us in four hours of travel to the great city of Rotterdam. It was
+long past dark by then, but the streets pretty brightly lighted and
+thronged with the wild-like, outlandish characters--bearded Hebrews, black
+men, and the hordes of courtesans, most indecently adorned with finery and
+stopping seamen by their very sleeves; the clash of talk about us made our
+heads to whirl; and what was the most unexpected of all, we appeared to be
+no more struck with all these foreigners than they with us. I made the best
+face I could, for the lass's sake and my own credit; but the truth is I
+felt like a lost sheep, and my heart beat in my bosom with anxiety. Once or
+twice I inquired after the harbor or the berth of the ship <i>Rose</i>; but
+either fell on some who spoke only Hollands, or my own French failed me.
+Trying a street at a venture, I came upon a lane of lighted houses, the
+doors and windows thronged with wauf-like painted women; these jostled and
+mocked upon us as <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296"
+id="Page_296"></a>[pg 296]</span>we passed, and I was thankful we had
+nothing of their language. A little after we issued forth upon an open
+place along the harbour.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall be doing now," cries I, as soon as I spied masts. "Let us walk
+here by the harbour. We are sure to meet some that has the English, and at
+the best of it we may light upon that very ship."</p>
+
+<p>We did the next best, as happened; for about nine of the evening, whom
+should we walk into the arms of but Captain Sang? He told us they had made
+their run in the most incredible brief time, the wind holding strong until
+they reached port; by which means his passengers were all gone already on
+their further travels. It was impossible to chase after the Gebbies into
+High Germany, and we had no other acquaintance to fall back upon but
+Captain Sang himself. It was the more gratifying to find the man friendly
+and wishful to assist. He made it a small affair to find some good plain
+family of merchants, where Catriona might harbour till the <i>Rose</i> was
+loaden; declared he would then blithely carry her back to Leith for nothing
+and see her safe in the hands of Mr. Gregory; and in the meanwhile carried
+us to a late ordinary for the meal we stood in need of. He seemed extremely
+friendly, as I say, but what surprised me a good deal, rather boisterous in
+the bargain; and the cause of this was soon to appear. For at the ordinary,
+calling for Rhenish wine and drinking of it deep, he soon became
+unutterably tipsy. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297"
+id="Page_297"></a>[pg 297]</span>In, this case, as too common with all men,
+but especially with those of his rough trade, what little sense or manners
+he possessed deserted him; and he behaved himself so scandalous to the
+young lady, jesting most ill-favoredly at the figure she had made on the
+ship's rail, that I had no resource but carry her suddenly away.</p>
+
+<p>She came out of that ordinary clinging to me close. "Take me away,
+David," she said. "<i>You</i> keep me. I am not afraid with you."</p>
+
+<p>"And have no cause, my little friend!" cried I, and could have found it
+in my heart to weep.</p>
+
+<p>"Where will you be taking me?" she said again. "Don't leave me at all
+events, never leave me."</p>
+
+<p>"Where am I taking you indeed?" says I stopping, for I had been staving
+on ahead in mere blindness. "I must stop and think. But I'll not leave you,
+Catriona; the Lord do so to me, and more also, if I should fail or fash
+you."</p>
+
+<p>She crept closer in to me by way of a reply.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," I said, "is the stillest place that we have hit on yet in this
+busy byke of a city. Let us sit down here under yon tree and consider of
+our course."</p>
+
+<p>That tree (which I am little like to forget) stood hard by the harbour
+side. It was a black night, but lights were in the houses, and nearer hand
+in the quiet ships; there was a shining of the city on the one hand, and a
+buzz hung over it of many thousands <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></a>[pg 298]</span>walking and talking; on
+the other, it was dark and the water bubbled on the sides. I spread my
+cloak upon a builder's stone, and made her sit there; she would have kept
+her hold upon me, for she still shook with the late affronts; but I wanted
+to think clear, disengaged myself, and paced to and fro before her, in the
+manner of what we call a smuggler's walk, belabouring my brains for any
+remedy. By the course of these scattering thoughts I was brought suddenly
+face to face with a remembrance that, in the heat and haste of our
+departure, I had left Captain Sang to pay the ordinary. At this I began to
+laugh out loud, for I thought the man well served; and at the same time, by
+an instinctive movement, carried my hand to the pocket where my money was.
+I suppose it was in the lane where the women jostled us; but there is only
+the one thing certain, that my purse was gone.</p>
+
+<p>"You will have thought of something good," said she, observing me to
+pause.</p>
+
+<p>At the pinch we were in, my mind became suddenly clear as a perspective
+glass, and I saw there was no choice of methods. I had not one doit of
+coin, but in my pocket-book I had still my letter on the Leyden merchant;
+and there was now but the one way to get to Leyden, and that was to walk on
+our two feet.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "I know you're brave and I believe you're strong, do
+you think you could walk thirty miles on a plain road?" We found it, I
+believe, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299"></a>[pg
+299]</span>scarce the two-thirds of that, but such was my notion of the
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>"David," she said, "if you will just keep near, I will go anywhere and
+do anything. The courage of my heart, it is all broken. Do not be leaving
+me in this horrible country by myself, and I will do all else."</p>
+
+<p>"Can you start now and march all night?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I will do all that you can ask of me," she said, "and never ask you
+why. I have been a bad ungrateful girl to you; and do what you please with
+me now! And I think Miss Barbara Grant is the best lady in the world," she
+added, "and I do not see what she would deny you for at all events."</p>
+
+<p>This was Greek and Hebrew to me; but I had other matters to consider,
+and the first of these was to get clear of that city on the Leyden road. It
+proved a cruel problem; and it may have been one or two at night ere we had
+solved it. Once beyond the houses, there was neither moon or stars to guide
+us; only the whiteness of the way in the midst and a blackness of an alley
+on both hands. The walking was besides made most extraordinary difficult by
+a plain black frost that fell suddenly in the small hours and turned that
+highway into one long slide.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Catriona," said I, "here we are like the king's sons and the old
+wives' daughters in your daft-like Highland tales. Soon we'll be going over
+the '<i>seven Bens, the seven glens, and the seven mountain <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300"></a>[pg
+300]</span>moors</i>.'" Which was a common byword or overcome in these
+tales of hers that had stuck in my memory.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," says she, "but here are no glens or mountains! Though I will never
+be denying but what the trees and some of the plain places hereabouts are
+very pretty. But our country is the best yet."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish we could say as much for our own folk," says I, recalling Sprott
+and Sang, and perhaps James More himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I will never complain of the country of my friend," said she, and spoke
+it out with an accent so particular that I seemed to see the look upon her
+face.</p>
+
+<p>I caught in my breath sharp and came near falling (for my pains) on the
+black ice.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not know what <i>you</i> think, Catriona," said I, when I was a
+little recovered, "but this has been the best day yet! I think shame to say
+it, when you have met in with such misfortunes and disfavours; but for me,
+it has been the best day yet."</p>
+
+<p>"It was a good day when you showed me so much love," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet I think shame to be happy too," I went on, "and you here on the
+road in the black night."</p>
+
+<p>"Where in the great world would I be else?" she cried. "I am thinking I
+am safest where I am with you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am quite forgiven, then?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301"></a>[pg
+301]</span>"Will you not forgive me that time so much as not to take it in
+your mouth again?" she cried. "There's is nothing in this heart to you but
+thanks. But I will be honest too," she added, with a kind of suddenness,
+"and I'll never can forgive that girl."</p>
+
+<p>"Is this Miss Grant again?" said I. "You said yourself she was the best
+lady in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"So she will be, indeed!" says Catriona. "But I will never forgive her
+for all that. I will never, never forgive her, and let me hear tell of her
+no more."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "this beats all that ever came to my knowledge; and I
+wonder that you can indulge yourself in such bairnly whims. Here is a young
+lady that was the best friend in the world to the both of us, that learned
+us how to dress ourselves, and in a great manner how to behave, as anyone
+can see that knew us both before and after."</p>
+
+<p>But Catriona stopped square in the midst of the highway.</p>
+
+<p>"It is this way of it," said she. "Either you will go on to speak of
+her, and I will go back to yon town, and let come of it what God pleases!
+Or else you will do me that politeness to talk of other things."</p>
+
+<p>I was the most nonplussed person in this world; but I bethought me that
+she depended altogether on my help, that she was of the frail sex and not
+so much beyond a child, and it was for me to be wise for the pair of
+us.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302"></a>[pg
+302]</span>"My dear girl," said I, "I can make neither head nor tails of
+this; but God forbid that I should do anything to set you on the jee. As
+for talking of Miss Grant I have no such a mind to it, and I believe it was
+yourself began it. My only design (if I took you up at all) was for your
+own improvement, for I hate the very look of injustice. Not that I do not
+wish you to have a good pride and a nice female delicacy; they become you
+well; but here you show them to excess."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, then, have you done?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I have done," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"A very good thing," said she, and we went on again, but now in
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>It was an eerie employment to walk in the gross night, beholding only
+shadows and hearing nought but our own steps. At first, I believe our
+hearts burned against each other with a deal of enmity; but the darkness
+and the cold, and the silence, which only the cocks sometimes interrupted,
+or sometimes the farmyard dogs, had pretty soon brought down our pride to
+the dust; and for my own particular, I would have jumped at any decent
+opening for speech.</p>
+
+<p>Before the day peeped, came on a warmish rain, and the frost was all
+wiped away from among our feet. I took my cloak to her and sought to hap
+her in the same; she bade me, rather impatiently, to keep it.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed and I will do no such thing," said I. "Here am I, a great, ugly
+lad that has seen all kinds of weather, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_303" id="Page_303"></a>[pg 303]</span>and here are you a tender,
+pretty maid! My dear, you would not put me to a shame?"</p>
+
+<p>Without more words she let me cover her; which as I was doing in the
+darkness, I let my hand rest a moment on her shoulder, almost like an
+embrace.</p>
+
+<p>"You must try to be more patient of your friend," said I.</p>
+
+<p>I thought she seemed to lean the least thing in the world against my
+bosom, or perhaps it was but fancy.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be no end to your goodness," said she.</p>
+
+<p>And we went on again in silence; but now all was changed; and the
+happiness that was in my heart was like a fire in a great chimney.</p>
+
+<p>The rain passed ere day; it was but a sloppy morning as we came into the
+town of Delft. The red gabled houses made a handsome show on either hand of
+a canal; the servant lassies were out slestering and scrubbing at the very
+stones upon the public highway; smoke rose from a hundred kitchens; and it
+came in upon me strongly it was time to break our fasts.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "I believe you have yet a shilling and three
+baubees?"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you wanting it?" said she, and passed me her purse. "I am wishing
+it was five pounds! What will you want it for?"</p>
+
+<p>"And what have we been walking for all night, like a pair of waif
+Egyptians?" says I. "Just because I was robbed of my purse and all I
+possessed in that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304"
+id="Page_304"></a>[pg 304]</span>unchancy town of Rotterdam. I will tell
+you of it now, because I think the worst is over, but we have still a good
+tramp before us till we get to where my money is, and if you would not buy
+me a piece of bread, I were like to go fasting."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me with open eyes. By the light of the new day she was all
+black and pale for weariness, so that my heart smote me for her. But as for
+her, she broke out laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"My torture! are we beggars then?" she cried. "You too? O, I could have
+wished for this same thing! And I am glad to buy your breakfast to you. But
+it would be pleisand if I would have had to dance to get a meal to you! For
+I believe they are not very well acquainted with our manner of dancing over
+here, and might be paying for the curiosity of that sight."</p>
+
+<p>I could have kissed her for that word, not with a lover's mind, but in a
+heat of admiration. For it always warms a man to see a woman brave.</p>
+
+<p>We got a drink of milk from a country wife but new come to the town, and
+in a baker's, a piece of excellent, hot, sweet-smelling bread, which we ate
+upon the road as we went on. That road from Delft to the Hague is just five
+miles of a fine avenue shaded with trees, a canal on the one hand, on the
+other excellent pastures of cattle. It was pleasant here indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"And now, Davie," said she, "what will you do with me at all
+events?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305"></a>[pg
+305]</span>"It is what we have to speak of," said I, "and the sooner yet
+the better. I can come by money in Leyden; that will be all well. But the
+trouble is how to dispose of you until your father come. I thought last
+night you seemed a little sweir to part from me?"</p>
+
+<p>"It will be more than seeming then," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a very young maid," said I, "and I am but a very young callant.
+This is a great piece of difficulty. What way are we to manage? Unless,
+indeed, you could pass to be my sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"And what for no?" said she, "if you would let me!"</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you were so, indeed!" I cried. "I would be a fine man if I had
+such a sister. But the rub is that you are Catriona Drummond."</p>
+
+<p>"And now I will be Catrine Balfour," she said. "And who is to ken? They
+are all strange folk here."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think that it would do," says I. "I own it troubles me. I would
+like it very ill, if I advised you at all wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"David, I have no friend here but you," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"The mere truth is, I am too young to be your friend," said I. "I am too
+young to advise you, or you to be advised. I see not what else we are to
+do, and yet I ought to warn you."</p>
+
+<p>"I will have no choice left," said she. "My father James More has not
+used me very well, and it is not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306"
+id="Page_306"></a>[pg 306]</span>the first time. I am cast upon your hands
+like a sack of barley meal, and have nothing else to think of but your
+pleasure. If you will have me, good and well. If you will not"--she turned
+and touched her hand upon my arm--"David, I am afraid," said she.</p>
+
+<p>"No, but I ought to warn you," I began; and then bethought me that I was
+the bearer of the purse, and it would never do to seem too churlish.
+"Catriona," said I, "don't misunderstand me: I am just trying to do my duty
+by you, girl! Here am I going alone to this strange city, to be a solitary
+student there; and here is this chance arisen that you might dwell with me
+a bit, and be like my sister: you can surely understand this much, my dear,
+that I would just love to have you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and here I am," said she. "So that's soon settled."</p>
+
+<p>I know I was in duty bounden to have spoke more plain. I know this was a
+great blot on my character for which I was lucky that I did not pay more
+dear. But I minded how easy her delicacy had been startled with a word of
+kissing her in Barbara's letter; now that she depended on me, how was I to
+be more bold? Besides, the truth is, I could see no other feasible method
+to dispose of her. And I daresay inclination pulled me very strong.</p>
+
+<p>A little beyond the Hague she fell very lame and made the rest of the
+distance heavily enough. Twice <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307"
+id="Page_307"></a>[pg 307]</span>she must rest by the wayside, which she
+did with pretty apologies, calling herself a shame to the Highlands and the
+race she came of, and nothing but a hindrance to myself. It was her excuse,
+she said, that she was not much used with walking shod. I would have had
+her strip off her shoes and stockings and go barefoot. But she pointed out
+to me that the women of that country, even in the landward roads, appeared
+to be all shod.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not be disgracing my brother," said she, and was very merry with
+it all, although her face told tales of her.</p>
+
+<p>There is a garden in that city we were bound to, sanded below with clean
+sand, the trees meeting overhead, some of them trimmed, some pleached, and
+the whole place beautified with alleys and arbours. Here I left Catriona,
+and went forward by myself to find my correspondent. There I drew on my
+credit, and asked to be recommended to some decent, retired lodging. My
+baggage not being yet arrived, I told him I supposed I should require his
+caution with the people of the house; and explained that, my sister being
+come for a while to keep house with me, I should be wanting two chambers.
+This was all very well; but the trouble was that Mr. Balfour in his letter
+of recommendation had condescended on a great deal of particulars, and
+never a word of any sister in the case. I could see my Dutchman was
+extremely suspicious; and viewing me over the rims of a great pair of
+spectacles--he <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308"
+id="Page_308"></a>[pg 308]</span>was a poor, frail body, and reminded me of
+an infirm rabbit--he began to question me close.</p>
+
+<p>Here I fell in a panic. Suppose he accept my tale (thinks I), suppose he
+invite my sister to his house, and that I bring her. I shall have a fine
+ravelled pirn to unwind, and may end by disgracing both the lassie and
+myself. Thereupon I began hastily to expound to him my sister's character.
+She was of a bashful disposition, it appeared, and so extremely fearful of
+meeting strangers that I had left her at that moment sitting in a public
+place alone. And then, being launched upon the stream of falsehood, I must
+do like all the rest of the world in the same circumstance, and plunge in
+deeper than was any service; adding some altogether needless particulars of
+Miss Balfour's ill-health and retirement during childhood. In the midst of
+which I awoke to a sense of my behaviour, and was turned to one blush.</p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman was not so much deceived but what he discovered a
+willingness to be quit of me. But he was first of all a man of business;
+and knowing that my money was good enough, however it might be with my
+conduct, he was so far obliging as to send his son to be my guide and
+caution in the matter of a lodging. This implied my presenting of the young
+man to Catriona. The poor, pretty child was much recovered with resting,
+looked and behaved to perfection, and took my arm and gave me the name of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309"></a>[pg
+309]</span>brother more easily than I could answer her. But there was one
+misfortune: thinking to help, she was rather towardly than otherwise to my
+Dutchman. And I could not but reflect that Miss Balfour had rather suddenly
+outgrown her bashfulness. And there was another thing, the difference of
+our speech. I had the Low Country tongue and dwelled upon my words; she had
+a hill voice, spoke with something of an English accent, only far more
+delightful, and was scarce quite fit to be called a deacon in the craft of
+talking English grammar; so that, for a brother and sister, we made a most
+uneven pair. But the young Hollander was a heavy dog, without so much
+spirit in his belly as to remark her prettiness, for which I scorned him.
+And as soon as he had found a cover to our heads, he left us alone, which
+was the greater service of the two.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310"></a>[pg
+310]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXIV'></a>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<h3>FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS</h3>
+
+
+<p>The place found was in the upper part of a house backed on a canal. We
+had two rooms, the second entering from the first; each had a chimney built
+out into the floor in the Dutch manner; and being alongside, each had the
+same prospect from the window of the top of a tree below us in a little
+court, of a piece of the canal, and of houses in the Hollands architecture
+and a church spire upon the further side. A full set of bells hung in that
+spire and made delightful music; and when there was any sun at all, it
+shone direct in our two chambers. From a tavern hard by we had good meals
+sent in.</p>
+
+<p>The first night we were both pretty weary, and she extremely so. There
+was little talk between us, and I packed her off to her bed as soon as she
+had eaten. The first thing in the morning I wrote word to Sprott to have
+her mails sent on, together with a line to Alan at his chief's; and had the
+same dispatched, and her breakfast ready, ere I waked her. I was a little
+abashed when she came forth in her one habit, and the mud of the way upon
+her stockings. By what inquiries I had made, it <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_311" id="Page_311"></a>[pg 311]</span>seemed a good few days
+must pass before her mails could come to hand in Leyden, and it was plainly
+needful she must have a shift of things. She was unwilling at first that I
+should go to that expense; but I reminded her she was now a rich man's
+sister and must appear suitably in the part, and we had not got to the
+second merchant's before she was entirely charmed into the spirit of the
+thing, and her eyes shining. It pleased me to see her so innocent and
+thorough in this pleasure. What was more extraordinary was the passion into
+which I fell on it myself; being never satisfied that I had bought her
+enough or fine enough, and never weary of beholding her in different
+attires. Indeed, I began to understand some little of Miss Grant's
+immersion in that interest of clothes; for the truth is, when you have the
+ground of a beautiful person to adorn, the whole business becomes
+beautiful. The Dutch chintzes I should say were extraordinary cheap and
+fine; but I would be ashamed to set down what I paid for stockings to her.
+Altogether I spent so great a sum upon this pleasuring (as I may call it)
+that I was ashamed for a great while to spend more; and by way of a set
+off, I left our chambers pretty bare. If we had beds, if Catriona was a
+little braw, and I had light to see her by, we were richly enough lodged
+for me.</p>
+
+<p>By the end of this merchandising I was glad to leave her at the door
+with all our purchases, and go for a long walk alone in which to read
+myself a lecture. Here had <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312"
+id="Page_312"></a>[pg 312]</span>I taken under my roof, and as good as to
+my bosom, a young lass extremely beautiful, and whose innocence was her
+peril. My talk with the old Dutchman, and the lies to which I was
+constrained, had already given me a sense of how my conduct must appear to
+others; and now, after the strong admiration I had just experienced and the
+immoderacy with which I had continued my vain purchases, I began to think
+of it myself as very hasarded. I bethought me, if I had a sister indeed,
+whether I would so expose her; then, judging the case too problematical, I
+varied my question into this, whether I would so trust Catriona in the
+hands of any other Christian being: the answer to which made my face to
+burn. The more cause, since I had been entrapped and had entrapped the girl
+into an undue situation, that I should behave in it with scrupulous nicety.
+She depended on me wholly for her bread and shelter; in case I should alarm
+her delicacy, she had no retreat. Besides, I was her host and her
+protector; and the more irregularly I had fallen in these positions, the
+less excuse for me if I should profit by the same to forward even the most
+honest suit; for with the opportunities that I enjoyed, and which no wise
+parent would have suffered for a moment, even the most honest suit would be
+unfair. I saw I must be extremely hold-off in my relations; and yet not too
+much so neither; for if I had no right to appear at all in the character of
+a suitor, I must yet appear continually, and if possible agreeably, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313"></a>[pg 313]</span>in that
+of host. It was plain I should require a great deal of tact and conduct,
+perhaps more than my years afforded. But I had rushed in where angels might
+have feared to tread, and there was no way out of that position, save by
+behaving right while I was in it. I made a set of rules for my guidance;
+prayed for strength to be enabled to observe them, and as a more human aid
+to the same end purchased a study book in law. This being all that I could
+think of, I relaxed from these grave considerations; whereupon my mind
+bubbled at once into an effervescency of pleasing spirits, and it was like
+one treading on air that I turned homeward. As I thought that name of home,
+and recalled the image of that figure awaiting me between four walls, my
+heart beat upon my bosom.</p>
+
+<p>My troubles began with my return. She ran to greet me with an obvious
+and affecting pleasure. She was clad, besides, entirely in the new clothes
+that I had bought for her; looked in them beyond expression well; and must
+walk about and drop me curtseys to display them and to be admired. I am
+sure I did it with an ill grace, for I thought to have choked upon the
+words.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, "if you will not be caring for my pretty clothes, see
+what I have done with our two chambers." And she showed me the place all
+very finely swept and the fires glowing in the two chimneys.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314"></a>[pg
+314]</span>I was glad of a chance to seem a little more severe than I quite
+felt. "Catriona," said I, "I am very much displeased with you, and you must
+never again lay a hand upon my room. One of us two must have the rule while
+we are here together; it is most fit it should be I who am both the man and
+the elder; and I give you that for my command."</p>
+
+<p>She dropped me one of her curtseys which were extraordinary taking. "If
+you will be cross," said she, "I must be making pretty manners at you,
+Davie. I will be very obedient, as I should be when every stitch upon all
+there is of me belongs to you. But you will not be very cross either,
+because now I have not anyone else."</p>
+
+<p>This struck me hard, and I made haste, in a kind of penitence, to blot
+out all the good effect of my last speech. In this direction, progress was
+more easy, being down hill; she led me forward, smiling; at the sight of
+her, in the brightness of the fire and with her pretty becks and looks, my
+heart was altogether melted. We made our meal with infinite mirth and
+tenderness; and the two seemed to be commingled into one, so that our very
+laughter sounded like a kindness.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of which I awoke to better recollections, made a lame word
+of excuse, and set myself boorishly to my studies. It was a substantial,
+instructive book that I had bought, by the late Dr. Heineccius, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315"></a>[pg 315]</span>in
+which I was to do a great deal of reading these next days, and often very
+glad that I had no one to question me of what I read. Methought she bit her
+lip at me a little, and that cut me. Indeed it left her wholly solitary,
+the more as she was very little of a reader, and had never a book. But what
+was I to do?</p>
+
+<p>So the rest of the evening flowed by almost without speech.</p>
+
+<p>I could have beat myself. I could not lie in my bed that night for rage
+and repentance, but walked to and fro on my bare feet till I was nearly
+perished, for the chimney was gone out and the frost keen. The thought of
+her in the next room, the thought that she might even hear me as I walked,
+the remembrance of my churlishness and that I must continue to practise the
+same ungrateful course or be dishonoured, put me beside my reason. I stood
+like a man between Scylla and Charybdis: <i>What must she think of me</i>?
+was my one thought that softened me continually into weakness. <i>What is
+to become of us</i>? the other which steeled me again to resolution. This
+was my first night of wakefulness and divided counsels, of which I was now
+to pass many, pacing like a madman, sometimes weeping like a childish boy,
+sometimes praying (I would fain hope) like a Christian.</p>
+
+<p>But prayer is not very difficult, and the hitch comes in practice. In
+her presence, and above all if I allowed <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_316" id="Page_316"></a>[pg 316]</span>any beginning of
+familiarity, I found I had very little command of what should follow. But
+to sit all day in the same room with her, and feign to be engaged upon
+Heineccius, surpassed my strength. So that I fell instead upon the
+expedient of absenting myself so much as I was able; taking out classes and
+sitting there regularly, often with small attention, the test of which I
+found the other day in a note-book of that period, where I had left off to
+follow an edifying lecture and actually scribbled in my book some very ill
+verses, though the Latinity is rather better than I thought I could ever
+have compassed. The evil of this course was unhappily near as great as its
+advantage. I had the less time of trial, but I believe, while that time
+lasted, I was tried the more extremely. For she being so much left to
+solitude, she came to greet my return with an increasing fervour that came
+nigh to overmaster me. These friendly offers I must barbarously cast back;
+and my rejection sometimes wounded her so cruelly that I must unbend and
+seek to make it up to her in kindness. So that our time passed in ups and
+downs, tiffs and disappointments, upon the which I could almost say (if it
+may be said with reverence) that I was crucified.</p>
+
+<p>The base of my trouble was Catriona's extraordinary innocence, at which
+I was not so much surprised as filled with pity and admiration. She seemed
+to have no thought of our position, no sense of my struggles; <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317"></a>[pg
+317]</span>welcomed any mark of my weakness with responsive joy; and when I
+was drove again to my retrenchments, did not always dissemble her chagrin.
+There were times when I have thought to myself, 'If she were over head in
+love, and set her cap to catch me, she would scarce behave much otherwise;'
+and then I would fall again into wonder at the simplicity of woman, from
+whom I felt (in these moments) that I was not worthy to be descended.</p>
+
+<p>There was one point in particular on which our warfare turned, and of
+all things, this was the question of her clothes. My baggage had soon
+followed me from Rotterdam, and hers from Helvoet. She had now, as it were,
+two wardrobes; and it grew to be understood between us (I could never tell
+how) that when she was friendly she would wear my clothes, and when
+otherwise her own. It was meant for a buffet, and (as it were) the
+renunciation of her gratitude; and I felt it so in my bosom, but was
+generally more wise than to appear to have observed the circumstance.</p>
+
+<p>Once, indeed, I was betrayed into a childishness greater than her own;
+it fell in this way. On my return from classes, thinking upon her devoutly
+with a great deal of love and a good deal of annoyance in the bargain, the
+annoyance began to fade away out of my mind; and spying in a window one of
+those forced flowers, of which the Hollanders are so skilled in the
+artifice, I gave way to an impulse and bought it for <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318"></a>[pg
+318]</span>Catriona. I do not know the name of that flower, but it was of
+the pink colour, and I thought she would admire the same, and carried it
+home to her with a wonderful soft heart. I had left her in my clothes, and
+when I returned to find her all changed and a face to match, I cast but the
+one look at her from head to foot, ground my teeth together, flung the
+window open, and my flower into the court, and then (between rage and
+prudence) myself out of that room again, of which I slammed the door as I
+went out.</p>
+
+<p>On the steep stair I came near falling, and this brought me to myself,
+so that I began at once to see the folly of my conduct. I went, not into
+the street as I had purposed, but to the house court, which was always a
+solitary place, and where I saw my flower (that had cost me vastly more
+than it was worth) hanging in the leafless tree. I stood by the side of the
+canal, and looked upon the ice. Country people went by on their skates, and
+I envied them. I could see no way out of the pickle I was in: no way so
+much as to return to the room I had just left. No doubt was in my mind but
+I had now betrayed the secret of my feelings; and to make things worse, I
+had shown at the same time (and that with wretched boyishness) incivility
+to my helpless guest.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose she must have seen me from the open window. It did not seem to
+me that I had stood there very long before I heard the crunching of
+footsteps on <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319"></a>[pg
+319]</span>the frozen snow, and turning somewhat angrily (for I was in no
+spirit to be interrupted) saw Catriona drawing near. She was all changed
+again, to the clocked stockings.</p>
+
+<p>"Are we not to have our walk to-day?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>I was looking at her in a maze. "Where is your brooch?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>She carried her hand to her bosom and coloured high. "I will have
+forgotten it," said she. "I will run upstairs for it quick, and then surely
+we'll can have our walk?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a note of pleading in that last that staggered me; I had
+neither words nor voice to utter them; I could do no more than nod by way
+of answer; and the moment she had left me, climbed into the tree and
+recovered my flower, which on her return I offered her.</p>
+
+<p>"I bought it for you, Catriona," said I.</p>
+
+<p>She fixed it in the midst of her bosom with the brooch, I could have
+thought tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is none the better of my handling," said I again, and blushed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will be liking it none the worse, you may be sure of that," said
+she.</p>
+
+<p>We did not speak so much that day, she seemed a thought on the reserve
+though not unkindly. As for me, all the time of our walking, and after we
+came home, and I had seen her put my flower into a pot of water, I was
+thinking to myself what puzzles women <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_320" id="Page_320"></a>[pg 320]</span>were. I was thinking, the
+one moment, it was the most stupid thing on earth she should not have
+perceived my love; and the next, that she had certainly perceived it long
+ago, and (being a wise girl with the fine female instinct of propriety)
+concealed her knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>We had our walk daily. Out in the streets I felt more safe; I relaxed a
+little in my guardedness; and for one thing, there was no Heineccius. This
+made these periods not only a relief to myself, but a particular pleasure
+to my poor child. When I came back about the hour appointed, I would
+generally find her ready dressed and glowing with anticipation. She would
+prolong their duration to the extreme, seeming to dread (as I did myself)
+the hour of the return; and there is scarce a field or waterside near
+Leyden, scarce a street or lane there, where we have not lingered. Outside
+of these, I bade her confine herself entirely to our lodgings; this in the
+fear of her encountering any acquaintance, which would have rendered our
+position very difficult. From the same apprehension I would never suffer
+her to attend church, nor even go myself; but made some kind of shift to
+hold worship privately in our own chamber--I hope with an honest, but I am
+quite sure with a very much divided mind. Indeed, there was scarce anything
+that more affected me, than thus to kneel down alone with her before God
+like man and wife.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321"></a>[pg
+321]</span>One day it was snowing downright hard. I had thought it not
+possible that we should venture forth, and was surprised to find her
+waiting for me ready dressed.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not be doing without my walk," she cried. "You are never a good
+boy, Davie, in the house; I will never be caring for you only in the open
+air. I think we two will better turn Egyptian and dwell by the
+roadside."</p>
+
+<p>That was the best walk yet of all of them; she clung near to me in the
+falling snow; it beat about and melted on us, and the drops stood upon her
+bright cheeks like tears and ran into her smiling mouth. Strength seemed to
+come upon me with the sight like a giant's; I thought I could have caught
+her up and run with her into the uttermost places in the earth; and we
+spoke together all that time beyond belief for freedom and sweetness.</p>
+
+<p>It was the dark night when we came to the house door. She pressed my arm
+upon her bosom. "Thank you kindly for these same good hours," said she, on
+a deep note of her voice.</p>
+
+<p>The concern in which I fell instantly on this address, put me with the
+same swiftness on my guard; and we were no sooner in the chamber, and the
+light made, than she beheld the old, dour, stubborn countenance of the
+student of Heineccius. Doubtless she was more than usually hurt; and I know
+for myself, I found it more <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322"
+id="Page_322"></a>[pg 322]</span>than usually difficult to maintain my
+strangeness. Even at the meal, I durst scarce unbuckle and scarce lift my
+eyes to her; and it was no sooner over than I fell again to my civilian,
+with more seeming abstraction and less understanding than before.
+Methought, as I-read, I could hear my heart strike like an eight-day clock.
+Hard as I feigned to study, there was still some of my eyesight that
+spilled beyond the book upon Catriona. She sat on the floor by the side of
+my great mail, and the chimney lighted her up, and shone and blinked upon
+her, and made her glow and darken through a wonder of fine hues. Now she
+would be gazing in the fire, and then again at me; and at that I would be
+plunged in a terror of myself, and turn the pages of Heineccius like a man
+looking for the text in church.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly she called out aloud, "O, why does not my father come?" she
+cried, and fell at once into a storm of tears.</p>
+
+<p>I leaped up, flung Heineccius fairly into the fire, ran to her side, and
+cast an arm around her sobbing body.</p>
+
+<p>She put me from her sharply. "You do not love your friend," says she. "I
+could be so happy too, if you would let me!" And then, "O, what will I have
+done that you should hate me so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hate you!" cries I, and held her firm. "You blind lass, can you not see
+a little in my wretched heart? Do you think when I set there, reading in
+that fool-book that I have just burned and be damned to it, I take <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323"></a>[pg 323]</span>ever
+the least thought of any stricken thing but just yourself? Night after
+night I could have grat to see you sitting there your lone. And what was I
+to do? You are here under my honour; would you punish me for that? Is it
+for that that you would spurn a loving servant?"</p>
+
+<p>At the word, with a small, sudden motion, she clung near to me. I raised
+her face to mine, I kissed it, and she bowed her brow upon my bosom,
+clasping me tight. I sat in a mere whirl like a man drunken. Then I heard
+her voice sound very small and muffled in my clothes.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you kiss her truly?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>There went through me so great a heave of surprise that I was all shook
+with it.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Grant!" I cried, all in a disorder. "Yes, I asked her to kiss me
+good-bye, the which she did."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, well!" said she, "you have kissed me too, at all events."</p>
+
+<p>At the strangeness and sweetness of that word, I saw where we had
+fallen; rose, and set her on her feet.</p>
+
+<p>"This will never do," said I. "This will never, never do. O Catrine,
+Catrine!" Then there came a pause in which I was debarred from any
+speaking. And then, "Go away to your bed," said I. "Go away to your bed and
+leave me."</p>
+
+<p>She turned to obey me like a little child, and the next I knew of it,
+had stopped in the very doorway.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324"></a>[pg
+324]</span>"Good night, Davie!" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"And O, good night, my love!" I cried, with a great outbreak of my soul,
+and caught her to me again, so that it seemed I must have broken her. The
+next moment I had thrust her from the room, shut to the door even with
+violence, and stood alone.</p>
+
+<p>The milk was spilt now, the word was out and the truth told. I had crept
+like an untrusty man into the poor maid's affections; she was in my hand
+like any frail, innocent thing to make or mar; and what weapon of defence
+was left me? It seemed like a symbol that Heinoccius, my old protection,
+was now burned. I repented, yet could not find it in my heart to blame
+myself for that great failure. It seemed not possible to have resisted the
+boldness of her innocence or that last temptation of her weeping. And all
+that I had to excuse me did but make my sin appear the greater--it was upon
+a nature so defenceless, and with such advantages of the position, that I
+seemed to have practised.</p>
+
+<p>What was to become of us now? It seemed we could no longer dwell in the
+one place. But where was I to go? or where she? Without either choice or
+fault of ours, life had conspired to wall us together in that narrow place.
+I had a wild thought of marrying out of hand; and the next moment put it
+from me with revolt. She was a child, she could not tell her own heart; I
+had surprised her weakness, I must never go <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_325" id="Page_325"></a>[pg 325]</span>on to build on that
+surprisal; I must keep her not only clear of reproach, but free as she had
+come to me.</p>
+
+<p>Down I sat before the fire, and reflected, and repented, and beat my
+brains in vain for any means of escape. About two of the morning, there
+were three red embers left and the house and all the city was asleep, when
+I was aware of a small sound of weeping in the next room. She thought that
+I slept, the poor soul; she regretted her weakness--and what perhaps (God
+help her!) she called her forwardness--and in the dead of the night solaced
+herself with tears. Tender and bitter feelings, love and penitence and pity
+struggled in my soul; it seemed I was under bond to heal that weeping.</p>
+
+<p>"O, try to forgive me!" I cried out, "try, try to forgive me. Let us
+forget it all, let us try if we'll no can forget it!"</p>
+
+<p>There came no answer, but the sobbing ceased. I stood a long while with
+my hands still clasped as I had spoken; then the cold of the night laid
+hold upon me with a shudder, and I think my reason reawakened.</p>
+
+<p>"You can make no hand of this, Davie," thinks I. "To bed with you like a
+wise lad, and try if you can sleep. To-morrow you may see your way."</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326"></a>[pg
+326]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXV'></a>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE</h3>
+
+
+<p>I was called on the morrow out of a late and troubled slumber by a
+knocking on my door, ran to open it, and had almost swooned with the
+contrariety of my feelings, mostly painful; for on the threshold, in a
+rough wrapraseal and an extraordinary big laced hat, there stood James
+More.</p>
+
+<p>I ought to have been glad perhaps without admixture, for there was a
+sense in which the man came like an answer to prayer. I had been saying
+till my head was weary that Catriona and I must separate, and looking till
+my head ached for any possible means of separation. Here were the means
+come to me upon two legs, and joy was the hindmost of my thoughts. It is to
+be considered, however, that even if the weight of the future were lifted
+off me by the man's arrival, the present heaved up the more black and
+menacing; so that, as I first stood before him in my shirt and breeches, I
+believe I took a leaping step backward like a person shot.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," said he, "I have found you, Mr. Balfour." And offered me his
+large, fine hand, the which (recovering <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_327" id="Page_327"></a>[pg 327]</span>at the same time my post
+in the doorway, as if with some thought of resistance) I took him by
+doubtfully. "It is a remarkable circumstance how our affairs appear to
+intermingle," he continued. "I am owing you an apology for an unfortunate
+intrusion upon yours, which I suffered myself to be entrapped into by my
+confidence in that false-face, Prestongrange; I think shame to own to you
+that I was ever trusting to a lawyer." He shrugged his shoulders with a
+very French air. "But indeed the man is very plausible," says he. "And now
+it seems that you have busied yourself handsomely in the matter of my
+daughter, for whose direction I was remitted to yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I think, sir," said I, with a very painful air, "that it will be
+necessary we two should have an explanation."</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing amiss?" he asked. "My agent, Mr. Sprott--"</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake moderate your voice!" I cried. "She must not hear till
+we have had an explanation."</p>
+
+<p>"She is in this place?" cries he.</p>
+
+<p>"That is her chamber door," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You are here with her alone?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"And who else would I have got to stay with us?" cries I.</p>
+
+<p>I will do him the justice to admit that he turned pale.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328"></a>[pg
+328]</span>"This is very unusual," said he. "This is a very unusual
+circumstance. You are right, we must hold an explanation."</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he passed me by, and I must own the tall old rogue appeared
+at that moment extraordinary dignified. He had now, for the first time, the
+view of my chamber, which I scanned (I may say) with his eyes. A bit of
+morning sun glinted in by the window pane, and showed it off; my bed, my
+mails, and washing dish, with some disorder of my clothes, and the
+unlighted chimney, made the only plenishing; no mistake but it looked bare
+and cold, and the most unsuitable, beggarly place conceivable to harbour a
+young lady. At the same time came in on my mind the recollection of the
+clothes that I had bought for her; and I thought this contrast of poverty
+and prodigality bore an ill appearance.</p>
+
+<p>He looked all about the chamber for a seat, and finding nothing else to
+his purpose except my bed, took a place upon the side of it; where, after I
+had closed the door, I could not very well avoid joining him. For however
+this extraordinary interview might end, it must pass if possible without
+waking Catriona; and the one thing needful was that we should sit close and
+talk low. But I can scarce picture what a pair we made; he in his great
+coat which the coldness of my chamber made extremely suitable; I shivering
+in my shirt and breeks; he with very much the air of a judge; and I
+(whatever <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329"></a>[pg
+329]</span>I looked) with very much the feelings of a man who has heard the
+last trumpet.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" says he.</p>
+
+<p>And "Well" I began, but found myself unable to go further.</p>
+
+<p>"You tell me she is here?" said he again, but now with a spice of
+impatiency that seemed to brace me up.</p>
+
+<p>"She is in this house," said I, "and I knew the circumstance would be
+called unusual. But you are to consider how very unusual the whole business
+was from the beginning. Here is a young lady landed on the coast of Europe
+with two shillings and a penny halfpenny. She is directed to yon man Sprott
+in Helvoet. I hear you call him your agent. All I can say is he could do
+nothing but damn and swear at the mere mention of your name, and I must fee
+him out of my own pocket even to receive the custody of her effects, You
+speak of unusual circumstances, Mr. Drummond, if that be the name you
+prefer. Here was a circumstance, if you like, to which it was barbarity to
+have exposed her."</p>
+
+<p>"But this is what I cannot understand the least," said James. "My
+daughter was placed into the charge of some responsible persons, whose
+names I have forgot."</p>
+
+<p>"Gebbie was the name," said I; "and there is no doubt that Mr. Gebbie
+should have gone ashore with her at Helvoet. But he did not, Mr. Drummond;
+and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330"></a>[pg
+330]</span>I think you might praise God that I was there to offer in his
+place."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have a word to say to Mr. Gebbie before done," said he. "As for
+yourself, I think it might have occurred that you were somewhat young for
+such a post."</p>
+
+<p>"But the choice was not between me and somebody else, it was between me
+and nobody," I cried. "Nobody offered in my place, and I must say I think
+you show a very small degree of gratitude to me that did."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall wait until I understand my obligation a little more in the
+particular," says he.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, and I think it stares you in the face, then," said I. "Your
+child was deserted, she was clean flung away in the midst of Europe, with
+scarce two shillings, and not two words of any language spoken there: I
+must say, a bonny business! I brought her to this place. I gave her the
+name and the tenderness due to a sister. All this has not gone without
+expense, but that I scarce need to hint at. They were services due to the
+young lady's character which I respect; and I think it would be a bonny
+business too, if I was to be singing her praises to her father."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a young man," he began.</p>
+
+<p>"So I hear you tell me," said I, with a good deal of heat.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a very young man," he repeated, "or you would have understood
+the significancy of the step."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331"></a>[pg
+331]</span>"I think you speak very much at your ease," cried I. "What else
+was I to do? It is a fact I might have hired some decent, poor woman to be
+a third to us, and I declare I never thought of it until this moment! But
+where was I to find her, that am a foreigner myself? And let me point out
+to your observation, Mr. Drummond, that it would have cost me money out of
+my pocket. For here is just what it comes to, that I had to pay through the
+nose for your neglect; and there is only the one story to it, just that you
+were so unloving and so careless as to have lost your daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"He that lives in a glass house should not be casting stones," says he;
+"and we will finish inquiring into the behaviour of Miss Drummond, before
+we go on to sit in judgment on her father."</p>
+
+<p>"But I will be entrapped into no such attitude," said I. "The character
+of Miss Drummond is far above inquiry, as her father ought to know. So is
+mine, and I am telling you that. There are but the two ways of it open. The
+one is to express your thanks to me as one gentleman to another, and to say
+no more. The other (if you are so difficult as to be still dissatisfied) is
+to pay me that which I have expended and be done."</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to soothe me with a hand in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"There, there," said he. "You go too fast, you go too fast, Mr. Balfour.
+It is a good thing that I have <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332"
+id="Page_332"></a>[pg 332]</span>learned to be more patient. And I believe
+you forget that I have yet to see my daughter."</p>
+
+<p>I began to be a little relieved upon this speech and a change in the
+man's manner that I spied in him as soon as the name of money fell between
+us.</p>
+
+<p>"I was thinking it would be more fit--if you will excuse the plainness
+of my dressing in your presence--that I should go forth and leave you to
+encounter her alone?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"What I would have looked for at your hands!" says he; and there was no
+mistake but what he said it civilly.</p>
+
+<p>I thought this better and better still, and as I began to pull on my
+hose, recalling the man's impudent mendicancy at Prestongrange's, I
+determined to pursue what seemed to be my victory.</p>
+
+<p>"If you have any mind to stay some while in Leyden," said I, "this room
+is very much at your disposal, and I can easy find another for myself: in
+which way we shall have the least amount of flitting possible, there being
+only one to change."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sir," said he, making his bosom big, "I think no shame of a
+poverty I have come by in the service of my king; I make no secret that my
+affairs are quite involved; and for the moment, it would be even impossible
+for me to undertake a journey."</p>
+
+<p>"Until you have occasion to communicate with your friends," said I,
+"perhaps it might be convenient <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333"
+id="Page_333"></a>[pg 333]</span>for you (as of course it would be
+honourable to myself) if you were to regard yourself in the light of my
+guest?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," said he, "when an offer is frankly made, I think I honour myself
+most to imitate that frankness. Your hand, Mr. David; you have the
+character that I respect the most; you are one of those from whom a
+gentleman can take a favour and no more words about it. I am an old
+soldier," he went on, looking rather disgusted-like around my chamber, "and
+you need not fear I shall prove burthensome. I have ate too often at a
+dyke-side, drank of the ditch, and had no roof but the rain."</p>
+
+<p>"I should be telling you," said I, "that our breakfasts are sent
+customarily in about this time of morning. I propose I should go now to the
+tavern, and bid them add a cover for yourself and delay the meal the matter
+of an hour, which will give you an interval to meet your daughter in."</p>
+
+<p>Methought his nostrils wagged at this. "O, an hour," says he. "That is
+perhaps superfluous. Half an hour, Mr. David, or say twenty minutes; I
+shall do very well in that. And by the way," he adds, detaining me by the
+coat, "what is it you drink in the morning, whether ale or wine?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be frank with you, sir," says I, "I drink nothing else but spare,
+cold water?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tut-tut," says he, "that is fair destruction to the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334"></a>[pg
+334]</span>stomach, take an old campaigner's word for it. Our country
+spirit at home is perhaps the most entirely wholesome; but as that is not
+come-at-able, Rhenish or a white wine of Burgundy will be next best."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall make it my business to see you are supplied," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, very good," said he, "and we shall make a man of you yet, Mr.
+David."</p>
+
+<p>By this time, I can hardly say that I was minding him at all, beyond an
+odd thought of the kind of father-in-law that he was like to prove; and all
+my cares centred about the lass his daughter, to whom I determined to
+convey some warning of her visitor. I stepped to the door accordingly, and
+cried through the panels, knocking thereon at the same time: "Miss
+Drummond, here is your father come at last."</p>
+
+<p>With that I went forth upon my errand, having (by two words)
+extraordinarily damaged my affairs.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335"></a>[pg
+335]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXVI'></a>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE THREESOME</h3>
+
+
+<p>Whether or not I was to be so much blamed, or rather perhaps pitied, I
+must leave others to judge of. My shrewdness (of which I have a good deal,
+too) seems not so great with the ladies. No doubt, at the moment when I
+awaked her, I was thinking a good deal of the effect upon James More; and
+similarly when I returned and we were all sat down to breakfast, I
+continued to behave to the young lady with deference and distance; as I
+still think to have been most wise. Her father had cast doubts upon the
+innocence of my friendship; and these, it was my first business to allay.
+But there is a kind of an excuse for Catriona also. We had shared in a
+scene of some tenderness and passion, and given and received caresses; I
+had thrust her from me with violence; I had called aloud upon her in the
+night from the one room to the other; she had passed hours of wakefulness
+and weeping; and it is not to be supposed I had been absent from her pillow
+thoughts. Upon the back of this, to be awaked, with unaccustomed formality,
+under the name of Miss Drummond, and to be thenceforth used with a great
+deal of distance <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336"
+id="Page_336"></a>[pg 336]</span>and respect, led her entirely in error on
+my private sentiments; and she was indeed so incredibly abused as to
+imagine me repentant and trying to draw off!</p>
+
+<p>The trouble betwixt us seems to have been this: that whereas I (since I
+had first set eyes on his great hat) thought singly of James More, his
+return and suspicions, she made so little of these that I may say she
+scarce remarked them, and all her troubles and doings regarded what had
+passed between us in the night before. This is partly to be explained by
+the innocence and boldness of her character; and partly because James More,
+having sped so ill in his interview with me, or had his mouth closed by my
+invitation, said no word to her upon the subject. At the breakfast,
+accordingly, it soon appeared we were at cross purposes. I had looked to
+find her in clothes of her own: I found her (as if her father were
+forgotten) wearing some of the best that I had bought for her and which she
+knew (or thought) that I admired her in. I had looked to find her imitate
+my affectation of distance, and be most precise and formal; instead I found
+her flushed and wild-like, with eyes extraordinary bright, and a painful
+and varying expression, calling me by name with a sort of appeal of
+tenderness, and referring and deferring to my thoughts and wishes like an
+anxious or a suspected wife.</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour008"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour008.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: YOU TELL ME SHE IS HERE? SAID HE AGAIN"
+src="images/balfour008sm.jpg" height="550" width="383" /></a>
+<br />YOU TELL ME SHE IS HERE? SAID HE AGAIN
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+
+<p>But this was not for long. As I beheld her so regardless of her own
+interests, which I had jeopardised <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337"
+id="Page_337"></a>[pg 337]</span>and was now endeavoring to recover, I
+redoubled my own boldness in the manner of a lesson to the girl. The more
+she came forward, the further I drew back; the more she betrayed the
+closeness of our intimacy, the more pointedly civil I became, until even
+her father (if he had not been so engrossed with eating) might have
+observed the opposition. In the midst of which, of a sudden, she became
+wholly changed, and I told myself, with a good deal of relief, that she had
+took the hint at last.</p>
+
+<p>All day I was at my classes or in quest of my new lodging; and though
+the hour of our customary walk hung miserably on my hands, I cannot say but
+I was happy on the whole to find my way cleared, the girl again in proper
+keeping, the father satisfied or at least acquiescent, and myself free to
+prosecute my love with honour. At supper, as at all our meals, it was James
+More that did the talking. No doubt but he talked well, if anyone could
+have believed him. But I will speak of him presently more at large. The
+meal at an end, he rose, got his great coat, and looking (as I thought) at
+me, observed he had affairs abroad. I took this for a hint that I was to be
+going also, and got up; whereupon the girl, who had scarce given me
+greeting at my entrance, turned her eyes on me wide open, with a look that
+bade me stay. I stood between them like a fish out of water, turning from
+one to the other; neither seemed to observe me, she gazing on the floor, he
+buttoning <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338"></a>[pg
+338]</span>his coat: which vastly swelled my embarrassment. This appearance
+of indifferency argued, upon her side, a good deal of anger very near to
+burst out. Upon his, I thought it horribly alarming; I made sure there was
+a tempest brewing there; and considering that to be the chief peril, turned
+towards him and put myself (so to speak) in the man's hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Can I do anything for <i>you</i>, Mr. Drummond?" says I.</p>
+
+<p>He stifled a yawn, which again I thought to be duplicity. "Why, Mr.
+David," said he, "since you are so obliging as to propose it, you might
+show me the way to a certain tavern" (of which he gave the name) "where I
+hope to fall in with some old companions in arms."</p>
+
+<p>There was no more to say, and I got my hat and cloak to bear him
+company.</p>
+
+<p>"And as for you," he says to his daughter, "you had best go to your bed.
+I shall be late home, and <i>Early to bed and early to rise, gars bonny
+lasses have bright eyes."</i></p>
+
+<p>Whereupon he kissed her with a good deal of tenderness, and ushered me
+before him from the door. This was so done (I thought on purpose) that it
+was scarce possible there should be any parting salutation; but I observed
+she did not look at me, and set it down to terror of James More.</p>
+
+<p>It was some distance to that tavern. He talked all <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339"></a>[pg 339]</span>the way
+of matters which did not interest me the smallest, and at the door
+dismissed me with empty manners. Thence I walked to my new lodging, where I
+had not so much as a chimney to hold me warm, and no society but my own
+thoughts. These were still bright enough; I did not so much as dream that
+Catriona was turned against me; I thought we were like folk pledged; I
+thought we had been too near and spoke too warmly to be severed, least of
+all by what were only steps in a most needful policy. And the chief of my
+concern was only the kind of father-in-law that I was getting, which was
+not at all the kind I would have chosen: and the matter of how soon I ought
+to speak to him, which was a delicate point on several sides. In the first
+place, when I thought how young I was, I blushed all over, and could almost
+have found it in my heart to have desisted; only that if once I let them go
+from Leyden without explanation, I might lose her altogether. And in the
+second place, there was our very irregular situation to be kept in view,
+and the rather scant measure of satisfaction I had given James More that
+morning. I concluded, on the whole, that delay would not hurt anything, yet
+I would not delay too long neither; and got to my cold bed with a full
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, as James More seemed a little on the complaining hand in
+the matter of my chamber, I offered to have in more furniture; and coming
+in the afternoon, with porters bringing chairs and tables, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340"></a>[pg 340]</span>found
+the girl once more left to herself. She greeted me on my admission civilly,
+but withdrew at once to her own room, of which she shut the door. I made my
+disposition, and paid and dismissed the men so that she might hear them go,
+when I supposed she would at once come forth again to speak to me. I waited
+yet awhile, then knocked upon her door.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>The door was opened so quickly, even before I had the word out, that I
+thought she must have stood behind it listening. She remained there in the
+interval quite still; but she had a look that I cannot put a name on, as of
+one in a bitter trouble.</p>
+
+<p>"Are we not to have our walk to-day either?" so I faltered.</p>
+
+<p>"I am thanking you," said she. "I will not be caring much to walk, now
+that my father is come home."</p>
+
+<p>"But I think he has gone out himself and left you here alone," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you think that was very kindly said?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It was not unkindly meant," I replied. "What ails you, Catriona? What
+have I done to you that you should turn from me like this?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not turn from you at all," she said, speaking very carefully. "I
+will ever be grateful to my friend that was good to me; I will ever be his
+friend in all that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341"
+id="Page_341"></a>[pg 341]</span>I am able. But now that my father James
+More is come again, there is a difference to be made, and I think there are
+some things said and done that would be better to be forgotten. But I will
+ever be your friend in all that I am able, and if that is not all that . . .
+if it is not so much. . . . Not that you will be caring! But I would not have
+you think of me too hard. It was true what you said to me, that I was too
+young to be advised, and I am hoping you will remember I was just a child.
+I would not like to lose your friendship, at all events."</p>
+
+<p>She began this very pale; but before she was done, the blood was in her
+face like scarlet, so that not her words only, but her face and the
+trembling of her very hands, besought me to be gentle. I saw for the first
+time, how very wrong I had done to place the child in that position, where
+she had been entrapped into a moment's weakness, and now stood before me
+like a person shamed.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Drummond," I said, and stuck, and made the same beginning once
+again, "I wish you could see into my heart," I cried. "You would read there
+that my respect is undiminished. If that were possible, I should say it was
+increased. This is but the result of the mistake we made; and had to come;
+and the less said of it now the better. Of all of our life here, I promise
+you it shall never pass my lips; I would like to promise you too that I
+would never think of it, but it's a memory <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_342" id="Page_342"></a>[pg 342]</span>that will be always dear
+to me. And as for a friend, you have one here that would die for you."</p>
+
+<p>"I am thanking you," said she.</p>
+
+<p>We stood awhile silent, and my sorrow for myself began to get the upper
+hand; for here were all my dreams come to a sad tumble, and my love lost,
+and myself alone again in the world as at the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "we shall be friends always, that's a certain thing. But
+this is a kind of a farewell too: it's a kind of a farewell after all; I
+shall always ken Miss Drummond, but this is a farewell to my Catriona."</p>
+
+<p>I looked at her; I could hardly say I saw her, but she seemed to grow
+great and brighten in my eyes; and with that I suppose I must have lost my
+head, for I called out her name again and made a step at her with my hands
+reached forth.</p>
+
+<p>She shrank back like a person struck, her face flamed; but the blood
+sprang no faster up into her cheeks, than what it flowed back upon my own
+heart, at sight of it, with penitence and concern. I found no words to
+excuse myself, but bowed before her very deep, and went my ways out of the
+house with death in my bosom.</p>
+
+<p>I think it was about five days that followed without any change. I saw
+her scarce ever but at meals, and then of course in the company of James
+More. If we were alone even for a moment, I made it my devoir to behave the
+more distantly and to multiply respectful attentions, having always in my
+mind's eye that picture of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343"
+id="Page_343"></a>[pg 343]</span>the girl shrinking and flaming in a blush,
+and in my heart more pity for her than I could depict in words. I was sorry
+enough for myself, I need not dwell on that, having fallen all my length
+and more than all my height in a few seconds; but, indeed, I was near as
+sorry for the girl, and sorry enough to be scarce angry with her save by
+fits and starts. Her plea was good: she was but a child; she had been
+placed in an unfair position; if she had deceived herself and me, it was no
+more than was to have been looked for.</p>
+
+<p>And for another thing she was now very much alone. Her father, when he
+was by, was rather a caressing parent; but he was very easy led away by his
+affairs and pleasures, neglected her without compunction or remark, spent
+his nights in taverns when he had the money, which was more often than I
+could at all account for; and even in the course of these few days, failed
+once to come to a meal, which Catriona and I were at last compelled to
+partake of without him. It was the evening meal, and I left immediately
+that I had eaten, observing I supposed she would prefer to be alone; to
+which she agreed and (strange as it may seem) I quite believed her. Indeed,
+I thought myself but an eyesore to the girl, and a reminder of a moment's
+weakness that she now abhorred to think of. So she must sit alone in that
+room where she and I had been so merry, and in the blink of that chimney
+whose light had shone upon our many difficult and tender moments. There she
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344"></a>[pg
+344]</span>must sit alone, and think of herself as of a maid who had most
+unmaidenly proffered her affections and had the same rejected. And in the
+meanwhile I would be alone some other place, and reading myself (whenever I
+was tempted to be angry) lessons upon human frailty and female delicacy.
+And altogether I suppose there were never two poor fools made themselves
+more unhappy in a greater misconception.</p>
+
+<p>As for James, he paid not so much heed to us, or to anything in nature
+but his pocket, and his belly, and his own prating talk. Before twelve
+hours were gone he had raised a small loan of me; before thirty, he had
+asked for a second and been refused. Money and refusal he took with the
+same kind of high good-nature. Indeed, he had an outside air of magnanimity
+that was very well fitted to impose upon a daughter; and the light in which
+he was constantly presented in his talk, and the man's fine presence and
+great ways went together pretty harmoniously. So that a man that had no
+business with him, and either very little penetration or a furious deal of
+prejudice, might almost have been taken in. To me, after my first two
+interviews, he was as plain as print; I saw him to be perfectly selfish,
+with a perfect innocency in the same; and I would harken to his swaggering
+talk (of arms, and "an old soldier," and "a poor Highland gentleman," and
+"the strength of my country and my friends") as I might to the babbling of
+a parrot.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345"></a>[pg
+345]</span>The odd thing was that I fancy he believed some part of it
+himself, or did at times; I think he was so false all through that he
+scarce knew when he was lying; and for one thing, his moments of dejection
+must have been wholly genuine. There were times when he would be the most
+silent, affectionate, clinging creature possible, holding Catriona's hand
+like a big baby, and begging of me not to leave if I had any love to him;
+of which, indeed, I had none, but all the more to his daughter. He would
+press and indeed beseech us to entertain him with our talk, a thing very
+difficult in the state of our relations; and again break forth in pitiable
+regrets for his own land and friends, or into Gaelic singing.</p>
+
+<p>"This is one of the melancholy airs of my native land," he would say.
+"You may think it strange to see a soldier weep, and indeed it is to make a
+near friend of you," says he. "But the notes of this singing are in my
+blood, and the words come out of my heart. And when I mind upon my red
+mountains and the wild birds calling there, and the brave streams of water
+running down, I would scarce think shame to weep before my enemies." Then
+he would sing again, and translate to me pieces of the song, with a great
+deal of boggling and much expressed contempt against the English language.
+"It says here," he would say, "that the sun is gone down, and the battle is
+at an end, and the brave chiefs are defeated. And it tells <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346"></a>[pg 346]</span>here
+how the stars see them fleeing into strange countries or lying dead on the
+red mountain; and they will never more shout the call of battle or wash
+their feet in the streams of the valley. But if you had only some of this
+language, you would weep also because the words of it are beyond all
+expression, and it is mere mockery to tell you it in English."</p>
+
+<p>Well, I thought there was a good deal of mockery in the business, one
+way and another; and yet, there was some feeling too, for which I hated
+him, I think, the worst of all. And it used to cut me to the quick to see
+Catriona so much concerned for the old rogue, and weeping herself to see
+him weep, when I was sure one-half of his distress flowed from his last
+night's drinking in some tavern. There were times when I was tempted to
+lend him a round sum, and see the last of him for good; but this would have
+been to see the last of Catriona as well, for which I was scarcely so
+prepared; and besides, it went against my conscience to squander my good
+money on one who was so little of a husband.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347"></a>[pg
+347]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXVII'></a>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<h3>A TWOSOME</h3>
+
+
+<p>I believe it was about the fifth day, and I know at least that James was
+in one of his fits of gloom, when I received three letters. The first was
+from Alan, offering to visit me in Leyden; the other two were out of
+Scotland and prompted by the same affair, which was the death of my uncle
+and my own complete accession to my rights. Rankeillor's was, of course,
+wholly in the business view; Miss Grant's was like herself, a little more
+witty than wise, full of blame to me for not having written (though how was
+I to write with such intelligence?) and of rallying talk about Catriona,
+which it cut me to the quick to read in her very presence.</p>
+
+<p>For it was of course in my own rooms that I found them, when I came to
+dinner, so that I was surprised out of my news in the very first moment of
+reading it. This made a welcome diversion for all three of us, nor could
+any have foreseen the ill consequences that ensued. It was accident that
+brought the three letters the same day, and that gave them into my hand in
+the same room with James More; and of all the events that <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348"></a>[pg 348]</span>flowed
+from that accident, and which I might have prevented if I had held my
+tongue, the truth is that they were preordained before Agricola came into
+Scotland or Abraham set out upon his travels.</p>
+
+<p>The first that I opened was naturally Alan's; and what more natural than
+that I should comment on his design to visit me? but I observed James to
+sit up with an air of immediate attention.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that not Alan Breck that was suspected of the Appin accident?" he
+inquired.</p>
+
+<p>I told him, "Ay," it was the same; and he withheld me some time from my
+other letters, asking of our acquaintance, of Alan's manner of life in
+France, of which I knew very little, and further of his visit as now
+proposed.</p>
+
+<p>"All we forfeited folk hang a little together," he explained, "and
+besides I know the gentleman: and though his descent is not the thing, and
+indeed he has no true right to use the name of Stewart, he was very much
+admired in the day of Drummossie. He did there like a soldier; if some that
+need not be named had done as well, the upshot need not have been so
+melancholy to remember. There were two that did their best that day, and it
+makes a bond between the pair of us," says he.</p>
+
+<p>I could scarce refrain from shooting out my tongue at him, and could
+almost have wished that Alan had been there to have inquired a little
+further into that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349"
+id="Page_349"></a>[pg 349]</span>mention of his birth. Though, they tell
+me, the same was indeed not wholly regular.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, I had opened Miss Grant's, and could not withhold an
+exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," I cried, forgetting, the first time since her father was
+arrived, to address her by a handle, "I am come into my kingdom fairly, I
+am the laird of Shaws indeed--my uncle is dead at last."</p>
+
+<p>She clapped her hands together leaping from her seat. The next moment it
+must have come over both of us at once what little cause of joy was left to
+either, and we stood opposite, staring on each other sadly.</p>
+
+<p>But James showed himself a ready hypocrite. "My daughter," says he, "is
+this how my cousin learned you to behave? Mr. David has lost a near friend,
+and we should first condole with him on his bereavement."</p>
+
+<p>"Troth, sir," said I, turning to him in a kind of anger, "I can make no
+such faces. His death is as blythe news as ever I got."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a good soldier's philosophy," says James. "'Tis the way of flesh,
+we must all go, all go. And if the gentleman was so far from your favour,
+why, very well! But we may at least congratulate you on your accession to
+your estates."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor can I say that either," I replied, with the same heat. "It is a
+good estate; what matters that to a lone man that has enough already? I had
+a good revenue before in my frugality; and but for the man's <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350"></a>[pg
+350]</span>death--which gratifies me, shame to me that must confess it!--I
+see not how anyone is to be bettered by this change."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come," said he, "you are more affected than you let on, or you
+would never make yourself out so lonely. Here are three letters; that means
+three that wish you well; and I could name two more, here in this very
+chamber. I have known you not so very long, but Catriona, when we are
+alone, is never done with the singing of your praises."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him, a little wild at that; and he slid off at once
+into another matter, the extent of my estate, which (during the most of the
+dinner time) he continued to dwell upon with interest. But it was to no
+purpose he dissembled; he had touched the matter with too gross a hand: and
+I knew what to expect. Dinner was scarce ate when he plainly discovered his
+designs. He reminded Catriona of an errand, and bid her attend to it. "I do
+not see you should be gone beyond the hour," he added, "and friend David
+will be good enough to bear me company till you return." She made haste to
+obey him without words. I do not know if she understood, I believe not; but
+I was completely satisfied, and sat strengthening my mind for what should
+follow.</p>
+
+<p>The door had scarce closed behind her departure, when the man leaned
+back in his chair and addressed me with a good affectation of easiness.
+Only the one <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351"></a>[pg
+351]</span>thing betrayed him and that was his face; which suddenly shone
+all over with fine points of sweat.</p>
+
+<p>"I am rather glad to have a word alone with you," says he, "because in
+our first interview there were some expressions you misapprehended and I
+have long meant to set you right upon. My daughter stands beyond doubt. So
+do you, and I would make that good with my sword against all gainsayers.
+But, my dear David, this world is a censorious place--as who should know it
+better than myself, who have lived ever since the days of my late departed
+father, God sain him! in a perfect spate of calumnies? We have to face to
+that; you and me have to consider of that; we have to consider of that."
+And he wagged his head like a minister in a pulpit.</p>
+
+<p>"To what effect, Mr. Drummond?" said I. "I would be obliged to you if
+you would approach your point."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay," says he, laughing, "like your character indeed! and what I
+most admire in it. But the point, my worthy fellow, is sometimes in a
+kittle bit." He filled a glass of wine. "Though between you and me, that
+are such fast friends, it need not bother us long. The point, I need
+scarcely tell you, is my daughter. And the first thing is that I have no
+thought in my mind of blaming you. In the unfortunate circumstances, what
+could you do else? 'Deed, and I cannot tell."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352"></a>[pg
+352]</span>"I thank you for that," said I, pretty close upon my guard.</p>
+
+<p>"I have besides studied your character," he went on; "your talents are
+fair; you seem to have a moderate competence; which does no harm; and one
+thing with another, I am very happy to have to announce to you that I have
+decided on the latter of the two ways open."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid I am dull," said I. "What ways are these?"</p>
+
+<p>He bent his brows upon me formidably and uncrossed his legs. "Why, sir,"
+says he, "I think I need scarce describe them to a gentleman of your
+condition; either that I should cut your throat or that you should marry my
+daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"You are pleased to be quite plain at last," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And I believe I have been plain from the beginning!" cries he
+robustiously. "I am a careful parent, Mr. Balfour; but I thank God, a
+patient and deleeberate man. There is many a father, sir, that would have
+hirsled you at once either to the altar or the field. My esteem for your
+character--"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Drummond," I interrupted, "if you have any esteem for me at all, I
+will beg of you to moderate your voice. It is quite needless to rowt at a
+gentleman in the same chamber with yourself and lending you his best
+attention."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353"></a>[pg
+353]</span>"Why, very true," says he, with an immediate change. "And you
+must excuse the agitations of a parent."</p>
+
+<p>"I understand you then," I continued--"for I will take no note of your
+other alternative, which perhaps it was a pity you let fall--I understand
+you rather to offer me encouragement in case I should desire to apply for
+your daughter's hand?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is not possible to express my meaning better," said he, "and I see
+we shall do well together."</p>
+
+<p>"That remains to be yet seen," said I. "But so much I need make no
+secret of, that I bear the lady you refer to the most tender affection, and
+I could not fancy, even in a dream, a better fortune than to get her."</p>
+
+<p>"I was sure of it, I felt certain of you, David," he cried, and reached
+out his hand to me.</p>
+
+<p>I put it by. "You go too fast, Mr. Drummond," said I. "There are
+conditions to be made; and there is a difficulty in the path, which I see
+not entirely how we shall come over. I have told you that, upon my side,
+there is no objection to the marriage, but I have good reason to believe
+there will be much on the young lady's."</p>
+
+<p>"This is all beside the mark," says he. "I will engage for her
+acceptance."</p>
+
+<p>"I think you forget, Mr. Drummond," said I, "that, even in dealing with
+myself you have been betrayed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354"
+id="Page_354"></a>[pg 354]</span>into two-three unpalatable expressions. I
+will have none such employed to the young lady. I am here to speak and
+think for the two of us; and I give you to understand that I would no more
+let a wife be forced upon myself, than what I would let a husband be forced
+on the young lady."</p>
+
+<p>He sat and glowered at me like one in doubt and a good deal of
+temper.</p>
+
+<p>"So that this is to be the way of it," I concluded. "I will marry Miss
+Drummond, and that blythely, if she is entirely willing. But if there be
+the least unwillingness, as I have reason to fear--marry her will I
+never."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," said he, "this is a small affair. As soon as she returns I
+will sound her a bit, and hope to reassure you----"</p>
+
+<p>But I cut in again. "Not a finger of you, Mr. Drummond, or I cry off,
+and you can seek a husband to your daughter somewhere else," said I. "It is
+I that am to be the only dealer and the only judge. I shall satisfy myself
+exactly; and none else shall anyways meddle--you the least of all."</p>
+
+<p>"Upon my word, sir!" he exclaimed, "and who are you to be the
+judge?"</p>
+
+<p>"The bridegroom, I believe," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"This is to quibble," he cried. "You turn your back upon the facts. The
+girl, my daughter, has no choice left to exercise. Her character is
+gone."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355"></a>[pg
+355]</span>"And I ask your pardon," said I, "but while this matter lies
+between her and you and me, that is not so."</p>
+
+<p>"What security have I!" he cried. "Am I to let my daughter's reputation
+depend upon a chance?"</p>
+
+<p>"You should have thought of all this long ago," said I, "before you were
+so misguided as to lose her; and not afterwards, when it is quite too late.
+I refuse to regard myself as any way accountable for your neglect, and I
+will be browbeat by no man living. My mind is quite made up, and come what
+may, I will not depart from it a hair's breadth. You and me are to sit here
+in company till her return; upon which, without either word or look from
+you, she and I are to go forth again to hold our talk. If she can satisfy
+me that she is willing to this step, I will then make it; and if she
+cannot, I will not."</p>
+
+<p>He leaped out of his seat like a man stung. "I can spy your manoeuvre,"
+he cried; "you would work upon her to refuse!"</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe ay, and maybe no," said I. "That is the way it is to be,
+whatever."</p>
+
+<p>"And if I refuse?" cries he.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Mr. Drummond, it will have to come to the throat-cutting," said
+I.</p>
+
+<p>What with the size of the man, his great length of arm in which he came
+near rivalling his father, and his reputed skill at weapons, I did not use
+this word without <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356"
+id="Page_356"></a>[pg 356]</span>some trepidation, to say nothing at all of
+the circumstance that he was Catriona's father. But I might have spared
+myself alarms. From the poorness of my lodging--he does not seem to have
+remarked his daughter's dresses, which were indeed all equally new to
+him--and from the fact that I had shown myself averse to lend, he had
+embraced a strong idea of my poverty. The sudden news of my estate
+convinced him of his error, and he had made but the one bound of it on this
+fresh venture, to which he was now so wedded, that I believe he would have
+suffered anything rather than fall to the alternative of fighting.</p>
+
+<p>A little while longer he continued to dispute with me until I hit upon a
+word that silenced him.</p>
+
+<p>"If I find you so averse to let me see the lady by herself," said I, "I
+must suppose you have very good grounds to think me in the right about her
+unwillingness."</p>
+
+<p>He gabbled some kind of an excuse.</p>
+
+<p>"But all this is very exhausting to both of our tempers," I added, "and
+I think we would do better to preserve a judicious silence."</p>
+
+<p>The which we did until the girl returned, and I must suppose would have
+cut a very ridiculous figure, had there been any there to view us.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357"></a>[pg
+357]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXVIII'></a>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE</h3>
+
+
+<p>I opened the door to Catriona and stopped her on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>"Your father wishes us to take our walk," said I.</p>
+
+<p>She looked to James More, who nodded, and at that, like a trained
+soldier, she turned to go with me.</p>
+
+<p>We took one of our old ways, where we had gone often together, and been
+more happy than I can tell of in the past. I came a half a step behind, so
+that I could watch her unobserved. The knocking of her little shoes upon
+the way sounded extraordinary pretty and sad; and I thought it a strange
+moment that I should be so near both ends of it at once, and walk in the
+midst between two destinies, and could not tell whether I was hearing these
+steps for the last time, or whether the sound of them was to go in and out
+with me till death should part us.</p>
+
+<p>She avoided even to look at me, only walked before her, like one who had
+a guess of what was coming. I saw I must speak soon before my courage was
+run out, but where to begin I knew not. In this painful situation, when the
+girl was as good as forced into my arms <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_358" id="Page_358"></a>[pg 358]</span>and had already besought
+my forbearance, any excess of pressure must have seemed indecent; yet to
+avoid it wholly would have a very cold-like appearance. Between these
+extremes I stood helpless, and could have bit my fingers; so that, when at
+last I managed to speak at all, it may be said I spoke at random.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said I, "I am in a very painful situation; or rather, so we
+are both; and I would be a good deal obliged to you if you would promise to
+let me speak through first of all, and not to interrupt till I have
+done."</p>
+
+<p>She promised me that simply.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "this that I have got to say is very difficult, and I
+know very well I have no right to be saying it. After what passed between
+the two of us last Friday, I have no manner of right. We have got so
+ravelled up (and all by my fault) that I know very well the least I could
+do is just to hold my tongue, which was what I intended fully, and there
+was nothing further from my thoughts than to have troubled you again. But,
+my dear, it has become merely necessary, and no way by it. You see, this
+estate of mine has fallen in, which makes me rather a better match; and
+the--the business would not have quite the same ridiculous-like appearance
+that it would before. Besides which, it's supposed that our affairs have
+got so much ravelled up (as I was saying) that it would be better to let
+them be the way they are. In my view, this part of <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_359" id="Page_359"></a>[pg 359]</span>the thing is vastly
+exaggerate, and if I were you I would not wear two thoughts on it. Only
+it's right I should mention the same, because there's no doubt it has some
+influence on James More. Then I think we were none so unhappy when we dwelt
+together in this town before. I think we did pretty well together. If you
+would look back, my dear--"</p>
+
+<p>"I will look neither back nor forward," she interrupted. "Tell me the
+one thing: this is my father's doing?"</p>
+
+<p>"He approves of it," said I. "He approved that I should ask your hand in
+marriage," and was going on again with somewhat more of an appeal upon her
+feelings; but she marked me not, and struck into the midst.</p>
+
+<p>"He told you to!" she cried. "It is no sense denying it, you said
+yourself that there was nothing farther from your thoughts. He told you
+to."</p>
+
+<p>"He spoke of it the first, if that is what you mean," I began.</p>
+
+<p>She was walking ever the faster, and looking fair in front of her; but
+at this she made a little noise in her head, and I thought she would have
+run.</p>
+
+<p>"Without which," I went on, "after what you said last Friday, I would
+never have been so troublesome as make the offer. But when he as good as
+asked me, what was I to do?"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped and turned round upon me.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360"></a>[pg
+360]</span>"Well, it is refused at all events," she cried, "and there will
+be an end of that."</p>
+
+<p>And she began to walk forward.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose I could expect no better," said I, "but I think you might try
+to be a little kind to me for the last end of it. I see not why you should
+be harsh. I have loved you very well, Catriona--no harm that I should call
+you so for the last time. I have done the best that I could manage, I am
+trying the same still, and only vexed that I can do no better. It is a
+strange thing to me that you can take any pleasure to be hard to me."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not thinking of you," she said, "I am thinking of that man, my
+father."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and that way, too!" said I. "I can be of use to you that way,
+too; I will have to be. It is very needful, my dear, that we should consult
+about your father; for the way this talk has gone, an angry man will be
+James More."</p>
+
+<p>She stopped again. "It is because I am disgraced?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"That is what he is thinking," I replied, "but I have told you already
+to make nought of it."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be all one to me," she cried. "I prefer to be disgraced!"</p>
+
+<p>I did not know very well what to answer, and stood silent.</p>
+
+<p>There seemed to be something working in her <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_361" id="Page_361"></a>[pg 361]</span>bosom after that last cry;
+presently she broke out, "And what is the meaning of all this? Why is all
+this shame loundered on my head? How could you dare it, David Balfour?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," said I, "what else was I to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am not your dear," she said, "and I defy you to be calling me these
+words."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not thinking of my words," said I. "My heart bleeds for you, Miss
+Drummond. Whatever I may say, be sure you have my pity in your difficult
+position. But there is just the one thing that I wish you would bear in
+view, if it was only long enough to discuss it quietly; for there is going
+to be a collieshangie when we two get home. Take my word for it, it will
+need the two of us to make this matter end in peace."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay," said she. There sprang a patch of red in either of her cheeks.
+"Was he for fighting you?" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he was that," said I.</p>
+
+<p>She gave a dreadful kind of laugh. "At all events, it is complete!" she
+cried. And then turning on me: "My father and I are a fine pair," she said,
+"but I am thanking the good God there will be somebody worse than what we
+are. I am thanking the good God that he has let me see you so. There will
+never be the girl made that would not scorn you."</p>
+
+<p>I had borne a good deal pretty patiently, but this was over the
+mark.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362"></a>[pg
+362]</span>"You have no right to speak to me like that," said I. "What have
+I done but to be good to you, or try to? And here is my repayment! O, it is
+too much."</p>
+
+<p>She kept looking at me with a hateful smile. "Coward!" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"The word in your throat and in your father's!" I cried. "I have dared
+him this day already in your interest. I will dare him again, the nasty
+pole-cat; little I care which of us should fall! Come," said I, "back to
+the house with us; let us be done with it, let me be done with the whole
+Hieland crew of you! You will see what you think when I am dead."</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head at me with that same smile I could have struck her
+for.</p>
+
+<p>"O, smile away!" I cried. "I have seen your bonny father smile on the
+wrong side this day. Not that I mean he was afraid, of course," I added
+hastily, "but he preferred the other way of it."</p>
+
+<p>"What is this?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"When I offered to draw with him," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You offered to draw upon James More?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"And I did so," said I, "and found him backward enough, or how would we
+be here?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is a meaning upon this," said she. "What is it you are
+meaning?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was to make you take me," I replied, "and I would not have it. I
+said you should be free, and I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363"
+id="Page_363"></a>[pg 363]</span>must speak with you alone; little I
+supposed it would be such a speaking! '<i>And what if I refuse</i>?' says
+he.--'<i>Then it must come to the throat cutting</i>,' says I, '<i>for I
+will no more have a husband forced on that young lady than what I would
+have a wife forced upon myself</i>.' These were my words, they were a
+friend's words; bonnily have I been paid for them! Now you have refused me
+of your own clear free will, and there lives no father in the Highlands, or
+out of them, that can force on this marriage. I will see that your wishes
+are respected; I will make the same my business, as I have all through. But
+I think you might have that decency as to affect some gratitude. 'Deed, and
+I thought you knew me better! I have not behaved quite well to you, but
+that was weakness. And to think me a coward and such a coward as that--O,
+my lass, there was a stab for the last of it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Davie, how would I guess?" she cried. "O, this is a dreadful business!
+Me and mine,"--she gave a kind of wretched cry at the word--"me and mine
+are not fit to speak to you. O, I could be kneeling down to you in the
+street, I could be kissing your hands for your forgiveness!"</p>
+
+<p>"I will keep the kisses I have got from you already," cried I. "I will
+keep the ones I wanted and that were something worth; I will not be kissed
+in penitence."</p>
+
+<p>"What can you be thinking of this miserable girl?" says she.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364"></a>[pg
+364]</span>"What I am trying to tell you all this while!" said I, "that you
+had best leave me alone, whom you can make no more unhappy if you tried,
+and turn your attention to James More, your father, with whom you are like
+to have a queer pirn to wind."</p>
+
+<p>"O, that I must be going out into the world alone with such a man!" she
+cried, and seemed to catch herself in with a great effort. "But trouble
+yourself no more for that," said she. "He does not know what kind of nature
+is in my heart. He will pay me dear for this day of it; dear, dear, will he
+pay."</p>
+
+<p>She turned, and began to go home and I to accompany her. At which she
+stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"I will be going alone," she said. "It is alone I must be seeing
+him."</p>
+
+<p>Some little while I raged about the streets, and told myself I was the
+worst used lad in Christendom. Anger choked me; it was all very well for me
+to breathe deep; it seemed there was not air enough about Leyden to supply
+me, and I thought I would have burst like a man at the bottom of the sea. I
+stopped and laughed at myself at a street corner a minute together,
+laughing out loud, so that a passenger looked at me, which brought me to
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," I thought, "I have been a gull and a ninny and a soft Tommy long
+enough. Time it was done. Here is a good lesson to have nothing to do with
+that accursed sex, that was the ruin of the man in the <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365"></a>[pg
+365]</span>beginning and will be so to the end. God knows I was happy
+enough before ever I saw her; God knows I can be happy enough again when I
+have seen the last of her."</p>
+
+<p>That seemed to me the chief affair: to see them go. I dwelled upon the
+idea fiercely; and presently slipped on, in a kind of malevolence, to
+consider how very poorly they were like to fare when Davie Balfour was no
+longer by to be their milk-cow; at which, to my own very great surprise,
+the disposition of my mind turned bottom up. I was still angry; I still
+hated her; and yet I thought I owed it to myself that she should suffer
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>This carried me home again at once, where I found the mails drawn out
+and ready fastened by the door, and the father and daughter with every mark
+upon them of a recent disagreement. Catriona was like a wooden doll; James
+More breathed hard, his face was dotted with white spots, and his nose upon
+one side. As soon as I came in, the girl looked at him with a steady,
+clear, dark look that might very well have been followed by a blow. It was
+a hint that was more contemptuous than a command, and I was surprised to
+see James More accept it. It was plain he had had a master talking-to; and
+I could see there must be more of the devil in the girl than I had guessed,
+and more good-humor about the man than I had given him the credit of.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366"></a>[pg
+366]</span>He began, at least, calling me Mr. Balfour, and plainly speaking
+from a lesson; but he got not very far, for at the first pompous swell of
+his voice, Catriona cut in.</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you what James More is meaning," said she. "He means we
+have come to you, beggar-folk, and have not behaved to you very well, and
+we are ashamed of our ingratitude and ill-behaviour. Now we are wanting to
+go away and be forgotten; and my father will have guided his gear so ill,
+that we cannot even do that unless you will give us some more alms. For
+that is what we are, at all events, beggar-folk and sorners."</p>
+
+<p>"By your leave, Miss Drummond," said I, "I must speak to your father by
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>She went into her own room and shut the door, without a word or a
+look.</p>
+
+<p>"You must excuse her, Mr. Balfour," says James More. "She has no
+delicacy."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not here to discuss that with you," said I, "but to be quit of
+you. And to that end I must talk of your position. Now, Mr. Drummond, I
+have kept the run of your affairs more closely than you bargained for. I
+know you had money of your own when you were borrowing mine. I know you
+have had more since you were here in Leyden, though you concealed it even
+from your daughter."</p>
+
+<p>"I bid you beware. I will stand no more baiting," <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367"></a>[pg 367]</span>he
+broke out. "I am sick of her and you. What kind of a damned trade is this
+to be a parent! I have had expressions used to me----" There he broke off.
+"Sir, this is the heart of a soldier and a parent," he went on again,
+laying his hand on his bosom, "outraged in both characters--and I bid you
+beware."</p>
+
+<p>"If you would have let me finish," says I, "you would have found I spoke
+for your advantage."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear friend," he cried, "I know I might have relied upon the
+generosity of your character."</p>
+
+<p>"Man! will you let me speak?" said I. "The fact is that I cannot win to
+find out if you are rich or poor. But it is my idea that your means, as
+they are mysterious in their source, so they are something insufficient in
+amount; and I do not choose your daughter to be lacking. If I durst speak
+to herself, you may be certain I would never dream of trusting it to you;
+because I know you like the back of my hand, and all your blustering talk
+is that much wind to me. However, I believe in your way you do still care
+something for your daughter after all; and I must just be doing with that
+ground of confidence, such as it is."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon, I arranged with him that he was to communicate with me, as to
+his whereabouts and Catriona's welfare, in consideration of which I was to
+serve him a small stipend.</p>
+
+<p>He heard the business out with a great deal of eagerness; and when it
+was done, "My dear fellow, my <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368"
+id="Page_368"></a>[pg 368]</span>dear son," he cried out, "this is more
+like yourself than any of it yet! I will serve you with a soldier's
+faithfulness----"</p>
+
+<p>"Let me hear no more of it!" says I. "You have got me to that pitch that
+the bare name of soldier rises on my stomach. Our traffic is settled; I am
+now going forth and will return in one half-hour, when I expect to find my
+chambers purged of you."</p>
+
+<p>I gave them good measure of time; it was my one fear that I might see
+Catriona again, because tears and weakness were ready in my heart, and I
+cherished my anger like a piece of dignity. Perhaps an hour went by; the
+sun had gone down, a little wisp of a new moon was following it across a
+scarlet sunset; already there were stars in the east, and in my chambers,
+when at last I entered them, the night lay blue. I lit a taper and reviewed
+the rooms; in the first there remained nothing so much as to awake a memory
+of those who were gone; but in the second, in a corner of the floor, I
+spied a little heap that brought my heart into my mouth. She had left
+behind at her departure all that ever she had of me. It was the blow that I
+felt sorest, perhaps because it was the last; and I fell upon that pile of
+clothing and behaved myself more foolish than I care to tell of.</p>
+
+<p>Late in the night, in a strict frost, and my teeth chattering, I came
+again by some portion of my manhood and considered with myself. The sight
+of these <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369"></a>[pg
+369]</span>poor frocks and ribbons, and her shifts, and the clocked
+stockings, was not to be endured; and if I were to recover any constancy of
+mind, I saw I must be rid of them ere the morning. It was my first thought
+to have made a fire and burned them; but my disposition has always been
+opposed to wastery, for one thing; and for another, to have burned these
+things that she had worn so close upon her body, seemed in the nature of a
+cruelty. There was a corner cupboard in that chamber; there I determined to
+bestow them. The which I did and made it a long business, folding them with
+very little skill indeed but the more care; and sometimes dropping them
+with my tears. All the heart was gone out of me, I was weary as though I
+had run miles, and sore like one beaten; when, as I was folding a kerchief
+that she wore often at her neck, I observed there was a corner neatly cut
+from it. It was a kerchief of a very pretty hue, on which I had frequently
+remarked; and once that she had it on, I remembered telling her (by way of
+a banter) that she wore my colours. There came a glow of hope and like a
+tide of sweetness in my bosom; and the next moment I was plunged back in a
+fresh despair. For there was the corner crumpled in a knot and cast down by
+itself in another part of the floor.</p>
+
+<p>But when I argued with myself, I grew more hopeful. She had cut that
+corner off in some childish freak that was manifestly tender; that she had
+cast it away <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370"></a>[pg
+370]</span>again was little to be wondered at; and I was inclined to dwell
+more upon the first than upon the second, and to be more pleased that she
+had ever conceived the idea of that keepsake, than concerned because she
+had flung it from her in an hour of natural resentment.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371"></a>[pg
+371]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXIX'></a>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+
+<h3>WE MEET IN DUNKIRK</h3>
+
+
+<p>Altogether, then, I was scarce so miserable the next days but what I had
+many hopeful and happy snatches; threw myself with a good deal of constancy
+upon my studies; and made out to endure the time till Alan should arrive,
+or I might hear word of Catriona by the means of James More. I had
+altogether three letters in the time of our separation. One was to announce
+their arrival in the town of Dunkirk in France, from which place James
+shortly after started alone upon a private mission. This was to England and
+to see Lord Holderness; and it has always been a bitter thought that my
+good money helped to pay the charges of the same. But he has need of a long
+spoon who sups with the deil, or James More either. During this absence,
+the time was to fall due for another letter; and as the letter was the
+condition of his stipend, he had been so careful as prepare it beforehand
+and leave it with Catriona to be despatched. The fact of our correspondence
+aroused her suspicions, and he was no sooner gone than she had burst the
+seal. What I received began accordingly in the writing of James More:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372"></a>[pg
+372]</span>"My dear Sir,--Your esteemed favour came to hand duly, and I
+have to acknowledge the inclosure according to agreement. It shall be all
+faithfully expended on my daughter, who is well, and desires to be
+remembered to her dear friend. I find her in rather a melancholy
+disposition, but trusts in the mercy of Grod to see her re-established. Our
+manner of life is very much alone, but we solace ourselves with the
+melancholy tunes of our native mountains, and by walking upon the margin of
+the sea that lies next to Scotland. It was better days with me when I lay
+with five wounds upon my body on the field of Gladsmuir. I have found
+employment here in the <i>haras</i> of a French nobleman, where my
+experience is valued. But, my dear Sir, the wages are so exceedingly
+unsuitable that I would be ashamed to mention them, which makes your
+remittances the more necessary to my daughter's comfort, though I daresay
+the sight of old friends would be still better.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Sir, "Your affectionate obedient servant,</p>
+
+<p>"JAMES MACGREGOR DRUMMOND."</p>
+
+<p>Below it began again in the hand of Catriona:--</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+"Do not be believing him, it is all lies together.<br />
+"C.M.D."<br />
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Not only did she add this postcript, but I think she must have come near
+suppressing the letter; for it came long after date, and was closely
+followed by the third. In the time betwixt them, Alan had arrived, and made
+another life to me with his merry conversation; I had been presented to his
+cousin of the Scots-Dutch, a man that drank more than I could have thought
+possible and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373"></a>[pg
+373]</span>was not otherwise of interest; I had been entertained to many
+jovial dinners and given some myself, all with no great change upon my
+sorrow; and we two (by which I mean Alan and myself, and not at all the
+cousin) had discussed a good deal the nature of my relations with James
+More and his daughter. I was naturally diffident to give particulars; and
+this disposition was not anyway lessened by the nature of Alan's commentary
+upon those I gave.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannae make head nor tail of it," he would say, "but it sticks in my
+mind ye've made a gowk of yourself. There's few people that has had more
+experience than Alan Breck; and I can never call to mind to have heard tell
+of a lassie like this one of yours. The way that you tell it, the thing's
+fair impossible. Ye must have made a terrible hash of the business,
+David."</p>
+
+<p>"There are whiles that I am of the same mind," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"The strange thing is that ye seem to have a kind of a fancy for her
+too!" said Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"The biggest kind, Alan," said I, "and I think I'll take it to my grave
+with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, ye beat me, whatever!" he would conclude.</p>
+
+<p>I showed him the letter with Catriona's postcript. "And here again!" he
+cried. "Impossible to deny a kind of decency to this Catriona, and sense
+forby! As for James More, the man's as boss as a drum; he's <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374"></a>[pg 374]</span>just a
+wame and a wheen words; though I'll can never deny that he fought
+reasonably well at Gladsmuir, and it's true what he says here about the
+five wounds. But the loss of him is that the man's boss."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye see, Alan," said I, "it goes against the grain with me to leave the
+maid in such poor hands."</p>
+
+<p>"Ye couldnae weel find poorer," he admitted. "But what are ye to do with
+it? It's this way about a man and a woman, ye see, Davie: The weemenfolk
+have got no kind of reason to them. Either they like the man, and then a'
+goes fine; or else they just detest him, and ye may spare your breath--ye
+can do naething. There's just the two sets of them--them that would sell
+their coats for ye, and them that never look the road ye're on. That's a'
+that there is to women; and you seem to be such a gomeral that ye cannae
+tell the tane frae the tither."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I'm afraid that's true for me," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet there's naething easier!" cried Alan. "I could easy learn ye
+the science of the thing; but ye seem to me to be born blind, and there's
+where the diffeeculty comes in!"</p>
+
+<p>"And can <i>you</i> no help me?" I asked, "you that's so clever at the
+trade?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ye see, David, I wasnae here," said he. "I'm like a field officer that
+has naebody but blind men for scouts and <i>&eacute;claireurs</i>; and what
+would he ken? But it sticks in my mind that ye'll have made some kind <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375"></a>[pg 375]</span>of
+bauchle; and if I was you, I would have a try at her again."</p>
+
+<p>"Would ye so, man Alan?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I would e'en't," says he.</p>
+
+<p>The third letter came to my hand while we were deep in some such talk;
+and it will be seen how pat it fell to the occasion. James professed to be
+in some concern upon his daughter's health, which I believe was never
+better; abounded in kind expressions to myself; and finally proposed that I
+should visit them at Dunkirk.</p>
+
+<p>"You will now be enjoying the society of my old comrade, Mr. Stewart,"
+he wrote. "Why not accompany him so far in his return to France? I have
+something very particular for Mr. Stewart's ear; and, at any rate, I would
+be pleased to meet in with an old fellow-soldier and one so mettle as
+himself. As for you, my dear sir, my daughter and I would be proud to
+receive our benefactor, whom we regard as a brother and a son. The French
+nobleman has proved a person of the most filthy avarice of character, and I
+have been necessitate to leave the <i>haras</i>. You will find us, in
+consequence, a little poorly lodged in the <i>auberge</i> of a man Bazin on
+the dunes; but the situation is caller, and I make no doubt but we might
+spend some very pleasant days, when Mr. Stewart and I could recall our
+services, and you and my daughter divert yourselves in a manner more
+befitting your age. I beg at <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376"
+id="Page_376"></a>[pg 376]</span>least that Mr. Stewart would come here; my
+business with him opens a very wide door."</p>
+
+<p>"What does the man want with me?" cried Alan, when he had read. "What he
+wants with you is clear enough--it's siller. But what can he want with Alan
+Breck?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, it'll be just an excuse," said I. "He is still after this marriage,
+which I wish from my heart that we could bring about. And he asks you
+because he thinks I would be less likely to come wanting you."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I wish that I kent," says Alan. "Him and me were never onyways
+pack; we used to girn at ither like a pair of pipers. 'Something for my
+ear,' quo' he! I'll maybe have something for his hinder end, before we're
+through with it. Dod, I'm thinking it would be a kind of a divertisement to
+gang and see what he'll be after! Forby that I could see your lassie then.
+What say ye, Davie? Will ye ride with Alan?"</p>
+
+<p>You may be sure I was not backward, and Alan's furlough running towards
+an end, we set forth presently upon this joint adventure.</p>
+
+<p>It was near dark of a January day when we rode at last into the town of
+Dunkirk. We left our horses at the post, and found a guide to Bazin's Inn,
+which lay beyond the walls. Night was quite fallen, so that we were the
+last to leave that fortress, and heard the doors of it close behind us as
+we passed the bridge. On the other side there lay a lighted suburb, which
+we <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377"></a>[pg
+377]</span>thridded for a while, then turned into a dark lane, and
+presently found ourselves wading in the night among deep sand where we
+could hear a bullering of the sea. We travelled in this fashion for some
+while, following our conductor mostly by the sound of his voice; and I had
+begun to think he was perhaps misleading us, when we came to the top of a
+small brae, and there appeared out of the darkness a dim light in a
+window.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Voil&agrave; l'auberge &agrave;, Bazin</i>," says the guide.</p>
+
+<p>Alan smacked his lips. "An unco lonely bit," said he, and I thought by
+his tone he was not wholly pleased.</p>
+
+<p>A little after, and we stood in the lower storey of the house, which was
+all in the one apartment, with a stair leading to the chambers at the side,
+benches and tables by the wall, the cooking fire at the one end of it, and
+shelves of bottles and the cellar-trap at the other. Here Bazin, who was an
+ill-looking, big man, told us the Scottish gentleman was gone abroad he
+knew not where, but the young lady was above, and he would call her down to
+us.</p>
+
+<p>I took from my breast the kerchief wanting the corner, and knotted it
+about my throat. I could hear my heart go; and Alan patting me on the
+shoulder with some of his laughable expressions, I could scarce refrain
+from a sharp word. But the time was not long to wait. I heard her step pass
+overhead, and saw her on the stair. This she descended very quietly, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378"></a>[pg
+378]</span>greeted me with a pale face and certain seeming of earnestness,
+or uneasiness, in her manner that extremely dashed me.</p>
+
+<p>"My father, James More, will be here soon. He will be very pleased to
+see you," she said. And then of a sudden her face flamed, her eyes
+lightened, the speech stopped upon her lips; and I made sure she had
+observed the kerchief. It was only for a breath that she was discomposed;
+but methought it was with a new animation that she turned to welcome Alan.
+"And you will be his friend Alan Breck?" she cried. "Many is the dozen
+times I will have heard him tell of you; and I love you already for all
+your bravery and goodness."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," says Alan, holding her hand in his and viewing her, "and
+so this is the young lady at the last of it! David, you're an awful poor
+hand of a description."</p>
+
+<p>I do not know that ever I heard him speak so straight to people's
+hearts; the sound of his voice was like song.</p>
+
+<p>"What? will he have been describing me?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Little else of it since I ever came out of France!" says he, "forby a
+bit of speciment one night in Scotland in a shaw of wood by Silvermills.
+But cheer up, my dear! ye're bonnier than what he said. And now there's one
+thing sure: you and me are to be a pair of friends. I'm a kind of a
+henchman to Davie here; I'm like a tyke at his heels; and whatever he cares
+for, I've <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379"></a>[pg
+379]</span>got to care for too--and by the holy airn! they've got to care
+for me! So now you can see what way you stand with Alan Breck, and ye'll
+find ye'll hardly lose on the transaction. He's no very bonnie, my dear,
+but he's leal to them he loves."</p>
+
+<p>"I thank you with my heart for your good words," said she. "I have that
+honour for a brave, honest man that I cannot find any to be answering
+with."</p>
+
+<p>Using travellers' freedom, we spared to wait for James More, and sat
+down to meat, we threesome. Alan had Catriona sit by him and wait upon his
+wants: he made her drink first out of his glass, he surrounded her with
+continual kind gallantries, and yet never gave me the most small occasion
+to be jealous; and he kept the talk so much in his own hand, and that in so
+merry a note, that neither she nor I remembered to be embarrassed. If any
+one had seen us there, it must have been supposed that Alan was the old
+friend and I the stranger. Indeed, I had often cause to love and to admire
+the man, but I never loved or admired him better than that night; and I
+could not help remarking to myself (what I was sometimes rather in danger
+of forgetting) that he had not only much experience of life, but in his own
+way a great deal of natural ability besides. As for Catriona she seemed
+quite carried away; her laugh was like a peal of bells, her face gay as a
+May morning; and I own, although I was very well pleased, yet I was a
+little sad also, and thought myself a dull, stockish character <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380"></a>[pg 380]</span>in
+comparison of my friend, and very unfit to come into a young maid's life,
+and perhaps ding down her gaiety.</p>
+
+<p>But if that was like to be my part, I found at least that I was not
+alone in it; for, James More returning suddenly, the girl was changed into
+a piece of stone. Through the rest of that evening, until she made an
+excuse and slipped to bed, I kept an eye upon her without cease: and I can
+bear testimony that she never smiled, scarce spoke, and looked mostly on
+the board in front of her. So that I really marvelled to see so much
+devotion (as it used to be) changed into the very sickness of hate.</p>
+
+<p>Of James More it is unnecessary to say much; you know the man already,
+what there was to know of him; and I am weary of writing out his lies.
+Enough that he drank a great deal, and told us very little that was to any
+possible purpose. As for the business with Alan, that was to be reserved
+for the morrow and his private hearing.</p>
+
+<p>It was the more easy to be put off, because Alan and I were pretty weary
+with our day's ride, and sat not very late after Catriona.</p>
+
+<p>We were soon alone in a chamber where we were to make shift with a
+single bed. Alan looked on me with a queer smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye muckle ass!" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"What do ye mean by that?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381"></a>[pg
+381]</span>"Mean? What do I mean? It's extraordinar, David man," says he,
+"that you should be so mortal stupit."</p>
+
+<p>Again I begged him to speak out.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's this of it," said he. "I told ye there were the two kinds of
+women--them that would sell their shifts for ye, and the others. Just you
+try for yoursel', my bonny man I But what's that neepkin at your
+craig?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him.</p>
+
+<p>"I thocht it was something there about," said he.</p>
+
+<p>Nor would he say another word though I besieged him long with
+importunities.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382"></a>[pg
+382]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CHAPTER_XXX'></a>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP</h3>
+
+
+<p>Daylight showed us how solitary the inn stood. It was plainly hard upon
+the sea, yet out of all view of it, and beset on every side with scabbit
+hills of sand. There was, indeed, only one thing in the nature of a
+prospect, where there stood out over a brae the two sails of a windmill,
+like an ass's ears, but with the ass quite hidden. It was strange (after
+the wind rose, for at first it was dead calm) to see the turning and
+following of each other of these great sails behind the hillock. Scarce any
+road came by there; but a number of footways travelled among the bents in
+all directions up to Mr. Bazin's door. The truth is, he was a man of many
+trades, not any one of them honest, and the position of his inn was the
+best of his livelihood. Smugglers frequented it; political agents and
+forfeited persons bound across the water came there to await their
+passages; and I daresay there was worse behind, for a whole family might
+have been butchered in that house and nobody the wiser.</p>
+
+<p>I slept little and ill. Long ere it was day, I had slipped from beside
+my bedfellow, and was warming myself at the fire or walking to and fro
+before the door. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383"
+id="Page_383"></a>[pg 383]</span>Dawn broke mighty sullen; but a little
+after, sprang up a wind out of the west, which burst the clouds, let
+through the sun, and set the mill to the turning. There was something of
+spring in the sunshine, or else it was in my heart; and the appearing of
+the great sails one after another from behind the hill, diverted me
+extremely. At times I could hear a creak of the machinery; and by half-past
+eight of the day, Catriona began to sing in the house. At this I would have
+cast my hat in the air; and I thought this dreary, desert place was like a
+paradise.</p>
+
+<p>For all which, as the day drew on and nobody came near, I began to be
+aware of an uneasiness that I could scarce explain. It seemed there was
+trouble afoot; the sails of the windmill, as they came up and went down
+over the hill, were like persons spying; and outside of all fancy, it was
+surely a strange neighbourhood and house for a young lady to be brought to
+dwell in.</p>
+
+<p>At breakfast, which we took late, it was manifest that James More was in
+some danger or perplexity; manifest that Alan was alive to the same, and
+watched him close; and this appearance of duplicity upon the one side and
+vigilance upon the other, held me on live coals. The meal was no sooner
+over than James seemed to come to a resolve, and began to make apologies.
+He had an appointment of a private nature in the town (it was with the
+French nobleman, he told me) and we would please excuse him till about
+noon. Meanwhile, he carried <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384"
+id="Page_384"></a>[pg 384]</span>his daughter aside to the far end of the
+room, where he seemed to speak rather earnestly and she to listen without
+much inclination.</p>
+
+<p>"I am caring less and less about this man James," said Alan. "There's
+something no right with the man James, and I wouldnae wonder but what Alan
+Breck would give an eye to him this day. I would like fine to see yon
+French nobleman, Davie; and I daresay you could find an employ to yoursel,
+and that would be to speer at the lassie for some news of your affair. Just
+tell it to her plainly--tell her ye're a muckle ass at the off-set; and
+then, if I were you, and ye could do it naitural, I would just mint to her
+I was in some kind of a danger; a' weemenfolk likes that."</p>
+
+<p>"I cannae lee, Alan, I cannae do it naitural," says I, mocking him.</p>
+
+<p>"The more fool you!" says he. "Then ye'll can tell her that I
+recommended it; that'll set her to the laughing; and I wouldnae wonder but
+what that was the next best. But see to the pair of them! If I didnae feel
+just sure of the lassie, and that she was awful pleased and chief with
+Alan, I would think there was some kind of hocus-pocus about yon."</p>
+
+<p>"And is she so pleased with ye, then, Alan?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"She thinks a heap of me," says he. "And I'm no like you: I'm one that
+can tell. That she does--she thinks a heap of Alan. And troth! I'm thinking
+a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385"></a>[pg
+385]</span>good deal of him mysel; and with your permission, Shaws, I'll be
+getting a wee yont amang the bents, so that I can see what way James
+goes."</p>
+
+<p>One after another went, till I was left alone beside the breakfast
+table; James to Dunkirk, Alan dogging him, Catriona up the stairs to her
+own chamber. I could very well understand how she should avoid to be alone
+with me; yet was none the better pleased with it for that, and bent my mind
+to entrap her to an interview before the men returned. Upon the whole, the
+best appeared to me to do like Alan. If I was out of view among the sand
+hills, the fine morning would decoy her out; and once I had her in the
+open, I could please myself.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner said than done; nor was I long under the bield of a hillock
+before she appeared at the inn door, looked here and there, and (seeing
+nobody) set out by a path that led directly seaward, and by which I
+followed her. I was in no haste to make my presence known; the further she
+went I made sure of the longer hearing to my suit; and the ground being all
+sandy, it was easy to follow her unheard. The path rose and came at last to
+the head of a knowe. Thence I had a picture for the first time of what a
+desolate wilderness that inn stood hidden in; where was no man to be seen,
+nor any house of man, except just Bazin's and the windmill. Only a little
+further on, the sea appeared and two or three ships upon it, pretty as a
+drawing. One of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386"
+id="Page_386"></a>[pg 386]</span>these was extremely close in to be so
+great a vessel; and I was aware of a shock of new suspicion, when I
+recognized the trim of the <i>Seahorse</i>. What should an English ship be
+doing so near in France? Why was Alan brought into her neighbourhood, and
+that in a place so far from any hope of rescue? and was it by accident, or
+by design, that the daughter of James More should walk that day to the
+seaside?</p>
+
+<p>Presently I came forth behind her in the front of the sand hills and
+above the beach. It was here long and solitary; with a man-o'-war's boat
+drawn up about the middle of the prospect, and an officer in charge and
+pacing the sands like one who waited. I sat immediately down where the
+rough grass a good deal covered me, and looked for what should follow.
+Catriona went straight to the boat; the officer met her with civilities;
+they had ten words together; I saw a letter changing hands; and there was
+Catriona returning. At the same time, as if this was all her business on
+the Continent, the boat shoved off and was headed for the <i>Seahorse</i>.
+But I observed the officer to remain behind and disappear among the
+bents.</p>
+
+<p>I liked the business little; and the more I considered of it, liked it
+less. Was it Alan the officer was seeking? or Catriona? She drew near with
+her head down, looking constantly on the sand, and made so tender a picture
+that I could not bear to doubt her innocency. The next, she raised her face
+and recognised me; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387"
+id="Page_387"></a>[pg 387]</span>seemed to hesitate, and then came on
+again, but more slowly, and I thought with a changed colour. And at that
+thought, all else that was upon my bosom--fears, suspicions, the care of my
+friend's life--was clean swallowed up; and I rose to my feet and stood
+waiting her in a drunkenness of hope.</p>
+
+<p>I gave her "good-morning" as she came up, which she returned with a good
+deal of composure.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you forgive my having followed you?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I know you are always meaning kindly," she replied; and then, with a
+little outburst, "But why will you be sending money to that man? It must
+not be."</p>
+
+<p>"I never sent it for him," said I, "but for you, as you know well."</p>
+
+<p>"And you have no right to be sending it to either one of us," said she.
+"David, it is not right."</p>
+
+<p>"It is not, it is all wrong," said I; "and I pray God he will help this
+dull fellow (if it be at all possible), to make it better. Catriona, this
+is no kind of life for you to lead, and I ask your pardon for the word, but
+yon man is no fit father to take care of you."</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be speaking of him, even!" was her cry.</p>
+
+<p>"And I need speak of him no more, it is not of him that I am thinking,
+O, be sure of that!" says I. "I think of the one thing. I have been alone
+now this long time in Leyden; and when I was by way of at my studies, still
+I was thinking of that. Next Alan came, and I went among soldier-men to
+their big dinners; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388"
+id="Page_388"></a>[pg 388]</span>and still I had the same thought. And it
+was the same before, when I had her there beside me. Catriona, do you see
+this napkin at my throat? You cut a corner from it once and then cast it
+from you. They're <i>your</i> colours now; I wear them in my heart. My
+dear, I cannot want you. O, try to put up with me!"</p>
+
+<p>I stepped before her so as to intercept her walking on.</p>
+
+<p>"Try to put up with me," I was saying, "try and bear me with a
+little."</p>
+
+<p>Still she had never the word, and a fear began to rise in me like a fear
+of death.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," I cried, gazing on her hard, "is it a mistake again? Am I
+quite lost?"</p>
+
+<p>She raised her face to me, breathless.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you want me, Davie, truly?" said she, and I scarce could hear her
+say it.</p>
+
+<p>"I do that," said I. "O, sure you know it--I do that."</p>
+
+<p>"I have nothing left to give or to keep back," said she. "I was all
+yours from the first day, if you would have had a gift of me!" she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>This was on the summit of a brae; the place was windy and conspicuous,
+we were to be seen there even from the English ship; but I kneeled down
+before her in the sand, and embraced her knees, and burst into that storm
+of weeping that I thought it must have broken me. All thought was wholly
+beaten from my <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389"
+id="Page_389"></a>[pg 389]</span>mind by the vehemency of my discomposure.
+I knew not where I was, I had forgot why I was happy; only I knew she
+stooped, and I felt her cherish me to her face and bosom, and heard her
+words out of a whirl.</p>
+
+<p>"Davie," she was saying, "O, Davie, is this what you think of me? Is it
+so that you were caring for poor me? O, Davie, Davie!"</p>
+
+<p>With that she wept also, and our tears were commingled in a perfect
+gladness.</p>
+
+<p>It might have been ten in the day before I came to a clear sense of what
+a mercy had befallen me; and sitting over against her, with her hands in
+mine, gazed in her face, and laughed out loud for pleasure like a child,
+and called her foolish and kind names. I have never seen the place look so
+pretty as these bents by Dunkirk; and the windmill sails, as they bobbed
+over the knowe, were like a tune of music.</p>
+
+<p>I know not how much longer we might have continued to forget all else
+besides ourselves, had I not chanced upon a reference to her father, which
+brought us to reality.</p>
+
+<p>"My little friend," I was calling her again and again, rejoicing to
+summon up the past by the sound of it, and to gaze across on her, and to be
+a little distant--"My little friend, now you are mine altogether; mine for
+good, my little friend; and that man's no longer at all."</p>
+
+<p>There came a sudden whiteness in her face, she plucked her hands from
+mine.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390"></a>[pg
+390]</span>"Davie, take me away from him!" she cried. "There's something
+wrong; he's not true. There will be something wrong; I have a dreadful
+terror here at my heart. What will he be wanting at all events with that
+King's ship? What will this word be saying?" And she held the letter forth.
+"My mind misgives me, it will be some ill to Alan. Open it, Davie--open it
+and see."</p>
+
+<p>I took it, and looked at it, and shook my head.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said I, "it goes against me, I cannot open a man's letter."</p>
+
+<p>"Not to save your friend?" she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannae tell," said I. "I think not. If I was only sure!"</p>
+
+<p>"And you have but to break the seal!" said she.</p>
+
+<p>"I know it," said I, "but the thing goes against me."</p>
+
+<p>"Give it here," said she, "and I will open it myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor you neither," said I. "You least of all. It concerns your father,
+and his honour, dear, which we are both misdoubting. No question but the
+place is dangerous-like, and the English ship being here, and your father
+having word of it, and yon officer that stayed ashore! He would not be
+alone either; there must be more along with him; I daresay we are spied
+upon this minute. Ay, no doubt, the letter should be opened; but somehow,
+not by you nor me."</p>
+
+<p>I was about this far with it, and my spirit very much overcome with a
+sense of danger and hidden enemies, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_391" id="Page_391"></a>[pg 391]</span>when I spied Alan, come
+back again from following James and walking by himself among the sand
+hills. He was in his soldier's coat, of course, and mighty fine; but I
+could not avoid to shudder when I thought how little that jacket would
+avail him, if he were once caught and flung in a skiff, and carried on
+board of the <i>Seahorse</i>, a deserter, a rebel, and now a condemned
+murderer.</p>
+
+<p>"There," said I, "there is the man that has the best right to open it:
+or not, as he thinks fit."</p>
+
+<p>With which I called upon his name, and we both stood up to be a mark for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"If it is so--if it be more disgrace--will you can bear it?" she asked,
+looking upon me with a burning eye.</p>
+
+<p>"I was asked something of the same question when I had seen you but the
+once," said I. "What do you think I answered? That if I liked you as I
+thought I did--and O, but I like you better!--I would marry you at his
+gallows' foot."</p>
+
+<p>The blood rose in her face; she came close up and pressed upon me,
+holding my hand: and it was so that we awaited Alan.</p>
+
+<p>He came with one of his queer smiles. "What was I telling ye, David?"
+says he.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a time for all things, Alan," said I, "and this time is
+serious. How have you sped? You can speak out plain before this friend of
+ours."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392"></a>[pg
+392]</span>"I have been upon a fool's errand," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt we have done better than you, then," said I; "and, at least,
+here is a great deal of matter that you must judge of. Do you see that?" I
+went on, pointing to the ship. "That is the <i>Seahorse</i>, Captain
+Palliser."</p>
+
+<p>"I should ken her, too," says Alan. "I had fyke enough with her when she
+was stationed in the Forth. But what ails the man to come so close?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you why he came there first," said I. "It was to bring this
+letter to James More. Why he stops here now that it's delivered, what it's
+likely to be about, why there's an officer hiding in the bents, and whether
+or not it's probable that he's alone--I would rather you considered for
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"A letter to James More?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"The same," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, and I can tell ye more than that," said Alan. "For last night
+when you were fast asleep, I heard the man colloquing with some one in the
+French, and then the door of that inn to be opened and shut."</p>
+
+<p>"Alan!" cried I, "you slept all night, and I am here to prove it."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, but I would never trust Alan whether he was asleep or waking!" says
+he. "But the business looks bad. Let's see the letter."</p>
+
+<p>I gave it him.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," said he, "ye'll have to excuse me, my <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393"></a>[pg 393]</span>dear;
+but there's nothing less than my fine bones upon the cast of it, and I'll
+have to break this seal."</p>
+
+<p>"It is my wish," said Catriona.</p>
+
+<p>He opened it, glanced it through, and flung his hand in the air.</p>
+
+<p>"The stinking brock!" says he, and crammed the paper in his pocket.
+"Here, let's get our things thegether. This place is fair death to me." And
+he began to walk towards the inn.</p>
+
+<p>It was Catriona who spoke the first. "He has sold you?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Sold me, my dear," said Alan. "But thanks to you and Davie, I'll can
+jink him yet. Just let me win upon my horse!" he added.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona must come with us," said I. "She can have no more traffic with
+that man. She and I are to be married." At which she pressed my hand to her
+side.</p>
+
+<p>"Are ye there with it?" says Alan, looking back. "The best day's work
+that ever either of ye did yet I And I'm bound to say, my dawtie, ye make a
+real, bonny couple."</p>
+
+<p>The way that he was following brought us close in by the windmill, where
+I was aware of a man in seaman's trousers, who seemed to be spying from
+behind it. Only, of course, we took him in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>"See, Alan!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Wheesht!" said he, "this is my affairs."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394"></a>[pg
+394]</span>The man was, no doubt, a little deafened by the clattering of
+the mill, and we got up close before he noticed. Then he turned, and we saw
+he was a big fellow with a mahogany face.</p>
+
+<p>"I think, sir," says Alan, "that you speak the English?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Non, monsieur</i>," says he, with an incredible bad accent.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Non, monsieur</i>," cries Alan, mocking him. "Is that how they learn
+you French on the <i>Seahorse?</i> Ye muckle, gutsey hash, here's a Scots
+boot to your English hurdies!"</p>
+
+<p>And bounding on him before he could escape, he dealt the man a kick that
+laid him on his nose. Then he stood, with a savage smile, and watched him
+scramble to his feet and scamper off into the sand hills.</p>
+
+<p>"But it's high time I was clear of these empty bents!" said Alan; and
+continued his way at top speed and we still following, to the back door of
+Bazin's inn.</p>
+
+<p>It chanced that as we entered by the one door we came face to face with
+James More entering by the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Here!" said I to Catriona, "quick! upstairs with you and make your
+packets; this is no fit scene for you."</p>
+
+<p>In the meanwhile James and Alan had met in the midst of the long room.
+She passed them close by to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395"
+id="Page_395"></a>[pg 395]</span>reach the stairs; and after she was some
+way up I saw her turn and glance at them again, though without pausing.
+Indeed, they were worth looking at. Alan wore as they met one of his best
+appearances of courtesy and friendliness, yet with something eminently
+warlike, so that James smelled danger off the man, as folk smell fire in a
+house, and stood prepared for accidents.</p>
+
+<p>Time pressed. Alan's situation in that solitary place, and his enemies
+about him, might have daunted C&aelig;sar. It made no change in him; and it
+was in his old spirit of mockery and daffing that he began the
+interview.</p>
+
+<p>"A braw good day to ye again, Mr. Drummond," said he. "What'll yon
+business of yours be just about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, the thing being private, and rather of a long story," says James,
+"I think it will keep very well till we have eaten."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm none so sure of that," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind it's either
+now or never; for the fact is me and Mr. Balfour here have gotten a line,
+and we're thinking of the road."</p>
+
+<p>I saw a little surprise in James's eye; but he held himself stoutly.</p>
+
+<p>"I have but the one word to say to cure you of that," said he, "and that
+is the name of my business."</p>
+
+<p>"Say it then," says Alan. "Hout! wha minds for Davie?"</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396"></a>[pg
+396]</span>"It is a matter that would make us both rich men," said
+James.</p>
+
+<p>"Do ye tell me that?" cries Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"I do, sir," said James. "The plain fact is that it is Cluny's
+Treasure."</p>
+
+<p>"No!" cried Alan. "Have ye got word of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I ken the place, Mr. Stewart, and can take you there," said James.</p>
+
+<p>"This crowns all!" says Alan. "Well, and I'm glad I came to Dunkirk. And
+so this was your business, was it? Halvers, I'm thinking?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is the business, sir," says James.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well," says Alan; and then in the same tone of childlike
+interest, "It has naething to do with the <i>Seahorse</i>, then?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"With what?" says James.</p>
+
+<p>"Or the lad that I have just kicked the bottom of behind yon windmill?"
+pursued Alan. "Hut, man! have done with your lees! I have Palliser's letter
+here in my pouch. You're by with it, James More. You can never show your
+face again with dacent folk."</p>
+
+<p>James was taken all aback with it. He stood a second, motionless and
+white, then swelled with the living anger.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you talk to me, you bastard?" he roared out.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye glee'd swine!" cried Alan, and hit him a sounding buffet on the
+mouth, and the next wink of time their blades clashed together.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397"></a>[pg
+397]</span>At the first sound of the bare steel I instinctively leaped back
+from the collision. The next I saw, James parried a thrust so nearly that I
+thought him killed; and it lowed up in my mind that this was the girl's
+father, and in a manner almost my own, and I drew and ran in to sever
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep back, Davie! Are ye daft? Damn ye, keep back!" roared Alan. "Your
+blood be on your ain heid then!"</p>
+
+<p>I beat their blades down twice. I was knocked reeling against the wall;
+I was back again betwixt them. They took no heed of me, thrusting at each
+other like two furies. I can never think how I avoided being stabbed myself
+or stabbing one of these two Rodomonts, and the whole business turned about
+me like a piece of a dream; in the midst of which I heard a great cry from
+the stair, and Catriona sprang before her father. In the same moment the
+point of my sword encountered something yielding. It came back to me
+reddened. I saw the blood flow on the girl's kerchief, and stood sick.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you be killing him before my eyes, and me his daughter after all?"
+she cried.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear, I have done with him," said Alan, and went and sat on a table,
+with his arms crossed and the sword naked in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Awhile she stood before the man, panting, with big eyes, then swung
+suddenly about and faced him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398"></a>[pg
+398]</span>"Begone!" was her word, "take your shame out of my sight; leave
+me with clean folk. I am a daughter of Alpin! Shame of the sons of Alpin,
+begone!"</p>
+
+<p>It was said with so much passion as awoke me from the horror of my own
+bloodied sword. The two stood facing, she with the red stain on her
+kerchief, he white as a rag. I knew him well enough--I knew it must have
+pierced him in the quick place of his soul; but he betook himself to a
+bravado air.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," says he, sheathing his sword, though still with a bright eye on
+Alan, "if this brawl is over I will but get my portmanteau---"</p>
+
+<p>"There goes no pockmantie out of this place except with me," says
+Alan.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir!" cries James.</p>
+
+<p>"James More," says Alan, "this lady daughter of yours is to marry my
+friend Davie, upon the which account I let you pack with a hale carcase.
+But take you my advice of it and get that carcase out of harm's way or ower
+late. Little as you suppose it, there are leemits to my temper."</p>
+
+<p>"Be damned, sir, but my money's there!" said James.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm vexed about that, too," says Alan, with his funny face, "but now,
+ye see, it's mines." And then with more gravity, "Be you advised, James
+More, you leave this house."</p>
+
+
+
+<a name="balfour009"></a>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<a href="images/balfour009.jpg"><img alt="Illustration: KEEP BACK, DAVIE! ARE YE DAFT?"
+src="images/balfour009sm.jpg" height="557" width="383" /></a>
+<br />KEEP BACK, DAVIE! ARE YE DAFT?
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p>James seemed to cast about for a moment in his <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_399" id="Page_399"></a>[pg 399]</span>mind; but it's to be
+thought he had enough of Alan's swordsmanship, for he suddenly put off his
+hat to us and (with a face like one of the damned) bade us farewell in a
+series. With which he was gone.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time a spell was lifted from me.</p>
+
+<p>"Catriona," I cried, "it was me--it was my sword. O, are ye much
+hurt?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it, Davie, I am loving you for the pain of it; it was done
+defending that bad man, my father. See!" she said, and showed me a bleeding
+scratch, "see, you have made a man of me now. I will carry a wound like an
+old soldier."</p>
+
+<p>Joy that she should be so little hurt, and the love of her brave nature,
+transported me. I embraced her, I kissed the wound.</p>
+
+<p>"And am I to be out of the kissing, me that never lost a chance?" says
+Alan; and putting me aside and taking Catriona by either shoulder, "My
+dear," he said, "you're a true daughter of Alpin. By all accounts, he was a
+very fine man, and he may weel be proud of you. If ever I was to get
+married, it's the marrow of you I would be seeking for a mother to my sons.
+And I bear a king's name and speak the truth."</p>
+
+<p>He said it with a serious heat of admiration that was honey to the girl,
+and through her, to me. It seemed to wipe us clean of all James More's
+disgraces. And the next moment he was just himself again.</p>
+
+<p>"And now by your leave, my dawties," said he, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_400" id="Page_400"></a>[pg 400]</span>"this is a' very bonny;
+but Alan Breck'll be a wee thing nearer to the gallows than he's caring
+for; and Dod! I think this is a grand place to be leaving."</p>
+
+<p>The word recalled us to some wisdom. Alan ran upstairs and returned with
+our saddle-bags and James More's portmanteau; I picked up Catriona's bundle
+where she had dropped it on the stair; and we were setting forth out of
+that dangerous house, when Bazin stopped the way with cries and
+gesticulations. He had whipped under a table when the swords were drawn,
+but now he was as bold as a lion. There was his bill to be settled, there
+was a chair broken, Alan had sat among his dinner things, James More had
+fled.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," I cried, "pay yourself," and flung him down some Lewie d'ors;
+for I thought it was no time to be accounting.</p>
+
+<p>He sprang upon that money, and we passed him by, and ran forth into the
+open. Upon three sides of the house were seamen hasting and closing in; a
+little nearer to us James More waved his hat as if to hurry them; and right
+behind him, like some foolish person holding up its hands, were the sails
+of the windmill turning.</p>
+
+<p>Alan gave but the one glance, and laid himself down to run. He carried a
+great weight in James More's portmanteau; but I think he would as soon have
+lost his life as cast away that booty which was his revenge; and he ran so
+that I was distressed to follow him, and <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_401" id="Page_401"></a>[pg 401]</span>marvelled and exulted to
+see the girl bounding at my side.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as we appeared, they cast off all disguise upon the other side;
+and the seamen pursued us with shouts and view-hullohs. We had a start of
+some two hundred yards, and they were but bandy-legged tarpaulins after
+all, that could not hope to better us at such an exercise. I suppose they
+were armed, but did not care to use their pistols on French ground. And as
+soon as I perceived that we not only held our advantage but drew a little
+away, I began to feel quite easy of the issue. For all which, it was a hot,
+brisk bit of work, so long as it lasted; Dunkirk was still far off; and
+when we popped over a knowe, and found a company of the garrison marching
+on the other side on some manoeuvre, I could very well understand the word
+that Alan had.</p>
+
+<p>He stopped running at once; and mopping at his brow, "They're a real
+bonny folk, the French nation," says he.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402"></a>[pg
+402]</span><hr />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name='CONCLUSION'></a>CONCLUSION</h2>
+
+
+<p>No sooner were we safe within the walls of Dunkirk than we held a very
+necessary council-of-war on our position. We had taken a daughter from her
+father at the sword's point; any judge would give her back to him at once,
+and by all likelihood clap me and Alan into jail; and though we had an
+argument upon our side in Captain Palisser's letter, neither Catriona nor I
+were very keen to be using it in public. Upon all accounts it seemed the
+most prudent to carry the girl to Paris to the hands of her own chieftain,
+Macgregor of Bohaldie, who would be very willing to help his kinswoman, on
+the one hand, and not at all anxious to dishonour James upon the other.</p>
+
+<p>We made but a slow journey of it up, for Catriona was not so good at the
+riding as the running, and had scarce sat in a saddle since the
+'Forty-five. But we made it out at last, reached Paris early of a Sabbath
+morning, and made all speed, under Alan's guidance, to find Bohaldie. He
+was finely lodged, and lived in a good style, having a pension in the Scots
+Fund, as well as private means; greeted Catriona like one of his own house,
+and seemed altogether very civil and discreet, <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_403" id="Page_403"></a>[pg 403]</span>but not particularly open.
+We asked of the news of James More. "Poor James!" said he, and shook his
+head and smiled, so that I thought he knew further than he meant to tell.
+Then we showed him Palisser's letter, and he drew a long face at that.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor James!" said he again. "Well, there are worse folk than James
+More, too. But this is dreadful bad. Tut, tut, he must have forgot himself
+entirely! This is a most undesirable letter. But, for all that, gentlemen,
+I cannot see what we would want to make it public for. It's an ill bird
+that fouls his own nest, and we are all Scots folk and all Hieland."</p>
+
+<p>Upon this we were all agreed, save perhaps Alan; and still more upon the
+question of our marriage, which Bohaldie took in his own hands, as though
+there had been no such person as James More, and gave Catriona away with
+very pretty manners and agreeable compliments in French. It was not till
+all was over, and our healths drunk, that he told us James was in that
+city, whither he had preceded us some days, and where he now lay sick, and
+like to die. I thought I saw by my wife's face what way her inclination
+pointed.</p>
+
+<p>"And let us go see him, then," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"If it is your pleasure," said Catriona. These were early days.</p>
+
+<p>He was lodged in the same quarter of the city with his chief, in a great
+house upon a corner; and we were guided up to the garret where he lay by
+the sound of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404"></a>[pg
+404]</span>Highland piping. It seemed he had just borrowed a set of them
+from Bohaldie to amuse his sickness; though he was no such hand as was his
+brother Rob, he made good music of the kind; and it was strange to observe
+the French folk crowding on the stairs, and some of them laughing. He lay
+propped in a pallet. The first look of him I saw he was upon his last
+business; and, doubtless, this was a strange place for him to die in. But
+even now I find I can scarce dwell upon his end with patience. Doubtless,
+Bohaldie had prepared him; he seemed to know we were married, complimented
+us on the event, and gave us a benediction like a patriarch.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been never understood," said he. "I forgive you both without an
+after-thought;" after which he spoke for all the world in his old manner,
+was so obliging as to play us a tune or two upon his pipes, and borrowed a
+small sum before I left. I could not trace even a hint of shame in any part
+of his behaviour; but he was great upon forgiveness; it seemed always fresh
+to him. I think he forgave me every time we met; and when after some four
+days he passed away in a kind of odour of affectionate sanctity, I could
+have torn my hair out for exasperation. I had him buried; but what to put
+upon his tomb was quite beyond me, till at last I considered the date would
+look best alone.</p>
+
+<p>I thought it wiser to resign all thoughts of Leyden, <span
+class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405"></a>[pg 405]</span>where
+we had appeared once as brother and sister, and it would certainly look
+strange to return in a new character. Scotland would be doing for us; and
+thither, after I had recovered that which I had left behind, we sailed in a
+Low Country ship.</p>
+
+<p>And now, Miss Barbara Balfour (to set the ladies first) and Mr. Alan
+Balfour, younger of Shaws, here is the story brought fairly to an end. A
+great many of the folk that took a part in it, you will find (if you think
+well) that you have seen and spoken with. Alison Hastie in Limekilns was
+the lass that rocked your cradle when you were too small to know of it, and
+walked abroad with you in the policy when you were bigger. That very fine
+great lady that is Miss Barbara's name-mamma is no other than the same Miss
+Grant that made so much a fool of David Balfour in the house of the Lord
+Advocate. And I wonder whether you remember a little, lean, lively
+gentleman in a scratchwig and a wraprascal, that came to Shaws very late of
+a dark night, and whom you were awakened out of your beds and brought down
+to the dining-hall to be presented to, by the name of Mr. Jamieson? Or has
+Alan forgotten what he did at Mr. Jamieson's request--a most disloyal
+act--for which, by the letter of the law, he might be hanged--no less than
+drinking the king's health <i>across the water</i>? These were strange
+doings in a good Whig house! But Mr. Jamieson is a man privileged, and
+might set fire to my corn-barn; and the <span class="pagenum"><a
+name="Page_406" id="Page_406"></a>[pg 406]</span>name they know him by now
+in France is the Chevalier Stewart.</p>
+
+<p>As for Davie and Catriona, I shall watch you pretty close in the next
+days, and see if you are so bold as to be laughing at papa and mamma. It is
+true we were not so wise as we might have been, and made a great deal of
+sorrow out of nothing; but you will find as you grow up that even the
+artful Miss Barbara, and even the valiant Mr. Alan will be not so very much
+wiser than their parents. For the life of man upon this world of ours is a
+funny business. They talk of the angels weeping; but I think they must more
+often be holding their sides, as they look on; and there was one thing I
+determined to do when I began this long story, and that was to tell out
+everything as it befell.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<p><a href="#rfn1" name="fn1">1.</a> Conspicuous.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn2" name="fn2">2.</a> Country.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn3" name="fn3">3.</a> The Fairies.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn4" name="fn4">4.</a> Flatteries.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn5" name="fn5">5.</a> Trust to.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn6" name="fn6">6.</a> This must have reference to Dr.
+Cameron on his first visit.--D.B.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn7" name="fn7">7.</a> Sweethearts.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn8" name="fn8">8.</a> Child.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn9" name="fn9">9.</a> Palm.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn10" name="fn10">10.</a> Gallows.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn11" name="fn11">11.</a> My Catechism.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn12" name="fn12">12.</a> Now Prince's Street.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn13" name="fn13">13.</a> A learned folklorist of my
+acquaintance hereby identifies Alan's air. It has been printed (it seems)
+in Campbell's <i>Tales of the West Highlands</i>, Vol. II., p. 91. Upon
+examination it would really seem as if Miss Grant's unrhymed doggrel (see
+chapter V.) would fit with a little humouring to the notes in question.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn14" name="fn14">14.</a> A ball placed upon a little mound
+for convenience of striking.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn15" name="fn15">15.</a> Patched shoes.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn16" name="fn16">16.</a> Shoemaker.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn17" name="fn17">17.</a> Tamson's mare, to go afoot.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn18" name="fn18">18.</a> Beard.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn19" name="fn19">19.</a> Ragged.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn20" name="fn20">20.</a> Fine things.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn21" name="fn21">21.</a> Catch.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn22" name="fn22">22.</a> Victuals.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn23" name="fn23">23.</a> Trust.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn24" name="fn24">24.</a> Sea fog.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn25" name="fn25">25.</a> Bashful.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#rfn26" name="fn26">26.</a> Rest.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of David Balfour, Second Part
+by Robert Louis Stevenson
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+Project Gutenberg's David Balfour, Second Part, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: David Balfour, Second Part
+ Being Memoirs Of His Adventures At Home And Abroad, The Second Part:
+ In Which Are Set Forth His Misfortunes Anent The Appin Murder; His
+ Troubles With Lord Advocate Grant; Captivity On The Bass Rock; Journey
+ Into Holland And France; And Singular Relations With James More
+ Drummond Or Macgregor, A Son Of The Notorious Rob Roy, And His
+ Daughter Catriona
+
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+Release Date: November 23, 2004 [EBook #14133]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVID BALFOUR, SECOND PART ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Kevin Handy, John Hagerson, and the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+DAVID BALFOUR
+
+Being Memoirs of his Adventures at home
+and Abroad
+
+THE SECOND PART: _In which are set forth his Misfortunes
+anent the_ APPIN _Murder; his Troubles with Lord Advocate_
+GRANT; _Captivity on the Bass Rock; Journey into Holland
+and France; and Singular Relations with_ JAMES MORE
+DRUMMOND _or_ MACGREGOR, _a Son of the notorious_ ROB
+ROY, _and his Daughter_ CATRIONA
+
+WRITTEN BY HIMSELF
+AND NOW SET FORTH BY
+ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
+
+_ILLUSTRATED_
+
+
+NEW YORK
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+1905
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1893, BY
+CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION TO CHARLES BAXTER, _WRITER TO THE SIGNET_.
+
+MY DEAR CHARLES,
+
+It is the fate of sequels to disappoint those who have waited for them;
+and, my David having been left to kick his heels for more than a lustre
+in the British Linen Company's office, must expect his late reappearance
+to be greeted with hoots, if not with missiles. Yet, when I remember the
+days of our explorations, I am not without hope. There should be left in
+our native city some seed of the elect; some long-legged, hot-headed
+youth must repeat to-day our dreams and wanderings of so many years ago;
+he will relish the pleasure, which should have been ours, to follow
+among named streets and numbered houses the country walks of David
+Balfour, to identify Dean, and Silvermills, and Broughton, and Hope Park
+and Pilrig, and poor old Lochend--if it still be standing, and the
+Figgate Whins--if there be any of them left; or to push (on a long
+holiday) so far afield as Gillane or the Bass. So, perhaps, his eye
+shall be opened to behold the series of the generations, and he shall
+weigh with surprise his momentous and nugatory gift of life.
+
+You are still--as when first I saw, as when I last addressed you--in the
+venerable city which I must always think of as my home. And I have come
+so far; and the sights and thoughts of my youth pursue me; and I see
+like a vision the youth of my father, and of his father, and the whole
+stream of lives flowing down there, far in the north, with the sound of
+laughter and tears, to cast me out in the end, as by a sudden freshet,
+on those ultimate islands. And I admire and bow my head before the
+romance of destiny.
+
+ R.L.S.
+
+ VAILIMA,
+ UPOLU,
+ SAMOA,
+ 1902.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Part I
+
+ _THE LORD ADVOCATE_
+
+ I. A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK
+ II. THE HIGHLAND WRITER
+ III. I GO TO PILRIG
+ IV. LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE
+ V. IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE
+ VI. UMQHILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT
+ VII. I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOUR
+ VIII. THE BRAVO
+ IX. THE HEATHER ON FIRE
+ X. THE RED-HEADED MAN
+ XI. THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS
+ XII. ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN
+ XIII. GILLANE SANDS
+ XIV. THE BASS
+ XV. BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+ XVI. THE MISSING WITNESS
+ XVII. THE MEMORIAL
+ XVIII. THE TEE'D BALL
+ XIX. I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES
+ XX. I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY
+
+ Part II
+
+ _FATHER AND DAUGHTER_
+
+ XXI. THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND
+ XXII. HELVOETSLUYS
+ XXIII. TRAVELS IN HOLLAND
+ XXIV. FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS
+ XXV. THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE
+ XXVI. THE THREESOME
+ XXVII. A TWOSOME
+ XXVIII. IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE
+ XXIX. WE MEET IN DUNKIRK
+ XXX. THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP
+ XXXI. CONCLUSION
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+THE LORD ADVOCATE
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK
+
+
+The 25th day of August, 1751, about two in the afternoon, I, David
+Balfour, came forth of the British Linen Company, a porter attending me
+with a bag of money, and some of the chief of these merchants bowing me
+from their doors. Two days before, and even so late as yestermorning, I
+was like a beggarman by the wayside, clad in rags, brought down to my
+last shillings, my companion a condemned traitor, a price set on my own
+head for a crime with the news of which the country rang. To-day I was
+served heir to my position in life, a landed laird, a bank porter by me
+carrying my gold, recommendations in my pocket, and (in the words of the
+saying) the ball directly at my foot.
+
+There were two circumstances that served me as ballast to so much sail.
+The first was the very difficult and deadly business I had still to
+handle; the second, the place that I was in. The tall, black city, and
+the numbers and movement and noise of so many folk, made a new world for
+me, after the moorland braes, the sea-sands, and the still country-sides
+that I had frequented up to then. The throng of the citizens in
+particular abashed me. Rankeillor's son was short and small in the
+girth; his clothes scarce held on me; and it was plain I was ill
+qualified to strut in the front of a bank-porter. It was plain, if I did
+so, I should but set folk laughing, and (what was worse in my case) set
+them asking questions. So that I behooved to come by some clothes of my
+own, and in the meanwhile to walk by the porter's side, and put my hand
+on his arm as though we were a pair of friends.
+
+At a merchant's in the Luckenbooths, I had myself fitted out: none too
+fine, for I had no idea to appear like a beggar on horseback; but comely
+and responsible, so that servants should respect me. Thence to an
+armourer's, where I got a plain sword, to suit with my degree in life. I
+felt safer with the weapon, though (for one so ignorant of defence) it
+might be called an added danger. The porter, who was naturally a man of
+some experience, judged my accoutrement to be well chosen.
+
+"Naething kenspeckle,"[1] said he, "plain, dacent claes. As for the
+rapier, nae doubt it sits wi' your degree; but an I had been you, I
+would hae waired my siller better-gates than that." And proposed I
+should buy winter-hosen from a wife in the Cowgate-back, that was a
+cousin of his own, and made them "extraordinar endurable."
+
+But I had other matters on my hand more pressing. Here I was in this
+old, black city, which was for all the world like a rabbit-warren, not
+only by the number of its indwellers, but the complication of its
+passages and holes. It was indeed a place where no stranger had a chance
+to find a friend, let be another stranger. Suppose him even to hit on
+the right close, people dwelt so thronged in these tall houses, he might
+very well seek a day before he chanced on the right door. The ordinary
+course was to hire a lad they called a _caddie_, who was like a guide or
+pilot, led you where you had occasion, and (your errands being done)
+brought you again where you were lodging. But these caddies, being
+always employed in the same sort of services, and having it for
+obligation to be well informed of every house and person in the city,
+had grown to form a brotherhood of spies; and I knew from tales of Mr.
+Campbell's how they communicated one with another, what a rage of
+curiosity they conceived as to their employer's business, and how they
+were like eyes and fingers to the police. It would be a piece of little
+wisdom, the way I was now placed, to tack such a ferret to my tails. I
+had three visits to make, all immediately needful: to my kinsman Mr.
+Balfour of Pilrig, to Stewart the Writer that was Appin's agent, and to
+William Grant Esquire of Prestongrange, Lord Advocate of Scotland. Mr.
+Balfour's was a non-committal visit; and besides (Pilrig being in the
+country) I made bold to find way to it myself, with the help of my two
+legs and a Scots tongue. But the rest were in a different case. Not only
+was the visit to Appin's agent, in the midst of the cry about the Appin
+murder, dangerous in itself, but it was highly inconsistent with the
+other. I was like to have a bad enough time of it with my Lord Advocate
+Grant, the best of ways; but to go to him hot-foot from Appin's agent,
+was little likely to mend my own affairs, and might prove the mere ruin
+of friend Alan's. The whole thing, besides, gave me a look of running
+with the hare and hunting with the hounds that was little to my fancy. I
+determined, therefore, to be done at once with Mr. Stewart and the whole
+Jacobitical side of my business, and to profit for that purpose by the
+guidance of the porter at my side. But it chanced I had scarce given him
+the address, when there came a sprinkle of rain--nothing to hurt, only
+for my new clothes--and we took shelter under a pend at the head of a
+close or alley.
+
+Being strange to what I saw, I stepped a little farther in. The narrow
+paved way descended swiftly. Prodigious tall houses sprang upon each
+side and bulged out, one story beyond another, as they rose. At the top
+only a ribbon of sky showed in. By what I could spy in the windows, and
+by the respectable persons that passed out and in, I saw the houses to
+be very well occupied; and the whole appearance of the place interested
+me like a tale.
+
+I was still gazing, when there came a sudden brisk tramp of feet in time
+and clash of steel behind me. Turning quickly, I was aware of a party of
+armed soldiers, and, in their midst, a tall man in a great-coat. He
+walked with a stoop that was like a piece of courtesy, genteel and
+insinuating: he waved his hands plausibly as he went, and his face was
+sly and handsome. I thought his eye took me in, but could not meet it.
+This procession went by to a door in the close, which a serving-man in a
+fine livery set open; and two of the soldier-lads carried the prisoner
+within, the rest lingering with their firelocks by the door.
+
+There can nothing pass in the streets of a city without some following
+of idle folk and children. It was so now; but the more part melted away
+incontinent until but three were left. One was a girl; she was dressed
+like a lady, and had a screen of the Drummond colours on her head; but
+her comrades or (I should say) followers were ragged gillies, such as I
+had seen the matches of by the dozen in my Highland journey. They all
+spoke together earnestly in Gaelic, the sound of which was pleasant in
+my ears for the sake of Alan; and though the rain was by again, and my
+porter plucked at me to be going, I even drew nearer where they were, to
+listen. The lady scolded sharply, the others making apologies and
+cringeing before her, so that I made sure she was come of a chief's
+house. All the while the three of them sought in their pockets, and by
+what I could make out, they had the matter of half a farthing among the
+party; which made me smile a little to see all Highland folk alike for
+fine obeisances and empty sporrans.
+
+It chanced the girl turned suddenly about, so that I saw her face for
+the first time. There is no greater wonder than the way the face of a
+young woman fits in a man's mind, and stays there, and he could never
+tell you why; it just seems it was the thing he wanted. She had
+wonderful bright eyes like stars, and I daresay the eyes had a part in
+it; but what I remember the most clearly was the way her lips were a
+trifle open as she turned. And whatever was the cause, I stood there
+staring like a fool. On her side, as she had not known there was anyone
+so near, she looked at me a little longer, and perhaps with more
+surprise, than was entirely civil.
+
+It went through my country head she might be wondering at my new
+clothes; with that, I blushed to my hair, and at the sight of my
+colouring it's to be supposed she drew her own conclusions, for she
+moved her gillies farther down the close, and they fell again to this
+dispute where I could hear no more of it.
+
+I had often admired a lassie before then, if scarce so sudden and
+strong; and it was rather my disposition to withdraw than to come
+forward, for I was much in fear of mockery from the womenkind. You would
+have thought I had now all the more reason to pursue my common practice,
+since I had met this young lady in the city street, seemingly following
+a prisoner, and accompanied with two very ragged, indecent-like
+Highlandmen. But there was here a different ingredient; it was plain the
+girl thought I had been prying in her secrets; and with my new clothes
+and sword, and at the top of my new fortunes, this was more than I could
+swallow. The beggar on horseback could not bear to be thrust down so
+low, or at the least of it, not by this young lady.
+
+I followed, accordingly, and took off my new hat to her, the best that I
+was able.
+
+"Madam," said I, "I think it only fair to myself to let you understand I
+have no Gaelic. It is true I was listening, for I have friends of my own
+across the Highland line, and the sound of that tongue comes friendly;
+but for your private affairs, if you had spoken Greek, I might have had
+more guess at them."
+
+She made me a little, distant curtsey. "There is no harm done," said
+she, with a pretty accent, most like the English (but more agreeable).
+"A cat may look at a king."
+
+"I do not mean to offend," said I. "I have no skill of city manners; I
+never before this day set foot inside the doors of Edinburgh. Take me
+for a country lad--it's what I am; and I would rather I told you than
+you found it out."
+
+"Indeed, it will be a very unusual thing for strangers to be speaking to
+each other on the causeway," she replied. "But if you are landward[2]
+bred it will be different. I am as landward as yourself; I am Highland
+as you see, and think myself the farther from my home."
+
+"It is not yet a week since I passed the line," said I. "Less than a
+week ago I was on the Braes of Balwhidder."
+
+"Balwhither?" she cries; "come ye from Balwhither? The name of it makes
+all there is of me rejoice. You will not have been long there, and not
+known some of our friends or family?"
+
+"I lived with a very honest, kind man called Duncan Dhu Maclaren," I
+replied.
+
+"Well I know Duncan, and you give him the true name!" she said; "and if
+he is an honest man, his wife is honest indeed."
+
+"Ay," said I, "they are fine people, and the place is a bonny place."
+
+"Where in the great world is such another?" she cries; "I am loving the
+smell of that place and the roots that grew there."
+
+I was infinitely taken with the spirit of the maid. "I could be wishing
+I had brought you a spray of that heather," says I. "And though I did
+ill to speak with you at the first, now it seems we have common
+acquaintance, I make it my petition you will not forget me. David
+Balfour is the name I am known by. This is my lucky day when I have just
+come into a landed estate and am not very long out of a deadly peril. I
+wish you would keep my name in mind for the sake of Balquidder," said I,
+"and I will yours for the sake of my lucky day."
+
+"My name is not spoken," she replied, with a great deal of haughtiness.
+"More than a hundred years it has not gone upon men's tongues, save for
+a blink. I am nameless like the Folk of Peace.[3] Catriona Drummond is
+the one I use."
+
+Now indeed I knew where I was standing. In all broad Scotland there was
+but the one name proscribed, and that was the name of the Macgregors.
+Yet so far from fleeing this undesirable acquaintancy, I plunged the
+deeper in.
+
+"I have been sitting with one who was in the same case with yourself,"
+said I, "and I think he will be one of your friends. They called him
+Robin Oig."
+
+"Did ye so?" cries she. "Ye met Rob?"
+
+"I passed the night with him," said I.
+
+"He is a fowl of the night," said she.
+
+"There was a set of pipes there," I went on, "so you may judge if the
+time passed."
+
+"You should be no enemy, at all events," said she. "That was his brother
+there a moment since, with the red soldiers round him. It is him that I
+call father."
+
+"Is it so?" cried I. "Are you a daughter of James More's?"
+
+"All the daughter that he has," says she: "the daughter of a prisoner;
+that I should forget it so, even for one hour, to talk with strangers!"
+
+Here one of the gillies addressed her in what he had of English, to know
+what "she" (meaning by that himself) was to do about "ta sneeshin." I
+took some note of him for a short, bandy-legged, red-haired, big-headed
+man, that I was to know more of to my cost.
+
+"There can be none the day, Neil," she replied. "How will you get
+'sneeshin,' wanting siller? It will teach you another time to be more
+careful; and I think James More will not be very well pleased with Neil
+of the Tom."
+
+"Miss Drummond," I said, "I told you I was in my lucky day. Here I am,
+and a bank-porter at my tail. And remember I have had the hospitality of
+your own country of Balwhidder."
+
+"It was not one of my people gave it," said she.
+
+"Ah, well," said I, "but I am owing your uncle at least for some springs
+upon the pipes. Besides which, I have offered myself to be your friend,
+and you have been so forgetful that you did not refuse me in the proper
+time."
+
+"If it had been a great sum, it might have done you honour," said she.
+"But I will tell you what this is. James More lies shackled in prison;
+but this time past, they will be bringing him down here daily to the
+Advocate's..."
+
+"The Advocate's?" I cried. "Is that...?"
+
+"It is the house of the Lord Advocate, Grant of Prestongrange," said
+she. "There they bring my father one time and another, for what purpose
+I have no thought in my mind; but it seems there is some hope dawned for
+him. All this same time they will not let me be seeing him, nor yet him
+write; and we wait upon the King's street to catch him; and now we give
+him his snuff as he goes by, and now something else. And here is this
+son of trouble, Neil, son of Duncan, has lost my fourpenny-piece that
+was to buy that snuff, and James More must go wanting, and will think
+his daughter has forgotten him."
+
+I took sixpence from my pocket, gave it to Neil, and bade him go about
+his errand. Then to her, "That sixpence came with me by Balwhidder,"
+said I.
+
+"Ah!" she said, "you are a friend to the Gregara!"
+
+"I would not like to deceive you either," said I. "I know very little of
+the Gregara and less of James More and his doings; but since the while I
+have been standing in this close, I seem to know something of yourself;
+and if you will just say 'a friend to Miss Catriona' I will see you are
+the less cheated."
+
+"The one cannot be without the other," said she.
+
+"I will even try," said I.
+
+"And what will you be thinking of myself?" she cried, "to be holding my
+hand to the first stranger!"
+
+"I am thinking nothing but that you are a good daughter," said I.
+
+"I must not be without repaying it," she said; "where is it you stop?"
+
+"To tell the truth, I am stopping nowhere yet," said I, "being not full
+three hours in the city; but if you will give me your direction, I will
+be so bold as come seeking my sixpence for myself."
+
+"Will I can trust you for that?" she asked.
+
+"You have little fear," said I.
+
+"James More could not bear it else," said she. "I stop beyond the
+village of Dean, on the north side of the water, with Mrs.
+Drummond-Ogilvy of Allardyce, who is my near friend and will be glad to
+thank you."
+
+"You are to see me then, so soon as what I have to do permits," said I;
+and the remembrance of Alan rolling in again upon my mind, I made haste
+to say farewell.
+
+I could not but think, even as I did so, that we had made extraordinary
+free upon short acquaintance, and that a really wise young lady would
+have shown herself more backward. I think it was the bank-porter that
+put me from this ungallant train of thought.
+
+"I thoucht ye had been a lad of some kind o' sense," he began, shooting
+out his lips. "Ye're no likely to gang far this gate. A fule and his
+siller's shune parted. Eh, but ye're a green callant!" he cried, "an' a
+veecious, tae! Cleikin' up wi' baubee-joes!"
+
+"If you dare to speak of the young lady ..." I began.
+
+"Leddy!" he cried. "Haud us and safe us, whatten leddy? Ca' _thon_ a
+leddy? The toun's fu' o' them. Leddies! Man, it's weel seen ye're no
+very acquant in Embro'!"
+
+A clap of anger took me.
+
+"Here," said I, "lead me where I told you, and keep your foul mouth
+shut!"
+
+He did not wholly obey me, for though he no more addressed me directly,
+he sang at me as he went in a very impudent manner of innuendo, and with
+an exceedingly ill voice and ear--
+
+ "As Mally Lee cam doun the street, her capuchin did flee.
+ She cuist a look ahint her to see her negligee,
+ And we're a' gaun east and wast, we're a' gaun ajee,
+ We're a' gaun east and wast courtin' Mally Lee."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HIGHLAND WRITER
+
+
+Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer dwelt at the top of the longest stair
+that ever mason set a hand to; fifteen flights of it, no less; and when
+I had come to his door, and a clerk had opened it, and told me his
+master was within, I had scarce breath enough to send my porter packing.
+
+"Awa' east and wast wi' ye!" said I, took the money bag out of his
+hands, and followed the clerk in.
+
+The outer room was an office with the clerk's chair at a table spread
+with law papers. In the inner chamber, which opened from it, a little
+brisk man sat poring on a deed, from which he scarce raised his eyes
+upon my entrance; indeed, he still kept his finger in the place, as
+though prepared to show me out and fall again to his studies. This
+pleased me little enough; and what pleased me less, I thought the clerk
+was in a good posture to overhear what should pass between us.
+
+I asked if he was Mr. Charles Stewart the Writer.
+
+"The same," says he; "and if the question is equally fair, who may you
+be yourself?"
+
+"You never heard tell of my name nor of me either," said I, "but I bring
+you a token from a friend that you know well. That you know well," I
+repeated, lowering my voice, "but maybe are not just so keen to hear
+from at this present being. And the bits of business that I have to
+propone to you are rather in the nature of being confidential. In short,
+I would like to think we were quite private."
+
+He rose without more words, casting down his paper like a man
+ill-pleased, sent forth his clerk of an errand, and shut to the
+house-door behind him.
+
+"Now, sir," said he, returning, "speak out your mind and fear nothing;
+though before you begin," he cries out, "I tell you mine misgives me! I
+tell you beforehand, ye're either a Stewart or a Stewart sent ye. A good
+name it is, and one it would ill-become my father's son to lightly. But
+I begin to grue at the sound of it."
+
+"My name is called Balfour," said I, "David Balfour of Shaws. As for him
+that sent me, I will let his token speak." And I showed the silver
+button.
+
+"Put it in your pocket, sir!" cries he, "Ye need name no names. The
+deevil's buckie, I ken the button of him! And de'il hae't! Where is he
+now?"
+
+I told him I knew not where Alan was, but he had some sure place (or
+thought he had) about the north side, where he was to lie until a ship
+was found for him; and how and where he had appointed to be spoken with.
+
+"It's been always my opinion that I would hang in a tow for this family
+of mine," he cried, "and, dod! I believe the day's come now! Get a ship
+for him, quot' he! And who's to pay for it? The man's daft!"
+
+"That is my part of the affair, Mr. Stewart," said I. "Here is a bag of
+good money, and if more be wanted, more is to be had where it came
+from."
+
+"I needn't ask your politics," said he.
+
+"Ye need not," said I, smiling, "for I'm as big a Whig as grows."
+
+"Stop a bit, stop a bit," says Mr. Stewart. "What's all this? A Whig?
+Then why are you here with Alan's button? and what kind of a black-foot
+traffic is this that I find ye out in, Mr. Whig? Here is a forfeited
+rebel and an accused murderer, with two hundred pounds on his life, and
+ye ask me to meddle in his business, and then tell me ye're a Whig! I
+have no mind of any such Whigs before, though I've kent plenty of them."
+
+"He's a forfeited rebel, the more's the pity," said I, "for the man's my
+friend." I can only wish he had been better guided. And an accused
+murderer, that he is too, for his misfortune; but wrongfully accused."
+
+"I hear you say so," said Stewart.
+
+"More than you are to hear me say so, before long," said I. "Alan Breck
+is innocent, and so is James."
+
+"Oh!" says he, "the two cases hang together. If Alan is out, James can
+never be in."
+
+Hereupon I told him briefly of my acquaintance with Alan, of the
+accident that brought me present at the Appin murder, and the various
+passages of our escape among the heather, and my recovery of my estate.
+"So, sir, you have now the whole train of these events," I went on, "and
+can see for yourself how I come to be so much mingled up with the
+affairs of your family and friends, which (for all of our sakes) I wish
+had been plainer and less bloody. You can see for yourself, too, that I
+have certain pieces of business depending, which were scarcely fit to
+lay before a lawyer chosen at random. No more remains, but to ask if you
+will undertake my service?"
+
+"I have no great mind to it; but coming as you do with Alan's button,
+the choice is scarcely left me," said he. "What are your instructions?"
+he added, and took up his pen.
+
+"The first point is to smuggle Alan forth of this country," said I, "but
+I need not be repeating that."
+
+"I am little likely to forget it," said Stewart.
+
+"The next thing is the bit money I am owing to Cluny," I went on. "It
+would be ill for me to find a conveyance, but that should be no stick to
+you. It was two pounds five shillings and three-halfpence farthing
+sterling."
+
+He noted it.
+
+"Then," said I, "there's a Mr. Henderland, a licensed preacher and
+missionary in Ardgour, that I would like well to get some snuff into the
+hands of; and as I daresay you keep touch with your friends in Appin (so
+near by), it's a job you could doubtless overtake with the other."
+
+"How much snuff are we to say?" he asked.
+
+"I was thinking of two pounds," said I.
+
+"Two," said he.
+
+"Then there's the lass Alison Hastie, in Limekilns," said I. "Her that
+helped Alan and me across the Forth. I was thinking if I could get her a
+good Sunday gown, such as she could wear with decency in her degree, it
+would be an ease to my conscience: for the mere truth is, we owe her our
+two lives."
+
+"I am glad to see you are thrifty, Mr. Balfour," says he, making his
+notes.
+
+"I would think shame to be otherwise the first day of my fortune," said
+I. "And now, if you will compute the outlay and your own proper charges,
+I would be glad to know if I could get some spending-money back. It's
+not that I grudge the whole of it to get Alan safe; it's not that I lack
+more; but having drawn so much the one day, I think it would have a very
+ill appearance if I was back again seeking, the next. Only be sure you
+have enough," I added, "for I am very undesirous to meet with you
+again."
+
+"Well, and I'm pleased to see you're cautious too," said the Writer.
+"But I think ye take a risk to lay so considerable a sum at my
+discretion."
+
+He said this with a plain sneer.
+
+"I'll have to run the hazard," I replied. "O, and there's another
+service I would ask, and that's to direct me to a lodging, for I have no
+roof to my head. But it must be a lodging I may seem to have hit upon by
+accident, for it would never do if the Lord Advocate were to get any
+jealousy of our acquaintance."
+
+"Ye may set your weary spirit at rest," said he. "I will never name your
+name, sir; and it's my belief the Advocate is still so much to be
+sympathised with that he doesnae ken of your existence."
+
+I saw I had got to the wrong side of the man.
+
+"There's a braw day coming for him, then," said I, "for he'll have to
+learn of it on the deaf side of his head no later than to-morrow, when I
+call on him."
+
+"When ye _call_ on him!" repeated Mr. Stewart. "Am I daft, or are you?
+What takes ye near the Advocate?"
+
+"O, just to give myself up," said I.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," he cried, "are ye making a mock of me?"
+
+"No, sir," said I, "though I think you have allowed yourself some such
+freedom with myself. But I give you to understand once and for all that
+I am in no jesting spirit."
+
+"Nor yet me," says Stewart. "And I give you to understand (if that's to
+be the word) that I like the looks of your behaviour less and less. You
+come here to me with all sorts of propositions, which will put me in a
+train of very doubtful acts and bring me among very undesirable persons
+this many a day to come. And then you tell me you're going straight out
+of my office to make your peace with the Advocate! Alan's button here or
+Alan's button there, the four quarters of Alan wouldnae bribe me further
+in."
+
+"I would take it with a little more temper," said I, "and perhaps we can
+avoid what you object to. I can see no way for it but to give myself up,
+but perhaps you can see another; and if you could, I could never deny
+but what I would be rather relieved. For I think my traffic with his
+lordship is little likely to agree with my health. There's just the one
+thing clear, that I have to give my evidence; for I hope it'll save
+Alan's character (what's left of it), and James's neck, which is the
+more immediate."
+
+He was silent for a breathing-space, and then, "My man," said he,
+"you'll never be allowed to give such evidence."
+
+"We'll have to see about that," said I; "I'm stiff-necked when I like."
+
+"Ye muckle ass!" cried Stewart, "it's James they want; James has got to
+hang--Alan too, if they could catch him--but James whatever! Go near the
+Advocate with any such business, and you'll see! he'll find a way to
+muzzle ye."
+
+"I think better of the Advocate than that," said I.
+
+"The Advocate be damned!" cries he. "It's the Campbells, man! You'll
+have the whole clanjamfry of them on your back; and so will the Advocate
+too, poor body! It's extraordinar ye cannot see where ye stand! If
+there's no fair way to stop your gab, there's a foul one gaping. They
+can put ye in the dock, do ye no see that?" he cried, and stabbed me
+with one finger in the leg.
+
+"Ay," said I, "I was told that same no further back than this morning by
+another lawyer."
+
+"And who was he?" asked Stewart. "He spoke sense at least."
+
+I told I must be excused from naming him, for he was a decent stout old
+Whig, and had little mind to be mixed up in such affairs.
+
+"I think all the world seems to be mixed up in it!" cries Stewart. "But
+what said you?"
+
+I told him what had passed between Rankeillor and myself before the
+house of Shaws.
+
+"Well, and so ye will hang!" said he. "Ye'll hang beside James Stewart.
+There's your fortune told."
+
+"I hope better of it yet than that," said I; "but I could never deny
+there was a risk."
+
+"Risk!" says he, and then sat silent again. "I ought to thank you for
+your staunchness to my friends, to whom you show a very good spirit," he
+says, "if you have the strength to stand by it. But I warn you that
+you're wading deep. I wouldn't put myself in your place (me that's a
+Stewart born!) for all the Stewarts that ever there were since Noah.
+Risk? ay, I take over-many, but to be tried in court before a Campbell
+jury and a Campbell judge, and that in a Campbell country and upon a
+Campbell quarrel--think what you like of me, Balfour, it's beyond me."
+
+"It's a different way of thinking, I suppose," said I; "I was brought up
+to this one by my father before me."
+
+"Glory to his bones! he has left a decent son to his name," says he.
+"Yet I would not have you judge me over-sorely. My case is dooms hard.
+See, sir! ye tell me ye're a Whig: I wonder what I am. No Whig to be
+sure; I couldnae be just that. But--laigh in your ear, man--I'm maybe no
+very keen on the other side."
+
+"Is that a fact?" cried I. "It's what I would think of a man of your
+intelligence."
+
+"Hut! none of your whillywhas!"[4] cries he. "There's intelligence upon
+both sides. But for my private part I have no particular desire to harm
+King George; and as for King James, God bless him! he does very well for
+me across the water. I'm a lawyer, ye see: fond of my books and my
+bottle, a good plea, a well-drawn deed, a crack in the Parliament House
+with other lawyer bodies, and perhaps a turn at the golf on a Saturday
+at e'en. Where do ye come in with your Hieland plaids and claymores?"
+
+"Well," said I, "it's a fact ye have little of the wild Highlandman."
+
+"Little?" quoth he. "Nothing, man! And yet I'm Hieland born, and when
+the clan pipes, who but me has to dance? The clan and the name, that
+goes by all. It's just what you said yourself; my father learned it to
+me, and a bonny trade I have of it. Treason and traitors, and the
+smuggling of them out and in; and the French recruiting, weary fall it!
+and the smuggling through of the recruits; and their pleas--a sorrow of
+their pleas! Here haye I been moving one for young Ardshiel, my cousin;
+claimed the estate under the marriage contract--a forfeited estate! I
+told them it was nonsense: muckle they cared! And there was I cocking
+behind a yadvocate that liked the business as little as myself, for it
+was fair ruin to the pair of us--a black mark, _disaffected_, branded on
+our hurdies, like folk's names upon their kye! And what can I do? I'm a
+Stewart, ye see, and must fend for my clan and family. Then no later by
+than yesterday there was one of our Stewart lads carried to the Castle.
+What for? I ken fine: Act of 1736: recruiting for King Lewie. And you'll
+see, he'll whistle me in to be his lawyer, and there'll be another black
+mark on my chara'ter! I tell you fair: if I but kent the heid of a
+Hebrew word from the hurdies of it be dammed but I would fling the whole
+thing up and turn minister!"
+
+"It's rather a hard position," said I.
+
+"Dooms hard!" cries he. "And that's what makes me think so much of
+ye--you that's no Stewart--to stick your head so deep in Stewart
+business. And for what, I do not know; unless it was the sense of duty."
+
+"I hope it will be that," said I.
+
+"Well," says he, "it's a grand quality. But here is my clerk back; and,
+by your leave, we'll pick a bit of dinner, all the three of us. When
+that's done, I'll give you the direction of a very decent man, that'll
+be very fain to have you for a lodger. And I'll fill your pockets to ye,
+forbye, out of your ain bag. For this business'll not be near as dear as
+ye suppose--not even the ship part of it."
+
+I made him a sign that his clerk was within hearing.
+
+"Hoot, ye neednae mind for Robbie," cries he. "A Stewart too, puir
+deevil! and has smuggled out more French recruits and trafficking
+Papists than what he has hairs upon his face. Why, it's Robin that
+manages that branch of my affairs. Who will we have now, Rob, for across
+the water?"
+
+"There'll be Andie Scougal, in the _Thristle_," replied Rob. "I saw
+Hoseason the other day, but it seems he's wanting the ship. Then
+there'll be Tarn Stobo; but I'm none so sure of Tam. I've seen him
+colloguing with some gey queer acquaintances; and if it was anybody
+important, I would give Tam the go-by."
+
+"The head's worth two hundred pounds, Robin," said Stewart.
+
+"Gosh, that'll no be Alan Breck?" cried the clerk.
+
+"Just Alan," said his master.
+
+"Weary winds! that's sayrious," cried Robin. "I'll try Andie then;
+Andie'll be the best."
+
+"It seems it's quite a big business," I observed.
+
+"Mr. Balfour, there's no end to it," said Stewart.
+
+"There was a name your clerk mentioned," I went on: "Hoseason. That must
+be my man, I think: Hoseason, of the brig _Covenant_. Would you set your
+trust on him?"
+
+"He didnae behave very well to you and Alan," said Mr. Stewart; "but my
+mind of the man in general is rather otherwise. If he had taken Alan on
+board his ship on an agreement, it's my notion he would have proved a
+just dealer. How say ye, Rob?"
+
+"No more honest skipper in the trade than Eli," said the clerk. "I would
+lippen to[5] Eli's word--ay, if it was the Chevalier, or Appin himsel',"
+he added.
+
+"And it was him that brought the doctor, wasnae't?" asked the master.
+
+"He was the very man," said the clerk.
+
+"And I think he took the doctor back?" says Stewart.
+
+"Ay, with his sporran full!" cried Robin. "And Eli kent of that!"[6]
+
+"Well, it seems it's hard to ken folk rightly," said I.
+
+"That was just what I forgot when ye came in, Mr. Balfour!" says the
+Writer.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+I GO TO PILRIG
+
+
+The next morning, I was no sooner awake in my new lodging than I was up
+and into my new clothes; and no sooner the breakfast swallowed, than I
+was forth on my adventures. Alan, I could hope, was fended for; James
+was like to be a more difficult affair, and I could not but think that
+enterprise might cost me dear, even as everybody said to whom I had
+opened my opinion. It seemed I was come to the top of the mountain only
+to cast myself down; that I had clambered up, through so many and hard
+trials, to be rich, to be recognised, to wear city clothes and a sword
+to my side, all to commit mere suicide at the last end of it, and the
+worst kind of suicide besides, which is to get hanged at the King's
+charges.
+
+What was I doing it for? I asked, as I went down the High Street and out
+north by Leith Wynd. First I said it was to save James Stewart, and no
+doubt the memory of his distress, and his wife's cries, and a word or so
+I had let drop on that occasion worked upon me strongly. At the same
+time I reflected that it was (or ought to be) the most indifferent
+matter to my father's son, whether James died in his bed or from a
+scaffold. He was Alan's cousin, to be sure; but so far as regarded Alan,
+the best thing would be to lie low, and let the King, and his Grace of
+Argyll, and the corbie crows, pick the bones of his kinsman their own
+way. Nor could I forget that, while we were all in the pot together,
+James had shown no such particular anxiety whether for Alan or me.
+
+Next it came upon me I was acting for the sake of justice: and I thought
+that a fine word, and reasoned it out that (since we dwelt in polities,
+at some discomfort to each one of us) the main thing of all must still
+be justice, and the death of any innocent man a wound upon the whole
+community. Next, again, it was the Accuser of the Brethren that gave me
+a turn of his argument; bid me think shame for pretending myself
+concerned in these high matters, and told me I was but a prating vain
+child, who had spoken big words to Rankeillor and to Stewart, and held
+myself bound upon my vanity to make good that boastfulness. Nay, and he
+hit me with the other end of the stick; for he accused me of a kind of
+artful cowardice, going about at the expense of a little risk to
+purchase greater safety. No doubt, until I had declared and cleared
+myself, I might any day encounter Mungo Campbell or the sheriff's
+officer, and be recognised, and dragged into the Appin murder by the
+heels; and, no doubt, in case I could manage my declaration with
+success, I should breathe more free for ever after. But when I looked
+this argument full in the face I could see nothing to be ashamed of. As
+for the rest, "Here are the two roads," I thought, "and both go to the
+same place. It's unjust that James should hang if I can save him; and it
+would be ridiculous in me to have talked so much and then do nothing.
+It's lucky for James of the Glens that I have boasted beforehand; and
+none so unlucky for myself, because now I'm committed to do right. I
+have the name of a gentleman and the means of one; it would be a poor
+discovery that I was wanting in the essence." And then I thought this
+was a Pagan spirit, and said a prayer in to myself, asking for what
+courage I might lack, and that I might go straight to my duty like a
+soldier to battle, and come off again scatheless as so many do.
+
+This train of reasoning brought me to a more resolved complexion; though
+it was far from closing up my sense of the dangers that surrounded me,
+nor of how very apt I was (if I went on) to stumble on the ladder of the
+gallows. It was a plain, fair morning, but the wind in the east. The
+little chill of it sang in my blood, and gave me a feeling of the
+autumn, and the dead leaves, and dead folks' bodies in their graves. It
+seemed the devil was in it, if I was to die in that tide of my fortunes
+and for other folks' affairs. On the top of the Calton Hill, though it
+was not the customary time of year for that diversion, some children
+were crying and running with their kites. These toys appeared very plain
+against the sky; I remarked a great one soar on the wind to a high
+altitude and then plump among the whins; and I thought to myself at
+sight of it, "There goes Davie."
+
+My way lay over Mouter's Hill, and through an end of a clachan on the
+braeside among fields. There was a whirr of looms in it went from house
+to house; bees bummed in the gardens; the neighbours that I saw at the
+doorsteps talked in a strange tongue; and I found out later that this
+was Picardy, a village where the French weavers wrought for the Linen
+Company. Here I got a fresh direction for Pilrig, my destination; and a
+little beyond, on the wayside, came by a gibbet and two men hanged in
+chains. They were dipped in tar, as the manner is; the wind span them,
+the chains clattered, and the birds hung about the uncanny jumping-jacks
+and cried. The sight coming on me suddenly, like an illustration of my
+fears, I could scarce be done with examining it and drinking in
+discomfort. And as I thus turned and turned about the gibbet, what
+should I strike on, but a weird old wife, that sat behind a leg of it,
+and nodded, and talked aloud to herself with becks and courtesies.
+
+"Who are these two, mother?" I asked, and pointed to the corpses.
+
+"A blessing on your precious face!" she cried. "Twa joes[7] o' mine:
+just twa o' my old joes, my hinny dear."
+
+"What did they suffer for?" I asked.
+
+"Ou, just for the guid cause," said she. "Aften I spaed to them the way
+that it would end. Twa shillin' Scots; no pickle mair; and there are twa
+bonny callants hingin' for 't! They took it frae a wean[8] belanged to
+Brouchton."
+
+"Ay!" said I to myself, and not to the daft limmer, "and did they come
+to such a figure for so poor a business? This is to lose all indeed."
+
+"Gie's your loof,[9] hinny," says she, "and let me spae your weird to
+ye."
+
+"No, mother," said I, "I see far enough the way I am. It's an unco thing
+to see too far in front."
+
+"I read it in your bree," she said. "There's a bonnie lassie that has
+bricht een, and there's a wee man in a braw coat, and a big man in a
+pouthered wig, and there's the shadow of the wuddy,[10] joe, that lies
+braid across your path. Gie's your loof, hinny, and let Auld Merren spae
+it to ye bonny."
+
+The two chance shots that seemed to point at Alan and the daughter of
+James More, struck me hard; and I fled from the eldritch creature,
+casting her a baubee, which she continued to sit and play with under the
+moving shadows of the hanged.
+
+My way down the causeway of Leith Walk would have been more pleasant to
+me but for this encounter. The old rampart ran among fields, the like of
+them I had never seen for artfulness of agriculture; I was pleased,
+besides, to be so far in the still countryside; but the shackles of the
+gibbet clattered in my head; and the mops and mows of the old witch, and
+the thought of the dead men, hag-rode my spirits. To hang on a gallows,
+that seemed a hard case; and whether a man came to hang there for two
+shillings Scots, or (as Mr. Stewart had it) from the sense of duty, once
+he was tarred and shackled and hung up, the difference seemed small.
+There might David Balfour hang, and other lads pass on their errands and
+think light of him; and old daft limmers sit at leg-foot and spae their
+fortunes; and the clean genty maids go by, and look to the other side,
+and hold a nose. I saw them plain, and they had grey eyes, and their
+screens upon their heads were of the Drummond colours.
+
+I was thus in the poorest of spirits, though still pretty resolved, when
+I came in view of Pilrig, a pleasant gabled house set by the walkside
+among some brave young woods. The laird's horse was standing saddled at
+the door as I came up, but himself was in the study, where he received
+me in the midst of learned works and musical instruments, for he was not
+only a deep philosopher but much of a musician. He greeted me at first
+pretty well, and when he had read Rankeillor's letter, placed himself
+obligingly at my disposal.
+
+"And what is it, cousin David?" says he--"since it appears that we are
+cousins--what is this that I can do for you? A word to Prestongrange?
+Doubtless that is easily given. But what should be the word?"
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said I, "if I were to tell you my whole story the way it
+fell out, it's my opinion (and it was Rankeillor's before me) that you
+would be very little made up with it."
+
+"I am sorry to hear this of you, kinsman," says he.
+
+"I must not take that at your hands, Mr. Balfour," said I; "I have
+nothing to my charge to make me sorry, or you for me, but just the
+common infirmities of mankind. 'The guilt of Adam's first sin, the want
+of original righteousness, and the corruption of my whole nature,' so
+much I must answer for, and I hope I have been taught where to look for
+help," I said; for I judged from the look of the man he would think the
+better of me if I knew my questions.[11] "But in the way of worldly
+honour I have no great stumble to reproach myself with; and my
+difficulties have befallen me very much against my will and (by all that
+I can see) without my fault. My trouble is to have become dipped in a
+political complication, which it is judged you would be blythe to avoid
+a knowledge of."
+
+"Why, very well, Mr. David," he replied, "I am pleased to see you are
+all that Rankeillor represented. And for what you say of political
+complications, you do me no more than justice. It is my study to be
+beyond suspicion, and indeed outside the field of it. The question is,"
+says he, "how, if I am to know nothing of the matter, I can very well
+assist you?"
+
+"Why, sir," said I, "I propose you should write to his lordship, that I
+am a young man of reasonable good family and of good means: both of
+which I believe to be the case."
+
+"I have Rankeillor's word for it," said Mr. Balfour, "and I count that a
+warrandice against all deadly."
+
+"To which you might add (if you will take my word for so much) that I am
+a good churchman, loyal to King George, and so brought up," I went on.
+
+"None of which will do you any harm," said Mr. Balfour.
+
+"Then you might go on to say that I sought his lordship on a matter of
+great moment, connected with His Majesty's service and the
+administration of justice," I suggested.
+
+"As I am not to hear the matter," says the laird, "I will not take upon
+myself to qualify its weight. 'Great moment' therefore falls, and
+'moment' along with it. For the rest, I might express myself much as you
+propose."
+
+"And then, sir," said I, and rubbed my neck a little with my thumb,
+"then I would be very desirous if you could slip in a word that might
+perhaps tell for my protection."
+
+"Protection?" says he. "For your protection? Here is a phrase that
+somewhat dampens me. If the matter be so dangerous, I own I would be a
+little loath to move in it blindfold."
+
+"I believe I could indicate in two words where the thing sticks," said
+I.
+
+"Perhaps that would be the best," said he.
+
+"Well, it's the Appin murder," said I.
+
+He held up both the hands. "Sirs! sirs!" cried he.
+
+I thought by the expression of his face and voice that I had lost my
+helper.
+
+"Let me explain ..." I began.
+
+"I thank you kindly, I will hear no more of it," says he. "I decline _in
+toto_ to hear more of it. For your name's sake and Rankeillor's, and
+perhaps a little for your own, I will do what I can to help you; but I
+will hear no more upon the facts. And it is my first clear duty to warn
+you. These are deep waters, Mr. David, and you are a young man. Be
+cautious and think twice."
+
+"It is to be supposed I will have thought oftener than that, Mr.
+Balfour," said I, "and I will direct your attention again to
+Rankeillor's letter, where (I hope and believe) he has registered his
+approval of that which I design."
+
+"Well, well," said he; and then again, "Well, well! I will do what I can
+for you." Therewith he took a pen and paper, sat awhile in thought, and
+began to write with much consideration. "I understand that Rankeillor
+approves of what you have in mind?" he asked presently.
+
+"After some discussion, sir, he bade me to go forward in God's name,"
+said I.
+
+"That is the name to go in," said Mr. Balfour, and resumed his writing.
+Presently, he signed, re-read what he had written, and addressed me
+again. "Now here, Mr. David," said he, "is a letter of introduction,
+which I will seal without closing, and give into your hands open, as the
+form requires. But since I am acting in the dark, I will just read it to
+you, so that you may see if it will secure your end--
+
+
+ "PILRIG, _August 26th_, 1751.
+
+ "MY LORD,--This is to bring to your notice my namesake and
+ cousin, David Balfour Esquire of Shaws, a young gentleman
+ of unblemished descent and good estate. He has enjoyed besides
+ the more valuable advantages of a godly training, and his
+ political
+ principles are all that your lordship can desire. I am not in
+ Mr. Balfour's confidence, but I understand him to have a
+ matter
+ to declare, touching His Majesty's service and the
+ administration
+ of justice: purposes for which your lordship's zeal is known.
+ I should add that the young gentleman's intention is known to
+ and approved by some of his friends, who will watch with
+ hopeful
+ anxiety the event of his success or failure.'
+
+
+"Whereupon," continued Mr. Balfour, "I have subscribed myself with the
+usual compliments. You observe I have said 'some of your friends;' I
+hope you can justify my plural?"
+
+"Perfectly, sir; my purpose is known and approved by more than one,"
+said I. "And your letter, which I take a pleasure to thank you for, is
+all I could have hoped."
+
+"It was all I could squeeze out," said he; "and from what I know of the
+matter you design to meddle in, I can only pray God that it may prove
+sufficient."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+LORD ADVOCATE PRESTONGRANGE
+
+
+My kinsman kept me to a meal, "for the honour of the roof," he said; and
+I believe I made the better speed on my return. I had no thought but to
+be done with the next stage, and have myself fully committed; to a
+person circumstanced as I was, the appearance of closing a door on
+hesitation and temptation was itself extremely tempting; and I was the
+more disappointed, when I came to Prestongrange's house, to be informed
+he was abroad. I believe it was true at the moment, and for some hours
+after; and then I have no doubt the Advocate came home again, and
+enjoyed himself in a neighbouring chamber among friends, while perhaps
+the very fact of my arrival was forgotten. I would have gone away a
+dozen times, only for this strong drawing to have done with my
+declaration out of hand and be able to lay me down to sleep with a free
+conscience. At first I read, for the little cabinet where I was left
+contained a variety of books. But I fear I read with little profit; and
+the weather falling cloudy, the dusk coming up earlier than usual, and
+my cabinet being lighted with but a loophole of a window, I was at last
+obliged to desist from this diversion (such as it was), and pass the
+rest of my time of waiting in a very burthensome vacuity. The sound of
+people talking in a naer chamber, the pleasant note of a harpsichord,
+and once the voice of a lady singing, bore me a kind of company.
+
+I do not know the hour, but the darkness was long come, when the door of
+the cabinet opened, and I was aware, by the light behind him, of a tall
+figure of a man upon the threshold. I rose at once.
+
+"Is anybody there?" he asked. "Who is that?"
+
+"I am bearer of a letter from the laird of Pilrig to the Lord Advocate,"
+said I.
+
+"Have you been here long?" he asked.
+
+"I would not like to hazard an estimate of how many hours," said I.
+
+"It is the first I hear of it," he replied, with a chuckle. "The lads
+must have forgotten you. But you are in the bit at last, for I am
+Prestongrange."
+
+So saying, he passed before me into the next room, whither (upon his
+sign) I followed him, and where he lit a candle and took his place
+before a business-table. It was a long room, of a good proportion,
+wholly lined with books. That small spark of light in a corner struck
+out the man's handsome person and strong face. He was flushed, his eye
+watered and sparkled, and before he sat down I observed him to sway back
+and forth. No doubt he had been supping liberally; but his mind and
+tongue were under full control.
+
+"Well, sir, sit ye down," said he, "and let us see Pilrig's letter."
+
+He glanced it through in the beginning carelessly, looking up and bowing
+when he came to my name; but at the last words I thought I observed his
+attention to redouble, and I made sure he read them twice. All this
+while you are to suppose my heart was beating, for I had now crossed my
+Rubicon and was come fairly on the field of battle.
+
+"I am pleased to make your acquaintance, Mr. Balfour," he said, when he
+had done. "Let me offer you a glass of claret."
+
+"Under your favour, my lord, I think it would scarce be fair on me,"
+said I. "I have come here, as the letter will have mentioned, on a
+business of some gravity to myself; and as I am little used with wine, I
+might be the sooner affected."
+
+"You shall be the judge," said he. "But if you will permit, I believe I
+will even have the bottle in myself."
+
+He touched a bell, and the footman came, as at a signal, bringing wine
+and glasses.
+
+"You are sure you will not join me?" asked the Advocate. "Well, here is
+to our better acquaintance! In what way can I serve you?"
+
+"I should perhaps begin by telling you, my lord, that I am here at your
+own pressing invitation," said I.
+
+"You have the advantage of me somewhere," said he, "for I profess I
+think I never heard of you before this evening."
+
+"Right, my lord; the name is indeed new to you," said I. "And yet you
+have been for some time extremely wishful to make my acquaintance, and
+have declared the same in public."
+
+"I wish you would afford me a clue," says he. "I am no Daniel."
+
+"It will perhaps serve for such," said I, "that if I was in a jesting
+humour--which is far from the case--I believe I might lay a claim on
+your lordship for two hundred pounds."
+
+"In what sense?" he inquired.
+
+"In the sense of rewards offered for my person," said I.
+
+He thrust away his glass once and for all, and sat straight up in the
+chair where he had been previously lolling. "What am I to understand?"
+said he.
+
+"_A tall strong lad of about eighteen_," I quoted, "_speaks like a
+Lowlander, and has no beard_."
+
+"I recognise those words," said he, "which, if you have come here with
+any ill-judged intention of amusing yourself, are like to prove
+extremely prejudicial to your safety."
+
+"My purpose in this," I replied, "is just entirely as serious as life
+and death, and you have understood me perfectly. I am the boy who was
+speaking with Glenure when he was shot."
+
+"I can only suppose (seeing you here) that you claim to be innocent,"
+said he.
+
+"The inference is clear," I said. "I am a very loyal subject to King
+George, but if I had anything to reproach myself with, I would have had
+more discretion than to walk into your den."
+
+"I am glad of that," said he. "This horrid crime, Mr. Balfour, is of a
+dye which cannot permit any clemency. Blood has been barbarously shed.
+It has been shed in direct opposition to his Majesty and our whole frame
+of laws, by those who are their known and public oppugnants. I take a
+very high sense of this. I will not deny that I consider the crime as
+directly personal to his Majesty."
+
+"And unfortunately, my lord," I added a little drily, "directly personal
+to another great personage who may be nameless."
+
+"If you mean anything by those words, I must tell you I consider them
+unfit for a good subject; and were they spoke publicly I should make it
+my business to take note of them," said he. "You do not appear to me to
+recognise the gravity of your situation, or you would be more careful
+not to pejorate the same by words which glance upon the purity of
+justice. Justice, in this country, and in my poor hands, is no respecter
+of persons."
+
+"You give me too great a share in my own speech, my lord," said I. "I
+did but repeat the common talk of the country, which I have heard
+everywhere, and from men of all opinions as I came along."
+
+"When you are come to more discretion you will understand such talk is
+not to be listened to, how much less repeated," says the Advocate. "But
+I acquit you of an ill intention. That nobleman, whom we all honour and
+who has indeed been wounded in a near place by the late barbarity, sits
+too high to be reached by these aspersions. The Duke of Argyle--you see
+that I deal plainly with you--takes it to heart as I do, and as we are
+both bound to do by our judicial functions and the service of his
+Majesty; and I could wish that all hands, in this ill age, were equally
+clean of family rancour. But from the accident that this is a Campbell
+who has fallen martyr to his duty--as who else but the Campbells have
+ever put themselves foremost on that path? I may say it, who am no
+Campbell--and that the chief of that great house happens (for all our
+advantages) to be the present head of the College of Justice, small
+minds and disaffected tongues are set agog in every changehouse in the
+country; and I find a young gentleman like Mr. Balfour so ill-advised as
+to make himself their echo." So much he spoke with a very oratorical
+delivery, as if in court, and then declined again upon the manner of a
+gentleman. "All this apart," said he. "It now remains that I should
+learn what I am to do with you."
+
+"I had thought it was rather I that should learn the same from your
+lordship," said I.
+
+"Ay, true," says the Advocate. "But, you see, you come to me well
+recommended. There is a good honest Whig name to this letter," says he,
+picking it up a moment from the table. "And--extra-judicially, Mr.
+Balfour--there is always the possibility of some arrangement. I tell
+you, and I tell you beforehand that you may be the more upon your guard,
+your fate lies with me singly. In such a matter (be it said with
+reverence) I am more powerful than the king's Majesty; and should you
+please me--and of course satisfy my conscience--in what remains to be
+held of our interview, I tell you it may remain between ourselves."
+
+"Meaning how?" I asked.
+
+"Why, I mean it thus, Mr. Balfour," said he, "that if you give
+satisfaction, no soul need know so much as that you visited my house;
+and you may observe that I do not even call my clerk."
+
+I saw what way he was driving. "I suppose it is needless anyone should
+be informed upon my visit," said I, "though the precise nature of my
+gains by that I cannot see. I am not at all ashamed of coming here."
+
+"And have no cause to be," says he, encouragingly. "Nor yet (if you are
+careful) to fear the consequences."
+
+"My lord," said I, "speaking under your correction, I am not very easy
+to be frightened."
+
+"And I am sure I do not seek to frighten you," says he. "But to the
+interrogation; and let me warn you to volunteer nothing beyond the
+questions I shall ask you. It may consist very immediately with your
+safety. I have a great discretion, it is true, but there are bounds to
+it."
+
+"I shall try to follow your lordship's advice," said I.
+
+He spread a sheet of paper on the table and wrote a heading. "It appears
+you were present, by the way, in the wood of Lettermore at the moment of
+the fatal shot," he began. "Was this by accident?"
+
+"By accident," said I.
+
+"How came you in speech with Colin Campbell?" he asked.
+
+"I was inquiring my way of him to Aucharn," I replied.
+
+I observed he did not write this answer down.
+
+"H'm, true," said he, "I had forgotten that. And do you know, Mr.
+Balfour, I would dwell, if I were you, as little as might be on your
+relations with these Stewarts? It might be found to complicate our
+business. I am not yet inclined to regard these matters as essential."
+
+"I had thought, my lord, that all points of fact were equally material
+in such a case," said I.
+
+"You forget we are now trying these Stewarts," he replied, with great
+significance. "If we should ever come to be trying you, it will be very
+different; and I shall press these very questions that I am now willing
+to glide upon. But to resume: I have it here in Mr. Mungo Campbell's
+precognition that you ran immediately up the brae. How came that?"
+
+"Not immediately, my lord, and the cause was my seeing of the murderer."
+
+"You saw him, then?"
+
+"As plain as I see your lordship, though not so near hand."
+
+"You know him?"
+
+"I should know him again."
+
+"In your pursuit you were not so fortunate, then, as to overtake him?"
+
+"I was not."
+
+"Was he alone?"
+
+"He was alone."
+
+"There was no one else in that neighbourhood?"
+
+"Alan Breck Stewart was not far off, in a piece of a wood."
+
+The Advocate laid his pen down. "I think we are playing at cross
+purposes," said he, "which you will find to prove a very ill amusement
+for yourself."
+
+"I content myself with following your lordship's advice, and answering
+what I am asked," said I.
+
+"Be so wise as to bethink yourself in time," said he. "I use you with
+the most anxious tenderness, which you scarce seem to appreciate, and
+which (unless you be more careful) may prove to be in vain."
+
+"I do appreciate your tenderness, but conceive it to be mistaken," I
+replied, with something of a falter, for I saw we were come to grips at
+last. "I am here to lay before you certain information, by which I shall
+convince you Alan had no hand whatever in the killing of Glenure."
+
+The Advocate appeared for a moment at a stick, sitting with pursed lips,
+and blinking his eyes upon me like an angry cat. "Mr. Balfour," he said
+at last, "I tell you pointedly you go an ill way for your own
+interests."
+
+"My lord," I said, "I am as free of the charge of considering my own
+interests in this matter as your lordship. As God judges me, I have but
+the one design, and that is to see justice executed and the innocent go
+clear. If in pursuit of that I come to fall under your lordship's
+displeasure, I must bear it as I may."
+
+At this he rose from his chair, lit a second candle, and for a while
+gazed upon me steadily. I was surprised to see a great change of gravity
+fallen upon his face, and I could have almost thought he was a little
+pale.
+
+"You are either very simple, or extremely the reverse, and I see that I
+must deal with you more confidentially," says he. "This is a political
+case--ah, yes, Mr. Balfour! whether we like it or no, the case is
+political--and I tremble when I think what issues may depend from it. To
+a political case, I need scarce tell a young man of your education, we
+approach with very different thoughts from one which is criminal only.
+_Salus populi suprema lex_ is a maxim susceptible of great abuse, but it
+has that force which we find elsewhere only in the laws of nature: I
+mean it has the force of necessity. I will open this out to you, if you
+will allow me, at more length. You would have me believe--"
+
+"Under your pardon, my lord, I would have you to believe nothing but
+that which I can prove," said I.
+
+"Tut! tut! young gentleman," says he, "be not so pragmatical, and suffer
+a man who might be your father (if it was nothing more) to employ his
+own imperfect language, and express his own poor thoughts, even when
+they have the misfortune not to coincide with Mr. Balfour's. You would
+have me to believe Breck innocent. I would think this of little account,
+the more so as we cannot catch our man. But the matter of Breck's
+innocence shoots beyond itself. Once admitted, it would destroy the
+whole presumptions of our case against another and a very different
+criminal; a man grown old in treason, already twice in arms against his
+king and already twice forgiven; a fomenter of discontent, and (whoever
+may have fired the shot) the unmistakable original of the deed in
+question. I need not tell you that I mean James Stewart."
+
+"And I can just say plainly that the innocence of Alan and of James is
+what I am here to declare in private to your lordship, and what I am
+prepared to establish at the trial by my testimony," said I.
+
+"To which I can only answer by an equal plainness, Mr. Balfour," said
+he, "that (in that case) your testimony will not be called by me, and I
+desire you to withhold it altogether."
+
+"You are at the head of Justice in this country," I cried, "and you
+propose to me a crime!"
+
+"I am a man nursing with both hands the interests of this country," he
+replied, "and I press on you a political necessity. Patriotism is not
+always moral in the formal sense. You might be glad of it, I think: it
+is your own protection; the facts are heavy against you; and if I am
+still trying to except you from a very dangerous place, it is in part of
+course because I am not insensible to your honesty in coming here; in
+part because of Pilrig's letter; but in part, and in chief part, because
+I regard in this matter my political duty first and my judicial duty
+only second. For the same reason--I repeat it to you in the same frank
+words--I do not want your testimony."
+
+"I desire not to be thought to make a repartee, when I express only the
+plain sense of our position," said I. "But if your lordship has no need
+of my testimony, I believe the other side would be extremely blythe to
+get it."
+
+Prestongrange arose and began to pace to and fro in the room. "You are
+not so young," he said, "but what you must remember very clearly the
+year '45 and the shock that went about the country. I read in Pilrig's
+letter that you are sound in Kirk and State. Who saved them in that
+fatal year? I do not refer to his Royal Highness and his ramrods, which
+were extremely useful in their day; but the country had been saved and
+the field won before ever Cumberland came upon Drummossie. Who saved it?
+I repeat; who saved the Protestant religion and the whole frame of our
+civil institutions? The late Lord President Culloden, for one; he played
+a man's part, and small thanks he got for it--even as I, whom you see
+before you, straining every nerve in the same service, look for no
+reward beyond the conscience of my duties done. After the President, who
+else? You know the answer as well as I do; 'tis partly a scandal, and
+you glanced at it yourself, and I reproved you for it, when you first
+came in. It was the Duke and the great clan of Campbell. Now here is a
+Campbell foully murdered, and that in the King's service. The Duke and I
+are Highlanders. But we are Highlanders civilised, and it is not so with
+the great mass of our clans and families. They have still savage virtues
+and defects. They are still barbarians, like these Stewarts; only the
+Campbells were barbarians on the right side, and the Stewarts were
+barbarians on the wrong. Now be you the judge. The Campbells expect
+vengeance. If they do not get it--if this man James escape--there will
+be trouble with the Campbells. That means disturbance in the Highlands,
+which are uneasy and very far from being disarmed: the disarming is a
+farce...."
+
+"I can bear you out in that," said I.
+
+"Disturbance in the Highlands makes the hour of our old watchful enemy,"
+pursued his lordship, holding out a finger as he paced; "and I give you
+my word we may have a '45 again with the Campbells on the other side. To
+protect the life of this man Stewart--which is forfeit already on
+half-a-dozen different counts if not on this--do you propose to plunge
+your country in war, to jeopardise the faith of your fathers, and to
+expose the lives and fortunes of how many thousand innocent persons? . . .
+These are considerations that weigh with me, and that I hope will weigh
+no less with yourself, Mr. Balfour, as a lover of your country, good
+government, and religious truth."
+
+"You deal with me very frankly, and I thank you for it," said I. "I will
+try on my side to be no less honest. I believe your policy to be sound.
+I believe these deep duties may lie upon your lordship; I believe you
+may have laid them on your conscience when you took the oaths of the
+high office which you hold. But for me, who am just a plain man--or
+scarce a man yet--the plain duties must suffice. I can think but of two
+things, of a poor soul in the immediate and unjust danger of a shameful
+death, and of the cries and tears of his wife that still tingle in my
+head. I cannot see beyond, my lord. It's the way that I am made. If the
+country has to fall, it has to fall. And I pray God, if this be wilful
+blindness, that he may enlighten me before too late."
+
+He had heard me motionless, and stood so a while longer.
+
+"This is an unexpected obstacle," says he, aloud, but to himself.
+
+"And how is your lordship to dispose of me?" I asked.
+
+"If I wished," said he, "you know that you might sleep in gaol?"
+
+"My lord," says I, "I have slept in worse places."
+
+"Well, my boy," said he, "there is one thing appears very plainly from
+our interview, that I may rely on your pledged word. Give me your honour
+that you will be wholly secret, not only on what has passed to-night,
+but in the matter of the Appin case, and I let you go free."
+
+"I will give it till to-morrow or any other near day that you may please
+to set," said I. "I would not be thought too wily; but if I gave the
+promise without qualification, your lordship would have attained his
+end."
+
+"I had no thought to entrap you," said he.
+
+"I am sure of that," said I.
+
+"Let me see," he continued. "To-morrow is the Sabbath. Come to me on
+Monday by eight in the morning, and give me your promise until then."
+
+"Freely given, my lord," said I. "And with regard to what has fallen
+from yourself, I will give it for as long as it shall please God to
+spare your days."
+
+"You will observe," he said next, "that I have made no employment of
+menaces."
+
+"It was like your lordship's nobility," said I. "Yet I am not altogether
+so dull but what I can perceive the nature of those you have not
+uttered."
+
+"Well," said he, "good-night to you. May you sleep well, for I think it
+is more than I am like to do."
+
+With that he sighed, took up a candle, and gave me his conveyance as far
+as the street door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+IN THE ADVOCATE'S HOUSE
+
+
+The next day, Sabbath, August 27th, I had the occasion I had long looked
+forward to, to hear some of the famous Edinburgh preachers, all well
+known to me already by the report of Mr. Campbell. Alas! and I might
+just as well have been at Essendean, and sitting under Mr. Campbell's
+worthy self! the turmoil of my thoughts, which dwelt continually on the
+interview with Prestongrange, inhibiting me from all attention. I was
+indeed much less impressed by the reasoning of the divines than by the
+spectacle of the thronged congregation in the churches, like what I
+imagined of a theatre or (in my then disposition) of an assize of trial;
+above all at the West Kirk, with its three tiers of galleries, where I
+went in the vain hope that I might see Miss Drummond.
+
+On the Monday I betook me for the first time to a barber's, and was very
+well pleased with the result. Thence to the Advocate's, where the red
+coats of the soldiers showed again about his door, making a bright place
+in the close. I looked about for the young lady and her gillies; there
+was never a sign of them. But I was no sooner shown into the cabinet or
+antechamber, where I had spent so wearyful a time upon the Saturday,
+than I was aware of the tall figure of James More in a corner. He seemed
+a prey to a painful uneasiness, reaching forth his feet and hands, and
+his eyes speeding here and there without rest about the walls of the
+small chamber, which recalled to me with a sense of pity the man's
+wretched situation. I suppose it was partly this, and partly my strong
+continuing interest in his daughter, that moved me to accost him.
+
+"Give you a good-morning, sir," said I.
+
+"And a good-morning to you, sir," said he.
+
+"You bide tryst with Prestongrange?" I asked.
+
+"I do, sir, and I pray your business with that gentleman be more
+agreeable than mine," was his reply.
+
+"I hope at least that yours will be brief, for I suppose you pass before
+me," said I.
+
+"All pass before me," he said, with a shrug and a gesture upward of the
+open hands. "It was not always so, sir, but times change. It was not so
+when the sword was in the scale, young gentleman, and the virtues of the
+soldier might sustain themselves."
+
+There came a kind of Highland snuffle out of the man that raised my
+dander strangely.
+
+"Well, Mr. Macgregor," said I, "I understand the main thing for a
+soldier is to be silent, and the first of his virtues never to
+complain."
+
+"You have my name, I perceive"--he bowed to me with his arms
+crossed--"though it's one I must not use myself. Well, there is a
+publicity--I have shown my face and told my name too often in the beards
+of my enemies. I must not wonder if both should be known to many that I
+know not."
+
+"That you know not in the least, sir," said I, "nor yet anybody else;
+but the name I am called, if you care to hear it, is Balfour."
+
+"It is a good name," he replied, civilly; "there are many decent folk
+that use it. And now that I call to mind, there was a young gentleman,
+your namesake, that marched surgeon in the year '45 with my battalion."
+
+"I believe that would be a brother to Balfour of Baith," said I, for I
+was ready for the surgeon now.
+
+"The same, sir," said James More. "And since I have been fellow-soldier
+with your kinsman, you must suffer me to grasp your hand."
+
+He shook hands with me long and tenderly, beaming on me the while as
+though he had found a brother.
+
+"Ah!" says he, "these are changed days since your cousin and I heard the
+balls whistle in our lugs."
+
+"I think he was a very far-away cousin," said I, drily, "and I ought to
+tell you that I never clapped eyes upon the man."
+
+"Well, well," said he, "it makes no change. And you--I do not think you
+were out yourself, sir--I have no clear mind of your face, which is one
+not probable to be forgotten."
+
+"In the year you refer to, Mr. Macgregor, I was getting skelped in the
+parish school," said I.
+
+"So young!" cries he. "Ah, then you will never be able to think what
+this meeting is to me. In the hour of my adversity, and in the house of
+my enemy, to meet in with the blood of an old brother-in-arms--it
+heartens me, Mr. Balfour, like the skirling of the Highland pipes! Sir,
+this is a sad look-back that many of us have to make: some with falling
+tears. I have lived in my own country like a king; my sword, my
+mountains, and the faith of my friends and kinsmen sufficed for me. Now
+I lie in a stinking dungeon; and do you know, Mr. Balfour," he went on,
+taking my arm and beginning to lead me about, "do you know, sir, that I
+lack mere necessaries? The malice of my foes has quite sequestered my
+resources. I lie, as you know, sir, on a trumped-up charge, of which I
+am as innocent as yourself. They dare not bring me to my trial, and in
+the meanwhile I am held naked in my prison. I could have wished it was
+your cousin I had met, or his brother Baith himself. Either would, I
+know, have been rejoiced to help me; while a comparative stranger like
+yourself--"
+
+I would be ashamed to set down all he poured out to me in this beggarly
+vein, or the very short and grudging answers that I made to him. There
+were times when I was tempted to stop his mouth with some small change;
+but whether it was from shame or pride--whether it was for my own sake
+or Catriona's--whether it was because I thought him no fit father for
+his daughter, or because I resented that grossness of immediate falsity
+that clung about the man himself--the thing was clean beyond me. And I
+was still being wheedled and preached to, and still being marched to and
+fro, three steps and a turn, in that small chamber, and had already, by
+some very short replies, highly incensed, although not finally
+discouraged, my beggar, when Prestongrange appeared in the doorway and
+bade me eagerly into his big chamber.
+
+"I have a moment's engagement," said he; "and that you may not sit
+empty-handed I am going to present you to my three braw daughters, of
+whom perhaps you may have heard, for I think they are more famous than
+papa. This way."
+
+He led me into another long room above, where a dry old lady sat at a
+frame of embroidery, and the three handsomest young women (I suppose) in
+Scotland stood together by a window.
+
+"This is my new friend, Mr. Balfour," said he, presenting me by the arm.
+"David, here is my sister, Miss Grant, who is so good as keep my house
+for me, and will be very pleased if she can help you. And here," says
+he, turning to the three younger ladies, "here are my _three braw
+dauchters_. A fair question to ye, Mr. Davie: which of the three is the
+best favoured? And I wager he will never have the impudence to propound
+honest Alan Ramsay's answer!"
+
+Hereupon all three, and the old Miss Grant as well, cried out against
+this sally, which (as I was acquainted with the verses he referred to)
+brought shame into my own cheek. It seemed to me a citation unpardonable
+in a father, and I was amazed that these ladies could laugh even while
+they reproved, or made believe to.
+
+Under cover of this mirth, Prestongrange got forth of the chamber, and I
+was left, like a fish upon dry land, in that very unsuitable society. I
+could never deny, in looking back upon what followed, that I was
+eminently stockish; and I must say the ladies were well drilled to have
+so long a patience with me. The aunt indeed sat close at her embroidery,
+only looking now and again and smiling; but the misses, and especially
+the eldest, who was besides the most handsome, paid me a score of
+attentions which I was very ill able to repay. It was all in vain to
+tell myself I was a young fellow of some worth as well as good estate,
+and had no call to feel abashed before these lasses, the eldest not so
+much older than myself, and no one of them by any probability half as
+learned. Reasoning would not change the fact; and there were times when
+the colour came into my face to think I was shaved that day for the
+first time.
+
+The talk going, with all their endeavours, very heavily, the eldest took
+pity on my awkwardness, sat down to her instrument, of which she was a
+passed mistress, and entertained me for a while with playing and
+singing, both in the Scots and in the Italian manners; this put me more
+at my ease, and being reminded of Alan's air that he had taught me in
+the hole near Carriden, I made so bold as to whistle a bar or two, and
+ask if she knew that.
+
+She shook her head. "I never heard a note of it," said she. "Whistle it
+all through. And now once again," she added, after I had done so.
+
+Then she picked it out upon the keyboard, and (to my surprise) instantly
+enriched the same with well-sounding chords, and sang, as she played,
+with a very droll expression and broad accent:
+
+ "Haenae I got just the lilt of it?
+ Isnae this the tune that ye whustled?"
+
+"You see," she says, "I can do the poetry too, only it won't rhyme." And
+then again:
+
+ "I am Miss Grant, sib to the Advocate:
+ You, I believe, are Dauvit Balfour."
+
+I told her how much astonished I was by her genius.
+
+"And what do you call the name of it?" she asked.
+
+"I do not know the real name," said I. "I just call it _Alan's air_."
+
+She looked at me directly in the face. "I shall call it _David's air_,"
+said she; "though if it's the least like what your namesake of Israel
+played to Saul I would never wonder that the king got little good by it,
+for it's but melancholy music. Your other name I do not like; so, if you
+was ever wishing to hear your tune again you are to ask for it by mine."
+
+This was said with a significance that gave my heart a jog. "Why that,
+Miss Grant?" I asked.
+
+"Why," says she, "if ever you should come to get hanged, I will set your
+last dying speech and confession to that tune and sing it."
+
+This put it beyond a doubt that she was partly informed of my story and
+peril. How, or just how much, it was more difficult to guess. It was
+plain she knew there was something of danger in the name of Alan, and
+thus warned me to leave it out of reference; and plain she knew that I
+stood under some criminal suspicion. I judged besides that the harshness
+of her last speech (which besides she had followed up immediately with a
+very noisy piece of music) was to put an end to the present
+conversation. I stood beside her, affecting to listen and admire, but
+truly whirled away by my own thoughts. I have always found this young
+lady to be a lover of the mysterious; and certainly this first interview
+made a mystery that was beyond my plummet. One thing I learned long
+after, the hours of the Sunday had been well employed, the bank porter
+had been found and examined, my visit to Charles Stewart was discovered,
+and the deduction made that I was pretty deep with James and Alan, and
+most likely in a continued correspondence with the last. Hence this
+broad hint that was given me across the harpsichord.
+
+In the midst of the piece of music, one of the younger misses, who was
+at a window over the close, cried on her sisters to come quick, for
+there was "_Grey eyes_ again." The whole family trooped there at once,
+and crowded one another for a look. The window whither they ran was in
+an odd corner of that room, gave above the entrance door, and flanked up
+the close.
+
+"Come, Mr. Balfour," they cried, "come and see. She is the most
+beautiful creature! She hangs round the close-head these last days,
+always with some wretched-like gillies, and yet seems quite a lady."
+
+I had no need to look; neither did I look twice, or long. I was afraid
+she might have seen me there, looking down upon her from that chamber of
+music, and she without, and her father in the same house, perhaps
+begging for his life with tears, and myself come but newly from
+rejecting his petitions. But even that glance set me in a better conceit
+of myself, and much less awe of the young ladies. They were beautiful,
+that was beyond question, but Catriona was beautiful too, and had a kind
+of brightness in her like a coal of fire. As much as the others cast me
+down, she lifted me up. I remembered I had talked easily with her. If I
+could make no hand of it with these fine maids, it was perhaps something
+their own fault. My embarrassment began to be a little mingled and
+lightened with a sense of fun; and when the aunt smiled at me from her
+embroidery, and the three daughters unbent to me like a baby, all with
+"papa's orders" written on their faces, there were times when I could
+have found it in my heart to smile myself.
+
+Presently papa returned, the same kind, happy-like, pleasant-spoken man.
+
+"Now, girls," said he, "I must take Mr. Balfour away again; but I hope
+you have been able to persuade him to return where I shall be always
+gratified to find him."
+
+So they each made me a little farthing compliment, and I was led away.
+
+If this visit to the family had been meant to soften my resistance, it
+was the worst of failures. I was no such ass but what I understood how
+poor a figure I had made, and that the girls would be yawning their jaws
+off as soon as my stiff back was turned. I felt I had shown how little I
+had in me of what was soft and graceful; and I longed for a chance to
+prove that I had something of the other stuff, the stern and dangerous.
+
+Well, I was to be served to my desire, for the scene to which he was
+conducting me was of a different character.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+UMQUILE THE MASTER OF LOVAT
+
+
+There was a man waiting us in Prestongrange's study, whom I distasted at
+the first look, as we distaste a ferret or an earwig. He was bitter
+ugly, but seemed very much of a gentleman; had still manners, but
+capable of sudden leaps and violences; and a small voice, which could
+ring out shrill and dangerous when he so desired.
+
+The Advocate presented us in a familiar, friendly way.
+
+"Here, Fraser," said he, "here is Mr. Balfour whom we talked about. Mr.
+David, this is Mr. Symon Fraser, whom we used to call by another title,
+but that is an old song. Mr. Fraser has an errand to you."
+
+With that he stepped aside to his book-shelves, and made believe to
+consult a quarto volume in the far end.
+
+I was thus left (in a sense) alone with perhaps the last person in the
+world I had expected. There was no doubt upon the terms of introduction;
+this could be no other than the forfeited Master of Lovat and chief of
+the great clan Fraser. I knew he had led his men in the Rebellion; I
+knew his father's head--my old lord's, that grey fox of the
+mountains--to have fallen on the block for that offence, the lands of
+the family to have been seized, and their nobility attainted. I could
+not conceive what he should be doing in Grant's house; I could not
+conceive that he had been called to the bar, had eaten all his
+principles, and was now currying favour with the Government even to the
+extent of acting Advocate-Depute in the Appin murder.
+
+"Well, Mr. Balfour," said he, "what is all this I hear of ye?"
+
+"It would not become me to prejudge," said I, "but if the Advocate was
+your authority he is fully possessed of my opinions."
+
+"I may tell you I am engaged in the Appin case," he went on; "I am to
+appear under Prestongrange; and from my study of the precognitions I can
+assure you your opinions are erroneous. The guilt of Breck is manifest;
+and your testimony, in which you admit you saw him on the hill at the
+very moment, will certify his hanging."
+
+"It will be rather ill to hang him till you catch him," I observed. "And
+for other matters I very willingly leave you to your own impressions."
+
+"The Duke has been informed," he went on. "I have just come from his
+Grace, and he expressed himself before me with an honest freedom like
+the great nobleman he is. He spoke of you by name, Mr. Balfour, and
+declared his gratitude beforehand in case you would be led by those who
+understand your own interests and those of the country so much better
+than yourself. Gratitude is no empty expression in that mouth: _experto
+crede_. I daresay you know something of my name and clan, and the
+damnable example and lamented end of my late father, to say nothing of
+my own errata. Well, I have made my peace with that good Duke; he has
+intervened for me with our friend Prestongrange; and here I am with my
+foot in the stirrup again and some of the responsibility shared into my
+hand of prosecuting King George's enemies and avenging the late daring
+and barefaced insult to his Majesty."
+
+"Doubtless a proud position for your father's son," says I.
+
+He wagged his bald eyebrows at me. "You are pleased to make experiments
+in the ironical, I think," said he. "But I am here upon duty, I am here
+to discharge my errand in good faith, it is in vain you think to divert
+me. And let me tell you, for a young fellow of spirit and ambition like
+yourself, a good shove in the beginning will do more than ten years'
+drudgery. The shove is now at your command; choose what you will to be
+advanced in, the Duke will watch upon you with the affectionate
+disposition of a father."
+
+"I am thinking that I lack the docility of the son," says I.
+
+"And do you really suppose, sir, that the whole policy of this country
+is to be suffered to trip up and tumble down for an ill-mannered colt of
+a boy?" he cried. "This has been made a test case, all who would prosper
+in the future must put a shoulder to the wheel. Look at me! Do you
+suppose it is for my pleasure that I put myself in the highly invidious
+position of prosecuting a man that I have drawn the sword alongside of?
+The choice is not left me."
+
+"But I think, sir, that you forfeited your choice when you mixed in with
+that unnatural rebellion," I remarked. "My case is happily otherwise; I
+am a true man, and can look either the Duke or King George in the face
+without concern."
+
+"Is it so the wind sits?" says he. "I protest you are fallen in the
+worst sort of error. Prestongrange has been hitherto so civil (he tells
+me) as not to combat your allegations; but you must not think they are
+not looked upon with strong suspicion. You say you are innocent. My dear
+sir, the facts declare you guilty."
+
+"I was waiting for you there," said I.
+
+"The evidence of Mungo Campbell; your flight after the completion of the
+murder; your long course of secresy--my good young man!" said Mr. Symon,
+"here is enough evidence to hang a bullock, let be a David Balfour! I
+shall be upon that trial; my voice shall be raised; I shall then speak
+much otherwise from what I do to-day, and far less to your
+gratification, little as you like it now! Ah, you look white!" cries he.
+"I have found the key of your impudent heart. You look pale, your eyes
+waver, Mr. David! You see the grave and the gallows nearer by than you
+had fancied."
+
+"I own to a natural weakness," said I. "I think no shame for that. Shame
+. . ." I was going on.
+
+"Shame waits for you on the gibbet," he broke in.
+
+"Where I shall but be even'd with my lord your father," said I.
+
+"Aha, but not so!" he cried, "and you do not yet see to the bottom of
+this business. My father suffered in a great cause, and for dealing in
+the affairs of kings. You are to hang for a dirty murder about
+boddle-pieces. Your personal part in it, the treacherous one of holding
+the poor wretch in talk, your accomplices a pack of ragged Highland
+gillies. And it can be shown, my great Mr. Balfour--it can be shown, and
+it _will_ be shown, trust _me_ that has a finger in the pie--it can be
+shown, and shall be shown, that you were paid to do it. I think I can
+see the looks go round the court when I adduce my evidence, and it shall
+appear that you, a young man of education, let yourself be corrupted to
+this shocking act for a suit of cast clothes, a bottle of Highland
+spirits, and three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in copper money."
+
+There was a touch of the truth in these words that knocked
+me like a blow: clothes, a bottle of _usquebaugh_, and
+three-and-fivepence-halfpenny in change made up, indeed, the most of what
+Alan and I had carried from Aucharn; and I saw that some of James's
+people had been blabbing in their dungeons.
+
+"You see I know more than you fancied," he resumed in triumph. "And as
+for giving it this turn, great Mr. David, you must not suppose the
+Government of Great Britain and Ireland will ever be stuck for want of
+evidence. We have men here in prison who will swear out their lives as
+we direct them; as I direct, if you prefer the phrase. So now you are to
+guess your part of glory if you choose to die. On the one hand, life,
+wine, women, and a duke to be your hand-gun; on the other, a rope to
+your craig, and a gibbet to clatter your bones on, and the lousiest,
+lowest story to hand down to your namesakes in the future that was ever
+told about a hired assassin. And see here!" he cried, with a formidable
+shrill voice, "see this paper that I pull out of my pocket. Look at the
+name there: it is the name of the great David, I believe, the ink scarce
+dry yet. Can you guess its nature? It is the warrant for your arrest,
+which I have but to touch this bell beside me to have executed on the
+spot. Once in the Tolbooth upon this paper, may God help you, for the
+die is cast!"
+
+I must never deny that I was greatly horrified by so much baseness, and
+much unmanned by the immediacy and ugliness of my danger. Mr. Symon had
+already gloried in the changes of my hue; I make no doubt I was now no
+ruddier than my shirt; my speech besides trembled.
+
+"There is a gentleman in this room," cried I. "I appeal to him. I put my
+life and credit in his hands."
+
+Prestongrange shut his book with a snap. "I told you so, Symon," said
+he; "you have played your hand for all it was worth, and you have lost.
+Mr. David," he went on, "I wish you to believe it was by no choice of
+mine you were subjected to this proof. I wish you could understand how
+glad I am you should come forth from it with so much credit. You may not
+quite see how, but it is a little of a service to myself. For had our
+friend here been more successful than I was last night, it might have
+appeared that he was a better judge of men than I; it might have
+appeared we were altogether in the wrong situations, Mr. Symon and
+myself. And I know our friend Symon to be ambitious," says he, striking
+lightly on Fraser's shoulder. "As for this stage play, it is over; my
+sentiments are very much engaged in your behalf; and whatever issue we
+can find to this unfortunate affair, I shall make it my business to see
+it is adopted with tenderness to you."
+
+These were very good words, and I could see besides that there was
+little love, and perhaps a spice of genuine ill-will, between those two
+who were opposed to me. For all that, it was unmistakable this interview
+had been designed, perhaps rehearsed, with the consent of both; it was
+plain my adversaries were in earnest to try me by all methods; and now
+(persuasion, flattery, and menaces having been tried in vain) I could
+not but wonder what would be their next expedient. My eyes besides were
+still troubled, and my knees loose under me, with the distress of the
+late ordeal; and I could do no more than stammer the same form of words:
+"I put my life and credit in your hands."
+
+"Well, well," says he, "we must try to save them. And in the meanwhile
+let us return to gentler methods. You must not bear any grudge upon my
+friend, Mr. Symon, who did but speak by his brief. And even if you did
+conceive some malice against myself, who stood by and seemed rather to
+hold a candle, I must not let that extend to innocent members of my
+family. These are greatly engaged to see more of you, and I cannot
+consent to have my young women-folk disappointed. To-morrow they will be
+going to Hope Park, where I think it very proper you should make your
+bow. Call for me first, when I may possibly have something for your
+private hearing; then you shall be turned abroad again under the conduct
+of my misses; and until that time repeat to me your promise of secrecy."
+
+I had done better to have instantly refused, but in truth I was beside
+the power of reasoning; did as I was bid; took my leave I know not how;
+and when I was forth again in the close, and the door had shut behind
+me, was glad to lean on a house wall and wipe my face. That horrid
+apparition (as I may call it) of Mr. Symon rang in my memory, as a
+sudden noise rings after it is over on the ear. Tales of the man's
+father, of his falseness, of his manifold perpetual treacheries, rose
+before me from all that I had heard and read, and joined on with what I
+had just experienced of himself. Each time it occurred to me, the
+ingenious foulness of that calumny he had proposed to nail upon my
+character startled me afresh. The case of the man upon the gibbet by
+Leith Walk appeared scarce distinguishable from that I was now to
+consider as my own. To rob a child of so little more than nothing was
+certainly a paltry enterprise for two grown men; but my own tale, as it
+was to be represented in a court by Symon Fraser, appeared a fair second
+in every possible point of view of sordidness and cowardice.
+
+The voices of two of Prestongrange's liveried men upon his doorstep
+recalled me to myself.
+
+"Ha'e," said the one, "this billet as fast as ye can link to the
+captain."
+
+"Is that for the cateran back again?" asked the other.
+
+"It would seem sae," returned the first. "Him and Symon are seeking
+him."
+
+"I think Prestongrange is gane gyte," says the second. "He'll have James
+More in bed with him next."
+
+"Weel, it's neither your affair nor mine's," says the first.
+
+And they parted, the one upon his errand, and the other back into the
+house.
+
+This looked as ill as possible. I was scarce gone and they were sending
+already for James More, to whom I thought Mr. Symon must have pointed
+when he spoke of men in prison and ready to redeem their lives by all
+extremities. My scalp curdled among my hair, and the next moment the
+blood leaped in me to remember Catriona. Poor lass! her father stood to
+be hanged for pretty indefensible misconduct. What was yet more
+unpalatable, it now seemed he was prepared to save his four quarters by
+the worst of shame and the most foul of cowardly murders--murder by the
+false oath; and to complete our misfortunes, it seemed myself was picked
+out to be the victim.
+
+I began to walk swiftly and at random, conscious only of a desire for
+movement, air, and the open country.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+I MAKE A FAULT IN HONOR
+
+
+I came forth, I vow I know not how, on the _Lang Dykes_.[12] This is a
+rural road which runs on the north side over against the city. Thence I
+could see the whole black length of it tail down, from where the castle
+stands upon its crags above the loch in a long line of spires and gable
+ends, and smoking chimneys, and at the sight my heart swelled in my
+bosom. My youth, as I have told, was already inured to dangers; but such
+danger as I had seen the face of but that morning, in the midst of what
+they call the safety of a town, shook me beyond experience. Peril of
+slavery, peril of shipwreck, peril of sword and shot, I had stood all of
+these without discredit; but the peril there was in the sharp voice and
+the fat face of Symon, properly Lord Lovat, daunted me wholly.
+
+I sat by the lake side in a place where the rushes went down into the
+water, and there steeped my wrists and laved my temples. If I could have
+done so with any remains of self-esteem I would now have fled from my
+foolhardy enterprise. But (call it courage or cowardice, and I believe
+it was both the one and the other) I decided I was ventured out beyond
+the possibility of a retreat. I had outfaced these men, I would continue
+to outface them; come what might, I would stand by the word spoken.
+
+The sense of my own constancy somewhat uplifted my spirits, but not
+much. At the best of it there was an icy place about my heart, and life
+seemed a black business to be at all engaged in. For two souls in
+particular my pity flowed. The one was myself, to be so friendless and
+lost among dangers. The other was the girl, the daughter of James More.
+I had seen but little of her; yet my view was taken and my judgment
+made. I thought her a lass of a clean honour, like a man's; I thought
+her one to die of a disgrace; and now I believed her father to be at
+that moment bargaining his vile life for mine. It made a bond in my
+thoughts betwixt the girl and me. I had seen her before only as a
+wayside appearance, though one that pleased me strangely; I saw her now
+in a sudden nearness of relation, as the daughter of my blood foe, and I
+might say, my murderer. I reflected it was hard I should be so plagued
+and persecuted all my days for other folk's affairs, and have no manner
+of pleasure myself. I got meals and a bed to sleep in when my concerns
+would suffer it; beyond that my wealth was of no help to me. If I was to
+hang, my days were like to be short; if I was not to hang but to escape
+out of this trouble, they might yet seem long to me ere I was done with
+them. Of a sudden her face appeared in my memory, the way I had first
+seen it, with the parted lips; at that, weakness came in my bosom and
+strength into my legs; and I set resolutely forward on the way to Dean.
+If I was to hang to-morrow, and it was sure enough I might very likely
+sleep that night in a dungeon, I determined I should hear and speak once
+more with Catriona.
+
+The exercise of walking and the thought of my destination braced me yet
+more, so that I began to pluck up a kind of spirit. In the village of
+Dean, where it sits in the bottom of a glen beside the river, I inquired
+my way of a miller's man, who sent me up the hill upon the farther side
+by a plain path, and so to a decent-like small house in a garden of
+lawns and apple-trees. My heart beat high as I stepped inside the garden
+hedge, but it fell low indeed when I came face to face with a grim and
+fierce old lady, walking there in a white mutch with a man's hat
+strapped upon the top of it.
+
+"What do ye come seeking here?" she asked.
+
+I told her I was after Miss Drummond.
+
+"And what may be your business with Miss Drummond?" says she.
+
+I told her I had met her on Saturday last, had been so fortunate as to
+render her a trifling service, and was come now on the young lady's
+invitation.
+
+"Oh, so you're Saxpence!" she cried, with a very sneering manner. "A
+braw gift, a bonny gentleman. And hae ye ony ither name and designation,
+or were ye bapteesed Saxpence?" she asked.
+
+I told my name.
+
+"Preserve me!" she cried. "Has Ebenezer gotten a son?"
+
+"No, ma'am," said I. "I am a son of Alexander's. It's I that am the
+Laird of Shaws."
+
+"Ye'll find your work cut out for ye to establish that," quoth she.
+
+"I perceive you know my uncle," said I; "and I daresay you may be the
+better pleased to hear that business is arranged."
+
+"And what brings ye here after Miss Drummond?" she pursued.
+
+"I'm come after my saxpence, mem," said I. "It's to be thought, being my
+uncle's nephew, I would be found a careful lad."
+
+"So ye have a spark of sleeness in ye," observed the old lady, with some
+approval. "I thought ye had just been a cuif--you and your saxpence, and
+your _lucky day_ and your _sake of Balwhidder_"--from which I was
+gratified to learn that Catriona had not forgotten some of our talk.
+"But all this is by the purpose," she resumed. "Am I to understand that
+ye come here keeping company?"
+
+"This is surely rather an early question," said I. "The maid is young,
+so am I, worse fortune. I have but seen her the once. I'll not deny," I
+added, making up my mind to try her with some frankness, "I'll not deny
+but she has run in my head a good deal since I met in with her. That is
+one thing; but it would be quite another, and I think I would look very
+like a fool, to commit myself."
+
+"You can speak out of your mouth, I see," said the old lady. "Praise
+God, and so can I! I was fool enough to take charge of this rogue's
+daughter: a fine charge I have gotten; but it's mine, and I'll carry it
+the way I want to. Do ye mean to tell me, Mr. Balfour of Shaws, that you
+would marry James More's daughter, and him hanged? Well, then, where
+there's no possible marriage there shall be no manner of carryings on,
+and take that for said. Lasses are bruckle things," she added, with a
+nod; "and though ye would never think it by my wrunkled chafts, I was a
+lassie mysel', and a bonny one."
+
+"Lady Allardyce," said I, "for that I suppose to be your name, you seem
+to do the two sides of the talking, which is a very poor manner to come
+to an agreement. You give me rather a home thrust when you ask if I
+would marry, at the gallows' foot, a young lady whom I have seen but the
+once. I have told you already I would never be so untenty as to commit
+myself. And yet I'll go some way with you. If I continue to like the
+lass as well as I have reason to expect, it will be something more than
+her father, or the gallows either, that keeps the two of us apart. As
+for my family, I found it by the wayside like a lost bawbee! I owe less
+than nothing to my uncle; and if ever I marry, it will be to please one
+person: that's myself."
+
+"I have heard this kind of talk before ye were born," said Mrs. Ogilvy,
+"which is perhaps the reason that I think of it so little. There's much
+to be considered. This James More is a kinsman of mine, to my shame be
+it spoken. But the better the family, the mair men hanged or heided,
+that's always been poor Scotland's story. And if it was just the
+hanging! For my part, I think I would be best pleased with James upon
+the gallows, which would be at least an end to him. Catrine's a good
+lass enough, and a good-hearted, and lets herself be deaved all day with
+a runt of an auld wife like me. But, ye see, there's the weak bit. She's
+daft about that long, false, fleeching beggar of a father of hers, and
+red-mad about the Gregara, and proscribed names, and King James, and a
+wheen blethers. And you might think ye could guide her, ye would find
+yourself sore mista'en. Ye say ye've seen her but the once..."
+
+"Spoke with her but the once, I should have said," I interrupted. "I saw
+her again this morning from a window at Prestongrange's."
+
+This I daresay I put in because it sounded well; but I was properly paid
+for my ostentation on the return.
+
+"What's this of it?" cries the old lady, with a sudden pucker of her
+face. "I think it was at the Advocate's door-cheek that ye met her
+first."
+
+I told her that was so.
+
+"H'm," she said; and then suddenly, upon rather a scolding tone, "I have
+your bare word for it," she cries, "as to who and what you are. By your
+way of it, you're Balfour of the Shaws; but for what I ken you may be
+Balfour of the Deevil's oxter. It's possible ye may come here for what
+ye say, and it's equally possible ye may come here for deil care what!
+I'm good enough whig to sit quiet, and to have keepit all my men-folk's
+heads upon their shoulders. But I'm not just a good enough whig to be
+made a fool of neither. And I tell you fairly, there's too much
+Advocate's door and Advocate's window here for a man that comes taigling
+after a Macgregor's daughter. Ye can tell that to the Advocate that sent
+ye, with my fond love. And I kiss my loof to ye, Mr. Balfour," says she,
+suiting the action to the word, "and a braw journey to ye back to where
+ye cam frae."
+
+"If you think me a spy," I broke out, and speech stuck in my throat. I
+stood and looked murder at the old lady for a space, then bowed and
+turned away.
+
+"Here! Hoots! The callant's in a creel!" she cried. "Think ye a spy?
+what else would I think ye--me that kens naething by ye? But I see that
+I was wrong; and as I cannot fight, I'll have to apologise. A bonny
+figure I would be with a broadsword. Ay! ay!" she went on, "you're none
+such a bad lad in your way; I think ye'll have some redeeming vices.
+But, oh, Davit Balfour, ye're damned countryfeed. Ye'll have to win over
+that, lad; ye'll have to soople your back-bone, and think a wee pickle
+less of your dainty self; and ye'll have to try to find out that
+women-folk are nae grenadiers. But that can never be. To your last day
+you'll ken no more of women-folk than what I do of sow-gelding."
+
+I had never been used with such expressions from a lady's tongue, the
+only two ladies I had known, Mrs. Campbell and my mother, being most
+devout and most particular women; and I suppose my amazement must have
+been depicted in my countenance, for Mrs. Ogilvy burst forth suddenly in
+a fit of laughter.
+
+"Keep me!" she cried, struggling with her mirth, "you have the finest
+timber face--and you to marry the daughter of a Hieland cateran! Davie,
+my dear, I think we'll have to make a match of it--if it was just to see
+the weans. And now," she went on, "there's no manner of service in your
+daidling here, for the young woman is from home, and it's my fear that
+the old woman is no suitable companion for your father's son. Forbye
+that I have nobody but myself to look after my reputation, and have been
+long enough alone with a sedooctive youth. And come back another day for
+your saxpence!" she cried after me as I left.
+
+My skirmish with this disconcerting lady gave my thoughts a boldness
+they had otherwise wanted. For two days the image of Catriona had mixed
+in all my meditations; she made their background, so that I scarce
+enjoyed my own company without a glint of her in a corner of my mind.
+But now she came immediately near; I seemed to touch her, whom I had
+never touched but the once; I let myself flow out to her in a happy
+weakness, and looking all about, and before and behind, saw the world
+like an undesirable desert, where men go as soldiers on a march,
+following their duty with what constancy they have, and Catriona alone
+there to offer me some pleasure of my days; I wondered at myself that I
+could dwell on such considerations in that time of my peril and
+disgrace; and when I remembered my youth I was ashamed. I had my studies
+to complete; I had to be called into some useful business; I had yet to
+take my part of service in a place where all must serve; I had yet to
+learn, and know, and prove myself a man; and I had so much sense as
+blush that I should be already tempted with these further-on and holier
+delights and duties. My education spoke home to me sharply; I was never
+brought up on sugar biscuits, but on the hard food of the truth. I knew
+that he was quite unfit to be a husband who was not prepared to be a
+father also; and for a boy like me to play the father was a mere
+derision.
+
+When I was in the midst of these thoughts and about half-way back to
+town I saw a figure coming to meet me, and the trouble of my heart was
+heightened. It seemed I had everything in the world to say to her, but
+nothing to say first; and remembering how tongue-tied I had been that
+morning at the Advocate's, I made sure that I would find myself struck
+dumb. But when she came up my fears fled away; not even the
+consciousness of what I had been privately thinking disconcerted me the
+least; and I found I could talk with her as easily and rationally as I
+might with Alan.
+
+"O!" she cried, "you have been seeking your sixpence: did you get it?"
+
+I told her no; but now I had met with her my walk was not in vain.
+"Though I have seen you to-day already," said I, and told her where and
+when.
+
+"I did not see you," she said. "My eyes are big, but there are better
+than mine at seeing far. Only I heard singing in the house."
+
+"That was Miss Grant," said I, "the eldest and the bonniest."
+
+"They say they are all beautiful," said she.
+
+"They think the same of you, Miss Drummond," I replied, "and were all
+crowding to the window to observe you."
+
+"It is a pity about my being so blind," said she, "or I might have seen
+them too. And you were in the house? You must have been having the fine
+time with the fine music and the pretty ladies."
+
+"There is just where you are wrong," said I; "for I was as uncouth as a
+sea-fish upon the brae of a mountain. The truth is that I am better
+fitted to go about with rudas men than pretty ladies."
+
+"Well, I would think so too, at all events!" said she, at which we both
+of us laughed.
+
+"It is a strange thing, now," said I. "I am not the least afraid with
+you, yet I could have run from the Miss Grants. And I was afraid of your
+cousin too."
+
+"O, I think any man will be afraid of her," she cried. "My father is
+afraid of her himself."
+
+The name of her father brought me to a stop. I looked at her as she
+walked by my side; I recalled the man, and the little I knew and the
+much I guessed of him; and comparing the one with the other, felt like a
+traitor to be silent.
+
+"Speaking of which," said I, "I met your father no later than this
+morning."
+
+"Did you?" she cried, with a voice of joy that seemed to mock at me.
+"You saw James More? You will have spoken with him, then?"
+
+"I did even that," said I.
+
+Then I think things went the worst way for me that was humanly possible.
+She gave me a look of mere gratitude. "Ah, thank you for that!" says
+she.
+
+"You thank me for very little," said I, and then stopped. But it seemed
+when I was holding back so much, something at least had to come out. "I
+spoke rather ill to him," said I; "I did not like him very much; I spoke
+him rather ill, and he was angry."
+
+"I think you had little to do then, and less to tell it to his
+daughter!" she cried out. "But those that do not love and cherish him I
+will not know."
+
+"I will take the freedom of a word yet," said I, beginning to tremble.
+"Perhaps neither your father nor I are in the best of good spirits at
+Prestongrange's. I daresay we both have anxious business there, for it's
+a dangerous house. I was sorry for him too, and spoke to him the first,
+if I could but have spoken the wiser. And for one thing, in my opinion,
+you will soon find that his affairs are mending."
+
+"It will not be through your friendship, I am thinking," said she; "and
+he is much made up to you for your sorrow."
+
+"Miss Drummond," cried I, "I am alone in this world...."
+
+"And I am not wondering at that," said she.
+
+"O, let me speak!" said I. "I will speak but the once, and then leave
+you, if you will, for ever. I came this day in the hopes of a kind word
+that I am sore in want of. I know that what I said must hurt you, and I
+knew it then. It would have been easy to have spoken smooth, easy to lie
+to you; can you not think how I was tempted to the same? Cannot you see
+the truth of my heart shine out?"
+
+"I think here is a great deal of work, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I think
+we will have met but the once, and will can part like gentle-folk."
+
+"O, let me have one to believe in me!" I pleaded, "I cannae bear it
+else. The whole world is clanned against me. How am I to go through with
+my dreadful fate? If there's to be none to believe in me I cannot do it.
+The man must just die, for I cannot do it."
+
+She had still looked straight in front of her, head in air; but at my
+words or the tone of my voice she came to a stop. "What is this you
+say?" she asked. "What are you talking of?"
+
+"It is my testimony which may save an innocent life," said I, "and they
+will not suffer me to bear it. What would you do yourself? You know what
+this is, whose father lies in danger. Would you desert the poor soul?
+They have tried all ways with me. They have sought to bribe me; they
+offered me hills and valleys. And to-day that sleuth-hound told me how I
+stood, and to what a length he would go to butcher and disgrace me. I am
+to be brought in a party to the murder; I am to have held Glenure in
+talk for money and old clothes; I am to be killed and shamed. If this is
+the way I am to fall, and me scarce a man--if this is the story to be
+told of me in all Scotland--if you are to believe it too, and my name is
+to be nothing but a by-word--Catriona, how can I go through with it? The
+thing's not possible; it's more than a man has in his heart."
+
+I poured my words out in a whirl, one upon the other; and when I stopped
+I found her gazing on me with a startled face.
+
+"Glenure! It is the Appin murder," she said softly, but with a very deep
+surprise.
+
+I had turned back to bear her company, and we were now come near the
+head of the brae above Dean village. At this word I stepped in front of
+her like one suddenly distracted.
+
+"For God's sake!" I cried, "for God's sake, what is this that I have
+done?" and carried my fists to my temples. "What made me do it? Sure, I
+am bewitched to say these things!"
+
+"In the name of heaven, what ails you now?" she cried.
+
+"I gave my honour," I groaned, "I gave my honour and now I have broke
+it. O, Catriona!"
+
+"I am asking you what it is," she said; "was it these things you should
+not have spoken? And do you think _I_ have no honour, then? or that I am
+one that would betray a friend? I hold up my right hand to you and
+swear."
+
+"O, I knew you would be true!" said I. "It's me--it's here. I that stood
+but this morning and out-faced them, that risked rather to die disgraced
+upon the gallows than do wrong--and a few hours after I throw my honour
+away by the roadside in common talk! 'There is one thing clear upon our
+interview,' says he, 'that I can rely on your pledged word.' Where is my
+word now? Who could believe me now? _You_ could not believe me. I am
+clean fallen down; I had best die!" All this I said with a weeping
+voice, but I had no tears in my body.
+
+"My heart is sore for you," said she, "but be sure you are too nice. I
+would not believe you, do you say? I would trust you with anything. And
+these men? I would not be thinking of them! Men who go about to entrap
+and to destroy you! Fy! this is no time to crouch. Look up! Do you not
+think I will be admiring you like a great hero of the good--and you a
+boy not much older than myself? And because you said a word too much in
+a friend's ear, that would die ere she betrayed you--to make such a
+matter! It is one thing that we must both forget."
+
+"Catriona," said I, looking at her, hang-dog, "is this true of it? Would
+ye trust me yet?"
+
+"Will you not believe the tears upon my face?" she cried. "It is the
+world I am thinking of you, Mr. David Balfour. Let them hang you; I will
+never forget, I will grow old and still remember you. I think it is
+great to die so; I will envy you that gallows."
+
+"And maybe all this while I am but a child frighted with bogles," said
+I. "Maybe they but make a mock of me."
+
+"It is what I must know," she said. "I must hear the whole. The harm is
+done at all events, and I must hear the whole."
+
+I had sat down on the wayside, where she took a place beside me, and I
+told her all that matter much as I have written it, my thoughts about
+her father's dealing being alone omitted.
+
+"Well," she said, when I had finished, "you are a hero, surely, and I
+never would have thought that same! And I think you are in peril, too.
+O, Symon Fraser! to think upon that man! For his life and the dirty
+money, to be dealing in such traffic!" And just then she called out
+aloud with a queer word that was common with her, and belongs, I
+believe, to her own language. "My torture!" says she, "look at the sun!"
+
+Indeed, it was already dipping towards the mountains.
+
+She bid me come again soon, gave me her hand, and left me in a turmoil
+of glad spirits. I delayed to go home to my lodging, for I had a terror
+of immediate arrest; but got some supper at a change house, and the
+better part of that night walked by myself in the barley-fields, and had
+such a sense of Catriona's presence that I seemed to bear her in my
+arms.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE BRAVO
+
+
+The next day, August 29th, I kept my appointment at the Advocate's in a
+coat that I had made to my own measure, and was but newly ready.
+
+"Aha," says Prestongrange, "you are very fine to-day; my misses are to
+have a fine cavalier. Come, I take that kind of you. I take that kind of
+you, Mr. David. O, we shall do very well yet, and I believe your
+troubles are nearly at an end."
+
+"You have news for me?" cried I.
+
+"Beyond anticipation," he replied. "Your testimony is after all to be
+received; and you may go, if you will, in my company to the trial, which
+is to be held at Inverary, Thursday, 21st _proximo_."
+
+I was too much amazed to find words.
+
+"In the meanwhile," he continued, "though I will not ask you to renew
+your pledge, I must caution you strictly to be reticent. To-morrow your
+precognition must be taken; and outside of that, do you know, I think
+least said will be soonest mended."
+
+"I shall try to go discreetly," said I. "I believe it is yourself that I
+must thank for this crowning mercy, and I do thank you gratefully. After
+yesterday, my lord, this is like the doors of Heaven. I cannot find it
+in my heart to get the thing believed."
+
+"Ah, but you must try and manage, you must try and manage to believe
+it," says he, soothing-like, "and I am very glad to hear your
+acknowledgment of obligation, for I think you may be able to repay me
+very shortly"--he coughed--"or even now. The matter is much changed.
+Your testimony, which I shall not trouble you for to-day, will doubtless
+alter the complexion of the case for all concerned, and this makes it
+less delicate for me to enter with you on a side issue."
+
+"My lord," I interrupted, "excuse me for interrupting you, but how has
+this been brought about? The obstacles you told me of on Saturday
+appeared even to me to be quite insurmountable; how has it been
+contrived?"
+
+"My dear Mr. David," said he, "it would never do for me to divulge (even
+to you, as you say) the councils of the Government; and you must content
+yourself, if you please, with the gross fact."
+
+He smiled upon me like a father as he spoke, playing the while with a
+new pen; methought it was impossible there could be any shadow of
+deception in the man: yet when he drew to him a sheet of paper, dipped
+his pen among the ink, and began again to address me, I was somehow not
+so certain, and fell instinctively into an attitude of guard.
+
+"There is a point I wish to touch upon," he began. "I purposely left it
+before upon one side, which need be now no longer necessary. This is
+not, of course, a part of your examination, which is to follow by
+another hand; this is a private interest of my own. You say you
+encountered Breck upon the hill?"
+
+"I did, my lord," said I.
+
+"This was immediately after the murder?"
+
+"It was."
+
+"Did you speak to him?"
+
+"I did."
+
+"You had known him before, I think?" says my lord, carelessly.
+
+"I cannot guess your reason for so thinking, my lord," I replied, "but
+such is the fact."
+
+"And when did you part with him again?" said he.
+
+"I reserve my answer," said I. "The question will be put to me at the
+assize."
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said he, "will you not understand that all this is
+without prejudice to yourself? I have promised you life and honour; and,
+believe me, I can keep my word. You are therefore clear of all anxiety.
+Alan, it appears, you suppose you can protect; and you talk to me of
+your gratitude, which I think (if you push me) is not ill-deserved.
+There are a great many different considerations all pointing the same
+way; and I will never be persuaded that you could not help us (if you
+chose) to put salt on Alan's tail."
+
+"My lord," said I, "I give you my word I do not so much as guess where
+Alan is."
+
+He paused a breath. "Nor how he might be found?" he asked.
+
+I sat before him like a log of wood.
+
+"And so much for your gratitude, Mr. David!" he observed. Again there
+was a piece of silence. "Well," said he, rising, "I am not fortunate,
+and we are a couple at cross purposes. Let us speak of it no more; you
+will receive notice when, where, and by whom we are to take your
+precognition. And in the meantime, my misses must be waiting you. They
+will never forgive me if I detain their cavalier."
+
+Into the hands of these graces I was accordingly offered up, and found
+them dressed beyond what I had thought possible, and looking fair as a
+posy.
+
+As we went forth from the doors a small circumstance occurred which came
+afterwards to look extremely big. I heard a whistle sound loud and brief
+like a signal, and looking all about, spied for one moment the red head
+of Neil of the Tom, the son of Duncan. The next moment he was gone
+again, nor could I see so much as the skirt-tail of Catriona, upon whom
+I naturally supposed him to be then attending.
+
+My three keepers led me out by Bristo and the Bruntsfield Links; whence
+a path carried us to Hope Park, a beautiful pleasance, laid with
+gravel-walks, furnished with seats and summer-sheds, and warded by a
+keeper.
+
+The way there was a little longsome; the two younger misses affected an
+air of genteel weariness that damped me cruelly, the eldest considered
+me with something that at times appeared like mirth; and though I
+thought I did myself more justice than the day before, it was not
+without some effort. Upon our reaching the park I was launched on a bevy
+of eight or ten young gentlemen (some of them cockaded officers, the
+rest chiefly advocates) who crowded to attend upon these beauties; and
+though I was presented to all of them in very good words, it seemed I
+was by all immediately forgotten. Young folk in a company are like to
+savage animals: they fall upon or scorn a stranger without civility, or
+I may say, humanity; and I am sure, if I had been among baboons, they
+would have shown me quite as much of both. Some of the advocates set up
+to be wits, and some of the soldiers to be rattles; and I could not tell
+which of these extremes annoyed me most. All had a manner of handling
+their swords and coat-skirts, for the which (in mere black envy) I could
+have kicked them from that park. I daresay, upon their side, they
+grudged me extremely the fine company in which I had arrived; and
+altogether I had soon fallen behind, and stepped stiffly in the rear of
+all that merriment with my own thoughts.
+
+From these I was recalled by one of the officers, Lieutenant Hector
+Duncansby, a gawky, leering, Highland boy, asking if my name was not
+"Palfour."
+
+I told him it was, not very kindly, for his manner was scant civil.
+
+"Ha, Palfour," says he, and then, repeating it, "Palfour, Palfour!"
+
+"I am afraid you do not like my name, sir," says I, annoyed with myself
+to be annoyed with such a rustical fellow.
+
+"No," says he, "but I wass thinking."
+
+"I would not advise you to make a practice of that, sir," says I. "I
+feel sure you would not find it to agree with you."
+
+"Tit you effer hear where Alan Grigor fand the tangs?" said he.
+
+I asked him what he could possibly mean, and he answered, with a
+heckling laugh, that he thought I must have found the poker in the same
+place and swallowed it.
+
+There could be no mistake about this, and my cheek burned.
+
+"Before I went about to put affronts on gentlemen," said I, "I think I
+would learn the English language first."
+
+He took me by the sleeve with a nod and a wink, and led me quietly
+outside Hope Park. But no sooner were we beyond the view of the
+promenaders, than the fashion of his countenance changed. "You tam
+lowland scoon'rel!" cries he, and hit me a buffet on the jaw with his
+closed fist.
+
+I paid him as good or better on the return; whereupon he stepped a
+little back and took off his hat to me decorously.
+
+"Enough plows I think," says he. "I will be the offended shentleman, for
+who effer heard of such suffeeciency as tell a shentlemans that is the
+king's officer he cannae speak Cot's English? We have swords at our
+hurdies, and here is the King's Park at hand. Will ye walk first, or let
+me show ye the way?"
+
+I returned his bow, told him to go first, and followed him. As he went I
+heard him grumble to himself about _Cot's English_ and the _King's
+coat_, so that I might have supposed him to be seriously offended. But
+his manner at the beginning of our interview was there to belie him. It
+was manifest he had come prepared to fasten a quarrel on me, right or
+wrong; manifest that I was taken in a fresh contrivance of my enemies;
+and to me (conscious as I was of my deficiencies) manifest enough that I
+should be the one to fall in our encounter.
+
+As we came into that rough rocky desert of the King's Park I was tempted
+half-a-dozen times to take to my heels and run for it, so loath was I to
+show my ignorance in fencing, and so much averse to die or even to be
+wounded. But I considered if their malice went as far as this, it would
+likely stick at nothing; and that to fall by the sword, however
+ungracefully, was still an improvement on the gallows. I considered
+besides that by the unguarded pertness of my words and the quickness of
+my blow I had put myself quite out of court; and that even if I ran, my
+adversary would, probably pursue and catch me, which would add disgrace
+to my misfortune. So that, taking all in all, I continued marching
+behind him, much as a man follows the hangman, and certainly with no
+more hope.
+
+We went about the end of the long craigs, and came into the Hunter's
+Bog. Here, on a piece of fair turf, my adversary drew. There was nobody
+there to see us but some birds; and no resource for me but to follow his
+example, and stand on guard with the best face I could display. It seems
+it was not good enough for Mr. Duncansby, who spied some flaw in my
+manoeuvres, paused, looked upon me sharply, and came off and on, and
+menaced me with his blade in the air. As I had seen no such proceedings
+from Alan, and was besides a good deal affected with the proximity of
+death, I grew quite bewildered, stood helpless, and could have longed to
+run away.
+
+"Fat, deil, ails her?" cries the lieutenant.
+
+And suddenly engaging, he twitched the sword out of my grasp and sent it
+flying far among the rushes.
+
+Twice was this manoeuvre repeated; and the third time when I brought
+back my humiliated weapon, I found he had returned his own to the
+scabbard, and stood awaiting me with a face of some anger, and his hands
+clasped under his skirt.
+
+"Pe tamned if I touch you!" he cried, and asked me bitterly what right I
+had to stand up before "shentlemans" when I did not know the back of a
+sword from the front of it.
+
+I answered that was the fault of my upbringing; and would he do me the
+justice to say I had given him all the satisfaction it was unfortunately
+in my power to offer, and had stood up like a man?
+
+"And that is the truth," said he. "I am fery prave myself, and pold as a
+lions. But to stand up there--and you ken naething of fence!--the way
+that you did, I declare it was peyond me. And I am sorry for the plow;
+though I declare I pelief your own was the elder brother, and my held
+still sings with it. And I declare if I had kent what way it wass, I
+would not put a hand to such a piece of pusiness."
+
+"That is handsomely said," I replied, "and I am sure you will not stand
+up a second time to be the actor for my private enemies."
+
+"Indeed, no, Palfour," said he; "and I think I was used extremely
+suffeeciently myself to be set up to fecht with an auld wife, or all the
+same as a bairn whateffer! And I will tell the Master so, and fecht him,
+by Cot, himself!"
+
+"And if you knew the nature of Mr. Symon's quarrel with me," said I,
+"you would be yet the more affronted to be mingled up with such
+affairs."
+
+He swore he could well believe it; that all the Lovats were made of the
+same meal and the devil was the miller that ground that; then suddenly
+shaking me by the hand, he vowed I was a pretty enough fellow after all,
+that it was a thousand pities I had been neglected, and that if he could
+find the time, he would give an eye himself to have me educated.
+
+"You can do me a better service than even what you propose," said I; and
+when he had asked its nature--"Come with me to the house of one of my
+enemies, and testify how I have carried myself this day," I told him.
+"That will be the true service. For though he has sent me a gallant
+adversary for the first, the thought in Mr. Symon's mind is merely
+murder. There will be a second and then a third; and by what you have
+seen of my cleverness with the cold steel, you can judge for yourself
+what is like to be upshot."
+
+"And I would not like it myself, if I was no more of a man than what you
+wass!" he cried. "But I will do you right, Palfour. Lead on!"
+
+If I had walked slowly on the way into that accursed park my heels were
+light enough on the way out. They kept time to a very good old air, that
+is as ancient as the Bible, and the words of it are: "_Surely the
+bitterness of death is passed_." I mind that I was extremely thirsty,
+and had a drink at Saint Margaret's well on the road down, and the
+sweetness of that water passed belief. We went through the sanctuary, up
+the Canongate, in by the Netherbow, and straight to Prestongrange's
+door, talking as we came and arranging the details of our affair. The
+footman owned his master was at home, but declared him engaged with
+other gentlemen on very private business, and his door forbidden.
+
+"My business is but for three minutes, and it cannot wait," said I. "You
+may say it is by no means private, and I shall be even glad to have some
+witnesses."
+
+As the man departed unwillingly enough upon this errand, we made so bold
+as to follow him to the antechamber, whence I could hear for a while the
+murmuring of several voices in the room within. The truth is, they were
+three at the one table--Prestongrange, Symon Fraser, and Mr. Erskine,
+Sheriff of Perth; and as they were met in consultation on the very
+business of the Appin murder, they were a little disturbed at my
+appearance, but decided to receive me.
+
+"Well, well, Mr. Balfour, and what brings you here again? and who is
+this you bring with you?" says Prestongrange.
+
+As for Fraser, he looked before him on the table.
+
+"He is here to bear a little testimony in my favour, my lord, which I
+think it very needful you should hear," said I, and turned to Duncansby.
+
+"I have only to say this," said the lieutenant, "that I stood up this
+day with Palfour in the Hunter's Pog, which I am now fery sorry for, and
+he behaved himself as pretty as a shentlemans could ask it. And I have
+creat respects for Palfour," he added.
+
+"I thank you for your honest expressions," said I.
+
+Whereupon Duncansby made his bow to the company, and left the chamber,
+as we had agreed upon before.
+
+"What have I to do with this?" says Prestongrange.
+
+"I will tell your lordship in two words," said I. "I have brought this
+gentleman, a King's officer, to do me so much justice. Now I think my
+character is covered, and until a certain date, which your lordship can
+very well supply, it will be quite in vain to despatch against me any
+more officers. I will not consent to fight my way through the garrison
+of the castle."
+
+The veins swelled on Prestongrange's brow, and he regarded me with fury.
+
+"I think the devil uncoupled this dog of a lad between my legs!" he
+cried; and then, turning fiercely on his neighbour, "This is some of
+your work, Symon," he said. "I spy your hand in the business, and, let
+me tell you, I resent it. It is disloyal, when we are agreed upon one
+expedient, to follow another in the dark. You are disloyal to me. What!
+you let me send this lad to the place with my very daughters! And
+because I let drop a word to you ... Fy, sir, keep your dishonours to
+yourself!"
+
+Symon was deadly pale. "I will be a kick-ball between you and the Duke
+no longer," he exclaimed. "Either come to an agreement, or come to a
+differ, and have it out among yourselves. But I will no longer fetch and
+carry, and get your contrary instructions, and be blamed by both. For if
+I were to tell you what I think of all your Hanover business it would
+make your head sing."
+
+But Sheriff Erskine had preserved his temper, and now intervened
+smoothly. "And in the meantime," says he, "I think we should tell Mr.
+Balfour that his character for valour is quite established. He may sleep
+in peace. Until the date he was so good as to refer to it shall be put
+to the proof no more."
+
+His coolness brought the others to their prudence; and they made haste,
+with a somewhat distracted civility, to pack me from the house.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE HEATHER ON FIRE
+
+
+When I left Prestongrange that afternoon I was for the first time angry.
+The Advocate had made a mock of me. He had pretended my testimony was to
+be received and myself respected; and in that very hour, not only was
+Symon practising against my life by the hands of the Highland soldier,
+but (as appeared from his own language) Prestongrange himself had some
+design in operation. I counted my enemies: Prestongrange with all the
+King's authority behind him; and the Duke with the power of the West
+Highlands; and the Lovat interest by their side to help them with so
+great a force in the north, and the whole clan of old Jacobite spies and
+traffickers. And when I remembered James More, and the red head of Neil
+the son of Duncan, I thought there was perhaps a fourth in the
+confederacy, and what remained of Rob Roy's old desperate sept of
+caterans would be banded against me with the others. One thing was
+requisite, some strong friend or wise adviser. The country must be full
+of such, both able and eager to support me, or Lovat and the Duke and
+Prestongrange had not been nosing for expedients; and it made me rage to
+think that I might brush against my champions in the street and be no
+wiser.
+
+And just then (like an answer) a gentleman brushed against me going by,
+gave me a meaning look, and turned into a close. I knew him with the
+tail of my eye--it was Stewart the Writer; and, blessing my good
+fortune, turned in to follow him. As soon as I had entered the close I
+saw him standing in the mouth of a stair, where he made me a signal and
+immediately vanished. Seven storeys up, there he was again in a house
+door, the which he locked behind us after we had entered. The house was
+quite dismantled, with not a stick of furniture; indeed, it was one of
+which Stewart had the letting in his hands.
+
+"We'll have to sit upon the floor," said he; "but we're safe here for
+the time being, and I've been wearying to see ye, Mr. Balfour."
+
+"How's it with Alan?'" I asked.
+
+"Brawly," said he. "Andie picks him up at Gillane Sands to-morrow,
+Wednesday. He was keen to say good-by to ye, but the way that things
+were going, I was feared the pair of ye was maybe best apart. And that
+brings me to the essential: how does your business speed?"
+
+"Why," said I, "I was told only this morning that my testimony was
+accepted, and I was to travel to Inverary with the Advocate, no less."
+
+"Hout awa!" cried Stewart. "I'll never believe that."
+
+"I have maybe a suspicion of my own," says I, "but I would like fine to
+hear your reasons."
+
+"Well, I tell ye fairly, I'm horn-mad," cries Stewart. "If my one hand
+could pull their Government down I would pluck it like a rotten apple.
+I'm doer for Appin and for James of the Glens; and, of course, it's my
+duty to defend my kinsman for his life. Hear how it goes with me, and
+I'll leave the judgment of it to yourself. The first thing they have to
+do is to get rid of Alan. They cannae bring in James as art and part
+until they've brought in Alan first as principal; that's sound law: they
+could never put the cart before the horse."
+
+"And how are they to bring in Alan till they can catch him?" says I.
+
+"Ah, but there is a way to evite that arrestment," said he. "Sound law,
+too. It would be a bonny thing if, by the escape of one ill-doer another
+was to go scatheless, and the remeid is to summon the principal and put
+him to outlawry for the non-compearance. Now there's four places where a
+person can be summoned: at his dwelling-house; at a place where he has
+resided forty days; at the head burgh of the shire where he ordinarily
+resorts; or lastly (if there be ground to think him forth of Scotland),
+_at the cross of Edinburgh, and the pier and shore of Leith, for sixty
+days_. The purpose of which last provision is evident upon its face:
+being that outgoing ships may have time to carry news of the
+transaction, and the summonsing be something other than a form. Now take
+the case of Alan. He has no dwelling-house that ever I could hear of; I
+would be obliged if anyone would show me where he has lived forty days
+together since the '45; there is no shire where he resorts whether
+ordinarily or extraordinarily; if he has a domicile at all, which I
+misdoubt, it must be with his regiment in France; and if he is not yet
+forth of Scotland (as we happen to know and they happen to guess) it
+must be evident to the most dull it's what he's aiming for. Where, then,
+and what way should he be summoned? I ask it at yourself, a layman."
+
+"You have given the very words," said I. "Here at the cross, and at the
+pier and shore of Leith, for sixty days."
+
+"Ye're a sounder Scots lawyer than Prestongrange, then!" cries the
+Writer. "He has had Alan summoned once; that was on the twenty-fifth,
+the day that we first met. Once, and done with it. And where? Where, but
+at the cross of Inverary, the head burgh of the Campbells. A word in
+your ear, Mr. Balfour--they're not seeking Alan."
+
+"What do you mean?" I cried. "Not seeking him?"
+
+"By the best that I can make of it," said he. "Not wanting to find him,
+in my poor thought. They think perhaps he might set up a fair defence,
+upon the back of which James, the man they're really after, might climb
+out. This is not a case, ye see, it's a conspiracy."
+
+"Yet I can tell you Prestongrange asked after Alan keenly," said I;
+"though, when I come to think of it, he was something of the easiest put
+by."
+
+"See that!" says he. "But there! I may be right or wrong, that's
+guesswork at the best, and let me get to my facts again. It comes to my
+ears that James and the witnesses--the witnesses, Mr. Balfour!--lay in
+close dungeons, and shackled forbye, in the military prison at Fort
+William; none allowed in to them, nor they to write. The witnesses, Mr.
+Balfour; heard ye ever the match of that? I assure ye, no old, crooked
+Stewart of the gang ever outfaced the law more impudently. It's clean in
+the two eyes of the Act of Parliament of 1700, anent wrongous
+imprisonment. No sooner did I get the news than I petitioned the Lord
+Justice Clerk. I have his word to-day. There's law for ye! here's
+justice!"
+
+He put a paper in my hand, that same mealy-mouthed, false-faced paper
+that was printed since in the pamphlet "by a bystander," for behoof (as
+the title says) of James's "poor widow and five children."
+
+"See," said Stewart, "he couldn't dare to refuse me access to my client,
+so he _recommends the commanding officer to let me in_. Recommends!--the
+Lord Justice Clerk of Scotland recommends. Is not the purpose of such
+language plain? They hope the officer may be so dull, or so very much
+the reverse, as to refuse the recommendation. I would have to make the
+journey back again betwixt here and Fort William. There would follow a
+fresh delay till I got fresh authority, and they had disavowed the
+officer--military man, notoriously ignorant of the law, and that--I ken
+the cant of it. Then the journey a third time; and there we should be on
+the immediate heels of the trial before I had received my first
+instruction. Am I not right to call this a conspiracy?"
+
+"It will bear that colour," said I.
+
+"And I'll go on to prove it you outright," said he. "They have the right
+to hold James in prison, yet they cannot deny me to visit him. They have
+no right to hold the witnesses; but am I to get a sight of them, that
+should be as free as the Lord Justice Clerk himself? See--read: _For the
+rest, refuses to give any orders to keepers of prisons who are not
+accused as having done anything contrary to the duties of their office_.
+Anything contrary! Sirs! And the Act of seventeen hunner! Mr. Balfour,
+this makes my heart to burst. The heather is on fire inside my wame."
+
+"And the plain English of that phrase," said I, "is that the witnesses
+are still to lie in prison and you are not to see them?"
+
+"And I am not to see them until Inverary, when the court is set!" cries
+he, "and then to hear Prestongrange upon _the anxious responsibilities
+of his office and the great facilities afforded the defence!_ But I'll
+begowk them there, Mr. David. I have a plan to waylay the witnesses upon
+the road, and see if I cannae get a little harle of justice out of the
+_military man notoriously ignorant of the law_ that shall command the
+party."
+
+It was actually so--it was actually on the wayside near Tynedrum, and by
+the connivance of a soldier officer, that Mr. Stewart first saw the
+witnesses upon the case.
+
+"There is nothing that would surprise me in this business," I remarked.
+
+"I'll surprise you ere I'm done!" cries he. "Do ye see this?"--producing
+a print still wet from the press. "This is the libel: see, there's
+Prestongrange's name to the list of witnesses, and I find no word of any
+Balfour. But here is not the question. Who do ye think paid for the
+printing of this paper?"
+
+"I suppose it would likely be King George," said I.
+
+"But it happens it was me!" he cried. "Not but it was printed by and for
+themselves, for the Grants and the Erskines, and yon thief of the black
+midnight, Symon Fraser. But could _I_ win to get a copy? No! I was to go
+blindfold to my defence; I was to hear the charges for the first time in
+court alongst the jury."
+
+"Is not this against the law?" I asked.
+
+"I cannot say so much," he replied. "It was a favour so natural and so
+constantly rendered (till this nonesuch business) that the law has never
+looked to it. And now admire the hand of Providence! A stranger is in
+Fleming's printing house, spies a proof on the floor, picks it up, and
+carries it to me. Of all things, it was just this libel. Whereupon I had
+it set again--printed at the expense of the defence: _sumptibus moesti
+rei_; heard ever man the like of it?--and here it is for anybody, the
+muckle secret out--all may see it now. But how do you think I would
+enjoy this, that has the life of my kinsman on my conscience?"
+
+"Troth, I think you would enjoy it ill," said I.
+
+"And now you see how it is," he concluded, "and why, when you tell me
+your evidence is to be let in, I laugh aloud in your face."
+
+It was now my turn. I laid before him in brief Mr. Symon's threats and
+offers, and the whole incident of the bravo, with the subsequent scene
+at Prestongrange's. Of my first talk, according to promise, I said
+nothing, nor indeed was it necessary. All the time I was talking Stewart
+nodded his head like a mechanical figure; and no sooner had my voice
+ceased, than he opened his mouth and gave me his opinion in two words,
+dwelling strong on both of them.
+
+"Disappear yourself," said he.
+
+"I do not take you," said I.
+
+"Then I'll carry you there," said he. "By my view of it you're to
+disappear whatever. O, that's outside debate. The Advocate, who is not
+without some spunks of a remainder decency, has wrung your life-safe out
+of Symon and the Duke. He has refused to put you on your trial, and
+refused to have you killed; and there is the clue to their ill words
+together, for Symon and the Duke can keep faith with neither friend nor
+enemy. Ye're not to be tried then, and ye're not to be murdered; but I'm
+in bitter error if ye're not to be kidnapped and carried away like the
+Lady Grange. Bet me what you please--there was their _expedient!_"
+
+"You make me think," said I, and told him of the whistle and the
+red-headed retainer, Neil.
+
+"Wherever James More is there's one big rogue, never be deceived on
+that," said he. "His father was none so ill a man, though a kenning on
+the wrong side of the law, and no friend to my family, that I should
+waste my breath to be defending him! But as for James he's a brock and a
+blagyard. I like the appearing of this red-headed Neil as little as
+yourself. It looks uncanny: fiegh! it smells bad. It was old Lovat that
+managed the Lady Grange affair, if young Lovat is to handle yours, it'll
+be all in the family. What's James More in prison for? The same offence:
+abduction. His men have had practice in the business. He'll be to lend
+them to be Symon's instruments; and the next thing we'll be hearing,
+James will have made his peace, or else he'll have escaped; and you'll
+be in Benbecula or Applecross."
+
+"Ye make a strong case," I admitted.
+
+"And what I want," he resumed, "is that you should disappear yourself
+ere they can get their hands upon ye. Lie quiet until just before the
+trial, and spring upon them at the last of it when they'll be looking
+for you least. This is always supposing, Mr. Balfour, that your evidence
+is worth so very great a measure of both risk and fash."
+
+"I will tell you one thing," said I. "I saw the murderer and it was not
+Alan."
+
+"Then, by God, my cousin's saved!" cried Stewart. "You have his life
+upon your tongue; and there's neither time, risk, nor money to be spared
+to bring you to the trial." He emptied his pockets on the floor. "Here
+is all that I have by me," he went on. "Take it, ye'll want it ere ye're
+through. Go straight down this close, there's a way out by there to the
+Lang Dykes, and by my will of it! see no more of Edinburgh till the
+clash is over."
+
+"Where am I to go, then?" I inquired.
+
+"And I wish that I could tell ye!" says he, "but all the places that I
+could send ye to, would be just the places they would seek. No, ye must
+fend for yourself, and God be your guiding! Five days before the trial,
+September the sixteen, get word to me at the _King's Arms_ in Stirling;
+and if ye've managed for yourself as long as that, I'll see that ye
+reach Inverary."
+
+"One thing more," said I. "Can I no see Alan?"
+
+He seemed boggled. "Hech, I would rather you wouldnae," said he. "But I
+can never deny that Alan is extremely keen of it, and is to lie this
+night by Silvermills on purpose. If you're sure that you're not
+followed, Mr. Balfour--but make sure of that--lie in a good place and
+watch your road for a clear hour before ye risk it. It would be a
+dreadful business if both you and him was to miscarry!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE RED-HEADED MAN
+
+
+It was about half-past three when I came forth on the Lang Dykes. Dean
+was where I wanted to go. Since Catriona dwelled there, and the Glengyle
+Macgregors appeared almost certainly to be employed against me, it was
+just one of the few places I should have kept away from; and being a
+very young man, and beginning to be very much in love, I turned my face
+in that direction without pause. As a salve to my conscience and common
+sense, however, I took a measure of precaution. Coming over the crown of
+a bit of a rise in the road, I clapped down suddenly among the barley
+and lay waiting. After a while, a man went by that looked to be a
+Highlandman, but I had never seen him till that hour. Presently after
+came Neil of the red head. The next to go past was a miller's cart, and
+after that nothing but manifest country people. Here was enough to have
+turned the most foolhardy from his purpose, but my inclination ran too
+strong the other way. I argued it out that if Neil was on that road, it
+was the right road to find him in, leading direct to his chief's
+daughter; as for the other Highlandman, if I was to be startled off by
+every Highlandman I saw, I would scarce reach anywhere. And having quite
+satisfied myself with this disingenuous debate, I made the better speed
+of it, and came a little after four to Mrs. Drummond-Ogilvy's.
+
+Both ladies were within the house; and upon my perceiving them together
+by the open door, I plucked off my hat and said, "Here was a lad come
+seeking saxpence," which I thought might please the dowager.
+
+Catriona ran out to greet me heartily, and, to my surprise, the old lady
+seemed scarce less forward than herself. I learned long afterwards that
+she had despatched a horseman by daylight to Rankeillor at the
+Queensferry, whom she knew to be the doer for Shaws, and had then in her
+pocket a letter from that good friend of mine, presenting, in the most
+favourable view, my character and prospects. But had I read it I could
+scarce have seen more clear in her designs. Maybe I was _countryfeed_;
+at least, I was not so much so as she thought; and it was plain enough,
+even to my homespun wits, that she was bent to hammer up a match between
+her cousin and a beardless boy that was something of a laird in Lothian.
+
+"Saxpence had better take his broth with us, Catrine," says she. "Run
+and tell the lasses."
+
+And for the little while we were alone was at a good deal of pains to
+flatter me; always cleverly, always with the appearance of a banter,
+still calling me Saxpence, but with such a turn that should rather
+uplift me in my own opinion. When Catriona returned the design became if
+possible more obvious, and she showed off the girl's advantages like a
+horse-couper with a horse. My face flamed that she should think me so
+obtuse. Now I would fancy the girl was being innocently made a show of,
+and then I could have beaten the old carline wife with a cudgel; and
+now, that perhaps these two had set their heads together to entrap me,
+and at that I sat and gloomed betwixt them like the very image of
+ill-will. At last the matchmaker had a better device, which was to leave
+the pair of us alone. When my suspicions are anyway roused it is
+sometimes a little the wrong side of easy to allay them. But though I
+knew what breed she was of, and that was a breed of thieves, I could
+never look in Catriona's face and disbelieve her.
+
+"I must not ask?" says she, eagerly, the same moment we were left alone.
+
+"Ah, but to-day I can talk with a free conscience," I replied. "I am
+lightened of my pledge, and indeed (after what has come and gone since
+morning) I would not have renewed it were it asked."
+
+"Tell me," she said. "My cousin will not be so long."
+
+So I told her the tale of the lieutenant from the first step to the last
+of it, making it as mirthful as I could, and, indeed, there was matter
+of mirth in that absurdity.
+
+"And I think you will be as little fitted for the rudas men as for the
+pretty ladies, after all!" says she, when I had done. "But what was your
+father that he could not learn you to draw the sword? It is most
+ungentle; I have not heard the match of that in anyone."
+
+"It is most misconvenient at least," said I; "and I think my father
+(honest man!) must have been wool-gathering to learn me Latin in the
+place of it. But you see I do the best I can, and just stand up like
+Lot's wife and let them hammer at me."
+
+"Do you know what makes me smile?" said she. "Well, it is this. I am
+made this way, that I should have been a man child. In my own thoughts
+it is so I am always; and I go on telling myself about this thing that
+is to befall and that. Then it comes to the place of the fighting, and
+it comes over me that I am only a girl at all events, and cannot hold a
+sword or give one good blow; and then I have to twist my story round
+about, so that the fighting is to stop, and yet me have the best of it,
+just like you and the lieutenant; and I am the boy that makes the fine
+speeches all through, like Mr. David Balfour."
+
+"You are a bloodthirsty maid," said I.
+
+"Well, I know it is good to sew and spin, and to make samplers," she
+said, "but if you were to do nothing else in the great world, I think
+you will say yourself it is a driech business; and it is not that I want
+to kill, I think. Did ever you kill anyone?"
+
+"That I have, as it chances. Two, no less, and me still a lad that
+should be at the college," said I. "But yet, in the look-back, I take no
+shame for it."
+
+"But how did you feel, then--after it?" she asked.
+
+"'Deed, I sat down and grat like a bairn," said I.
+
+"I know that, too," she cried. "I feel where these tears should come
+from. And at any rate, I would not wish to kill, only to be Catherine
+Douglas that put her arm through the staples of the bolt, where it was
+broken. That is my chief hero. Would you not love to die so--for your
+king?" she asked.
+
+"Troth," said I, "my affection for my king, God bless the puggy face of
+him, is under more control; and I thought I saw death so near to me this
+day already, that I am rather taken up with the notion of living."
+
+"Right," she said, "the right mind of a man! Only you must learn arms; I
+would not like to have a friend that cannot strike. But it will not have
+been with the sword that you killed these two?"
+
+"Indeed, no," said I, "but with a pair of pistols. And a fortunate thing
+it was the men were so near-hand to me, for I am about as clever with
+the pistols as I am with the sword."
+
+So then she drew from me the story of our battle in the brig, which I
+had omitted in my first account of my affairs.
+
+"Yes," said she, "you are brave. And your friend, I admire and love
+him."
+
+"Well, and I think any one would!" said I. "He has his faults like other
+folk; but he is brave and staunch and kind, God bless him! That will be
+a strange day when I forget Alan." And the thought of him, and that it
+was within my choice to speak with him that night, had almost overcome
+me.
+
+"And where will my head be gone that I have not told my news!" she
+cried, and spoke of a letter from her father, bearing that she might
+visit him to-morrow in the castle whither he was now transferred, and
+that his affairs were mending. "You do not like to hear it," said she.
+"Will you judge my father and not know him?"
+
+"I am a thousand miles from judging," I replied. "And I give you my word
+I do rejoice to know your heart is lightened. If my face fell at all, as
+I suppose it must, you will allow this is rather an ill day for
+compositions, and the people in power extremely ill persons to be
+compounding with. I have Symon Fraser extremely heavy on my stomach
+still."
+
+"Ah!" she cried, "you will not be evening these two; and you should bear
+in mind that Prestongrange and James More, my father, are of the one
+blood."
+
+"I never heard tell of that," said I.
+
+"It is rather singular how little you are acquainted with," said she.
+"One part may call themselves Grant, and one Macgregor, but they are
+still of the same clan. They are all the sons of Alpin, from whom, I
+think, our country has its name."
+
+"What country is that?" I asked.
+
+"My country and yours," said she.
+
+"This is my day for discoveries, I think," said I, "for I always thought
+the name of it was Scotland."
+
+"Scotland is the name of what you call Ireland," she replied. "But the
+old ancient true name of this place that we have our foot-soles on, and
+that our bones are made of, will be Alban. It was Alban they called it
+when our forefathers will be fighting for it against Rome and Alexander;
+and it is called so still in your own tongue that you forget."
+
+"Troth," said I, "and that I never learned!" For I lacked heart to take
+her up about the Macedonian.
+
+"But your fathers and mothers talked it, one generation with another,"
+said she. "And it was sung about the cradles before you or me were ever
+dreamed of; and your name remembers it still. Ah, if you could talk that
+language you would find me another girl. The heart speaks in that
+tongue."
+
+I had a meal with the two ladies, all very good, served in fine old
+plate, and the wine excellent, for it seems that Mrs. Ogilvy was rich.
+Our talk, too, was pleasant enough; but as soon as I saw the sun decline
+sharply and the shadows to run out long, I rose to take my leave. For my
+mind was now made up to say farewell to Alan; and it was needful I
+should see the trysting wood, and reconnoitre it, by daylight. Catriona
+came with me as far as to the garden gate.
+
+"It is long till I see you now?" she asked.
+
+"It is beyond my judging," I replied. "It will be long, it may be
+never."
+
+"It may be so," said she. "And you are sorry?"
+
+I bowed my head, looking upon her.
+
+"So am I, at all events," said she. "I have seen you but a small time,
+but I put you very high. You are true, you are brave; in time I think
+you will be more of a man yet. I will be proud to hear of that. If you
+should speed worse, if it will come to fall as we are afraid--O well!
+think you have the one friend. Long after you are dead and me an old
+wife, I will be telling the bairns about David Balfour, and my tears
+running. I will be telling how we parted, and what I said to you, and
+did to you. _God go with you and guide you, prays your little friend_:
+so I said--I will be telling them--and here is what I did."
+
+She took up my hand and kissed it. This so surprised my spirits that I
+cried out like one hurt. The colour came strong in her face, and she
+looked at me and nodded.
+
+"O yes, Mr. David," said she, "that is what I think of you. The heart
+goes with the lips."
+
+I could read in her face high spirit, and a chivalry like a brave
+child's; not anything besides. She kissed my hand, as she had kissed
+Prince Charlie's, with a higher passion than the common kind of clay has
+any sense of. Nothing before had taught me how deep I was her lover, nor
+how far I had yet to climb to make her think of me in such a character.
+Yet I could tell myself I had advanced some way, and that her heart had
+beat and her blood flowed at thoughts of me.
+
+After that honour she had done me I could offer no more trivial
+civility. It was even hard for me to speak; a certain lifting in her
+voice had knocked directly at the door of my own tears.
+
+"I praise God for your kindness, dear," said I. "Farewell, my little
+friend!" giving her that name which she had given to herself; with which
+I bowed and left her.
+
+My way was down the glen of the Leith River, towards Stockbridge and
+Silvermills. A path led in the foot of it, the water bickered and sang
+in the midst; the sunbeams overhead struck out of the west among long
+shadows and (as the valley turned) made like a new scene and a new world
+of it at every corner. With Catriona behind and Alan before me, I was
+like one lifted up. The place besides, and the hour, and the talking of
+the water, infinitely pleased me; and I lingered in my steps and looked
+before and behind me as I went. This was the cause, under providence,
+that I spied a little in my rear a red head among some bushes.
+
+Anger sprang in my heart, and I turned straight about and walked at a
+stiff pace to where I came from. The path lay close by the bushes where
+I had remarked the head. The cover came to the wayside, and as I passed
+I was all strung up to meet and to resist an onfall. No such thing
+befell, I went by unmeddled with; and at that fear increased upon me. It
+was still day indeed, but the place exceeding solitary. If my haunters
+had let slip that fair occasion I could but judge they aimed at
+something more than David Balfour. The lives of Alan and James weighed
+upon my spirit with the weight of two grown bullocks.
+
+Catriona was yet in the garden walking by herself.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "you see me back again."
+
+"With a changed face," said she.
+
+"I carry two men's lives besides my own," said I. "It would be a sin and
+a shame not to walk carefully. I was doubtful whether I did right to
+come here. I would like it ill, if it was by that means we were brought
+to harm."
+
+"I could tell you one that would be liking it less, and will like little
+enough to hear you talking at this very same time," she cried. "What
+have I done, at all events?"
+
+"O, you! you are not alone," I replied. "But since I went off I have
+been dogged again, and I can give you the name of him that follows me.
+It is Neil, son of Duncan, your man or your father's."
+
+"To be sure you are mistaken there," she said, with a white face. "Neil
+is in Edinburgh on errands from my father."
+
+"It is what I fear," said I, "the last of it. But for his being in
+Edinburgh I think I can show you another of that. For sure you have some
+signal, a signal of need, such as would bring him to your help, if he
+was anywhere within the reach of ears and legs?"
+
+"Why, how will you know that?" says she.
+
+"By means of a magical talisman God gave to me when I was born, and the
+name they call it by is Common-sense," said I. "Oblige me so far as to
+make your signal, and I will show you the red head of Neil."
+
+No doubt but I spoke bitter and sharp. My heart was bitter. I blamed
+myself and the girl and hated both of us: her for the vile crew that she
+was come of, myself for my wanton folly to have stuck my head in such a
+byke of wasps.
+
+Catriona set her fingers to her lips and whistled once, with an
+exceeding clear, strong, mounting note, as full as a ploughman's. A
+while we stood silent; and I was about to ask her to repeat the same,
+when I heard the sound of some one bursting through the bushes below on
+the braeside. I pointed in that direction with a smile, and presently
+Neil leaped into the garden. His eyes burned, and he had a black knife
+(as they call it on the Highland side) naked in his hand; but, seeing me
+beside his mistress, stood like a man struck.
+
+"He has come to your call," said I; "judge how near he was to Edinburgh,
+or what was the nature of your father's errands. Ask himself. If I am to
+lose my life, or the lives of those that hang by me, through the means
+of your clan, let me go where I have to go with my eyes open."
+
+She addressed him tremulously in the Gaelic. Remembering Alan's anxious
+civility in that particular, I could have laughed out loud for
+bitterness; here, sure, in the midst of these suspicions, was the hour
+she should have stuck by English.
+
+Twice or thrice they spoke together, and I could make out that Neil (for
+all his obsequiousness) was an angry man.
+
+Then she turned to me. "He swears it is not," she said.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "do you believe the man yourself?"
+
+She made a gesture like wringing the hands.
+
+"How will I can know?" she cried.
+
+"But I must find some means to know," said I. "I cannot continue to go
+dovering round in the black night with two men's lives at my girdle!
+Catriona, try to put yourself in my place, as I vow to God I try hard to
+put myself in yours. This is no kind of talk that should ever have
+fallen between me and you; no kind of talk; my heart is sick with it.
+See, keep him here till two of the morning, and I care not. Try him with
+that."
+
+They spoke together once more in the Gaelic.
+
+"He says he has James More my father's errand," said she. She was whiter
+than ever, and her voice faltered as she said it.
+
+"It is pretty plain now," said I, "and may God forgive the wicked!"
+
+She said never anything to that, but continued gazing at me with the
+same white face.
+
+"This is a fine business," said I again. "Am I to fall, then, and those
+two along with me?"
+
+"O, what am I to do?" she cried. "Could I go against my father's orders,
+and him in prison, in the danger of his life?"
+
+"But perhaps we go too fast," said I. "This may be a lie too. He may
+have no right orders; all may be contrived by Symon, and your father
+knowing nothing."
+
+She burst out weeping between the pair of us; and my heart smote me
+hard, for I thought this girl was in a dreadful situation.
+
+"Here," said I, "keep him but the one hour; and I'll chance it, and say
+God bless you."
+
+She put out her hand to me. "I will be needing one good word," she
+sobbed.
+
+"The full hour, then?" said I, keeping her hand in mine. "Three lives of
+it, my lass!"
+
+"The full hour!" she said, and cried aloud on her Redeemer to forgive
+her.
+
+I thought it no fit place for me, and fled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+THE WOOD BY SILVERMILLS
+
+
+I lost no time, but down through the valley and by Stockbrig and
+Silvermills as hard as I could stave. It was Alan's tryst to lie every
+night between twelve and two "in a bit scrog of wood by east of
+Silvermills and by south the south mill-lade." This I found easy enough,
+where it grew on a steep brae, with the mill-lade flowing swift and deep
+along the foot of it; and here I began to walk slower and to reflect
+more reasonably on my employment. I saw I had made but a fool's bargain
+with Catriona. It was not to be supposed that Neil was sent alone upon
+his errand, but perhaps he was the only man belonging to James More; in
+which case, I should have done all I could to hang Catriona's father,
+and nothing the least material to help myself. To tell the truth, I
+fancied neither one of these ideas. Suppose, by holding back Neil, the
+girl should have helped to hang her father, I thought she would never
+forgive herself this side of time. And suppose there were others
+pursuing me that moment, what kind of a gift was I come bringing to
+Alan? and how would I like that?
+
+I was up with the west end of that wood when these two considerations
+struck me like a cudgel. My feet stopped of themselves and my heart
+along with them. "What wild game is this that I have been playing?"
+thought I; and turned instantly upon my heels to go elsewhere.
+
+This brought my face to Silvermills; the path came past the village with
+a crook, but all plainly visible; and, Highland or Lowland, there was
+nobody stirring. Here was my advantage, here was just such a conjuncture
+as Stewart had counselled me to profit by, and I ran by the side of the
+mill-lade, fetched about beyond the east corner of the wood, threaded
+through the midst of it, and returned to the west selvage, whence I
+could again command the path, and yet be myself unseen. Again it was all
+empty, and my heart began to rise.
+
+For more than an hour I sat close in the border of the trees, and no
+hare or eagle could have kept a more particular watch. When that hour
+began the sun was already set, but the sky still all golden and the
+daylight clear; before the hour was done it had fallen to be half mirk,
+the images and distances of things were mingled, and observation began
+to be difficult. All that time not a foot of man had come east from
+Silvermills, and the few that had gone west were honest countryfolk and
+their wives upon the road to bed. If I were tracked by the most cunning
+spies in Europe, I judged it was beyond the course of nature they could
+have any jealousy of where I was; and going a little further home into
+the wood I lay down to wait for Alan.
+
+The strain of my attention had been great, for I had watched not the
+path only, but every bush and field within my vision. That was now at an
+end. The moon, which was in her first quarter, glinted a little in the
+wood; all round there was a stillness of the country; and as I lay there
+on my back, the next three or four hours, I had a fine occasion to
+review my conduct.
+
+Two things became plain to me first: that I had had no right to go that
+day to Dean, and (having gone there) had now no right to be lying where
+I was. This (where Alan was to come) was just the one wood in all broad
+Scotland that was, by every proper feeling, closed against me; I
+admitted that, and yet stayed on, wondering at myself. I thought of the
+measure with which I had meted to Catriona that same night; how I had
+prated of the two lives I carried, and had thus forced her to enjeopardy
+her father's; and how I was here exposing them again, it seemed in
+wantonness. A good conscience is eight parts of courage. No sooner had I
+lost conceit of my behaviour, than I seemed to stand disarmed amidst a
+throng of terrors. Of a sudden I sat up. How if I went now to
+Prestongrange, caught him (as I still easily might) before he slept, and
+made a full submission? Who could blame me? Not Stewart the writer; I
+had but to say that I was followed, despaired of getting clear, and so
+gave in. Not Catriona: here, too, I had my answer ready; that I could
+not bear she should expose her father. So, in a moment, I could lay all
+these troubles by, which were after all and truly none of mine; swim
+clear of the Appin murder; get forth out of handstroke of all the
+Stewarts and Campbells, all the whigs and tories, in the land; and live
+thenceforth to my own mind, and be able to enjoy and to improve my
+fortunes, and devote some hours of my youth to courting Catriona, which
+would be surely a more suitable occupation than to hide and run and be
+followed like a hunted thief, and begin over again the dreadful miseries
+of my escape with Alan.
+
+At first I thought no shame of this capitulation; I was only amazed I
+had not thought upon the thing and done it earlier; and began to inquire
+into the causes of the change. These I traced to my lowness of spirits,
+that back to my late recklessness, and that again to the common, old,
+public, disconsidered sin of self-indulgence. Instantly the text came in
+my head, "_How can Satan cast out Satan?_" What? (I thought) I had, by
+self-indulgence, and the following of pleasant paths, and the lure of a
+young maid, cast myself wholly out of conceit with my own character, and
+jeopardised the lives of James and Alan? And I was to seek the way out
+by the same road as I had entered in? No; the hurt that had been caused
+by self-indulgence must be cured by self-denial; the flesh I had
+pampered must be crucified. I looked about me for that course which I
+least liked to follow: this was to leave the wood without waiting to see
+Alan, and go forth again alone, in the dark and in the midst of my
+perplexed and dangerous fortunes.
+
+I have been the more careful to narrate this passage of my reflections,
+because I think it is of some utility, and may serve as an example to
+young men. But there is reason (they say) in planting kale, and even in
+ethic and religion, room for common sense. It was already close on
+Alan's hour, and the moon was down. If I left (as I could not very
+decently whistle to my spies to follow me) they might miss me in the
+dark and tack themselves to Alan by mistake. If I stayed, I could at the
+least of it set my friend upon his guard which might prove his mere
+salvation. I had adventured other peoples' safety in a course of
+self-indulgence; to have endangered them again, and now on a mere design
+of penance, would have been scarce rational. Accordingly, I had scarce
+risen from my place ere I sat down again, but already in a different
+frame of spirits, and equally marvelling at my past weakness and
+rejoicing in my present composure.
+
+Presently after came a crackling in the thicket. Putting my mouth near
+down to the ground, I whistled a note or two of Alan's air; an answer
+came, in the like guarded tone, and soon we had thralled together in the
+dark.
+
+"Is this you at last, Davie?" he whispered.
+
+"Just myself," said I.
+
+"God, man, but I've been wearying to see ye!" says he. "I've had the
+longest kind of a time. A' day, I've had my dwelling into the inside of
+a stack of hay, where I couldnae see the nebs of my ten fingers; and
+then two hours of it waiting here for you, and you never coming! Dod,
+and ye're none too soon the way it is, with me to sail the morn! The
+morn? what am I saying?--the day, I mean."
+
+"Ay, Alan, man, the day, sure enough," said I. "It's past twelve now,
+surely, and ye sail the day. This'll be a long road you have before
+you."
+
+"We'll have a long crack of it first," said he.
+
+"Well, indeed, and I have a good deal it will be telling you to hear,"
+said I.
+
+And I told him what behooved, making rather a jumble of it, but clear
+enough when done. He heard me out with very few questions, laughing here
+and there like a man delighted: and the sound of his laughing (above all
+there, in the dark, where neither one of us could see the other) was
+extraordinary friendly to my heart.
+
+"Ay, Davie, ye're a queer character," says he, when I had done: "a queer
+bitch after a', and I have no mind of meeting with the like of ye. As
+for your story, Prestongrange is a Whig like yoursel', so I'll say the
+less of him; and, dod! I believe he was the best friend ye had, if ye
+could only trust him. But Symon Fraser and James More are my ain kind of
+cattle, and I'll give them the name that they deserve. The muckle black
+de'il was father to the Frasers, a'body kens that; and as for the
+Gregara, I never could abye the reek of them since I could stotter on
+two feet. I bloodied the nose of one, I mind, when I was still so wambly
+on my legs that I cowped upon the top of him. A proud man was my father
+that day, God rest him! and I think he had the cause. I'll never can
+deny but what Robin was something of a piper," he added; "but as for
+James More, the de'il guide him for me!"
+
+"One thing we have to consider," said I. "Was Charles Stewart right or
+wrong? Is it only me they're after, or the pair of us?"
+
+"And what's your ain opinion, you that's a man of so much experience?"
+said he.
+
+"It passes me," said I.
+
+"And me too," says Alan. "Do ye think this lass would keep her word to
+ye?" he asked.
+
+"I do that," said I.
+
+"Well, there's nae telling," said he. "And anyway, that's over and done:
+he'll be joined to the rest of them lang syne."
+
+"How many would ye think there would be of them?" I asked.
+
+"That depends," said Alan. "If it was only you, they would likely send
+two-three lively, brisk young birkies, and if they thought that I was to
+appear in the employ, I daresay ten or twelve," said he.
+
+It was no use, I gave a little crack of laughter.
+
+"And I think your own two eyes will have seen me drive that number, or
+the double of it, nearer hand!" cries he.
+
+"It matters the less," said I, "because I am well rid of them for this
+time."
+
+"Nae doubt that's your opinion," said he; "but I wouldnae be the least
+surprised if they were hunkering this wood. Ye see, David man, they'll
+be Hieland folk. There'll be some Frasers, I'm thinking, and some of the
+Gregara; and I would never deny but what the both of them, and the
+Gregara in especial, were clever experienced persons. A man kens little
+till he's driven a spreagh of neat cattle (say) ten miles through a
+throng lowland country and the black soldiers maybe at his tail. It's
+there that I learned a great part of my penetration. And ye need nae
+tell me: it's better than war; which is the next best, however, though
+generally rather a bauchle of a business. Now the Gregara have had grand
+practice."
+
+"No doubt that's a branch of education that was left out with me," said
+I.
+
+"And I can see the marks of it upon ye constantly," said Alan. "But
+that's the strange thing about you folk of the college learning: ye're
+ignorant, and ye cannae see 't. Wae's me for my Greek and Hebrew; but,
+man, I ken that I dinnae ken them--there's the differ of it. Now, here's
+you. Ye lie on your wame a bittie in the bield of this wood, and ye tell
+me that ye've cuist off these Frasers and Macgregors. Why! _Because I
+couldnae see them_, says you. Ye blockhead, that's their livelihood."
+
+"Take the worst of it," said I, "and what are we to do?"
+
+"I am thinking of that same," said he. "We might twine. It wouldnae be
+greatly to my taste; and forbye that, I see reasons against it. First,
+it's now unco dark, and it's just humanly possible we might give them
+the clean slip. If we keep together, we make but the ae line of it; if
+we gang separate, we make twae of them: the more likelihood to stave in
+upon some of these gentry of yours. And then, second, if they keep the
+track of us, it may come to a fecht for it yet, Davie; and then, I'll
+confess I would be blythe to have you at my oxter, and I think you would
+be none the worse of having me at yours. So, by my way of it, we should
+creep out of this wood no further gone than just the inside of next
+minute, and hold away east for Gillane, where I'm to find my ship. It'll
+be like old days while it lasts, Davie; and (come the time) we'll have
+to think what you should be doing. I'm wae to leave ye here, wanting
+me."
+
+"Have with ye, then!" says I. "Do ye gang back where you were stopping."
+
+"De'il a fear!" said Alan. "They were good folks to me, but I think they
+would be a good deal disappointed if they saw my bonny face again. For
+(the way times go) I amnae just what ye could call a Walcome Guest.
+Which makes me the keener for your company, Mr. David Balfour of the
+Shaws, and set ye up! For, leave aside twa cracks here in the wood with
+Charlie Stewart, I have scarce said black or white since the day we
+parted at Corstorphine."
+
+With which he rose from his place, and we began to move quietly eastward
+through the wood.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ON THE MARCH AGAIN WITH ALAN
+
+
+It was likely between one and two; the moon (as I have said) was down; a
+strongish wind, carrying a heavy wrack of cloud, had set in suddenly
+from the west; and we began our movement in as black a night as ever a
+fugitive or a murderer wanted. The whiteness of the path guided us into
+the sleeping town of Broughton, thence through Picardy, and beside my
+old acquaintance the gibbet of the two thieves. A little beyond we made
+a useful beacon, which was a light in an upper window of Lochend.
+Steering by this, but a good deal at random, and with some trampling of
+the harvest, and stumbling and falling down upon the banks, we made our
+way across country, and won forth at last upon the linky, boggy muirland
+that they call the Figgate Whins. Here, under a bush of whin, we lay
+down the remainder of that night and slumbered.
+
+The day called us about five. A beautiful morning it was, the high
+westerly wind still blowing strong, but the clouds all blown away to
+Europe. Alan was already sitting up and smiling to himself. It was my
+first sight of my friend since we were parted, and I looked upon him
+with enjoyment. He had still the same big great-coat on his back; but
+(what was new) he had now a pair of knitted boot-hose drawn above the
+knee. Doubtless these were intended for disguise; but, as the day
+promised to be warm, he made a most unseasonable figure.
+
+"Well, Davie," said he, "is this no a bonny morning? Here is a day that
+looks the way that a day ought to. This is a great change of it from the
+belly of my haystack; and while you were there sottering and sleeping I
+have done a thing that maybe I do over seldom."
+
+"And what was that?" said I.
+
+"O, just said my prayers," said he.
+
+"And where are my gentry, as ye call them?" I asked.
+
+"Gude kens," says he; "and the short and the long of it is that we must
+take our chance of them. Up with your foot-soles, Davie! Forth, Fortune,
+once again of it! And a bonny walk we are like to have."
+
+So we went east by the beach of the sea, towards where the salt-pans
+were smoking in by the Esk mouth. No doubt there was a by-ordinary bonny
+blink of morning sun on Arthur's Seat and the green Pentlands; and the
+pleasantness of the day appeared to set Alan among nettles.
+
+"I feel like a gomeral," says he, "to be leaving Scotland on a day like
+this. It sticks in my head; I would maybe like it better to stay here
+and hing."
+
+"Ay, but ye wouldnae, Alan," said I.
+
+"No but what France is a good place too," he explained; "but it's some
+way no the same. It's brawer, I believe, but it's no Scotland. I like it
+fine when I'm there, man; yet I kind of weary for Scots divots and the
+Scots peat-reek."
+
+"If that's all you have to complain of, Alan, it's no such great
+affair," said I.
+
+"And it sets me ill to be complaining, whatever," said he, "and me but
+new out of yon de'il's haystack."
+
+"And so you were unco' weary of your haystack?" I asked.
+
+"Weary's nae word for it," said he. "I'm not just precisely a man that's
+easily cast down; but I do better with caller air and the lift above my
+head. I'm like the auld Black Douglas (wasnae't?) that likit better to
+hear the laverock sing than the mouse cheep. And yon place, ye see,
+Davie--whilk was a very suitable place to hide in, as I'm free to
+own--was pit mirk from dawn to gloaming. There were days (or nights, for
+how would I tell one from other?) that seemed to me as long as a long
+winter."
+
+"How did you know the hour to bide your tryst?" I asked.
+
+"The goodman brought me my meat and a drop brandy, and a candle-dowp to
+eat it by, about eleeven," said he. "So, when I had swallowed a bit, it
+would be time to be getting to the wood. There I lay and wearied for ye
+sore, Davie," says he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "and guessed when
+the two hours would be about by--unless Charlie Stewart would come and
+tell me on his watch--and then back to the dooms haystack. Na, it was a
+driech employ, and praise the Lord that I have warstled through with
+it!"
+
+"What did you do with yourself?" I asked.
+
+"Faith," said he, "the best I could! Whiles I played at the
+knucklebones. I'm an extraordinar good hand at the knucklebones, but
+it's a poor piece of business playing with naebody to admire ye. And
+whiles I would make songs."
+
+"What were they about?" says I.
+
+"O, about the deer and the heather," says he, "and about the ancient old
+chiefs that are all by with it long syne, and just about what songs are
+about in general. And then whiles I would make believe I had a set of
+pipes and I was playing. I played some grand springs, and I thought I
+played them awful bonny; I vow whiles that I could hear the squeal of
+them! But the great affair is that it's done with."
+
+With that he carried me again to my adventures, which he heard all over
+again with more particularity, and extraordinary approval, swearing at
+intervals that I was "a queer character of a callant."
+
+"So ye were frich'ened of Sym Fraser?" he asked once.
+
+"In troth was I!" cried I.
+
+"So would I have been, Davie," said he. "And that is indeed a dreidful
+man. But it is only proper to give the de'il his due; and I can tell you
+he is a most respectable person on the field of war."
+
+"Is he so brave?" I asked.
+
+"Brave!" said he. "He is as brave as my steel sword."
+
+The story of my duel set him beside himself.
+
+"To think of that!" he cried. "I showed ye the trick in Corrynakiegh
+too. And three times--three times disarmed! It's a disgrace upon my
+character that learned ye! Here, stand up, out with your airn; ye shall
+walk no step beyond this place upon the road till ye can do yoursel' and
+me mair credit."
+
+"Alan," said I, "this is midsummer madness. Here is no time for fencing
+lessons."
+
+"I cannae well say no to that," he admitted. "But three times, man! And
+you standing there like a straw bogle and rinning to fetch your ain
+sword like a doggie with a pocket-napkin! David, this man Duncansby must
+be something altogether by-ordinar! He maun be extraordinar skilly. If I
+had the time, I would gang straight back and try a turn at him mysel'.
+The man must be a provost."
+
+"You silly fellow," said I, "you forget it was just me."
+
+"Na," said he, "but three times!"
+
+"When ye ken yourself that I am fair incompetent," I cried.
+
+"Well, I never heard tell the equal of it," said he.
+
+"I promise you the one thing, Alan," said I. "The next time that we
+forgather, I'll be better learned. You shall not continue to bear the
+disgrace of a friend that cannot strike."
+
+"Ay, the next time!" says he. "And when will that be, I would like to
+ken?"
+
+"Well, Alan, I have had some thoughts of that, too," said I; "and my
+plan is this. It's my opinion to be called an advocate."
+
+"That's but a weary trade, Davie," says Alan, "and rather a blagyard one
+forby. Ye would be better in a king's coat than that."
+
+"And no doubt that would be the way to have us meet," cried I. "But as
+you'll be in King Lewie's coat, and I'll be in King Geordie's, we'll
+have a dainty meeting of it."
+
+"There's some sense in that," he admitted.
+
+"An advocate, then, it'll have to be," I continued, "and I think it a
+more suitable trade for a gentleman that was _three times_ disarmed. But
+the beauty of the thing is this: that one of the best colleges for that
+kind of learning--and the one where my kinsman, Pilrig, made his
+studies--is the college of Leyden in Holland. Now, what say you, Alan?
+Could not a cadet of _Royal Ecossais_ get a furlough, slip over the
+marches, and call in upon a Leyden student!"
+
+"Well, and I would think he could!" cried he. "Ye see, I stand well in
+with my colonel, Count Drummond-Melfort; and, what's mair to the
+purpose, I have a cousin of mine lieutenant-colonel in a regiment of the
+Scots-Dutch. Naething could be mair proper than what I would get a leave
+to see Lieutenant-Colonel Stewart of Halkett's. And Lord Melfort, who is
+a very scienteefic kind of a man, and writes books like Caesar, would be
+doubtless very pleased to have the advantage of my observes."
+
+"Is Lord Melfort an author, then?" I asked, for much as Alan thought of
+soldiers, I thought more of the gentry that write books.
+
+"The very same, Davie," said he. "One would think a colonel would have
+something better to attend to. But what can I say that make songs?"
+
+"Well, then," said I, "it only remains you should give me an address to
+write you at in France; and as soon as I am got to Leyden I will send
+you mine."
+
+"The best will be to write me in the care of my chieftain," said he,
+"Charles Stewart, of Ardsheil, Esquire, at the town of Melons, in the
+Isle of France. It might take long, or it might take short, but it would
+aye get to my hands at the last of it."
+
+We had a haddock to our breakfast in Musselburgh, where it amused me
+vastly to hear Alan. His great-coat and boot-hose were extremely
+remarkable this warm morning, and perhaps some hint of an explanation
+had been wise; but Alan went into that matter like a business, or I
+should rather say, like a diversion. He engaged the goodwife of the
+house with some compliments upon the rizzoring of our haddocks; and the
+whole of the rest of our stay held her in talk about a cold he had taken
+on his stomach, gravely relating all manner of symptoms and sufferings,
+and hearing with a vast show of interest all the old wives' remedies she
+could supply him with in return.
+
+We left Musselburgh before the first ninepenny coach was due from
+Edinburgh, for (as Alan said) that was a rencounter we might very well
+avoid. The wind, although still high, was very mild, the sun shone
+strong, and Alan began to suffer in proportion. From Prestonpans he had
+me aside to the field of Gladsmuir, where he exerted himself a great
+deal more than needful to describe the stages of the battle. Thence, at
+his old round pace, we travelled to Cockenzie. Though they were building
+herring-busses there at Mrs. Cadell's, it seemed a desert-like,
+back-going town, about half full of ruined houses; but the ale-house was
+clean, and Alan, who was now in a glowing heat, must indulge himself
+with a bottle of ale, and carry on to the new luckie with the old story
+of the cold upon his stomach, only now the symptoms were all different.
+
+I sat listening; and it came in my mind that I had scarce ever heard him
+address three serious words to any woman, but he was always drolling and
+fleering and making a private mock of them, and yet brought to that
+business a remarkable degree of energy and interest. Something to this
+effect I remarked to him, when the good wife (as chanced) was called
+away.
+
+"What do ye want?" says he. "A man should aye put his best foot forrit
+with the womenkind; he should aye give them a bit of a story to divert
+them, the poor lambs! It's what ye should learn to attend to, David; ye
+should get the principles, it's like a trade. Now, if this had been a
+young lassie, or onyways bonnie, she would never have heard tell of my
+stomach, Davie. But aince they're too old to be seeking joes, they a'
+set up to be apotecaries. Why? What do I ken? They'll be just the way
+God made them, I suppose. But I think a man would be a gomeral that
+didnae give his attention to the same."
+
+And here, the luckie coming back, he turned from me as if with
+impatience to renew their former conversation. The lady had branched
+some while before from Alan's stomach to the case of a goodbrother of
+her own in Aberlady, whose last sickness and demise she was describing
+at extraordinary length. Sometimes it was merely dull, sometimes both
+dull and awful, for she talked with unction. The upshot was that I fell
+in a deep muse, looking forth of the window on the road, and scarce
+marking what I saw. Presently had any been looking they might have seen
+me to start.
+
+"We pit a fomentation to his feet," the goodwife was saying, "and a het
+stane to his wame, and we gied him hyssop and water of pennyroyal, and
+fine, clean balsam of sulphur for the hoast...."
+
+"Sir," says I, cutting very quietly in, "there's a friend of mine gone
+by the house."
+
+"Is that e'en sae?" replies Alan, as though it were a thing of
+small-account. And then, "Ye were saying, mem?" says he; and the
+wearyful wife went on.
+
+Presently, however, he paid her with a half-crown piece, and she must go
+forth after the change.
+
+"Was it him with the red head?" asked Alan.
+
+"Ye have it," said I.
+
+"What did I tell you in the wood?" he cried. "And yet it's strange he
+should be here too! Was he his lane?"
+
+"His lee-lane for what I could see," said I.
+
+"Did he gang by?" he asked.
+
+"Straight by," said I, "and looked neither to the right nor left."
+
+"And that's queerer yet," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind, Davie, that
+we should be stirring. But where to?--deil hae't! This is like old days
+fairly," cries he.
+
+"There is one big differ, though," said I, "that now we have money in
+our pockets."
+
+"And another big differ, Mr. Balfour," says he, "that now we have dogs
+at our tail. They're on the scent; they're in full cry, David. It's a
+bad business and be damned to it." And he sat thinking hard with a look
+of his that I knew well.
+
+"I'm saying, Luckie," says he, when the goodwife returned, "have ye a
+back road out of this change house?"
+
+She told him there was and where it led to.
+
+"Then, sir," says he to me, "I think that will be the shortest road for
+us. And here's good-bye to ye, my braw woman; and I'll no forget thon of
+the cinnamon water."
+
+We went out by way of the woman's kale yard, and up a lane among fields.
+Alan looked sharply to all sides, and seeing we were in a little hollow
+place of the country, out of view of men, sat down.
+
+"Now for a council of war, Davie," said he. "But first of all, a bit
+lesson to ye. Suppose that I had been like you, what would yon old wife
+have minded of the pair of us? Just that we had gone out by the back
+gate. And what does she mind now? A fine, canty, friendly, cracky man,
+that suffered with the stomach, poor body! and was real ta'en up about
+the goodbrother. O man, David, try and learn to have some kind of
+intelligence!"
+
+"I'll try, Alan," said I.
+
+"And now for him of the red head," says he; "was he gaun fast or slow?"
+
+"Betwixt and between," said I.
+
+"No kind of a hurry about the man?" he asked.
+
+"Never a sign of it," said I.
+
+"Nhm!" said Alan, "it looks queer. We saw nothing of them this morning
+on the Whins; he's passed us by, he doesnae seem to be looking, and yet
+here he is on our road! Dod, Davie, I begin to take a notion. I think
+it's no you they're seeking, I think it's me; and I think they ken fine
+where they're gaun."
+
+"They ken?" I asked.
+
+"I think Andie Scougal's sold me--him or his mate wha kent some part of
+the affair--or else Chairlie's clerk callant, which would be a pity
+too," says Alan; "and if you askit me for just my inward private
+conviction, I think there'll be heads cracked on Gillane sands."
+
+"Alan," I cried, "if you're at all right there'll be folk there and to
+spare. It'll be small service to crack heads."
+
+"It would aye be a satisfaction though," says Alan. "But bide a bit,
+bide a bit; I'm thinking--and thanks to this bonny westland wind, I
+believe I've still a chance of it. It's this way, Davie. I'm no trysted
+with this man Scougal till the gloaming comes. _But_," says he, "_if I
+can get a bit of a wind out of the west I'll be there long or that_," he
+says, "_and lie-to for ye behind the Isle of Fidra_. Now if your gentry
+kens the place, they ken the time forbye. Do ye see me coming, Davie?
+Thanks to Johnnie Cope and other red-coat gomerals, I should ken this
+country like the back of my hand; and if ye're ready for another bit run
+with Alan Breck, we'll can cast back inshore, and come down to the
+seaside again by Dirleton. If the ship's there, we'll try and get on
+board of her. If she's no there, I'll just have to get back to my weary
+haystack. But either way of it, I think we will leave your gentry
+whistling on their thumbs."
+
+"I believe there's some chance in it," said I. "Have on with ye, Alan!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+GILLANE SANDS
+
+
+I did not profit by Alan's pilotage as he had done by his marchings
+under General Cope; for I can scarce tell what way we went. It is my
+excuse that we travelled exceeding fast. Some part we ran, some trotted,
+and the rest walked at a vengeance of a pace. Twice, while we were at
+top speed, we ran against country-folk; but though we plumped into the
+first from round a corner, Alan was as ready as a loaded musket.
+
+"Hae ye seen my horse?" he gasped.
+
+"Na, man, I haenae seen nae horse the day," replied the countryman.
+
+And Alan spared the time to explain to him that we were travelling "ride
+and tie"; that our charger had escaped, and it was feared he had gone
+home to Linton. Not only that, but he expended some breath (of which he
+had not very much left) to curse his own misfortune and my stupidity
+which was said to be its cause.
+
+"Them that cannae tell the truth," he observed to myself as we went on
+again, "should be aye mindfu' to leave an honest, handy lee behind them.
+If folk dinnae ken what ye're doing, Davie, they're terrible taken up
+with it; but if they think they ken, they care nae mair for it than what
+I do for pease porridge."
+
+As we had first made inland, so our road came in the end to lie very
+near due north; the old Kirk of Aberlady for a landmark on the left; on
+the right, the top of the Berwick Law; and it was thus we struck the
+shore again, not far from Dirleton. From North Berwick west to Gillane
+Ness there runs a string of four small islets, Craiglieth, the Lamb,
+Fidra, and Eyebrough, notable by their diversity of size and shape.
+Fidra is the most particular, being a strange grey islet of two humps,
+made the more conspicuous by a piece of ruin; and I mind that (as we
+drew closer to it) by some door or window of these ruins the sea peeped
+through like a man's eye. Under the lee of Fidra there is a good
+anchorage in westerly winds, and there, from a far way off, we could see
+the _Thistle_ riding.
+
+The shore in face of these islets is altogether waste. Here is no
+dwelling of man, and scarce any passage, or at most of vagabond children
+running at their play. Gillane is a small place on the far side of the
+Ness, the folk of Dirleton go to their business in the inland fields,
+and those of North Berwick straight to the sea-fishing from their haven;
+so that few parts of the coast are lonelier. But I mind, as we crawled
+upon our bellies into that multiplicity of heights and hollows, keeping
+a bright eye upon all sides, and our hearts hammering at our ribs, there
+was such a shining of the sun and the sea, such a stir of the wind in
+the bent grass, and such a bustle of down-popping rabbits and up-flying
+gulls, that the desert seemed to me like a place alive. No doubt it was
+in all ways well chosen for a secret embarcation, if the secret had been
+kept; and even now that it was out, and the place watched, we were able
+to creep unperceived to the front of the sandhills, where they look down
+immediately on the beach and sea.
+
+But here Alan came to a full stop.
+
+"Davie," said he, "this is a kittle passage! As long as we lie here
+we're safe; but I'm nane sae muckle nearer to my ship or the coast of
+France. And as soon as we stand up and signal the brig, it's another
+matter. For where will your gentry be, think ye?"
+
+"Maybe they're no come yet," said I. "And even if they are, there's one
+clear matter in our favour. They'll be all arranged to take us, that's
+true. But they'll have arranged for our coming from the east, and here
+we are upon their west."
+
+"Ay," says Alan, "I wish we were in some force, and this was a battle,
+we would have bonnily out-manoeuvred them! But it isnae, Davit; and the
+way it is, is a wee thing less inspiring to Alan Breck. I swither,
+Davie."
+
+"Time flies, Alan," said I.
+
+"I ken that," said Alan. "I ken naething else, as the French folk say.
+But this is a dreidful case of heids or tails. O! if I could but ken
+where your gentry were!"
+
+"Alan," said I, "this is no like you. It's got to be now or never."
+
+ "This is no me, quo' he,"
+
+sang Alan, with a queer face betwixt shame and drollery.
+
+ "Neither you nor me, quo' he, neither you nor me,
+ Wow, na, Johnnie man! neither you nor me."
+
+And then of a sudden he stood straight up where he was, and with a
+handkerchief flying in his right hand, marched down upon the beach. I
+stood up myself, but lingered behind him, scanning the sandhills to the
+east. His appearance was at first unremarked: Scougal not expecting him
+so early, and _my gentry_ watching on the other side. Then they awoke on
+board the _Thistle_, and it seemed they had all in readiness, for there
+was scarce a second's bustle on the deck before we saw a skiff put round
+her stern and begin to pull lively for the coast. Almost at the same
+moment of time, and perhaps half a mile away towards Gillane Ness, the
+figure of a man appeared for a blink upon a sandhill, waving with his
+arms; and though he was gone again in the same flash, the gulls in that
+part continued a little longer to fly wild.
+
+Alan had not seen this, looking straight to seaward at the ship and
+skiff.
+
+"It maun be as it will!" said he, when I had told him. "Weel may yon
+boatie row, or my craig'll have to thole a raxing."
+
+That part of the beach was long and flat, and excellent walking when the
+tide was down; a little cressy burn flowed over it in one place to the
+sea; and the sandhills ran along the head of it like the rampart of a
+town. No eye of ours could spy what was passing behind there in the
+bents, no hurry of ours could mend the speed of the boat's coming: time
+stood still with us through that uncanny period of waiting.
+
+"There is one thing I would like to ken," says Alan. "I would like fine
+to ken these gentry's orders. We're worth four hunner pound the pair of
+us: how if they took the guns to us, Davie? They would get a bonny shot
+from the top of that lang sandy bank."
+
+"Morally impossible," said I. "The point is that they can have no guns.
+This thing has been gone about too secret; pistols they may have, but
+never guns."
+
+"I believe ye'll be in the right," says Alan. "For all which I am
+wearying a good deal for yon boat."
+
+And he snapped his fingers and whistled to it like a dog.
+
+It was now perhaps a third of the way in, and we ourselves already hard
+on the margin of the sea, so that the soft sand rose over my shoes.
+There was no more to do whatever but to wait, to look as much as we were
+able at the creeping nearer of the boat, and as little as we could
+manage at the long impenetrable front of the sandhills, over which the
+gulls twinkled and behind which our enemies were doubtless marshalling.
+
+"This is a fine, bright, caller place to get shot in," says Alan,
+suddenly; "and, man, I wish that I had your courage!"
+
+"Alan!" I cried, "what kind of talk is this of it? You're just made of
+courage; it's the character of the man, as I could prove myself if there
+was nobody else."
+
+"And you would be the more mistaken," said he. "What makes the differ
+with me is just my great penetration and knowledge of affairs. But for
+auld, cauld, dour, deidly courage, I am not fit to hold a candle to
+yourself. Look at us two here upon the sands. Here am I, fair hotching
+to be off; here's you (for all that I ken) in two minds of it whether
+you'll no stop. Do you think that I could do that, or would? No me!
+Firstly, because I havenae got the courage and wouldnae daur; and
+secondly, because I am a man of so much penetration and would see ye
+damned first."
+
+"It's there ye're coming, is it?" I cried. "Ah, man Alan, you can wile
+your old wives, but you never can wile me."
+
+Remembrance of my temptation in the wood made me strong as iron.
+
+"I have a tryst to keep," I continued. "I am trysted with your cousin
+Charlie; I have passed my word."
+
+"Braw trysts that you'll can keep," said Alan. "Ye'll just mistryst
+aince and for a' with the gentry in the bents. And what for?" he went on
+with an extreme threatening gravity. "Just tell me that, my mannie! Are
+ye to be speerited away like Lady Grange? Are they to drive a dirk in
+your inside and bury ye in the bents? Or is it to be the other way, and
+are they to bring ye in with James? Are they folk to be trustit? Would
+ye stick your head in the mouth of Sim Fraser and the ither Whigs?" he
+added with extraordinary bitterness.
+
+"Alan," cried I, "they're all rogues and liars, and I'm with ye there.
+The more reason there should be one decent man in such a land of
+thieves! My word is passed, and I'll stick to it. I said long syne to
+your kinswoman that I would stumble at no risk. Do ye mind of that?--the
+night Red Colin fell, it was. No more I will, then. Here I stop.
+Prestongrange promised me my life; if he's to be mansworn, here I'll
+have to die."
+
+"Aweel, aweel," said Alan.
+
+All this time we had seen or heard no more of our pursuers. In truth we
+had caught them unawares; their whole party (as I was to learn
+afterwards) had not yet reached the scene; what there was of them was
+spread among the bents towards Gillane. It was quite an affair to call
+them in and bring them over, and the boat was making speed. They were
+besides but cowardly fellows: a mere leash of Highland cattle thieves,
+of several clans, no gentleman there to be the captain: and the more
+they looked at Alan and me upon the beach, the less (I must suppose)
+they liked the looks of us.
+
+Whoever had betrayed Alan it was not the captain: he was in the skiff
+himself, steering and stirring up his oarsmen, like a man with his heart
+in his employ. Already he was near in, and the boat scouring--already
+Alan's face had flamed crimson with the excitement of his deliverance,
+when our friends in the bents, either in despair to see their prey
+escape them or with some hope of scaring Andie, raised suddenly a shrill
+cry of several voices.
+
+This sound, arising from what appeared to be a quite deserted coast, was
+really very daunting, and the men in the boat held water instantly.
+
+"What's this of it?" sings out the captain, for he was come within an
+easy hail.
+
+"Freens o' mine," says Alan, and began immediately to wade forth in the
+shallow water towards the boat. "Davie," he said, pausing, "Davie, are
+ye no coming? I am swier to leave ye."
+
+"Not a hair of me," said I.
+
+He stood part of a second where he was to his knees in the salt water,
+hesitating.
+
+"He that will to Cupar, maun to Cupar," said he, and swashing in deeper
+than his waist, was hauled into the skiff, which was immediately
+directed for the ship.
+
+I stood where he had left me, with my hands behind my back; Alan sat
+with his head turned watching me; and the boat drew smoothly away. Of a
+sudden I came the nearest hand to shedding tears, and seemed to myself
+the most deserted, solitary lad in Scotland. With that I turned my back
+upon the sea and faced the sand hills. There was no sight or sound of
+man; the sun shone on the wet sand and the dry, the wind blew in the
+bents, the gulls made a dreary piping. As I passed higher up the beach,
+the sand-lice were hopping nimbly about the stranded tangles. The devil
+any other sight or sound in that unchancy place. And yet I knew there
+were folk there, observing me, upon some secret purpose. They were no
+soldiers, or they would have fallen on and taken us ere now; doubtless
+they were some common rogues hired for my undoing, perhaps to kidnap,
+perhaps to murder me outright. From the position of those engaged, the
+first was the more likely; from what I knew of their character and
+ardency in this business, I thought the second very possible; and the
+blood ran cold about my heart.
+
+I had a mad idea to loosen my sword in the scabbard; for though I was
+very unfit to stand up like a gentleman blade to blade, I thought I
+could do some scathe in a random combat. But I perceived in time the
+folly of resistance. This was no doubt the joint "expedient" on which
+Prestongrange and Fraser were agreed. The first, I was very sure, had
+done something to secure my life; the second was pretty likely to have
+slipped in some contrary hints into the ears of Neil and his companions;
+and if I were to show bare steel I might play straight into the hands of
+my worst enemy and seal my own doom.
+
+These thoughts brought me to the head of the beach. I cast a look
+behind, the boat was nearing the brig, and Alan flew his handkerchief
+for a farewell, which I replied to with the waving of my hand. But Alan
+himself was shrunk to a small thing in my view, alongside of this pass
+that lay in front of me. I set my hat hard on my head, clenched my
+teeth, and went right before me up the face of the sand-wreath. It made
+a hard climb, being steep, and the sand like water underfoot. But I
+caught hold at last by the long bent grass on the brae-top, and pulled
+myself to a good footing. The same moment men stirred and stood up here
+and there, six or seven of them, ragged-like knaves, each with a dagger
+in his hand. The fair truth is, I shut my eyes and prayed. When I opened
+them again, the rogues were crept the least thing nearer without speech
+or hurry. Every eye was upon mine, which struck me with a strange
+sensation of their brightness, and of the fear with which they continued
+to approach me. I held out my hands empty: whereupon one asked, with a
+strong Highland brogue, if I surrendered.
+
+"Under protest," said I, "if ye ken what that means, which I misdoubt."
+
+At that word, they came all in upon me like a flight of birds upon a
+carrion, seized me, took my sword, and all the money from my pockets,
+bound me hand and foot with some strong line, and cast me on a tussock
+of bent. There they sat about their captive in a part of a circle and
+gazed upon him silently like something dangerous, perhaps a lion or a
+tiger on the spring. Presently this attention was relaxed. They drew
+nearer together, fell to speech in the Gaelic, and very cynically
+divided my property before my eyes. It was my diversion in this time
+that I could watch from my place the progress of my friend's escape. I
+saw the boat come to the brig and be hoisted in, the sails fill, and the
+ship pass out seaward behind the isles and by North Berwick.
+
+In the course of two hours or so, more and more ragged Highlandmen kept
+collecting, Neil among the first, until the party must have numbered
+near a score. With each new arrival there was a fresh bout of talk, that
+sounded like complaints and explanations; but I observed one thing, none
+of those that came late had any share in the division of my spoils. The
+last discussion was very violent and eager, so that once I thought they
+would have quarrelled; on the heels of which their company parted, the
+bulk of them returning westward in a troop, and only three, Neil and two
+others, remaining sentries on the prisoner.
+
+"I could name one who would be very ill pleased with your day's work,
+Neil Duncanson," said I, when the rest had moved away.
+
+He assured me in answer I should be tenderly used, for he knew he was
+"acquent wi' the leddy."
+
+This was all our talk, nor did any other son of man appear upon that
+portion of the coast until the sun had gone down among the Highland
+mountains, and the gloaming was beginning to grow dark. At which hour I
+was aware of a long, lean, bony-like Lothian man of a very swarthy
+countenance, that came towards us among the bents on a farm horse.
+
+"Lads," cried he, "hae ye a paper like this?" and held up one in his
+hand. Neil produced a second, which the new comer studied through a pair
+of horn spectacles, and saying all was right and we were the folk he was
+seeking, immediately dismounted. I was then set in his place, my feet
+tied under the horse's belly, and we set forth under the guidance of the
+Lowlander. His path must have been very well chosen, for we met but one
+pair--a pair of lovers--the whole way, and these, perhaps taking us to
+be free-traders, fled on our approach. We were at one time close at the
+foot of Berwick Law on the south side; at another, as we passed over
+some open hills, I spied the lights of a clachan and the old tower of a
+church among some trees not far off, but too far to cry for help, if I
+had dreamed of it. At last we came again within sound of the sea. There
+was moonlight, though not much; and by this I could see the three huge
+towers and broken battlements of Tantallon, that old chief place of the
+Red Douglases. The horse was picketed in the bottom of the ditch to
+graze, and I was led within, and forth into the court, and thence into a
+tumble-down stone hall. Here my conductors built a brisk fire in the
+midst of the pavement, for there was a chill in the night. My hands were
+loosed, I was set by the wall in the inner end, and (the Lowlander
+having produced provisions) I was given oatmeal bread and a pitcher of
+French brandy. This done, I was left once more alone with my three
+Highlandmen. They sat close by the fire drinking and talking; the wind
+blew in by the breaches, cast about the smoke and flames, and sang in
+the tops of the towers; I could hear the sea under the cliffs, and my
+mind being reassured as to my life, and my body and spirits wearied with
+the day's employment, I turned upon one side and slumbered.
+
+I had no means of guessing at what hour I was wakened, only the moon was
+down and the fire low. My feet were now loosed, and I was carried
+through the ruins and down the cliff-side by a precipitous path to where
+I found a fisher's boat in a haven of the rocks. This I was had on board
+of, and we began to put forth from the shore in a fine starlight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE BASS
+
+
+I had no thought where they were taking me; only looked here and there
+for the appearance of a ship; and there ran the while in my head a word
+of Ransome's--the _twenty-pounders_. If I were to be exposed a second
+time to that same former danger of the plantations, I judged it must
+turn ill with me; there was no second Alan, and no second shipwreck and
+spare yard to be expected now; and I saw myself hoe tobacco under the
+whip's lash. The thought chilled me; the air was sharp upon the water,
+the stretchers of the boat drenched with a cold dew; and I shivered in
+my place beside the steersman. This was the dark man whom I have called
+hitherto the Lowlander; his name was Dale, ordinarily called Black
+Andie. Feeling the thrill of my shiver, he very kindly handed me a rough
+jacket full of fish-scales, with which I was glad to cover myself.
+
+"I thank you for this kindness," said I, "and will make so free as to
+repay it with a warning. You take a high responsibility in this affair.
+You are not like these ignorant, barbarous Highlanders, but know what
+the law is and the risks of those that break it."
+
+"I am no just exactly what ye would ca' an extremist for the law," says
+he, "at the best of times; but in this business I act with a good
+warranty."
+
+"What are you going to do with me?" I asked.
+
+"Nae harm," said he, "nae harm ava'. Ye'll hae strong freens, I'm
+thinking. Ye'll be richt eneuch yet."
+
+There began to fall a greyness on the face of the sea; little dabs of
+pink and like coals of slow fire came in the east; and at the same time
+the geese awakened, and began crying about the top of the Bass. It is
+just the one crag of rock, as everybody knows, but great enough to carve
+a city from. The sea was extremely little, but there went a hollow
+plowter round the base of it. With the growing of the dawn I could see
+it clearer and clearer; the straight crags painted with sea-birds'
+droppings like a morning frost, the sloping top of it green with grass,
+the clan of white geese that cried about the sides, and the black,
+broken buildings of the prison sitting close on the sea's edge.
+
+At the sight the truth came in upon me in a clap.
+
+"It's there you're taking me!" I cried.
+
+"Just to the Bass, mannie," said he: "whaur the auld sants were afore
+ye, and I misdoubt if ye have come so fairly by your preeson."
+
+"But none dwells there now," I cried; "the place is long a ruin."
+
+"It'll be the mair pleisand a change for the solan geese, then," quoth
+Andie dryly.
+
+The day coming slowly brighter I observed on the bilge, among the big
+stones with which fisherfolk ballast their boats, several kegs and
+baskets, and a provision of fuel. All these were discharged upon the
+crag. Andie, myself, and my three Highlanders (I call them mine,
+although it was the other way about), landed along with them. The sun
+was not yet up when the boat moved away again, the noise of the oars on
+the thole-pins echoing from the cliffs, and left us in our singular
+reclusion.
+
+Andie Dale was the Prefect (as I would jocularly call him) of the Bass,
+being at once the shepherd and the gamekeeper of that small and rich
+estate. He had to mind the dozen or so of sheep that fed and fattened on
+the grass of the sloping part of it, like beasts grazing the roof of a
+cathedral. He had charge besides of the solan geese that roosted in the
+crags; and from these an extraordinary income is derived. The young are
+dainty eating, as much as two shillings a-piece being a common price,
+and paid willingly by epicures; even the grown birds are valuable for
+their oil and feathers; and a part of the minister's stipend of North
+Berwick is paid to this day in solan geese, which makes it (in some
+folks' eyes) a parish to be coveted. To perform these several
+businesses, as well as to protect the geese from poachers, Andie had
+frequent occasion to sleep and pass days together on the crag; and we
+found the man at home there like a farmer in his steading. Bidding us
+all shoulder some of the packages, a matter in which I made haste to
+bear a hand, he led us in by a locked gate, which was the only admission
+to the island, and through the ruins of the fortress, to the governor's
+house. There we saw, by the ashes in the chimney and a standing
+bed-place in one corner, that he made his usual occupation.
+
+This bed he now offered me to use, saying he supposed I would set up to
+be gentry.
+
+"My gentrice has nothing to do with where I lie," said I. "I bless God I
+have lain hard ere now, and can do the same again with thankfulness.
+While I am here, Mr. Andie, if that be your name, I will do my part and
+take my place beside the rest of you; and I ask you on the other hand to
+spare me your mockery, which I own I like ill."
+
+He grumbled a little at this speech, but seemed upon reflection to
+approve it. Indeed, he was a long-headed, sensible man, and a good Whig
+and Presbyterian; read daily in a pocket Bible, and was both able and
+eager to converse seriously on religion, leaning more than a little
+towards the Cameronian extremes. His morals were of a more doubtful
+colour. I found he was deep in the free trade, and used the ruins of
+Tantallon for a magazine of smuggled merchandise. As for a gauger, I do
+not believe he valued the life of one at half-a-farthing. But that part
+of the coast of Lothian is to this day as wild a place, and the commons
+there as rough a crew as any in Scotland.
+
+One incident of my imprisonment is made memorable by a consequence it
+had long after. There was a warship at this time stationed in the Firth,
+the _Seahorse_, Captain Palliser. It chanced she was cruising in the
+month of September, plying between Fife and Lothian, and sounding for
+sunk dangers. Early one fine morning she was seen about two miles to
+east of us, where she lowered a boat, and seemed to examine the Wildfire
+Rocks and Satan's Bush, famous dangers of that coast. And presently,
+after having got her boat again, she came before the wind and was headed
+directly for the Bass. This was very troublesome to Andie and the
+Highlanders; the whole business of my sequestration was designed for
+privacy, and here, with a navy captain perhaps blundering ashore, it
+looked to become public enough, if it were nothing worse. I was in a
+minority of one, I am no Alan to fall upon so many, and I was far from
+sure that a warship was the least likely to improve my condition. All
+which considered, I gave Andie my parole of good behaviour and
+obedience, and was had briskly to the summit of the rock, where we all
+lay down, at the cliff's edge, in different places of observation and
+concealment. The _Seahorse_ came straight on till I thought she would
+have struck, and we (looking giddily down) could see the ship's company
+at their quarters and hear the leadsman singing at the lead. Then she
+suddenly wore and let fly a volley of I know not how many great guns.
+The rock was shaken with the thunder of the sound, the smoke flowed over
+our heads, and the geese rose in number beyond computation or belief. To
+hear their screaming and to see the twinkling of their wings, made a
+most inimitable curiosity: and I suppose it was after this somewhat
+childish pleasure that Captain Palliser had come so near the Bass. He
+was to pay dear for it in time. During his approach I had the
+opportunity to make a remark upon the rigging of that ship by which I
+ever after knew it miles away; and this was a means (under Providence)
+of my averting from a friend a great calamity, and inflicting on Captain
+Palliser himself a sensible disappointment.
+
+All the time of my stay on the rock we lived well. We had small ale and
+brandy, and oatmeal of which we made our porridge night and morning. At
+times a boat came from the Castleton and brought us a quarter of mutton,
+for the sheep upon the rock we must not touch, these being specially fed
+to market. The geese were unfortunately out of season, and we let them
+be. We fished ourselves, and yet more often made the geese to fish for
+us: observing one when he had made a capture and scaring him from his
+prey ere he had swallowed it.
+
+The strange nature of this place, and the curiosities with which it
+abounded, held me busy and amused. Escape being impossible, I was
+allowed my entire liberty, and continually explored the surface of the
+isle wherever it might support the foot of man. The old garden of the
+prison was still to be observed, with flowers and pot-herbs running
+wild, and some ripe cherries on a bush. A little lower stood a chapel or
+a hermit's cell; who built or dwelt in it, none may know, and the
+thought of its age made a ground of many meditations. The prison too,
+where I now bivouacked with Highland cattle thieves, was a place full of
+history, both human and divine. I thought it strange so many saints and
+martyrs should have gone by there so recently, and left not so much as a
+leaf out of their Bibles, or a name carved upon the wall, while the
+rough soldier lads that mounted guard upon the battlements had filled
+the neighbourhood with their mementoes--broken tobacco-pipes for the
+most part, and that in a surprising plenty, but also metal buttons from
+their coats. There were times when I thought I could have heard the
+pious sound of psalms out of the martyrs' dungeons, and seen the
+soldiers tramp the ramparts with their glinting pipes, and the dawn
+rising behind them out of the North Sea.
+
+No doubt it was a good deal Andie and his tales that put these fancies
+in my head. He was extraordinary well acquainted with the story of the
+rock in all particulars, down to the names of private soldiers, his
+father having served there in that same capacity. He was gifted besides
+with a natural genius for narration, so that the people seemed to speak
+and the things to be done before your face. This gift of his and my
+assiduity to listen brought us the more close together. I could not
+honestly deny but what I liked him; I soon saw that he liked me; and
+indeed, from the first I had set myself out to capture his good will. An
+odd circumstance (to be told presently) effected this beyond my
+expectation; but even in early days we made a friendly pair to be a
+prisoner and his gaoler.
+
+I should trifle with my conscience if I pretended my stay upon the Bass
+was wholly disagreeable. It seemed to me a safe place, as though I was
+escaped there out of my troubles. No harm was to be offered me; a
+material impossibility, rock and the deep sea, prevented me from fresh
+attempts; I felt I had my life safe and my honour safe, and there were
+times when I allowed myself to gloat on them like stolen waters. At
+other times my thoughts were very different. I recalled how strong I had
+expressed myself both to Rankeillor and to Stewart; I reflected that my
+captivity upon the Bass, in view of a great part of the coasts of Fife
+and Lothian, was a thing I should be thought more likely to have
+invented than endured; and in the eyes of these two gentlemen, at least,
+I must pass for a boaster and a coward. Now I would take this lightly
+enough; tell myself that so long as I stood well with Catriona Drummond,
+the opinion of the rest of man was but moonshine and spilled water; and
+thence pass off into those meditations of a lover which are so
+delightful to himself and must always appear so surprisingly idle to a
+reader. But anon the fear would take me otherwise; I would be shaken
+with a perfect panic of self-esteem, and these supposed hard judgments
+appear an injustice impossible to be supported. With that another train
+of thought would be presented, and I had scarce begun to be concerned
+about men's judgments of myself, than I was haunted with the remembrance
+of James Stewart in his dungeon and the lamentations of his wife. Then,
+indeed, passion began to work in me; I could not forgive myself to sit
+there idle; it seemed (if I were a man at all) that I could fly or swim
+out of my place of safety; and it was in such humours and to amuse my
+self-reproaches that I would set the more particularly to win the good
+side of Andie Dale.
+
+At last, when we two were alone on the summit of the rock on a bright
+morning, I put in some hint about a bribe. He looked at me, cast back
+his head, and laughed out loud.
+
+"Ay, you're funny, Mr. Dale," said I, "but perhaps if you glance an eye
+upon that paper you may change your note."
+
+The stupid Highlanders had taken from me at the time of my seizure
+nothing but hard money, and the paper I now showed Andie was an
+acknowledgment from the British Linen Company for a considerable sum.
+
+He read it. "Troth, and ye're nane sae ill aff," said he.
+
+"I thought that would maybe vary your opinions," said I.
+
+"Hout!" said he. "It shaws me ye can bribe; but I'm no to be bribit."
+
+"We'll see about that yet a while," says I. "And first, I'll show you
+that I know what I am talking. You have orders to detain me here till
+Thursday, 21st September."
+
+"Ye're no a'thegether wrong either," says Andie. "I'm to let ye gang,
+bar orders contrair, on Saturday, the 23rd."
+
+I could not but feel there was something extremely insidious in this
+arrangement. That I was to reappear precisely in time to be too late
+would cast the more discredit on my tale, if I were minded to tell one;
+and this screwed me to fighting point.
+
+"Now then, Andie, you that kens the world, listen to me, and think while
+ye listen," said I. "I know there are great folks in the business, and I
+make no doubt you have their names to go upon. I have seen some of them
+myself since this affair began, and said my say into their faces too.
+But what kind of a crime would this be that I had committed? or what
+kind of a process is this that I am fallen under? To be apprehended by
+some ragged John-Hielandmen on August 30th, carried to a rickle of old
+stones that is now neither fort nor gaol (whatever it once was) but just
+the gamekeeper's lodge of the Bass Rock, and set free again, September
+23d, as secretly as I was first arrested--does that sound like law to
+you? or does it sound like justice? or does it not sound honestly like a
+piece of some low dirty intrigue, of which the very folk that meddle
+with it are ashamed?"
+
+"I canna gainsay ye, Shaws. It looks unco underhand," says Andie. "And
+werenae the folk guid sound Whigs and true-blue Presbyterians I would
+hae seen them ayont Jordan and Jeroozlem or I would have set hand to
+it."
+
+"The Master of Lovat'll be a braw Whig," says I, "and a grand
+Presbyterian."
+
+"I ken naething by him," said he. "I hae nae trokings wi' Lovats."
+
+"No, it'll be Prestongrange that you'll be dealing with," said I.
+
+"Ah, but I'll no tell ye that," said Andie.
+
+"Little need when I ken," was my retort.
+
+"There's just the ae thing ye can be fairly sure of, Shaws," says Andie.
+"And that is that (try as ye please) I'm no dealing wi' yoursel'; nor
+yet I amnae goin' to," he added.
+
+"Well, Andie, I see I'll have to be speak out plain with you," I
+replied. And I told him so much as I thought needful of the facts.
+
+He heard me out with serious interest, and when I had done, seemed to
+consider a little with himself.
+
+"Shaws," said he at last, "I deal with the naked hand. It's a queer
+tale, and no vary creditable, the way you tell it; and I'm far frae
+minting that is other than the way that ye believe it. As for yoursel',
+ye seems to me rather a dacent-like young man. But me, that's aulder and
+mair judeecious, see perhaps a wee bit further forrit in the job than
+what ye can dae. And here is the maitter clear and plain to ye. There'll
+be nae skaith to yoursel' if I keep ye here; far frae that, I think
+ye'll be a hantle better by it. There'll be nae skaith to the
+kintry--just ae mair Hielantman hangit--Gude kens, a guid riddance! On
+the ither hand it would be considerable skaith to me if I would let you
+free. Sae, speakin' as a guid Whig, an honest freen' to you, and an
+anxious freen' to my ainsel', the plain fact is that I think ye'll just
+have to bide here wi' Andie an' the solans."
+
+"Andie," said I, laying my hand upon his knee, "this Hielantman's
+innocent."
+
+"Ay, it's a peety about that," said he. "But ye see in this warld, the
+way God made it, we cannae just get a'thing that we want."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+BLACK ANDIE'S TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+
+
+I have yet said little of the Highlanders. They were all three of the
+followers of James More, which bound the accusation very tight about
+their master's neck. All understood a word or two of English; but Neil
+was the only one who judged he had enough of it for general converse, in
+which (when once he got embarked) his company was often tempted to the
+contrary opinion. They were tractable, simple creatures; showed much
+more courtesy than might have been expected from their raggedness and
+their uncouth appearance, and fell spontaneously to be like three
+servants for Andie and myself.
+
+Dwelling in that isolated place, in the old falling ruins of a prison,
+and among endless strange sounds of the sea and the sea-birds, I thought
+I perceived in them early the effects of superstitious fear. When there
+was nothing doing they would either lie and sleep, for which their
+appetite appeared insatiable, or Neil would entertain the others with
+stories which seemed always of a terrifying strain. If neither of these
+delights were within reach--if perhaps two were sleeping and the third
+could find no means to follow their example--I would see him sit and
+listen and look about him in a progression of uneasiness, starting, his
+face blenching, his hands clutched, a man strung like a bow. The nature
+of these fears I had never an occasion to find out, but the sight of
+them was catching, and the nature of the place that we were in
+favourable to alarms. I can find no word for it in the English, but
+Andie had an expression for it in the Scots from which he never varied.
+
+"Ay," he would say, "_it's an unco place, the Bass_." It is so I always
+think of it. It was an unco place by night, unco by day; and these were
+unco sounds, of the calling of the solans, and the plash of the sea and
+the rock echoes, that hung continually in our ears. It was chiefly so in
+moderate weather. When the waves were anyway great they roared about the
+rock like thunder and the drums of armies, dreadful but merry to hear;
+and it was in the calm days that a man could daunt himself with
+listening--not a Highlandman only, as I several times experimented on
+myself, so many still, hollow noises haunted and reverberated in the
+porches of the rock.
+
+This brings me to a story I heard, and a scene I took part in, which
+quite changed our terms of living, and had a great effect on my
+departure. It chanced one night I fell in a muse beside the fire and
+(that little air of Alan's coming back to my memory) began to whistle. A
+hand was laid upon my arm, and the voice of Neil bade me to stop, for it
+was not "canny musics."
+
+"Not canny?" I asked. "How can that be?"
+
+"Na," said he; "it will be made by a bogle and her wanting ta heid upon
+his body."[13]
+
+"Well," said I, "there can be no bogles here, Neil; for it's not likely
+they would fash themselves to frighten solan geese."
+
+"Ay?" says Andie, "is that what ye think of it? But I'll can tell ye
+there's been waur nor bogles here."
+
+"What's waur than bogles, Andie?" said I.
+
+"Warlocks," said he. "Or a warlock at the least of it. And that's a
+queer tale, too," he added. "And if ye would like, I'll tell it ye."
+
+To be sure we were all of the one mind, and even the Highlander that had
+the least English of the three set himself to listen with all his might.
+
+
+THE TALE OF TOD LAPRAIK
+
+My faither, Tam Dale, peace to his banes, was a wild, sploring lad in
+his young days, wi' little wisdom and less grace. He was fond of a lass
+and fond of a glass, and fond of a ran-dan; but I could never hear tell
+that he was muckle use for honest employment. Frae ae thing to anither,
+he listed at last for a sodger and was in the garrison of this fort,
+which was the first way that ony of the Dales cam to set foot upon the
+Bass. Sorrow upon that service! The governor brewed his ain ale; it
+seems it was the warst conceivable. The rock was proveesioned frae the
+shore with vivers, the thing was ill-guided, and there were whiles when
+they but to fish and shoot solans for their diet. To crown a', thir was
+the Days of the Persecution. The perishin' cauld chalmers were all
+occupeed wi' sants and martyrs, the saut of the yearth, of which it
+wasnae worthy. And though Tam Dale carried a firelock there, a single
+sodger, and liked a lass and a glass, as I was sayin', the mind of the
+man was mair just than set with his position. He had glints of the glory
+of the kirk; there were whiles when his dander rase to see the Lord's
+sants misguided, and shame covered him that he should be haulding a
+can'le (or carrying a firelock) in so black a business. There were
+nights of it when he was here on sentry, the place a' wheesht, the
+frosts o' winter maybe riving in the wa's, and he would hear are o' the
+prisoners strike up a psalm, and the rest join in, and the blessed
+sounds rising from the different chalmers--or dungeons, I would raither
+say--so that this auld craig in the sea was like a pairt of Heev'n.
+Black shame was on his saul; his sins hove up before him muckle as the
+Bass, and above a', that chief sin, that he should have a hand in
+hagging and hashing at Christ's Kirk. But the truth is that he resisted
+the spirit. Day cam, there were the rousing companions, and his guid
+resolves depairtit.
+
+In thir days, dwalled upon the Bass a man of God, Peden the Prophet was
+his name. Ye'll have heard tell of Prophet Peden. There was never the
+wale of him sinsyne, and it's a question wi' mony if there ever was his
+like afore. He was wild 's a peat-hag, fearsome to look at, fearsome to
+hear, his face like the day of judgment. The voice of him was like a
+solan's and dinnle'd in folks' lugs, and the words of him like coals of
+fire.
+
+Now there was a lass on the rock, and I think she had little to do, for
+it was nae place far dacent weemen; but it seems she was bonny, and her
+and Tam Dale were very well agreed. It befell that Peden was in the
+gairden his lane at the praying when Tam and the lass cam by; and what
+should the lassie do but mock with laughter at the sant's devotions? He
+rose and lookit at the twa o' them, and Tam's knees knoitered thegether
+at the look of him. But whan he spak, it was mair in sorrow than in
+anger. "Poor thing, poor thing!" says he, and it was the lass he lookit
+at. "I hear you skirl and laugh," he says, "but the Lord has a deid shot
+prepared for you, and at that surprising judgment ye shall skirl but the
+ae time!" Shortly thereafter she was daundering on the craigs wi'
+twa-three sodgers, and it was a blawy day. There cam a gowst of wind,
+claught her by the coats, and awa' wi' her bag and baggage. And it was
+remarked by the sodgers that she gied but the ae skirl.
+
+Nae doubt this judgment had some weicht upon Tam Dale; but it passed
+again and him none the better. Ae day he was flyting wi' anither
+sodger-lad. "Deil hae me!" quo' Tam, for he was a profane swearer. And
+there was Peden glowering at him, gash an' waefu'; Peden wi' his lang
+chafts an' luntin' een, the maud happed about his kist, and the hand of
+him held out wi' the black nails upon the finger-nebs--for he had nae
+care of the body. "Fy, fy, poor man!" cries he, "the poor fool man!
+_Deil hae me_, quo' he; an' I see the deil at his oxter." The conviction
+of guilt and grace cam in on Tam like the deep sea; he flang doun the
+pike that was in his hands--"I will nae mair lift arms against the cause
+o' Christ!" says he, and was as gude's word. There was a sair fyke in
+the beginning, but the governor, seeing him resolved, gied him his
+dischairge, and he went and dwallt and merried in North Berwick, and had
+aye a gude name with honest folk frae that day on.
+
+It was in the year seeventeen hunner and sax that the Bass cam in the
+hands o' the Da'rymples, and there was twa men soucht the chairge of it.
+Baith were weel qualified, for they had baith been sodgers in the
+garrison, and kent the gate to handle solans, and the seasons and values
+of them. Forby that they were baith--or they baith seemed--earnest
+professors and men of comely conversation. The first of them was just
+Tam Dale, my faither. The second was ane Lapraik, whom the folk ca'd Tod
+Lapraik maistly, but whether for his name or his nature I could never
+hear tell. Weel, Tam gaed to see Lapraik upon this business, and took
+me, that was a toddlin' laddie, by the hand. Tod had his dwallin' in the
+lang loan benorth the kirkyaird. It's a dark uncanny loan, forby that
+the kirk has aye had an ill name since the days o' James the Saxt and
+the deevil's cantrips played therein when the Queen was on the seas; and
+as for Tod's house, it was in the mirkest end, and was little liked by
+some that kenned the best. The door was on the sneck that day, and me
+and my faither gaed straucht in. Tod was a wabster to his trade; his
+loom stood in the but. There he sat, a muckle fat, white hash of a man
+like creish, wi' a kind of a holy smile that gart me scunner. The hand
+of him aye cawed the shuttle, but his een was steeked. We cried to him
+by his name, we skirled in the deid lug of him, we shook him by the
+shou'ther. Nae mainner o' service! There he sat on his dowp, an' cawed
+the shuttle and smiled like creish.
+
+"God be guid to us," says Tam Dale, "this is no canny!"
+
+He had jimp said the word, when Tod Lapraik cam to himsel'.
+
+"Is this you, Tam?" says he. "Haith, man! I'm blythe to see ye. I whiles
+fa' into a bit dwam like this," he says; "it's frae the stamach."
+
+Weel, they began to crack about the Bass and which of them twa was to
+get the warding o't, and by little and little cam to very ill words, and
+twined in anger. I mind weel, that as my faither and me gaed hame again,
+he cam ower and ower the same expression, how little he likit Tod
+Lapraik and his dwams.
+
+"Dwam!" says he. "I think folk hae brunt far dwams like yon."
+
+Aweel, my faither got the Bass and Tod had to go wantin'. It was
+remembered sinsyne what way he had ta'en the thing. "Tam," says he, "ye
+hae gotten the better o'me aince mair, and I hope," says he, "ye'll find
+at least a' that ye expeckit at the Bass." Which have since been thought
+remarkable expressions. At last the time came for Tam Dale to take young
+solans. This was a business he was weel used wi', he had been a
+craigsman frae a laddie, and trustit nane but himsel'. So there was he
+hingin' by a line an' speldering on the craig face, whaur it's hieest
+and steighest. Fower tenty lads were on the tap, hauldin' the line and
+mindin' for his signals. But whaur Tam hung there was naething but the
+craig, and the sea belaw, and the solans skirling and flying. It was a
+braw spring morn, and Tam whustled as he claught in the young geese.
+Mony's the time I heard him tell of this experience, and aye the swat
+ran upon the man.
+
+It chanced, ye see, that Tam keeked up, and he was awaur of a muckle
+solan, and the solan pyking at the line. He thocht this by-ordinar and
+outside the creature's habits. He minded that ropes was unco saft
+things, and the solan's neb and the Bass Rock unco hard, and that twa
+hunner feet were raither mair than he would care to fa'.
+
+"Shoo!" says Tam. "Awa', bird! Shoo, awa' wi' ye!" says he.
+
+The solan keekit doun into Tam's face, and there was something unco in
+the creature's ee. Just the ae keek it gied, and back to the rope. But
+now it wroucht and warstl't like a thing dementit. There never was the
+solan made that wroucht as that solan wroucht; and it seemed to
+understand it's employ brawly, birzing the saft rope between the neb of
+it and a crunkled jag o' stane.
+
+There gaed a cauld stend o' fear into Tam's heart. "This thing is nae
+bird," thinks he. His een turnt backward in his heid and the day gaed
+black about him. "If I get a dwam here," he thoucht, "it's by wi' Tam
+Dale." And he signalled for the lads to pu' him up.
+
+And it seemed the solan understood about signals. For nae sooner was the
+signal made than he let be the rope, spried his wings, squawked out
+loud, took a turn flying, and dashed straucht at Tam Dale's een. Tam had
+a knife, he gart the cauld steel glitter. And it seemed the solan
+understood about knives, for nae suner did the steel glint in the sun
+than he gied the ae squawk, but laigher, like a body disappointit, and
+flegged aff about the roundness of the craig, and Tam saw him nae mair.
+And as sune as that thing was gane, Tam's held drapt upon his shouther,
+and they pu'd him up like a deid corp, dadding on the craig.
+
+A dram of brandy (which he went never without) broucht him to his mind,
+or what was left of it. Up he sat.
+
+"Rin, Geordie, rin to the boat, mak' sure of the boat, man--rin!" he
+cries, "or yon solan 'll have it awa'," says he.
+
+The fower lads stared at ither, an' tried to whilly-wha him to be quiet.
+But naething, would satisfy Tam Dale, till ane o' them had startit on
+aheid to stand sentry on the boat. The ithers askit if he was for down
+again.
+
+"Na," says he, "and niether you nor me," says he, "and as sune as I can
+win to stand on my twa feet we'll be aff frae this craig o' Sawtan."
+
+Sure eneuch, nae time was lost, and that was ower muckle; for before
+they won to North Berwick Tam was in a crying fever. He lay a' the
+simmer; and wha was sae kind as come speiring for him, but Tod Lapraik!
+Folk thocht afterwards that ilka time Tod cam near the house the fever
+had worsened. I kenna for that; but what I ken the best, that was the
+end of it.
+
+It was about this time o' the year; my grandfaither was out at the white
+fishing; and like a bairn, I but to gang wi' him. We had a grand take, I
+mind, and the way that the fish lay broucht us near in by the Bass,
+whaur we forgaithered wi' anither boat that belanged to a man Sandie
+Fletcher in Castleton. He's no lang deid niether, or ye could spier at
+himsel'. Weel, Sandie hailed.
+
+"What's yon on the Bass?" says he.
+
+"On the Bass?" says grandfaither.
+
+"Ay," says Sandie, "on the green side o't."
+
+"Whatten kind of a thing?" says grandfaither. "There cannae be naething
+on the Bass but just the sheep."
+
+"It looks unco like a body," quo' Sandie, who was nearer in.
+
+"A body!" says we, and we nane of us likit that. For there was nae boat
+that could have broucht a man, and the key o' the prison yett hung ower
+my faither's held at hame in the press bed.
+
+We keept the twa boats closs for company, and crap in nearer hand.
+Grandfaither had a gless, for he had been a sailor, and the captain of a
+smack, and had lost her on the sands of Tay. And when we took the gless
+to it, sure eneuch there was a man. He was in a crunkle o' green brae, a
+wee below the chaipel, a' by his lee lane, and lowped and flang and
+danced like a daft quean at a waddin'.
+
+"It's Tod," says grandfaither, and passed the gless to Sandie.
+
+"Ay, it's him," says Sandie.
+
+"Or ane in the likeness o' him,'' says grandfaither.
+
+"Sma' is the differ," quo' Sandie. "De'il or warlock, I'll try the gun
+at him," quo' he, and broucht up a fowling-piece that he aye carried,
+for Sandie was a notable famous shot in all that country.
+
+"Haud your hand, Sandie," says grandfaither; "we maun see clearer
+first," says he, "or this may be a dear day's wark to the baith of us."
+
+"Hout!" says Sandie, "this is the Lord's judgments surely, and be damned
+to it!" says he.
+
+"Maybe ay, and maybe no," says my grandfaither, worthy man! "But have
+you a mind of the Procurator Fiscal, that I think ye'll have
+forgaithered wi' before," says he.
+
+This was ower true, and Sandie was a wee thing set ajee. "Aweel, Edie,"
+says he, "and what would be your way of it?"
+
+"Ou, just this," says grandfaither. "Let me that has the fastest boat
+gang back to North Berwick, and let you bide here and keep an eye on
+Thon. If I cannae find Lapraik, I'll join ye and the twa of us'll have a
+crack wi' him. But if Lapraik's at hame, I'll rin up the flag at the
+harbour, and ye can try Thon Thing wi' the gun."
+
+Aweel, so it was agreed between them twa. I was just a bairn, an' clum
+in Sandie's boat, whaur I thoucht I would see the best of the employ. My
+grandsire gied Sandie a siller tester to pit in his gun wi' the leid
+draps, bein' mair deidly again bogles. And then the ae boat set aff for
+North Berwick, an' the tither lay whaur it was and watched the wanchancy
+thing on the braeside.
+
+A' the time we lay there it lowped and flang and capered and span like a
+teetotum, and whiles we could hear it skelloch as it span. I hae seen
+lassies, the daft queans, that would lowp and dance a winter's nicht,
+and still be lowping and dancing when the winter's day cam in. But there
+would be folk there to hauld them company, and the lads to egg them on;
+and this thing was its lee-lane. And there would be a fiddler diddling
+his elbock in the chimney-side; and this thing had nae music but the
+skirling of the solans. And the lassies were bits o' young things wi'
+the reid life dinnling and stending in their members; and this was a
+muckle, fat, crieshy man, and him fa'n in the vale o' years. Say what ye
+like, I maun say what I believe. It was joy was in the creature's heart;
+the joy o' hell, I daursay: joy whatever. Mony a time I have askit
+mysel', why witches and warlocks should sell their sauls (whilk are
+their maist dear possessions) and be auld, duddy, wrunkl't wives or
+auld, feckless, doddered men; and then I mind upon Tod Lapraik dancing
+a' they hours by his lane in the black glory of his heart. Nae doubt
+they burn for it in muckle hell, but they have a grand time here of it,
+whatever!--and the Lord forgie us!
+
+Weel, at the hinder end, we saw the wee flag yirk up to the mast-held
+upon the harbour rocks. That was a' Sandie waited for. He up wi' the
+gun, took a deleeberate aim, an' pu'd the trigger. There cam' a bang and
+then ae waefu' skirl frae the Bass. And there were we rubbin' our een
+and lookin' at ither like daft folk. For wi' the bang and the skirl the
+thing had clean disappeared. The sun glintit, the wund blew, and there
+was the bare yaird whaur the Wonder had been lowping and flinging but ae
+second syne.
+
+The hale way hame I roared and grat wi' the terror of that dispensation.
+The grawn folk were nane sae muckle better; there was little said in
+Sandie's boat but just the name of God; and when we won in by the pier,
+the harbour rocks were fair black wi' the folk waitin' us. It seems they
+had fund Lapraik in ane of his dwams, cawing the shuttle and smiling. Ae
+lad they sent to hoist the flag, and the rest abode there in the
+wabster's house. You may be sure they liked it little; but it was a
+means of grace to severals that stood there praying in to themsel's (for
+nane cared to pray out loud) and looking on thon awesome thing as it
+cawed the shuttle. Syne, upon a suddenty, and wi' the ae driedfu'
+skelloch, Tod sprang up frae his hinderlands and fell forrit on the wab,
+a bluidy corp.
+
+When the corp was examined the leid draps hadnae played buff upon the
+warlock's body; sorrow a leid drap was to be fund; but there was
+grandfather's siller tester in the puddock's heart of him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Andie had scarce done when there befell a mighty silly affair that had
+its consequence. Neil, as I have said, was himself a great narrator. I
+have heard since that he knew all the stories in the Highlands; and
+thought much of himself, and was thought much of by others, on the
+strength of it. Now Andie's tale reminded him of one he had already
+heard.
+
+"She would ken that story afore," he said. "She was the story of Uistean
+More M'Gillie Phadrig and the Gavar Vore."
+
+"It is no sic a thing," cried Andie. "It is the story of my faither (now
+wi' God) and Tod Lapraik. And the same in your beard," says he; "and
+keep the tongue of ye inside your Hielant chafts!"
+
+In dealing with Highlanders it will be found, and has been shown in
+history, how well it goes with Lowland gentlefolk; but the thing appears
+scarce feasible for Lowland commons. I had already remarked that Andie
+was continually on the point of quarrelling with our three Macgregors,
+and now, sure enough, it was to come.
+
+"Thir will be no words to use to shentlemans," says Neil.
+
+"Shentlemans!" cries Andie. "Shentlemans, ye hielant stot! If God would
+give ye the grace to see yoursel' the way that ithers see ye, ye would
+throw your denner up."
+
+There came some kind of a Gaelic oath from Neil, and the black knife was
+in his hand that moment.
+
+There was no time to think; and I caught the Highlander by the leg, and
+had him down, and his armed hand pinned out, before I knew what I was
+doing. His comrades sprang to rescue him, Andie and I were without
+weapons, the Gregara three to two. It seemed we were beyond salvation,
+when Neil screamed in his own tongue, ordering the others back, and made
+his submission to myself in a manner the most abject, even giving me up
+his knife which (upon a repetition of his promises) I returned to him on
+the morrow.
+
+Two things I saw plain: the first, that I must not build too high on
+Andie, who had shrunk against the wall and stood there, as pale as
+death, till the affair was over; the second, the strength of my own
+position with the Highlanders, who must have received extraordinary
+charges to be tender of my safety. But if I thought Andie came not very
+well out in courage, I had no fault to find with him upon the account of
+gratitude. It was not so much that he troubled me with thanks, as that
+his whole mind and manner appeared changed; and as he preserved ever
+after a great timidity of our companions, he and I were yet more
+constantly together.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE MISSING WITNESS
+
+
+On the seventeenth, the day I was trysted with the Writer, I had much
+rebellion against fate. The thought of him waiting in the _King's Arms_,
+and of what he would think, and what he would say when next we met,
+tormented and oppressed me. The truth was unbelievable, so much I had to
+grant, and it seemed cruel hard I should be posted as a liar and a
+coward, and have never consciously omitted what it was possible that I
+should do. I repeated this form of words with a kind of bitter relish,
+and re-examined in that light the steps of my behaviour. It seemed I had
+behaved to James Stewart as a brother might; all the past was a picture
+that I could be proud of, and there was only the present to consider. I
+could not swim the sea, nor yet fly in the air, but there was always
+Andie. I had done him a service, he liked me; I had a lever there to
+work on; if it were just for decency, I must try once more with Andie.
+
+It was late afternoon; there was no sound in all the Bass but the lap
+and bubble of a very quiet sea; and my four companions were all crept
+apart, the three Macgregors higher on the rock, and Andie with his Bible
+to a sunny place among the ruins; there I found him in deep sleep, and,
+as soon as he was awake, appealed to him with some fervour of manner and
+a good show of argument.
+
+"If I thoucht it was to do guid to ye, Shaws!" said he, staring at me
+over his spectacles.
+
+"It's to save another," said I, "and to redeem my word. What would be
+more good than that? Do ye no mind the scripture, Andie? And you with
+the Book upon your lap! _What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole
+world?"_
+
+"Ay," said he, "that's grand for you. But where do I come in? I have my
+word to redeem the same's yoursel'. And what are ye asking me to do, but
+just to sell it ye for siller?"
+
+"Andie! have I named the name of siller?" cried I.
+
+"Ou, the name's naething," said he; "the thing is there, whatever. It
+just comes to this; if I am to service ye the way that you propose, I'll
+loss my lieihood. Then it's clear ye'll have to make it up to me, and a
+pickle mair, for your ain credit like. And what's that but just a bribe?
+And if even I was certain of the bribe! But by a' that I can learn, it's
+far frae that; and if _you_ were to hang, where would _I_ be? Na: the
+thing's no possible. And just awa' wi' ye like a bonny lad! and let
+Andie read his chapter."
+
+I remember I was at bottom a good deal gratified with this result; and
+the next humour I fell into was one (I had near said) of gratitude to
+Prestongrange, who had saved me, in this violent, illegal manner, out of
+the midst of my dangers, temptations, and perplexities. But this was
+both too flimsy and too cowardly to last me long, and the remembrance of
+James began to succeed to the possession of my spirits. The 21st, the
+day set for the trial, I passed in such misery of mind as I can scarce
+recall to have endured, save perhaps upon Isle Earraid only. Much of the
+time I lay on a braeside betwixt sleep and waking, my body motionless,
+my mind full of violent thoughts. Sometimes I slept indeed; but the
+court-house of Inverary and the prisoner glancing on all sides to find
+his missing witness, followed me in slumber; and I would wake again with
+a start to darkness of spirit and distress of body. I thought Andie
+seemed to observe me, but I paid him little heed. Verily, my bread was
+bitter to me, and my days a burthen.
+
+Early the next morning (Friday, 22nd) a boat came with provisions, and
+Andie placed a packet in my hand. The cover was without address but
+sealed with a Government seal. It enclosed two notes. "Mr. Balfour can
+now see for himself it is too late to meddle. His conduct will be
+observed and his discretion rewarded." So ran the first, which seemed to
+be laboriously writ with the left hand. There was certainly nothing in
+these expressions to compromise the writer, even if that person could be
+found; the seal, which formidably served instead of signature, was
+affixed to a separate sheet on which there was no scratch of writing;
+and I had to confess that (so far) my adversaries knew what they were
+doing, and to digest as well as I was able the threat that peeped under
+the promise.
+
+But the second enclosure was by far the more surprising. It was in a
+lady's hand of writ. "_Maister Dauvit Balfour is informed a friend was
+speiring for him, and her eyes were of the grey_," it ran--and seemed so
+extraordinary a piece to come to my hands at such a moment and under
+cover of a Government seal, that I stood stupid. Catriona's grey eyes
+shone in my remembrance. I thought, with a bound of pleasure, she must
+be the friend. But who should the writer be, to have her billet thus
+enclosed with Prestongrange's? And of all wonders, why was it thought
+needful to give me this pleasing but most inconsequential intelligence
+upon the Bass? For the writer, I could hit upon none possible except
+Miss Grant. Her family, I remembered, had remarked on Catriona's eyes
+and even named her for their colour; and she herself had been much in
+the habit to address me with a broad pronunciation, by way of a sniff, I
+supposed, at my rusticity. No doubt, besides, but she lived in the same
+house as this letter came from. So there remained but one step to be
+accounted for; and that was how Prestongrange should have permitted her
+at all in an affair so secret, or let her daft-like billet go in the
+same cover with his own. But even here I had a glimmering. For, first of
+all, there was something rather alarming about the young lady, and papa
+might be more under her domination than I knew. And second, there was
+the man's continual policy to be remembered, how his conduct had been
+continually mingled with caresses, and he had scarce ever, in the midst
+of so much contention, laid aside a mask of friendship. He must conceive
+that my imprisonment had incensed me. Perhaps this little jesting,
+friendly message was intended to disarm my rancour?
+
+I will be honest--and I think it did. I felt a sudden warmth towards
+that beautiful Miss Grant, that she should stoop to so much interest in
+my affairs. The summoning up of Catriona moved me of itself to milder
+and more cowardly counsels. If the Advocate knew of her and of our
+acquaintance--if I should please him by some of that "discretion" at
+which his letter pointed--to what might not this lead? _In vain is the
+net spread in the sight of any fowl_, the scripture says. Well, fowls
+must be wiser than folk! For I thought I perceived the policy, and yet
+fell in with it.
+
+I was in this frame, my heart beating, the grey eyes plain before me
+like two stars, when Andie broke in upon my musing.
+
+"I see ye hae gotten guid news," said he.
+
+I found him looking curiously in my face; with that, there came before
+me like a vision of James Stewart and the court of Inverary; and my mind
+turned at once like a door upon its hinges. Trials, I reflected,
+sometimes draw out longer than is looked for. Even if I came to Inverary
+just too late, something might yet be attempted in the interests of
+James--and in those of my own character, the best would be accomplished.
+In a moment, it seemed without thought, I had a plan devised.
+
+"Andie," said I, "is it still to be to-morrow?"
+
+He told me nothing was changed.
+
+"Was anything said about the hour?" I asked.
+
+He told me it was to be two o'clock afternoon.
+
+"And about the place?" I pursued.
+
+"Whatten place?" says Andie.
+
+"The place I'm to be landed at," said I.
+
+He owned there was nothing as to that.
+
+"Very well, then," I said, "this shall be mine to arrange. The wind is
+in the east, my road lies westward; keep your boat, I hire it; let us
+work up the Forth all day; and land me at two o'clock to-morrow at the
+westmost we'll can have reached."
+
+"Ye daft callant!" he cried, "ye would try for Inverary after a'!"
+
+"Just that, Andie," says I.
+
+"Weel, ye're ill to beat!" says he. "And I was kind o' sorry for ye a'
+day yesterday," he added. "Ye see, I was never entirely sure till then,
+which way of it ye really wantit."
+
+Here was a spur to a lame horse!
+
+"A word in your ear, Andie," said I. "This plan of mine has another
+advantage yet. We can leave these Hielandmen behind us on the rock, and
+one of your boats from the Castleton can bring them off to-morrow. Yon
+Neil has a queer eye when he regards you; maybe, if I was once out of
+the gate there might be knives again; these red-shanks are unco
+grudgeful. And if there should come to be any question, here is your
+excuse. Our lives were in danger by these savages; being answerable for
+my safety, you chose the part to bring me from their neighbourhood and
+detain me the rest of the time on board your boat; and do you know,
+Andie?" says I, with a smile, "I think it was very wisely chosen."
+
+"The truth is I have nae goo for Neil," says Andie, "nor he for me, I'm
+thinking; and I would like ill to come to my hands wi' the man. Tam
+Anster will make a better hand of it with the cattle onyway." (For this
+man, Anster, came from Fife, where the Gaelic is still spoken.) "Ay,
+ay!" says Andie, "Tam'll can deal with them the best. And troth! the
+mair I think of it, the less I see what way we would be required. The
+place--ay, feggs! they had forgot the place. Eh, Shaws, ye're a
+lang-heided chield when ye like! Forby that I'm awing ye my life," he
+added, with more solemnity, and offered me his hand upon the bargain.
+
+Whereupon, with scarce more words, we stepped suddenly on board the
+boat, cast off, and set the lug. The Gregara were then busy upon
+breakfast, for the cookery was their usual part; but, one of them
+stepping to the battlements, our flight was observed before we were
+twenty fathoms from the rock; and the three of them ran about the ruins
+and the landing-shelf, for all the world like ants about a broken nest,
+hailing and crying on us to return. We were still in both the lee and
+the shadow of the rock, which last lay broad upon the waters, but
+presently came forth in almost the same moment into the wind and
+sunshine; the sail filled, the boat heeled to the gunwale, and we swept
+immediately beyond sound of the men's voices. To what terrors they
+endured upon the rock, where they were now deserted without the
+countenance of any civilised person or so much as the protection of a
+Bible, no limit can be set; nor had they any brandy left to be their
+consolation, for even in the haste and secrecy of our departure Andie
+had managed to remove it.
+
+It was our first care to set Anster ashore in a cove by the Glenteithy
+Rocks, so that the deliverance of our maroons might be duly seen to the
+next day. Thence we kept away up Firth. The breeze, which was then so
+spirited, swiftly declined, but never wholly failed us. All day we kept
+moving, though often not much more; and it was after dark ere we were up
+with the Queensferry. To keep the letter of Andie's engagement (or what
+was left of it) I must remain on board, but I thought no harm to
+communicate with the shore in writing. On Prestongrange's cover, where
+the Government seal must have a good deal surprised my correspondent, I
+writ, by the boat's lantern, a few necessary words, and Andie carried
+them to Rankeillor. In about an hour he came aboard again, with a purse
+of money and the assurance that a good horse should be standing saddled
+for me by two to-morrow at Clackmannan Pool. This done, and the boat
+riding by her stone anchor, we lay down to sleep under the sail.
+
+We were in the Pool the next day long ere two; and there was nothing
+left for me but sit and wait. I felt little alacrity upon my errand. I
+would have been glad of any passable excuse to lay it down; but none
+being to be found, my uneasiness was no less great than if I had been
+running to some desired pleasure. By shortly after one the horse was at
+the waterside, and I could see a man walking it to and fro till I should
+land, which vastly swelled my impatience. Andie ran the moment of my
+liberation very fine, showing himself a man of his bare word, but scarce
+serving his employers with a heaped measure; and by about fifty seconds
+after two I was in the saddle and on the full stretch for Stirling. In a
+little more than an hour I had passed that town, and was already
+mounting Alan Water side, when the weather broke in a small tempest. The
+rain blinded me, the wind had nearly beat me from the saddle, and the
+first darkness of the night surprised me in a wilderness still some way
+east of Balwhidder, not very sure of my direction and mounted on a horse
+that began already to be weary.
+
+In the press of my hurry, and to be spared the delay and annoyance of a
+guide, I had followed (so far as it was possible for any horseman) the
+line of my journey with Alan. This I did with open eyes, foreseeing a
+great risk in it, which the tempest had now brought to a reality. The
+last that I knew of where I was, I think it must have been about Uam
+Var; the hour perhaps six at night. I must still think it great good
+fortune that I got about eleven to my destination, the house of Duncan
+Dhu. Where I had wandered in the interval perhaps the horse could tell.
+I know we were twice down, and once over the saddle and for a moment
+carried away in a roaring burn. Steed and rider were bemired up to the
+eyes.
+
+From Duncan I had news of the trial. It was followed in all these
+Highland regions with religious interest; news of it spread from
+Inverary as swift as men could travel; and I was rejoiced to learn that,
+up to a late hour that Saturday, it was not yet concluded; and all men
+began to suppose it must spread over to the Monday. Under the spur of
+this intelligence I would not sit to eat; but, Duncan having agreed to
+be my guide, took the road again on foot, with the piece in my hand and
+munching as I went. Duncan brought with him a flask of usquebaugh and a
+hand-lantern; which last enlightened us just so long as we could find
+houses where to rekindle it, for the thing leaked outrageously and blew
+out with every gust. The more part of the night we walked blindfold
+among sheets of rain, and day found us aimless on the mountains. Hard by
+we struck a hut on a burn-side, where we got a bite and a direction;
+and, a little before the end of the sermon, came to the kirk doors of
+Inverary.
+
+The rain had somewhat washed the upper parts of me, but I was still
+bogged as high as to the knees; I streamed water; I was so weary I could
+hardly limp, and my face was like a ghost's. I stood certainly more in
+need of a change of raiment and a bed to lie on, than of all the
+benefits in Christianity. For all which (being persuaded the chief point
+for me was to make myself immediately public) I set the door open,
+entered that church with the dirty Duncan at my tails, and finding a
+vacant place hard by, sat down.
+
+"Thirteenthly, my brethren, and in parenthesis, the law itself must be
+regarded as a means of grace," the minister was saying, in the voice of
+one delighting to pursue an argument.
+
+The sermon was in English on account of the assize. The judges were
+present with their armed attendants, the halberts glittered in a corner
+by the door, and the seats were thronged beyond custom with the array of
+lawyers. The text was in Romans 5th and 13th--the minister a skilled
+hand; and the whole of that able churchful--from Argyle, and my Lords
+Elchies and Kilkerran, down to the halbertmen that came in their
+attendance--was sunk with gathered brows in a profound critical
+attention. The minister himself and a sprinkling of those about the door
+observed our entrance at the moment and immediately forgot the same; the
+rest either did not hear or would not heed; and I sat there amongst my
+friends and enemies unremarked.
+
+The first that I singled out was Prestongrange. He sat well forward,
+like an eager horseman in the saddle, his lips moving with relish, his
+eyes glued on the minister: the doctrine was clearly to his mind.
+Charles Stewart, on the other hand, was half asleep, and looked harassed
+and pale. As for Symon Fraser, he appeared like a blot, and almost a
+scandal, in the midst of that attentive congregation, digging his hands
+in his pockets, shifting his legs, clearing his throat, rolling up his
+bald eyebrows and shooting out his eyes to right and left, now with a
+yawn, now with a secret smile. At times too, he would take the Bible in
+front of him, run it through, seem to read a bit, run it through again,
+and stop and yawn prodigiously: the whole as if for exercise.
+
+In the course of this restlessness his eye alighted on myself. He sat a
+second stupefied, than tore a half leaf out of the Bible, scrawled upon
+it with a pencil, and passed it with a whispered word to his next
+neighbor. The note came to Prestongrange, who gave me but the one look;
+thence it voyaged to the hands of Mr. Erskine; thence again to Argyle,
+where he sat between the other two lords of session, and his Grace
+turned and fixed me with an arrogant eye. The last of those interested
+to observe my presence was Charlie Stewart, and he too began to pencil
+and hand about despatches, none of which I was able to trace to their
+destination in the crowd.
+
+But the passage of these notes had aroused notice; all who were in the
+secret (or supposed themselves to be so) were whispering
+information--the rest questions; and the minister himself seemed quite
+discountenanced by the flutter in the church and sudden stir and
+whispering. His voice changed, he plainly faltered, nor did he again
+recover the easy conviction and full tones of his delivery. It would be
+a puzzle to him till his dying day, why a sermon that had gone with
+triumph through four parts, should thus miscarry in the fifth.
+
+As for me, I continued to sit there, very wet and weary, and a good deal
+anxious as to what should happen next, but greatly exulting in my
+success.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE MEMORIAL
+
+
+The last word of the blessing was scarce out of the minister's mouth
+before Stewart had me by the arm. We were the first to be forth of the
+church, and he made such extraordinary expedition that we were safe
+within the four walls of a house before the street had begun to be
+thronged with the home-going congregation.
+
+"Am I yet in time?" I asked.
+
+"Ay and no," said he. "The case is over; the jury is enclosed, and will
+be so kind as let us ken their view of it to-morrow in the morning, the
+same as I could have told it my own self three days ago before the play
+began. The thing has been public from the start. The panel kent it, '_Ye
+may do what ye will for me_,' whispers he two days ago. '_I ken my fate
+by what the Duke of Argyle has just said to Mr. Macintosh_.' O, it's
+been a scandal!
+
+ The great Argyle he gaed before,
+ He gart the cannons and guns to roar,
+
+and the very macer cried 'Cruachan!' But now that I have got you again
+I'll never despair. The oak shall go over the myrtle yet; we'll ding the
+Campbells yet in their own town. Praise God that I should see the day!"
+
+He was leaping with excitement, emptied out his mails upon the floor
+that I might have a change of clothes, and incommoded me with his
+assistance as I changed. What remained to be done, or how I was to do
+it, was what he never told me nor, I believe, so much as thought of.
+"We'll ding the Camphells yet!" that was still his overcome. And it was
+forced home upon my mind how this, that had the externals of a sober
+process of law, was in its essence a clan battle between savage clans. I
+thought my friend the Writer none of the least savage. Who, that had
+only seen him at a counsel's back before the Lord Ordinary or following
+a golf ball and laying down his clubs on Bruntsfield links, could have
+recognised for the same person this voluble and violent clansman?
+
+James Stewart's counsel were four in number--Sheriffs Brown of Colstoun
+and Miller, Mr. Robert Macintosh and Mr. Stewart younger of Stewart
+Hall. These were covenanted to dine with the Writer after sermon, and I
+was very obligingly included of the party. No sooner the cloth lifted,
+and the first bowl very artfully compounded by Sheriff Miller, than we
+fell to the subject in hand. I made a short narration of my seizure and
+captivity, and was then examined and re-examined upon the circumstances
+of the murder. It will be remembered this was the first time I had had
+my say out, or the matter at all handled, among lawyers; and the
+consequence was very dispiriting to the others and (I must own)
+disappointing to myself.
+
+"To sum up," said Colstoun, "you prove that Alan was on the spot; you
+have heard him proffer menaces against Glenure; and though you assure us
+he was not the man who fired, you leave a strong impression that he was
+in league with him, and consenting, perhaps immediately assisting, in
+the act. You show him besides, at the risk of his own liberty, actively
+furthering the criminal's escape. And the rest of your testimony (so far
+as the least material) depends on the bare word of Alan or of James, the
+two accused. In short, you do not at all break, but only lengthen by one
+personage, the chain that binds our client to the murderer; and I need
+scarcely say that the introduction of a third accomplice rather
+aggravates that appearance of a conspiracy which has been our stumbling
+block from the beginning."
+
+"I am of the same opinion," said Sheriff Miller. "I think we may all be
+very much obliged to Prestongrange for taking a most uncomfortable
+witness out of our way. And chiefly, I think, Mr. Balfour himself might
+be obliged. For you talk of a third accomplice, but Mr. Balfour (in my
+view) has very much the appearance of a fourth."
+
+"Allow me, sirs!" interposed Stewart the Writer. "There is another view.
+Here we have a witness--never fash whether material or not--a witness in
+this cause, kidnapped by that old, lawless, bandit crew of the Glengyle
+Macgregors, and sequestered for near upon a month in a bourock of old
+cold ruins on the Bass. Move that and see what dirt you fling on the
+proceedings! Sirs, this is a tale to make the world ring with! It would
+be strange, with such a grip as this, if we couldnae squeeze out a
+pardon for my client."
+
+"And suppose we took up Mr. Balfour's cause to-morrow?" said Stewart
+Hall. "I am much deceived or we should find so many impediments thrown
+in our path, as that James should have been hanged before we had found a
+court to hear us. This is a great scandal, but I suppose we have none of
+us forgot a greater still, I mean the matter of the Lady Grange. The
+woman was still in durance; my friend Mr. Hope of Rankeillor did what
+was humanly possible; and how did he speed? He never got a warrant!
+Well, it'll be the same now; the same weapons will be used. This is a
+scene, gentlemen, of clan animosity. The hatred of the name which I have
+the honor to bear, rages in high quarters. There is nothing here to be
+viewed but naked Campbell spite and scurvy Campbell intrigue."
+
+You may be sure this was to touch a welcome topic, and I sat for some
+time in the midst of my learned counsel, almost deaved with their talk
+but extremely little the wiser for its purport. The Writer was led into
+some hot expressions; Colstoun must take him up and set him right; the
+rest joined in on different sides, but all pretty noisy; the Duke of
+Argyle was beaten like a blanket; King George came in for a few digs in
+the by-going and a great deal of rather elaborate defence: and there was
+only one person that seemed to be forgotten, and that was James of the
+Glens.
+
+Through all this Mr. Miller sat quiet. He was a slip of an oldish
+gentleman, ruddy and twinkling; he spoke in a smooth rich voice, with an
+infinite effect of pawkiness, dealing out each word the way an actor
+does, to give the most expression possible; and even now, when he was
+silent, and sat there with his wig laid aside, his glass in both hands,
+his mouth funnily pursed, and his chin out, he seemed the mere picture
+of a merry slyness. It was plain he had a word to say, and waited for
+the fit occasion.
+
+It came presently. Colstoun had wound up one of his speeches with some
+expression of their duty to their client. His brother sheriff was
+pleased, I suppose, with the transition. He took the table in his
+confidence with a gesture and a look.
+
+"That suggests to me a consideration which seems overlooked," said he.
+"The interest of our client goes certainly before all, but the world
+does not come to an end with James Stewart." Whereat he cocked his eye.
+"I might condescend, _exempli gratia_, upon a Mr. George Brown, a Mr.
+Thomas Miller, and a Mr. David Balfour. Mr. David Balfour has a very
+good ground of complaint, and I think, gentlemen--if his story was
+properly red out--I think there would be a number of wigs on the green."
+
+The whole table turned to him with a common movement.
+
+"Properly handled and carefully red out, his is a story that could
+scarcely fail to have some consequence," he continued. "The whole
+administration of justice, from its highest officer downward, would be
+totally discredited; and it looks to me as if they would need to be
+replaced." He seemed to shine with cunning as he said it. "And I need
+not point out to ye that this of Mr. Balfour's would be a remarkable
+bonny cause to appear in," he added.
+
+Well, there they all were started on another hare; Mr. Balfour's cause,
+and what kind of speeches could be there delivered, and what officials
+could be thus turned out, and who would succeed to their positions. I
+shall give but the two specimens. It was proposed to approach Symon
+Fraser, whose testimony, if it could be obtained, could prove certainly
+fatal to Argyle and Prestongrange. Miller highly approved of the
+attempt. "We have here before us a dreeping roast," said he, "here is
+cut-and-come-again for all." And methought all licked their lips. The
+other was already near the end. Stewart the Writer was out of the body
+with, delight, smelling vengeance on his chief enemy, the Duke.
+
+"Gentlemen," cried he, charging his glass, "here is to Sheriff Miller.
+His legal abilities are known to all. His culinary, this bowl in front
+of us is here to speak for. But when it comes to the poleetical!"--cries
+he, and drains the glass.
+
+"Ay, but it will hardly prove politics in your meaning, my friend," said
+the gratified Miller. "A revolution, if you like, and I think I can
+promise you that historical writers shall date from Mr. Balfour's cause.
+But properly guided, Mr. Stewart, tenderly guided, it shall prove a
+peaceful revolution."
+
+"And if the damned Campbells get their ears rubbed, what care I?" cries
+Stewart, smiting down his fist.
+
+It will be thought I was not very well pleased with all this, though I
+could scarce forbear smiling at a kind of innocency in these old
+intriguers. But it was not my view to have undergone so many sorrows for
+the advancement of Sheriff Miller or to make a revolution in the
+Parliament House: and I interposed accordingly with as much simplicity
+of manner as I could assume.
+
+"I have to thank you, gentlemen, for your advice," said I. "And now I
+would like, by your leave, to set you two or three questions. There is
+one thing that has fallen rather on one side, for instance: Will this
+cause do any good to our friend James of the Glens?"
+
+They seemed all a hair set back, and gave various answers, but
+concurring practically in one point, that James had now no hope but in
+the King's mercy.
+
+"To proceed, then," said I, "will it do any good to Scotland? We have a
+saying that it is an ill bird that fouls his own nest. I remember
+hearing we had a riot in Edinburgh when I was an infant child, which
+gave occasion to the late Queen to call this country barbarous; and I
+always understood that we had rather lost than gained by that. Then came
+the year 'Forty-five, which made Scotland to be talked of everywhere;
+but I never heard it said we had anyway gained by the 'Forty-five. And
+now we come to this cause of Mr. Balfour's, as you call it. Sheriff
+Miller tells us historical writers are to date from it, and I would not
+wonder. It is only my fear they would date from it as a period of
+calamity and public reproach."
+
+The nimble-witted Miller had already smelt where I was travelling to,
+and made haste to get on the same road. "Forcibly put, Mr. Balfour,"
+says he. "A weighty observe, sir."
+
+"We have next to ask ourselves if it will be good for King George," I
+pursued. "Sheriff Miller appears pretty easy upon this; but I doubt you
+will scarce be able to pull down the house from under him, without his
+Majesty coming by a knock or two, one of which might easily prove
+fatal."
+
+I gave them a chance to answer, but none volunteered.
+
+"Of those for whom the case was to be profitable," I went on, "Sheriff
+Miller gave us the names of several, among the which he was good enough
+to mention mine. I hope he will pardon me if I think otherwise. I
+believe I hung not the least back in this affair while there was life to
+be saved; but I own I thought myself extremely hazarded, and I own I
+think it would be a pity for a young man, with some idea of coming to
+the bar, to ingrain upon himself the character of a turbulent, factious
+fellow before he was yet twenty. As for James, it seems--at this date of
+the proceedings, with the sentence as good as pronounced--he has no hope
+but in the King's mercy. May not his Majesty, then, be more pointedly
+addressed, the characters of these high officers sheltered from the
+public, and myself kept out of a position which I think spells ruin for
+me?"
+
+They all sat and gazed into their glasses, and I could see they found my
+attitude on the affair unpalatable. But Miller was ready at all events.
+
+"If I may be allowed to put our young friend's notion in more formal
+shape," says he, "I understand him to propose that we should embody the
+fact of his sequestration, and perhaps some heads of the testimony he
+was prepared to offer, in a memorial to the Crown. This plan has
+elements of success. It is as likely as any other (and perhaps likelier)
+to help our client. Perhaps his Majesty would have the goodness to feel
+a certain gratitude to all concerned in such a memorial, which might be
+construed into an expression of a very delicate loyalty; and I think, in
+the drafting of the same, this view might be brought forward."
+
+They all nodded to each other, not without sighs, for the former
+alternative was doubtless more after their inclination.
+
+"Paper then, Mr. Stewart, if you please," pursued Miller; "and I think
+it might very fittingly be signed by the five of us here present, as
+procurators for the 'condemned man.'"
+
+"It can do none of us any harm at least," says Colstoun, heaving another
+sigh, for he had seen himself Lord Advocate the last ten minutes.
+
+Thereupon they set themselves, not very enthusiastically, to draft the
+memorial--a process in the course of which they soon caught fire; and I
+had no more ado but to sit looking on and answer an occasional question.
+The paper was very well expressed; beginning with a recitation of the
+facts about myself, the reward offered for my apprehension, my
+surrender, the pressure brought to bear upon me; my sequestration; and
+my arrival at Inverary in time to be too late; going on to explain the
+reasons of loyalty and public interest for which it was agreed to waive
+any right of action; and winding up with a forcible appeal to the King's
+mercy on behalf of James.
+
+Methought I was a good deal sacrificed, and rather represented in the
+light of a firebrand of a fellow whom my cloud of lawyers had restrained
+with difficulty from extremes. But I let it pass, and made but the one
+suggestion, that I should be described as ready to deliver my own
+evidence and adduce that of others before any commission of inquiry--and
+the one demand, that I should be immediately furnished with a copy.
+
+Colstoun hummed and hawed. "This is a very confidential document," said
+he.
+
+"And my position towards Prestongrange is highly peculiar," I replied.
+"No question but I must have touched his heart at our first interview,
+so that he has since stood my friend consistently. But for him,
+gentlemen, I must now be lying dead or awaiting my sentence alongside
+poor James. For which reason I choose to communicate to him the fact of
+this memorial as soon as it is copied. You are to consider also that
+this step will make for my protection. I have enemies here accustomed to
+drive hard; his Grace is in his own country, Lovat by his side; and if
+there should hang any ambiguity over our proceedings, I think I might
+very well awake in gaol."
+
+Not finding any very ready answer to these considerations, my company of
+advisers were at the last persuaded to consent, and made only this
+condition that I was to lay the paper before Prestongrange with the
+express compliments of all concerned.
+
+The Advocate was at the castle dining with his Grace. By the hand of one
+of Colstoun's servants I sent him a billet asking for an interview, and
+received a summons to meet him at once in a private house of the town.
+Here I found him alone in a chamber; from his face there was nothing to
+be gleaned; yet I was not so unobservant but what I spied some halberts
+in the hall, and not so stupid but what I could gather he was prepared
+to arrest me there and then, should it appear advisable.
+
+"So, Mr. David, this is you?" said he.
+
+"Where I fear I am not overly welcome, my lord," said I. "And I would
+like before I go further to express my sense of your lordship's
+continued good offices, even should they now cease."
+
+"I have heard of your gratitude before," he replied drily, "and I think
+this can scarce be the matter you called me from my wine to listen to. I
+would remember also, if I were you, that you still stand on a very boggy
+foundation."
+
+"Not now, my lord, I think," said I; "and if your lordship will but
+glance an eye along this, you will perhaps think as I do."
+
+He read it sedulously through, frowning heavily; then turned back to one
+part and another which he seemed to weigh and compare the effect of. His
+face a little lightened.
+
+"This is not so bad but what it might be worse," said he; "though I am
+still likely to pay dear for my acquaintance with Mr. David Balfour."
+
+"Rather for your indulgence to that unlucky young man, my lord," said I.
+
+He still skimmed the paper, and all the while his spirits seemed to
+mend.
+
+"And to whom am I indebted for this?" he asked presently. "Other
+counsels must have been discussed, I think. Who was it proposed this
+private method? Was it Miller?"
+
+"My lord, it was myself," said I. "These gentlemen have shown me no such
+consideration, as that I should deny myself any credit I can fairly
+claim, or spare them any responsibility they should properly bear. And
+the mere truth is, that they were all in favour of a process which
+should have remarkable consequences in the Parliament House, and prove
+for them (in one of their own expressions) a dripping roast. Before I
+intervened, I think they were on the point of sharing out the different
+law appointments. Our friend Mr. Symon was to be taken in upon some
+composition."
+
+Prestongrange smiled. "These are our friends!" said he. "And what were
+your reasons for dissenting, Mr. David?"
+
+I told them without concealment, expressing, however, with more force
+and volume those which regarded Prestongrange himself.
+
+"You do me no more than justice," said he. "I have fought as hard in
+your interest as you have fought against mine. And how came you here
+to-day?" he asked. "As the case drew out, I began to grow uneasy that I
+had clipped the period so fine, and I was even expecting you to-morrow.
+But to-day--I never dreamed of it."
+
+I was not, of course, going to betray Andie.
+
+"I suspect there is some very weary cattle by the road," said I.
+
+"If I had known you were such a mosstrooper you should have tasted
+longer of the Bass," says he.
+
+"Speaking of which, my lord, I return your letter." And I gave him the
+enclosure in the counterfeit hand.
+
+"There was the cover also with the seal," said he.
+
+"I have it not," said I. "It bore naught but the address, and could not
+compromise a cat. The second enclosure I have, and with your permission,
+I desire to keep it."
+
+I thought he winced a little, but he said nothing to the point.
+"To-morrow," he resumed, "our business here is to be finished, and I
+proceed by Glasgow. I would be very glad to have you of my party, Mr.
+David."
+
+"My lord...." I began.
+
+"I do not deny it will be of service to me," he interrupted. "I desire
+even that, when we shall come to Edinburgh you should alight at my
+house. You have very warm friends in the Miss Grants, who will be
+overjoyed to have you to themselves. If you think I have been of use to
+you, you can thus easily repay me, and so far from losing, may reap some
+advantage by the way. It is not every strange young man who is presented
+in society by the King's Advocate."
+
+Often enough already (in our brief relations) this gentleman had caused
+my head to spin; no doubt but what for a moment he did so again now.
+Here was the old fiction still maintained of my particular favour with
+his daughters, one of whom had been so good as laugh at me, while the
+other two had scarce deigned to remark the fact of my existence. And now
+I was to ride with my lord to Glascow; I was to dwell with him in
+Edinburgh; I was to be brought into society under his protection! That
+he should have so much good-nature as to forgive me was surprising
+enough; that he could wish to take me up and serve me seemed impossible;
+and I began to seek for some ulterior meaning. One was plain. If I
+became his guest, repentance was excluded; I could never think better of
+my present design and bring any action. And besides, would not my
+presence in his house draw out the whole pungency of the memorial? For
+that complaint could not be very seriously regarded, if the person
+chiefly injured was the guest of the official most incriminated. As I
+thought upon this, I could not quite refrain from smiling.
+
+"This is in the nature of a countercheck to the memorial?" said I.
+
+"You are cunning, Mr. David," said he, "and you do not wholly guess
+wrong; the fact will be of use to me in my defence. Perhaps, however,
+you underrate my friendly sentiments, which are perfectly genuine. I
+have a respect for you, Mr. David, mingled with awe," says he, smiling.
+
+"I am more than willing, I am earnestly desirous to meet your wishes,"
+said I. "It is my design to be called to the bar, where your lordship's
+countenance would be invaluable; and I am besides sincerely grateful to
+yourself and family for different marks of interest and of indulgence.
+The difficulty is here. There is one point in which we pull two ways.
+You are trying to hang James Stewart, I am trying to save him. In so far
+as my riding with you would better your lordship's defence, I am at your
+lordship's orders; but in so far as it would help to hang James Stewart,
+you see me at a stick."
+
+I thought he swore to himself. "You should certainly be called; the bar
+is the true scene for your talents," says he, bitterly, and then fell a
+while silent. "I will tell you," he presently resumed, "there is no
+question of James Stewart, for or against. James is a dead man; his life
+is given and taken--bought (if you like it better) and sold; no memorial
+can help--no defalcation of a faithful Mr. David hurt him. Blow high,
+blow low, there will be no pardon for James Stewart: and take that for
+said! The question is now of myself: am I to stand or fall? and I do not
+deny to you that I am in some danger. But will Mr. David Balfour
+consider why? It is not because I have pushed the case unduly against
+James; for that, I am sure of condonation. And it is not because I have
+sequestered Mr. David on a rock, though it will pass under that colour;
+but because I did not take the ready and plain path, to which I was
+pressed repeatedly, and send Mr. David to his grave or to the gallows.
+Hence the scandal--hence this damned memorial," striking the paper on
+his leg. "My tenderness for you has brought me in this difficulty. I
+wish to know if your tenderness to your own conscience is too great to
+let you help me out of it?"
+
+No doubt but there was much of the truth in what he said; if James was
+past helping, whom was it more natural that I should turn to help than
+just the man before me, who had helped myself so often, and was even now
+setting me a pattern of patience? I was besides not only weary, but
+beginning to be ashamed of my perpetual attitude of suspicion and
+refusal.
+
+"If you will name the time and place, I will be punctually ready to
+attend your lordship," said I.
+
+He shook hands with me. "And I think my misses have some news for you,"
+says he, dismissing me.
+
+I came away, vastly pleased to have my peace made, yet a little
+concerned in conscience; nor could I help wondering, as I went back,
+whether, perhaps, I had not been a scruple too good-natured. But there
+was the fact, that this was a man that might have been my father, an
+able man, a great dignitary, and one that, in the hour of my need, had
+reached a hand to my assistance. I was in the better humour to enjoy the
+remainder of that evening, which I passed with the advocates, in
+excellent company no doubt, but perhaps with rather more than a
+sufficiency of punch: for though I went early to bed I have no clear
+mind of how I got there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE TEE'D BALL
+
+
+On the morrow, from the justices' private room, where none could see me,
+I heard the verdict given in and judgment rendered upon James. The
+Duke's words I am quite sure I have correctly; and since that famous
+passage has been made a subject of dispute, I may as well commemorate my
+version. Having referred to the year '45, the chief of the Campbells,
+sitting as Justice-General upon the bench, thus addressed the
+unfortunate Stewart before him: "If you had been successful in that
+rebellion, you might have been giving the law where you have now
+received the judgment of it; we, who are this day your judges, might
+have been tried before one of your mock courts of judicature; and then
+you might have been satiated with the blood of any name or clan to which
+you had an aversion."
+
+"This is to let the cat out of the bag, indeed," thought I. And that was
+the general impression. It was extraordinary how the young advocate lads
+took hold and made a mock of this speech, and how scarce a meal passed
+but what some one would get in the words: "And then you might have been
+satiated." Many songs were made in that time for the hour's diversion,
+and are near all forgot. I remember one began:
+
+ What do ye want the bluid of, bluid of?
+ Is it a name, or is it a clan,
+ Or is it an aefauld Hielandman,
+ That ye want the bluid of, bluid of?
+
+Another went to my old favourite air, _The House of Airlie_, and began
+thus:
+
+ It fell on a day when Argyle was on the bench,
+ That they served him a Stewart for his denner.
+
+And one of the verses ran:
+
+ Then up and spak the Duke, and flyted on his cook,
+ I regaird it as a sensible aspersion,
+ That I would sup ava', an' satiate my maw,
+ With the bluid of ony clan of my aversion.
+
+James was as fairly murdered as though the Duke had got a fowling-piece
+and stalked him. So much of course I knew: but others knew not so much,
+and were more affected by the items of scandal that came to light in the
+progress of the cause. One of the chief was certainly this sally of the
+justice's. It was run hard by another of a juryman, who had struck into
+the midst of Colstoun's speech for the defence with a "Pray, sir, cut it
+short, we are quite weary," which seemed the very excess of impudence
+and simplicity. But some of my new lawyer friends were still more
+staggered with an innovation that had disgraced and even vitiated the
+proceedings. One witness was never called. His name, indeed, was
+printed, where it may still be seen on the fourth page of the list:
+"James Drummond, _alias_ Macgregor, _alias_ James More, late tenant in
+Inveronachile"; and his precognition had been taken, as the manner is,
+in writing. He had remembered or invented (God help him) matter which
+was lead in James Stewart's shoes, and I saw was like to prove wings to
+his own. This testimony it was highly desirable to bring to the notice
+of the jury, without exposing the man himself to the perils of
+cross-examination; and the way it was brought about was a matter of
+surprise to all. For the paper was handed round (like a curiosity) in
+court; passed through the jury-box, where it did its work; and
+disappeared again (as though by accident) before it reached the counsel
+for the prisoner. This was counted a most insidious device; and that the
+name of James More should be mingled up with it filled me with shame for
+Catriona and concern for myself.
+
+The following day, Prestongrange and I, with a considerable company, set
+out for Glasgow, where (to my impatience) we continued to linger some
+time in a mixture of pleasure and affairs. I lodged with my lord, with
+whom I was encouraged to familiarity; had my place at entertainments;
+was presented to the chief guests; and altogether made more of than I
+thought accorded either with my parts or station; so that, on strangers
+being present, I would often blush for Prestongrange. It must be owned
+the view I had taken of the world in these last months was fit to cast a
+gloom upon my character. I had met many men, some of them leaders in
+Israel whether by their birth or talents; and who among them all had
+shown clean hands? As for the Browns and Millers, I had seen their
+self-seeking, I could never again respect them. Prestongrange was the
+best yet; he had saved me, had spared me rather, when others had it in
+their minds to murder me outright; but the blood of James lay at his
+door; and I thought his present dissimulation with myself a thing below
+pardon. That he should affect to find pleasure in my discourse almost
+surprised me out of my patience. I would sit and watch him with a kind
+of a slow fire of anger in my bowels. "Ah, friend, friend," I would
+think to myself, "if you were but through with this affair of the
+memorial, would you not kick me in the streets?" Here I did him, as
+events have proved, the most foul injustice; and I think he was at once
+far more sincere, and a far more artful performer than I supposed.
+
+But I had some warrant for my incredulity in the behaviour of that court
+of young advocates that hung about him in the hope of patronage. The
+sudden favour of a lad not previously heard of troubled them at first
+out of measure; but two days were not gone by before I found myself
+surrounded with flattery and attention. I was the same young man, and
+neither better nor bonnier, that they had rejected a month before; and
+now there was no civility too fine for me! The same, do I say? It was
+not so; and the byname by which I went behind my back confirmed it.
+Seeing me so firm with the Advocate, and persuaded that I was to fly
+high and far, they had taken a word from the golfing green, and called
+me _the Tee'd Ball_.[14] I was told I was now "one of themselves"; I was
+to taste of their soft lining, who had already made my own experience of
+the roughness of the outer husk; and the one, to whom I had been
+presented in Hope Park, was so assured as even to remind me of that
+meeting. I told him I had not the pleasure of remembering it.
+
+"Why," says he, "it was Miss Grant herself presented me! My name is
+so-and-so."
+
+"It may very well be, sir," said I, "but I have kept no mind of it."
+
+At which he desisted; and in the midst of the disgust that commonly
+overflowed my spirits I had a glisk of pleasure.
+
+But I have not patience to dwell upon that time at length. When I was in
+company with these young politics I was borne down with shame for myself
+and my own plain ways, and scorn for them and their duplicity. Of the
+two evils, I thought Prestongrange to be the least; and while I was
+always as stiff as buckram to the young bloods, I made rather a
+dissimulation of my hard feelings towards the Advocate, and was (in old
+Mr. Campbell's word) "soople to the laird." Himself commented on the
+difference, and bid me be more of my age, and make friends with my young
+comrades.
+
+I told him I was slow of making friends.
+
+"I will take the word back," said he. "But there is such a thing as
+_Fair gude e'en and fair gude day_, Mr. David. These are the same young
+men with whom you are to pass your days and get through life: your
+backwardness has a look of arrogance; and unless you can assume a little
+more lightness of manner, I fear you will meet difficulties in the
+path."
+
+"It will be an ill job to make a silk purse of a sow's ear," said I.
+
+On the morning of October 1st I was awakened by the clattering in of an
+express; and getting to my window almost before he had dismounted, I saw
+the messenger had ridden hard. Somewhile after I was called to
+Prestongrange, where he was sitting in his bedgown and nightcap, with
+his letters around him.
+
+"Mr. David," said he, "I have a piece of news for you. It concerns some
+friends of yours, of whom I sometimes think you are a little ashamed,
+for you have never referred to their existence."
+
+I suppose I blushed.
+
+"I see you understand, since you make the answering signal," said he.
+"And I must compliment you on your excellent taste in beauty. But do you
+know, Mr. David, this seems to me a very enterprising lass? She crops up
+from every side. The Government of Scotland appears unable to proceed
+for Mistress Katrine Drummond, which was somewhat the case (no great
+while back) with a certain Mr. David Balfour. Should not these make a
+good match? Her first intromission in politics--but I must not tell you
+that story, the authorities have decided you are to hear it otherwise
+and from a livelier narrator. This new example is more serious, however;
+and I am afraid I must alarm you with the intelligence that she is now
+in prison."
+
+I cried out.
+
+"Yes," said he, "the little lady is in prison. But I would not have you
+to despair. Unless you (with your friends and memorials) shall procure
+my downfall, she is to suffer nothing."
+
+"But what has she done? What is her offence?" I cried.
+
+"It might be almost construed a high treason," he returned, "for she has
+broke the King's Castle of Edinburgh."
+
+"The lady is much my friend," I said. "I know you would not work me if
+the thing were serious."
+
+"And yet it is serious in a sense," said he; "for this rogue of a
+Katrine--or Cateran, as we may call her--has set adrift again upon the
+world that very doubtful character, her papa."
+
+Here was one of my previsions justified: James More was once again at
+liberty. He had lent his men to keep me a prisoner; he had volunteered
+his testimony in the Appin case, and the same (no matter by what
+subterfuge) had been employed to influence the jury. Now came his
+reward, and he was free. It might please the authorities to give to it
+the colour of an escape; but I knew better--I knew it was the fulfilment
+of a bargain. The same course of thought relieved me of the least alarm
+for Catriona. She might be thought to have broke prison for her father;
+she might have believed so herself. But the chief hand in the whole
+business was that of Prestongrange; and I was sure, so far from letting
+her come to punishment, he would not suffer her to be even tried.
+Whereupon thus came out of me the not very politic ejaculation:
+
+"Ah! I was expecting that!"
+
+"You have at times a great deal of discretion too!" says Prestongrange.
+
+"And what is my lord pleased to mean by that?" I asked.
+
+"I was just marvelling," he replied, "that being so clever as to draw
+these inferences, you should not be clever enough to keep them to
+yourself. But I think you would like to hear the details of the affair.
+I have received two versions: and the least official is the more full
+and far the more entertaining, being from the lively pen of my eldest
+daughter. 'Here is all the town bizzing with a fine piece of work,' she
+writes, 'and what would make the thing more noted (if it were only
+known) the malefactor is a _protegee_ of his lordship my papa. I am sure
+your heart is too much in your duty (if it were nothing else) to have
+forgotten Grey Eyes. What does she do, but get a broad hat with the
+flaps open, a long hairy-like man's great-coat, and a big gravatt; kilt
+her coats up to _Gude kens whaur_, clap two pair of boot-hose upon her
+legs, take a pair of _clouted brogues_[15] in her hand, and off to the
+Castle? Here she gives herself out to be a soutar[16] in the employ of
+James More, and gets admitted to his cell, the lieutenant (who seems to
+have been full of pleasantry) making sport among his soldiers of the
+soutar's great-coat. Presently they hear disputation and the sound of
+blows inside. Out flies the cobbler, his coat flying, the flaps of his
+hat beat about his face, and the lieutenant and his soldiers mock at him
+as he runs off. They laughed not so hearty the next time they had
+occasion to visit the cell, and found nobody but a tall, pretty,
+grey-eyed lass in the female habit! As for the cobbler, he was "over the
+hills ayont Dumblane," and it's thought that poor Scotland will have to
+console herself without him. I drank Catriona's health this night in
+public. Indeed, the whole town admires her; and I think the beaux would
+wear bits of her garters in their button-holes if they could only get
+them. I would have gone to visit her in prison too, only I remembered in
+time I was papa's daughter; so I wrote her a billet instead, which I
+entrusted to the faithful Doig, and I hope you will admit I can be
+political when I please. The same faithful gomeral is to despatch this
+letter by the express along with those of the wiseacres, so that you may
+hear Tom Fool in company with Solomon. Talking of _gomerals_, do tell
+_Dauvit Balfour_. I would I could see the face of him at the thought of
+a long-legged lass in such a predicament! to say nothing of the levities
+of your affectionate daughter, and his respectful friend.' So my rascal
+signs herself!" continued Prestongrange. "And you see, Mr. David, it is
+quite true what I tell you, that my daughters regard you with the most
+affectionate playfulness."
+
+
+"The gomeral is much obliged," said I.
+
+"And was not this prettily done?" he went on. "Is not this Highland maid
+a piece of a heroine?"
+
+"I was always sure she had a great heart," said I. "And I wager she
+guessed nothing.... But I beg your pardon, this is to tread upon
+forbidden subjects."
+
+"I will go bail she did not," he returned, quite openly. "I will go bail
+she thought she was flying straight into King George's face."
+
+Remembrance of Catriona, and the thought of her lying in captivity,
+moved me strangely. I could see that even Prestongrange admired, and
+could not withhold his lips from smiling when he considered her
+behaviour. As for Miss Grant, for all her ill habit of mockery, her
+admiration shone out plain. A kind of a heat came on me.
+
+"I am not your lordship's daughter..." I began.
+
+"That I know of!" he put in smiling.
+
+"I speak like a fool," said I, "or rather I began wrong. It would
+doubtless be unwise in Mistress Grant to go to her in prison; but for
+me, I think I would look like a half-hearted friend if I did not fly
+there instantly."
+
+"So-ho, Mr. David," says he, "I thought that you and I were in a
+bargain?"
+
+"My lord," I said, "when I made that bargain I was a good deal affected
+by your goodness, but I'll never can deny that I was moved besides by my
+own interest. There was self-seeking in my heart, and I think shame of
+it now. It may be for your lordship's safety to say this fashious Davie
+Balfour is your friend and housemate. Say it then; I'll never contradict
+you. But as for your patronage, I give it all back. I ask but the one
+thing--let me go, and give me a pass to see her in her prison."
+
+He looked at me with a hard eye. "You put the cart before the horse, I
+think," says he. "That which I had given was a portion of my liking,
+which your thankless nature does not seem to have remarked. But for my
+patronage, it is not given, nor (to be exact) is it yet offered." He
+paused a bit. "And I warn you, you do not know yourself," he added.
+"Youth is a hasty season; you will think better of all this before a
+year."
+
+"Well, and I would like to be that kind of youth!" I cried. "I have seen
+too much of the other party, in these young advocates that fawn upon
+your lordship and are even at the pains to fawn on me. And I have seen
+it in the old ones also. They are all for by-ends, the whole clan of
+them! It's this that makes me seem to misdoubt your lordship's liking.
+Why would I think that you would like me? But ye told me yourself ye had
+an interest!"
+
+I stopped at this, confounded that I had run so far; he was observing me
+with a unfathomable face.
+
+"My lord, I ask your pardon," I resumed. "I have nothing in my chafts
+but a rough country tongue. I think it would be only decent-like if I
+would go to see my friend in her captivity; but I'm owing you my life,
+I'll never forget that; and-if it's for your lordship's good, here I'll
+stay. That's barely gratitude."
+
+"This might have been reached in fewer words," says Prestongrange,
+grimly. "It is easy, and it is at times gracious, to say a plain Scots
+'ay'."
+
+"Ah, but, my lord, I think ye take me not yet entirely!" cried I. "For
+_your_ sake, for my life-safe, and the kindness that ye say ye bear to
+me--for these, I'll consent; but not for any good that might be coming
+to myself. If I stand aside when this young maid is in her trial, it's a
+thing I will be noways advantaged by; I will lose by it, I will never
+gain. I would rather make a shipwreck wholly than to build on that
+foundation."
+
+He was a minute serious, then smiled. "You mind me of the man with the
+long nose," said he: "was you to look at the moon by a telescope, you
+would see David Balfour there! But you shall have your way of it. I will
+ask at you one service, and then set you free. My clerks are overdriven;
+be so good as copy me these few pages," says he, visibly swithering
+among some huge rolls of manuscripts, "and when that is done, I shall
+bid you God speed! I would never charge myself with Mr. David's
+conscience; and if you could cast some part of it (as you went by) in a
+moss hag, you would find yourself to ride much easier without it."
+
+"Perhaps not just entirely in the same direction though, my lord!" says
+I.
+
+"And you shall have the last word, too!" cries he gaily.
+
+Indeed he had some cause for gaiety, having now found the means to gain
+his purpose. To lessen the weight of the memorial, or to have a readier
+answer at his hand, he desired I should appear publicly in the character
+of his intimate. But if I were to appear with the same publicity as a
+visitor to Catriona in her prison the world would scarce stint to draw
+conclusions, and the true nature of James More's escape must become
+evident to all. This was the little problem I had set him of a sudden,
+and to which he had so briskly found an answer. I was to be tethered in
+Glasgow by that job of copying, which in mere outward decency I could
+not well refuse; and during these hours of my employment Catriona was
+privately got rid of. I think shame to write of this man that loaded me
+with so many goodnesses. He was kind to me as any father, yet I ever
+thought him as false as a cracked bell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+I AM MUCH IN THE HANDS OF THE LADIES
+
+
+The copying was a weary business, the more so as I perceived very early
+there was no sort of urgency in the matters treated, and began very
+early to consider my employment a pretext. I had no sooner finished,
+than I got to horse, used what remained of daylight to the best purpose,
+and being at last fairly benighted, slept in a house by Almond-Water
+side. I was in the saddle again before the day, and the Edinburgh booths
+were just opening when I clattered in by the West Bow and drew up a
+smoking horse at my lord Advocate's door. I had a written word for Doig,
+my lord's private hand that was thought to be in all his secrets, a
+worthy, little plain man, all fat and snuff and self-sufficiency. Him I
+found already at his desk and already bedabbled with maccabaw, in the
+same anteroom where I rencountered with James More. He read the note
+scrupulously through like a chapter in his Bible.
+
+"H'm," says he, "ye come a wee thing ahint-hand, Mr. Balfour. The bird's
+flaen, we hae letten her out."
+
+"Miss Drummond is set free?" I cried.
+
+"Achy!" said he. "What would we keep her for, ye ken? To hae made a
+steer about the bairn would hae pleased naebody."
+
+"And where'll she be now?" says I.
+
+"Gude kens!" says Doig, with a shrug.
+
+"She'll have gone home to Lady Allardyce, I'm thinking," said I.
+
+"That'll be it," said he.
+
+"Then I'll gang there straight," says I.
+
+"But ye'll be for a bite or ye go?" said he.
+
+"Neither bite nor sup," said I. "I had a good waucht of milk in by
+Ratho."
+
+"Aweel, aweel," says Doig. "But ye'll can leave your horse here and your
+bags, for it seems we're to have your up-put."
+
+"Na, na," said I. "Tamson's mear[17] would never be the thing for me,
+this day of all days."
+
+Doig speaking somewhat broad, I had been led by imitation into an accent
+much more countrified than I was usually careful to affect, a good deal
+broader indeed than I have written it down; and I was the more ashamed
+when another voice joined in behind me with a scrap of a ballad:
+
+ "Gae saddle me the bonny black,
+ Gae saddle sune and mak' him ready,
+ For I will down the Gatehope-slack,
+ And a' to see my bonny leddy."
+
+The young lady, when I turned to her, stood in a morning gown, and her
+hands muffled in the same, as if to hold me at a distance. Yet I could
+not but think there was kindness in the eye with which she saw me.
+
+"My best respects to you, Mistress Grant," said I bowing.
+
+"The like to yourself, Mr. David," she replied, with a deep courtesy,
+"And I beg to remind you of an old musty saw, that meat and mass never
+hindered man. The mass I cannot afford you, for we are all good
+Protestants. But the meat I press on your attention. And I would not
+wonder but I could find something for your private ear that would be
+worth the stopping for."
+
+"Mistress Grant," said I, "I believe I am already your debtor for some
+merry words--and I think they were kind too--on a piece of unsigned
+paper."
+
+"Unsigned paper?" says she, and made a droll face, which was likewise
+wondrous beautiful, as of one trying to remember.
+
+"Or else I am the more deceived," I went on. "But to be sure, we shall
+have the time to speak of these, since your father is so good as to make
+me for a while your inmate; and the _gomeral_ begs you at this time only
+for the favour of his liberty."
+
+"You give yourself hard names," said she.
+
+"Mr. Doig and I would be blythe to take harder at your clever pen," says
+I.
+
+"Once more I have to admire the discretion of all men-folk," she
+replied. "But if you will not eat, off with you at once; you will be
+back the sooner, for you go on a fool's errand. Off with you, Mr.
+David," she continued, opening the door.
+
+ "He has lowpen on his bonny grey,
+ He rade the richt gate and the ready;
+ I trow he would neither stint nor stay,
+ Far he was seeking his bonny leddy."
+
+I did not wait to be twice bidden, and did justice to Miss Grant's
+citation on the way to Dean.
+
+Old Lady Allardyce walked there alone in the garden, in her hat and
+mutch, and having a silver-mounted staff of some black wood to lean
+upon. As I alighted from my horse, and drew near to her with _congees_,
+I could see the blood come in her face, and her head fling into the air
+like what I had conceived of empresses.
+
+"What brings you to my poor door?" she cried, speaking high through her
+nose. "I cannot bar it. The males of my house are dead and buried; I
+have neither son nor husband to stand in the gate for me; any beggar can
+pluck me by the baird[18]--and a baird there is, and that's the worst of
+it yet!" she added, partly to herself.
+
+I was extremely put out at this reception, and the last remark, which
+seemed like a daft wife's, left me near hand speechless.
+
+"I see I have fallen under your displeasure, ma'am," said I. "Yet I will
+still be so bold as ask after Mistress Drummond."
+
+She considered me with a burning eye, her lips pressed close together
+into twenty creases, her hand shaking on her staff. "This cows all!" she
+cried. "Ye come to me to spier for her! Would God I knew!"
+
+"She is not here?" I cried.
+
+She threw up her chin and made a step and a cry at me, so that I fell
+back incontinent.
+
+"Out upon your leeing throat!" she cried. "What! ye come and spier at
+me! She's in jyle, whaur ye took her to--that's all there is to it. And
+of a' the beings ever I beheld in breeks, to think it should be you! Ye
+timmer scoun'rel, if I had a male left to my name I would have your
+jaicket dustit till ye raired."
+
+I thought it not good to delay longer in that place because I remarked
+her passion to be rising. As I turned to the horse-post she even
+followed me; and I make no shame to confess that I rode away with the
+one stirrup on and scrambling for the other.
+
+As I knew no other quarter where I could push my inquiries, there was
+nothing left me but to return to the Advocate's. I was well received by
+the four ladies, who were now in company together, and must give the
+news of Prestongrange and what word went in the west country, at the
+most inordinate length and with great weariness to myself; while all the
+time that young lady, with whom I so much desired to be alone again,
+observed me quizzically and seemed to find pleasure in the sight of my
+impatience. At last, after I had endured a meal with them, and was come
+very near the point of appealing for an interview before her aunt, she
+went and stood by the music case, and picking out a tune, sang to it on
+a high key--"He that will not when he may, When he will he shall have
+nay." But this was the end of her rigours, and presently, after making
+some excuse of which I have no mind, she carried me away in private to
+her father's library. I should not fail to say that she was dressed to
+the nines, and appeared extraordinary handsome.
+
+"Now, Mr. David, sit ye down here and let us have a two-handed crack,"
+said she. "For I have much to tell you, and it appears besides that I
+have been grossly unjust to your good taste."
+
+"In what manner, Mistress Grant?" I asked. "I trust I have never seemed
+to fail in due respect."
+
+"I will be your surety, Mr. David," said she. "Your respect, whether to
+yourself or your poor neighbours, has been always and most fortunately
+beyond imitation. But that is by the question. You got a note from me?"
+she asked.
+
+"I was so bold as to suppose so upon inference," said I, "and it was
+kindly thought upon."
+
+"It must have prodigiously surprised you," said she. "But let us begin
+with the beginning. You have not perhaps forgot a day when you were so
+kind as to escort three very tedious misses to Hope Park? I have the
+less cause to forget it myself, because you was so particular obliging
+as to introduce me to some of the principles of the Latin grammar, a
+thing which wrote itself profoundly on my gratitude."
+
+"I fear I was sadly pedantical," said I, overcome with confusion at the
+memory. "You are only to consider I am quite unused with the society of
+ladies."
+
+"I will say the less about the grammar then," she replied. "But how came
+you to desert your charge? 'He has thrown her out, overboard, his ain
+dear Annie!'" she hummed; "and his ain dear Annie and her two sisters
+had to taigle home by theirselves like a string of green geese! It seems
+you returned to my papa's, where you showed yourself excessively
+martial, and then on to realms unknown, with an eye (it appears) to the
+Bass Rock; solan geese being perhaps more to your mind than bonny
+lasses."
+
+Through all this raillery there was something indulgent in the lady's
+eye which made me suppose there might be better coming.
+
+"You take a pleasure to torment me," said I, "and I make a very feckless
+plaything; but let me ask you to be more merciful. At this time there is
+but the one thing that I care to hear of, and that will be news of
+Catriona."
+
+"Do you call her by that name to her face, Mr. Balfour?" she asked.
+
+"In troth, and I am not very sure," I stammered.
+
+"I would not do so in any case to strangers," said Miss Grant. "And why
+are you so much immersed in the affairs of this young lady?"
+
+"I heard she was in prison," said I.
+
+"Well, and now you hear that she is out of it," she replied, "and what
+more would you have? She has no need of any further champion."
+
+"I may have the greater need of her, ma'am," said I.
+
+"Come, this is better!" says Miss Grant. "But look me fairly in the
+face; am I not bonnier than she?"
+
+"I would be the last to be denying it," said I. "There is not your
+marrow in all Scotland."
+
+"Well, here you have the pick of the two at your hand, and must needs
+speak of the other," said she. "This is never the way to please the
+ladies, Mr. Balfour."
+
+"But, mistress," said I, "there are surely other things besides mere
+beauty."
+
+"By which I am to understand that I am no better than I should be,
+perhaps?" she asked.
+
+"By which you will please understand that I am like the cock in the
+midden in the fable book," said I. "I see the braw jewel--and I like
+fine to see it too--but I have more need of the pickle corn."
+
+"Bravissimo!" she cried. "There is a word well said at last, and I will
+reward you for it with my story. That same night of your desertion I
+came late from a friend's house--where I was excessively admired,
+whatever you may think of it--and what should I hear but that a lass in
+a tartan screen desired to speak with me? She had been there an hour or
+better, said the servant-lass, and she grat in to herself as she sat
+waiting. I went to her direct; she rose as I came in, and I knew her at
+a look. '_Grey Eyes!_' says I to myself, but was more wise than to let
+on. _You will be Miss Grant at last?_ she says, rising and looking at me
+hard and pitiful. _Ay, it was true he said, you are bonny at all
+events.--The way God made me, my dear_, I said, _but I would be gey and
+obliged if ye could tell me what brought you here at such a time of the
+night--Lady_, she said, _we are kinsfolk, we are both come of the blood
+of the sons of Alpin.--My dear_, I replied, _I think no more of Alpin or
+his sons than what I do of a kale-stock. You have a better argument in
+these tears upon your bonny face_. And at that I was so weakminded as to
+kiss her, which is what you would like to do dearly, and I wager will
+never find the courage of. I say it was weakminded of me, for I knew no
+more of her than the outside; but it was the wisest stroke I could have
+hit upon. She is a very staunch, brave nature, but I think she has been
+little used with tenderness; and at that caress (though to say the
+truth, it was but lightly given) her heart went out to me. I will never
+betray the secrets of my sex, Mr. Davie; I will never tell you the way
+she turned me round her thumb, because it is the same she will use to
+twist yourself. Ay, it is a fine lass! She is as clean as hill well
+water."
+
+"She is e'en't!" I cried.
+
+"Well, then, she told me her concerns," pursued Miss Grant, "and in what
+a swither she was in about her papa, and what a taking about yourself,
+with very little cause, and in what a perplexity she had found herself
+after you was gone away. _And then I minded at long last,_ says she,
+_that we were kinswomen, and that Mr. David should have given you the
+name of the bonniest of the bonny, and I was thinking to myself 'If she
+is so bonny she will be good at all events; and I took up my foot soles
+out of that_. That was when I forgave yourself, Mr. Davie. When you was
+in my society, you seemed upon hot iron; by all marks, if ever I saw a
+young man that wanted to be gone, it was yourself, and I and my two
+sisters were the ladies you were so desirous to be gone from; and now it
+appeared you had given me some notice in the bygoing, and was so kind as
+to comment on my attractions! From that hour you may date our
+friendship, and I began to think with tenderness upon the Latin
+grammar."
+
+"You will have many hours to rally me in," said I, "and I think besides
+you do yourself injustice, I think it was Catriona turned your heart in
+my direction, she is too simple to perceive as you do the stiffness of
+her friend."
+
+"I would not like to wager upon that, Mr. David," said she. "The lasses
+have clear eyes. But at least she is your friend entirely, as I was to
+see. I carried her in to his lordship my papa; and his Advocacy, being
+in a favourable stage of claret, was so good as to receive the pair of
+us. _Here is Grey Eyes that you have been deaved with these days past_,
+said I, _she is come to prove that we spoke true, and I lay the
+prettiest lass in the three Lothians at your feet_--making a papistical
+reservation of myself. She suited her action to my words; down she went
+upon her knees to him--I would not like to swear but he saw two of her,
+which doubtless made her appeal the more irresistible, for you are all a
+pack of Mahomedans--told him what had passed that night, and how she had
+withheld her father's man from following of you, and what a case she was
+in about her father, and what a flutter for yourself; and begged with
+weeping for the lives of both of you (neither of which was in the
+slightest danger) till I vow I was proud of my sex because it was done
+so pretty, and ashamed for it because of the smallness of the occasion.
+She had not gone far, I assure you, before the Advocate was wholly
+sober, to see his inmost politics ravelled out by a young lass and
+discovered to the most unruly of his daughters. But we took him in hand,
+the pair of us, and brought that matter straight. Properly managed--and
+that means managed by me--there is no one to compare with my papa."
+
+"He has been a good man to me," said I.
+
+"Well, he was a good man to Katrine, and I was there to see to it," said
+she.
+
+"And she pled for me!" said I.
+
+"She did that, and very movingly," said Miss Grant. "I would not like to
+tell you what she said, I find you vain enough already."
+
+"God reward her for it!" cried I.
+
+"With Mr. David Balfour, I suppose?" says she.
+
+"You do me too much injustice at the last!" I cried. "I would tremble to
+think of her in such hard hands. Do you think I would presume, because
+she begged my life? She would do that for a new whelped puppy! I have
+had more than that to set me up, if you but ken'd. She kissed that hand
+of mine. Ay, but she did. And why? because she thought I was playing a
+brave part and might be going to my death. It was not for my sake, but I
+need not be telling that to you that cannot look at me without laughter.
+It was for the love of what she thought was bravery. I believe there is
+none but me and poor Prince Charlie had that honour done them. Was this
+not to make a god of me? and do you not think my heart would quake when
+I remember it?"
+
+"I do laugh at you a good deal, and a good deal more than is quite
+civil," said she; "but I will tell you one thing: if you speak to her
+like that, you have some glimmerings of a chance."
+
+"Me?" I cried, "I would never dare. I can speak to you, Miss Grant,
+because it's a matter of indifference what ye think of me. But her? no
+fear!" said I.
+
+"I think you have the largest feet in all broad Scotland," says she.
+
+"Troth, they are no very small," said I, looking down.
+
+"Ah, poor Catriona!" cried Miss Grant.
+
+And I could but stare upon her; for though I now see very well what she
+was driving at (and perhaps some justification for the same), I was
+never swift at the uptake in such flimsy talk.
+
+"Ah well, Mr. David," she said, "it goes sore against my conscience, but
+I see I shall have to be your speaking board. She shall know you came to
+her straight upon the news of her imprisonment; she shall know you would
+not pause to eat; and of your conversation she shall hear just so much
+as I think convenient for a maid of her age and inexperience. Believe
+me, you will be in that way much better served than you could serve
+yourself, for I will keep the big feet out of the platter."
+
+"You know where she is, then?" I exclaimed.
+
+"That I do, Mr. David, and will never tell," said she.
+
+"Why that?" I asked.
+
+"Well," she said, "I am a good friend, as you will soon discover; and
+the chief of those that I am a friend to is my papa. I assure you, you
+will never heat nor melt me out of that, so you may spare me your
+sheep's eyes; and adieu to your David-Balfourship for the now."
+
+"But there is yet one thing more," I cried. "There is one thing that
+must be stopped, being mere ruin to herself, and to me too."
+
+"Well," she said, "be brief, I have spent half the day on you already."
+
+"My Lady Allardyce believes," I began, "she supposes--she thinks that I
+abducted her."
+
+The colour came into Miss Grant's face, so that at first I was quite
+abashed to find her ear so delicate, till I bethought me she was
+struggling rather with mirth, a notion in which I was altogether
+confirmed by the shaking of her voice as she replied--
+
+"I will take up the defence of your reputation," said she. "You may
+leave it in my hands."
+
+And with that she withdrew out of the library.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+I CONTINUE TO MOVE IN GOOD SOCIETY
+
+
+For about exactly two months I remained a guest in Prestongrange's
+family, where I bettered my acquaintance with the bench, the bar, and
+the flower of Edinburgh company. You are not to suppose my education was
+neglected, on the contrary I was kept extremely busy. I studied the
+French, so as to be more prepared to go to Leyden; I set myself to the
+fencing, and wrought hard, sometimes three hours in the day, with
+notable advancement; at the suggestion of my cousin, Pilrig, who was an
+apt musician, I was put to a singing class, and by the orders of my Miss
+Grant, to one for the dancing, at which. I must say I proved far from
+ornamental. However, all were good enough to say it gave me an address a
+little more genteel; and there is no question but I learned to manage my
+coat skirts and sword with more dexterity, and to stand in a room as
+though the same belonged to me. My clothes themselves were all earnestly
+re-ordered; and the most trifling circumstance, such as where I should
+tie my hair, or the colour of my ribbon, debated among the three misses
+like a thing of weight. One way with another, no doubt I was a good deal
+improved to look at, and acquired a bit of a modish air that would have
+surprised the good folks at Essendean.
+
+The two younger misses were very willing to discuss a point of my
+habiliment, because that was in the line of their chief thoughts. I
+cannot say that they appeared any other way conscious of my presence;
+and though always more than civil, with a kind of heartless cordiality,
+could not hide how much I wearied them. As for the aunt, she was a
+wonderful still woman; and I think she gave me much the same attention
+as she gave the rest of the family, which was little enough. The eldest
+daughter and the Advocate himself were thus my principal friends, and
+our familiarity was much increased by a pleasure that we took in common.
+Before the court met we spent a day or two at the house of Grange,
+living very nobly with an open table, and here it was that we three
+began to ride out together in the fields, a practice afterwards
+maintained in Edinburgh, so far as the Advocate's continual affairs
+permitted. When we were put in a good frame by the briskness of the
+exercise, the difficulties of the way, or the accidents of bad weather,
+my shyness wore entirely off; we forgot that we were strangers, and
+speech not being required, it flowed the more naturally on. Then it was
+that they had my story from me, bit by bit, from the time that I left
+Essendean, with my voyage and battle in the _Covenant_, wanderings in
+the heather, etc.; and from the interest they found in my adventures
+sprung the circumstance of a jaunt we made a little later on, a day when
+the courts were not sitting, and of which I will tell a trifle more at
+length.
+
+We took horse early, and passed first by the house of Shaws, where it
+stood smokeless in a great field of white frost, for it was yet early in
+the day. Here Prestongrange alighted down, gave me his horse, and
+proceeded alone to visit my uncle. My heart, I remember, swelled up
+bitter within me at the sight of that bare house and the thought of the
+old miser sitting chittering within in the cold kitchen.
+
+"There is my home," said I. "And my family."
+
+"Poor David Balfour!" said Miss Grant.
+
+What passed during the visit I have never heard; but it would doubtless
+not be very agreeable to Ebenezer; for when the Advocate came forth
+again his face was dark.
+
+"I think you will soon be the laird indeed, Mr. Davie," says he, turning
+half about with the one foot in the stirrup.
+
+"I will never pretend sorrow," said I; and, to say the truth, during his
+absence Miss Grant and I had been embellishing the place in fancy with
+plantations, parterres, and a terrace, much as I have since carried out
+in fact.
+
+Thence we pushed to the Queensferry, where Rankeillor gave us a good
+welcome, being indeed out of the body to receive so great a visitor.
+Here the Advocate was so unaffectedly good as to go quite fully over my
+affairs, sitting perhaps two hours with the Writer in his study, and
+expressing (I was told) a great esteem for myself and concern for my
+fortunes. To while this time, Miss Grant and I and young Rankeillor took
+boat and passed the Hope to Limekilns. Rankeillor made himself very
+ridiculous (and, I thought offensive) with his admiration for the young
+lady, and to my wonder (only it is so common a weakness of her sex) she
+seemed, if anything, to be a little gratified. One use it had: for when
+we were come to the other side, she laid her commands on him to mind the
+boat, while she and I passed a little further to the ale-house. This was
+her own thought, for she had been taken with my account of Alison
+Hastie, and desired to see the lass herself. We found her once more
+alone--indeed, I believe her father wrought all day in the fields--and
+she curtsied dutifully to the gentry-folk and the beautiful young lady
+in the riding coat.
+
+"Is this all the welcome I am to get?" said I, holding out my hand. "And
+have you no more memory of old friends?"
+
+"Keep me! wha's this of it?" she cried, and then, "God's truth, it's the
+tautit[19] laddie!"
+
+"The very same," says I.
+
+"Mony's the time I've thocht upon you and your freen, and blythe am I to
+see in your braws,"[20] she cried. "Though I kent ye were come to your
+ain folk by the grand present that ye sent me and that I thank ye for
+with a' my heart."
+
+"There," said Miss Grant to me, "run out by with ye, like a good bairn.
+I didnae come here to stand and hand a candle; it's her and me that are
+to crack."
+
+I suppose she stayed ten minutes in the house, but when she came forth I
+observed two things--that her eyes were reddened, and a silver brooch
+was gone out of her bosom. This very much affected me.
+
+"I never saw you so well adorned," said I.
+
+"O Davie man, dinna be a pompous gowk!" said she, and was more than
+usually sharp to me the remainder of the day.
+
+About candlelight we came home from this excursion.
+
+For a good while I heard nothing further of Catriona: my Miss Grant
+remaining quite impenetrable, and stopping my mouth with pleasantries.
+At last, one day that she returned from walking and found me alone in
+the parlour over my French, I thought there was something unusual in her
+looks; the colour heightened, the eyes sparkling high, and a bit of a
+smile continually bitten in as she regarded me. She seemed indeed like
+the very spirit of mischief, and walking briskly in the room, had soon
+involved me in a kind of quarrel over nothing and (at the least) with
+nothing intended on my side. I was like Christian in the slough; the
+more I tried to clamber out upon the side, the deeper I became involved;
+until at last I heard her declare, with a great deal of passion, that
+she would take that answer at the hands of none, and I must down upon my
+knees for pardon.
+
+The causelessness of all this fuff stirred my own bile. "I have said
+nothing you can properly object to," said I, "and as for my knees, that
+is an attitude I keep for God."
+
+"And as a goddess I am to be served!" she cried, shaking her brown locks
+at me and with a bright colour. "Every man that comes within waft of my
+petticoats shall use me so!"
+
+"I will go so far as ask your pardon for the fashion's sake, although I
+vow I know not why," I replied. "But for these play-acting postures, you
+can go to others."
+
+"O Davie!" she said. "Not if I was to beg you?"
+
+I bethought me I was fighting with a woman, which is the same as to say
+a child, and that upon a point entirely formal.
+
+"I think it a bairnly thing," I said, "not worthy in you to ask, or me
+to render. Yet I will not refuse you, neither," said I; "and the stain,
+if there be any, rests with yourself." And at that I kneeled fairly
+down.
+
+"There!" she cried. "There is the proper station, there is where I have
+been manoeuvring to bring you." And then, suddenly, "Kep,"[21] said she,
+flung me a folded billet, and ran from the apartment laughing.
+
+The billet had neither place nor date. "Dear Mr. David," it began, "I
+get your news continually by my cousin, Miss Grant, and it is a pleisand
+hearing. I am very well, in a good place, among good folk, but
+necessitated to be quite private, though I am hoping that at long last
+we may meet again. All your friendships have been told me by my loving
+cousin, who loves us both. She bids me to send you this writing, and
+oversees the same. I will be asking you to do all her commands, and rest
+your affectionate friend, Catriona Macgregor-Drummond. P.S.--Will you
+not see my cousin, Allardyce?"
+
+I think it not the least brave of my campaigns (as the soldiers say)
+that I should have done as I was here bidden and gone forthright to the
+house by Dean. But the old lady was now entirely changed and supple as a
+glove. By what means Miss Grant had brought this round I could never
+guess; I am sure at least, she dared not to appear openly in the affair,
+for her papa was compromised in it pretty deep. It was he, indeed, who
+had persuaded Catriona to leave, or rather, not to return, to her
+cousin's, placing her instead with a family of Gregorys, decent people,
+quite at the Advocate's disposition, and in whom she might have the more
+confidence because they were of her own clan and family. These kept her
+private till all was ripe, heated and helped her to attempt her father's
+rescue, and after she was discharged from prison received her again into
+the same secrecy. Thus Prestongrange obtained and used his instrument;
+nor did there leak out the smallest word of his acquaintance with the
+daughter of James More. There was some whispering, of course, upon the
+escape of that discredited person; but the Government replied by a show
+of rigour, one of the cell porters was flogged, the lieutenant of the
+guard (my poor friend, Duncansby) was broken of his rank, and as for
+Catriona, all men were well enough pleased that her fault should be
+passed by in silence.
+
+I could never induce Miss Grant to carry back an answer. "No," she would
+say, when I persisted, "I am going to keep the big feet out of the
+platter." This was the more hard to bear, as I was aware she saw my
+little friend many times in the week, and carried her my news whenever
+(as she said) I "had behaved myself." At last she treated me to what she
+called an indulgence, and I thought rather more of a banter. She was
+certainly a strong, almost a violent friend, to all she liked; chief
+among whom was a certain frail old gentlewoman, very blind, and very
+witty, who dwelt in the top of a tall land on a strait close, with a
+nest of linnets in a cage, and thronged all day with visitors. Miss
+Grant was very fond to carry me there and put me to entertain her friend
+with the narrative of my misfortunes; and Miss Tibbie Ramsay (that was
+her name) was particular kind, and told me a great deal that was worth
+knowledge of old folks and past affairs in Scotland. I should say that
+from her chamber window, and not three feet away, such is the straitness
+of that close, it was possible to look into a barred loophole lighting
+the stairway of the opposite house.
+
+Here, upon some pretext, Miss Grant left me one day alone with Miss
+Ramsay. I mind I thought that lady inattentive and like one preoccupied.
+I was besides yery uncomfortable, for the window, contrary to custom,
+was left open and the day was cold. All at once the voice of Miss Grant
+sounded in my ears as from a distance.
+
+"Here, Shaws!" she cried, "keek out of the window and see what I have
+broughten you."
+
+I think it was the prettiest sight that ever I beheld; the well of the
+close was all in clear shadow where a man could see distinctly, the
+walls very black and dingy; and there from the barred loophole I saw two
+faces smiling across at me--Miss Grant's and Catriona's.
+
+"There!" says Miss Grant, "I wanted her to see you in your braws like
+the lass of Limekilns. I wanted her to see what I could make of you,
+when I buckled to the job in earnest!"
+
+It came in my mind she had been more than common particular that day
+upon my dress: and I think that some of the same care had been bestowed
+upon Catriona. For so merry and sensible a lady, Miss Grant was
+certainly wonderful taken up with duds.
+
+"Catriona!" was all I could get out.
+
+As for her, she said nothing in the world, but only waved her hand and
+smiled to me, and was suddenly carried away again from before the
+loophole.
+
+The vision was no sooner lost than I ran to the house door, where I
+found I was locked in; thence back to Miss Ramsay, crying for the key,
+but might as well have cried upon the castle rock. She had passed her
+word, she said, and I must be a good lad. It was impossible to burst the
+door, even if it had been mannerly; it was impossible I should leap from
+the window, being seven storeys above ground. All I could do was to
+crane over the close and watch for their reappearance from the stair. It
+was little to see, being no more than the tops of their two heads each
+on a ridiculous bobbin of skirts, like to a pair of pincushions. Nor did
+Catriona so much as look up for a farewell; being prevented (as I heard
+afterwards) by Miss Grant, who told her folk were never seen to less
+advantage than from above downward.
+
+On the way home, as soon as I was set free, I upbraided Miss Grant with
+her cruelty.
+
+"I am sorry you was disappointed," says she demurely. "For my part I was
+very pleased. You looked better than I dreaded; you looked--if it will
+not make you vain--a mighty pretty young man when you appeared in the
+window. You are to remember that she could not see your feet," says she,
+with the manner of one reassuring me.
+
+"O!" cried I, "leave my feet be, they are no bigger than my neighbor's."
+
+"They are even smaller than some," said she, "but I speak in parables
+like a Hebrew prophet."
+
+"I marvel little they were sometimes stoned!" says I. "But you miserable
+girl, how could you do it? Why should you care to tantalise me with a
+moment?"
+
+"Love is like folk," says she, "it needs some kind of vivers."[22]
+
+"O, Barbara, let me see her properly!" I pleaded. "_You_ can, you see
+her when you please; let me have half an hour."
+
+"Who is it that is managing this love affair? You? Or me?" she asked,
+and as I continued to press her with my instances, fell back upon a
+deadly expedient: that of imitating the tones of my voice when I called
+on Catriona by name; with which, indeed, she held me in subjection for
+some days to follow.
+
+There was never the least word heard of the memorial, or none by me.
+Prestongrange and his grace the Lord President may have heard of it (for
+what I know) on the deafest sides of their heads; they kept it to
+themselves, at least; the public was none the wiser; and in course of
+time, on November 8th, and in the midst of a prodigious storm of wind
+and rain, poor James of the Glens was duly hanged at Lettermore by
+Balachulish.
+
+So there was the final upshot of my politics! Innocent men have perished
+before James, and are like to keep on perishing (in spite of all our
+wisdom) till the end of time. And till the end of time, young folk (who
+are not yet used with the duplicity of life and men) will struggle as I
+did, and make heroical resolves, and take long risks; and the course of
+events will push them upon the one side and go on like a marching army.
+James was hanged; and here was I dwelling in the house of Prestongrange,
+and grateful to him for his fatherly attention. He was hanged; and
+behold! When I met Mr. Symon in the causeway, I was fain to pull off my
+beaver to him like a good little boy before his dominie. He had been
+hanged by fraud and violence, and the world wagged along, and there was
+not a pennyweight of difference; and the villains of that horrid plot
+were decent, kind, respectable fathers of families, who went to kirk and
+took the sacrament!
+
+But I had had my view of that detestable business they call politics--I
+had seen it from behind, when it is all bones and blackness; and I was
+cured for life of any temptations to take part in it again. A plain,
+quiet, private path was that which I was ambitious to walk in, when I
+might keep my head out of the way of dangers and my conscience out of
+the road of temptation. For, upon a retrospect, it appeared I had not
+done so grandly, after all; but with the greatest possible amount of big
+speech and preparation, had accomplished nothing.
+
+The 25th of the same month, a ship was advertised to sail from Leith;
+and I was suddenly recommended to make up my mails for Leyden. To
+Prestongrange I could, of course, say nothing; for I had already been a
+long while sorning on his house and table. But with his daughter I was
+more open, bewailing my fate that I should be sent out of the country,
+and assuring her, unless she should bring me to farewell with Catriona,
+I would refuse at the last hour.
+
+"Have I not given you my advice?" she asked.
+
+"I know you have," said I, "and I know how much I am beholden to you
+already, and that I am bidden to obey your orders. But you must confess
+you are something too merry a lass at times to lippen[23] to entirely."
+
+"I will tell you, then," said she. "Be you on board at nine o'clock
+forenoon; the ship does not sail before one; keep your boat alongside;
+and if you are not pleased with my farewells when I shall send them, you
+can come ashore again and seek Katrine for yourself."
+
+Since I could make no more of her, I was fain to be content with this.
+
+The day came round at last when she and I were to separate. We had been
+extremely intimate and familiar; I was much in her debt; and what way we
+were to part was a thing that put me from my sleep, like the vails I was
+to give to the domestic servants. I knew she considered me too backward,
+and rather desired to rise in her opinion on that head. Besides which,
+after so much affection shown and (I believe) felt upon both sides, it
+would have looked cold-like to be anyways stiff. Accordingly, I got my
+courage up and my words ready, and the last chance we were like to be
+alone, asked pretty boldly to be allowed to salute her in farewell.
+
+"You forget yourself strangely, Mr. Balfour," said she. "I cannot call
+to mind that I had given you any right to presume on our acquaintancy."
+
+I stood before her like a stopped clock, and knew not what to think, far
+less to say, when of a sudden she cast her arms about my neck and kissed
+me with the best will in the world.
+
+"You inimitable bairn!" she cried. "Did you think that I would let us
+part like strangers? Because I can never keep my gravity at you five
+minutes on end, you must not dream I do not love you very well; I am all
+love and laughter, every time I cast an eye on you! And now I will give
+you an advice to conclude your education, which you will have need of
+before its very long. Never _ask_ women-folk. They're bound to answer
+'No'; God never made the lass that could resist the temptation. It's
+supposed by divines to be the curse of Eve; because she did not say it
+when the devil offered her the apple, her daughters can say nothing
+else."
+
+"Since I am so soon to lose my bonny professor," I began.
+
+"This is gallant, indeed," says she curtseying.
+
+"--I would put the one question," I went on; "May I ask a lass to marry
+me?"
+
+"You think you could not marry her without?" she asked. "Or else get her
+to offer?"
+
+"You see you cannot be serious," said I.
+
+"I shall be very serious in one thing, David," said she. "I shall always
+be your friend."
+
+As I got to my horse the next morning, the four ladies were all at the
+same window whence we had once looked down on Catriona, and all cried
+farewell and waved their pocket napkins as I rode away; one out of the
+four I knew was truly sorry; and at the thought of that, and how I had
+come to the door three months ago for the first time, sorrow and
+gratitude made a confusion in my mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+FATHER AND DAUGHTER
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE VOYAGE INTO HOLLAND
+
+
+The ship lay at a single anchor, well outside the pier of Leith, so that
+all we passengers must come to it by the means of skiffs. This was very
+little troublesome, for the reason that the day was a flat calm, very
+frosty and cloudy, and with a low shifting fog upon the water. The body
+of the vessel was thus quite hid as I drew near, but the tall spars of
+her stood high and bright in a sunshine like the flickering of a fire.
+She proved to be a very roomy, commodious merchant, but somewhat blunt
+in the bows, and loaden extraordinary deep with salt, salted salmon, and
+fine white linen stockings for the Dutch. Upon my coming on board, the
+captain welcomed me, one Sang (out of Lesmahago, I believe), a very
+hearty, friendly tarpauling of a man, but at the moment in rather of a
+bustle. There had no other of the passengers yet appeared, so that I was
+left to walk about upon the deck, viewing the prospect and wondering a
+good deal what these farewells should be which I was promised.
+
+All Edinburgh and the Pentland Hills glinted above me in a kind of
+smuisty brightness, now and again overcome with blots of cloud; of Leith
+there was no more than the tops of chimneys visible, and on the face of
+the water, where the haar[24] lay, nothing at all. Out of this I was
+presently aware of a sound of oars pulling, and a little after (as if
+out of the smoke of a fire) a boat issued. There sat a grave man in the
+stern sheets, well muffled from the cold, and by his side a tall,
+pretty, tender figure of a maid that brought my heart to a stand. I had
+scarce the time to catch my breath in, and be ready to meet her, as she
+stepped upon the deck, smiling, and making my best bow, which was now
+vastly finer than some months before when I first made it to her
+ladyship. No doubt we were both a good deal changed; she seemed to have
+shot up taller, like a young, comely tree. She had now a kind of pretty
+backwardness that became her well, as of one that regarded herself more
+highly and was fairly woman; and for another thing, the hand of the same
+magician had been at work upon the pair of us, and Miss Grant had made
+us both _braw_, if she could make but the one _bonny_.
+
+The same cry, in words not very different, came from both of us, that
+the other was come in compliment to say farewell, and then we perceived
+in a flash we were to ship together.
+
+"O, why will not Baby have been telling me!" she cried; and then
+remembered a letter she had been given, on the condition of not opening
+it till she was well on board. Within was an enclosure for myself, and
+ran thus:
+
+
+ "DEAR DAVIE,--What do you think of my farewell? and what
+ do you say to your fellow-passenger? Did you kiss, or did you
+ ask? I was about to have signed here, but that would leave the
+ purport of my question doubtful; and in my own case _I ken the
+ answer_. So fill up here with good advice. Do not be too
+ blate,[25]
+ and for God's sake do not try to be too forward; nothing sets
+ you
+ worse. I am
+
+ "Your affectionate friend and governess,
+
+ "BARBARA GRANT."
+
+
+I wrote a word of answer and compliment on a leaf out of my pocketbook,
+put it in with another scratch from Catriona, sealed the whole with my
+new signet of the Balfour arms, and despatched it by the hand of
+Prestongrange's servant that still waited in my boat.
+
+Then we had time to look upon each other more at leisure, which we had
+not done for a piece of a minute before (upon a common impulse) we shook
+hands again.
+
+"Catriona!" said I; it seemed that was the first and last word of my
+eloquence.
+
+"You will be glad to see me again?" says she.
+
+"And I think that is an idle word," said I. "We are too deep friends to
+make speech upon such trifles."
+
+"Is she not the girl of all the world?" she cried again. "I was never
+knowing such a girl, so honest and so beautiful."
+
+"And yet she cared no more for Alpin than what she did for a
+kale-stock," said I.
+
+"Ah, she will say so indeed!" cries Catriona. "Yet it was for the name
+and the gentle kind blood that she took me up and was so good to me."
+
+"Well, I will tell you why it was," said I. "There are all sorts of
+people's faces in this world. There is Barbara's face, that everyone
+must look at and admire, and think her a fine, brave, merry girl. And
+then there is your face, which is quite different, I never knew how
+different till to-day. You cannot see yourself, and that is why you do
+not understand; but it was for the love of your face that she took you
+up and was so good to you. And everybody in the world would do the
+same."
+
+"Everybody?" says she.
+
+"Every living soul!" said I.
+
+"Ah, then, that will be why the soldiers at the castle took me up!" she
+cried.
+
+"Barbara has been teaching you to catch me," said I.
+
+"She will have taught me more than that at all events. She will have
+taught me a great deal about Mr. David--all the ill of him, and a little
+that was not so ill either now and then," she said, smiling. "She will
+have told me all there was of Mr. David, only just that he would sail
+upon this very same ship. And why is it you go?"
+
+I told her.
+
+"Ah, well," said she, "we will be some days in company and then (I
+suppose) good-bye for altogether! I go to meet my father at a place of
+the name of Helvoetsluys, and from there to France, to be exiles by the
+side of our chieftain."
+
+I could say no more than just "O!" the name of James More always drying
+up my very voice.
+
+She was quick to perceive it, and to guess some portion of my thought.
+
+"There is one thing I must be saying first of all, Mr. David," said she.
+"I think two of my kinsfolk have not behaved to you altogether very
+well. And the one of them two is James More, my father, and the other is
+the Laird of Prestongrange. Prestongrange will have spoken by himself,
+or his daughter in the place of him. But for James More, my father, I
+have this much to say: he lay shackled in a prison; he is a plain honest
+soldier and a plain Highland gentleman; what they would be after, he
+never would be guessing; but if he had understood it was to be some
+prejudice to a young gentleman like yourself, he would have died first.
+And for the sake of all your friendships, I will be asking you to pardon
+my father and family for that same mistake."
+
+"Catriona," said I, "what that mistake was I do not care to know. I know
+but the one thing, that you went to Prestongrange and begged my life
+upon your knees. O, I ken well it was for your father that you went, but
+when you were there you pleaded for me also. It is a thing I cannot
+speak of. There are two things I cannot think of in to myself; and the
+one is your good words when you called yourself my little friend, and
+the other that you pleaded for my life. Let us never speak more, we two,
+of pardon or offence."
+
+We stood after that silent, Catriona looking on the deck and I on her;
+and before there was more speech, a little wind having sprung up, in the
+nor'-west, they began to shake out the sails and heave in upon the
+anchor.
+
+There were six passengers besides our two selves, which made of it a
+full cabin. Three were solid merchants out of Leith, Kirkaldy, and
+Dundee, all engaged in the same adventure into High Germany; one was a
+Hollander returning; the rest worthy merchants' wives, to the charge of
+one of whom Catriona was recommended. Mrs. Grebbie (for that was her
+name) was by great good fortune heavily incommoded by the sea, and lay
+day and night on the broad of her back. We were besides the only
+creatures at all young on board the _Rose_, except a white-faced boy
+that did my old duty to attend upon the table; and it came about that
+Catriona and I were left almost entirely to ourselves. We had the next
+seats together at the table, where I waited on her with extraordinary
+pleasure. On deck, I made her a soft place with my cloak; and the
+weather being singularly fine for that season, with bright frosty days
+and nights, a steady, gentle wind, and scarce a sheet started all the
+way through the North Sea, we sat there (only now and again walking to
+and fro for warmth) from the first blink of the sun till eight or nine
+at night under the clear stars. The merchants or Captain Sang would
+sometimes glance and smile upon us, or pass a merry word or two and give
+us the go-by again; but the most part of the time they were deep in
+herring and chintzes and linen, or in computations of the slowness of
+the passage, and left us to our own concerns, which were very little
+important to any but ourselves.
+
+At the first, we had a great deal to say, and thought ourselves pretty
+witty; and I was at a little pains to be the _beau_, and she (I believe)
+to play the young lady of experience. But soon we grew plainer with each
+other; I laid aside my high, clipped English (what little there was of
+it) and forgot to make my Edinburgh bows and scrapes; she upon her side,
+fell into a sort of kind familiarity; and we dwelt together like those
+of the same household, only (upon my side) with a more deep emotion.
+About the same time, the bottom seemed to fall out of our conversation,
+and neither one of us the less pleased. Whiles she would tell me old
+wives' tales, of which she had a wonderful variety, many of them from my
+friend red-headed Niel. She told them very pretty, and they were pretty
+enough childish tales; but the pleasure to myself was in the sound of
+her voice, and the thought that she was telling and I listening. Whiles,
+again, we would sit entirely silent, not communicating even with a look,
+and tasting pleasure enough in the sweetness of that neighbourhood. I
+speak here only for myself. Of what was in the maid's mind, I am not
+very sure that ever I asked myself; and what was in my own, I was afraid
+to consider. I need make no secret of it now, either to myself or to the
+reader: I was fallen totally in love. She came between me and the sun.
+She had grown suddenly taller, as I say, but with a wholesome growth;
+she seemed all health, and lightness, and brave spirits; and I thought
+she walked like a young deer, and stood like a birch upon the mountains.
+It was enough for me to sit near by her on the deck; and I declare I
+scarce spent two thoughts upon the future, and was so well content with
+what I then enjoyed that I was never at the pains to imagine any further
+step; unless perhaps that I would be sometimes tempted to take her hand
+in mine and hold it there. But I was too like a miser of what joys I had
+and would venture nothing on a hazard.
+
+What we spoke was usually of ourselves or of each other, so that if
+anyone had been at so much pains as overhear us, he must have supposed
+us the most egotistical persons in the world. It befell one day when we
+were at this practice, that we came on a discourse of friends and
+friendship, and I think now that we were sailing near the wind. We said
+what a fine thing friendship was, and how little we had guessed of it,
+and how it made life a new thing, and a thousand covered things of the
+same kind that will have been said, since the foundation of the world,
+by young folk in the same predicament. Then we remarked upon the
+strangeness of that circumstance, that friends came together in the
+beginning as if they were there for the first time, and yet each had
+been alive a good while, losing time with other people.
+
+"It is not much that I have done," said she, "and I could be telling you
+the five-fifths of it in two-three words. It is only a girl I am, and
+what can befall a girl, at all events? But I went with the clan in the
+year '45. The men marched with swords and firelocks, and some of them in
+brigades in the same set of tartan; they were not backward at the
+marching, I can tell you. And there were gentlemen from the Low Country,
+with their tenants mounted and trumpets to sound, and there was a grand
+skirling of war-pipes. I rode on a little Highland horse on the right
+hand of my father, James More, and of Glengyle himself. And here is one
+fine thing that I remember, that Glengyle kissed me in the face, because
+(says he) 'my kinswoman, you are the only lady of the clan that has come
+out,' and me a little maid of maybe twelve years old! I saw Prince
+Charlie too, and the blue eyes of him; he was pretty indeed! I had his
+hand to kiss in the front of the army. O, well, these were the good
+days, but it is all like a dream that I have seen and then awakened. It
+went what way you very well know; and these were the worst days of all,
+when the red-coat soldiers were out, and my father and my uncles lay in
+the hill, and I was to be carrying them their meat in the middle night,
+or at the short side of day when the cocks crow. Yes, I have walked in
+the night, many's the time, and my heart great in me for terror of the
+darkness. It is a strange thing I will never have been meddled with a
+bogle; but they say a maid goes safe. Next there was my uncle's
+marriage, and that was a dreadful affair beyond all. Jean Kay was that
+woman's name; and she had me in the room with her that night at
+Inversnaid, the night we took her from her friends in the old, ancient
+manner. She would and she wouldn't; she was for marrying Rob the one
+minute, and the next she would be for none of him. I will never have
+seen such a feckless creature of a woman; surely all there was of her
+would tell her ay or no. Well, she was a widow, and I can never be
+thinking a widow a good woman."
+
+"Catriona!" says I, "how do you make out that?"
+
+"I do not know," said she; "I am only telling you the seeming in my
+heart. And then to marry a new man! Fy! But that was her; and she was
+married again upon my Uncle Robin, and went with him awhile to kirk and
+market; and then wearied, or else her friends got claught of her and
+talked her round, or maybe she turned ashamed; at the least of it, she
+ran away, and went back to her own folk, and said we had held her in the
+lake, and I will never tell you all what. I have never thought much of
+any females since that day. And so in the end my father, James More,
+came to be cast in prison, and you know the rest of it as well as me."
+
+"And through all you had no friends?" said I.
+
+"No," said she; "I have been pretty chief with two-three lasses on the
+braes, but not to call it friends."
+
+"Well, mine is a plain tale," said I. "I never had a friend to my name
+till I met in with you."
+
+"And that brave Mr. Stewart?" she asked.
+
+"O, yes, I was forgetting him," I said. "But he is a man, and that is
+very different."
+
+"I would think so," said she. "O, yes, it is quite different."
+
+"And then there was one other," said I. "I once thought I had a friend,
+but it proved a disappointment."
+
+She asked me who she was?
+
+"It was a he, then," said I. "We were the two best lads at my father's
+school, and we thought we loved each other dearly. Well, the time came
+when he went to Glasgow to a merchant's house, that was his second
+cousin once removed; and wrote me two-three times by the carrier; and
+then he found new friends, and I might write till I was tired, he took
+no notice. Eh, Catriona, it took me a long while to forgive the world.
+There is not anything more bitter than to lose a fancied friend."
+
+Then she began to question me close upon his looks and character, for we
+were each a great deal concerned in all that touched the other; till at
+last, in a very evil hour, I minded of his letters and went and fetched
+the bundle from the cabin.
+
+"Here are his letters," said I, "and all the letters that ever I got.
+That will be the last I'll can tell of myself; you know the lave[26] as
+well as I do."
+
+"Will you let me read them, then?" says she.
+
+I told her, _if she would be at the pains_; and she bade me go away and
+she would read them from the one end to the other. Now, in this bundle
+that I gave her, there were packed together not only all the letters of
+my false friend, but one or two of Mr. Campbell's when he was in town at
+the Assembly, and to make a complete roll of all that ever was written
+to me, Catriona's little word, and the two I had received from Miss
+Grant, one when I was on the Bass and one on board that ship. But of
+these last I had no particular mind at the moment.
+
+I was in that state of subjection to the thought of my friend that it
+mattered not what I did, nor scarce whether I was in her presence or out
+of it; I had caught her like some kind of a noble fever that lived
+continually in my bosom, by night and by day, and whether I was waking
+or asleep. So it befell that after I was come into the fore-part of the
+ship where the broad bows splashed into the billows, I was in no such
+hurry to return as you might fancy; rather prolonged my absence like a
+variety in pleasure. I do not think I am by nature much of an Epicurean;
+and there had come till then so small a share of pleasure in my way that
+I might be excused perhaps to dwell on it unduly.
+
+When I returned to her again, I had a faint, painful impression as of a
+buckle slipped, so coldly she returned the packet.
+
+"You have read them?" said I; and I thought my voice sounded not wholly
+natural, for I was turning in my mind for what could ail her.
+
+"Did you mean me to read all?" she asked.
+
+I told her "Yes," with a drooping voice.
+
+"The last of them as well?" said she.
+
+I knew where we were now; yet I would not lie to her either. "I gave
+them all without after-thought," I said, "as I supposed that you would
+read them. I see no harm in any."
+
+"I will be differently made," said she. "I thank God I am differently
+made. It was not a fit letter to be shown me. It was not fit to be
+written."
+
+"I think you are speaking of your own friend, Barbara Grant?" said I.
+
+"There will not be anything as bitter as to lose a fancied friend," said
+she, quoting my own expression.
+
+"I think it is sometimes the friendship that was fancied!" I cried.
+"What kind of justice do you call this, to blame me for some words that
+a tomfool of a madcap lass has written down upon a piece of paper? You
+know yourself with what respect I have behaved--and would do always."
+
+"Yet you would show me that same letter!" says she. "I want no such
+friends. I can be doing very well, Mr. Balfour, without her--or you."
+
+"This is your fine gratitude!" says I.
+
+"I am very much obliged to you," said she. "I will be asking you to take
+away your--letters." She seemed to choke upon the word, so that it
+sounded like an oath.
+
+"You shall never ask twice," said I; picked up that bundle, walked a
+little way forward and cast them as far as possible into the sea. For a
+very little more, I could have cast myself after them.
+
+The rest of the day I walked up and down raging. There were few names so
+ill but what I gave her them in my own mind before the sun went down.
+All that I had ever heard of Highland pride seemed quite outdone; that a
+girl (scarce grown) should resent so trifling an allusion, and that from
+her next friend, that she had near wearied me with praising of! I had
+bitter, sharp, hard thoughts of her, like an angry boy's. If I had
+kissed her indeed (I thought), perhaps she would have taken it pretty
+well; and only because it had been written down, and with a spice of
+jocularity, up she must fuff in this ridiculous passion. It seemed to me
+there was a want of penetration in the female sex, to make angels weep
+over the case of the poor men.
+
+We were side by side again at supper, and what a change was there! She
+was like curdled milk to me; her face was like a wooden doll's; I could
+have indifferently smitten her or grovelled at her feet, but she gave me
+not the least occasion to do either. No sooner the meal done than she
+betook herself to attend on Mrs. Gebbie, which I think she had a little
+neglected heretofore. But she was to make up for lost time, and in what
+remained of the passage was extraordinary assiduous with the old lady,
+and on deck began to make a great deal more than I thought wise of
+Captain Sang. Not but what the captain seemed a worthy, fatherly man;
+but I hated to behold her in the least familiarity with anyone except
+myself.
+
+Altogether, she was so quick to avoid me, and so constant to keep
+herself surrounded with others, that I must watch a long while before I
+could find my opportunity; and after it was found, I made not much of
+it, as you are now to hear.
+
+"I have no guess how I have offended," said I; "it should scarce be
+beyond pardon, then. O, try if you can pardon me."
+
+"I have no pardon to give," said she; and the words seemed to come out
+of her throat like marbles. "I will be very much obliged for all your
+friendships." And she made me an eight part of a curtsey.
+
+But I had schooled myself beforehand to say more, and I was going to say
+it too.
+
+"There is one thing," said I. "If I have shocked your particularity by
+the showing of that letter, it cannot touch Miss Grant. She wrote not to
+you, but to a poor, common, ordinary lad, who might have had more sense
+than show it. If you are to blame me--"
+
+"I will advise you to say no more about that girl, at all events!" said
+Catriona. "It is her I will never look the road of, not if she lay
+dying." She turned away from me, and suddenly back. "Will you swear you
+will have no more to deal with her?" she cried.
+
+"Indeed, and I will never be so unjust then," said I; "nor yet so
+ungrateful."
+
+And now it was I that turned away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HELVOETSLUYS
+
+
+The weather in the end considerably worsened; the wind sang in the
+shrouds, the sea swelled higher, and the ship began to labour and cry
+out among the billows. The song of the leadsman in the chains was now
+scarce ceasing, for we thrid all the way among shoals. About nine in the
+morning, in a burst of wintry sun between two squalls of hail, I had my
+first look of Holland--a line of windmills birling in the breeze. It was
+besides my first knowledge of these daft-like contrivances, which gave
+me a near sense of foreign travel and a new world and life. We came to
+an anchor about half-past eleven, outside the harbour of Helvoetsluys,
+in a place where the sea sometimes broke and the ship pitched
+outrageously. You may be sure we were all on deck save Mrs. Gebbie, some
+of us in cloaks, others mantled in the ship's tarpaulins, all clinging
+on by ropes, and jesting the most like old sailor-folk that we could
+imitate.
+
+Presently a boat, that was backed like a partan-crab, came gingerly
+alongside, and the skipper of it hailed our master in the Dutch. Thence
+Captain Sang turned, very troubled like, to Catriona; and the rest of us
+crowding about, the nature of the difficulty was made plain to all. The
+_Rose_ was bound to the port of Rotterdam, whither the other passengers
+were in a great impatience to arrive, in view of a conveyance due to
+leave that very evening in the direction of the Upper Germany. This,
+with the present half-gale of wind, the captain (if no time were lost)
+declared himself still capable to save. Now James More had trysted in
+Helvoet with his daughter, and the captain had engaged to call before
+the port and place her (according to the custom) in a shore boat. There
+was the boat, to be sure, and there was Catriona ready: but both our
+master and the patroon of the boat scrupled at the risk, and the first
+was in no humour to delay.
+
+"Your father," said he, "would be gey an little pleased if we was to
+break a leg to ye, Miss Drummond, let-a-be drowning of you. Take my way
+of it," says he, "and come on-by with the rest of us here to Rotterdam.
+Ye can get a passage down the Maes in a sailing scoot as far to the
+Brill, and thence on again, by a place in a rattel-waggon, back to
+Helvoet."
+
+But Catriona would hear of no change. She looked white-like as she
+beheld the bursting of the sprays, the green seas that sometimes poured
+upon the forecastle, and the perpetual bounding and swooping of the boat
+among the billows; but she stood firmly by her father's orders. "My
+father, James More, will have arranged it so," was her first word and
+her last. I thought it very idle and indeed wanton in the girl to be so
+literal and stand opposite to so much kind advice; but the fact is she
+had a very good reason, if she would have told us. Sailing scoots and
+rattel-waggons are excellent things; only the use of them must first be
+paid for, and all she was possessed of in the world was just two
+shillings and a penny halfpenny sterling. So it fell out that captain
+and passengers, not knowing of her destitution--and she being too proud
+to tell them--spoke in vain.
+
+"But you ken nae French and nae Dutch neither," said one.
+
+"It is very true," says she, "but since the year '46 there are so many
+of the honest Scots abroad that I will be doing very well, I thank you."
+
+There was a pretty country simplicity in this that made some laugh,
+others looked the more sorry, and Mr. Gebbie fall outright in a passion.
+I believe he knew it was his duty (his wife having accepted charge of
+the girl) to have gone ashore with her and seen her safe; nothing would
+have induced him to have done so, since it must have involved the loss
+of his conveyance; and I think he made it up to his conscience by the
+loudness of his voice. At least he broke out upon Captain Sang, raging
+and saying the thing was a disgrace; that it was mere death to try to
+leave the ship, and at any event we could not cast down an innocent maid
+in a boatful of nasty Holland fishers, and leave her to her fate. I was
+thinking something of the same; took the mate upon one side, arranged
+with him to send on my chests by track-scoot to an address I had in
+Leyden, and stood up and signalled to the fishers.
+
+"I will go ashore with the young lady, Captain Sang," said I. "It is all
+one what way I go to Leyden;" and leaped at the same time into the boat,
+which I managed not so elegantly but what I fell with two of the fishers
+in the bilge.
+
+From the boat the business appeared yet more precarious than from the
+ship, she stood so high over us, swung down so swift, and menaced us so
+perpetually with her plunging and passaging upon the anchor cable. I
+began to think I had made a fool's bargain, that it was merely
+impossible Catriona should be got on board to me, and that I stood to be
+set ashore at Helvoet all by myself and with no hope of any reward but
+the pleasure of embracing James More, if I should want to. But this was
+to reckon without the lass's courage. She had seen me leap with very
+little appearance (however much reality) of hesitation; to be sure, she
+was not to be beat by her discarded friend. Up she stood on the bulwarks
+and held by a stay, the wind blowing in her petticoats, which made the
+enterprise more dangerous and gave us rather more of a view of her
+stockings than would be thought genteel in cities. There was no minute
+lost, and scarce time given for any to interfere if they had wished the
+same. I stood up on the other side and spread my arms; the ship swung
+down on us, the patroon humoured his boat nearer in than was perhaps
+wholly safe, and Catriona leaped into the air. I was so happy as to
+catch her, and the fishers readily supporting us, escaped a fall. She
+held to me a moment very tight, breathing quick and deep; thence (she
+still clinging to me with both hands) we were passed aft to our places
+by the steersman; and Captain Sang and all the crew and passengers
+cheering and crying farewell, the boat was put about for shore.
+
+As soon as Catriona came a little to herself she unhanded me suddenly
+but said no word. No more did I; and indeed the whistling of the wind
+and the breaching of the sprays made it no time for speech; and our crew
+not only toiled excessively but made extremely little way, so that the
+_Rose_ had got her anchor and was off again before we had approached the
+harbour mouth.
+
+We were no sooner in smooth water than the patroon, according to their
+beastly Hollands custom, stopped his boat and required of us our fares.
+Two guilders was the man's demand, between three and four shillings
+English money, for each passenger. But at this Catriona began to cry out
+with a vast deal of agitation. She had asked of Captain Sang, she said,
+and the fare was but an English shilling. "Do you think I will have come
+on board and not ask first?" cries she. The patroon scolded back upon
+her in a lingo where the oaths were English and the rest right Hollands;
+till at last (seeing her near tears) I privately slipped in the rogue's
+hand six shillings, whereupon he was obliging enough to receive from her
+the other shilling without more complaint. No doubt I was a good deal
+nettled and ashamed. I like to see folk thrifty but not with so much
+passion; and I daresay it would be rather coldly that I asked her, as
+the boat moved on again for shore, where it was that she was trysted
+with her father.
+
+"He is to be inquired of at the house of one Sprott, an honest Scotch
+merchant," says she; and then with the same breath, "I am wishing to
+thank you very much--you are a brave friend to me."
+
+"It will be time enough when I get you to your father," said I, little
+thinking that I spoke so true. "I can tell him a fine tale of a loyal
+daughter."
+
+"O, I do not think I will be a loyal girl, at all events," she cried,
+with a great deal of painfulness in the expression. "I do not think my
+heart is true."
+
+"Yet there are very few that would have made that leap, and all to obey
+a father's orders," I observed.
+
+"I cannot have you to be thinking of me so," she cried again. "When you
+had done that same, how would I stop behind? And at all events that was
+not all the reasons." Whereupon, with a burning face, she told me the
+plain truth upon her poverty.
+
+"Good guide us!" cried I, "what kind of daft-like proceeding is this, to
+let yourself be launched on the continent of Europe with an empty
+purse--I count it hardly decent--scant decent!" I cried.
+
+"You forget James More, my father, is a poor gentleman," said she. "He
+is a hunted exile."
+
+"But I think not all your friends are hunted exiles," I exclaimed. "And
+was this fair to them that care for you? Was it fair to me? was it fair
+to Miss Grant that counselled you to go, and would be driven fair
+horn-mad if she could hear of it? Was it even fair to these Gregory folk
+that you were living with, and used you lovingly? It's a blessing you
+have fallen in my hands! Suppose your father hindered by an accident,
+what would become of you here, and you your lee-alone in a strange
+place? The thought of the thing frightens me," I said.
+
+"I will have lied to all of them," she replied. "I will have told them
+all that I had plenty. I told _her_ too. I could not be lowering James
+More to them."
+
+I found out later on that she must have lowered him in the very dust,
+for the lie was originally the father's not the daughter's, and she thus
+obliged to persevere in it for the man's reputation. But at the time I
+was ignorant of this, and the mere thought of her destitution and the
+perils in which she must have fallen, had ruffled me almost beyond
+reason.
+
+"Well, well, well," said I, "you will have to learn more sense."
+
+I left her mails for the moment in an inn upon the shore, where I got a
+direction for Sprott's house in my new French, and we walked there--it
+was some little way--beholding the place with wonder as we went. Indeed,
+there was much for Scots folk to admire; canals and trees being
+intermingled with the houses; the houses, each within itself, of a brave
+red brick, the colour of a rose, with steps and benches of blue marble
+at the cheek of every door, and the whole town so clean you might have
+dined upon the causeway. Sprott was within, upon his ledgers, in a low
+parlour, very neat and clean, and set out with china and pictures and a
+globe of the earth in a brass frame. He was a big-chafted, ruddy, lusty
+man, with a crooked hard look to him; and he made us not that much
+civility as offer us a seat.
+
+"Is James More Macgregor now in Helvoet, sir?" says I.
+
+"I ken nobody by such a name," says he, impatient-like.
+
+"Since you are so particular," says I, "I will amend my question, and
+ask you where we are to find in Helvoet one James Drummond, _alias_
+Macgregor, _alias_ James More, late tenant in Iveronachile?"
+
+"Sir," says he, "he may be in Hell for what I ken, and for my part I
+wish he was."
+
+"The young lady is that gentleman's daughter, sir," said I, "before
+whom, I think you will agree with me, it is not very becoming to discuss
+his character."
+
+"I have nothing to make either with him, or her, or you!" cries he in
+his gross voice.
+
+"Under your favour, Mr. Sprott," said I, "this young lady is come from
+Scotland seeking him, and by whatever mistake, was given the name of
+your house for a direction. An error it seems to have been, but I think
+this places both you and me--who am but her fellow-traveller by
+accident--under a strong obligation to help our countrywoman."
+
+"Will you ding me daft?" he cries. "I tell ye I ken naething and care
+less either for him or his breed. I tell ye the man owes me money."
+
+"That may very well be, sir," said I, who was now rather more angry than
+himself. "At least I owe you nothing; the young lady is under my
+protection; and I am neither at all used with these manners, nor in the
+least content with them."
+
+As I said this, and without particularly thinking what I did, I drew a
+step or two nearer to his table; thus striking, by mere good fortune, on
+the only argument that could at all affect the man. The blood left his
+lusty countenance.
+
+"For the Lord's sake dinna be hasty, sir!" he cried. "I am truly wishfu'
+no to be offensive. But ye ken, sir, I'm like a wheen guid-natured,
+honest, canty auld fallows--my bark is waur nor my bite. To hear me, ye
+micht whiles fancy I was a wee thing dour; but na, na! its a kind auld
+fellow at heart, Sandie Sprott! And ye could never imagine the fyke and
+fash this man has been to me."
+
+"Very good, sir," said I. "Then I will make that much freedom with your
+kindness, as trouble you for your last news of Mr. Drummond."
+
+"You're welcome, sir!" said he. "As for the young leddy (my respec's to
+her!) he'll just have clean forgotten her. I ken the man, ye see; I have
+lost siller by him ere now. He thinks of naebody but just himsel'; clan,
+king, or dauchter, if he can get his wameful, he would give them a' the
+go-by! ay, or his correspondent either. For there is a sense in whilk I
+may be nearly almost said to be his correspondent. The fact is, we are
+employed thegether in a business affair, and I think it's like to turn
+out a dear affair for Sandie Sprott. The man's as guid's my pairtner,
+and I give ye my mere word I ken naething by where he is. He micht be
+coming here to Helvoet; he micht come here the morn, he michtnae come
+for a twalmonth; I would wonder at naething--or just at the ae thing,
+and that's if he was to pay me my siller. Ye see what way I stand with
+it; and it's clear I'm no very likely to meddle up with the young leddy,
+as ye ca' her. She cannae stop here, that's ae thing certain sure. Dod,
+sir, I'm a lone man! If I was to tak her in, its highly possible the
+hellicat would try and gar me marry her when he turned up."
+
+"Enough of this talk," said I. "I will take the young lady among better
+friends. Give me pen, ink, and paper, and I will leave here for James
+More the address of my correspondent in Leyden. He can inquire from me
+where he is to seek his daughter."
+
+This word I wrote and sealed; which while I was doing, Sprott of his own
+motion made a welcome offer, to charge himself with Miss Drummond's
+mails, and even send a porter for them to the inn. I advanced him to
+that effect a dollar or two to be a cover, and he gave me an
+acknowledgment in writing of the sum.
+
+Whereupon (I giving my arm to Catriona) we left the house of this
+unpalatable rascal. She had said no word throughout, leaving me to judge
+and speak in her place; I, upon my side, had been careful not to
+embarrass her by a glance; and even now although my heart still glowed
+inside of me with shame and anger, I made it my affair to seem quite
+easy.
+
+"Now," said I, "let us get back to yon same inn where they can speak the
+French, have a piece of dinner, and inquire for conveyances to
+Rotterdam. I will never be easy till I have you safe again in the hands
+of Mrs. Gebbie."
+
+"I suppose it will have to be," said Catriona, "though whoever will be
+pleased, I do not think it will be her. And I will remind you this once
+again that I have but one shilling, and three baubees."
+
+"And just this once again," said I, "I will remind you it was a blessing
+that I came alongst with you."
+
+"What else would I be thinking all this time!" says she, and I thought
+weighed a little on my arm. "It is you that are the good friend to me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+TRAVELS IN HOLLAND
+
+
+The rattel-wagon, which is a kind of a long wagon set with benches,
+carried us in four hours of travel to the great city of Rotterdam. It
+was long past dark by then, but the streets pretty brightly lighted and
+thronged with the wild-like, outlandish characters--bearded Hebrews,
+black men, and the hordes of courtesans, most indecently adorned with
+finery and stopping seamen by their very sleeves; the clash of talk
+about us made our heads to whirl; and what was the most unexpected of
+all, we appeared to be no more struck with all these foreigners than
+they with us. I made the best face I could, for the lass's sake and my
+own credit; but the truth is I felt like a lost sheep, and my heart beat
+in my bosom with anxiety. Once or twice I inquired after the harbor or
+the berth of the ship _Rose_; but either fell on some who spoke only
+Hollands, or my own French failed me. Trying a street at a venture, I
+came upon a lane of lighted houses, the doors and windows thronged with
+wauf-like painted women; these jostled and mocked upon us as we passed,
+and I was thankful we had nothing of their language. A little after we
+issued forth upon an open place along the harbour.
+
+"We shall be doing now," cries I, as soon as I spied masts. "Let us walk
+here by the harbour. We are sure to meet some that has the English, and
+at the best of it we may light upon that very ship."
+
+We did the next best, as happened; for about nine of the evening, whom
+should we walk into the arms of but Captain Sang? He told us they had
+made their run in the most incredible brief time, the wind holding
+strong until they reached port; by which means his passengers were all
+gone already on their further travels. It was impossible to chase after
+the Gebbies into High Germany, and we had no other acquaintance to fall
+back upon but Captain Sang himself. It was the more gratifying to find
+the man friendly and wishful to assist. He made it a small affair to
+find some good plain family of merchants, where Catriona might harbour
+till the _Rose_ was loaden; declared he would then blithely carry her
+back to Leith for nothing and see her safe in the hands of Mr. Gregory;
+and in the meanwhile carried us to a late ordinary for the meal we stood
+in need of. He seemed extremely friendly, as I say, but what surprised
+me a good deal, rather boisterous in the bargain; and the cause of this
+was soon to appear. For at the ordinary, calling for Rhenish wine and
+drinking of it deep, he soon became unutterably tipsy. In, this case, as
+too common with all men, but especially with those of his rough trade,
+what little sense or manners he possessed deserted him; and he behaved
+himself so scandalous to the young lady, jesting most ill-favoredly at
+the figure she had made on the ship's rail, that I had no resource but
+carry her suddenly away.
+
+She came out of that ordinary clinging to me close. "Take me away,
+David," she said. "_You_ keep me. I am not afraid with you."
+
+"And have no cause, my little friend!" cried I, and could have found it
+in my heart to weep.
+
+"Where will you be taking me?" she said again. "Don't leave me at all
+events, never leave me."
+
+"Where am I taking you indeed?" says I stopping, for I had been staving
+on ahead in mere blindness. "I must stop and think. But I'll not leave
+you, Catriona; the Lord do so to me, and more also, if I should fail or
+fash you."
+
+She crept closer in to me by way of a reply.
+
+"Here," I said, "is the stillest place that we have hit on yet in this
+busy byke of a city. Let us sit down here under yon tree and consider of
+our course."
+
+That tree (which I am little like to forget) stood hard by the harbour
+side. It was a black night, but lights were in the houses, and nearer
+hand in the quiet ships; there was a shining of the city on the one
+hand, and a buzz hung over it of many thousands walking and talking; on
+the other, it was dark and the water bubbled on the sides. I spread my
+cloak upon a builder's stone, and made her sit there; she would have
+kept her hold upon me, for she still shook with the late affronts; but I
+wanted to think clear, disengaged myself, and paced to and fro before
+her, in the manner of what we call a smuggler's walk, belabouring my
+brains for any remedy. By the course of these scattering thoughts I was
+brought suddenly face to face with a remembrance that, in the heat and
+haste of our departure, I had left Captain Sang to pay the ordinary. At
+this I began to laugh out loud, for I thought the man well served; and
+at the same time, by an instinctive movement, carried my hand to the
+pocket where my money was. I suppose it was in the lane where the women
+jostled us; but there is only the one thing certain, that my purse was
+gone.
+
+"You will have thought of something good," said she, observing me to
+pause.
+
+At the pinch we were in, my mind became suddenly clear as a perspective
+glass, and I saw there was no choice of methods. I had not one doit of
+coin, but in my pocket-book I had still my letter on the Leyden
+merchant; and there was now but the one way to get to Leyden, and that
+was to walk on our two feet.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I know you're brave and I believe you're strong, do
+you think you could walk thirty miles on a plain road?" We found it, I
+believe, scarce the two-thirds of that, but such was my notion of the
+distance.
+
+"David," she said, "if you will just keep near, I will go anywhere and
+do anything. The courage of my heart, it is all broken. Do not be
+leaving me in this horrible country by myself, and I will do all else."
+
+"Can you start now and march all night?" said I.
+
+"I will do all that you can ask of me," she said, "and never ask you
+why. I have been a bad ungrateful girl to you; and do what you please
+with me now! And I think Miss Barbara Grant is the best lady in the
+world," she added, "and I do not see what she would deny you for at all
+events."
+
+This was Greek and Hebrew to me; but I had other matters to consider,
+and the first of these was to get clear of that city on the Leyden road.
+It proved a cruel problem; and it may have been one or two at night ere
+we had solved it. Once beyond the houses, there was neither moon or
+stars to guide us; only the whiteness of the way in the midst and a
+blackness of an alley on both hands. The walking was besides made most
+extraordinary difficult by a plain black frost that fell suddenly in the
+small hours and turned that highway into one long slide.
+
+"Well, Catriona," said I, "here we are like the king's sons and the old
+wives' daughters in your daft-like Highland tales. Soon we'll be going
+over the '_seven Bens, the seven glens, and the seven mountain moors_.'"
+Which was a common byword or overcome in these tales of hers that had
+stuck in my memory.
+
+"Ah," says she, "but here are no glens or mountains! Though I will never
+be denying but what the trees and some of the plain places hereabouts
+are very pretty. But our country is the best yet."
+
+"I wish we could say as much for our own folk," says I, recalling Sprott
+and Sang, and perhaps James More himself.
+
+"I will never complain of the country of my friend," said she, and spoke
+it out with an accent so particular that I seemed to see the look upon
+her face.
+
+I caught in my breath sharp and came near falling (for my pains) on the
+black ice.
+
+"I do not know what _you_ think, Catriona," said I, when I was a little
+recovered, "but this has been the best day yet! I think shame to say it,
+when you have met in with such misfortunes and disfavours; but for me,
+it has been the best day yet."
+
+"It was a good day when you showed me so much love," said she.
+
+"And yet I think shame to be happy too," I went on, "and you here on the
+road in the black night."
+
+"Where in the great world would I be else?" she cried. "I am thinking I
+am safest where I am with you."
+
+"I am quite forgiven, then?" I asked.
+
+"Will you not forgive me that time so much as not to take it in your
+mouth again?" she cried. "There's is nothing in this heart to you but
+thanks. But I will be honest too," she added, with a kind of suddenness,
+"and I'll never can forgive that girl."
+
+"Is this Miss Grant again?" said I. "You said yourself she was the best
+lady in the world."
+
+"So she will be, indeed!" says Catriona. "But I will never forgive her
+for all that. I will never, never forgive her, and let me hear tell of
+her no more."
+
+"Well," said I, "this beats all that ever came to my knowledge; and I
+wonder that you can indulge yourself in such bairnly whims. Here is a
+young lady that was the best friend in the world to the both of us, that
+learned us how to dress ourselves, and in a great manner how to behave,
+as anyone can see that knew us both before and after."
+
+But Catriona stopped square in the midst of the highway.
+
+"It is this way of it," said she. "Either you will go on to speak of
+her, and I will go back to yon town, and let come of it what God
+pleases! Or else you will do me that politeness to talk of other
+things."
+
+I was the most nonplussed person in this world; but I bethought me that
+she depended altogether on my help, that she was of the frail sex and
+not so much beyond a child, and it was for me to be wise for the pair of
+us.
+
+"My dear girl," said I, "I can make neither head nor tails of this; but
+God forbid that I should do anything to set you on the jee. As for
+talking of Miss Grant I have no such a mind to it, and I believe it was
+yourself began it. My only design (if I took you up at all) was for your
+own improvement, for I hate the very look of injustice. Not that I do
+not wish you to have a good pride and a nice female delicacy; they
+become you well; but here you show them to excess."
+
+"Well, then, have you done?" said she.
+
+"I have done," said I.
+
+"A very good thing," said she, and we went on again, but now in silence.
+
+It was an eerie employment to walk in the gross night, beholding only
+shadows and hearing nought but our own steps. At first, I believe our
+hearts burned against each other with a deal of enmity; but the darkness
+and the cold, and the silence, which only the cocks sometimes
+interrupted, or sometimes the farmyard dogs, had pretty soon brought
+down our pride to the dust; and for my own particular, I would have
+jumped at any decent opening for speech.
+
+Before the day peeped, came on a warmish rain, and the frost was all
+wiped away from among our feet. I took my cloak to her and sought to hap
+her in the same; she bade me, rather impatiently, to keep it.
+
+"Indeed and I will do no such thing," said I. "Here am I, a great, ugly
+lad that has seen all kinds of weather, and here are you a tender,
+pretty maid! My dear, you would not put me to a shame?"
+
+Without more words she let me cover her; which as I was doing in the
+darkness, I let my hand rest a moment on her shoulder, almost like an
+embrace.
+
+"You must try to be more patient of your friend," said I.
+
+I thought she seemed to lean the least thing in the world against my
+bosom, or perhaps it was but fancy.
+
+"There will be no end to your goodness," said she.
+
+And we went on again in silence; but now all was changed; and the
+happiness that was in my heart was like a fire in a great chimney.
+
+The rain passed ere day; it was but a sloppy morning as we came into the
+town of Delft. The red gabled houses made a handsome show on either hand
+of a canal; the servant lassies were out slestering and scrubbing at the
+very stones upon the public highway; smoke rose from a hundred kitchens;
+and it came in upon me strongly it was time to break our fasts.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I believe you have yet a shilling and three
+baubees?"
+
+"Are you wanting it?" said she, and passed me her purse. "I am wishing
+it was five pounds! What will you want it for?"
+
+"And what have we been walking for all night, like a pair of waif
+Egyptians?" says I. "Just because I was robbed of my purse and all I
+possessed in that unchancy town of Rotterdam. I will tell you of it now,
+because I think the worst is over, but we have still a good tramp before
+us till we get to where my money is, and if you would not buy me a piece
+of bread, I were like to go fasting."
+
+She looked at me with open eyes. By the light of the new day she was all
+black and pale for weariness, so that my heart smote me for her. But as
+for her, she broke out laughing.
+
+"My torture! are we beggars then?" she cried. "You too? O, I could have
+wished for this same thing! And I am glad to buy your breakfast to you.
+But it would be pleisand if I would have had to dance to get a meal to
+you! For I believe they are not very well acquainted with our manner of
+dancing over here, and might be paying for the curiosity of that sight."
+
+I could have kissed her for that word, not with a lover's mind, but in a
+heat of admiration. For it always warms a man to see a woman brave.
+
+We got a drink of milk from a country wife but new come to the town, and
+in a baker's, a piece of excellent, hot, sweet-smelling bread, which we
+ate upon the road as we went on. That road from Delft to the Hague is
+just five miles of a fine avenue shaded with trees, a canal on the one
+hand, on the other excellent pastures of cattle. It was pleasant here
+indeed.
+
+"And now, Davie," said she, "what will you do with me at all events?"
+
+"It is what we have to speak of," said I, "and the sooner yet the
+better. I can come by money in Leyden; that will be all well. But the
+trouble is how to dispose of you until your father come. I thought last
+night you seemed a little sweir to part from me?"
+
+"It will be more than seeming then," said she.
+
+"You are a very young maid," said I, "and I am but a very young callant.
+This is a great piece of difficulty. What way are we to manage? Unless,
+indeed, you could pass to be my sister?"
+
+"And what for no?" said she, "if you would let me!"
+
+"I wish you were so, indeed!" I cried. "I would be a fine man if I had
+such a sister. But the rub is that you are Catriona Drummond."
+
+"And now I will be Catrine Balfour," she said. "And who is to ken? They
+are all strange folk here."
+
+"If you think that it would do," says I. "I own it troubles me. I would
+like it very ill, if I advised you at all wrong."
+
+"David, I have no friend here but you," she said.
+
+"The mere truth is, I am too young to be your friend," said I. "I am too
+young to advise you, or you to be advised. I see not what else we are to
+do, and yet I ought to warn you."
+
+"I will have no choice left," said she. "My father James More has not
+used me very well, and it is not the first time. I am cast upon your
+hands like a sack of barley meal, and have nothing else to think of but
+your pleasure. If you will have me, good and well. If you will not"--she
+turned and touched her hand upon my arm--"David, I am afraid," said she.
+
+"No, but I ought to warn you," I began; and then bethought me that I was
+the bearer of the purse, and it would never do to seem too churlish.
+"Catriona," said I, "don't misunderstand me: I am just trying to do my
+duty by you, girl! Here am I going alone to this strange city, to be a
+solitary student there; and here is this chance arisen that you might
+dwell with me a bit, and be like my sister: you can surely understand
+this much, my dear, that I would just love to have you?"
+
+"Well, and here I am," said she. "So that's soon settled."
+
+I know I was in duty bounden to have spoke more plain. I know this was a
+great blot on my character for which I was lucky that I did not pay more
+dear. But I minded how easy her delicacy had been startled with a word
+of kissing her in Barbara's letter; now that she depended on me, how was
+I to be more bold? Besides, the truth is, I could see no other feasible
+method to dispose of her. And I daresay inclination pulled me very
+strong.
+
+A little beyond the Hague she fell very lame and made the rest of the
+distance heavily enough. Twice she must rest by the wayside, which she
+did with pretty apologies, calling herself a shame to the Highlands and
+the race she came of, and nothing but a hindrance to myself. It was her
+excuse, she said, that she was not much used with walking shod. I would
+have had her strip off her shoes and stockings and go barefoot. But she
+pointed out to me that the women of that country, even in the landward
+roads, appeared to be all shod.
+
+"I must not be disgracing my brother," said she, and was very merry with
+it all, although her face told tales of her.
+
+There is a garden in that city we were bound to, sanded below with clean
+sand, the trees meeting overhead, some of them trimmed, some pleached,
+and the whole place beautified with alleys and arbours. Here I left
+Catriona, and went forward by myself to find my correspondent. There I
+drew on my credit, and asked to be recommended to some decent, retired
+lodging. My baggage not being yet arrived, I told him I supposed I
+should require his caution with the people of the house; and explained
+that, my sister being come for a while to keep house with me, I should
+be wanting two chambers. This was all very well; but the trouble was
+that Mr. Balfour in his letter of recommendation had condescended on a
+great deal of particulars, and never a word of any sister in the case. I
+could see my Dutchman was extremely suspicious; and viewing me over the
+rims of a great pair of spectacles--he was a poor, frail body, and
+reminded me of an infirm rabbit--he began to question me close.
+
+Here I fell in a panic. Suppose he accept my tale (thinks I), suppose he
+invite my sister to his house, and that I bring her. I shall have a fine
+ravelled pirn to unwind, and may end by disgracing both the lassie and
+myself. Thereupon I began hastily to expound to him my sister's
+character. She was of a bashful disposition, it appeared, and so
+extremely fearful of meeting strangers that I had left her at that
+moment sitting in a public place alone. And then, being launched upon
+the stream of falsehood, I must do like all the rest of the world in the
+same circumstance, and plunge in deeper than was any service; adding
+some altogether needless particulars of Miss Balfour's ill-health and
+retirement during childhood. In the midst of which I awoke to a sense of
+my behaviour, and was turned to one blush.
+
+The old gentleman was not so much deceived but what he discovered a
+willingness to be quit of me. But he was first of all a man of business;
+and knowing that my money was good enough, however it might be with my
+conduct, he was so far obliging as to send his son to be my guide and
+caution in the matter of a lodging. This implied my presenting of the
+young man to Catriona. The poor, pretty child was much recovered with
+resting, looked and behaved to perfection, and took my arm and gave me
+the name of brother more easily than I could answer her. But there was
+one misfortune: thinking to help, she was rather towardly than otherwise
+to my Dutchman. And I could not but reflect that Miss Balfour had rather
+suddenly outgrown her bashfulness. And there was another thing, the
+difference of our speech. I had the Low Country tongue and dwelled upon
+my words; she had a hill voice, spoke with something of an English
+accent, only far more delightful, and was scarce quite fit to be called
+a deacon in the craft of talking English grammar; so that, for a brother
+and sister, we made a most uneven pair. But the young Hollander was a
+heavy dog, without so much spirit in his belly as to remark her
+prettiness, for which I scorned him. And as soon as he had found a cover
+to our heads, he left us alone, which was the greater service of the
+two.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+FULL STORY OF A COPY OF HEINECCIUS
+
+
+The place found was in the upper part of a house backed on a canal. We
+had two rooms, the second entering from the first; each had a chimney
+built out into the floor in the Dutch manner; and being alongside, each
+had the same prospect from the window of the top of a tree below us in a
+little court, of a piece of the canal, and of houses in the Hollands
+architecture and a church spire upon the further side. A full set of
+bells hung in that spire and made delightful music; and when there was
+any sun at all, it shone direct in our two chambers. From a tavern hard
+by we had good meals sent in.
+
+The first night we were both pretty weary, and she extremely so. There
+was little talk between us, and I packed her off to her bed as soon as
+she had eaten. The first thing in the morning I wrote word to Sprott to
+have her mails sent on, together with a line to Alan at his chief's; and
+had the same dispatched, and her breakfast ready, ere I waked her. I was
+a little abashed when she came forth in her one habit, and the mud of
+the way upon her stockings. By what inquiries I had made, it seemed a
+good few days must pass before her mails could come to hand in Leyden,
+and it was plainly needful she must have a shift of things. She was
+unwilling at first that I should go to that expense; but I reminded her
+she was now a rich man's sister and must appear suitably in the part,
+and we had not got to the second merchant's before she was entirely
+charmed into the spirit of the thing, and her eyes shining. It pleased
+me to see her so innocent and thorough in this pleasure. What was more
+extraordinary was the passion into which I fell on it myself; being
+never satisfied that I had bought her enough or fine enough, and never
+weary of beholding her in different attires. Indeed, I began to
+understand some little of Miss Grant's immersion in that interest of
+clothes; for the truth is, when you have the ground of a beautiful
+person to adorn, the whole business becomes beautiful. The Dutch
+chintzes I should say were extraordinary cheap and fine; but I would be
+ashamed to set down what I paid for stockings to her. Altogether I spent
+so great a sum upon this pleasuring (as I may call it) that I was
+ashamed for a great while to spend more; and by way of a set off, I left
+our chambers pretty bare. If we had beds, if Catriona was a little braw,
+and I had light to see her by, we were richly enough lodged for me.
+
+By the end of this merchandising I was glad to leave her at the door
+with all our purchases, and go for a long walk alone in which to read
+myself a lecture. Here had I taken under my roof, and as good as to my
+bosom, a young lass extremely beautiful, and whose innocence was her
+peril. My talk with the old Dutchman, and the lies to which I was
+constrained, had already given me a sense of how my conduct must appear
+to others; and now, after the strong admiration I had just experienced
+and the immoderacy with which I had continued my vain purchases, I began
+to think of it myself as very hasarded. I bethought me, if I had a
+sister indeed, whether I would so expose her; then, judging the case too
+problematical, I varied my question into this, whether I would so trust
+Catriona in the hands of any other Christian being: the answer to which
+made my face to burn. The more cause, since I had been entrapped and had
+entrapped the girl into an undue situation, that I should behave in it
+with scrupulous nicety. She depended on me wholly for her bread and
+shelter; in case I should alarm her delicacy, she had no retreat.
+Besides, I was her host and her protector; and the more irregularly I
+had fallen in these positions, the less excuse for me if I should profit
+by the same to forward even the most honest suit; for with the
+opportunities that I enjoyed, and which no wise parent would have
+suffered for a moment, even the most honest suit would be unfair. I saw
+I must be extremely hold-off in my relations; and yet not too much so
+neither; for if I had no right to appear at all in the character of a
+suitor, I must yet appear continually, and if possible agreeably, in
+that of host. It was plain I should require a great deal of tact and
+conduct, perhaps more than my years afforded. But I had rushed in where
+angels might have feared to tread, and there was no way out of that
+position, save by behaving right while I was in it. I made a set of
+rules for my guidance; prayed for strength to be enabled to observe
+them, and as a more human aid to the same end purchased a study book in
+law. This being all that I could think of, I relaxed from these grave
+considerations; whereupon my mind bubbled at once into an effervescency
+of pleasing spirits, and it was like one treading on air that I turned
+homeward. As I thought that name of home, and recalled the image of that
+figure awaiting me between four walls, my heart beat upon my bosom.
+
+My troubles began with my return. She ran to greet me with an obvious
+and affecting pleasure. She was clad, besides, entirely in the new
+clothes that I had bought for her; looked in them beyond expression
+well; and must walk about and drop me curtseys to display them and to be
+admired. I am sure I did it with an ill grace, for I thought to have
+choked upon the words.
+
+"Well," she said, "if you will not be caring for my pretty clothes, see
+what I have done with our two chambers." And she showed me the place all
+very finely swept and the fires glowing in the two chimneys.
+
+I was glad of a chance to seem a little more severe than I quite felt.
+"Catriona," said I, "I am very much displeased with you, and you must
+never again lay a hand upon my room. One of us two must have the rule
+while we are here together; it is most fit it should be I who am both
+the man and the elder; and I give you that for my command."
+
+She dropped me one of her curtseys which were extraordinary taking. "If
+you will be cross," said she, "I must be making pretty manners at you,
+Davie. I will be very obedient, as I should be when every stitch upon
+all there is of me belongs to you. But you will not be very cross
+either, because now I have not anyone else."
+
+This struck me hard, and I made haste, in a kind of penitence, to blot
+out all the good effect of my last speech. In this direction, progress
+was more easy, being down hill; she led me forward, smiling; at the
+sight of her, in the brightness of the fire and with her pretty becks
+and looks, my heart was altogether melted. We made our meal with
+infinite mirth and tenderness; and the two seemed to be commingled into
+one, so that our very laughter sounded like a kindness.
+
+In the midst of which I awoke to better recollections, made a lame word
+of excuse, and set myself boorishly to my studies. It was a substantial,
+instructive book that I had bought, by the late Dr. Heineccius, in which
+I was to do a great deal of reading these next days, and often very glad
+that I had no one to question me of what I read. Methought she bit her
+lip at me a little, and that cut me. Indeed it left her wholly solitary,
+the more as she was very little of a reader, and had never a book. But
+what was I to do?
+
+So the rest of the evening flowed by almost without speech.
+
+I could have beat myself. I could not lie in my bed that night for rage
+and repentance, but walked to and fro on my bare feet till I was nearly
+perished, for the chimney was gone out and the frost keen. The thought
+of her in the next room, the thought that she might even hear me as I
+walked, the remembrance of my churlishness and that I must continue to
+practise the same ungrateful course or be dishonoured, put me beside my
+reason. I stood like a man between Scylla and Charybdis: _What must she
+think of me_? was my one thought that softened me continually into
+weakness. _What is to become of us_? the other which steeled me again to
+resolution. This was my first night of wakefulness and divided counsels,
+of which I was now to pass many, pacing like a madman, sometimes weeping
+like a childish boy, sometimes praying (I would fain hope) like a
+Christian.
+
+But prayer is not very difficult, and the hitch comes in practice. In
+her presence, and above all if I allowed any beginning of familiarity, I
+found I had very little command of what should follow. But to sit all
+day in the same room with her, and feign to be engaged upon Heineccius,
+surpassed my strength. So that I fell instead upon the expedient of
+absenting myself so much as I was able; taking out classes and sitting
+there regularly, often with small attention, the test of which I found
+the other day in a note-book of that period, where I had left off to
+follow an edifying lecture and actually scribbled in my book some very
+ill verses, though the Latinity is rather better than I thought I could
+ever have compassed. The evil of this course was unhappily near as great
+as its advantage. I had the less time of trial, but I believe, while
+that time lasted, I was tried the more extremely. For she being so much
+left to solitude, she came to greet my return with an increasing fervour
+that came nigh to overmaster me. These friendly offers I must
+barbarously cast back; and my rejection sometimes wounded her so cruelly
+that I must unbend and seek to make it up to her in kindness. So that
+our time passed in ups and downs, tiffs and disappointments, upon the
+which I could almost say (if it may be said with reverence) that I was
+crucified.
+
+The base of my trouble was Catriona's extraordinary innocence, at which
+I was not so much surprised as filled with pity and admiration. She
+seemed to have no thought of our position, no sense of my struggles;
+welcomed any mark of my weakness with responsive joy; and when I was
+drove again to my retrenchments, did not always dissemble her chagrin.
+There were times when I have thought to myself, 'If she were over head
+in love, and set her cap to catch me, she would scarce behave much
+otherwise;' and then I would fall again into wonder at the simplicity of
+woman, from whom I felt (in these moments) that I was not worthy to be
+descended.
+
+There was one point in particular on which our warfare turned, and of
+all things, this was the question of her clothes. My baggage had soon
+followed me from Rotterdam, and hers from Helvoet. She had now, as it
+were, two wardrobes; and it grew to be understood between us (I could
+never tell how) that when she was friendly she would wear my clothes,
+and when otherwise her own. It was meant for a buffet, and (as it were)
+the renunciation of her gratitude; and I felt it so in my bosom, but was
+generally more wise than to appear to have observed the circumstance.
+
+Once, indeed, I was betrayed into a childishness greater than her own;
+it fell in this way. On my return from classes, thinking upon her
+devoutly with a great deal of love and a good deal of annoyance in the
+bargain, the annoyance began to fade away out of my mind; and spying in
+a window one of those forced flowers, of which the Hollanders are so
+skilled in the artifice, I gave way to an impulse and bought it for
+Catriona. I do not know the name of that flower, but it was of the pink
+colour, and I thought she would admire the same, and carried it home to
+her with a wonderful soft heart. I had left her in my clothes, and when
+I returned to find her all changed and a face to match, I cast but the
+one look at her from head to foot, ground my teeth together, flung the
+window open, and my flower into the court, and then (between rage and
+prudence) myself out of that room again, of which I slammed the door as
+I went out.
+
+On the steep stair I came near falling, and this brought me to myself,
+so that I began at once to see the folly of my conduct. I went, not into
+the street as I had purposed, but to the house court, which was always a
+solitary place, and where I saw my flower (that had cost me vastly more
+than it was worth) hanging in the leafless tree. I stood by the side of
+the canal, and looked upon the ice. Country people went by on their
+skates, and I envied them. I could see no way out of the pickle I was
+in: no way so much as to return to the room I had just left. No doubt
+was in my mind but I had now betrayed the secret of my feelings; and to
+make things worse, I had shown at the same time (and that with wretched
+boyishness) incivility to my helpless guest.
+
+I suppose she must have seen me from the open window. It did not seem to
+me that I had stood there very long before I heard the crunching of
+footsteps on the frozen snow, and turning somewhat angrily (for I was in
+no spirit to be interrupted) saw Catriona drawing near. She was all
+changed again, to the clocked stockings.
+
+"Are we not to have our walk to-day?" said she.
+
+I was looking at her in a maze. "Where is your brooch?" says I.
+
+She carried her hand to her bosom and coloured high. "I will have
+forgotten it," said she. "I will run upstairs for it quick, and then
+surely we'll can have our walk?"
+
+There was a note of pleading in that last that staggered me; I had
+neither words nor voice to utter them; I could do no more than nod by
+way of answer; and the moment she had left me, climbed into the tree and
+recovered my flower, which on her return I offered her.
+
+"I bought it for you, Catriona," said I.
+
+She fixed it in the midst of her bosom with the brooch, I could have
+thought tenderly.
+
+"It is none the better of my handling," said I again, and blushed.
+
+"I will be liking it none the worse, you may be sure of that," said she.
+
+We did not speak so much that day, she seemed a thought on the reserve
+though not unkindly. As for me, all the time of our walking, and after
+we came home, and I had seen her put my flower into a pot of water, I
+was thinking to myself what puzzles women were. I was thinking, the one
+moment, it was the most stupid thing on earth she should not have
+perceived my love; and the next, that she had certainly perceived it
+long ago, and (being a wise girl with the fine female instinct of
+propriety) concealed her knowledge.
+
+We had our walk daily. Out in the streets I felt more safe; I relaxed a
+little in my guardedness; and for one thing, there was no Heineccius.
+This made these periods not only a relief to myself, but a particular
+pleasure to my poor child. When I came back about the hour appointed, I
+would generally find her ready dressed and glowing with anticipation.
+She would prolong their duration to the extreme, seeming to dread (as I
+did myself) the hour of the return; and there is scarce a field or
+waterside near Leyden, scarce a street or lane there, where we have not
+lingered. Outside of these, I bade her confine herself entirely to our
+lodgings; this in the fear of her encountering any acquaintance, which
+would have rendered our position very difficult. From the same
+apprehension I would never suffer her to attend church, nor even go
+myself; but made some kind of shift to hold worship privately in our own
+chamber--I hope with an honest, but I am quite sure with a very much
+divided mind. Indeed, there was scarce anything that more affected me,
+than thus to kneel down alone with her before God like man and wife.
+
+One day it was snowing downright hard. I had thought it not possible
+that we should venture forth, and was surprised to find her waiting for
+me ready dressed.
+
+"I will not be doing without my walk," she cried. "You are never a good
+boy, Davie, in the house; I will never be caring for you only in the
+open air. I think we two will better turn Egyptian and dwell by the
+roadside."
+
+That was the best walk yet of all of them; she clung near to me in the
+falling snow; it beat about and melted on us, and the drops stood upon
+her bright cheeks like tears and ran into her smiling mouth. Strength
+seemed to come upon me with the sight like a giant's; I thought I could
+have caught her up and run with her into the uttermost places in the
+earth; and we spoke together all that time beyond belief for freedom and
+sweetness.
+
+It was the dark night when we came to the house door. She pressed my arm
+upon her bosom. "Thank you kindly for these same good hours," said she,
+on a deep note of her voice.
+
+The concern in which I fell instantly on this address, put me with the
+same swiftness on my guard; and we were no sooner in the chamber, and
+the light made, than she beheld the old, dour, stubborn countenance of
+the student of Heineccius. Doubtless she was more than usually hurt; and
+I know for myself, I found it more than usually difficult to maintain my
+strangeness. Even at the meal, I durst scarce unbuckle and scarce lift
+my eyes to her; and it was no sooner over than I fell again to my
+civilian, with more seeming abstraction and less understanding than
+before. Methought, as I-read, I could hear my heart strike like an
+eight-day clock. Hard as I feigned to study, there was still some of my
+eyesight that spilled beyond the book upon Catriona. She sat on the
+floor by the side of my great mail, and the chimney lighted her up, and
+shone and blinked upon her, and made her glow and darken through a
+wonder of fine hues. Now she would be gazing in the fire, and then again
+at me; and at that I would be plunged in a terror of myself, and turn
+the pages of Heineccius like a man looking for the text in church.
+
+Suddenly she called out aloud, "O, why does not my father come?" she
+cried, and fell at once into a storm of tears.
+
+I leaped up, flung Heineccius fairly into the fire, ran to her side, and
+cast an arm around her sobbing body.
+
+She put me from her sharply. "You do not love your friend," says she. "I
+could be so happy too, if you would let me!" And then, "O, what will I
+have done that you should hate me so?"
+
+"Hate you!" cries I, and held her firm. "You blind lass, can you not see
+a little in my wretched heart? Do you think when I set there, reading in
+that fool-book that I have just burned and be damned to it, I take ever
+the least thought of any stricken thing but just yourself? Night after
+night I could have grat to see you sitting there your lone. And what was
+I to do? You are here under my honour; would you punish me for that? Is
+it for that that you would spurn a loving servant?"
+
+At the word, with a small, sudden motion, she clung near to me. I raised
+her face to mine, I kissed it, and she bowed her brow upon my bosom,
+clasping me tight. I sat in a mere whirl like a man drunken. Then I
+heard her voice sound very small and muffled in my clothes.
+
+"Did you kiss her truly?" she asked.
+
+There went through me so great a heave of surprise that I was all shook
+with it.
+
+"Miss Grant!" I cried, all in a disorder. "Yes, I asked her to kiss me
+good-bye, the which she did."
+
+"Ah, well!" said she, "you have kissed me too, at all events."
+
+At the strangeness and sweetness of that word, I saw where we had
+fallen; rose, and set her on her feet.
+
+"This will never do," said I. "This will never, never do. O Catrine,
+Catrine!" Then there came a pause in which I was debarred from any
+speaking. And then, "Go away to your bed," said I. "Go away to your bed
+and leave me."
+
+She turned to obey me like a little child, and the next I knew of it,
+had stopped in the very doorway.
+
+"Good night, Davie!" said she.
+
+"And O, good night, my love!" I cried, with a great outbreak of my soul,
+and caught her to me again, so that it seemed I must have broken her.
+The next moment I had thrust her from the room, shut to the door even
+with violence, and stood alone.
+
+The milk was spilt now, the word was out and the truth told. I had crept
+like an untrusty man into the poor maid's affections; she was in my hand
+like any frail, innocent thing to make or mar; and what weapon of
+defence was left me? It seemed like a symbol that Heinoccius, my old
+protection, was now burned. I repented, yet could not find it in my
+heart to blame myself for that great failure. It seemed not possible to
+have resisted the boldness of her innocence or that last temptation of
+her weeping. And all that I had to excuse me did but make my sin appear
+the greater--it was upon a nature so defenceless, and with such
+advantages of the position, that I seemed to have practised.
+
+What was to become of us now? It seemed we could no longer dwell in the
+one place. But where was I to go? or where she? Without either choice or
+fault of ours, life had conspired to wall us together in that narrow
+place. I had a wild thought of marrying out of hand; and the next moment
+put it from me with revolt. She was a child, she could not tell her own
+heart; I had surprised her weakness, I must never go on to build on that
+surprisal; I must keep her not only clear of reproach, but free as she
+had come to me.
+
+Down I sat before the fire, and reflected, and repented, and beat my
+brains in vain for any means of escape. About two of the morning, there
+were three red embers left and the house and all the city was asleep,
+when I was aware of a small sound of weeping in the next room. She
+thought that I slept, the poor soul; she regretted her weakness--and
+what perhaps (God help her!) she called her forwardness--and in the dead
+of the night solaced herself with tears. Tender and bitter feelings,
+love and penitence and pity struggled in my soul; it seemed I was under
+bond to heal that weeping.
+
+"O, try to forgive me!" I cried out, "try, try to forgive me. Let us
+forget it all, let us try if we'll no can forget it!"
+
+There came no answer, but the sobbing ceased. I stood a long while with
+my hands still clasped as I had spoken; then the cold of the night laid
+hold upon me with a shudder, and I think my reason reawakened.
+
+"You can make no hand of this, Davie," thinks I. "To bed with you like a
+wise lad, and try if you can sleep. To-morrow you may see your way."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+THE RETURN OF JAMES MORE
+
+
+I was called on the morrow out of a late and troubled slumber by a
+knocking on my door, ran to open it, and had almost swooned with the
+contrariety of my feelings, mostly painful; for on the threshold, in a
+rough wrapraseal and an extraordinary big laced hat, there stood James
+More.
+
+I ought to have been glad perhaps without admixture, for there was a
+sense in which the man came like an answer to prayer. I had been saying
+till my head was weary that Catriona and I must separate, and looking
+till my head ached for any possible means of separation. Here were the
+means come to me upon two legs, and joy was the hindmost of my thoughts.
+It is to be considered, however, that even if the weight of the future
+were lifted off me by the man's arrival, the present heaved up the more
+black and menacing; so that, as I first stood before him in my shirt and
+breeches, I believe I took a leaping step backward like a person shot.
+
+"Ah," said he, "I have found you, Mr. Balfour." And offered me his
+large, fine hand, the which (recovering at the same time my post in the
+doorway, as if with some thought of resistance) I took him by
+doubtfully. "It is a remarkable circumstance how our affairs appear to
+intermingle," he continued. "I am owing you an apology for an
+unfortunate intrusion upon yours, which I suffered myself to be
+entrapped into by my confidence in that false-face, Prestongrange; I
+think shame to own to you that I was ever trusting to a lawyer." He
+shrugged his shoulders with a very French air. "But indeed the man is
+very plausible," says he. "And now it seems that you have busied
+yourself handsomely in the matter of my daughter, for whose direction I
+was remitted to yourself."
+
+"I think, sir," said I, with a very painful air, "that it will be
+necessary we two should have an explanation."
+
+"There is nothing amiss?" he asked. "My agent, Mr. Sprott--"
+
+"For God's sake moderate your voice!" I cried. "She must not hear till
+we have had an explanation."
+
+"She is in this place?" cries he.
+
+"That is her chamber door," said I.
+
+"You are here with her alone?" he asked.
+
+"And who else would I have got to stay with us?" cries I.
+
+I will do him the justice to admit that he turned pale.
+
+"This is very unusual," said he. "This is a very unusual circumstance.
+You are right, we must hold an explanation."
+
+So saying, he passed me by, and I must own the tall old rogue appeared
+at that moment extraordinary dignified. He had now, for the first time,
+the view of my chamber, which I scanned (I may say) with his eyes. A bit
+of morning sun glinted in by the window pane, and showed it off; my bed,
+my mails, and washing dish, with some disorder of my clothes, and the
+unlighted chimney, made the only plenishing; no mistake but it looked
+bare and cold, and the most unsuitable, beggarly place conceivable to
+harbour a young lady. At the same time came in on my mind the
+recollection of the clothes that I had bought for her; and I thought
+this contrast of poverty and prodigality bore an ill appearance.
+
+He looked all about the chamber for a seat, and finding nothing else to
+his purpose except my bed, took a place upon the side of it; where,
+after I had closed the door, I could not very well avoid joining him.
+For however this extraordinary interview might end, it must pass if
+possible without waking Catriona; and the one thing needful was that we
+should sit close and talk low. But I can scarce picture what a pair we
+made; he in his great coat which the coldness of my chamber made
+extremely suitable; I shivering in my shirt and breeks; he with very
+much the air of a judge; and I (whatever I looked) with very much the
+feelings of a man who has heard the last trumpet.
+
+"Well?" says he.
+
+And "Well" I began, but found myself unable to go further.
+
+"You tell me she is here?" said he again, but now with a spice of
+impatiency that seemed to brace me up.
+
+"She is in this house," said I, "and I knew the circumstance would be
+called unusual. But you are to consider how very unusual the whole
+business was from the beginning. Here is a young lady landed on the
+coast of Europe with two shillings and a penny halfpenny. She is
+directed to yon man Sprott in Helvoet. I hear you call him your agent.
+All I can say is he could do nothing but damn and swear at the mere
+mention of your name, and I must fee him out of my own pocket even to
+receive the custody of her effects, You speak of unusual circumstances,
+Mr. Drummond, if that be the name you prefer. Here was a circumstance,
+if you like, to which it was barbarity to have exposed her."
+
+"But this is what I cannot understand the least," said James. "My
+daughter was placed into the charge of some responsible persons, whose
+names I have forgot."
+
+"Gebbie was the name," said I; "and there is no doubt that Mr. Gebbie
+should have gone ashore with her at Helvoet. But he did not, Mr.
+Drummond; and I think you might praise God that I was there to offer in
+his place."
+
+"I shall have a word to say to Mr. Gebbie before done," said he. "As for
+yourself, I think it might have occurred that you were somewhat young
+for such a post."
+
+"But the choice was not between me and somebody else, it was between me
+and nobody," I cried. "Nobody offered in my place, and I must say I
+think you show a very small degree of gratitude to me that did."
+
+"I shall wait until I understand my obligation a little more in the
+particular," says he.
+
+"Indeed, and I think it stares you in the face, then," said I. "Your
+child was deserted, she was clean flung away in the midst of Europe,
+with scarce two shillings, and not two words of any language spoken
+there: I must say, a bonny business! I brought her to this place. I gave
+her the name and the tenderness due to a sister. All this has not gone
+without expense, but that I scarce need to hint at. They were services
+due to the young lady's character which I respect; and I think it would
+be a bonny business too, if I was to be singing her praises to her
+father."
+
+"You are a young man," he began.
+
+"So I hear you tell me," said I, with a good deal of heat.
+
+"You are a very young man," he repeated, "or you would have understood
+the significancy of the step."
+
+"I think you speak very much at your ease," cried I. "What else was I to
+do? It is a fact I might have hired some decent, poor woman to be a
+third to us, and I declare I never thought of it until this moment! But
+where was I to find her, that am a foreigner myself? And let me point
+out to your observation, Mr. Drummond, that it would have cost me money
+out of my pocket. For here is just what it comes to, that I had to pay
+through the nose for your neglect; and there is only the one story to
+it, just that you were so unloving and so careless as to have lost your
+daughter."
+
+"He that lives in a glass house should not be casting stones," says he;
+"and we will finish inquiring into the behaviour of Miss Drummond,
+before we go on to sit in judgment on her father."
+
+"But I will be entrapped into no such attitude," said I. "The character
+of Miss Drummond is far above inquiry, as her father ought to know. So
+is mine, and I am telling you that. There are but the two ways of it
+open. The one is to express your thanks to me as one gentleman to
+another, and to say no more. The other (if you are so difficult as to be
+still dissatisfied) is to pay me that which I have expended and be
+done."
+
+He seemed to soothe me with a hand in the air.
+
+"There, there," said he. "You go too fast, you go too fast, Mr. Balfour.
+It is a good thing that I have learned to be more patient. And I believe
+you forget that I have yet to see my daughter."
+
+I began to be a little relieved upon this speech and a change in the
+man's manner that I spied in him as soon as the name of money fell
+between us.
+
+"I was thinking it would be more fit--if you will excuse the plainness
+of my dressing in your presence--that I should go forth and leave you to
+encounter her alone?" said I.
+
+"What I would have looked for at your hands!" says he; and there was no
+mistake but what he said it civilly.
+
+I thought this better and better still, and as I began to pull on my
+hose, recalling the man's impudent mendicancy at Prestongrange's, I
+determined to pursue what seemed to be my victory.
+
+"If you have any mind to stay some while in Leyden," said I, "this room
+is very much at your disposal, and I can easy find another for myself:
+in which way we shall have the least amount of flitting possible, there
+being only one to change."
+
+"Why, sir," said he, making his bosom big, "I think no shame of a
+poverty I have come by in the service of my king; I make no secret that
+my affairs are quite involved; and for the moment, it would be even
+impossible for me to undertake a journey."
+
+"Until you have occasion to communicate with your friends," said I,
+"perhaps it might be convenient for you (as of course it would be
+honourable to myself) if you were to regard yourself in the light of my
+guest?"
+
+"Sir," said he, "when an offer is frankly made, I think I honour myself
+most to imitate that frankness. Your hand, Mr. David; you have the
+character that I respect the most; you are one of those from whom a
+gentleman can take a favour and no more words about it. I am an old
+soldier," he went on, looking rather disgusted-like around my chamber,
+"and you need not fear I shall prove burthensome. I have ate too often
+at a dyke-side, drank of the ditch, and had no roof but the rain."
+
+"I should be telling you," said I, "that our breakfasts are sent
+customarily in about this time of morning. I propose I should go now to
+the tavern, and bid them add a cover for yourself and delay the meal the
+matter of an hour, which will give you an interval to meet your daughter
+in."
+
+Methought his nostrils wagged at this. "O, an hour," says he. "That is
+perhaps superfluous. Half an hour, Mr. David, or say twenty minutes; I
+shall do very well in that. And by the way," he adds, detaining me by
+the coat, "what is it you drink in the morning, whether ale or wine?"
+
+"To be frank with you, sir," says I, "I drink nothing else but spare,
+cold water?"
+
+"Tut-tut," says he, "that is fair destruction to the stomach, take an
+old campaigner's word for it. Our country spirit at home is perhaps the
+most entirely wholesome; but as that is not come-at-able, Rhenish or a
+white wine of Burgundy will be next best."
+
+"I shall make it my business to see you are supplied," said I.
+
+"Why, very good," said he, "and we shall make a man of you yet, Mr.
+David."
+
+By this time, I can hardly say that I was minding him at all, beyond an
+odd thought of the kind of father-in-law that he was like to prove; and
+all my cares centred about the lass his daughter, to whom I determined
+to convey some warning of her visitor. I stepped to the door
+accordingly, and cried through the panels, knocking thereon at the same
+time: "Miss Drummond, here is your father come at last."
+
+With that I went forth upon my errand, having (by two words)
+extraordinarily damaged my affairs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+THE THREESOME
+
+
+Whether or not I was to be so much blamed, or rather perhaps pitied, I
+must leave others to judge of. My shrewdness (of which I have a good
+deal, too) seems not so great with the ladies. No doubt, at the moment
+when I awaked her, I was thinking a good deal of the effect upon James
+More; and similarly when I returned and we were all sat down to
+breakfast, I continued to behave to the young lady with deference and
+distance; as I still think to have been most wise. Her father had cast
+doubts upon the innocence of my friendship; and these, it was my first
+business to allay. But there is a kind of an excuse for Catriona also.
+We had shared in a scene of some tenderness and passion, and given and
+received caresses; I had thrust her from me with violence; I had called
+aloud upon her in the night from the one room to the other; she had
+passed hours of wakefulness and weeping; and it is not to be supposed I
+had been absent from her pillow thoughts. Upon the back of this, to be
+awaked, with unaccustomed formality, under the name of Miss Drummond,
+and to be thenceforth used with a great deal of distance and respect,
+led her entirely in error on my private sentiments; and she was indeed
+so incredibly abused as to imagine me repentant and trying to draw off!
+
+The trouble betwixt us seems to have been this: that whereas I (since I
+had first set eyes on his great hat) thought singly of James More, his
+return and suspicions, she made so little of these that I may say she
+scarce remarked them, and all her troubles and doings regarded what had
+passed between us in the night before. This is partly to be explained by
+the innocence and boldness of her character; and partly because James
+More, having sped so ill in his interview with me, or had his mouth
+closed by my invitation, said no word to her upon the subject. At the
+breakfast, accordingly, it soon appeared we were at cross purposes. I
+had looked to find her in clothes of her own: I found her (as if her
+father were forgotten) wearing some of the best that I had bought for
+her and which she knew (or thought) that I admired her in. I had looked
+to find her imitate my affectation of distance, and be most precise and
+formal; instead I found her flushed and wild-like, with eyes
+extraordinary bright, and a painful and varying expression, calling me
+by name with a sort of appeal of tenderness, and referring and deferring
+to my thoughts and wishes like an anxious or a suspected wife.
+
+But this was not for long. As I beheld her so regardless of her own
+interests, which I had jeopardised and was now endeavoring to recover, I
+redoubled my own boldness in the manner of a lesson to the girl. The
+more she came forward, the further I drew back; the more she betrayed
+the closeness of our intimacy, the more pointedly civil I became, until
+even her father (if he had not been so engrossed with eating) might have
+observed the opposition. In the midst of which, of a sudden, she became
+wholly changed, and I told myself, with a good deal of relief, that she
+had took the hint at last.
+
+All day I was at my classes or in quest of my new lodging; and though
+the hour of our customary walk hung miserably on my hands, I cannot say
+but I was happy on the whole to find my way cleared, the girl again in
+proper keeping, the father satisfied or at least acquiescent, and myself
+free to prosecute my love with honour. At supper, as at all our meals,
+it was James More that did the talking. No doubt but he talked well, if
+anyone could have believed him. But I will speak of him presently more
+at large. The meal at an end, he rose, got his great coat, and looking
+(as I thought) at me, observed he had affairs abroad. I took this for a
+hint that I was to be going also, and got up; whereupon the girl, who
+had scarce given me greeting at my entrance, turned her eyes on me wide
+open, with a look that bade me stay. I stood between them like a fish
+out of water, turning from one to the other; neither seemed to observe
+me, she gazing on the floor, he buttoning his coat: which vastly swelled
+my embarrassment. This appearance of indifferency argued, upon her side,
+a good deal of anger very near to burst out. Upon his, I thought it
+horribly alarming; I made sure there was a tempest brewing there; and
+considering that to be the chief peril, turned towards him and put
+myself (so to speak) in the man's hands.
+
+"Can I do anything for _you_, Mr. Drummond?" says I.
+
+He stifled a yawn, which again I thought to be duplicity. "Why, Mr.
+David," said he, "since you are so obliging as to propose it, you might
+show me the way to a certain tavern" (of which he gave the name) "where
+I hope to fall in with some old companions in arms."
+
+There was no more to say, and I got my hat and cloak to bear him
+company.
+
+"And as for you," he says to his daughter, "you had best go to your bed.
+I shall be late home, and _Early to bed and early to rise, gars bonny
+lasses have bright eyes."_
+
+Whereupon he kissed her with a good deal of tenderness, and ushered me
+before him from the door. This was so done (I thought on purpose) that
+it was scarce possible there should be any parting salutation; but I
+observed she did not look at me, and set it down to terror of James
+More.
+
+It was some distance to that tavern. He talked all the way of matters
+which did not interest me the smallest, and at the door dismissed me
+with empty manners. Thence I walked to my new lodging, where I had not
+so much as a chimney to hold me warm, and no society but my own
+thoughts. These were still bright enough; I did not so much as dream
+that Catriona was turned against me; I thought we were like folk
+pledged; I thought we had been too near and spoke too warmly to be
+severed, least of all by what were only steps in a most needful policy.
+And the chief of my concern was only the kind of father-in-law that I
+was getting, which was not at all the kind I would have chosen: and the
+matter of how soon I ought to speak to him, which was a delicate point
+on several sides. In the first place, when I thought how young I was, I
+blushed all over, and could almost have found it in my heart to have
+desisted; only that if once I let them go from Leyden without
+explanation, I might lose her altogether. And in the second place, there
+was our very irregular situation to be kept in view, and the rather
+scant measure of satisfaction I had given James More that morning. I
+concluded, on the whole, that delay would not hurt anything, yet I would
+not delay too long neither; and got to my cold bed with a full heart.
+
+The next day, as James More seemed a little on the complaining hand in
+the matter of my chamber, I offered to have in more furniture; and
+coming in the afternoon, with porters bringing chairs and tables, found
+the girl once more left to herself. She greeted me on my admission
+civilly, but withdrew at once to her own room, of which she shut the
+door. I made my disposition, and paid and dismissed the men so that she
+might hear them go, when I supposed she would at once come forth again
+to speak to me. I waited yet awhile, then knocked upon her door.
+
+"Catriona!" said I.
+
+The door was opened so quickly, even before I had the word out, that I
+thought she must have stood behind it listening. She remained there in
+the interval quite still; but she had a look that I cannot put a name
+on, as of one in a bitter trouble.
+
+"Are we not to have our walk to-day either?" so I faltered.
+
+"I am thanking you," said she. "I will not be caring much to walk, now
+that my father is come home."
+
+"But I think he has gone out himself and left you here alone," said I.
+
+"And do you think that was very kindly said?" she asked.
+
+"It was not unkindly meant," I replied. "What ails you, Catriona? What
+have I done to you that you should turn from me like this?"
+
+"I do not turn from you at all," she said, speaking very carefully. "I
+will ever be grateful to my friend that was good to me; I will ever be
+his friend in all that I am able. But now that my father James More is
+come again, there is a difference to be made, and I think there are some
+things said and done that would be better to be forgotten. But I will
+ever be your friend in all that I am able, and if that is not all that
+. . . if it is not so much. . . . Not that you will be caring! But I would
+not have you think of me too hard. It was true what you said to me, that
+I was too young to be advised, and I am hoping you will remember I was
+just a child. I would not like to lose your friendship, at all events."
+
+She began this very pale; but before she was done, the blood was in her
+face like scarlet, so that not her words only, but her face and the
+trembling of her very hands, besought me to be gentle. I saw for the
+first time, how very wrong I had done to place the child in that
+position, where she had been entrapped into a moment's weakness, and now
+stood before me like a person shamed.
+
+"Miss Drummond," I said, and stuck, and made the same beginning once
+again, "I wish you could see into my heart," I cried. "You would read
+there that my respect is undiminished. If that were possible, I should
+say it was increased. This is but the result of the mistake we made; and
+had to come; and the less said of it now the better. Of all of our life
+here, I promise you it shall never pass my lips; I would like to promise
+you too that I would never think of it, but it's a memory that will be
+always dear to me. And as for a friend, you have one here that would die
+for you."
+
+"I am thanking you," said she.
+
+We stood awhile silent, and my sorrow for myself began to get the upper
+hand; for here were all my dreams come to a sad tumble, and my love
+lost, and myself alone again in the world as at the beginning.
+
+"Well," said I, "we shall be friends always, that's a certain thing. But
+this is a kind of a farewell too: it's a kind of a farewell after all; I
+shall always ken Miss Drummond, but this is a farewell to my Catriona."
+
+I looked at her; I could hardly say I saw her, but she seemed to grow
+great and brighten in my eyes; and with that I suppose I must have lost
+my head, for I called out her name again and made a step at her with my
+hands reached forth.
+
+She shrank back like a person struck, her face flamed; but the blood
+sprang no faster up into her cheeks, than what it flowed back upon my
+own heart, at sight of it, with penitence and concern. I found no words
+to excuse myself, but bowed before her very deep, and went my ways out
+of the house with death in my bosom.
+
+I think it was about five days that followed without any change. I saw
+her scarce ever but at meals, and then of course in the company of James
+More. If we were alone even for a moment, I made it my devoir to behave
+the more distantly and to multiply respectful attentions, having always
+in my mind's eye that picture of the girl shrinking and flaming in a
+blush, and in my heart more pity for her than I could depict in words. I
+was sorry enough for myself, I need not dwell on that, having fallen all
+my length and more than all my height in a few seconds; but, indeed, I
+was near as sorry for the girl, and sorry enough to be scarce angry with
+her save by fits and starts. Her plea was good: she was but a child; she
+had been placed in an unfair position; if she had deceived herself and
+me, it was no more than was to have been looked for.
+
+And for another thing she was now very much alone. Her father, when he
+was by, was rather a caressing parent; but he was very easy led away by
+his affairs and pleasures, neglected her without compunction or remark,
+spent his nights in taverns when he had the money, which was more often
+than I could at all account for; and even in the course of these few
+days, failed once to come to a meal, which Catriona and I were at last
+compelled to partake of without him. It was the evening meal, and I left
+immediately that I had eaten, observing I supposed she would prefer to
+be alone; to which she agreed and (strange as it may seem) I quite
+believed her. Indeed, I thought myself but an eyesore to the girl, and a
+reminder of a moment's weakness that she now abhorred to think of. So
+she must sit alone in that room where she and I had been so merry, and
+in the blink of that chimney whose light had shone upon our many
+difficult and tender moments. There she must sit alone, and think of
+herself as of a maid who had most unmaidenly proffered her affections
+and had the same rejected. And in the meanwhile I would be alone some
+other place, and reading myself (whenever I was tempted to be angry)
+lessons upon human frailty and female delicacy. And altogether I suppose
+there were never two poor fools made themselves more unhappy in a
+greater misconception.
+
+As for James, he paid not so much heed to us, or to anything in nature
+but his pocket, and his belly, and his own prating talk. Before twelve
+hours were gone he had raised a small loan of me; before thirty, he had
+asked for a second and been refused. Money and refusal he took with the
+same kind of high good-nature. Indeed, he had an outside air of
+magnanimity that was very well fitted to impose upon a daughter; and the
+light in which he was constantly presented in his talk, and the man's
+fine presence and great ways went together pretty harmoniously. So that
+a man that had no business with him, and either very little penetration
+or a furious deal of prejudice, might almost have been taken in. To me,
+after my first two interviews, he was as plain as print; I saw him to be
+perfectly selfish, with a perfect innocency in the same; and I would
+harken to his swaggering talk (of arms, and "an old soldier," and "a
+poor Highland gentleman," and "the strength of my country and my
+friends") as I might to the babbling of a parrot.
+
+The odd thing was that I fancy he believed some part of it himself, or
+did at times; I think he was so false all through that he scarce knew
+when he was lying; and for one thing, his moments of dejection must have
+been wholly genuine. There were times when he would be the most silent,
+affectionate, clinging creature possible, holding Catriona's hand like a
+big baby, and begging of me not to leave if I had any love to him; of
+which, indeed, I had none, but all the more to his daughter. He would
+press and indeed beseech us to entertain him with our talk, a thing very
+difficult in the state of our relations; and again break forth in
+pitiable regrets for his own land and friends, or into Gaelic singing.
+
+"This is one of the melancholy airs of my native land," he would say.
+"You may think it strange to see a soldier weep, and indeed it is to
+make a near friend of you," says he. "But the notes of this singing are
+in my blood, and the words come out of my heart. And when I mind upon my
+red mountains and the wild birds calling there, and the brave streams of
+water running down, I would scarce think shame to weep before my
+enemies." Then he would sing again, and translate to me pieces of the
+song, with a great deal of boggling and much expressed contempt against
+the English language. "It says here," he would say, "that the sun is
+gone down, and the battle is at an end, and the brave chiefs are
+defeated. And it tells here how the stars see them fleeing into strange
+countries or lying dead on the red mountain; and they will never more
+shout the call of battle or wash their feet in the streams of the
+valley. But if you had only some of this language, you would weep also
+because the words of it are beyond all expression, and it is mere
+mockery to tell you it in English."
+
+Well, I thought there was a good deal of mockery in the business, one
+way and another; and yet, there was some feeling too, for which I hated
+him, I think, the worst of all. And it used to cut me to the quick to
+see Catriona so much concerned for the old rogue, and weeping herself to
+see him weep, when I was sure one-half of his distress flowed from his
+last night's drinking in some tavern. There were times when I was
+tempted to lend him a round sum, and see the last of him for good; but
+this would have been to see the last of Catriona as well, for which I
+was scarcely so prepared; and besides, it went against my conscience to
+squander my good money on one who was so little of a husband.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+A TWOSOME
+
+
+I believe it was about the fifth day, and I know at least that James was
+in one of his fits of gloom, when I received three letters. The first
+was from Alan, offering to visit me in Leyden; the other two were out of
+Scotland and prompted by the same affair, which was the death of my
+uncle and my own complete accession to my rights. Rankeillor's was, of
+course, wholly in the business view; Miss Grant's was like herself, a
+little more witty than wise, full of blame to me for not having written
+(though how was I to write with such intelligence?) and of rallying talk
+about Catriona, which it cut me to the quick to read in her very
+presence.
+
+For it was of course in my own rooms that I found them, when I came to
+dinner, so that I was surprised out of my news in the very first moment
+of reading it. This made a welcome diversion for all three of us, nor
+could any have foreseen the ill consequences that ensued. It was
+accident that brought the three letters the same day, and that gave them
+into my hand in the same room with James More; and of all the events
+that flowed from that accident, and which I might have prevented if I
+had held my tongue, the truth is that they were preordained before
+Agricola came into Scotland or Abraham set out upon his travels.
+
+The first that I opened was naturally Alan's; and what more natural than
+that I should comment on his design to visit me? but I observed James to
+sit up with an air of immediate attention.
+
+"Is that not Alan Breck that was suspected of the Appin accident?" he
+inquired.
+
+I told him, "Ay," it was the same; and he withheld me some time from my
+other letters, asking of our acquaintance, of Alan's manner of life in
+France, of which I knew very little, and further of his visit as now
+proposed.
+
+"All we forfeited folk hang a little together," he explained, "and
+besides I know the gentleman: and though his descent is not the thing,
+and indeed he has no true right to use the name of Stewart, he was very
+much admired in the day of Drummossie. He did there like a soldier; if
+some that need not be named had done as well, the upshot need not have
+been so melancholy to remember. There were two that did their best that
+day, and it makes a bond between the pair of us," says he.
+
+I could scarce refrain from shooting out my tongue at him, and could
+almost have wished that Alan had been there to have inquired a little
+further into that mention of his birth. Though, they tell me, the same
+was indeed not wholly regular.
+
+Meanwhile, I had opened Miss Grant's, and could not withhold an
+exclamation.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, forgetting, the first time since her father was
+arrived, to address her by a handle, "I am come into my kingdom fairly,
+I am the laird of Shaws indeed--my uncle is dead at last."
+
+She clapped her hands together leaping from her seat. The next moment it
+must have come over both of us at once what little cause of joy was left
+to either, and we stood opposite, staring on each other sadly.
+
+But James showed himself a ready hypocrite. "My daughter," says he, "is
+this how my cousin learned you to behave? Mr. David has lost a near
+friend, and we should first condole with him on his bereavement."
+
+"Troth, sir," said I, turning to him in a kind of anger, "I can make no
+such faces. His death is as blythe news as ever I got."
+
+"It's a good soldier's philosophy," says James. "'Tis the way of flesh,
+we must all go, all go. And if the gentleman was so far from your
+favour, why, very well! But we may at least congratulate you on your
+accession to your estates."
+
+"Nor can I say that either," I replied, with the same heat. "It is a
+good estate; what matters that to a lone man that has enough already? I
+had a good revenue before in my frugality; and but for the man's
+death--which gratifies me, shame to me that must confess it!--I see not
+how anyone is to be bettered by this change."
+
+"Come, come," said he, "you are more affected than you let on, or you
+would never make yourself out so lonely. Here are three letters; that
+means three that wish you well; and I could name two more, here in this
+very chamber. I have known you not so very long, but Catriona, when we
+are alone, is never done with the singing of your praises."
+
+She looked up at him, a little wild at that; and he slid off at once
+into another matter, the extent of my estate, which (during the most of
+the dinner time) he continued to dwell upon with interest. But it was to
+no purpose he dissembled; he had touched the matter with too gross a
+hand: and I knew what to expect. Dinner was scarce ate when he plainly
+discovered his designs. He reminded Catriona of an errand, and bid her
+attend to it. "I do not see you should be gone beyond the hour," he
+added, "and friend David will be good enough to bear me company till you
+return." She made haste to obey him without words. I do not know if she
+understood, I believe not; but I was completely satisfied, and sat
+strengthening my mind for what should follow.
+
+The door had scarce closed behind her departure, when the man leaned
+back in his chair and addressed me with a good affectation of easiness.
+Only the one thing betrayed him and that was his face; which suddenly
+shone all over with fine points of sweat.
+
+"I am rather glad to have a word alone with you," says he, "because in
+our first interview there were some expressions you misapprehended and I
+have long meant to set you right upon. My daughter stands beyond doubt.
+So do you, and I would make that good with my sword against all
+gainsayers. But, my dear David, this world is a censorious place--as who
+should know it better than myself, who have lived ever since the days of
+my late departed father, God sain him! in a perfect spate of calumnies?
+We have to face to that; you and me have to consider of that; we have to
+consider of that." And he wagged his head like a minister in a pulpit.
+
+"To what effect, Mr. Drummond?" said I. "I would be obliged to you if
+you would approach your point."
+
+"Ay, ay," says he, laughing, "like your character indeed! and what I
+most admire in it. But the point, my worthy fellow, is sometimes in a
+kittle bit." He filled a glass of wine. "Though between you and me, that
+are such fast friends, it need not bother us long. The point, I need
+scarcely tell you, is my daughter. And the first thing is that I have no
+thought in my mind of blaming you. In the unfortunate circumstances,
+what could you do else? 'Deed, and I cannot tell."
+
+"I thank you for that," said I, pretty close upon my guard.
+
+"I have besides studied your character," he went on; "your talents are
+fair; you seem to have a moderate competence; which does no harm; and
+one thing with another, I am very happy to have to announce to you that
+I have decided on the latter of the two ways open."
+
+"I am afraid I am dull," said I. "What ways are these?"
+
+He bent his brows upon me formidably and uncrossed his legs. "Why, sir,"
+says he, "I think I need scarce describe them to a gentleman of your
+condition; either that I should cut your throat or that you should marry
+my daughter."
+
+"You are pleased to be quite plain at last," said I.
+
+"And I believe I have been plain from the beginning!" cries he
+robustiously. "I am a careful parent, Mr. Balfour; but I thank God, a
+patient and deleeberate man. There is many a father, sir, that would
+have hirsled you at once either to the altar or the field. My esteem for
+your character--"
+
+"Mr. Drummond," I interrupted, "if you have any esteem for me at all, I
+will beg of you to moderate your voice. It is quite needless to rowt at
+a gentleman in the same chamber with yourself and lending you his best
+attention."
+
+"Why, very true," says he, with an immediate change. "And you must
+excuse the agitations of a parent."
+
+"I understand you then," I continued--"for I will take no note of your
+other alternative, which perhaps it was a pity you let fall--I
+understand you rather to offer me encouragement in case I should desire
+to apply for your daughter's hand?"
+
+"It is not possible to express my meaning better," said he, "and I see
+we shall do well together."
+
+"That remains to be yet seen," said I. "But so much I need make no
+secret of, that I bear the lady you refer to the most tender affection,
+and I could not fancy, even in a dream, a better fortune than to get
+her."
+
+"I was sure of it, I felt certain of you, David," he cried, and reached
+out his hand to me.
+
+I put it by. "You go too fast, Mr. Drummond," said I. "There are
+conditions to be made; and there is a difficulty in the path, which I
+see not entirely how we shall come over. I have told you that, upon my
+side, there is no objection to the marriage, but I have good reason to
+believe there will be much on the young lady's."
+
+"This is all beside the mark," says he. "I will engage for her
+acceptance."
+
+"I think you forget, Mr. Drummond," said I, "that, even in dealing with
+myself you have been betrayed into two-three unpalatable expressions. I
+will have none such employed to the young lady. I am here to speak and
+think for the two of us; and I give you to understand that I would no
+more let a wife be forced upon myself, than what I would let a husband
+be forced on the young lady."
+
+He sat and glowered at me like one in doubt and a good deal of temper.
+
+"So that this is to be the way of it," I concluded. "I will marry Miss
+Drummond, and that blythely, if she is entirely willing. But if there be
+the least unwillingness, as I have reason to fear--marry her will I
+never."
+
+"Well, well," said he, "this is a small affair. As soon as she returns I
+will sound her a bit, and hope to reassure you----"
+
+But I cut in again. "Not a finger of you, Mr. Drummond, or I cry off,
+and you can seek a husband to your daughter somewhere else," said I. "It
+is I that am to be the only dealer and the only judge. I shall satisfy
+myself exactly; and none else shall anyways meddle--you the least of
+all."
+
+"Upon my word, sir!" he exclaimed, "and who are you to be the judge?"
+
+"The bridegroom, I believe," said I.
+
+"This is to quibble," he cried. "You turn your back upon the facts. The
+girl, my daughter, has no choice left to exercise. Her character is
+gone."
+
+"And I ask your pardon," said I, "but while this matter lies between her
+and you and me, that is not so."
+
+"What security have I!" he cried. "Am I to let my daughter's reputation
+depend upon a chance?"
+
+"You should have thought of all this long ago," said I, "before you were
+so misguided as to lose her; and not afterwards, when it is quite too
+late. I refuse to regard myself as any way accountable for your neglect,
+and I will be browbeat by no man living. My mind is quite made up, and
+come what may, I will not depart from it a hair's breadth. You and me
+are to sit here in company till her return; upon which, without either
+word or look from you, she and I are to go forth again to hold our talk.
+If she can satisfy me that she is willing to this step, I will then make
+it; and if she cannot, I will not."
+
+He leaped out of his seat like a man stung. "I can spy your manoeuvre,"
+he cried; "you would work upon her to refuse!"
+
+"Maybe ay, and maybe no," said I. "That is the way it is to be,
+whatever."
+
+"And if I refuse?" cries he.
+
+"Then, Mr. Drummond, it will have to come to the throat-cutting," said
+I.
+
+What with the size of the man, his great length of arm in which he came
+near rivalling his father, and his reputed skill at weapons, I did not
+use this word without some trepidation, to say nothing at all of the
+circumstance that he was Catriona's father. But I might have spared
+myself alarms. From the poorness of my lodging--he does not seem to have
+remarked his daughter's dresses, which were indeed all equally new to
+him--and from the fact that I had shown myself averse to lend, he had
+embraced a strong idea of my poverty. The sudden news of my estate
+convinced him of his error, and he had made but the one bound of it on
+this fresh venture, to which he was now so wedded, that I believe he
+would have suffered anything rather than fall to the alternative of
+fighting.
+
+A little while longer he continued to dispute with me until I hit upon a
+word that silenced him.
+
+"If I find you so averse to let me see the lady by herself," said I, "I
+must suppose you have very good grounds to think me in the right about
+her unwillingness."
+
+He gabbled some kind of an excuse.
+
+"But all this is very exhausting to both of our tempers," I added, "and
+I think we would do better to preserve a judicious silence."
+
+The which we did until the girl returned, and I must suppose would have
+cut a very ridiculous figure, had there been any there to view us.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN WHICH I AM LEFT ALONE
+
+
+I opened the door to Catriona and stopped her on the threshold.
+
+"Your father wishes us to take our walk," said I.
+
+She looked to James More, who nodded, and at that, like a trained
+soldier, she turned to go with me.
+
+We took one of our old ways, where we had gone often together, and been
+more happy than I can tell of in the past. I came a half a step behind,
+so that I could watch her unobserved. The knocking of her little shoes
+upon the way sounded extraordinary pretty and sad; and I thought it a
+strange moment that I should be so near both ends of it at once, and
+walk in the midst between two destinies, and could not tell whether I
+was hearing these steps for the last time, or whether the sound of them
+was to go in and out with me till death should part us.
+
+She avoided even to look at me, only walked before her, like one who had
+a guess of what was coming. I saw I must speak soon before my courage
+was run out, but where to begin I knew not. In this painful situation,
+when the girl was as good as forced into my arms and had already
+besought my forbearance, any excess of pressure must have seemed
+indecent; yet to avoid it wholly would have a very cold-like appearance.
+Between these extremes I stood helpless, and could have bit my fingers;
+so that, when at last I managed to speak at all, it may be said I spoke
+at random.
+
+"Catriona," said I, "I am in a very painful situation; or rather, so we
+are both; and I would be a good deal obliged to you if you would promise
+to let me speak through first of all, and not to interrupt till I have
+done."
+
+She promised me that simply.
+
+"Well," said I, "this that I have got to say is very difficult, and I
+know very well I have no right to be saying it. After what passed
+between the two of us last Friday, I have no manner of right. We have
+got so ravelled up (and all by my fault) that I know very well the least
+I could do is just to hold my tongue, which was what I intended fully,
+and there was nothing further from my thoughts than to have troubled you
+again. But, my dear, it has become merely necessary, and no way by it.
+You see, this estate of mine has fallen in, which makes me rather a
+better match; and the--the business would not have quite the same
+ridiculous-like appearance that it would before. Besides which, it's
+supposed that our affairs have got so much ravelled up (as I was saying)
+that it would be better to let them be the way they are. In my view,
+this part of the thing is vastly exaggerate, and if I were you I would
+not wear two thoughts on it. Only it's right I should mention the same,
+because there's no doubt it has some influence on James More. Then I
+think we were none so unhappy when we dwelt together in this town
+before. I think we did pretty well together. If you would look back, my
+dear--"
+
+"I will look neither back nor forward," she interrupted. "Tell me the
+one thing: this is my father's doing?"
+
+"He approves of it," said I. "He approved that I should ask your hand in
+marriage," and was going on again with somewhat more of an appeal upon
+her feelings; but she marked me not, and struck into the midst.
+
+"He told you to!" she cried. "It is no sense denying it, you said
+yourself that there was nothing farther from your thoughts. He told you
+to."
+
+"He spoke of it the first, if that is what you mean," I began.
+
+She was walking ever the faster, and looking fair in front of her; but
+at this she made a little noise in her head, and I thought she would
+have run.
+
+"Without which," I went on, "after what you said last Friday, I would
+never have been so troublesome as make the offer. But when he as good as
+asked me, what was I to do?"
+
+She stopped and turned round upon me.
+
+"Well, it is refused at all events," she cried, "and there will be an
+end of that."
+
+And she began to walk forward.
+
+"I suppose I could expect no better," said I, "but I think you might try
+to be a little kind to me for the last end of it. I see not why you
+should be harsh. I have loved you very well, Catriona--no harm that I
+should call you so for the last time. I have done the best that I could
+manage, I am trying the same still, and only vexed that I can do no
+better. It is a strange thing to me that you can take any pleasure to be
+hard to me."
+
+"I am not thinking of you," she said, "I am thinking of that man, my
+father."
+
+"Well, and that way, too!" said I. "I can be of use to you that way,
+too; I will have to be. It is very needful, my dear, that we should
+consult about your father; for the way this talk has gone, an angry man
+will be James More."
+
+She stopped again. "It is because I am disgraced?" she asked.
+
+"That is what he is thinking," I replied, "but I have told you already
+to make nought of it."
+
+"It will be all one to me," she cried. "I prefer to be disgraced!"
+
+I did not know very well what to answer, and stood silent.
+
+There seemed to be something working in her bosom after that last cry;
+presently she broke out, "And what is the meaning of all this? Why is
+all this shame loundered on my head? How could you dare it, David
+Balfour?"
+
+"My dear," said I, "what else was I to do?"
+
+"I am not your dear," she said, "and I defy you to be calling me these
+words."
+
+"I am not thinking of my words," said I. "My heart bleeds for you, Miss
+Drummond. Whatever I may say, be sure you have my pity in your difficult
+position. But there is just the one thing that I wish you would bear in
+view, if it was only long enough to discuss it quietly; for there is
+going to be a collieshangie when we two get home. Take my word for it,
+it will need the two of us to make this matter end in peace."
+
+"Ay," said she. There sprang a patch of red in either of her cheeks.
+"Was he for fighting you?" said she.
+
+"Well, he was that," said I.
+
+She gave a dreadful kind of laugh. "At all events, it is complete!" she
+cried. And then turning on me: "My father and I are a fine pair," she
+said, "but I am thanking the good God there will be somebody worse than
+what we are. I am thanking the good God that he has let me see you so.
+There will never be the girl made that would not scorn you."
+
+I had borne a good deal pretty patiently, but this was over the mark.
+
+"You have no right to speak to me like that," said I. "What have I done
+but to be good to you, or try to? And here is my repayment! O, it is too
+much."
+
+She kept looking at me with a hateful smile. "Coward!" said she.
+
+"The word in your throat and in your father's!" I cried. "I have dared
+him this day already in your interest. I will dare him again, the nasty
+pole-cat; little I care which of us should fall! Come," said I, "back to
+the house with us; let us be done with it, let me be done with the whole
+Hieland crew of you! You will see what you think when I am dead."
+
+She shook her head at me with that same smile I could have struck her
+for.
+
+"O, smile away!" I cried. "I have seen your bonny father smile on the
+wrong side this day. Not that I mean he was afraid, of course," I added
+hastily, "but he preferred the other way of it."
+
+"What is this?" she asked.
+
+"When I offered to draw with him," said I.
+
+"You offered to draw upon James More?" she cried.
+
+"And I did so," said I, "and found him backward enough, or how would we
+be here?"
+
+"There is a meaning upon this," said she. "What is it you are meaning?"
+
+"He was to make you take me," I replied, "and I would not have it. I
+said you should be free, and I must speak with you alone; little I
+supposed it would be such a speaking! '_And what if I refuse_?' says
+he.--'_Then it must come to the throat cutting_,' says I, '_for I will
+no more have a husband forced on that young lady than what I would have
+a wife forced upon myself_.' These were my words, they were a friend's
+words; bonnily have I been paid for them! Now you have refused me of
+your own clear free will, and there lives no father in the Highlands, or
+out of them, that can force on this marriage. I will see that your
+wishes are respected; I will make the same my business, as I have all
+through. But I think you might have that decency as to affect some
+gratitude. 'Deed, and I thought you knew me better! I have not behaved
+quite well to you, but that was weakness. And to think me a coward and
+such a coward as that--O, my lass, there was a stab for the last of it!"
+
+"Davie, how would I guess?" she cried. "O, this is a dreadful business!
+Me and mine,"--she gave a kind of wretched cry at the word--"me and mine
+are not fit to speak to you. O, I could be kneeling down to you in the
+street, I could be kissing your hands for your forgiveness!"
+
+"I will keep the kisses I have got from you already," cried I. "I will
+keep the ones I wanted and that were something worth; I will not be
+kissed in penitence."
+
+"What can you be thinking of this miserable girl?" says she.
+
+"What I am trying to tell you all this while!" said I, "that you had
+best leave me alone, whom you can make no more unhappy if you tried, and
+turn your attention to James More, your father, with whom you are like
+to have a queer pirn to wind."
+
+"O, that I must be going out into the world alone with such a man!" she
+cried, and seemed to catch herself in with a great effort. "But trouble
+yourself no more for that," said she. "He does not know what kind of
+nature is in my heart. He will pay me dear for this day of it; dear,
+dear, will he pay."
+
+She turned, and began to go home and I to accompany her. At which she
+stopped.
+
+"I will be going alone," she said. "It is alone I must be seeing him."
+
+Some little while I raged about the streets, and told myself I was the
+worst used lad in Christendom. Anger choked me; it was all very well for
+me to breathe deep; it seemed there was not air enough about Leyden to
+supply me, and I thought I would have burst like a man at the bottom of
+the sea. I stopped and laughed at myself at a street corner a minute
+together, laughing out loud, so that a passenger looked at me, which
+brought me to myself.
+
+"Well," I thought, "I have been a gull and a ninny and a soft Tommy long
+enough. Time it was done. Here is a good lesson to have nothing to do
+with that accursed sex, that was the ruin of the man in the beginning
+and will be so to the end. God knows I was happy enough before ever I
+saw her; God knows I can be happy enough again when I have seen the last
+of her."
+
+That seemed to me the chief affair: to see them go. I dwelled upon the
+idea fiercely; and presently slipped on, in a kind of malevolence, to
+consider how very poorly they were like to fare when Davie Balfour was
+no longer by to be their milk-cow; at which, to my own very great
+surprise, the disposition of my mind turned bottom up. I was still
+angry; I still hated her; and yet I thought I owed it to myself that she
+should suffer nothing.
+
+This carried me home again at once, where I found the mails drawn out
+and ready fastened by the door, and the father and daughter with every
+mark upon them of a recent disagreement. Catriona was like a wooden
+doll; James More breathed hard, his face was dotted with white spots,
+and his nose upon one side. As soon as I came in, the girl looked at him
+with a steady, clear, dark look that might very well have been followed
+by a blow. It was a hint that was more contemptuous than a command, and
+I was surprised to see James More accept it. It was plain he had had a
+master talking-to; and I could see there must be more of the devil in
+the girl than I had guessed, and more good-humor about the man than I
+had given him the credit of.
+
+He began, at least, calling me Mr. Balfour, and plainly speaking from a
+lesson; but he got not very far, for at the first pompous swell of his
+voice, Catriona cut in.
+
+"I will tell you what James More is meaning," said she. "He means we
+have come to you, beggar-folk, and have not behaved to you very well,
+and we are ashamed of our ingratitude and ill-behaviour. Now we are
+wanting to go away and be forgotten; and my father will have guided his
+gear so ill, that we cannot even do that unless you will give us some
+more alms. For that is what we are, at all events, beggar-folk and
+sorners."
+
+"By your leave, Miss Drummond," said I, "I must speak to your father by
+myself."
+
+She went into her own room and shut the door, without a word or a look.
+
+"You must excuse her, Mr. Balfour," says James More. "She has no
+delicacy."
+
+"I am not here to discuss that with you," said I, "but to be quit of
+you. And to that end I must talk of your position. Now, Mr. Drummond, I
+have kept the run of your affairs more closely than you bargained for. I
+know you had money of your own when you were borrowing mine. I know you
+have had more since you were here in Leyden, though you concealed it
+even from your daughter."
+
+"I bid you beware. I will stand no more baiting," he broke out. "I am
+sick of her and you. What kind of a damned trade is this to be a parent!
+I have had expressions used to me----" There he broke off. "Sir, this is
+the heart of a soldier and a parent," he went on again, laying his hand
+on his bosom, "outraged in both characters--and I bid you beware."
+
+"If you would have let me finish," says I, "you would have found I spoke
+for your advantage."
+
+"My dear friend," he cried, "I know I might have relied upon the
+generosity of your character."
+
+"Man! will you let me speak?" said I. "The fact is that I cannot win to
+find out if you are rich or poor. But it is my idea that your means, as
+they are mysterious in their source, so they are something insufficient
+in amount; and I do not choose your daughter to be lacking. If I durst
+speak to herself, you may be certain I would never dream of trusting it
+to you; because I know you like the back of my hand, and all your
+blustering talk is that much wind to me. However, I believe in your way
+you do still care something for your daughter after all; and I must just
+be doing with that ground of confidence, such as it is."
+
+Whereupon, I arranged with him that he was to communicate with me, as to
+his whereabouts and Catriona's welfare, in consideration of which I was
+to serve him a small stipend.
+
+He heard the business out with a great deal of eagerness; and when it
+was done, "My dear fellow, my dear son," he cried out, "this is more
+like yourself than any of it yet! I will serve you with a soldier's
+faithfulness----"
+
+"Let me hear no more of it!" says I. "You have got me to that pitch that
+the bare name of soldier rises on my stomach. Our traffic is settled; I
+am now going forth and will return in one half-hour, when I expect to
+find my chambers purged of you."
+
+I gave them good measure of time; it was my one fear that I might see
+Catriona again, because tears and weakness were ready in my heart, and I
+cherished my anger like a piece of dignity. Perhaps an hour went by; the
+sun had gone down, a little wisp of a new moon was following it across a
+scarlet sunset; already there were stars in the east, and in my
+chambers, when at last I entered them, the night lay blue. I lit a taper
+and reviewed the rooms; in the first there remained nothing so much as
+to awake a memory of those who were gone; but in the second, in a corner
+of the floor, I spied a little heap that brought my heart into my mouth.
+She had left behind at her departure all that ever she had of me. It was
+the blow that I felt sorest, perhaps because it was the last; and I fell
+upon that pile of clothing and behaved myself more foolish than I care
+to tell of.
+
+Late in the night, in a strict frost, and my teeth chattering, I came
+again by some portion of my manhood and considered with myself. The
+sight of these poor frocks and ribbons, and her shifts, and the clocked
+stockings, was not to be endured; and if I were to recover any constancy
+of mind, I saw I must be rid of them ere the morning. It was my first
+thought to have made a fire and burned them; but my disposition has
+always been opposed to wastery, for one thing; and for another, to have
+burned these things that she had worn so close upon her body, seemed in
+the nature of a cruelty. There was a corner cupboard in that chamber;
+there I determined to bestow them. The which I did and made it a long
+business, folding them with very little skill indeed but the more care;
+and sometimes dropping them with my tears. All the heart was gone out of
+me, I was weary as though I had run miles, and sore like one beaten;
+when, as I was folding a kerchief that she wore often at her neck, I
+observed there was a corner neatly cut from it. It was a kerchief of a
+very pretty hue, on which I had frequently remarked; and once that she
+had it on, I remembered telling her (by way of a banter) that she wore
+my colours. There came a glow of hope and like a tide of sweetness in my
+bosom; and the next moment I was plunged back in a fresh despair. For
+there was the corner crumpled in a knot and cast down by itself in
+another part of the floor.
+
+But when I argued with myself, I grew more hopeful. She had cut that
+corner off in some childish freak that was manifestly tender; that she
+had cast it away again was little to be wondered at; and I was inclined
+to dwell more upon the first than upon the second, and to be more
+pleased that she had ever conceived the idea of that keepsake, than
+concerned because she had flung it from her in an hour of natural
+resentment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+WE MEET IN DUNKIRK
+
+
+Altogether, then, I was scarce so miserable the next days but what I had
+many hopeful and happy snatches; threw myself with a good deal of
+constancy upon my studies; and made out to endure the time till Alan
+should arrive, or I might hear word of Catriona by the means of James
+More. I had altogether three letters in the time of our separation. One
+was to announce their arrival in the town of Dunkirk in France, from
+which place James shortly after started alone upon a private mission.
+This was to England and to see Lord Holderness; and it has always been a
+bitter thought that my good money helped to pay the charges of the same.
+But he has need of a long spoon who sups with the deil, or James More
+either. During this absence, the time was to fall due for another
+letter; and as the letter was the condition of his stipend, he had been
+so careful as prepare it beforehand and leave it with Catriona to be
+despatched. The fact of our correspondence aroused her suspicions, and
+he was no sooner gone than she had burst the seal. What I received began
+accordingly in the writing of James More:
+
+"My dear Sir,--Your esteemed favour came to hand duly, and I have to
+acknowledge the inclosure according to agreement. It shall be all
+faithfully expended on my daughter, who is well, and desires to be
+remembered to her dear friend. I find her in rather a melancholy
+disposition, but trusts in the mercy of Grod to see her re-established.
+Our manner of life is very much alone, but we solace ourselves with the
+melancholy tunes of our native mountains, and by walking upon the margin
+of the sea that lies next to Scotland. It was better days with me when I
+lay with five wounds upon my body on the field of Gladsmuir. I have found
+employment here in the _haras_ of a French nobleman, where my experience
+is valued. But, my dear Sir, the wages are so exceedingly unsuitable that
+I would be ashamed to mention them, which makes your remittances the more
+necessary to my daughter's comfort, though I daresay the sight of old
+friends would be still better.
+
+"My dear Sir, "Your affectionate obedient servant,
+
+"JAMES MACGREGOR DRUMMOND."
+
+Below it began again in the hand of Catriona:--
+
+ "Do not be believing him, it is all lies together.
+ "C.M.D."
+
+Not only did she add this postcript, but I think she must have come near
+suppressing the letter; for it came long after date, and was closely
+followed by the third. In the time betwixt them, Alan had arrived, and
+made another life to me with his merry conversation; I had been
+presented to his cousin of the Scots-Dutch, a man that drank more than I
+could have thought possible and was not otherwise of interest; I had
+been entertained to many jovial dinners and given some myself, all with
+no great change upon my sorrow; and we two (by which I mean Alan and
+myself, and not at all the cousin) had discussed a good deal the nature
+of my relations with James More and his daughter. I was naturally
+diffident to give particulars; and this disposition was not anyway
+lessened by the nature of Alan's commentary upon those I gave.
+
+"I cannae make head nor tail of it," he would say, "but it sticks in my
+mind ye've made a gowk of yourself. There's few people that has had more
+experience than Alan Breck; and I can never call to mind to have heard
+tell of a lassie like this one of yours. The way that you tell it, the
+thing's fair impossible. Ye must have made a terrible hash of the
+business, David."
+
+"There are whiles that I am of the same mind," said I.
+
+"The strange thing is that ye seem to have a kind of a fancy for her
+too!" said Alan.
+
+"The biggest kind, Alan," said I, "and I think I'll take it to my grave
+with me."
+
+"Well, ye beat me, whatever!" he would conclude.
+
+I showed him the letter with Catriona's postcript. "And here again!" he
+cried. "Impossible to deny a kind of decency to this Catriona, and sense
+forby! As for James More, the man's as boss as a drum; he's just a wame
+and a wheen words; though I'll can never deny that he fought reasonably
+well at Gladsmuir, and it's true what he says here about the five
+wounds. But the loss of him is that the man's boss."
+
+"Ye see, Alan," said I, "it goes against the grain with me to leave the
+maid in such poor hands."
+
+"Ye couldnae weel find poorer," he admitted. "But what are ye to do with
+it? It's this way about a man and a woman, ye see, Davie: The weemenfolk
+have got no kind of reason to them. Either they like the man, and then
+a' goes fine; or else they just detest him, and ye may spare your
+breath--ye can do naething. There's just the two sets of them--them that
+would sell their coats for ye, and them that never look the road ye're
+on. That's a' that there is to women; and you seem to be such a gomeral
+that ye cannae tell the tane frae the tither."
+
+"Well, and I'm afraid that's true for me," said I.
+
+"And yet there's naething easier!" cried Alan. "I could easy learn ye
+the science of the thing; but ye seem to me to be born blind, and
+there's where the diffeeculty comes in!"
+
+"And can _you_ no help me?" I asked, "you that's so clever at the
+trade?"
+
+"Ye see, David, I wasnae here," said he. "I'm like a field officer that
+has naebody but blind men for scouts and _eclaireurs_; and what would he
+ken? But it sticks in my mind that ye'll have made some kind of bauchle;
+and if I was you, I would have a try at her again."
+
+"Would ye so, man Alan?" said I.
+
+"I would e'en't," says he.
+
+The third letter came to my hand while we were deep in some such talk;
+and it will be seen how pat it fell to the occasion. James professed to
+be in some concern upon his daughter's health, which I believe was never
+better; abounded in kind expressions to myself; and finally proposed
+that I should visit them at Dunkirk.
+
+"You will now be enjoying the society of my old comrade, Mr. Stewart,"
+he wrote. "Why not accompany him so far in his return to France? I have
+something very particular for Mr. Stewart's ear; and, at any rate, I
+would be pleased to meet in with an old fellow-soldier and one so mettle
+as himself. As for you, my dear sir, my daughter and I would be proud to
+receive our benefactor, whom we regard as a brother and a son. The
+French nobleman has proved a person of the most filthy avarice of
+character, and I have been necessitate to leave the _haras_. You will
+find us, in consequence, a little poorly lodged in the _auberge_ of a
+man Bazin on the dunes; but the situation is caller, and I make no doubt
+but we might spend some very pleasant days, when Mr. Stewart and I could
+recall our services, and you and my daughter divert yourselves in a
+manner more befitting your age. I beg at least that Mr. Stewart would
+come here; my business with him opens a very wide door."
+
+"What does the man want with me?" cried Alan, when he had read. "What he
+wants with you is clear enough--it's siller. But what can he want with
+Alan Breck?"
+
+"O, it'll be just an excuse," said I. "He is still after this marriage,
+which I wish from my heart that we could bring about. And he asks you
+because he thinks I would be less likely to come wanting you."
+
+"Well, I wish that I kent," says Alan. "Him and me were never onyways
+pack; we used to girn at ither like a pair of pipers. 'Something for my
+ear,' quo' he! I'll maybe have something for his hinder end, before
+we're through with it. Dod, I'm thinking it would be a kind of a
+divertisement to gang and see what he'll be after! Forby that I could
+see your lassie then. What say ye, Davie? Will ye ride with Alan?"
+
+You may be sure I was not backward, and Alan's furlough running towards
+an end, we set forth presently upon this joint adventure.
+
+It was near dark of a January day when we rode at last into the town of
+Dunkirk. We left our horses at the post, and found a guide to Bazin's
+Inn, which lay beyond the walls. Night was quite fallen, so that we were
+the last to leave that fortress, and heard the doors of it close behind
+us as we passed the bridge. On the other side there lay a lighted
+suburb, which we thridded for a while, then turned into a dark lane, and
+presently found ourselves wading in the night among deep sand where we
+could hear a bullering of the sea. We travelled in this fashion for some
+while, following our conductor mostly by the sound of his voice; and I
+had begun to think he was perhaps misleading us, when we came to the top
+of a small brae, and there appeared out of the darkness a dim light in a
+window.
+
+"_Voila l'auberge a, Bazin_," says the guide.
+
+Alan smacked his lips. "An unco lonely bit," said he, and I thought by
+his tone he was not wholly pleased.
+
+A little after, and we stood in the lower storey of the house, which was
+all in the one apartment, with a stair leading to the chambers at the
+side, benches and tables by the wall, the cooking fire at the one end of
+it, and shelves of bottles and the cellar-trap at the other. Here Bazin,
+who was an ill-looking, big man, told us the Scottish gentleman was gone
+abroad he knew not where, but the young lady was above, and he would
+call her down to us.
+
+I took from my breast the kerchief wanting the corner, and knotted it
+about my throat. I could hear my heart go; and Alan patting me on the
+shoulder with some of his laughable expressions, I could scarce refrain
+from a sharp word. But the time was not long to wait. I heard her step
+pass overhead, and saw her on the stair. This she descended very
+quietly, and greeted me with a pale face and certain seeming of
+earnestness, or uneasiness, in her manner that extremely dashed me.
+
+"My father, James More, will be here soon. He will be very pleased to
+see you," she said. And then of a sudden her face flamed, her eyes
+lightened, the speech stopped upon her lips; and I made sure she had
+observed the kerchief. It was only for a breath that she was
+discomposed; but methought it was with a new animation that she turned
+to welcome Alan. "And you will be his friend Alan Breck?" she cried.
+"Many is the dozen times I will have heard him tell of you; and I love
+you already for all your bravery and goodness."
+
+"Well, well," says Alan, holding her hand in his and viewing her, "and
+so this is the young lady at the last of it! David, you're an awful poor
+hand of a description."
+
+I do not know that ever I heard him speak so straight to people's
+hearts; the sound of his voice was like song.
+
+"What? will he have been describing me?" she cried.
+
+"Little else of it since I ever came out of France!" says he, "forby a
+bit of speciment one night in Scotland in a shaw of wood by Silvermills.
+But cheer up, my dear! ye're bonnier than what he said. And now there's
+one thing sure: you and me are to be a pair of friends. I'm a kind of a
+henchman to Davie here; I'm like a tyke at his heels; and whatever he
+cares for, I've got to care for too--and by the holy airn! they've got
+to care for me! So now you can see what way you stand with Alan Breck,
+and ye'll find ye'll hardly lose on the transaction. He's no very
+bonnie, my dear, but he's leal to them he loves."
+
+"I thank you with my heart for your good words," said she. "I have that
+honour for a brave, honest man that I cannot find any to be answering
+with."
+
+Using travellers' freedom, we spared to wait for James More, and sat
+down to meat, we threesome. Alan had Catriona sit by him and wait upon
+his wants: he made her drink first out of his glass, he surrounded her
+with continual kind gallantries, and yet never gave me the most small
+occasion to be jealous; and he kept the talk so much in his own hand,
+and that in so merry a note, that neither she nor I remembered to be
+embarrassed. If any one had seen us there, it must have been supposed
+that Alan was the old friend and I the stranger. Indeed, I had often
+cause to love and to admire the man, but I never loved or admired him
+better than that night; and I could not help remarking to myself (what I
+was sometimes rather in danger of forgetting) that he had not only much
+experience of life, but in his own way a great deal of natural ability
+besides. As for Catriona she seemed quite carried away; her laugh was
+like a peal of bells, her face gay as a May morning; and I own, although
+I was very well pleased, yet I was a little sad also, and thought myself
+a dull, stockish character in comparison of my friend, and very unfit to
+come into a young maid's life, and perhaps ding down her gaiety.
+
+But if that was like to be my part, I found at least that I was not
+alone in it; for, James More returning suddenly, the girl was changed
+into a piece of stone. Through the rest of that evening, until she made
+an excuse and slipped to bed, I kept an eye upon her without cease: and
+I can bear testimony that she never smiled, scarce spoke, and looked
+mostly on the board in front of her. So that I really marvelled to see
+so much devotion (as it used to be) changed into the very sickness of
+hate.
+
+Of James More it is unnecessary to say much; you know the man already,
+what there was to know of him; and I am weary of writing out his lies.
+Enough that he drank a great deal, and told us very little that was to
+any possible purpose. As for the business with Alan, that was to be
+reserved for the morrow and his private hearing.
+
+It was the more easy to be put off, because Alan and I were pretty weary
+with our day's ride, and sat not very late after Catriona.
+
+We were soon alone in a chamber where we were to make shift with a
+single bed. Alan looked on me with a queer smile.
+
+"Ye muckle ass!" said he.
+
+"What do ye mean by that?" I cried.
+
+"Mean? What do I mean? It's extraordinar, David man," says he, "that you
+should be so mortal stupit."
+
+Again I begged him to speak out.
+
+"Well, it's this of it," said he. "I told ye there were the two kinds of
+women--them that would sell their shifts for ye, and the others. Just
+you try for yoursel', my bonny man I But what's that neepkin at your
+craig?"
+
+I told him.
+
+"I thocht it was something there about," said he.
+
+Nor would he say another word though I besieged him long with
+importunities.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+THE LETTER FROM THE SHIP
+
+
+Daylight showed us how solitary the inn stood. It was plainly hard upon
+the sea, yet out of all view of it, and beset on every side with scabbit
+hills of sand. There was, indeed, only one thing in the nature of a
+prospect, where there stood out over a brae the two sails of a windmill,
+like an ass's ears, but with the ass quite hidden. It was strange (after
+the wind rose, for at first it was dead calm) to see the turning and
+following of each other of these great sails behind the hillock. Scarce
+any road came by there; but a number of footways travelled among the
+bents in all directions up to Mr. Bazin's door. The truth is, he was a
+man of many trades, not any one of them honest, and the position of his
+inn was the best of his livelihood. Smugglers frequented it; political
+agents and forfeited persons bound across the water came there to await
+their passages; and I daresay there was worse behind, for a whole family
+might have been butchered in that house and nobody the wiser.
+
+I slept little and ill. Long ere it was day, I had slipped from beside
+my bedfellow, and was warming myself at the fire or walking to and fro
+before the door. Dawn broke mighty sullen; but a little after, sprang up
+a wind out of the west, which burst the clouds, let through the sun, and
+set the mill to the turning. There was something of spring in the
+sunshine, or else it was in my heart; and the appearing of the great
+sails one after another from behind the hill, diverted me extremely. At
+times I could hear a creak of the machinery; and by half-past eight of
+the day, Catriona began to sing in the house. At this I would have cast
+my hat in the air; and I thought this dreary, desert place was like a
+paradise.
+
+For all which, as the day drew on and nobody came near, I began to be
+aware of an uneasiness that I could scarce explain. It seemed there was
+trouble afoot; the sails of the windmill, as they came up and went down
+over the hill, were like persons spying; and outside of all fancy, it
+was surely a strange neighbourhood and house for a young lady to be
+brought to dwell in.
+
+At breakfast, which we took late, it was manifest that James More was in
+some danger or perplexity; manifest that Alan was alive to the same, and
+watched him close; and this appearance of duplicity upon the one side
+and vigilance upon the other, held me on live coals. The meal was no
+sooner over than James seemed to come to a resolve, and began to make
+apologies. He had an appointment of a private nature in the town (it was
+with the French nobleman, he told me) and we would please excuse him
+till about noon. Meanwhile, he carried his daughter aside to the far end
+of the room, where he seemed to speak rather earnestly and she to listen
+without much inclination.
+
+"I am caring less and less about this man James," said Alan. "There's
+something no right with the man James, and I wouldnae wonder but what
+Alan Breck would give an eye to him this day. I would like fine to see
+yon French nobleman, Davie; and I daresay you could find an employ to
+yoursel, and that would be to speer at the lassie for some news of your
+affair. Just tell it to her plainly--tell her ye're a muckle ass at the
+off-set; and then, if I were you, and ye could do it naitural, I would
+just mint to her I was in some kind of a danger; a' weemenfolk likes
+that."
+
+"I cannae lee, Alan, I cannae do it naitural," says I, mocking him.
+
+"The more fool you!" says he. "Then ye'll can tell her that I
+recommended it; that'll set her to the laughing; and I wouldnae wonder
+but what that was the next best. But see to the pair of them! If I
+didnae feel just sure of the lassie, and that she was awful pleased and
+chief with Alan, I would think there was some kind of hocus-pocus about
+yon."
+
+"And is she so pleased with ye, then, Alan?" I asked.
+
+"She thinks a heap of me," says he. "And I'm no like you: I'm one that
+can tell. That she does--she thinks a heap of Alan. And troth! I'm
+thinking a good deal of him mysel; and with your permission, Shaws, I'll
+be getting a wee yont amang the bents, so that I can see what way James
+goes."
+
+One after another went, till I was left alone beside the breakfast
+table; James to Dunkirk, Alan dogging him, Catriona up the stairs to her
+own chamber. I could very well understand how she should avoid to be
+alone with me; yet was none the better pleased with it for that, and
+bent my mind to entrap her to an interview before the men returned. Upon
+the whole, the best appeared to me to do like Alan. If I was out of view
+among the sand hills, the fine morning would decoy her out; and once I
+had her in the open, I could please myself.
+
+No sooner said than done; nor was I long under the bield of a hillock
+before she appeared at the inn door, looked here and there, and (seeing
+nobody) set out by a path that led directly seaward, and by which I
+followed her. I was in no haste to make my presence known; the further
+she went I made sure of the longer hearing to my suit; and the ground
+being all sandy, it was easy to follow her unheard. The path rose and
+came at last to the head of a knowe. Thence I had a picture for the
+first time of what a desolate wilderness that inn stood hidden in; where
+was no man to be seen, nor any house of man, except just Bazin's and the
+windmill. Only a little further on, the sea appeared and two or three
+ships upon it, pretty as a drawing. One of these was extremely close in
+to be so great a vessel; and I was aware of a shock of new suspicion,
+when I recognized the trim of the _Seahorse_. What should an English
+ship be doing so near in France? Why was Alan brought into her
+neighbourhood, and that in a place so far from any hope of rescue? and
+was it by accident, or by design, that the daughter of James More should
+walk that day to the seaside?
+
+Presently I came forth behind her in the front of the sand hills and
+above the beach. It was here long and solitary; with a man-o'-war's boat
+drawn up about the middle of the prospect, and an officer in charge and
+pacing the sands like one who waited. I sat immediately down where the
+rough grass a good deal covered me, and looked for what should follow.
+Catriona went straight to the boat; the officer met her with civilities;
+they had ten words together; I saw a letter changing hands; and there
+was Catriona returning. At the same time, as if this was all her
+business on the Continent, the boat shoved off and was headed for the
+_Seahorse_. But I observed the officer to remain behind and disappear
+among the bents.
+
+I liked the business little; and the more I considered of it, liked it
+less. Was it Alan the officer was seeking? or Catriona? She drew near
+with her head down, looking constantly on the sand, and made so tender a
+picture that I could not bear to doubt her innocency. The next, she
+raised her face and recognised me; seemed to hesitate, and then came on
+again, but more slowly, and I thought with a changed colour. And at that
+thought, all else that was upon my bosom--fears, suspicions, the care of
+my friend's life--was clean swallowed up; and I rose to my feet and
+stood waiting her in a drunkenness of hope.
+
+I gave her "good-morning" as she came up, which she returned with a good
+deal of composure.
+
+"Will you forgive my having followed you?" said I.
+
+"I know you are always meaning kindly," she replied; and then, with a
+little outburst, "But why will you be sending money to that man? It must
+not be."
+
+"I never sent it for him," said I, "but for you, as you know well."
+
+"And you have no right to be sending it to either one of us," said she.
+"David, it is not right."
+
+"It is not, it is all wrong," said I; "and I pray God he will help this
+dull fellow (if it be at all possible), to make it better. Catriona,
+this is no kind of life for you to lead, and I ask your pardon for the
+word, but yon man is no fit father to take care of you."
+
+"Do not be speaking of him, even!" was her cry.
+
+"And I need speak of him no more, it is not of him that I am thinking,
+O, be sure of that!" says I. "I think of the one thing. I have been
+alone now this long time in Leyden; and when I was by way of at my
+studies, still I was thinking of that. Next Alan came, and I went among
+soldier-men to their big dinners; and still I had the same thought. And
+it was the same before, when I had her there beside me. Catriona, do you
+see this napkin at my throat? You cut a corner from it once and then
+cast it from you. They're _your_ colours now; I wear them in my heart.
+My dear, I cannot want you. O, try to put up with me!"
+
+I stepped before her so as to intercept her walking on.
+
+"Try to put up with me," I was saying, "try and bear me with a little."
+
+Still she had never the word, and a fear began to rise in me like a fear
+of death.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, gazing on her hard, "is it a mistake again? Am I
+quite lost?"
+
+She raised her face to me, breathless.
+
+"Do you want me, Davie, truly?" said she, and I scarce could hear her
+say it.
+
+"I do that," said I. "O, sure you know it--I do that."
+
+"I have nothing left to give or to keep back," said she. "I was all
+yours from the first day, if you would have had a gift of me!" she said.
+
+This was on the summit of a brae; the place was windy and conspicuous,
+we were to be seen there even from the English ship; but I kneeled down
+before her in the sand, and embraced her knees, and burst into that
+storm of weeping that I thought it must have broken me. All thought was
+wholly beaten from my mind by the vehemency of my discomposure. I knew
+not where I was, I had forgot why I was happy; only I knew she stooped,
+and I felt her cherish me to her face and bosom, and heard her words out
+of a whirl.
+
+"Davie," she was saying, "O, Davie, is this what you think of me? Is it
+so that you were caring for poor me? O, Davie, Davie!"
+
+With that she wept also, and our tears were commingled in a perfect
+gladness.
+
+It might have been ten in the day before I came to a clear sense of what
+a mercy had befallen me; and sitting over against her, with her hands in
+mine, gazed in her face, and laughed out loud for pleasure like a child,
+and called her foolish and kind names. I have never seen the place look
+so pretty as these bents by Dunkirk; and the windmill sails, as they
+bobbed over the knowe, were like a tune of music.
+
+I know not how much longer we might have continued to forget all else
+besides ourselves, had I not chanced upon a reference to her father,
+which brought us to reality.
+
+"My little friend," I was calling her again and again, rejoicing to
+summon up the past by the sound of it, and to gaze across on her, and to
+be a little distant--"My little friend, now you are mine altogether;
+mine for good, my little friend; and that man's no longer at all."
+
+There came a sudden whiteness in her face, she plucked her hands from
+mine.
+
+"Davie, take me away from him!" she cried. "There's something wrong;
+he's not true. There will be something wrong; I have a dreadful terror
+here at my heart. What will he be wanting at all events with that King's
+ship? What will this word be saying?" And she held the letter forth. "My
+mind misgives me, it will be some ill to Alan. Open it, Davie--open it
+and see."
+
+I took it, and looked at it, and shook my head.
+
+"No," said I, "it goes against me, I cannot open a man's letter."
+
+"Not to save your friend?" she cried.
+
+"I cannae tell," said I. "I think not. If I was only sure!"
+
+"And you have but to break the seal!" said she.
+
+"I know it," said I, "but the thing goes against me."
+
+"Give it here," said she, "and I will open it myself."
+
+"Nor you neither," said I. "You least of all. It concerns your father,
+and his honour, dear, which we are both misdoubting. No question but the
+place is dangerous-like, and the English ship being here, and your
+father having word of it, and yon officer that stayed ashore! He would
+not be alone either; there must be more along with him; I daresay we are
+spied upon this minute. Ay, no doubt, the letter should be opened; but
+somehow, not by you nor me."
+
+I was about this far with it, and my spirit very much overcome with a
+sense of danger and hidden enemies, when I spied Alan, come back again
+from following James and walking by himself among the sand hills. He was
+in his soldier's coat, of course, and mighty fine; but I could not avoid
+to shudder when I thought how little that jacket would avail him, if he
+were once caught and flung in a skiff, and carried on board of the
+_Seahorse_, a deserter, a rebel, and now a condemned murderer.
+
+"There," said I, "there is the man that has the best right to open it:
+or not, as he thinks fit."
+
+With which I called upon his name, and we both stood up to be a mark for
+him.
+
+"If it is so--if it be more disgrace--will you can bear it?" she asked,
+looking upon me with a burning eye.
+
+"I was asked something of the same question when I had seen you but the
+once," said I. "What do you think I answered? That if I liked you as I
+thought I did--and O, but I like you better!--I would marry you at his
+gallows' foot."
+
+The blood rose in her face; she came close up and pressed upon me,
+holding my hand: and it was so that we awaited Alan.
+
+He came with one of his queer smiles. "What was I telling ye, David?"
+says he.
+
+"There is a time for all things, Alan," said I, "and this time is
+serious. How have you sped? You can speak out plain before this friend
+of ours."
+
+"I have been upon a fool's errand," said he.
+
+"I doubt we have done better than you, then," said I; "and, at least,
+here is a great deal of matter that you must judge of. Do you see that?"
+I went on, pointing to the ship. "That is the _Seahorse_, Captain
+Palliser."
+
+"I should ken her, too," says Alan. "I had fyke enough with her when she
+was stationed in the Forth. But what ails the man to come so close?"
+
+"I will tell you why he came there first," said I. "It was to bring this
+letter to James More. Why he stops here now that it's delivered, what
+it's likely to be about, why there's an officer hiding in the bents, and
+whether or not it's probable that he's alone--I would rather you
+considered for yourself."
+
+"A letter to James More?" said he.
+
+"The same," said I.
+
+"Well, and I can tell ye more than that," said Alan. "For last night
+when you were fast asleep, I heard the man colloquing with some one in
+the French, and then the door of that inn to be opened and shut."
+
+"Alan!" cried I, "you slept all night, and I am here to prove it."
+
+"Ay, but I would never trust Alan whether he was asleep or waking!" says
+he. "But the business looks bad. Let's see the letter."
+
+I gave it him.
+
+"Catriona," said he, "ye'll have to excuse me, my dear; but there's
+nothing less than my fine bones upon the cast of it, and I'll have to
+break this seal."
+
+"It is my wish," said Catriona.
+
+He opened it, glanced it through, and flung his hand in the air.
+
+"The stinking brock!" says he, and crammed the paper in his pocket.
+"Here, let's get our things thegether. This place is fair death to me."
+And he began to walk towards the inn.
+
+It was Catriona who spoke the first. "He has sold you?" she asked.
+
+"Sold me, my dear," said Alan. "But thanks to you and Davie, I'll can
+jink him yet. Just let me win upon my horse!" he added.
+
+"Catriona must come with us," said I. "She can have no more traffic with
+that man. She and I are to be married." At which she pressed my hand to
+her side.
+
+"Are ye there with it?" says Alan, looking back. "The best day's work
+that ever either of ye did yet I And I'm bound to say, my dawtie, ye
+make a real, bonny couple."
+
+The way that he was following brought us close in by the windmill, where
+I was aware of a man in seaman's trousers, who seemed to be spying from
+behind it. Only, of course, we took him in the rear.
+
+"See, Alan!" said I.
+
+"Wheesht!" said he, "this is my affairs."
+
+The man was, no doubt, a little deafened by the clattering of the mill,
+and we got up close before he noticed. Then he turned, and we saw he was
+a big fellow with a mahogany face.
+
+"I think, sir," says Alan, "that you speak the English?"
+
+"_Non, monsieur_," says he, with an incredible bad accent.
+
+"_Non, monsieur_," cries Alan, mocking him. "Is that how they learn you
+French on the _Seahorse?_ Ye muckle, gutsey hash, here's a Scots boot to
+your English hurdies!"
+
+And bounding on him before he could escape, he dealt the man a kick that
+laid him on his nose. Then he stood, with a savage smile, and watched
+him scramble to his feet and scamper off into the sand hills.
+
+"But it's high time I was clear of these empty bents!" said Alan; and
+continued his way at top speed and we still following, to the back door
+of Bazin's inn.
+
+It chanced that as we entered by the one door we came face to face with
+James More entering by the other.
+
+"Here!" said I to Catriona, "quick! upstairs with you and make your
+packets; this is no fit scene for you."
+
+In the meanwhile James and Alan had met in the midst of the long room.
+She passed them close by to reach the stairs; and after she was some way
+up I saw her turn and glance at them again, though without pausing.
+Indeed, they were worth looking at. Alan wore as they met one of his
+best appearances of courtesy and friendliness, yet with something
+eminently warlike, so that James smelled danger off the man, as folk
+smell fire in a house, and stood prepared for accidents.
+
+Time pressed. Alan's situation in that solitary place, and his enemies
+about him, might have daunted Caesar. It made no change in him; and it
+was in his old spirit of mockery and daffing that he began the
+interview.
+
+"A braw good day to ye again, Mr. Drummond," said he. "What'll yon
+business of yours be just about?"
+
+"Why, the thing being private, and rather of a long story," says James,
+"I think it will keep very well till we have eaten."
+
+"I'm none so sure of that," said Alan. "It sticks in my mind it's either
+now or never; for the fact is me and Mr. Balfour here have gotten a
+line, and we're thinking of the road."
+
+I saw a little surprise in James's eye; but he held himself stoutly.
+
+"I have but the one word to say to cure you of that," said he, "and that
+is the name of my business."
+
+"Say it then," says Alan. "Hout! wha minds for Davie?"
+
+"It is a matter that would make us both rich men," said James.
+
+"Do ye tell me that?" cries Alan.
+
+"I do, sir," said James. "The plain fact is that it is Cluny's
+Treasure."
+
+"No!" cried Alan. "Have ye got word of it?"
+
+"I ken the place, Mr. Stewart, and can take you there," said James.
+
+"This crowns all!" says Alan. "Well, and I'm glad I came to Dunkirk. And
+so this was your business, was it? Halvers, I'm thinking?"
+
+"That is the business, sir," says James.
+
+"Well, well," says Alan; and then in the same tone of childlike
+interest, "It has naething to do with the _Seahorse_, then?" he asked.
+
+"With what?" says James.
+
+"Or the lad that I have just kicked the bottom of behind yon windmill?"
+pursued Alan. "Hut, man! have done with your lees! I have Palliser's
+letter here in my pouch. You're by with it, James More. You can never
+show your face again with dacent folk."
+
+James was taken all aback with it. He stood a second, motionless and
+white, then swelled with the living anger.
+
+"Do you talk to me, you bastard?" he roared out.
+
+"Ye glee'd swine!" cried Alan, and hit him a sounding buffet on the
+mouth, and the next wink of time their blades clashed together.
+
+At the first sound of the bare steel I instinctively leaped back from
+the collision. The next I saw, James parried a thrust so nearly that I
+thought him killed; and it lowed up in my mind that this was the girl's
+father, and in a manner almost my own, and I drew and ran in to sever
+them.
+
+"Keep back, Davie! Are ye daft? Damn ye, keep back!" roared Alan. "Your
+blood be on your ain heid then!"
+
+I beat their blades down twice. I was knocked reeling against the wall;
+I was back again betwixt them. They took no heed of me, thrusting at
+each other like two furies. I can never think how I avoided being
+stabbed myself or stabbing one of these two Rodomonts, and the whole
+business turned about me like a piece of a dream; in the midst of which
+I heard a great cry from the stair, and Catriona sprang before her
+father. In the same moment the point of my sword encountered something
+yielding. It came back to me reddened. I saw the blood flow on the
+girl's kerchief, and stood sick.
+
+"Will you be killing him before my eyes, and me his daughter after all?"
+she cried.
+
+"My dear, I have done with him," said Alan, and went and sat on a table,
+with his arms crossed and the sword naked in his hand.
+
+Awhile she stood before the man, panting, with big eyes, then swung
+suddenly about and faced him.
+
+"Begone!" was her word, "take your shame out of my sight; leave me with
+clean folk. I am a daughter of Alpin! Shame of the sons of Alpin,
+begone!"
+
+It was said with so much passion as awoke me from the horror of my own
+bloodied sword. The two stood facing, she with the red stain on her
+kerchief, he white as a rag. I knew him well enough--I knew it must have
+pierced him in the quick place of his soul; but he betook himself to a
+bravado air.
+
+"Why," says he, sheathing his sword, though still with a bright eye on
+Alan, "if this brawl is over I will but get my portmanteau---"
+
+"There goes no pockmantie out of this place except with me," says Alan.
+
+"Sir!" cries James.
+
+"James More," says Alan, "this lady daughter of yours is to marry my
+friend Davie, upon the which account I let you pack with a hale carcase.
+But take you my advice of it and get that carcase out of harm's way or
+ower late. Little as you suppose it, there are leemits to my temper."
+
+"Be damned, sir, but my money's there!" said James.
+
+"I'm vexed about that, too," says Alan, with his funny face, "but now,
+ye see, it's mines." And then with more gravity, "Be you advised, James
+More, you leave this house."
+
+James seemed to cast about for a moment in his mind; but it's to be
+thought he had enough of Alan's swordsmanship, for he suddenly put off
+his hat to us and (with a face like one of the damned) bade us farewell
+in a series. With which he was gone.
+
+At the same time a spell was lifted from me.
+
+"Catriona," I cried, "it was me--it was my sword. O, are ye much hurt?"
+
+"I know it, Davie, I am loving you for the pain of it; it was done
+defending that bad man, my father. See!" she said, and showed me a
+bleeding scratch, "see, you have made a man of me now. I will carry a
+wound like an old soldier."
+
+Joy that she should be so little hurt, and the love of her brave nature,
+transported me. I embraced her, I kissed the wound.
+
+"And am I to be out of the kissing, me that never lost a chance?" says
+Alan; and putting me aside and taking Catriona by either shoulder, "My
+dear," he said, "you're a true daughter of Alpin. By all accounts, he
+was a very fine man, and he may weel be proud of you. If ever I was to
+get married, it's the marrow of you I would be seeking for a mother to
+my sons. And I bear a king's name and speak the truth."
+
+He said it with a serious heat of admiration that was honey to the girl,
+and through her, to me. It seemed to wipe us clean of all James More's
+disgraces. And the next moment he was just himself again.
+
+"And now by your leave, my dawties," said he, "this is a' very bonny;
+but Alan Breck'll be a wee thing nearer to the gallows than he's caring
+for; and Dod! I think this is a grand place to be leaving."
+
+The word recalled us to some wisdom. Alan ran upstairs and returned with
+our saddle-bags and James More's portmanteau; I picked up Catriona's
+bundle where she had dropped it on the stair; and we were setting forth
+out of that dangerous house, when Bazin stopped the way with cries and
+gesticulations. He had whipped under a table when the swords were drawn,
+but now he was as bold as a lion. There was his bill to be settled,
+there was a chair broken, Alan had sat among his dinner things, James
+More had fled.
+
+"Here," I cried, "pay yourself," and flung him down some Lewie d'ors;
+for I thought it was no time to be accounting.
+
+He sprang upon that money, and we passed him by, and ran forth into the
+open. Upon three sides of the house were seamen hasting and closing in;
+a little nearer to us James More waved his hat as if to hurry them; and
+right behind him, like some foolish person holding up its hands, were
+the sails of the windmill turning.
+
+Alan gave but the one glance, and laid himself down to run. He carried a
+great weight in James More's portmanteau; but I think he would as soon
+have lost his life as cast away that booty which was his revenge; and he
+ran so that I was distressed to follow him, and marvelled and exulted to
+see the girl bounding at my side.
+
+As soon as we appeared, they cast off all disguise upon the other side;
+and the seamen pursued us with shouts and view-hullohs. We had a start
+of some two hundred yards, and they were but bandy-legged tarpaulins
+after all, that could not hope to better us at such an exercise. I
+suppose they were armed, but did not care to use their pistols on French
+ground. And as soon as I perceived that we not only held our advantage
+but drew a little away, I began to feel quite easy of the issue. For all
+which, it was a hot, brisk bit of work, so long as it lasted; Dunkirk
+was still far off; and when we popped over a knowe, and found a company
+of the garrison marching on the other side on some manoeuvre, I could
+very well understand the word that Alan had.
+
+He stopped running at once; and mopping at his brow, "They're a real
+bonny folk, the French nation," says he.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+No sooner were we safe within the walls of Dunkirk than we held a very
+necessary council-of-war on our position. We had taken a daughter from
+her father at the sword's point; any judge would give her back to him at
+once, and by all likelihood clap me and Alan into jail; and though we
+had an argument upon our side in Captain Palisser's letter, neither
+Catriona nor I were very keen to be using it in public. Upon all
+accounts it seemed the most prudent to carry the girl to Paris to the
+hands of her own chieftain, Macgregor of Bohaldie, who would be very
+willing to help his kinswoman, on the one hand, and not at all anxious
+to dishonour James upon the other.
+
+We made but a slow journey of it up, for Catriona was not so good at the
+riding as the running, and had scarce sat in a saddle since the
+'Forty-five. But we made it out at last, reached Paris early of a
+Sabbath morning, and made all speed, under Alan's guidance, to find
+Bohaldie. He was finely lodged, and lived in a good style, having a
+pension in the Scots Fund, as well as private means; greeted Catriona
+like one of his own house, and seemed altogether very civil and
+discreet, but not particularly open. We asked of the news of James More.
+"Poor James!" said he, and shook his head and smiled, so that I thought
+he knew further than he meant to tell. Then we showed him Palisser's
+letter, and he drew a long face at that.
+
+"Poor James!" said he again. "Well, there are worse folk than James
+More, too. But this is dreadful bad. Tut, tut, he must have forgot
+himself entirely! This is a most undesirable letter. But, for all that,
+gentlemen, I cannot see what we would want to make it public for. It's
+an ill bird that fouls his own nest, and we are all Scots folk and all
+Hieland."
+
+Upon this we were all agreed, save perhaps Alan; and still more upon the
+question of our marriage, which Bohaldie took in his own hands, as
+though there had been no such person as James More, and gave Catriona
+away with very pretty manners and agreeable compliments in French. It
+was not till all was over, and our healths drunk, that he told us James
+was in that city, whither he had preceded us some days, and where he now
+lay sick, and like to die. I thought I saw by my wife's face what way
+her inclination pointed.
+
+"And let us go see him, then," said I.
+
+"If it is your pleasure," said Catriona. These were early days.
+
+He was lodged in the same quarter of the city with his chief, in a great
+house upon a corner; and we were guided up to the garret where he lay by
+the sound of Highland piping. It seemed he had just borrowed a set of
+them from Bohaldie to amuse his sickness; though he was no such hand as
+was his brother Rob, he made good music of the kind; and it was strange
+to observe the French folk crowding on the stairs, and some of them
+laughing. He lay propped in a pallet. The first look of him I saw he was
+upon his last business; and, doubtless, this was a strange place for him
+to die in. But even now I find I can scarce dwell upon his end with
+patience. Doubtless, Bohaldie had prepared him; he seemed to know we
+were married, complimented us on the event, and gave us a benediction
+like a patriarch.
+
+"I have been never understood," said he. "I forgive you both without an
+after-thought;" after which he spoke for all the world in his old
+manner, was so obliging as to play us a tune or two upon his pipes, and
+borrowed a small sum before I left. I could not trace even a hint of
+shame in any part of his behaviour; but he was great upon forgiveness;
+it seemed always fresh to him. I think he forgave me every time we met;
+and when after some four days he passed away in a kind of odour of
+affectionate sanctity, I could have torn my hair out for exasperation. I
+had him buried; but what to put upon his tomb was quite beyond me, till
+at last I considered the date would look best alone.
+
+I thought it wiser to resign all thoughts of Leyden, where we had
+appeared once as brother and sister, and it would certainly look strange
+to return in a new character. Scotland would be doing for us; and
+thither, after I had recovered that which I had left behind, we sailed
+in a Low Country ship.
+
+And now, Miss Barbara Balfour (to set the ladies first) and Mr. Alan
+Balfour, younger of Shaws, here is the story brought fairly to an end. A
+great many of the folk that took a part in it, you will find (if you
+think well) that you have seen and spoken with. Alison Hastie in
+Limekilns was the lass that rocked your cradle when you were too small
+to know of it, and walked abroad with you in the policy when you were
+bigger. That very fine great lady that is Miss Barbara's name-mamma is
+no other than the same Miss Grant that made so much a fool of David
+Balfour in the house of the Lord Advocate. And I wonder whether you
+remember a little, lean, lively gentleman in a scratchwig and a
+wraprascal, that came to Shaws very late of a dark night, and whom you
+were awakened out of your beds and brought down to the dining-hall to be
+presented to, by the name of Mr. Jamieson? Or has Alan forgotten what he
+did at Mr. Jamieson's request--a most disloyal act--for which, by the
+letter of the law, he might be hanged--no less than drinking the king's
+health _across the water_? These were strange doings in a good Whig
+house! But Mr. Jamieson is a man privileged, and might set fire to my
+corn-barn; and the name they know him by now in France is the Chevalier
+Stewart.
+
+As for Davie and Catriona, I shall watch you pretty close in the next
+days, and see if you are so bold as to be laughing at papa and mamma. It
+is true we were not so wise as we might have been, and made a great deal
+of sorrow out of nothing; but you will find as you grow up that even the
+artful Miss Barbara, and even the valiant Mr. Alan will be not so very
+much wiser than their parents. For the life of man upon this world of
+ours is a funny business. They talk of the angels weeping; but I think
+they must more often be holding their sides, as they look on; and there
+was one thing I determined to do when I began this long story, and that
+was to tell out everything as it befell.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Footnote 1: Conspicuous.
+
+Footnote 2: Country.
+
+Footnote 3: The Fairies.
+
+Footnote 4: Flatteries.
+
+Footnote 5: Trust to.
+
+Footnote 6: This must have reference to Dr. Cameron on his first
+visit.--D.B.
+
+Footnote 7: Sweethearts.
+
+Footnote 8: Child.
+
+Footnote 9: Palm.
+
+Footnote 10: Gallows.
+
+Footnote 11: My Catechism.
+
+Footnote 12: Now Prince's Street.
+
+Footnote 13: A learned folklorist of my acquaintance hereby identifies
+Alan's air. It has been printed (it seems) in Campbell's _Tales of the
+West Highlands_, Vol. II., p. 91. Upon examination it would really seem
+as if Miss Grant's unrhymed doggrel (see chapter V.) would fit with a
+little humouring to the notes in question.
+
+Footnote 14: A ball placed upon a little mound for convenience of
+striking.
+
+Footnote 15: Patched shoes.
+
+Footnote 16: Shoemaker.
+
+Footnote 17: Tamson's mare, to go afoot.
+
+Footnote 18: Beard.
+
+Footnote 19: Ragged.
+
+Footnote 20: Fine things.
+
+Footnote 21: Catch.
+
+Footnote 22: Victuals.
+
+Footnote 23: Trust.
+
+Footnote 24: Sea fog.
+
+Footnote 25: Bashful.
+
+Footnote 26: Rest.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of David Balfour, Second Part
+by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DAVID BALFOUR, SECOND PART ***
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