Big Game: A Story for Girls

By Mrs. George de Horne Vaizey

The Project Gutenberg EBook of Big Game, by Mrs. George de Horne Vaizey

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: Big Game
       A Story for Girls

Author: Mrs. George de Horne Vaizey

Release Date: April 16, 2007 [EBook #21109]

Language: English


*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIG GAME ***




Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England





Big Game
A Story for Girls

By Mrs George de Horne Vaizey
________________________________________________________________________
A charming little book. The son of the family aspires to be a poet, much
to his father's annoyance: he ought to have a proper job in the family
firm.

His sister hits on a plan to get his work published, which would be a
step in the right direction, one that might help to change the father's
mind.  She discovers that the editor of a poetry magazine always takes
a holiday in a very remote hotel in the Scottish highlands, so she books
a holiday for them in the same hotel.

The woman who runs the hotel hates women guests, and isn't very polite
to most people, but they manage to charm her, and get her on their side,
until one Sunday they make the fatal mistake of going to the wrong
church.  That eventually passes over.  Meanwhile Margot, the heroine,
has been wooing the poetry editor.  They go fishing together, and one
day they go for a long walk in which the weather turns nasty.  Margot
catches pneumonia and is very ill.

They get back to their homes in London.  Margot's lover turns out not to
have been the poetry editor after all, yet somehow young Ron finds that
one of his poems has been published.  How this happens is revealed in
the last chapter.  An average length book, probably more for girls than
for boys.  N.H.
________________________________________________________________________

BIG GAME
A STORY FOR GIRLS

BY MRS GEORGE DE HORNE VAIZEY



CHAPTER ONE.

PLANS.

It was the old story of woman comforting man in his affliction; the
trouble in this instance appearing in the shape of a long blue envelope
addressed to himself in his own handwriting.  Poor young poet!  He had
no more appetite for eggs and bacon that morning; he pushed aside even
his coffee, and buried his head in his hands.

"Back again!" he groaned.  "Always back, and back, and back, and these
are my last verses: the best I have written.  I felt sure that these
would have been taken!"

"So they will be, some day," comforted the woman.  "You have only to be
patient and go on trying.  I'll re-type the first and last pages, and
iron out the dog's ears, and we will send it off on a fresh journey.
Why don't you try the _Pinnacle Magazine_?  There ought to be a chance
there.  They published some awful bosh last month."

The poet was roused to a passing indignation.

"As feeble as mine, I suppose!  Oh, well, if even you turn against me,
it is time I gave up the struggle."

"Even you" was not in this instance a wife, but "only a sister," so
instead of falling on her accuser's neck with explanations and caresses,
she helped herself to a second cup of coffee, and replied coolly--

"Silly thing!  You know quite well that I do nothing of the sort, so
don't be high-falutin.  I should not encourage you to waste time if I
did not know that you were going to succeed in the end.  I don't think;
I _know_!"

"How?" queried the poet.  "How?"  He had heard the reason a dozen times
before, but he longed to hear it again.  He lifted his face from his
hands--an ideal face for a poet; clean-cut, sensitive, with deep-set
eyes, curved lips, and a finely-modelled chin.  "How do you know?"

"I feel!" replied the critic simply.  "Of course, I am prejudiced in
favour of your work; but that would not make it haunt me as if it were
my own.  I can see your faults; you are horribly uneven.  There are
lines here and there which make me cold; lines which are put in for the
sake of the rhyme, and nothing more; but there are other bits,"--the
girl's eyes turned towards the window, and gazed dreamily into
space--"which sing in my heart!  When it is fine, when it is dark, when
I am glad, when I am in trouble, why do your lines come unconsciously
into my mind, as if they expressed my own feelings better than I can do
it myself?  That's not rhyme--that's poetry!  It is the real thing; not
pretence."

A glad smile passed over the boy's face; he stretched out his hand
towards the neglected cup, and quaffed coffee and hope in one reviving
draught.  "But no one seems to want poetry nowadays!"

"True!  I think you may have to wait until you have made a name in the
other direction.  Why not try fiction?  Your prose is excellent, almost
as good as your verse."

"Can't think of a plot!"

"Bah! you are behind the times, my dear!  You don't need a plot.  Begin
in the middle, meander back to the beginning, and end in the thick of
the strife.  Then every one wonders and raves, and the public--`mostly
fools!'--think it must be clever, because they don't understand what
it's about."

"Like the lady and the tiger,--which came out first?"

"Ah! if you could think of anything as baffling as that, your future
would be made.  Write a novel, Ron, and take me for the heroine.  You
might have a poet, too, and introduce some of your own love-songs.  I'd
coach you in the feminine parts, and you could give me a royalty on the
sales."

But Ronald shook his head.

"I might try short stories, perhaps--I've thought of that--but not a
novel.  It's too big a venture; and we can't spare the time.  There are
only four months left, and unless I make some money soon, father will
insist upon that hateful partnership."

The girl left her seat and strolled over to the window.  She was
strikingly like her brother in appearance, but a saucy imp of humour
lurked in the corners of her curving lips, and danced in her big brown
eyes.

Margot Vane at twenty-two made a delightful picture of youth and
happiness, and radiant, unbroken health.  Her slight figure was upright
as a dart; her cheeks were smooth and fresh as a petal of a rose; her
hair was thick and luxuriant, and she bore herself with the jaunty,
self-confident gait of one whose lines have been cast in pleasant
places, and who is well satisfied of her own ability to keep them
pleasant to the end.

"Anything may happen in four months--and everything!" she cried
cheerily.  "I don't say that you will have made your name by September,
but if you have drawn a reasonable amount of blood-money, father will
have to be satisfied.  It is in the bond!  Work away, and don't worry.
You are improving all the time, and spring is coming, when even ordinary
people like myself feel inspired.  We will stick to the ordinary methods
yet awhile, but if matters get desperate, we will resort to strategy.
I've several lovely plans simmering in my brain!"

The boy looked up eagerly.

"Strategy!  Plans!  What plans?  What can we possibly do out of the
ordinary course?"

But Margot only laughed mischievously, and refused to be drawn.

The cruel parent in the case of Ronald Vane was exemplified by an
exceedingly worthy and kind-hearted gentleman, who followed the
profession of underwriter at Lloyd's.  His family had consisted of three
daughters before Ronald appeared to gratify a long ambition.  Now, Mr
Vane was a widower, and his son engrossed a large share in his
affections, being at once his pride, his hope, and his despair.  The lad
was a good lad; upright, honourable, and clean-living; everything, in
fact, that a father could wish, if only,--but that "if" was the
mischief!  It was hard lines on a steady-going City man, who was famed
for his level-headed sobriety, to possess a son who eschewed fact in
favour of fancy, and preferred rather to roam the countryside composing
rhymes and couplets, than to step into a junior partnership in an
established and prosperous firm.

It is part of an Englishman's creed to appreciate the great singers of
his race,--Shakespeare, Milton, Tennyson, not to mention a dozen lesser
fry; but, strange to say, though he feels a due pride in the row of
poets on his library shelves, he yet regards a poet by his own fireside
as a humiliation and an offence.  A budding painter, a sculptor, a
musician, may be the boast of a proud family circle, but to give a youth
the reputation of writing verses is at once to call down upon his head a
storm of ridicule and patronising disdain!  He is credited with being
effeminate, sentimental, and feeble-minded; his failure is taken as a
preordained fact; he becomes a butt and a jest.

Mr Vane profoundly hoped that none of the underwriters at Lloyd's would
hear of Ronald's scribbling.  It would handicap the boy in his future
work, and make it harder for him to get rid of his "slips"!  No one
could guess from the lad's appearances that there was anything wrong,--
that was one comfort!  He kept his hair well cropped, and wore as high
and glossy collars as any fellow in his right mind.

"You don't know when you are well off!" cried the irate father.  "How
many thousands would be thankful to be in your shoes, with a place kept
warm to step into, and an income assured from the start!  I am not
asking you to sit mewed up at a desk all day.  If you want to use your
gift of words, you couldn't have a better chance than as a writer at
Lloyd's.  There's scope for imagination too,--judiciously applied!  And
you would have your evenings _free_ for scribbling, if you haven't had
enough of it in the daytime."

Ronald's reply dealt at length with the subject of environment, and his
father was given to understand that the conditions in which his life was
spent were mean, sordid, demoralising; fatal to all that was true and
beautiful.  The lad also gave it as his opinion that, so far from
regarding money as a worthy object for a life's ambition, the true lover
of Nature would be cumbered by the possession of more than was
absolutely necessary for food and clothing.  And as for neglecting a
God-given gift--

"What authority have you for asking me to believe that the gift exists
at all, except in your own imagination?  Tell me that, if you please!"
cried the father.  "You spend a small income in stamps and paper, but so
far as I know no human creature can be induced to publish your God-given
rhymes!"

At this point matters became decidedly strained, and a serious quarrel
might have developed, had it not been for the diplomatic intervention of
Margot, the youngest and fairest of Mr Vane's three daughters.

Margot pinched her father's ears and kissed him on the end of his nose,
a form of caress which he seemed to find extremely soothing.

"He is only twenty-one, darling," she said, referring to the turbulent
heir.  "You ought to be thankful that he has such good tastes, instead
of drinking and gambling, like some other young men.  Really and truly I
believe he is a genius, but even if he is not, there is nothing to be
gained by using force.  Ron has a very strong will--you have yourself,
you know, dear, only of course in your case it is guided by judgment and
common sense--and you will never drive him into doing a thing against
his will.  Now just suppose you let him go his own way for a time!  Six
months or a year can't matter so very much out of a lifetime, and you
will never regret erring on the side of kindness."

"Since when, may I ask, have you set yourself up as your father's
mentor?" cried that gentleman with a growl; but he was softening
obviously, and Margot knew as much, and pinched his nose for a change.

"You must try to remember how you felt yourself when you were young.  If
you wanted a thing, how _badly_ you wanted it, and how _soon_, and how
terribly cruel every one seemed who interfered!  Give Ron a chance, like
the dear old sportsman as you are, before you tie him down for life!
It's a pity I'm not a boy--I should have loved to be at Lloyd's.  Even
now--if I went round with the slips, and coaxed the underwriters, don't
you think it might be a striking and lucrative innovation?"

Mr Vane laughed at that, and reflected with pride that not a man in the
room could boast such a taking little witch for his daughter.  Then he
grew grave, and returned to the subject in hand.

"In what way do you propose that I shall give the boy a chance?"

"Continue his allowance for a year, and let him give himself up to his
work!  If at the end of the year he has made no headway, it should be an
understanding that he joins you in business without any more fuss; but
if he _has_ received real encouragement,--if even one or two editors
have accepted his verses, and think well of them--"

"Yes?  What then?"

"Then you must consider that Ron has proved his point!  It is really a
stiff test, for it takes mediocre people far longer than a year to make
a footing on the literary ladder.  You would then have to continue his
allowance, and try to be thankful that you are the father of a poet,
instead of a clerk!"

Mr Vane growled again, and, what was worse, sighed into the bargain, a
sigh of real heartache and disappointment.

"I have looked forward for twenty years to the time when my son should
be old enough to help me!  I have slaved all my life to keep a place for
him, and now he despises me for my pains!  And you will want to be off
with him, I suppose, rambling about the country while he writes his
rhymes.  I shall have to say good-bye to the pair of you!  It doesn't
matter how dull or lonely the poor old father may be."

Margot looked at him with a reproving eye.

"That's not true, and you know it isn't!  I love you best of any one on
earth, and I am only talking to you for your own good.  I'd like to stay
in the country with Ronald in summer, for he does so hate the town, but
I'll strike a bargain with you, too!  Last year I spent three months in
visiting friends.  This year I'll refuse all invitations, so that you
shan't be deprived of any more of my valuable society."

"And why should you give up your pleasures, pray?  Why are you so
precious anxious to be with the boy?  Are you going to aid and abet him
in his efforts?"

"Yes, I am!" answered Margot bravely.  "He has his life to live, and I
want him to spend it in his own way.  If he becomes a great writer, I'll
be prouder of him than if he were the greatest millionaire on earth.
I'll move heaven and earth to help him, and if he fails I'll move them
again to make him a good underwriter!  So now you know!"

Mr Vane chewed his moustache, disconsolately resigned.

"Ah well! the partnership will have to go to a stranger, I suppose.  I
can't get on much longer without help.  I hoped it might be one of my
own kith and kin, but--"

"Don't be in a hurry, dear.  I may fall in love with a pauper, and then
you can have a son-in-law to help you, instead of a son."

Mr Vane pushed her away with an impatient hand.

"No more son-in-laws, thank you!  One is about as many as I can tackle
at a time.  Edith has been at me again with a sheaf of bills--"

His eldest daughter's husband had recently failed in business, in
consequence of which he himself was at present supporting a second
establishment.  He sighed, and reflected that it was a thankless task to
rear a family.  The infantine troubles of teething, whooping-cough, and
scarlatina were trifles as compared with the later annoyance and
difficulties of dealing with striplings who had the audacity to imagine
themselves grown-up, and competent to have a say in their own lives!

If things turned out well, they took the credit to themselves!  If ill,
then papa had to pay the bills!  Mr Vane was convinced that he was an
ill-used and much-to-be-pitied martyr.



CHAPTER TWO.

THE SISTERS.

Mr Vane's house overlooked Regent's Park, and formed the corner house
of a white terrace boasting Grecian pillars and a railed-in stretch of
grass in front of the windows.  The rooms were large and handsome, and
of that severe, box-like outline which are the despair of the modern
upholsterer.  The drawing-room boasted half a dozen windows, four in
front, and two at the side, and as regards furnishings was a curious
graft of modern art upon an Early Victoria stock.  Logically the
combination was an anachronism; in effect it was charming and
harmonious, for the changes had been made with the utmost caution, in
consideration of the feelings of the head of the household.

Mr Vane's argument was that he preferred solid old-fashioned furniture
to modern gimcracks, and had no wish to conform to artistic fads, and
his daughters dutifully agreed, and--disobeyed!  Their mode of procedure
was to withdraw one article at a time, and to wait until the parental
eye had become accustomed to the gap before venturing on a second
confiscation.  On the rare occasions when the abduction was discovered,
it was easy to fall back upon the well-worn domestic justification, "Oh,
that's been gone a _long_ time!" when, in justice to one's own power of
observation, the matter must be allowed to drop.

The eldest daughter of the household had married five years before the
date at which this narrative opens, and during that period had enjoyed
the happiness of a true and enduring devotion, and the troubles
inseparable from a constant financial struggle, ending with bankruptcy,
and a retreat from a tastefully furnished villa at Surbiton to a dreary
lodging in Oxford Terrace.  Poor Edith had lost much of her beauty and
light-hearted gaiety as a result of anxiety and the constant care of two
delicate children; but never in the blackest moment of her trouble had
she wished herself unwed, or been willing to change places with any
woman who had not the felicity of being John Martin's wife.

Trouble had drawn Jack and herself more closely together; she was in
arms in a passion of indignation against that world which judged a man
by the standpoint of success or failure, and lay in readiness to heave
another stone at the fallen.  At nightfall she watched for his coming to
judge of the day's doings by the expression of his face, before it lit
up with the dear welcoming smile.  At sight of the weary lines, strength
came to her, as though she could move mountains on his behalf.  As they
sat together on the horsehair sofa, his tired head resting on her
shoulder, the strain and the burden fell from them both, and they knew
themselves millionaires of blessings.

The second daughter of the Vane household was a very different character
from her sensitive and highly-strung sister.  The fairies who had
attended her christening, and bequeathed upon the infant the gifts of
industry, common sense, and propriety, forgot to bestow at the same time
that most valuable of all qualities,--the power to awaken love!  Her
relatives loved Agnes--"Of course," they would have said; but when "of
course" is added in this connection, it is sadly eloquent!  The poor
whom she visited were basely ungrateful for her doles, and when she
approached empty-handed, took the occasion to pay a visit to a
neighbour's back yard, leaving her to flay her knuckles on an
unresponsive door.

Agnes had many acquaintances, but no friends, and none of the young men
who frequented the house had exhibited even a passing inclination to pay
her attention.

Edith had been a belle in her day; while as for Margot, every masculine
creature gravitated towards her as needles to a magnet.  Among various
proposals of marriage had been one from so solid and eligible a _parti_,
that even the doting father had laid aside his grudge, and turned into
special pleader.  He had advanced one by one the different claims to
consideration possessed by the said suitor, and to every argument Margot
had meekly agreed, until the moment arrived at which she was naturally
expected to say "Yes" to the concluding exhortation, when she said "No"
with much fervour, and stuck to it to the end of the chapter.  Pressed
for reasons for her obstinacy, she could advance none more satisfying
than that "she did not like the shape of his ears"! but the worthy man
was rejected nevertheless, and took a voyage to the Cape to blow away
his disappointment.

No man crossed as much as a road for the sake of Agnes Vane!  It was a
tragedy, because this incapacity of her nature by no means prohibited
the usual feminine desire for appreciation.  Agnes could not understand
why she was invariably passed over in favour of her sisters, and why
even her father was more influenced by the will-o'-the-wisp Margot than
by her own staid maxims.  Agnes could not understand many things.  In
this obtuseness, perhaps, and in a deadly lack of humour lay the secret
of her limitations.

On the morning after the conversation between the brother and sister
recorded in the last chapter the young poet paced his attic sitting-
room, wrestling with lines that halted, and others which were palpably
artificial.  Margot's accusations had gone home, and instead of
indulging in fresh flights, he resolved to correct certain errors in the
lines now on hand until the verses should be polished to a flawless
whole.  Any one who has any experience with the pen understands the
difficulty of such a task, and the almost hopeless puzzle of changing a
stone in the mosaic without disturbing the whole.  The infinite capacity
for taking pains is not by any means a satisfying definition of genius,
but it is certainly one great secret of success.

Ronald's awkward couplet gave him employment for the rest of the
morning, and lunch-time found him still dissatisfied.  An adjective
avoided his quest--the right adjective; the one and only word which
expressed the precise shade of meaning desired.  From the recesses of
his brain it peeped at him, now advancing so near that it was almost
within grasp, anon retreating to a shadowy distance.  There was no help
for it but to wait for the moment when, tired of its game of hide-and-
seek, it would choose the most unexpected and inappropriate moment to
peer boldly forward, and make its curtsy.

Meantime Margot had dusted the china in the drawing-room, watered the
plants, put in an hour's practising, and done a _few_ odds and ends of
mending; in a word, had gone through the programme which comprises the
duties of a well-to-do modern maiden, and by half-past eleven was
stepping out of the door, arrayed in a pretty spring dress, and her
third best hat.  She crept quietly along the hall, treading with the
cautious steps of one who wishes to escape observation; but her
precautions were in vain, for just as she was passing the door of the
morning-room it was thrown open from within, and Agnes appeared upon the
threshold--Agnes neat and trim in her morning gown of serviceable fawn
alpaca, her hands full of tradesmen's books, on her face an expression
of acute disapproval.

"Going out, Margot?  So early?  It's not long past eleven o'clock!"

"I know?"

"Where are you going?"

"Don't know!"

"If you are passing down Edgware Road--"

"I'm not!"

The front door closed with a bang, leaving Agnes discomfited on the mat.
There was no denying that at times Margot was distinctly difficult in
her dealings with her elder sister.  She herself was aware of the fact,
and repented ardently after each fresh offence, but alas! without
reformation.

"We don't fit.  We never shall, if we live together a hundred years.
Edgware Road, indeed, on a morning like this, when you can hear the
spring a-calling, and it's a sin and a shame to live in a city at all!
If I had told her I was going into the Park, she would have offered
stale bread for the ducks!"  Margot laughed derisively as she crossed
the road in the direction of the Park, and passing in through a narrow
gateway, struck boldly across a wide avenue between stretches of grass
where the wind and sun had full play, and she could be as much alone as
possible, within the precincts of the great city.

In spite of her light and easy manner, the problem of her brother's
future weighed heavily upon the girl's mind.  The eleventh hour
approached, and nothing more definite had been achieved in the way of
encouragement than an occasional written line at the end of the printed
rejections: "Pleased to see future verses," "Unsuitable; but shall be
glad to consider other poems."  Even the optimism of two-and-twenty
recognised that such straws as these could not weigh against the hard-
headed logic of a business man!

It was in the last degree unlikely that Ronald would make any striking
success in literature in the time still remaining under the terms of the
agreement, unless--as she herself had hinted--desperate measures were
adopted to meet desperate needs.  A scheme was hatching in Margot's
brain,--daring, uncertain; such a scheme as no one but a young and self-
confident girl could have conceived, but holding nevertheless the
possibilities of success.  She wanted to think it out, and movement in
the fresh air gave freedom to her thoughts.

Really it was simple enough,--requiring only a little trouble, a little
engineering, a little harmless diplomacy.  Ronald was a mere babe where
such things were concerned, but he would be obedient and do as he was
told, and for the rest, Margot was confident of her own powers.

The speculative frown gave way to a smile; she laughed, a gleeful,
girlish laugh, and tossed her head, unconsciously acting a little
duologue, with nods and frowns and upward languishing glance.  All
things seem easy to sweet and twenty, when the sun shines, and the scent
of spring is in the air.  The completed scheme stood out clear and
distinct in Margot's mind.  Only one small clue was lacking, and that
she was even now on the way to discover!



CHAPTER THREE.

A TONIC.

Margot wandered about the Park so lost in her own thoughts that she was
dismayed to find that it was already one o'clock, when warned by the
departing stream of nursemaids that it must be approaching luncheon hour
she at last consulted her watch.

Half an hour's walk, cold cutlets and an irate Agnes, were prospects
which did not smile upon her; it seemed infinitely more agreeable to
turn in an opposite direction, and make as quickly as possible for
Oxford Terrace, where she would be certain of a welcome from poor sad
Edith, who was probably even now lunching on bread and cheese and
anxiety, while her two sturdy infants tucked into nourishing beefsteak.
Edith was one of those dear things who did not preach if you were late,
but was content to give you what she had, without apologising.

Margot trotted briskly past Dorset Square, took a short cut behind the
Great Central Hotel, and emerged into the dreary stretch of Marylebone
Road.

Even in the spring sunshine it looked dull and depressing, with the
gloomy hospital abutting at the corner, the flights of dull red flats on
the right.

A block of flats--in appearance the most depressing--in reality the most
interesting of buildings!

Inside those walls a hundred different households lived, and moved, and
had their being.  Every experience of life and death, of joy and grief,
was acted on that stage, the innumerable curtains of which were so
discreetly drawn.  Margot scanned the several rows of windows with a
curious interest.  To-day new silk _brise-bise_ appeared on the second
floor, and a glimpse of a branching palm.  Possibly some young bride had
found her new home in this dull labyrinth, and it was still beautiful in
her sight!  Alas, poor bird, to be condemned to build in such a nest!
Those curtains to the right were shockingly dirty, showing that some
over-tired housewife had retired discomfited from the struggle against
London grime.  Up on the sixth floor there was a welcome splash of
colour in the shape of Turkey red curtains, and a bank of scarlet
geranium.  Margot had decided long since that this flat must belong to
an art student to whom colour was a necessity of life; who toiled up the
weary length of stairs on her return from the day's work, tasting in
advance the welcome of the cosy room.  She herself never forgot to look
up at that window, or to send a mental message of sympathy and cheer to
its unknown occupant.

Oxford Terrace looked quite cheerful in comparison with the surrounding
roads,--and almost countrified into the bargain, now that the beech
trees were bursting into leaf.  Margot passed by two or three blocks,
then mounting the steps at the corner of a new terrace, walked along
within the railed-in strip of lawn until she reached a house in the
middle of the row.  A peep between draped Nottingham lace curtains
showed a luncheon table placed against the wall, after the cheerful
fashion of furnished apartments, when one room does duty for three, at
which sat two little sailor-suited lads and a pale mother, smiling
bravely at their sallies.

Margot felt the quick contraction of the heart which she experienced
afresh at every sight of Edith's changed face, but next moment she
whistled softly in the familiar key, and saw the light flash back.
Edith sprang to the door, and appeared flushed and smiling.

"Margot, how sweet of you!  I _am_ glad!  Have you had lunch?"

"No.  Give me anything you have.  I'm awfully late.  Bread and jam will
do splendidly.  Halloa, youngsters, how are you?  We'll defer kisses, I
think, till you are past the sticky stage.  I've been prowling about the
Park for the last two hours enjoying the spring breezes, and working out
problems, and suddenly discovered it was too late to go home."

She sank down on a seat by the table, shaking her head in response to an
anxious glance.  "No, not my own affairs, dear; only Ron's!  Can't the
boys run away now, and let us have a chat?  I know you have had enough
of them by your face, and I've such a lot to say.  Don't grumble, boys!
Be good, and you shall be happy, and your aunt will take you to the Zoo.
Yes, I promise!  The very first afternoon that the sun shines; but
first I shall ask mother if you have deserved it by doing what you are
told."

"Run upstairs, dears, and wash, and put on your boots before Esther
comes," said Mrs Martin fondly; and the boys obeyed, with a lingering
obedience which was plainly due rather to bribery than training.

The elder of the two was a sturdy, plain-featured lad, uninteresting
except to the parental eye; the younger a beauty, a bewitching, plump,
curly-headed cherub of four years, with widely-opened grey eyes and a
Cupid's bow of a mouth.  Margot let Jim pass by with a nod, but her hand
stretched out involuntarily to stroke Pat's cheek, and ruffle his curly
pow.

Edith smiled in sympathetic understanding, but even as she smiled she
turned her head over her shoulder to speak a parting word to the older
lad.

"Good-bye, darling!  We'll have a lovely game after tea!"  Then the door
shut, and she turned to her sister with a sigh.

"Poor Jim! everybody overlooks him to fuss over Pat, and it is hard
lines.  Children feel these things much more than grown-up people
realise.  I heard yells resounding from their bedroom one day last year,
and flew upstairs to see what was wrong.  There was Pat on the floor,
with Jim kneeling on his chest, with his fingers twined in his hair,
which he was literally dragging out by the roots.  He was put to bed for
being cruel to his little brother, but when I went to talk quietly to
him afterwards, he sobbed so pitifully, and said, `I only wanted some of
his curls to put on, to make people love me too!'  Poor wee man!  You
know what a silly way people have of saying, `Will you give me one of
your curls?' and poor Jim had grown tired of walking beside the pram,
and having no notice taken of him.  I vowed that from that day if I
showed the least preference to either of the boys it should be to Jim.
The world will be kind to Pat; he will never need friends."

"No, Pat is all right.  He has the `come-hither eye,' as his mother had
before him!"

"And his aunt!"

Margot chuckled complacently.  "Well! it's a valuable thing to possess.
I find it most useful in my various plights.  They are dear naughty
boys, both of them, and I always love them, but rather less than usual
when I see you looking so worn out.  You have enough strain on you
without turning nursemaid into the bargain."

Mrs Martin sighed, and knitted her delicate brows.

"I do feel such a wicked wretch, but one of the hardest bits of life at
the present is being shut up with the boys in one room all day long.
They are very good, poor dears, but when one is racked with anxiety, it
is a strain to play wild Indians and polar bears for hours at a stretch.
We do some lessons now, and that's a help--and Jack insisted that I
should engage this girl to take them out in the afternoon.  I must be a
wretched mother, for I am thankful every day afresh to hear the door
bang behind them, and to know that I am free until tea-time."

"Nonsense!  Don't be artificial, Edie!  You know that you are nothing of
the sort, and that it's perfectly natural to be glad of a quiet hour.
You are a marvel of patience.  I should snap their heads off if I had
them all day, packed up in this little room.  What have you had for
lunch?  No meat?  And you look so white and spent.  How wicked of you!"

"Oh, Margot," sighed the other pathetically, "it's not food that I need!
What good can food do when one is racked with anxiety?  It's my mind
that is ill, not my body.  We can't pay our way even with the rent of
the house coming in, unless Jack gets something to do very soon, and I
am such a stupid, useless thing that I can do nothing to help."

"Except to give up your house, and your servants, and turn yourself into
nurse, and seamstress, and tailor, and dressmaker, rolled into one; and
live in an uproar all day long, and be a perfect angel of sympathy every
night--that's all!--and try to do it on bread and cheese into the
bargain!  There must be something inherently mean in women, to skimp
themselves as they do.  You'd never find a man who would grudge tenpence
for a chop, however hard up he might be, but a woman spends twopence on
lunch, and a sovereign on tonics!  Darling, will it comfort you most if
I sympathise, or encourage?  I know there are moods when it's pure
aggravation to be cheerful!"

Edith sighed and smiled at one and the same moment.

"I don't know!  I'd like to hear a little of both, I think, just to see
what sort of a case you could make out."

"Very well, then, so you shall, but first I'll make you comfy.  Which is
the least lumpy chair which this beautiful room possesses?  Sit down
then, and put up your feet while I enjoy my lunch.  I do love damson
jam!  I shall finish the pot before I'm satisfied...  Well, to take the
worst things first, I do sympathise with you about the table linen!  One
clean cloth a week, I suppose?  It must be quite a chronicle of the
boys' exploits!  I should live on cold meat, so that they couldn't spill
he gravy.  And the spoons.  They feel gritty, don't they?  What is it
exactly that they are made of?  Poor old, dainty Edie!  I know you hate
it, and the idea that aliens are usurping your own treasures.  Stupid
people like Agnes would say that these are only pin-pricks, which we
should not deign to notice, but sensible people like you and me know
that constant little pricks take more out of one than the big stabs.  If
the wall-paper had not been so hideous, your anxieties would have seemed
lighter, but it's difficult to bear things cheerfully against a
background of drab roses.  Here's an idea now!  If all else fails, start
a cheerful lodging-house.  You'd make a fortune, and be a philanthropist
to boot...  This _is_ good jam!  I shall have to hide the stones, for
the sake of decency.--I know you think fifty times more of Jack than of
yourself.  It's hard luck to feel that all his hard work ends in this,
and men hate failure.  They have the responsibility, poor things, and it
must be tragic to feel that through their mistakes, or rashness, or
incapacity, as the case may be, they have brought hard times upon their
wives.  I expect Jack feels the table cloth even more than you do!  You
smart, but you don't feel, `This is my fault!'"

"It isn't Jack's fault," interrupted Jack's wife quickly.  "He never
speculated, nor shirked work, nor did anything but his best.  It was
that hateful war, and the upset of the market, and--"

"Call it misfortune, then; in any case the fact remains that he is the
bread-winner, and has failed to provide--cake!  We are not satisfied
with dry bread nowadays.  You are always sure of that from father, if
from no one else."

"But I loathe taking it!  And I would sooner live in one room than go
home again, as some people do.  When one marries one loses one's place
in the old home, and it is never given back.  Father loves me, but he
would feel it a humiliation to have me back on his hands.  Agnes would
resent my presence, and so would you.  Yes, you would!  Not consciously,
perhaps, but in a hundred side-issues.  We should take up your spare
rooms, and prevent visitors, and upset the maids.  If you ran into debt,
father would pay your debts as a matter of course, but he grudges paying
mine, because they are partly Jack's."

"Yes, I understand.  It must be hateful for you, dear.  I suppose no man
wishes to pay out more money than he need, especially when he has worked
hard to make it, as the pater has done; but if you take him the right
way he is a marvel of goodness.--This year--next year--sometime--
never;--I'm going to be married next year!  Just what I had decided
myself...  I must begin to pick up bargains at the sales."

Margot rose from her seat, flicking the crumbs off her lap with a fine
disregard of the flower-wreathed carpet, and came over to a seat beside
her sister.

"Now, shall I change briefs, and expatiate on the other side of the
question? ...  Why, Edie, every bit of this trouble depends on your
attitude towards it, and on nothing else.  You are all well; you are
young; you adore each other; you have done nothing dishonourable; you
have been able to pay your debts--what does the rest matter?  Jack has
had a big disappointment.  Very well, but what's the use of crying over
spilt milk?  Get a fresh jug, and try for cream next time!  The children
are too young to suffer, and think it's fine fun to have no nursery, and
live near Edgware Road.  If you and Jack could just manage to think the
same, you might turn it all into a picnic and a joke.  Jack is strong
and clever and industrious, and you have a rich father; humanly
speaking, you will never want.  Take it with a smile, dear!  If you will
smile, so will Jack.  If you push things to the end, it rests with you,
for he won't fret if he sees you happy.  He _does_ love you, Edie!  I'm
not sentimental, but I think it must be just the most beautiful thing in
the world to be loved like that.  I should like some one to look at me
as he does at you, with his eyes lighting up with that deep, bright
glow.  I'd live in an attic with my Jack, and ask for nothing more!"

The elder woman smiled--a smile eloquent of a sadder, maturer wisdom.
She adored her husband, and gloried in the knowledge of his love of
herself, but she knew that attics are not conducive to the continuance
of devotion.  Love is a delicate plant, which needs care and nourishment
and discreet sheltering, if it is to remain perennially in bloom.  The
smile lingered on her lips, however; she rested her head against the
cushions of her chair and cried gratefully--

"Oh, Margot, you do comfort me!  You are so nice and human.  Do you
really, truly think I am taking things too seriously?  Do you think I am
depressing Jack?  Wouldn't he think me heartless if I seemed bright and
happy?"

"Try it and see!  You can decide according to the effect produced, but
first you must have a tonic, to brace you for the effort.  I've a new
prescription, and we are going to Edgware Road to get it this very
hour."

"Quinine, I suppose.  Esther and the boys can get it at the chemist's,
but really it will do roe no good."

"I'm sure it wouldn't.  Mine is a hundred times more powerful."

"Iron?  I can't take it.  It gives me headaches."

"It isn't iron.  Mine won't give you a headache, unless the pins get
twisted.  It's a finer specific for low spirits feminine, than any
stupid drugs.  A new hat!"

Edith stared, and laughed, and laughed again.

"You silly girl!  What nonsense!  I don't need a hat."

"That's nonsense if you like!  It depresses me to see you going about in
that dowdy thing, and it must be a martyrdom for you to wear it every
day.  Come out and buy a straw shape for something and `eleven-three',"
(it's always "eleven-three" in Edgware Road), "and I'll trim it with
some of your scraps.  You have such nice scraps.  Then we'll have tea,
and you shall walk part of the way home with me, and meet Jack, and
smile at him and look pretty, and watch him perk up to match.  What do
you say?"

Edith lifted her eyes with a smile which brought back the youth and
beauty to her face.

"I say, thank you!" she said simply.  "You are a regular missionary,
Margot.  You spend your life making other people happy."

"Goodness!" cried Margot, aghast.  "Do I?  How proper it sounds!  You
just repeat that to Agnes, and see what she says.  You'll hear a
different story, I can tell you!"



CHAPTER FOUR.

MARGOT'S SCHEME.

The sisters repaired to Edgware Road, and after much searching finally
ran to earth a desirable hat for at least the odd farthing less than it
would have cost round the corner in Oxford Street.  This saving would
have existed only in imagination to the ordinary customer, who is
presented with a paper of nail-like pins, a rusty bodkin, or a highly-
superfluous button-hook as a substitute for lawful change; but Margot
took a mischievous delight in collecting farthings and paying down the
exact sum in establishments devoted to eleven-threes, to the disgust of
the young ladies who supplied her demands.

The hat was carried home in true Bohemian fashion, encased in a huge
paper bag, and a happy hour ensued, when the contents of the scrap-box
were scattered over the bed, and a dozen different effects studied in
turn.  Edith sat on a chair before the glass with the skeleton frame
perched on her head at the accepted fashionable angle, criticising fresh
draperies and arrangement of flowers, and from time to time uttering
sharp exclamations of pain as Margot's actions led to an injudicious use
of the dagger-like pins.  Her delicate finely-cut face and misty hair
made her a delightful model, and she smiled back at the face in the
mirror, reflecting that if you happened to be a pauper, it was at least
satisfactory to be a pretty one, and that to possess long, curling
eyelashes was a distinct compensation in life.  Margot draped an old
lace veil over the hard brim, caught it together at the back with a
paste button, and pinned a cluster of brown roses beneath the brim, with
just one pink one among the number, to give the _cachet_ to the whole.

"There's Bond Street for you!" she cried triumphantly; and Edith flushed
with pleasure, and wriggled round and round to admire herself from
different points of view.

"It _is_ a tonic!" she declared gratefully.  "You are a born milliner,
Margot.  It will be a pleasure to go out in this hat, and I shall feel
quite nice and conceited again.  It's so long since I've felt conceited!
I'm ever and ever so much obliged.  Can you stay on a little longer,
dear, or are you in a hurry to get back?"

"No!  I shall get a scolding anyway, so I might as well have all the
fling I can get.  I'll have tea with you and the boys, and a little
private chat with Jack afterwards.  You won't mind leaving us alone for
a few minutes?  It's something about Ron, but I won't promise not to get
in a little flirtation on my own account."

Jack's wife laughed happily.

"Flirt away--it will cheer him up!  I'll put the boys to bed, and give
you a fine opportunity.  Here they come, back from their walk.  I must
hurry, dear, and cut bread and butter.  I'll carry down the hat, and put
it on when Jack comes in."

Aunt Margot's appearance at tea was hailed with a somewhat qualified
approval.

"You must talk to _us_, mother," Jim said sternly; "talk properly, not
only, `Yes, dear,' `No, dear,' like you do sometimes, and then go on
speaking to her about what we can't understand.  She's had you all
afternoon!"

"So I have, Jim.  It's your turn now.  What do you want to say?"

Jim immediately lapsed into silence.  Having gained his point, he had no
remark to offer, but Pat lifted his curly head and asked eagerly--

"Muzzer, shall I ever grow up to be a king?"

"No, my son; little boys like you are never kings."

"Not if I'm very good, and do what I'm told?"

"No, dear, not even then.  No one can be a king unless his father is a
king, too, or some very, very great man.  What has put that in your
head, I wonder?  Why do you want to be a king?"

Pat widened his clear grey eyes; the afternoon sunshine shone on his
ruffled head, turning his curls to gold, until he looked like some
exquisite cherub, too good and beautiful for this wicked world.

"'Cause if I was a king I could take people prisoners and cut off their
heads, and stick them upon posts," he said sweetly; his mother and aunt
exchanged horrified glances.  Pat alternated between moods of angelic
tenderness, when every tiger was a "good, _good_ tiger," and naughty
children "never did it any more," and a condition of frank cannibalism,
when he literally wallowed in atrocities.  His mother forbode to
lecture, but judiciously turned the conversation.

"Kings can do much nicer things than that, Patsy boy.  Our kind King
Edward doesn't like cutting off heads a bit.  He is always trying to
prevent men from fighting with each other."

"Is he?"

"Yes, he is.  People call him the Peace-maker, because he prevents so
many wars."

"_Bother_ him!" cried Pat fervently.

Margot giggled helplessly.  Mrs Martin stared fixedly out of the
window, and Jim in his turn took up the ball of conversation.

"Mummie, will you die before me?"

"I can't tell, dear; nobody knows."

"Will daddy die before me?"

"Probably he will."

"May I have his penknife when he's dead?"

"I think it's about time to cut up that lovely new cake!" cried Margot,
saving the situation with admirable promptitude.  "We bought it for you
this afternoon, and it tastes of chocolate, and all sorts of good
things."

The bait was successful, and a silence followed, eloquent of intense
enjoyment; then the table was cleared and various games were played, in
the midst of which Jack's whistle sounded from without, and his wife and
sons rushed to meet him.  They looked a typical family group as they re-
entered the room, Edith happily hanging on to his arm, the boys prancing
round his feet, and the onlooker felt a little pang of loneliness at the
sight.

John Martin was a tall, well-made man, with a clean-shaven face and
deep-set grey eyes.  He was pale and lined, and a nervous twitching of
the eyelids testified to the strain through which he had passed, but it
was a strong face and a pleasant face, and, when he looked at his wife,
a face of indescribable tenderness.  At the moment he was smiling, for
it was always a pleasure to see his pretty sister-in-law, and to-night
Edith's anxious looks had departed, and she skipped by his side as eager
and excited as the boys themselves.

"Dad, dad, has there been any more 'splosions?"

"Hasn't there been no fearful doings on in the world, daddy?"

"Jack!  Jack!  I've got a new tonic.  It has done me such a lot of
good!"

Jack turned from one to the other.

"No, boys, no,--no more accidents to-day!  What is it, darling?  You
look radiant.  What is the joke?"

"Look out of the window for a minute!  Margot, you talk to him, and
don't let him look round."

Edith pinned on the new hat before the mirror, carefully adjusting the
angles, and pulling out her cloudy hair to fill in the necessary spaces.
Her cheeks were flushed, her eyes sparkled; it was no longer the worn
white wife, but a pretty, coquettish girl, who danced up to Jack's side
with saucy, uplifted head.

"There!  What do you think of that?"

The answer of the glowing eyes was more eloquent than words.  Jack
whistled softly beneath his breath, walking slowly round and round to
take in the whole effect.

"I say, that _is_ fetching!  That's something like a hat you wore the
summer we were engaged.  You don't look a day older.  Where did you run
that to earth, darling?"

"Can't you see Bond Street in every curve?  I should have thought it was
self-evident.  Margot said I was shabby, and that a new hat would do me
good, so we went out and bought it.  Do you think I am extravagant?
It's better to spend on this than on medicine, and three guineas isn't
expensive for real lace, is it?"

She peered in her husband's face with simulated anxiety, but his smile
breathed pleasure unqualified.

"I'm delighted that you have bought something at last!  You have not
spent a penny on yourself for goodness knows how long."

"Goose!" cried Edith.  "He has swallowed it at a gulp.  Three guineas,
indeed--as if I dare!  Four and eleven-pence three-farthings in Edgware
Road, and my old lace veil, and one of the paste buttons you gave me at
Christmas, and some roses off last year's hat, and Margot's clever
fingers, and my--pretty face!  Do you think I am pretty still?"

"I should rather think I do!"  Jack framed his wife's face in his hands,
stooping to kiss the soft flushed cheeks as fondly as he had done in the
time of that other lace-wreathed hat six years before.  Pat and Jim
returned to their dominoes, bored by such foolish proceedings on the
part of their parents, while Margot covered her face with her hands,
with ostentatious propriety.

"This is no place for me!  Consider my feelings, Jack.  I'm like a story
I once read in an old volume of _Good Words_, `Lovely yet Unloved!'
When you have quite finished love-making, I want a private chat with
you, while Edie puts the boys to bed.  They will hate me for suggesting
such a thing, but it is already past their hour, and I must have ten
minutes' talk on a point of life and death!"

"Come away, boys; we are not wanted here.  Daddy will come upstairs and
see you again before you go to sleep."

Mother and sons departed together, and Jack Martin sat down on the
corner of the sofa and leant his head on his hand.  With his wife's
departure the light went out of his face, but he smiled at his sister-
in-law with an air of affectionate _camaraderie_.

"You are a little brick, Margot!  You have done Edie a world of good.
What can I do for you in return?  I am at your service."

Margot pulled forward the chair that her sister had chosen as the least
lumpy which the room afforded, and seated herself before him, returning
his glance with an odd mixture of mischief and embarrassment.

"It's about Ron.  The year of probation is nearly over."

"I know it."

"Two months more will decide whether he is to be a broker or a poet.  It
will mean death to Ronald to be sent into the City."

"You are wrong there.  If he is a poet, no amount of brokering will
alter the fact, any more than it will change the colour of his eyes or
hair.  It is bound to come out sooner or later.  You will probably think
me a brute, if I suggest that a little discipline and knowledge of the
world might improve the value of his writings."

"Yes, I will!  What does a poet want with a knowledge of the world, in
the common, sordid sense?  Let him keep his mind unsullied, and be an
inspiration to others.  When we were children, we used to keep birds in
the nursery, in a very fine cage with golden bars, and we fed them with
every bird delicacy we could find.  They lived for a little time, and
tried to sing, poor brave things!  We threw away the cage in a fury,
after finding one soft dead thing after another lying huddled up in a
corner.  No one shall cage Ronald, if I can prevent it!  It's no use
pretending to be cold-blooded and middle-aged, Jack, for I know you are
with us at heart.  This means every bit as much to Ron as your business
troubles do to you."

Jack drew in his breath with a wince of pain.

"Well, what is it you wish me to do?  I am afraid I have very little
influence in the literary world, and I have always heard that
introductions do more harm than good.  An editor would soon ruin his
paper if he accepted all the manuscripts pressed upon him by admiring
relatives."

"But you see I don't ask you for an introduction.  It's just a piece of
information I want, which I can't get for myself.  You know the
_Loadstar Magazine_?"

"Certainly I do."

"Well, the _Loadstar_ is--the _Loadstar_!  The summit of Ron's ambition.
It's the magazine of all others which he likes and admires, and the
editor is known to be a man of great power and discernment.  It is said
that if he has the will, he can do more than any man in London to help
on young writers.  It is useless sending manuscripts, for he refuses to
consider unsolicited poetical contributions.  He shuts himself up in a
fastness in Fleet Street, and the door thereof is guarded with dragons
with lying tongues.  I know!  I have made it my business to inquire, but
I feel convinced that if he once gave Ron a fair reading, he would
acknowledge his gifts.  There is no hope of approaching him direct, but
I intend to get hold of him all the same."

Jack Martin looked up at that, his thin face twitching into a smile.

"You little baggage! and you expect me to help you.  I must hear some
more about this before I involve myself any further.  What mischief are
you up to now?"

"Dear Jack, what can I do; a little girl like me?" cried Miss Margot,
mightily meek all of a sudden, as she realised that she had ventured a
step too far.  "I wouldn't for the whole world get you into trouble.
It's just a little, simple thing that I want you to find out from some
one in the office."

"I don't know any one in the office."

"But you could find out some one who did?  For instance, you know that
Mr Oliver who illustrates?  I've seen his things in the _Loadstar_.
You could ask him in a casual, off-hand manner without ever mentioning
our name."

"What could I ask him?"

"Such a nice, simple little question!  Just the name of the place where
the editor proposes to spend this summer holiday, and the date on which
he will start."

Jack stared in amazement, but the meekest, most demure of maidens
confronted him from the opposite chair, with eyes so translucently
candid, lips so guilelessly sweet, that it seemed incredible that any
hidden mischief could lurk behind the innocent question.  Nevertheless
seven years' intimacy with Miss Margot made Jack Martin suspicious of
mischief.

"What do you know about this editor man?  Have you seen him anywhere?
He is handsome, I suppose, and a bachelor?"

"You're a wretch!" retorted Miss Margot.  "I don't know the man from
Adam, and he may be a Methuselah for all I care; but if possible I want
it to happen that Ron and I chance to be staying in the same place, in
the same house, or hotel, or _pension_, whichever it may be, when he
goes away for his yearly rest.  We are going to the country in any
case--why should we not be guided by the choice of those older and wiser
than ourselves?  Why should we not meet the one of all others we are
most anxious to know?"

"Just so! and having done so, you will confide in the editor that Ronald
is an embryo Poet Laureate, and try to enlist his kind sympathy and
assistance!"

Margot smiled; a smile of lofty superiority.

"No, indeed!  I know rather better than that!  He will be out on a
holiday, poor man, and won't want to be troubled with literary
aspirants.  He has enough of them all the year round.  We'll never
mention poetry, but we will try to get to know _him_, and to make him
like us so much that he will want to see more of us when we return to
town.  No one can live in the same house with Ron, and have an
opportunity of talking to him day by day, without feeling that he is
different from other boys, and alone together in the country one can
never tell what may happen.  Opportunities may arise, too; opportunities
for help and service.  We would be on the look-out for them, and would
try by every means in our power to forge the first link in the chain.
Don't look so solemn, old Jack, it's all perfectly innocent!  You can
trust me to do nothing you would disapprove."

"I believe I can.  You are a madcap, Margot, but you are a good girl.
I'm not afraid of you, but I imagine that the editor will be a match for
a dozen youngsters like you and Ron, and will soon see through your
little scheme.  However, I'll do what I can.  In big offices holiday
arrangements have to be made a good while ahead, so it ought not to be
difficult to get the information you want.  Now I must be off upstairs
to see the boys before they get into bed.  Shall I see you again when I
come down?"

"No, indeed!  I've played truant since half-past eleven, so I shall have
to hang about the end of the terrace until father appears, and go in
under his wing, to escape a scolding from Agnes.  I had arranged to pay
calls with her this afternoon.  I wonder how it is that my memory is so
dreadfully uncertain about things I don't want to do!  Good-bye then,
Jack, and a hundred thanks.  Posterity will thank you for your help."

Jack Martin laughed and shrugged his shoulders.  He had a man's typical
disbelief in the ability of his wife's relatives.



CHAPTER FIVE.

AN EXPLOSION.

Relationships were somewhat strained in the Vane household during the
next few weeks, the two elder members being banded together in an
unusual partnership to bring about the confusion of the younger.

"I can't understand what you are making such a fuss about.  You'll have
to give in, in the end.  You a poet, indeed!  What next?  If you would
come down to breakfast in time, and give over burning the gas till one
o'clock in the morning, it would be more to the point than writing silly
verses.  I'd be ashamed to waste my time scribbling nonsense all day
long!"  So cried Agnes, in Martha-like irritation, and Ronald turned his
eyes upon her with that deep, dreamy gaze which only added fuel to the
flame.

He was not angry with Agnes, who, as she herself truly said, "did not
understand."  Out of the storm of her anger an inspiration had fluttered
towards him, like a crystal out of the surf.  "The Worker and the
Dreamer"--he would make a poem out of that idea!  Already the wonderful
inner vision pictured the scene--the poet sitting idle on the hillside,
the man of toil labouring in the heat and glare of the fields, casting
glances of scorn and impatience at the inert form.  The lines began to
take shape in his brain.

  "...And the worker worked from the misty dawn,
  Till the east was golden and red;
  But the dreamer's dream which he thought to scorn,
  Lived on when they both were dead..."

"I asked him three times over if he would have another cup of coffee,
and he stared at me as if he were daft!  I believe he _is_ half daft at
times, and he will grow worse and worse, if Margot encourages him like
this!"  Agnes announced to her father, on his weary return from City.

It was one of Agnes's exemplary habits to refuse all invitations which
could prevent her being at home to welcome her father every afternoon,
and assist him to tea and scones, accompanied by a minute _resume_ of
the bad news of the day.  What the housemaid had broken; what the cat
had spilt; the parlourmaid's impertinences; the dressmaker's
delinquencies; Ronald's vapourings; the new and unabashed transgressions
of Margot--each in its turn was dropped into the tired man's cup with
the lumps of sugar, and stirred round with the cream.  There was no
escaping the ordeal.  On the hottest day of summer there was the boiling
tea, with the hot muffins, and the rich, indigestible cake, exactly as
they had appeared amidst the ice and snows of January; and the
accompanied recital hardly varied more.  It was a positive relief to
hear that the chimney had smoked, or the parrot had had a fit.

Once a year Agnes departed on a holiday, handing over the keys to
Margot, who meekly promised to follow in her footsteps; and then,
heigho! for a fortnight of Bohemia, with every arrangement upside down,
and appearing vastly improved by the change of position.  Instead of tea
in the drawing-room, two easy-chairs on the balcony overlooking the
Park; cool iced drinks sipped through straws, and luscious dishes of
fruit.  Instead of Agnes, stiff and starched and tailor-made, a radiant
vision in muslin and laces, with a ruffled golden head, and distracting
little feet peeping out from beneath the frills.

"Isn't this fun?" cried the vision.  "Don't you feel quite frivolous and
Continental?  Let's pretend we are a newly-married couple, and you adore
me, and can't deny a thing I ask!  There was a blouse in Bond Street
this morning...  Sweetest darling, wouldn't you like me to buy it to-
morrow, and show me off in it to your friends?  I told them to send it
home on approval.  I knew you couldn't bear to see your little girl
unhappy for the sake of four miserable guineas!"

This sort of treatment was very agreeable to a worn-out City man, and as
a pure matter of bargaining, the blouse was a cheap price to pay for the
refreshment of that cool, restful hour, and the pretty chatter which
smoothed the tired lines out of his face, and made him laugh and feel
young again.

Another night Mr Vane would be decoyed to a rendezvous at Earl's Court,
when Margot would wear the blouse, and insist upon turning round the
pearl band on her third finger, so as to imitate a wedding-ring, looking
at him in languishing fashion across the table the while, to the delight
of fellow-diners and his own mingled horror and amusement.  Then they
would wander about beneath the glimmer of the fairy-lights, listening to
the band, as veritable a pair of lovers as any among the throng.

As summer approached, Mr Vane's thoughts turned to these happy
occasions, and it strengthened his indignation against his son to
realise that this year a cloud had arisen between himself and his
dearest daughter.  Margot had openly ranked herself against him, which
was a bitter pill to swallow, and, so far from showing an inclination to
repent as the prescribed time drew to a close, the conspirators appeared
only to be the more determined.  Long envelopes were continually being
dispatched to the post, to appear with astonishing dispatch on the
family breakfast-table.  The pale, wrought look on Ronald's face as he
caught sight of them against the white cloth!  No parent's heart could
fail to be wrung for the lad's misery; but the futility of it added to
the inward exasperation.  Thousands of men walking the streets of London
vainly seeking for work, while this misguided youth scorned a safe and
secure position!

The pent-up irritation exploded one Sunday evening, when the presence of
Edith and her husband recalled the consciousness of yet another
disappointment.  Mr Vane had made his own way, and, after the manner of
successful men, had little sympathy with failure.  The presence of the
two pale, dejected-looking young men filled him with impatient wrath.
At the supper-table he was morose and irritable, until a chance remark
set the fuse ablaze.

"Yes, yes!  You all imagine yourselves so clever nowadays that you can
afford to despise the experience of men who knew the world before you
were born!  I can see you look at each other as I speak!  I'm not blind!
I'm an out-of-date old fogey who doesn't know what he is talking about,
and hasn't even the culture to appreciate his own children.  Because one
has composed a bundle of rhymes that no one will publish, he must needs
assume an attitude of forbearance with the man who supplies the bread
and butter!  I've never been accustomed to regard failure as an instance
of superiority, but no doubt I am wrong--no doubt I am behind the
times--no doubt you are all condemning me in your minds as a blundering
old ignoramus!  A father is nothing but a nuisance who must be tolerated
for the sake of what can be got out of him."

He looked round the table with his tired, angry eyes.  Jack Martin sat
with bent head and lips pressed tightly together, repressing himself for
his wife's sake.  Edith struggled against tears.  Agnes served the salad
dressing and grunted approval.  Margot, usually so pert and ready of
retort, stared at the cloth with a frown of strained distress.  Only
Ronald faced him with steady eyes.

"That is not true, father, and you know it yourself!"

"I know nothing, it appears!  That's just what I say.  Why don't you
undertake my education?  You never show me your work; you take the
advice of a child like Margot, and leave me out in the cold, and then
expect me to have faith enough to believe you a genius without a word of
proof.  You want to become known to the public?  Very well, bring down
some of that precious poetry and read it aloud to us now!  You can't say
then that I haven't given you a chance!"

It was a frightful prospect!  The criticism of the family is always an
ordeal to the budding author, and the moment was painfully unpropitious.
It would have been as easy for a bird to sing in the presence of the
fowler.  Ronald turned white to the lips, but his reply came as
unwavering as the last.

"Do you think you would care to hear even the finest poetry in the world
read aloud to-night?  Mine is very far from the best.  I will read it to
you if you wish, but you must give me a happier opportunity."

Agnes laughed shortly.

"Shilly-shally!  I can't understand what opportunity you want.  If it's
good, it can't be spoilt by being read one day instead of another; if
it's bad, it won't be improved by waiting.  This is cherry-pie, and
there is some tipsy cake.  Edith, which will you have?"

Edith would have neither.  She was still trembling with wounded
indignation against her father for that cruel hit at her husband.  She
sat pale and silent, vowing never to enter the house again until Jack's
fortunes were restored; never to accept another penny from her father's
hands.  She was comparatively little interested in the discussion about
poetry.  Ron was a dear boy; she would be sorry if he were disappointed,
but Jack was her life, and Jack was working for bread!

If she had followed the moment's impulse, she would have risen and left
the room, and though better counsel prevailed, she could not control the
spice of temper which made the cherry-pie abhorrent.

Jack, as a man, saw no reason why he should deny himself the mitigations
of the situation; he helped himself to cream and sifted sugar with
leisurely satisfaction, and sensibly softened in spirit.  After all,
there was a measure of truth in what the old man said, and his bark was
worse than his bite.  If his own boy, Pat, took it into his head to go
off on some scatter-brain prank when he came of age, it would be a big
trouble, or if later on he came a cropper in business-- Jack waited for
a convenient pause, and then deftly turned the conversation to politics,
and by the time that cheese was on the table, he and his father-in-law
were discussing the mysteries of the last Education Bill with the
satisfaction of men who hold similar views on the inanities of the
opposite party.  Later on they bade each other a friendly good-night;
but Edith went straight from the bedroom to the street, and clung
tightly to her husband's arm as they walked along the pavement opposite
the Park, enjoying the quiet before entering the busy streets.

"We'll never come again!" she cried tremulously.  "We'll stay at home,
and have a supper of bread and cheese and love with it!  You shan't be
taunted and sneered at by any man on earth, if he were twenty times my
father!  What an angel you were, Jack, to keep quiet, and then talk as
if nothing had happened!  I was choking with rage!"

"Poor darling!" said Jack Martin tenderly.  "You take things too much to
heart.  It's rough on you, but you must remember that it's rough on the
old man too.  You are his eldest child, and the beauty of the family.
He hoped great things for you, and it is wormwood and gall to his proud
spirit to see you struggling along in cheap lodgings.  We can't wonder
if he explodes occasionally.  It's wonderful that he is as civil to me
as he is; he has put me down as a hopeless blunderer!"

There was a touch of bitterness in the speaker's voice, for all his
brave assumption of composure, and his wife winced at the sound.  She
clung more tightly to his arm, and raised her face to his with eager
comfort.

"Don't mind what he says!  Don't mind what any one says.  I believe in
you.  I trust you!  The good times will come back again, dear, and we
will be happier than ever, because we shall know how to appreciate them.
Even if we were always poor, I'd rather have you for my husband than
the greatest millionaire in the world!"

"Thank God for my wife!" said Jack Martin solemnly.



CHAPTER SIX.

A MANAGING WOMAN.

Meanwhile Ronald and Margot were holding a conclave on the third floor.
"I must get away from home at once!" cried the lad feverishly.  "I can't
write in this atmosphere of antagonism.  I breathe it in the air.  It
poisons everything I do.  If I am to have only three more months of
liberty, I must spend them in my own way, in the country with you,
Margot, away from all this fret and turmoil.  It's my last chance.  I
might as well throw up the sponge at once, if we are to stay here."

"Yes, we must go away; for father's sake as well as our own," replied
Margot slowly.  She leant her head against the back of her chair, and
pushed the hair from her brow.  Without the smile and the sparkle she
was astonishingly like her brother,--both had oval faces, well-marked
eyebrows, flexible scarlet lips, and hazel eyes, but the girl's chin was
made in a firmer mould, and the expression of dreamy abstraction which
characterised the boy's face was on hers replaced by animation and
alertness.

"Father will be miserable to-night because he flared out at supper; but
he'll flare again unless we put him out of temptation.  He likes his own
way as much as we like ours, and it's so difficult for parents to
realise that their children are grown-up.  We seem silly babies in his
eyes, and he longs to be able to shut us up in the nursery until we are
sorry, as he used to do in the old days.  As for our own plans, Ron,
they are all settled.  I was just waiting for a quiet opportunity to
tell you.  I have been busy planning and scheming for some time back,
but it was only to-night that my clue arrived.  Jack, my emissary,
slipped it into my hand after supper.  Read that!"

She held out a half sheet of paper with an air of triumph, on which were
scribbled the following lines:--

"Name, Elgood.  Great walker, climber, etcetera.  Goes every June with
brother to small lonely inn (Nag's Head)--Glenaire--six miles' drive
from S--, Perthshire.  Scenery fine, but wild; accommodation limited;
landlady refuses lady visitors, which fact is supposed to be one of the
chief attractions; Elgood reported to be tough nut to crack; chief
object of holiday, quiet and seclusion; probably dates two or three
weeks from June 15."

Ronald read, and lifted a bewildered face.

"What does it all mean?  How do this man's plans affect ours?  I don't
understand what you are driving at, Margot, but I should love to go to
Scotland!  The mountains in the dawning, and the shadows at night, and
the dark green of the firs against the blue of the heather--oh, wouldn't
it be life to see it all again, after this terrible brick city!  How
clever of you to think of Scotland!"

"My dear boy, if it had been Southend it would have been all the same.
We are going where Mr Elgood goes, for Mr Elgood, you must know, is
the editor of _The Loadstar_--the man of all others who could give you a
helping hand.  Now, Ron, I am quite prepared for you to be shocked, but
I know that you will agree in the end, so please give in as quickly as
possible, and don't make a fuss.  You have been sending unknown poems to
unknown editors for the last two years, with practically no result.
It's not the fault of your poems--of that I am convinced.  In ten years'
time every one will rave about them, but you can't afford to wait ten
years, or even ten months.  Our only hope is to interest some big
literary light, whose verdict can't be ignored, and persuade him to
plead your cause, or at least to give you such encouragement as will
satisfy father that you are not deluded by your own conceit.  I've
thought and thought, and lain awake thinking, till I feel quite tired
out, and then at last I hit on this plan,--to find out where Mr Elgood
is going for his holidays, and go to the same place, so that he can't
help getting to know us, whatever he may wish.  Ordinary methods are
useless at this stage of affairs.  We must try a desperate remedy for a
desperate situation!"

"I'm sure I am willing.  I would try any crazy plan that had a
possibility of success for the next three months.  But yours isn't
possible.  The landlady won't take ladies.  That's an unsurmountable
objection at the start."

But Margot only preened her head with a smile of undaunted self-
confidence.

"She'll take _me_!" she declared complacently.  "She can't refuse me
shelter for a night at least, after such a long, tiring journey, and
I'll be such a perfect dear, that after twenty-four hours she wouldn't
be bribed to do without me!  You can leave Mrs McNab to me, Ron.  I'll
manage her.  Very well then, there we shall be, away from the madding
crowd, shut up in that lonely Highland glen, in the quaint little inn;
two nice, amiable, attractive young people with nothing to do but make
ourselves amiable and useful to our companions.  Mr Elgood can't be
young; he is certainly middle-aged, perhaps quite old; he will be very
tired after his year's work, and perhaps even ill.  Very well then, we
will wait upon him and save him trouble!  You shall bicycle to the
village for his tobacco and papers, and I'll read aloud and bring him
cups of tea.  We won't worry him, but we'll be there all the time,
waiting and watching for an opportunity.  One never knows what may
happen in the country.  He might slip into the river some day, and you
could drag him out.  Ronald, wouldn't it be perfectly lovely if you
could save his life!"

The two youthful faces confronted each other breathlessly for a moment,
and then simultaneously boy and girl burst into a peal of laughter.
They laughed and laughed again, till the tear-drops shone on Margot's
lashes, and Ronald's pale face was flushed with colour.

"You silly girl!  What nonsense you talk!  I'm afraid Mr Elgood won't
give me a chance of rescuing him.  He won't want to be bothered with
literary aspirants on his summer holiday, and he will guess that I want
his help--"

"He mustn't guess anything of the kind until the end of the time.  You
must even never mention the word poetry.  It would neither be fair to
him, nor wise for ourselves.  What we have to do is to make ourselves so
charming and interesting that at the end of the three weeks he will want
to help us as much as we want to be helped.  I understand how to manage
old gentlemen I've had experience, you see, in rather a difficult
school.  Poor father!  I must run down to comfort him before I go to
bed.  I feel sure he is sitting in the library, puffing away at his
pipe, and feeling absolutely retched.  He always does after he has been
cross."

Ronald's face hardened with youthful disapproval.  "Why should you pity
him?  It's his own fault."

"That makes it all the harder, for he has remorse to trouble him, as
well as disappointment.  You must not be hard on the pater, Ron.
Remember he has looked forward to having you with him in business ever
since you were born, and it is awfully hard on him to be disappointed
just when he is beginning to feel old and tired, and would be glad of a
son's help.  It is not easy to give up the dream of twenty years!"

Ronald felt conscience-stricken.  He knew in his own heart that he would
find it next to impossible to relinquish his own dawning ambitions, and
the thought silenced his complaints.  He looked at his sister and smiled
his peculiarly sweet smile.

"You have a wide heart, Margot.  It can sympathise with both plaintiff
and defendant at the same time."

"Why, of course!" asserted Margot easily.  "I love them both, you see,
and that makes things easy.  Go to bed, dear boy, and dream of Glenaire!
Your chance is coming at the eleventh hour."

The light flashed in the lad's eyes as he bent his head for the good-
night kiss--a light of hope and expectation, which was his sister's best
reward.

Ron had worked, fretted, and worried of late, and his health itself
might break down under the strain, for his constitution was not strong.
During one long, anxious year there had been fear of lung trouble, and
mental agitation of any kind told quickly upon him.  Margot's thoughts
flew longingly to the northern glen where the wind blew fresh and cool
over the heather, with never a taint of smoke and grime to mar its God-
given purity.  All that would be medicine indeed, after the year's
confinement in the murky city!  Ron would lift up his head again, like a
plant refreshed with dew; body and mind alike would then expand in
jubilant freedom.

Margot crept down the darkened staircase, treading with precaution as
she passed her sister's room.  The hall beneath was in utter darkness,
for it was against Agnes's economical instincts to leave a light burning
after eleven o'clock, even for the convenience of the master of the
house.  When Mr Vane demurred, she pointed out that it was the easiest
thing in the world for him to put a match to the candle which was left
waiting for his use, and that each electric light cost--she had worked
it all out, and mentioned a definite and substantial sum which would be
wasted by the end of the year if the light were allowed to burn in hall
or staircase while he enjoyed his nightly read and smoke.

"Would you wish this money to be wasted?" she asked calmly; and thus
questioned, there was no alternative but to reply in the negative.  It
would never do for the head of the house to pose as an advocate of
extravagance; but all the same he was irritated by the necessity, and
with Agnes for enforcing it.

Margot turned the handle of the door and stood upon the threshold
looking across the room.

It was as she had imagined.  On the big leather chair beside the
tireless grate sat Mr Vane, one hand supporting the pipe at which he
was drearily puffing from time to time, the other hanging limp and idle
by his side.  Close at hand stood his writing-table, the nearer corner
piled high with books, papers, and reviews, but to-night they had
remained undisturbed.  The inner tragedy of the man's own life had
precluded interest in outside happenings.  He wanted his wife!  That was
the incessant cry of his heart, which, diminished somewhat by the
passage of the years, awoke to fresh intensity at each new crisis of
life!  The one love of his youth and his manhood; the dearest, wisest,
truest friend that was ever sent by God to be the helpmeet of man--why
had she been taken from him just when he needed her most, when the
children were growing up, and her son, the longed-for Benjamin, was at
his most susceptible age?  It was a mystery which could never be solved
this side of the grave.  As a Christian Mr Vane hung fast to the belief
that love and wisdom were behind the cloud; but, though his friends
commented on his bravery and composure, no one but himself knew at what
a cost his courage was sustained.  Every now and then, when the longing
was like an ache in his soul, and when he felt weary and dispirited, and
irritated by the self-will of the children who were children no longer,
then, alas! he was apt to forget himself, and to utter bitter, hasty
words which would have grieved _her_ ears, if she had been near to
listen.  After each of these outbreaks he suffered tortures of remorse
and loneliness, realising that by his own deed he had alienated his
children; grieving because they did not, could not understand!

Except, perhaps, Margot!  Margot, the third little daughter, whose
coming in the place of the much-desired boy had been a keen
disappointment to both parents.  The mother had been doubly tender to
the child, as if to compensate for that passing pang; but Mr Vane
recalled with contrition that he himself had remained indifferent and
neglectful until two or three years later, when at last Ronald had made
his tardy appearance.  Then ensued constant visits to the nursery, to
examine the progress of the son and heir; and after the daily
questioning and inspection it was impossible to resist bestowing some
little attention on the bewitching curly-headed, chubby-cheeked little
damsel who clung to his trouser leg, and raised entreating eyes from the
altitude of his knee.  Mr Vane felt guiltily conscious of having
neglected this child, and now in the content of gratified ambition he
proceeded to make good that neglect by petting her to her heart's
desire, until as time went on it became an open question whether his
daily visits were not paid even more to the girl than to the boy.
Ronald remained his father's pride, but Margot was his joy, his pet,--in
years to come his comfort and companion.

There was more of the dead mother in this last daughter than in either
of the elder sisters; she had her mother's gift of insight and
understanding.

This was not the first time of many that she had crept downstairs after
the household was in bed, to play David to his Saul, and to-night, as he
turned his eyes to the doorway and recognised her slight figure, it was
not surprise which he felt, but rather a shamed and uneasy
embarrassment.  "Margot!  It's very late!  Why are you not in bed?"

She shut the door and crossed the room to his side.

"I wanted to talk to you!"

"To remonstrate, I suppose, for what I said at supper!  You and Ron are
angry, no doubt, and feel yourselves badly used.  You have come to fight
his battles, as usual."

"No.  I don't want to fight at all.  Just to talk to you a little while,
and say I'm sorry."

She seated herself on the arm of his chair as she spoke, and leant her
shoulder carelessly against his; but he edged away, still sore and
suspicious.

"Sorry for what?"

"For you!  Because _you're_ sorry.  Because I knew you'd be sitting
alone, doing nothing else but being sorry.  So I came down to put my
arms round your dear old neck, and kiss your dear old head, and tell you
that I love you.  Badly!"

Yes!  Margot understood.  In just such pretty simple words would his own
Margaret have chased away the black spirit years ago.  Mr Vane puffed
at his pipe, staring fixedly across the room, to conceal the sudden
moistening of his eyes, but his figure sank back into its old place, no
longer repulsing the caress.

"It's a hard task for a lonely man to manage a family of children.  He
gets all the kicks, and none of the thanks!"

"That's exaggeration, dear--which you are always protesting against in
others.  We are tiresome and self-willed, but we know very well how much
we owe to you, and your care for us.  It hurts us as much as it hurts
you when we disagree; but we've got to live our own lives, father!"

"And you imagine that you know better how to set about it than a man who
has lived more than twice as long, and has had ten times the
experience?"

Margot hesitated.

"In a way--no; in a way--_yes_!  We know ourselves, daddy, as even you
cannot do, and it is impossible for one person, however kind and wise he
may be, to lay down the law as to what is to be the object of other
lives.  We all have our own ambitions; what could satisfy one, would
leave another empty and aching.  Agnes, for instance, and me!  How
different we are!  Her idea of happiness would be a house worked by
machinery, where every hour the same things happened at precisely the
same moment, and there were never any cataracts and breaks, and nobody
ever came down late to breakfast.  _I_ should like to have breakfast in
bed, and a new excitement every single day!  We are not all cut out of
one pattern, and we are not children any longer, dear.  Sometimes you
forget that.  When _you_ were twenty-three, you were married, and had a
home of your own."

"Ron is not twenty-one."

"When you were twenty-one, did you want your own way, or were you
willing for other people to decide for you?"

Mr Vane sighed, and moved his head impatiently.

"Here we are back again at the same old argument!  It's waste of time,
Margot.  I can't alter my ideas, but I'll try to keep a tighter rein
over myself for the next few months.  We mustn't have any more scenes
like to-night."

"No."  Margot spoke as gravely as himself.  "We mustn't, daddy, for your
sake as well as ours, and therefore I think it wise to remove the cause
of your irritation.  You said we might go away to the country together,
Ron and I, and we have decided on Scotland--on a glen in Perthshire, six
miles from the nearest station, where the landlady of a quaint little
inn takes in a few boarders.  It will be very primitive, I expect, and
we shall live on cream and porridge and mountain air, and grow brown and
bonnie, and study Nature as we have never had a chance of doing before.
Six miles from a station, daddy!  There's seclusion, if you like!"

Mr Vane knitted his brow, uncertain whether to approve or object.

"How did you come to hear of this place, if it is so out of the world?"

"Jack heard of some people who like it so much that they have gone back
again and again."  Margot paused for a moment, and then added
resolutely, "They go to fish.  Probably they will be there again this
summer.  They are two brothers--one of them is quite old.  I don't know
anything about the other.  Of course, wherever we stay we shall meet
other people--but you don't mind that, do you, dear?  You can trust us
not to associate with any one who is not what you would approve?"

"Oh yes.  I am not afraid of you in that way, and Ron is sensible enough
where you are concerned.  He'll take care of you.  I wouldn't allow you
to stay at a big hotel without Agnes or some older woman, but you are
welcome to your little inn, if it takes your fancy.  If it rains all
day, in Highland fashion, Ronald may discover that there are
compensations even in Regent's Park.  How soon are you off?"

"The middle of June, if all's well, and we'll stay on as long as we are
happy and enjoying ourselves.  Then there will be your holiday to
consider, dear.  I thought it would be such a good idea if you took Jack
with you, while I went to the seaside with Edith and the boys.  Jack and
you agree so well, and have so many tastes in common.  You would make
splendid _compagnons de voyage_!"

Mr Vane drew back in his chair to stare at her beneath frowning brows.

"If there is one thing in this world more objectionable than another,
it's a managing woman!" he cried emphatically.  "Don't you develop into
one, Margot, if you wish to keep any influence over me.  I've seen
danger signals once or twice lately, and I tell you plainly--I won't
stand it!  Be satisfied with what you have gained, and carry Ron away to
your Highland glen, but leave my holiday alone, if you please.  I'm
quite capable of choosing a companion for myself if I need one."

"Yes, dear," said Margot meekly; but her smile showed no sign of
contrition.  She had heard this terrible indictment times without
number, but as yet there had come no waning of her influence.  As she
felt her way carefully up the dark staircase a few minutes later, she
smiled to herself with complacent satisfaction; for not only had the
Scotch trip received the parental sanction, but the first step was taken
towards securing a holiday for poor tired Jack.  Mr Vane might protest,
but the idea once suggested would take root in his mind, and by the time
that it developed into action he would imagine that it was entirely his
own inspiration.  What did it matter?  For Jack's sake even more than
his own it was better that he should be so deluded; and Margot was
happily above the littleness of desiring to monopolise the credit for
her ideas.  So long as a point was gained, she was more than content to
remain inconspicuously in the background.



CHAPTER SEVEN.

PREPARATIONS.

Every one said that it would rain.  It was most depressing.  You had
only to mention that you intended to spend your summer holiday in a
Highland glen, to set the torrent of warning in full flow.  "It will
rain all the time.--It always rains in Scotland...  You will be
soaked...  You will be starved...  You will feel as if you have gone
back to winter.  You will miss all the summer in the South...  You will
get rheumatism...  You will be bored to death."  On and on it went, each
newcomer adding volume to the chorus, until it became quite difficult to
remember that one was starting on a pleasure trip, and not on a perilous
Arctic exploration.

"Take plenty of wraps!" urged the wise ones.  "Don't imagine that you
will be able to wear pretty white things, as you do at home.  Take old
things that don't matter, for no one will see you, and you will never
want to wear them again.  You will shiver round the fire in the
evenings.  Be sure to take rugs.  You won't have half enough blankets on
the bed.  I was in the Highlands for a month two years ago, and we had
one fine day!"

"Well!" queried Margot of this last Job's comforter, "and what was
_that_ like?  Were you glad that you were there for that one day at
least?"

The speaker paused, and over her face there passed a wave of
illuminating recollection.  She was a prosaic, middle-aged woman, but
for the moment she looked young,--young and ardent.

"Ah!" she sighed.  "That day!  It was wonderful; I shall never forget
it.  We went to bed cold and tired, looking forward to another dark,
depressing morning, and woke in a dazzle of sunlight, to see the
mountains outlined against a blue sky.  We ran out into the road, and
held out our hands to the sun, and the wind blew towards us, the soft,
wet, heathery wind, and it tasted like--_nectar_!  We could not go
indoors.  We walked about all day, and laughed, and sang.  We walked
miles.  It seemed as if we could not tire.  I--I think we were `fey.'"
She paused again, and the light flickered out, leaving her cold and
prosaic once more.  "The rest of the time was most unfortunate.  I
contracted a severe chill, and my sister-in-law had rheumatism in her
ankles.  Now, my dear, be sure to take good strong boots--"

Margot and Ronald listened politely to all the good advice which was
lavished upon them, but, after the manner of youth, felt convinced that
in their case precautions were needless.  It was going to be fine.  If
it had been wet in previous years, all the more reason why this coming
summer should be warm and dry.  The sun was going to shine; the clouds
were going to roll away; Mr Elgood was going to fall in love with Ron
at first sight, and prove himself all that was wise, and kind, and
helpful.  Delightful optimism of youth, which is worth more than all the
wisdom of maturer years!

Margot set about her preparations unhampered by the financial troubles
which befall less fortunate girls.  Her father was lavishly generous to
his favourite daughter, supplementing her dress allowance by constant
gifts.  It was one of his greatest pleasures in life to see his pretty
Margot prettily attired, a pleasure in which the young lady herself
fully concurred.  She had too much good taste to transport all the
frills and fripperies of London to a Highland glen; but, on the other
hand, she set her face firmly against the mustard-coloured tweeds
affected by so many women for country wear, choosing instead a soft dull
blue, a hundred times more becoming.  For headgear there was a little
cap of the same material, with a quill feather stuck jauntily through a
fold at the side, while neat, strong little boots and a pair of doeskin
gloves gave a delightfully business-like air to the costume.  In the
rug-strap was a capacious golf cloak, displaying a bright plaid lining.
This was waiting in readiness for the six-mile drive at the end of the
journey, and inside the large dress-box was a selection of well-chosen
garments--a white serge coat and skirt for bright weather; cottons and
lawns for the warm days that must surely come; a velveteen dress for
chilly evenings, blouses galore, and even a fur-lined cloak.  Margot
felt a thrill of wondering satisfaction in her own prudence, as she
packed this latter garment, on a hot June day, with the scent of roses
filling the room from the vase on the toilet table.

She packed sketching materials also, plenty of fancy-work destined to
provide presents for the coming Christmas, a selection of sixpenny
novels, and one or two pet classics from her own library, which
travelled about with her wherever she went.

Ronald's preparations were more easy, for surely no stock-in-trade is so
simple as that of an author!  His favourite stylographic pen, his
favourite note-book, and that was an end of it so far as work was
concerned.  He took his half-plate camera with him, however; and the two
handsome free-wheel bicycles were carefully swathed for the journey.

"I can't understand why you couldn't be content to go to some nice
south-country place, instead of travelling to the other end of the
country in this dusty weather," Agnes opined, as she assiduously fixed
the label to every separate piece of the luggage which was piled
together in the hall.  "It's so foolish to waste time and money when
there are nice places at hand.  Now, there's Cromer--"

"You don't get heather-clad mountains at Cromer, Agnes, and we shan't
have promenades at Glenaire, nor bands, nor crowds of fashionable people
quizzing each other all day long.  We prefer the real, true, genuine
country."

"Oh, well, you'll be tired of it soon enough!  Margot will hate it.  We
shall have you hurrying back at the end of a fortnight, bored to death.
I don't think that lock of yours is quite safe, Margot.  I shouldn't
wonder if you found some things missing when you arrive.  The guards
have a splendid chance on these all-night journeys," prophesied Agnes
cheerfully.  She stared in surprise when Margot burst into a peal of
laughter, and repeated, "Poor old Agnes!" as if she, secure and
comfortable at home, were the one to be pitied, instead of the careless
travellers into the unknown!

The sisters kissed each other in perfunctory manner, Ron shook hands,
and nodded vaguely in response to half a dozen injunctions and
reminders; then the travellers took their places in the cab, bending
forward to wave their adieux, looking extraordinarily alike the while--
young and eager and handsome, with the light of the summer sun reflected
in their happy eyes.

Agnes felt a little chill as she shut the door and walked back into the
quiet house.  All the morning she had looked forward to the hours of
peace and quietness which would follow the departure of the two children
of the household; but now that the time had arrived she was conscious of
an unwonted feeling of depression.  The sound of that last pitying,
"Poor old Agnes!" rang in her ears.  Why "poor"?  Why should Margot
speak of her as some one to be pitied?  As her father's eldest unmarried
daughter and the mistress of the house, she was surely a person to be
approved and envied.  And yet, recalling those two vivid, radiant faces,
Agnes dimly felt that there was something in life which Margot and Ron
had found, and she herself had missed.

"I don't understand!" she repeated to herself with wrinkled brows.  A
vague depression hung over her spirits; she thought uneasily of her
years, and wondered if she were growing old, unconscious of the fact
that she had never yet succeeded in being young.



CHAPTER EIGHT.

GLENAIRE.

Margot and Ronald slept through their long journey with the fortitude of
youth, enjoyed a delicious breakfast at Perth, took train again for a
couple of hours, and finally set out on the last and most enjoyable
stage of their journey--the six-mile drive to the head of Glenaire.

The first portion of the road gave little promise of beauty, but with
every mile that was traversed the scenery began to assume a wilder and a
sterner aspect.  The mountains were high and bare, with few trees upon
their banks, except here and there a patch of dark green firs.  When the
sun retired behind a cloud they looked somewhat grim and forbidding, but
as it emerged from the shelter they became in a moment a soft, blooming
purple; a wonder of beauty against the high, blue sky.  In the valley
were rolling plains of meadowland, of richest, most verdant green, with
here and there a blaze of golden gorse or of thickly-growing rushes, to
mark the presence of hidden water.

At long intervals was seen a little white cottage, set back from the
road, where some lonely shepherd tended his sheep; and, at the sound of
wheels, little linty-headed children would rush out to the gate, and
stand gazing at the strangers with big round eyes, which looked light
against the tan of their faces.

What a life for young and old to live all the year round, looking out on
the grim bare hills; alone with God and Nature, and the dumb, patient
animals!  Day after day alone, in a little niche between grey rocks;
alone in the summer-time, when the winds blew soft, and the buttercups
made splashes of gold across the green; alone in the winter, when the
mountains seemed to shut out the light, and the snow lay deep on the
ground.

Margot looked with a shudder at the tall poles set here and there along
the road.  She had inquired as to their purpose, and had been informed
that they were so placed to act as landmarks; for when the drifts lay
deep, the ends of the poles served to point out the direction of the
road, whereas without their aid the traveller would of a certainty be
lost on the moors.  Poor little linty-locked ones, imprisoned in the
tiny cot in those bitter days!

Margot's thoughts flew homeward, to the well-kept roads near her own
home; to the grumbling and indignation of the family, if perchance a
recent fall of snow had not been swept away as speedily as might be:
"The road was thick with mud.  Impossible to cross without splashing
one's shoes.  The snow was left to melt on the pavement--disgraceful!"
The Southerner railed at the discomfort of a greasy roadway; the
Northerner was thankful to escape death by the aid of a warning pole!

Suddenly and unexpectedly the road took a quick swerve to the right, and
lo, a narrow glen leading apparently into the very heart of the
mountains.

Glenaire village at last!  A little group of cottages, two whitewashed
kirks, a schoolhouse, a post office, a crowded emporium where everything
was to be purchased, from a bale of wincey to a red herring or a coil of
rope; a baker's shop, sending forth a warm and appetising odour; a
smithy, through the open door of which came out a glare of heat,
astonishingly welcome after the long, chill drive; bare-footed children
playing at tares by the wayside; an old man in a plaid, smoking a pipe
and turning on the new arrivals a kindly, weather-beaten face,--these
were the impressions left on Margot's mind as the horses put on an extra
spurt, knowing full well that rest and food were near at hand.

After the little group of houses there came another stretch of road for
perhaps three-quarters of a mile; a road which wound along between
moorland on the right, and on the left a straggling tarn, thickly
surrounded by rushes.  The cone-shaped mountain at the head of the glen
towered ever nearer and nearer, until it seemed as if it must be
impossible to drive a hundred yards farther.  Seen in the broad light of
a summer afternoon it was wonderfully beautiful; but it was a wild and
lonesome spot, and, given cloud or rain, its very grandeur and isolation
would increase the sense of gloom.

Margot had time to shiver at an imaginary picture before an exclamation
from Ron attracted her attention.  There it stood! the little white inn,
nestled beneath the shelter of a rock, so near to the head of the glen
that the road came to an abrupt ending but a few yards farther on.  A
door in the middle; two small-paned windows on either side; a row of
five windows overhead; to the right a garden stocked with vegetables and
a tangle of bright-coloured flowers; to the left the stable-yard.  This
was the Nag's Head, and in the doorway stood the redoubtable Mrs McNab
herself, staring with steely eyes at the daring feminine intruder.

The one overpowering impression made by Mrs McNab was cleanliness!  She
was so obtrusively, aggressively, immaculately clean, that the like of
her had never before dazzled the eyes of the benighted Southern
visitors.  Her lilac print gown was glossy from the press of the iron;
the hands folded across the snowy apron were puffed and lined from
recent parboiling; her face shone like a mirror from a generous use of
good yellow soap.  White stockings showed above her black felt slippers;
her hair--red streaked with grey--was plastered down on each side of her
head, and, for greater security, tied with a broad black ribbon.  A
stiff white collar was fastened by a slab of pebble rimmed in silver,
which proudly imagined itself to be an ornamental brooch.  There was not
a single feminine curve in her body; stiff and square she stood, like a
sentinel on guard, her lips pressed into a thin line; in her eyes a
smouldering flame.

Margot took her in, with one swift comprehensive glance, as the driver
reined up his tired horses before the door.  A temper; a quick temper, a
temper easily provoked, but a kindly woman nevertheless.  No country
bumpkin, but a shrewd, capable business woman, with two light blue eyes
fixed stolidly on the main chance; a woman, moreover, blessed with a
sense of humour; else why those deep lines stretching from nose to chin;
that radiating nest of wrinkles round the eyes?

Margot's courage revived at the sight.  She sprang down lightly from her
perch and advanced towards the house, smiling in her most fascinating
manner.

"How do you do, Mrs McNab?  We have arrived, you see.  So glad to be
here at last!"

The mistress of the inn stared into her face, stolidly unmoved.

"It was two brithers I was expecting.  I'm no caring for leddies!"

"You like gentlemen better?  Oh, so do I--_Much_!" cried Margot with a
gush.  "But they need us to look after them, don't they?  My brother is
not at all strong.  The drive has been delightful, but rather cold, all
the same.  I am afraid he may be chilled."  She stretched out a little
ungloved hand, and laid it lightly on the hard red fist.  "Feel!  We
_should_ love some tea!"

Mrs McNab looked down at the delicate little hand, up into the pleading
eyes, and over her set square face there passed a contortion,--there is
really no other word to describe it,--a contortion of unwilling
amusement.  The chin dropped, the lips twitched, the red lines which did
duty for eyebrows wrinkled towards the nose.  Similarly affected, an
Irishwoman would have invoked all the saints in her calendar, and rained
welcomes and blessings in a breath; an Englishwoman would have smiled a
gracious welcome; but Mrs McNab drew away from the beguiling touch,
turned a broad back on her guests, and with a curt "Come yer ways!" led
the way into the house.

Behind her back Margot beamed and grimaced triumphantly to her
confederate.  Victory was in the air!  Mrs McNab could not refuse to
grant a night's shelter to a tired and chilly traveller, and by to-
morrow--Margot smiled to herself, recalling the contortion of the dour
Scotch face,--by to-morrow she was complacently satisfied that Mrs
McNab would no longer wish to be rid of her unexpected guest!



CHAPTER NINE.

THE BROTHERS ELGOOD.

Inside the inn a mingling of odours greeted the nostrils.  Furniture
polish, soft soap, various whiffs from the bar, which by good fortune
opened into the stable-yard, and was distinct from the house itself; a
sweet, heavy odour of milk from the dairy; a smell of musk from the
plants ranged along the window-sills.  In the dining-room the tablecloth
was laid, with a large home-cured ham in the place of honour.  The floor
was covered with oilcloth; the furniture was covered with horsehair.  On
the mantelpiece stood two large specimens of granite, and a last year's
almanac.  Red rep curtains were draped across the window, so as to
conceal all the view except a glimpse of the road.  The walls were hung
with a fearsome paper, in which bouquets of deep blue flowers were
grouped on a background of lozenges of an orange hue.  Over the
mantelpiece hung a coloured print of Queen Victoria; over the sideboard
a print entitled "Deerstalking," representing two Highlanders in plaids
and bonnets standing over the prostrate form of a "monarch of the
waste."  In the corner by the window were massed together quite an
imposing collection of "burial cards," memorialising McNab connections
dead and gone, all framed to match in black bands with silver beadings.

Anything less homelike and inviting can hardly be imagined to welcome
tired travellers at the end of a long and chilly journey.  Margot
shivered as she crossed the portals, and rubbed her hands together in
disconsolate fashion, even her cheery optimism failing at the sight.

"It's so--_slippery_!" was the mental comment.  "What an appalling room
to sit in!  What must it be like in bad weather!  And no fire!  We'd die
of cold if we sat here all the evening.  If the worst comes to the
worst, I'll hug my hot bottle.  What a mercy I remembered to bring it!"

Mrs McNab was speaking in hard, aloof accents, after the manner of one
who, having been interrupted in her work by unwelcome intruders, is
still determined to perform her duty toward them, as a matter of
distasteful necessity.  Shades of the obsequious landladies of the
South!  The tired guests quailed before the severity of this Northern
welcome.

"If it's tea you're wanting, the kettle's on the hob.  It will be
waiting for you before ye're ready for it.  Ye'll be wanting a wash, I'm
thinking."

It was a statement, not a question, and, in response to it, brother and
sister meekly ascended the staircase to the rooms allotted to their use
in the front of the house--two whitewashed cribs, provided with nothing
which was not absolutely necessary; a small, white-covered bed; a wooden
chest of drawers, made to do duty for a dressing-table also, by the
presence of a small mirror set fair and square in the middle of a
coarse-grained mat; a few pegs on the wall, a deal washstand, and a
couple of chairs--that was all; but everything was exquisitely clean and
orderly, and what did one want with luxurious upholstery when a peep
through the open windows revealed a view which sent the blood racing
through the veins in very ecstasy of delight?  Purple mountains and a
blue sky; golden yellow of gorse--a silver sheet of water, reflecting
the dark fringe of the pines--it was wonderfully, incredibly beautiful
in the clear afternoon light.

Margot thrust her head out of the window, forgetful of cold and fatigue.
What joy to think of waking up every morning for a month to a scene
like this!  Thirty mornings, and on every one of them the sun would
shine, and the air blow clear and sweet.  She would put on her thick,
nailed boots, and clamber up the glen, to see what lay at the other side
of the pass; she would take her sketching materials, and sit on that
sunny knoll, trying to make some sort of a picture to send home to the
poor father in his smoky prison-house.  On hot days she would wade in
the cool grey tarn...

The little maid was knocking at the door, and announcing that tea was
ready, while Margot was still weaving her rose-coloured dreams.  It was
a cold douche in more ways than one, to return to the depressing
atmosphere of the dining-room, but the meal itself was tempting and
plentiful.  Scones and toast, eggs and strawberry-jam, besides the solid
flank of ham, and, better than all, plenty of delicious cream and fresh
butter.

Margot poured out tea for herself and Ron, and, taking the hot-water-jug
on her knee, warmed her numbed hands on it as she ate.  For the first
five or ten minutes no time was wasted in talking; then, the first pangs
of hunger being appeased, the two young people began to compare
impressions.

"Do you suppose this is the only sitting-room?  Do you suppose we shall
have to sit here in the evenings and when it rains?  Fancy a long wet
day, Ron, shining on horsehair chairs, with your feet on an oil-clothed
floor, gazing at funeral cards!  I should go to bed!"

"It wouldn't be a bad idea.  Rest cure, you know!  If we are very
energetic in fine weather, we may be glad of a rest; but there _is_
another room.  I caught sight of a sanctuary filled with woollen mats
and wax flowers, with a real live piano in the corner.  `The best
parlour,' I should say, and the pride of Mrs McNab's heart.  I don't
know if she will allow you to enter."

"She will; but she won't have a fire.  It has been spring-cleaned, and
has a waterfall of green paper in the grate--I can see it all!"  Margot
declared, with a shudder.  She hugged the hot-water-jug still closer,
and shivered expressively.  "I shall be obliged to raid the kitchen--
there's nothing else for it!"

"You daren't!"

Margot laughed derisively, but her answer was checked by the sudden
appearance of a man's figure pacing slowly past the window.  Brother and
sister sprang from their chairs, with a simultaneous impulse, rushed
across the room, and crouched behind the moreen curtains.  "Is it?" they
queried breathlessly of each other--"Mr Elgood?  Can it be?"

If it were Mr Elgood, he was certainly not imposing, so far as looks
were concerned.  A dumpy little man, of forty years or more, dressed in
a baggy suit of grey tweed, with carpet slippers on his dumpy little
feet.  He had evidently started out of the inn to enjoy a smoke in the
open air, sublimely unconscious of the scrutiny that was levelled upon
him the while.  His uncovered head showed a large bald patch, his face
was round and of a cherubic serenity.

"I could twist him round like a teetotum!" whispered Margot, holding up
a pert first finger and peering complacently.

"He looks terribly commonplace!" sighed Ronald disconsolately.  "Not in
the least the sort of man I expected."

Together they peered and peeped, ducking behind the curtains as the
stranger approached, and gazing out again the moment his back was
turned.  Every now and then he halted in his promenade, stuck his hands
inside his baggy pockets, and tilted slowly to and fro on the points of
his carpeted toes.  Anon he took his pipe from his mouth, and blew out
big whiffs of smoke, glancing around the while with an expression of
beatific contentment.  The whole appearance of the man was an embodiment
of the holiday spirit, the unrestrained enjoyment of one who has escaped
from work, and sees before him a pageant of golden idle hours.  Margot
and Ronald smiled in sympathy even as they looked.  He was a plain
little man, a fat little man, a middle-aged little man, but they
recognised in him the spirit of abiding youth, and recognising, felt
their hearts warm towards him.

"He is nice, Ron, after all!  I like him!"

"So do I.  A capital chap.  But he can't possibly be Elgood of the
_Loadstar_."

Even as he spoke the last word the door was thrown suddenly open, and
Mrs McNab entered, carrying a plate of hot scones.  She stopped short
to stare in surprise, while the two new arrivals hurried back to the
table, obviously discomposed at being discovered playing the part of
Peeping Tom.

Seated once more before the tea-tray, Margot made an effort at
composure; decided that honesty was the best policy, and said in her
most charming manner--

"We were looking at the gentleman who is walking up and down!  Another
of your guests, I suppose?  It is interesting to see people who are
staying in the same house."

Mrs McNab planted the scones in the centre of the table, and gathered
together the soiled plates with a wooden stolidity.  To all appearances
she might not have heard a word that had been said.  Margot seized the
hot-water-jug, and shivered ostentatiously, trusting to pity to prevail
where guile had failed; and sure enough the pale blue eye turned on her
like a flash of steel.

"What's ailing ye with the water-jug?"

"I'm ailing myself!" returned Margot meekly.  "So cold!  I can't get
warm.  Tired out after the long journey."

She tried her best to look delicate and fragile, but the healthy bloom
on her cheeks contradicted her words, and the landlady's reply showed no
softening of heart.

"Cramped, more like!  Better go ye're ways for a guid sharp trot, to
bring the blood back to your veins.  Ye'll be in time for the
afternoon's post; but unless ye're expecting news of your own, ye needna
fash for the rest.  Mr Elgood's gane to fetch them."

"Mr Elgood?"  Information had come at last, and in the most unexpected
fashion.  "The gentleman we have been watching?"

The thin lips lifted with a suspicion of scorn.

"Oh, him!  That's just the brither.  The real Mr Elgood's away till the
village.  You passed it on the road."

She disappeared into the "lobby," and brother and sister nodded at each
other solemnly, the while they munched the hot buttered scones.

"We'll go!  As soon as we have finished.  I long to see what he is like.
I'm glad it is not--" Margot nodded towards the window, and Ron
assented with a lofty superiority--

"Yes--he is not the type!  A good sort, no doubt, but hardly an
intellectual leader.  One could not imagine him writing those grand
articles."

"He may be useful, though, for he looks a friendly little soul, and if
we get intimate with him we must know his brother, too...  These scones
are the most delectable things!  Do you think She will be shocked if we
eat them all?  I feel a conviction that I shall get into the way of
calling her `She'--with a capital S.  `She who must be obeyed!'  I
thought She would be softened by the sight of me hugging the jug, and
offer to light a fire at once; but not a bit of it!  Her cure was much
more drastic.  I'll accept it this time, as it suits my purpose, but
when to-morrow comes,--we'll see!"

Margot nodded her head meaningly, pushed her chair back from the table,
and picked up the golf cape which lay over the back of a chair.  "After
all, I believe `She' is right!  It will do us good to have a scamper,
and the unpacking can wait until the light goes."  She peered discreetly
through the window, and held up a detaining hand.  "Wait a moment until
the `Brither' has turned back towards the village.  Then we'll sally out
of the door and meet him face to face."

Ron picked up his grey cap,--a coat he disdained, though he also was far
from warm,--and followed his sister into the bare entrance-hall, with
its pungent mingling of odours.  From the back of the house could be
heard the jangling of milk-pails, and a feminine voice raised in shrill
invective; but no one was in sight, and the conspirators emerged unseen
from the door of the inn, and turned to the left, endeavouring somewhat
unsuccessfully to appear unconscious of the approaching figure.

"Good afternoon!  Good afternoon!" cried the stranger, in a full genial
voice.

"Good afternoon!" cried the confederates, in eager response; then they
passed by, and were conscious, by the cessation of the crunching
footsteps, that the "Brither" had halted to look after them as they
went.

"He likes our looks!  He is going to be friendly...  I don't wonder!"
soliloquised Margot, looking with fond eyes at the tall figure of the
youth by her side; at the clean-cut, sensitive face beneath the
deerstalker cap.

"He was pleased to see us.  All men admire Margot," said Ron to himself,
noting with an artist's appreciation the picture made by the graceful
figure of the girl, with her vivid, healthful colouring, the little cap
set jauntily on her chestnut locks, the breeze showing glimpses of the
bright tartan lining of her cloak.

Starting under such promising auspices, brother and sister merrily
continued their way along the winding road which skirted the border of
the tarn.  Fresh from London smoke and grime, the clear mountain air
tasted almost incredibly pure and fresh.  One wanted to open the mouth
wide and drink it in in deep gulps; to send it down to the poor clogged
lungs,--most marvellous and reviving of tonics!

"It makes me feel--_clean_!" gasped Margot, at the end of a deep
respiration, and Ron's eyes lighted with the inward glow which showed
that imagination was perfecting the idea.

Margot loved to watch the lad at moments like these, when he strode
along, forgetful of her presence, oblivious of everything but his own
thoughts; his face set, save for those glowing eyes, and now and then an
involuntary twitch of the lips.  In her own poor way she could grasp the
trend of his mind, could toil after him as he flew.

That word "clean" had suggested wonderful thoughts.  God's wind, blowing
fresh over the ageless hills, untainted by the soil of the city; the
wind of the moorland and the heights!  Must not a man's soul perforce be
clean who lived alone in the solitude with God?  Dare he remain alone in
that awful companionship with a taint upon his life?...

Ronald dreamt, and Margot pondered, making no excuses for the silence
which is a sign of truest understanding, until the scattered village
came in sight, and curiosity awakened once more.

"Why did they have two churches, I wonder?  There can't be enough people
to fill even one, and every one is Presbyterian in the Highlands.  Why
don't they all meet together?" cried Margot, in her ignorance.

At the door of the outlying cottages the fair-haired matrons stood to
stare at the new arrivals.  They all seemed fresh and rosy, and of an
exquisite cleanliness; they each bore a linty-haired infant in their
arms, or held by the hand a toddling mite of two or three summers; but
they made no sign of welcome, and, when Margot smiled and nodded in her
friendly fashion, either retreated hastily into the shadow, or responded
in a manner painfully suggestive of Mrs McNab's contortion.  Then came
the scattered shops; the baker's, the draper's, (fancy being condemned
to purchase your whole wardrobe in that dreary little cell!) the grocer
and general emporium in the middle of the row; last of all, the post
office and stationer's shop combined.

Brother and sister cast a swift glance down the road, but there was no
male figure in sight which could by any possibility belong to a visitor
from the South.

"You go in, and I'll mount guard at the door.  Buy some postcards to
send home!" suggested Ron; and, nothing loath, Margot entered the little
shop, glancing round with a curious air.  There was no other customer
but herself; but a queer little figure of a man stood behind the
counter, sorting packets of stationery.  He turned his head at her
approach, and displayed a face thickly powdered with freckles of
extraordinary size and darkness.  Margot was irresistibly reminded of an
advertisement of "The Spotted Man," which she had once seen in a
travelling circus, and had some ado to restrain a start of surprise.
The eyes looking out between the hairless lids, looked like nothing so
much as a pair of larger and more animated freckles, and the hair was of
the same washed--out brown.  Whether the curious-looking specimen was
fourteen or forty was at first sight a problem to decide, but a closer
inspection proved the latter age to be the more likely, and when Margot
smiled and wished him a cheery good afternoon, he responded with unusual
cordiality for an inhabitant of the glen.

"Good efternoun to ye, mem!  What may ye be seeking, the day?"

Margot took refuge in the picture postcards, which afforded a good
excuse for deliberation.  The great object was to dally in the post
office as long as possible, in the hope of meeting the real Mr Elgood;
and to this end she turned over several packets of views, making the
while many inquiries; and the spotted man was delighted to expatiate on
the beauties of his native land, the more so, as, presumably, it was not
often that so lavish a purchaser came his way.

They were in the middle of the fourth packet of views, and the selected
pile of cards had reached quite a formidable height, when a familiar
whistle from the doorway started Margot into vivid attention, and a
minute later a tall dark man stepped hastily into the shop.

What a marvellous thing is family likeness!  In height, in complexion,
and feature alike this man appeared diametrically the opposite of the
stout little person encountered outside the inn; yet in his thin,
cadaverous face there was an intangible something which marked him out
as a child of the same parents.  The brother on whom Margot was now
gazing was considerably the younger of the two, and might have been
handsome, given a trifle more flesh and animation.  As it was, he looked
gaunt and livid, and his shoulders were rounded, as with much stooping
over a scholar's desk.

"A fine big bundle for ye the day, Mister Elgood!  I'm thinking the
whole of London is coming down upon ye," the postmaster declared
affably, as he handed over a formidable packet of letters.  Envelopes
white and envelopes blue, long manuscript envelopes, which Margot
recognised with a reminiscent pang; rolled-up bundles of papers.  The
stranger took them over with a thin hand, thrust them into the pockets
of his coat, with a muttered word of acknowledgment, and turned back to
the door.

Now for the first time Margot stood directly in his path, and waited
with a thrill of curiosity and excitement to see whether he would echo
his brother's welcome.  In this Highland glen the ordinary forms and
ceremonies of society were hopelessly out of place, and it seemed as if
perforce there must be an atmosphere of _camaraderie_ between the few
visitors whom Fate had thrown together in the spirit of holiday-making.

Margot's prettiest smile and bow were in waiting to greet the faintest
flicker of animation on the grave, dark face, but it did not come.  Mr
Elgood's deep-set eyes stared at her with an unseeing gaze--stared as it
were straight through her, without being conscious of her presence.  She
might have been a chair, a table, a post of wood by the wayside, for all
the notice bestowed upon her by the man whose favour she had travelled
some hundreds of miles to obtain.

Another moment and he had left the shop, leaving Margot to draw out her
purse and pay for her purchases in a tingling of pique and
disappointment.

"That gentleman will be staying up at the Nag's Head with yourself,"
vouchsafed the spotted postmaster affably.  "A fine gentleman--a ferry
fine gentleman!  They say he will be a ferry great man up in London.  I
suppose you will be hearing of his name?"

Margot's response was somewhat depressed in tone.

"Yes.  She had heard of Mr Elgood...  She would take four, not five,
postcards of the Nag's Head.  No; there was nothing else she was
needing.  The two penny packets of notepaper were certainly very cheap,
the coloured tints and scalloped borders quite wonderful to behold; but
she did not require any to-day, thank you.  Perhaps another time.  Good
morning!"

Outside in the road Ronald was pacing up and down, twirling his stick,
and looking bright and animated.  He came hurrying back to meet Margot,
hardly waiting to reach her side before breaking into speech.

"Well--well!  You saw him?  Did you notice the shape of his head?  You
can see it all in his face--the force and the insight, the imagination.
The face of a scholar, and the body of a sportsman, A magnificent
combination!  Did you notice his walk?"

"Oh, I noticed him well enough.  I noticed all there was to see.  I have
no complaints to make about his appearance."

"What have you to complain of then?  What has gone wrong?"

"He never noticed me!"

Ron laughed; a loud boyish laugh of amusement!

"Poor old Margot!  That was it, was it?  An unforgivable offence.  He
lives up in the clouds, my dear; compared with him, you and I are
miserable little earth-worms crawling about the ground.  It will take
some time before he is even aware of our presence.  We will have to make
friends with the brother, and trust by degrees to make him conscious of
our existence.  It's worth waiting for!"

Ronald was plainly afire with enthusiastic admiration of his hero; but
for once Margot refused to be infected.

"I'm not a worm!" she murmured resentfully.  "Worm, indeed!  I'm every
bit as good as he!"

For twenty yards she walked on in silence, tilting her chin in petulant
scorn.  Then--

"Do you remember the old story of Johnny-head-in-air, Ron?" she asked
mischievously.  "He had a fall.  A fall and a dousing!  If he isn't very
careful, the same sad fate may await your wonderful Mr Elgood!"



CHAPTER TEN.

AN EXCELLENT BEGINNING.

Dinner was served at seven o'clock at the Nag's Head, and was a
substantial meal, consisting of spiced salt beef, gooseberry pie, and
cheese.  Mrs McNab carved the joint at the sideboard, and directed the
movements of the maid by a series of glares which appeared to be fraught
with wondrous significance.

"Brither Elgood" took the head of the table, and beamed upon his
companions with cherubic good-nature, while his brother sat on his left,
immersed in thought and his dinner.  An elderly man with a strong
Glasgow accent came next, accompanied by a homely, kindly-looking wife.
(Margot sighed with relief to find that after all she was not the only
lady of the company).  Across from them sat a bowed old man, wearing a
clerical collar with his tweed coat, and a thin, weedy-looking youth,
evidently his son.  An eminently staid and respectable company, but
hardly of thrilling interest!

Ronald's handsome, clear-cut face stood out like a cameo among them,
while Margot's fluffy net blouse looked a garment of superfine
smartness.  There was no opportunity of talking to either of the
brothers Elgood, separated as they were by the length of the table.  The
clergyman, Mr Moffat, remarked that it had been a fine day, an ex-
ceptionally fine day!  Mrs Macalister, the Glasgow lady, handed the
mustard with the suggestion that it was always an improvement to a
boiled round; but with these thrilling exceptions the newcomers were
left to their own devices.  Conversation even among the older residents
was spasmodic and intermittent, and in no sense could the meal be termed
sociable or cheerful.

As soon as it was over "the real Mr Elgood" darted upstairs to his own
room, the remaining gentlemen strolled out of doors to smoke their
pipes, and Mrs Macalister escorted Margot to the best parlour across
the landing.

It was a chill, yet fusty little apartment, the shrine of the
accumulated treasures of Mrs McNab's lifetime.  Time was when she had
been cook to a family in Edinburgh, before McNab won her reluctant
consent to matrimony.  Photographs of different members of "The Family"
were displayed in plush frames on the mantelpiece, table, and piano-top.
Mr Moncrieff in Sheriff's attire, "The Mistress" in black satin;
Master Percy in cap and gown, Miss Isabel reclining in a hammock, Master
Bunting and Miss Poppet in various stages of development.  There was
also a framed picture of "The House"; a tambourine painted with purple
iris by Miss Isabel's own hands; an old bannerette in cross-stitch
pendent from the mantelpiece, a collection of paper mats, shaded from
orange to white, the glass-covered vase of wax flowers which had
attracted Ron's notice, one or two cheap china vases, a pot of musk
placed diametrically in the centre of a wicker table, a sofa, and two
"occasional chairs" gorgeously upholstered in red satin and green plush.

Mrs Macalister seated herself in the larger of the chairs, Margot took
possession of the smaller, and heroically stifled a yawn.  Another
evening she would wrap herself in her golf cape and go out into the
clear cool evening air; but now at last fatigue overpowered her; fatigue
and a little chill of disappointment and doubt.  How would it be
possible to become intimate with a man who sat at the opposite end of
the table, shut himself in his own room, and was apparently oblivious of
his surroundings?  With characteristic recklessness Margot had put on
her very prettiest blouse, hoping to make a good impression on this
first evening, but for all the attention it had received it might as
well have been black delaine!  She sighed and yawned again, whereupon
Mrs Macalister manifested a kindly concern.

"You're tired out, poor lassie!  Ye've had a weary journey of it.  From
London, I believe?  I have a daughter married in Notting Hill.  Will
that be anywhere near where you stay?  I'm hoping she'll be up to visit
us in the New Year, and bring the baby with her.  I have five children.
The eldest girl is settled in Glasgow.  I say, that's something to be
thankful for, to have a married daughter near by.  There was a young
lawyer paying her attention who's away to the Cape.  If it had been him,
I'd have broken my heart!  It's bad enough to have Lizzie in London,
where, if the worst comes to the worst, ye can get to her for thirty-
three shillings, but I couldn't bear one of my girls to go abroad..."

"But the men have to go--it's their duty to the Empire; and somebody
must marry the poor things," Margot declared, still stifling yawns, but
roused to a sleepy interest in Lizzie and her sisters.  She foresaw that
Mrs Macalister would need but the slightest encouragement to divulge
her entire family history, and wondered whether time would prove her to
be more of a solace or a bore.  As a rule, she herself preferred to
monopolise the larger share of a conversation, but to-night she was too
tired to do more than offer the necessary remarks by the way.

"Oh ay, that's right enough.  I don't object to their marrying, so long
as it isn't one of my girls.  I sent Isabel off on a visit to a school
friend when young Bailey began to grow particular.  A mother can manage
these things, if she's any gumption, without letting the young people
suspect that there is any interference.  They like their own way, young
people do, and Isabel is obstinate, like her father.  Mr Macalister can
be led, but he'll never be driven.  Ye have to ca' canny to get the
better of him."

Margot murmured a few words of polite but somewhat vague import, being
rather puzzled to decide in what light she was expected to view Mr
Macalister's characteristics.  It occurred to her that as the good lady
was determined to talk, the conversation might be carefully directed
into more interesting channels, and valuable information gleaned
concerning the other guests of the house.

"Have you been staying here long?  Are you going to make a long visit?"
she inquired; whereupon her companion began again with increased vigour.

"We've been a matter of a week, and as for the future, it just depends!
Mr Macalister's been failing for the past year.  He's just unduly set
on his business, and his nerves," (she pronounced it "nearves") "are in
a terrible condition.  The doctor warned him he would have a collapse if
he didn't get a rest at once.  `Take him away where he can't get letters
and telegrams every hour of the day,' he told me.  `Take him to the
quietest place you can find, and keep him there as long as ye can!'  So
here we are; but how long he'll put up with it, is past my knowledge.
He begins to weary already, and of course no man will ever believe that
any one else will take his place.  They're conceited creatures, my dear.
Mr Macalister--"

"It is nice for him having so many companions.  I suppose you know the
other visitors quite well?"  Margot felt that for one evening she had
heard as much as she cared for about Mr Macalister, and headed the
subject in the desired direction with unflinching determination.  "The
Mr Elgood who took the head of the table seems very agreeable."

"Oh ay, he's a friendly wee body!"  Mrs Macalister allowed,
patronisingly.  "There's no harm in him, nor in his brother neither,
though he keeps himself to himself, and is always busy with his fishing,
or writing, or what not.  My husband went fishing with him one day, but
they didn't seem to hit it exactly.  Mr Macalister is very genial-like
when he's in health, and he can't do with any one who's stand-off.  He
always says--"

"But Mrs McNab seems to prefer the younger brother.  He must be nice,
or she would not like him so much," interrupted Margot once more; and
Mrs Macalister smiled with unruffled good-humour.

"Oh ay, they're just two dour, silent bodies who understand each other
and each other's ways.  He goes and has a crack with her now and then,
and I've even heard them laugh,"--her voice took an awed and incredulous
tone--"but at the table he never raises his voice.  Mr Macalister says
he is very close.  He couldn't get anything out of him at all, and all
his friends say Mr Macalister ought to have been a lawyer, for he's
just wonderful for getting to the bottom of things.  Of course when a
man's run down, he isna at his best.  Ye can't judge him, as I say, as
you can when he's in his usual--"

Margot groaned in spirit!  To keep Mr Macalister out of the
conversation was evidently a hopeless feat.  She saw before her a long
succession of interviews when she would sit caged up in this little
room, listening to the expressions of his virtues and failings!  To-
night she felt a moral conviction that she would soon fall asleep under
the strain, and making an excuse of writing home, escaped to her own
room, scribbled a few words on the back of a postcard, wrapped herself
in her golf cape, and went out into the road in search of Ron.

It was still broad daylight, but now the sky was grey and colourless,
and the mountains had ceased to smile.  Like grim watching sentinels
they stood on either side, closing in the Glen in a solitude that was
almost awesome to behold.  It seemed impossible to believe that twenty-
four hours earlier one had been in the great city, and had considered
Regent's Park countrified!  Margot hurried forward to meet Ron, who was
strolling along by himself, the other men of the party being out of
sight.  He looked at her with some anxiety, as she approached, and asked
an eager question--

"What's the matter?  Aren't you well?  I thought you were not coming
out.  You look quite white!"

"I'm cold and tired, and--scarey!  The beauty seems to have disappeared,
and it's all so grim and grey.  I made an excuse and came out to you
with a card to post--but we needn't take it to-night, it's too far to
the village."

"Nonsense! the walk is just what you need.  You are tired with sitting
still, and a sharp trot will warm you up, and help you to sleep.  Come
along.  I'll give you a start to the bend of the road, and race you to
the nearest tree."

Margot was not in the least in the mood for running races, but as a
means of getting warm it was not to be despised, so she started
promptly, running with swift, easy steps, and gradually quickening pace,
as Ron gained upon her from the rear.  She had not been educated at a
girls' public school and been captain of the sports committee for
nothing, and, given a short handicap, could often come off best.  As the
following footsteps grew nearer and nearer she spurted bravely forward,
the ends of her cape streaming wildly in the breeze, her uncovered hair
ruffled into curling ends.  The tree was but a few yards distant; she
was laughing and panting, dodging from right and left, to prevent Ron
from passing by from behind, when round a bend in the road a figure
appeared directly in her path, the figure of Brither Elgood himself, his
round eyes bulging with surprise and curiosity.  He came to an abrupt
standstill in the middle of the road, and the racers followed his
example, looking, if the truth were told, a trifle abashed to be
discovered in so childish an amusement.

"Halloa!  What is the matter?  Is the Inn on fire?"

Margot laughed merrily.  The voice, the tone, the manner, were those of
a friend of a lifetime, rather than an acquaintance of an hour.  It was
impossible to answer formally; moreover, the humour of the idea made its
appeal.

"No, indeed!  On ice, more likely!  We were so cold that a race seemed
the only chance of getting warm!  I hope we didn't startle you too
much!"

"I like being startled," returned Mr Elgood complacently.  He stood
still, swinging his cane, looking from brother to sister with bright,
approving eyes.  "I was afraid you were feeling tired after your
journey, but evidently you have not yet reached the age of fatigue.
That's right!  Thats quite right!  I am glad that you have joined us at
the Nag's Head.  We are a respectable and harmonious party, but we need
life--young life!  We may weary _you_, but you will refresh and enliven
us.  In the name of our little company, I welcome you to the Glen?"

"Thank you, sir," said Ron simply, while Margot, as usual, hastened to
amplify his words.

"I hope we shall be friends.  I hope we shall all be friends.  I was
dreadfully tired really, but I felt worse staying in the house, and in
that little parlour after dinner I nearly fell asleep."

Mr Elgood's eyes lit up with a flash of humour.

"But when a man's out of health you canna judge him!  When he's in his
usual, Mr Macalister's a verra interesting character!" he said
solemnly.  Then, meeting Margot's start and smile, he began to laugh
again, and to shake in his happy, jelly-like fashion.  "Ah--ha, I know!
I guessed what was in store for you, as I saw you led away.  She's a
good woman that; a good, kind, womanly woman.  Her devotion does her
credit.  When you and I get a wife, sir, we shall do well if we find one
half so loyal and devoted."

He looked at Ron as he spoke, bringing his eyebrows together in a quick,
scrutinising glance; but Ron's face was blank and unresponsive.
Enshrined in his heart was a dim figure, half goddess, half fairy, a
creature of thistledown, of snow, of blossom tossed before the wind; a
lovely illusive vision who in due time was to appear and complete his
life.  It was a violation of the shrine to suggest a Mrs Macalister!
He stood still, his brows knitted, his lips pressed together in a thin,
warning line.  Margot was impatient at his lack of response, but all the
same he looked wonderfully handsome and interesting, and she could see
that Mr Elgood regarded him with awakened interest, conscious that here
was a character cut out of a pattern of its own, not made in the same
mould as the vast majority of his fellows.

They turned and walked together along the winding road.  Evidently
friendship progressed quickly in this quiet glen, and guests living
beneath the same roof accepted each other in simple, natural fashion, as
members of a common household.  Margot felt a sense of protection in the
presence of this little man, so much older than herself, so friendly, so
absolutely unsentimental in manner.  His head was on a level with her
own, and she read a frank admiration in his eyes, but it was an
admiration of which Agnes herself could not have disapproved.  He was
the kind of man one would have chosen for an uncle--an indulgent
bachelor uncle with plenty of money, and a partiality for standing
treat!

"Tell me about the people in the Inn!  I am always so interested in
people!" she cried eagerly.  "My brother likes other things better--
books and pictures and mountains--but I like the living things best.  I
know a good deal about Mr Macalister's health, and about Lizzie, and
Isabel, and their husbands and babies, and their lovers before they were
married.  They come from Glasgow--and the old clergyman is Scotch too, I
suppose.  Is every one Scotch except ourselves and you?  We come from
London--"

Mr Elgood's face shadowed quickly.

"Yes! but don't mention it.  Never mention it!" he cried quickly.  "I
live there, too, or as nearly live as is possible in the surroundings.
Now for three or four weeks I've escaped, and my one endeavour is to
forget that such a place exists.  I ask every one as a favour never to
mention as much as the name in my hearing.  You'll remember, won't you,
and be good enough to indulge me?  For the moment Miss--Miss Vane, I am
a Heelander, born and bred, a strapping young chieftain of five-and-
twenty.  The Elgood of Elgood, an it please you, in bonnet and kilt, and
my foot is on my native heather!"

He tilted his cap on one side, and threw a swagger into his walk,
cleverly remindful of the swirl of tartan skirts, then turning upon
Margot, queried quickly--

"Why do you laugh?  It's rude to laugh!  Is it so impossible to think of
me in the character?"

"I laugh because I'm pleased," Margot answered, truthfully enough.  "I
do love to pretend!  Let's bury London and our lives there, and pretend
that we are _all_ Highlanders!  We will be your guests up in your
mountain fastness, and you will take us about, and show us the scenes of
your historic feuds with neighbouring clans, and we will swear to help
you, if any new trouble should arise!"

"Right oh!" cried Mr Elgood, laughing.  "I shall be only too proud.
I'm a sociable beggar--during holiday time--and want to do nothing but
smoke and talk.  To talk nonsense, of course.  Nothing dull or
improving."  He cast a sudden, suspicious look at the girl's face.  "You
are not clever by any chance, are you?  I can't stand cleverness in the
country."

Margot laughed gaily.

"I think I am--rather!" she declared audaciously.  "I couldn't confess
to being stupid, even to please a Highland chief, but it's in a very
feminine way.  I don't know anything about politics or science, and I've
forgotten almost all that I learnt at school, but I take an interest in
things, and understand people pretty well.  I am generally clever enough
to get my own way!"

She laughed again, remembering the purpose of the moment, and its close
connection with this newly-made acquaintance.  Instinctively she turned
towards Ron, and the two pairs of brown eyes met, and flashed a message
of mischief, affection, and secret understanding--a glance which made
the watcher sigh with a sudden realisation of his own lost youth, his
bald head, and increasing bulk.  They were only a pair of children,
these newcomers; kindly, affectionate, light-hearted children, whose
companionship would be a tonic to a lonely, tired man.  The broad
cherubic countenance showed a passing shadow of wistfulness, as he
slacked his pace and said in hesitating tones--

"I am afraid I have tacked myself on to you, without waiting for an
invitation.  I will say good evening now, unless I can act as guide, or
help you in any way.  Have you any special object in your walk?"

"Only the post office in the village.  Do please come with us if you
will!  We should be delighted to have you!" cried Margot eagerly; and
Ron looked down into the little man's face with his beautiful dreamy
eyes, and said simply, "Please come, sir," with a sincerity which there
was no denying.

Mr Elgood beamed with satisfaction.  "Come awa, then, ma bonnie men!"
he cried jauntily, and waved his stick in the air.

For the very first evening Margot could not help thinking that they had
made an excellent beginning!



CHAPTER ELEVEN.

AN AWKWARD MEETING.

Being a prudent damsel, and wise in her day and generation, Margot set
before herself the subjugation of Mrs McNab as her first duty in
Glenaire.  To this end she repaired to her bedroom after breakfast on
the morning after her arrival, made her bed, carefully put away every
article of clothing, and tidied the oddments on the dressing-table; went
through the same performance in Ron's little crib adjoining her own, and
sailed downstairs in a glow of virtuous satisfaction.

Mrs McNab had apparently only one maid to help her to attend to her
eight guests and to keep the inn in its present condition of immaculate
order and cleanliness, though a shaggy-headed man--presumably the master
of the house--could be seen through the staircase window, meekly
brushing boots, and cleaning knives in a corner of the flagged yard.  He
had a small, wizened face, to which the unkempt hair, tufted eyebrows,
and straggling whiskers gave a strong resemblance to a Skye terrier dog.
Margot watched him now and then for a minute or two as she passed up
and down, and heard him speaking once or twice, but he "had the Gaelic,"
and the sing-song voice and mysterious words sounded weirdly in her
ears.  Sometimes, as he put the final polish on the boots, he would
break into song,--a strange, tuneless song which quavered up and down,
and ended on long-sustained notes.  Once even she saw the slippered feet
move in jaunty dance-step to and fro, but at the sound of a clatter of
saucepans from the kitchen close at hand he retired into his corner, and
polished with redoubled energy.  Mrs McNab evidently kept her husband
in order, even as she did her house!

Elspeth, the maid, was a girl of eighteen or twenty, with a thin figure
encased in a lavender print gown, and flaxen hair pulled so tightly back
from her forehead that her eyebrows seemed to be permanently elevated by
the process.  Her face shone from the effects of constant soaping, and
was absolutely void of expression.  From morn till night she rushed
breathlessly from one duty to another, rated continuously by Mrs
McNab's strident voice, with never so much as a bleat of protest.  When
waiting at table, she snored loudly from nervousness, and the big red
fist trembled as she carried the dishes to and fro, but her face
remained blankly expressionless as before.  Margot smiled at her
radiantly every time that they met, and mentally decided to bequeath to
her half her own wardrobe before leaving the Glen.  In comparison with
such a lot of drudgery, her own life seemed inexcusably idle and self-
indulgent!

It took a considerable amount of courage to beard in her own den a woman
of whom the members of her own household stood in such evident awe, but
there was at least no nervousness apparent in Margot's manner as she
tapped at the kitchen door at eleven o'clock that first morning, and
thrust her pretty face round the opening to request permission to enter.
Mrs McNab had descended from her work upstairs, and surely her heart
must be softened by the spectacle of those two immaculately tidy rooms!

"Mrs McNab, I'm cold!  May I come in and warm myself by your fire?"

The mistress of the inn turned a stonily surprised face from the table,
before which she stood chopping suet with a short-handled knife; she did
not suspend her work, but simply heightened her voice to make it heard
above the harsh, monotonous noise.

"Cold, are ye?  Havers!  It's a fine June day.  There's no call for any
one to feel cold, if they don't sit about idling away their time.  Put
on yer cloak, and go a turn down the Glen!"

Margot suppressed a thrill of indignation at that accusation of
idleness.  Had she not made two whole beds, and even stooped to pick
stray pins off the carpet?  She pushed the door open and walked boldly
forward.

"I'll go out as soon as I'm warm.  If I caught a chill, I should give a
lot of trouble, and you have enough to do without fussing over me.  I
know you would be a good nurse, Mrs McNab--good housekeepers always
are.  I know without being told that you have a cupboard chock full of
medicines and mixtures, and plasters and liniments, and neat little
rolls of lint and oilskins.  Is it this one?"  She laid her hand on a
closed door, drawing the while nearer and nearer to the fire.  "What a
perfectly beautiful oak chest!  That's genuine!  One can see it at a
glance.  The lovely elbow-grease polish can never be imitated.  So
different from the faked-up, over-carved things glittering with varnish
that one sees so often nowadays.  What a shame to keep it hidden away in
the kitchen!"

Mrs McNab pounded stolidly away at the suet.

"I dinna ken where the shame can be!" she responded drily.  "It's my own
chest, and my mither's before me, and it's a pity if I mayna keep it
where it pleases meself.  There's no call that I know of to turn out my
things, so that ither folks can have the fun of staring at them!"

Mrs McNab's manner was certainly the reverse of gracious, but,
remembering the momentary softening of the grim face which she had
witnessed the night before, Margot was determined not to be easily
discouraged.  Having gone so far, one could not retreat without
irrevocably burning one's boats.  Now or never victory must be wrested
from the enemy!

With a charming little air of domesticity she seated herself upon the
polished fender-stool at the side of the open grate, catching up her
skirt so that it should not be caught by the blaze, and smiling across
the room in her most confiding fashion.

"Please let me stay, Mrs McNab!  It's such a lovely cosy kitchen, and
my brother is out, and I feel so lost!  Couldn't I do something to help?
Are those gooseberries in that basket?  Do they need picking?  I can't
cook, but I can pick gooseberries with any man living.  Do let me!  You
said I was idling away my time.  Give me a chance to work!"

Mrs McNab grunted sourly.

"There's no call for you to do anything of the sort.  I never was one to
take work upon myself that I couldna perform.  The girl would have
picked them before now, if she didna go about making more work than she
gets through.  She can do them when she gets downstairs!"

Poor, struggling, machine-like Elspeth!  Margot felt a pang of pity for
her unappreciated efforts, and the determination to spare her one task
at least brought with it renewed courage.

"Let me do them as a pleasure to myself!  I should feel so proud when
the pie came to table, if I had helped to prepare it, and it would be an
excuse to sit by this lovely fire.  Please?"

"Kitchen work is no for the likes of you.  Ye wouldna like it if ye
soiled yer fine new gown!"

"If I asked you very nicely, perhaps you would lend me an apron!"

Mrs McNab threw down her chopper, and turned to wipe her hands on a
roller towel.  Perhaps she had come to the conclusion that as a pure
saving of time it would be wise to give in without further demur;
perhaps the twinkling appeal of the brown eyes touched a vulnerable spot
in her heart; perhaps the service itself was of some value at the
moment.

Margot did not concern herself as to causes, but was content to realise
that she had won the victory.  She meekly allowed herself to be tied
into a coarse white apron, and set to work on the big basket of berries
with nimble fingers.  Picking gooseberries is not a task which requires
much skill or experience; perhaps quickness is the criterion by which it
can best be tested, and Mrs McNab's sharp glances soon discovered that
her new apprentice was no laggard at the work.  The little green balls
fell from Margot's fingers into the basin with quite extraordinary
quickness.  She kept her eyes on her work, but her tongue wagged.

Margot talked, and Mrs McNab grunted, but the grunts grew ever softer
and less repellent.  The first attempt at a joke was met with a sniff of
disdain, but a second effort produced a dry cackle, and that was a
triumph indeed!  When the suet had been reduced to shreds, there was
bread to sift, and eggs to beat; and then Mrs McNab washed her hands
and dropped her working apron preparatory to going upstairs to see after
"the girl."  She made no demur at leaving Margot alone in the kitchen,
for, having undertaken a task, she was plainly expected to carry it
through.

It was astonishing how much fruit one basket could hold!  One wide-
lipped basin had already been filled, and another pressed into the
service, yet even a vigorous tilt to the side failed to show any signs
of the bottom of the basket.  Margot had achieved her double purpose of
warming herself and breaking the ice of her hostess's reserve, and now
was in a fidget to be off to join Ron on the hillside; but the fear of
Mrs McNab was strong upon her, and she dare not move until her task was
complete.

There she sat upon the low fender-stool, the big white apron concealing
the blue tweed dress, her pretty, flushed face bent over her work, to
all appearances the most industrious of Cinderellas, while the pendulum
of the old oak clock clicked noisily to and fro, and through the open
door came a whiff of clean cool air, laden with the scent of flowers and
sweet-briar, with the pungent aromatic odour of growing herbs, with the
heavy sweetness of the dairy.

Margot thought with a shudder of the gloomy underground regions in
Regent's Park, where the servants of the house spent the greater part of
their lives.  In her own future spells of authority she determined to be
very, very indulgent to pleas for "outings"; nay, even to make it a
matter of duty to plan days of sunshine and liberty for the patient,
uncomplaining workers.

The sun was beginning to peep forth from behind the clouds, and its rays
dancing across the kitchen floor were an almost irresistible temptation
to one newly escaped from town.  Margot gave the basket an impatient
shake, and, as another means to the desired end, popped a couple of
berries into her mouth.  So sweet did they taste, so fresh and ripe,
that another two soon followed suit, and henceforth she ate as steadily
as she worked.  There could be no hesitation in so doing, for in fruit-
picking it is an unwritten law that the worker is free to take his toll.

It was while Margot's hand was raised to her mouth for the eighth or
ninth time that a footstep sounded on the flagged floor of the scullery
behind her back, and a man's voice and laugh startled her into vivid
attention.  In both was a note which immediately recalled her companion
of the night before,--the cheery, warm-hearted pseudo-chieftain of the
Glen--yet in both rang a difference which told that the newcomer was not
he, but probably one closely connected by birth and association.

_The_ Mr Elgood; the Editor; the all-powerful dispenser of Ronald's
fortunes!  Margot felt convinced that it could be no one else, and
experienced a moment of keen anticipation, followed by a shock of
disgust, as she grasped the meaning of his words.

"Ah-ha!  So I've caught you pilfering again.  What will Mrs McNab say
when she finds all her good fruit disappearing like this?  You'll have
to bribe me not to carry tales.  Better turn me into a confederate--eh?
Are they ripe?"

A long thin hand descended over Margot's shoulder, the fingers
deliberately feeling after the plumpest and yellowest of the berries.
_He had mistaken her for Elspeth_!  Stupefaction mingled with
wrath,--_Elspeth_!  A vision of the square-built, flat-headed,
hopelessly graceless figure rose before Margot's outraged vision, and
resentment lighted into a blaze.  Could any apron in the world be large
enough to cause a resemblance between two such diametrically different
figures!  Margot appreciated her own beauty in an honest, unaffected
fashion, as one of the good gifts which had been showered upon her, and
for the moment the sense of injury eclipsed that of embarrassment.

With an impetuous movement she turned her face over her shoulder--that
vivid pink and white face which made such a startling contrast to
Elspeth's stolidity--and stared with widely-opened hazel eyes into that
other pair of eyes so near her own.

It was the younger Mr Elgood sure enough,--but seen close at hand, with
that mischievous smile curling his lips, he had an extraordinary
youthful and boyish appearance.  Margot received an instantaneous
impression of kindliness and strength, of a glinting sense of humour,
before the change came.  Such a change!  If she had been a wild animal
prepared to spring, horror and dismay could not have been more
eloquently depicted upon his face.  The eyes widened, the features
stiffened into a mask, the outstretched hand fell limply to his side.
He opened his lips to say something, several things, but the words were
unintelligible; a mere broken stammer of apology, as he wheeled round
and walked hastily from the room.

The door slammed behind him; she heard his footsteps over the flagged
hall.  Poor Margot!  Never before in her life had she so keenly desired
to make a good impression; never had she so signally failed.  It was
indeed an unpromising beginning to the campaign!



CHAPTER TWELVE.

A MOORLAND WALK.

A second time that day Margot came into close contact with Mr George
Elgood.  She was strolling slowly up and down the road with "the
Chieftain," waiting for Ron to make his appearance before starting for a
ramble over the countryside, when through the doorway of the inn out
dashed the "Editor," making in the same direction, in the headlong,
unseeing fashion which was plainly a characteristic.  When about twenty
yards distant, he lifted his eyes from the ground, became suddenly
conscious of the two figures slowly strolling towards him, stopped short
in the middle of the path, and, wheeling round, darted quickly in the
opposite direction.

The cut was too glaring to be ignored.  Margot's cheeks flamed with
annoyance, which the sound of a low chuckle by her side did not help to
subdue.  She reared her little head to its haughtiest angle, and spoke
in frosty accents.

"I am afraid I am in the way.  Pray don't let me interfere with your
plans.  Won't you join your brother before he goes too far?  He is
walking very fast--"

There was a note of satire in the last words which made the Chieftain
chuckle once more.

"Not I," he replied easily.  "I can have his society any time I like.
Yours is infinitely more refreshing.  Keeps up a pretty good pace, don't
he?  Scared, you know.  Scared to death!  Running to cover like a
frightened hare!"

"Scared of what?"

"Of you?"

Margot had known the answer to the question before she had put it, but,
woman-like, was none the less affronted.  Accustomed to be sought after
and admired by mankind in general, it was a disagreeable experience to
find herself repelled by the man of all others whom she was most anxious
to ingratiate.  Her face stiffened, and her rounded little chin
projected itself proudly, the while her companion looked on with
twinkling amusement.

"That makes you feel pretty mad, don't it?" he inquired genially.  "You
are not accustomed to that sort of treatment.  Most of 'em run the other
way, don't they?  I should, in their place!  But you mustn't be hard on
old George.  When I said `you,' I used the word as a plural, not as
applying with any special significance to your charming self.  It is
womankind as a whole which he finds terrifying.  Run a mile any day
rather than meet a woman face to face!  You must not imagine that there
is anything unusual in his avoidance of yourself.  It's always the same
tale."

Margot paused a moment, to reflect dismally that in this case there was
small hope for the fulfilment of her scheme, then ventured the natural
feminine question--

"Has he been crossed in love?"

"Who?  George?"  George's brother appeared to find something
mysteriously ludicrous in the suggestion, for he shook with delighted
laughter.  "Rather not!  Never had enough to do with a woman to give
himself a chance.  He's an old hermit of a bachelor, Miss Vane, absorbed
in his work, and becoming more of a slave to it every year of his life.
Even on a holiday he can't take it easy like other folks.  He has some
writing on hand just now--a paper of sorts which he has undertaken to
have ready by a certain time, and it appears to his benighted intellect
that a holiday is an excellent opportunity of getting it through.  Mad,
you see; stark, staring mad, but an excellent fellow all the same.  One
of the very best.  I have a large experience of men, but I've never met
one to compare with him for all-round goodness and simplicity of heart.
We all have our failings, and there are worse things than a little
shyness and reserve.  If he avoids you like the plague, try to pity him
for the loss it entails upon himself, and take no offence!  As I said
before, it's not a personal matter.  He knows that you are a stranger
and a woman, but I don't suppose he has the most glimmering idea of what
you are really like!"

"Oh yes, he has.  I was sitting in the kitchen this morning, and he came
and spoke to me under the impression that I was Elspeth!  The impression
lasted until he got quite near.  I was wearing an apron, but still,--I
wasn't pleased!  When he saw my face instead of hers, he fled for his
life.  But he _did_ see it!  He knows quite well what I am like."

"And in the depths of your little girl heart you think he is a strange
fellow, not to want to see you again!  You can't understand why he
should go out of his way to be kind to Elspeth, and avoid some one
infinitely more attractive.  Don't be offended, but that's a wrong view
to take of the case.  In my brother's eyes Elspeth is more attractive
than yourself, for she is poor, you see, and ugly, and leads a life of
all work and no play.  He might be able to do her a good turn.  Besides,
he has known her for several years, and has had time to become
reconciled to her existence, so to speak.  Custom goes a long way with
shy people.  George would rather beard a den of lions than face the
company in the inn parlour on a wet evening, but he is a welcome guest
in the kitchen, and Mrs McNab adores him to the extent of submitting to
muddy boots without a murmur.  He cracks jokes with her in a free-and-
easy manner which strikes awe into the heart of tremblers like myself.
It's my first visit to the Nag's Head, and I'm still in the stage of
abject submission.  She's a wonderful woman!"

Margot smiled with returning composure.  She divined her companion's
desire to change the subject of conversation, and was quite willing to
further his efforts.  What she had already heard concerning George
Elgood supplied ample food for meditation.

Viewed in dispassionate light, it was not wholly disconcerting, for if
the citadel could but once be stormed, there seemed a certainty of
gaining sympathy and consideration.  She must be content to wait in
patience, until the hermit had become reconciled to her existence; but
Ron, as a fellow-man, could venture on advances on his own account.

She must talk to Ron in private, and try to instil into him some of her
own energy and enterprise.  He was a dear, wonderful fellow, but
absolutely wanting in initiative.  Poets, she supposed, were always
dreamy, impracticable creatures, unfitted to attend to practical
interests, and dependent upon the good offices of some adoring woman
working meekly in the background.

Her eyes brightened eloquently as she watched her brother's approach
along the winding path.  What a handsome young figure of manhood he made
in his Norfolk jacket and knickerbockers, the close-fitting deerstalker
cap showing the light chestnut hair, from which no barber's shears could
succeed in banishing the natural kink and curl.  No one would suspect,
to look at him, that he cherished poetical ambitions!  Margot was
English enough to be thankful for this fact, illogical as it may appear.
She was proud to realise that he looked a thorough sportsman, and in
absolute harmony with his surroundings, and instinctively her pride and
affection voiced themselves in words.  The Chieftain might not be the
rose, but he was at least near the rose, and it would be well to enlist
his interest as well as that of his brother.

"Doesn't he look splendid?"

Mr Elgood started, and for a moment his round face expressed the
blankest bewilderment, then his eyes lit upon Ron, and comprehension
dawned.

"Ah, yes," he returned indifferently, "nice-looking lad!  Pity he hasn't
more to say for himself.  What's he supposed to do?  Business or
profession?"

"It's not decided.  He has not long come down from Cambridge.  He is
quiet, but he is very clever, all the same.  Much cleverer than most
boys of his age."

"Humph!"  The Chieftain's tone was distinctly sceptical.  "Yes!  Good
degree?"

Margot's colour heightened in embarrassment.

"Nothing special.  Only a pass.  It isn't in _that_ way that his
cleverness shows."

"Just so!  Just so!  I've met men like that before.  Well, don't spoil
him, that's all.  Worship him in your heart, but not to his face.  Looks
to me as if he needed hardening up.  A bit moony and sentimental.  What?
Don't mind my saying so, do you?"

"Not a bit!" returned Margot proudly; but she cared horribly, all the
same, and for the moment her liking for her companion suffered a
distinct eclipse.  "I know him, you see, and understand him as no
stranger can do.  He needs appreciation, for he is too apt to lose faith
in himself, and he is not sentimental at all.  He has plenty of
sentiment, but that's a different thing!"

"Yes--Um!" responded the Chieftain mischievously, his little eyes
twinkling with amusement as they scanned the girl's flushed, injured
face.  "Quite so!  Sorry I spoke.  He is, without doubt, an unusually
gifted young man."  He bowed towards Margot, with an inference too
transparent to be mistaken, and at which she was obliged to laugh,
despite herself.

Ronald joined them at this moment, and looked from one to the other with
his big, dreamy eyes.  Margot was irritated to see that he looked even
more absent-minded than usual, just when she was anxious that he should
show to most advantage.  He asked no questions in words, however, but
Mr Elgood hastened to reply to the unspoken query in his eyes.

"Your sister and I have been having an argument.  I don't know how it
came about.  Hate arguments myself, especially on a holiday.  Besides,
it's a waste of time.  Whoever knew any one converted by an argument?
Each one goes away more satisfied than ever that he is in the right, and
that his opponent is talking rubbish; present company excluded, of
course.  So far as I can remember, we were discussing cleverness.  If
you were asked for a definition of a clever man, what would you say?
How would you describe him?"

Ronald stood in the centre of the road, his hands clasped behind his
back, his brows knitted in thought.  Ninety-nine people out of a hundred
would have answered such a question off-hand with a few light words; Ron
bent the weight of his mind to it, with whole-hearted earnestness.

"Cleverness!" he repeated slowly.  "It's a poor word!  There's no depth
in it.  When a man is called clever, it means, I think, more an ability
to display a superficial knowledge than any real, stored-up wisdom.  It
may even be a double-edged compliment!"

"Scored!" cried the Chieftain gaily, as he waved his stick in the air,
and led the way forward with a jaunty tread.  "Proposed, seconded, and
carried that cleverness is a delusion to be sedulously avoided!  Just
what I always said.  I've known clever people in my day--squillions of
them, and, my hat! how stupid they were!  That little lass dabbling in
the lake is wiser than the whole crowd."  He pointed to a fair-haired
child wading by the side of the tarn.  "The spirit of childhood--that's
what we want! the spirit of joy in present blessings, and untroubled
trust for the future.  That little lass has a life of hardship and toil
ahead--but what does she care?  The sun shines to-day, and the funny wee
mannie fra the inn is going to gie her a bawbee for goodies.  It's a bad
habit which he has fallen into; a shocking bad habit, but he canna cure
himself of it."  He threw a penny to the smiling, expectant child, then
turning sharply to the left, led the way across the low-lying ground
towards the base of the nearest hill.

Margot noticed that, as he went, he turned from time to time quick,
scrutinising glances at Ron's face, as though trying to satisfy a doubt,
and classify him in his own mind.  Evidently the lad's serious, somewhat
pedantic manner of replying had invested him with a new interest, but
when he spoke again it was only in reference to the afternoon's
expedition itself.

"I am not going to take you far," he announced.  "I object to walking,
on principle.  What I maintain is, that we were never intended to walk!
If we had been, we should have had four legs, instead of two.  I never
walk if I can possibly induce something else to carry me.  And climbing
is another mistake.  What is it that one admires about mountains?  Their
height and grandeur!  Very well, then, where is the point of vantage
from which to view them?  The base, of course.  Climb up to the top, and
you lose the whole effect, to say nothing of chucking away your valuable
breath.  See that little path winding up the slope?  That leads to the
moors, and when you are once on the moors you can walk about on the
level all day long, if you are so disposed, and the air goes to the head
of even a lazy old fellow like myself, and makes me quite gay and
frisky.  You two youngsters can go on ahead and engage in light
conversation, while I puff along in the rear.  At my age and bulk even
the most witty conversation palls when climbing a hillside.  When you
get to the end of the footpath sit down and wait till I arrive, and take
no notice of me till I get my wind.  Then we'll start fair.  Off with
you!"

Margot ran forward, laughing, and she and Ron were soon scrambling up
the hillside, side by side.

"That's a good fellow.  I like him!  He will be very interesting when
one gets beneath the surface," pronounced the boy thoughtfully.

Margot nodded emphatically.

"I'm going to love him!  I feel it in my bones, and he is going to love
me too, but unfortunately he's the wrong man.  He says that his brother
hates women, and will do all he can to avoid me, so you must take things
into your own hands, Ron!  I can't help you, so you must help yourself.
You will have to cultivate his acquaintance, and get him to take you
about, and talk to him, and try to get intimate.  You will, won't you?
Promise me that you will!"

She looked with anxiety into the lad's face as she spoke, for previous
experience had proved that Ron possessed the full share of those
failings which are most characteristic of his temperament: a sudden
cooling of interest at critical moments; a shirking of responsibility,
an inclination to drift.  It was a part of the artistic nature, which
had an irritating effect on more practical mortals.  Now, as she feared,
he remained as placidly unmoved by the intelligence as if it had no
bearing whatever on his own prospects.

"Oh, all right.  I'll see!  You can't rush things, if a fellow keeps out
of your way.  Our opening will come in time, if we leave it to chance
and don't worry.  I believe I am going to do really good work here,
Margot!  I had an idea last night, after you had gone to bed, and I was
watching the stars through the pines.  I won't read it to you yet, for
it wants working up, but it's good--I am sure it is good!  And that
little stream along from the house; I found a song motif in
that,--`_Clear babbling over amber bed_!'  How's that for a word-
picture?  Shows the whole thing, doesn't it?  The crystal clearness of
the water; the music of its flow, the curious golden colour of the
rocks.  I'm always pleased when I can hit off a description in a line.
I'm glad we came, Margot!  There's inspiration in this place."

But for once Margot refused to be sympathetic.

"You did not come for inspiration, you came for a definite, practical
purpose; and if you write a hundred poems, it won't make up for
neglecting it.  Now, Ron, wake up!  I shall be angry with you if you
don't do all you can for yourself.  Promise me that you will try!"

"All right!  All right!  Do let us be happy while we have the chance,
Margot.  We had enough worry at home, and this place is perfect.  Let us
be wise children, and take no thought for the morrow.  What would Elgood
think of you, beginning to worry about the future, the moment his back
was turned?  She was a pretty illustration, wasn't she?--that little
bare-headed child.  Did you notice her hair?  Almost white against the
russet of her skin."

Margot grunted unsympathetically.  She was out of breath with scrambling
up the hillside, a trifle out of temper also, and consequently not in
the mood to enthuse over artistic contrasts.  She did not speak again
until the summit was reached, and she threw herself on the ground to
rest, and wait the arrival of the Chieftain.  His gasps and grunts could
already be heard in the distance, for, notwithstanding his various
handicaps, he was surprisingly nimble, and in a few moments a round
scarlet face hove into sight, and a round grey body rolled over on the
ground by her side.

"Piff! piff! whew-w!  Don't look at me, please--I don't like--being
stared at by ladies--when my--complexion is flushed!" he gasped
brokenly, mopping his face with a large silk handkerchief.  "Every
time--I--come up here--I vow I'll--never come again; but when _I'm_ once
up, I--never want to go down!"

He flourished his handkerchief to the left, pointing out the wide
moorland, beautiful in colouring with its bright rank greens, and the
bloomy purple of heather undulating gently up and down like the waves of
an inland sea.

The pure rarefied air fanned the heated faces of the climbers, and with
every moment seemed to instil fresh life and vigour.  It was easy to
believe that, once started, one would wander on and on over this
wonderful moorland, feeling no fatigue, possessed with the desire to go
farther and farther, to see what surprise lay beyond the next hillock.

After all, it was Mr Elgood who made the first start.  One moment he
lay still, puffing and blowing, bemoaning past youth, and bewailing loss
of strength; the next, like an indiarubber ball, he had bounced to his
feet, and was strutting forward, waving his short arms in the air, the
white silk handkerchief streaming behind him like a flag.

"_Allons, mes enfants_!  No lolling allowed on the moors.  Keep your eye
on that green peak to the right, and make for it as straight as a die.
A few hundred yards away is a cottage where, if we are very polite and
ask prettily, the guid-wife will give us a cup of buttermilk, the Gaelic
substitute for afternoon tea.  In a certain spot, which shall be
nameless, I should as soon think of drinking poison in glassfuls, but
after a stretch on the moors it tastes like nectar!  Take my word for
it, and try!"

That was the first walk which Ron and Margot had ever taken over a
Scotch moor, and to the last day of their lives they remembered it with
joy.  The air went to their heads so that they grew "fey," and sang, and
laughed, and teased each other like a couple of merry-hearted children,
while the Chieftain was the biggest child of the three.

At times he declared that he was tired out and must turn back, but
hardly were the words out of his mouth, than, lo, he was dancing an
impromptu hornpipe with astonishing nimbleness and dexterity!  He took a
lively interest in all that his companions did and said, and did not
hesitate to put question after question in order to arrive at a fuller
understanding of any case in point; but London, and all that took place
in London, remained a forbidden topic.  He was the Elgood of Elgood, and
they were "his bonnie men," and life outside the Highlands had ceased to
exist.

Margot was delighted that the little man should have a chance of seeing
Ronald in one of his lightest, most boyish moods, for from the
expression of his face she feared that he had not so far previously been
favourably impressed by the lad's personality.  Now it was impossible
not to admire and laugh as Ron played imaginary bagpipes on the end of
his walking-stick, or droned out lugubrious ballads in imitation of a
strolling minstrel who had visited the inn the night before.  The ballad
dramatised the circumstances of the moment: the perilous ascent, the
wandering of three strangers across the moor, the flowing bowl which was
to refresh and strengthen them for the return journey.  Ron's knowledge
of the native dialect was so slight that he fell back upon the more
stately phraseology of the early English poets, introducing a strange
Scotch term now and again with irresistibly comic effect.

The two listeners cheered him on with bursts of delighted laughter,
while at an unexpected clever turn, or apt stringing together of words,
the Chieftain would clap his hands and caper with delight.

"Good! good!" he would cry.  "Neat! neat!" while his twinkling eyes
surveyed the boy with increasing respect.  "Do you often improvise?" he
asked, when the ballad came to an end, and when Ron replied truthfully
enough in the negative, "Well, I have heard many fellows do it worse!"
was his flattering comment.

Margot had expected more, and felt that more was deserved, for the
ballad had been quite a brilliant effort to be rattled off on the spur
of the moment, but she could only hope that, in conclave with his
brother, the Chieftain might be more enthusiastic, and manage to impress
upon that absent-minded genius that the boy was worthy of his notice and
study.

In due time--a very short time, as it appeared--the cottage was reached
owned by the "guid-wife," who was ready to give--not sell--draughts of
buttermilk to the passers-by.  Margot was a little chary of the first
taste, but the keen moorland air had done its work, and she too found it
as nectar to the palate.  The guid-wife "had no English," but the two
women conversed eloquently with the language of the eyes, concerning the
sleeping baby in its cradle, and the toddling urchins around the door.
Here in the solitude this brave woman of the people reared her family,
made their garments, tended them when they were sick, cooked for them,
baked for them, washed for them, mended for them, and kept the three-
roomed cot as exquisitely clean as hands could make it.  The girl who
dusted the drawing-room and arranged a few vases of flowers as her duty
in life, gazed at her with awe, and felt ashamed of her own idle
existence!

The buttermilk quaffed, Mr Elgood led the way to a thick patch of
heather some few hundred yards nearer home, came to a standstill, and,
spreading his handkerchief under his head, lay down with great
deliberation and crossed his arms in beatific content.

"Now, if you want to discover what comfort means, find a soft patch for
yourselves, and take a nap before we start for home.  No upholsterer on
earth ever manufactured a mattress to equal a bed of heather.  If you
don't want to sleep, kindly keep your distance, and enjoy yourselves
with discretion, for if I'm awakened in the middle of my siesta, nothing
short of murder will appease me!"

He shut his eyes even as he spoke, and composed himself with a sigh of
content.  Margot, nothing loath, took off her cap, and, spreading her
cape over the bushes, nestled contentedly into its folds.  Ron scorned
the idea of sleep, but as he was curious to test the comforts of the
heather, down he lay in his turn; and so soft, so springy, so eminently
luxurious did the new bed appear, that he felt no desire to rise.
Presently his eyes dropped, rose heavily once or twice, and rose no
more.  Margot's head burrowed more deeply into her cape.  Deep regular
snores sounded from the bush where Mr Elgood reposed.  All three were
fast asleep!

The sun shone on them; the hum of a thousand insects rose from the
grass; high in the air a lark trilled his triumphant song.  It was rest
indeed to sleep and dream in such surroundings!



CHAPTER THIRTEEN.

THE TRUE CHURCH.

Life flowed on very quietly and uneventfully at the Nag's Head during
the next few days.  The clergyman and his son were determined walkers,
who set out each morning on a new expedition over the countryside, and
at the evening dinner boasted of the number of miles they had traversed.
What they had seen appeared to be of secondary importance, and they
were correspondingly depressed or elated according as they had fallen
short of, or surpassed previous records of distance.

Mr Macalister sat in the garden, reading day-old editions of the
"_Glasga He-rald_" from the front page to the last, while his wife made
pilgrimages to the village shop to buy infinitesimal articles of
drapery, and exchange details of domestic history with the good lady in
charge of the emporium.

Mr George Elgood went out fishing in a river two or three miles
distant, accompanied sometimes by his brother, but for the most part by
himself.  He also sat at his bedroom window, writing by the hour
together, and always and at all times he avoided his fellow-guests with
a quiet persistence which could not be gainsaid.  By the time that
Margot had been in the inn for four days, he had advanced to the point
of bidding her good-night and good morning, staring steadily at a point
about a yard above her head, while on one historic occasion he even
brought himself to remark that it was a fine day.  Once also, looking up
suddenly at dinner, she met his eyes fixed upon her with an expression
of intent scrutiny; but he turned aside in evident perturbation at being
discovered, and though the little puss thereafter wore her prettiest
dresses, and took special pains with the arrangement of her hair, the
incident was never repeated.

Goaded thereto by his sister's entreaties, Ronald had proposed himself
as the companion of a morning's fishing expedition, but he returned home
bored and irritated, and could not be persuaded to repeat the
experiment.  As Mr Elgood had left him at one point in the stream, and
himself repaired to another some two hundred yards distant, the
opportunities for conversation had been limited, while not even a twitch
of the line had rewarded his amateur efforts.

Margot coaxed, reasoned, and finally stormed, but to no avail.  In a
quiet, amiable fashion, Ronald could be as obstinate as a mule, and he
was plainly determined to go his own way.  The sun shone; the
surroundings were magnificent; he was free from the jarring dissensions
of home; in easy, light-hearted manner he was content to live for the
moment, and shut his eyes to troubles ahead.

"Remember what the Chieftain said to as the first day we were here!" he
protested vigorously.  "We ought to cultivate the spirit of children; to
rejoice in the present, and trust for the future; whereas you want me to
begin worrying the very first thing.  I do call it stupid of you,
Margot!"

"But, my dear boy--remember September!  September is coming, and if you
don't bestir yourself to take advantage of this last chance, you will be
bemoaning your hard fate, and calling out that your life is ruined!  Do,
for goodness' sake, descend from the clouds and be practical for once!
I'd help you if I could, but how can I, when the man refuses even to
look at me?"

Margot's voice took a plaintive tone as she uttered those last words.
She was so unaccustomed to be ignored, that the editor's avoidance
rankled in her mind.  She found her thoughts persistently returning to
him in every period of leisure; when he was near, she was acutely
conscious of his presence; when he was absent, her mind followed after
him, wondering where he was, what he was doing, and of what he was
thinking.  Having once seen a glimpse of the real man when, in the
character of Elspeth, she had looked into his face, sparkling with
youth, kindliness, and humour, she understood that the abstracted figure
which sat at the table at meal-times was but the shell of the real
George Elgood, and that, if the barriers of shyness and reserve could
once be overcome, he would prove an even more fascinating companion than
his brother.  The desire to know him grew daily in intensity, while,
unconsciously to herself, the personal element slowly predominated the
thought of Ron and Ron's future.

Now, as the brother and sister argued together, they were hurrying along
by the edge of the tarn on their way to service at the kirk, for this
was Sunday morning, the fifth day after their arrival at the Glen.

Ron, as usual, had been late in starting, and before the village was
reached his watch showed that it was already five minutes past the time
when service began.  They had been sternly directed by Mrs McNab to go
to the kirk at the far end of the village, and inquire for the inn pew,
but as it would take several minutes longer to traverse the length of
the straggling street, Margot suggested that it would be wise to attend
the nearer of the two churches.

"There can be no difference.  They are both Presbyterian," quoth she, in
her ignorance; so in they went, to be met in the doorway by an elder in
his Sabbath "blacks," his solemn face surrounded by a fringe of sandy
whisker.  The pews were very narrow and very high, shut in a box-like
seclusion by wooden doors; the minister, in his pulpit, was just giving
out the number of the psalm, and the precentor, after tapping his
tuning-fork and holding it to his ear, burst forth into wailing notes of
surprising strength and volume.  Margot rose automatically to her feet,
to subside in confusion, as the seated congregation gazed at her in
stolid rebuke.  In this kirk it was the custom to sit while singing, and
stand during prayers--a seemly and decorous habit which benighted
Southerners had difficulty in understanding.

The singing of the metrical psalm sounded strangely in unaccustomed
ears.  Of melody there seemed little or none.  The notes ascended and
fell, and quavered into odd, unexpected trills and shakes, but it was
sung with an earnestness and an intensity which could not fail to be
impressive.  The women, clean and tidy in their Sabbath bravery, sat
with eyes fixed unwaveringly on their books; the children piped lustily
by their sides; at the door of the pews the heads of the different
families peered over their spectacles at the printed words, their
solemn, whiskered faces drawn out to abnormal length.

In a corner by himself sat a weather-beaten old shepherd, singing with
closed eyes, his shaggy head waving to and fro in time with the strain.
Up in this lonesome glen those words had been his stay and comfort
during a life of hardship.  Like David of old, he had sung them on the
mountainside, and they had been as a guide unto his feet, a lamp unto
his eyes.  He needed no book and no spectacles to enable him to join his
note to the strain.  Margot looked at him with a thrill of understanding
and reverence.  A saint of God, a lowly dweller on earth, for whom was
waiting one of the "higher" places in the kingdom of heaven.

The sermon was long and rambling, and somewhat difficult for Southern
ears to follow; there was a solemn collection taken in small boxes
secured to long wooden handles, thrust in turns down the various pews
with somewhat comical effect; then the service was over, and Margot and
Ron came out into the village street, to find themselves face to face
with a stream of worshippers who were returning from the farther kirk.
Foremost among the number was Mrs McNab, large and imposing to behold
in her Sabbath best, with her small husband ambling meekly by her side.
Margot smiled at her in friendly fashion, and was dismayed to receive in
return a glare of incredulous anger.  What had she done to offend?  She
could not imagine what was wrong, and continued to stare blankly after
the unbending figure, until presently her eye encountered another well-
known face bent upon her with a smile.  The Chieftain and his brother
were close behind; so close that even the Editor's shyness could not
attempt an escape.  In another moment they were walking together, Margot
between the two men, Ron on the outside, a few paces apart from the
rest.

Margot glanced from one to the other with puzzled eyes.  The Chieftain
beamed upon her frankly.  The Editor looked, and looked away, knitting
his brows in embarrassment.

"What have I done?" she cried eagerly.  "Why is Mrs McNab so cross?
All was peace and joy when we left the inn.  I had done my very best to
help her, and now--you saw how she scowled!  How can I possibly have
offended her in this short time?"

The Chieftain chuckled softly.

"A good deal, I'm afraid!  I'm sorry for you, after all your efforts at
conciliation.  It's bad luck that you should have stumbled upon an
unforgivable offence.  I'm afraid that there is no doubt that you will
be turned out of the inn, neck and crop.  Not to-day, perhaps, as she
won't send out the trap, but certainly to-morrow morning."

"I shan't go!" protested Margot defiantly.  If eviction had been
probable, she did not believe that the Chieftain would have taken it in
so unperturbed a fashion; but it was evident that she had committed some
offence, and that he was aware of its nature.  "But what have I done?"
she continued urgently.  "That's what I want to discover.  There can't
be any harm in going to church!"

"Oh, can't there, just?  That's the whole crux of the matter.  You went
to the wrong church!"

There was a pause of stunned surprise while Margot gasped, and Ron's
sleepy eyes brightened with curiosity.

"The wrong church!  How can that be?  They are both Scotch
Presbyterians?  There is no difference between them?"

"Only this difference, that the members of one kirk are hardly on
speaking terms with the members of the other!  That their leaders are at
law together in the Courts, and that feeling runs so high, even in this
sleepy hollow, that Mrs McNab, being a Free, refuses to sell milk to
the `Wees,' and is shamed to the heart to think that a guest living
under her house-roof should have condescended to attend their service.
It will be all over the Glen this afternoon that the bonny lady fra the
inn chose to give her offering of siller to the `Wees,' and they will
bear themselves haughtily in consequence.  Mrs McNab feels that she has
been humiliated the day in the eyes of the neighbourhood.  No wonder she
looks coldly upon you!"

Margot flushed with resentment and indignation, but before she could
speak Ron burst into impetuous speech.

"They quarrel?  Up here?  A handful of men and women among the great
mountains?  How can they do it?  How can they harbour ill-feeling?

"And what can they quarrel about?  There must be such tiny, trivial
differences.  I am thankful I am not a Dissenter!" cried Margot proudly.
"There are so many sects that one gets muddled among them all, and even
in the same one it appears that there are differences!  I am thankful
that I belong to the Church."

The Chieftain looked at her quietly.

"To which Church?"

"The Church of England, of course."

"Oh!"  He elevated his light eyebrows expressively.  "Because its
members have no quarrels with one another?"

Margot frowned uneasily.

"Oh, well--I suppose they have.  But at the worst there are two parties,
as compared to a dozen.  You cannot deny that we are more united?"

"I should not boast too much about the unity of a Church in which civil
war is permanently in progress; and what about charity and humility of
mind?  Suppose now, suppose for a moment that a family of strangers come
to live in the house next your own in town, and you discover among other
things that they are Dissenters.  How does it influence your attitude
towards them?"  He thrust his ruddy face nearer, staring fixedly into
hers.  "Answer me that!  Feel just the same?  Exactly the same?  No
cooling off in the intention to call?  _Quite_ sure you never used the
expression, `only Dissenters!' and passed by on the other side?"

Margot's cheeks blazed.  Her lids dropped, and the corners of her mouth
drooped in self-conscious shame.  There was a moment's silence, then a
low murmur sounded on her ear, and, looking up quickly, she saw the
Editor's dark face turned upon his brother, with reproach written large
in frowning brow and flashing eye.  He was taking up the cudgels in her
defence; reproaching his own brother for forcing her into an awkward
position.

Margot's heart gave a leap of joy at the discovery; in the flash of an
eye her mood, her outlook on life, the very scene itself, seemed
transfused with new radiance and joy.  The sun seemed to peep out
through the grey clouds, the underlying anxiety and worry of the past
days took to itself wings, and disappeared.  Her brown eyes thanked him
with a glance more eloquent than she was aware; she laughed softly, and
her laugh was sweet as a chime of bells.

"Yes, I have!  I confess it.  I've been narrow-minded and uncharitable,
and a snob into the bargain.  I've no right to throw stones...  What
Church do you belong to, Mr Elgood?"

The little man stood still in the middle of the road, throwing out his
arms on either side, with a gesture wonderfully eloquent.  His round,
chubby face shone with earnestness and exaltation.

"To the Church of Christ!  The Church of loyalty, and obedience, and
love towards the brethren!  To the Church of Christ, wherever I find it!
When will Christians learn to remember the points on which they agree,
rather than those on which they differ?  The questions of form and
ceremony; of Church government and ritual; how small they are, how
unutterably trivial, compared to the great facts of the Fatherhood of
God, and the sacrifice of Christ!  Did the Power who made every one of
us with different faces and different forms, expect us all to think
mathematically alike?  I cannot believe it!  It is our duty to trust in
God and love our brethren; to live together in peace, seeing the best in
each other, acknowledging the best, thinking no evil!  To see men who
make a profession of religion quarrelling and persecuting each other for
trivial differences, is a ghastly spectacle--a ghastly spectacle!"  He
walked on, swinging his short arms to and fro, then suddenly looked up
with a keen glance into Ron's eager face.

There were no traces of dreaminess in the brown eyes at this moment; the
dilated pupil gave to them an appearance of extraordinary depth and
intensity; it was easy to see that the lad had been swept off his feet
by the rugged force of the speaker's words, and was kindled into a like
enthusiasm.

Lads of nineteen and twenty make it so much a matter of principle to
suppress all exhibition of feeling, that it is almost startling to come
across one who is not ashamed to betray a little human emotion.  Mr
Elgood evidently found it so, for he continued to cast those quick
peering glances until the inn was reached, and the little party
separated, to prepare for the midday dinner.

Margot walked slowly up the steep staircase leading to her room, and sat
herself down on the bed to think out the problem.  More and more did she
long to pierce through the armour by which the strange, silent man was
enveloped; but how was it to be done?  Opportunities were few and far
between, and now, for the first time in her life, confidence in her own
powers deserted her, and she was overcome by a strange new feeling of
humility and doubt.  Who and what was she, that such a man should stoop
to accept her friendship; poor, unlettered girl that she was, while he
was acknowledged as one of the leading intellects of the day?  Yet deep
in her heart the thought lingered that between this man and herself
existed a certain affinity, which, given an opportunity, might bridge
over greater gaps than that of intellect and learning.  How was that
opportunity to be gained?  She might be willing to sacrifice much to
attain it, but there was one thing that could never be thrown on one
side--her natural maidenly pride and dignity!  Not even for Ron's sake
could she bring herself to make advances to a man who, so far from
exhibiting any desire for her company, had gone markedly out of his way
to avoid it.

Ron himself was useless in such circumstances, a creature of moods,
living for the moment only, content to forget the future in the
enjoyment of present good.  To drive him into the Editor's company
against his will could do no good, since he would certainly reveal
himself in his worst light, and in aggravating, topsy-turvy fashion he
had taken a violent fancy for the wrong brother.

The Chieftain's geniality and candour, his boy-like lightness of heart
on the one hand, his passion for right on the other, were fast
developing a species of hero-worship in the lad's mind.  Margot foresaw
that, as time passed by, the two would grow closer together, and that
any chance of intimacy with the other brother would retreat helplessly
into the background.  Unless--!  Her face flamed as a possible solution
of the difficulty darted suddenly into her mind.  Could she?  Dared she
risk it?  Yes, she could.  It would be difficult, but she could bring
herself to face it, if after a few days' consideration it still seemed
the only way out of the difficulty.

Margot rose from the bed, and began quietly to prepare for dinner.  Her
face looked grave and anxious, but it had lost its troubled, fretted
expression.  She had made up her mind what to do, and with the decision
came rest and ease of mind.



CHAPTER FOURTEEN.

MUSIC HATH CHARMS.

For the next two days it rained incessantly, and Margot sat in the
little parlour of the inn talking to Mrs Macalister, or rather
listening while Mrs Macalister talked, and playing draughts with Mr
Macalister, who had relapsed into hopeless gloom of mind, and was with
difficulty prevented from rushing home by the first train.

"The doctor said we were to keep him from the office for a good month at
least, and there's not three weeks of the time gone by.  If he goes back
now, what will be the use of spending all this money on travelling and
keep, and what not?  It will be all clean waste," sighed the poor dame
sadly.  "He's a bit fratchety and irritable, I'm free to admit, but you
should not judge a man when his nerves are upset.  There's not a better
man on earth than Mr Macalister when he has his health.  It's dull for
a man-body to be shut up in an inn, without the comforts of home, and
feeling all the time that there's money going out.  It is different when
he can be out and about with his fishing and what not.--If you could
just manage to amuse him a bit, like a good lassie!..."

The good lassie nodded reassuringly into the troubled, kindly face.

"I'll do my best.  I have an old father of my own, who has nerves too,
and I am used to amusing him.  I'll take Mr Macalister in hand till the
weather clears."

It was not a congenial task, for, truth to tell, Mr Macalister was not
a beguiling object, with his lugubrious face, lack-lustre eyes, and
sandy, outstanding whiskers; nor did he in the first instance betray any
gratitude for the attention bestowed upon him.  A stolid glance over his
spectacles was his first response to Margot's overtures; his next, a
series of grunts and sniffs, and when at last he condescended to words
it was invariably to deride or throw doubt on her statements.

"Tut, nonsense!  Who told you that?  I would think so, indeed!" followed
by another and more determined retreat behind the _Glasgow Herald_.

In the corner of the room Mrs Macalister sat meekly knitting, never
venturing a look upwards so long as her spouse was in view, but urging
Margot onward by nods and winks and noiseless mouthings, the moment that
she was safe from observation.

It had its comic side, but it was also somewhat pathetic.  These two
good commonplace souls had travelled through life together side by side
for over thirty years, and, despite age, infirmity, and "nearves", were
still lovers at heart.  Before the wife's eyes the figure of "Mr
Macalister" loomed so large that it blocked out the entire world; to
him, even in this hour of depression, "the wife" was the one supreme
authority.

Fortunately for herself and her friends, Margot was gifted with
sufficient insight to grasp the poetry behind the prose, and it gave her
patience to persevere.  Solution came at last, in the shape of the
wheezy old piano in the corner, opened in a moment of aimless wandering
to and fro.  Margot was no great performer, but what she could play she
played by heart, and Nature had provided her with a sweet, thrush-like
voice, with that true musical thrill which no teaching can impart.  At
the first few bars of a Chopin nocturne Mr Macalister's newspaper
wavered, and fell to his knee.  Margot heard the rustle of it, slid
gradually into a simpler melody, and was conscious of a heavy hand
waving steadily to and fro.

"Ha-ha!" murmured Mr Macalister, at the end of the strain.  "Hum-hum!
The piano wants tuning, I'm thinking!"  It was foreign to his nature to
express any gratification, but that he had deigned to speak at all was a
distinct advance, and equal to a whole volume of compliments from
another man.

"Maybe," he added, after a pause, "if ye were to sing us a ballad it
would be less obsearved!"

So Margot sang, and, finding a book of Scotch selections, could gratify
the old man by selecting his favourite airs, and providing him with an
excuse to hum a gentle accompaniment.  Music, it appeared, was Mr
Macalister's passion in life.  As a young man he had been quite a
celebrated performer at Penny Readings and Church Soirees, and had been
told by a lady who had heard Sims Reeves that she preferred his
rendering of "Tom Bowling" to that of the famous tenor.  This anecdote
was proudly related by his wife, and though Mr Macalister cried,
"Hoots!" and rustled his paper in protest, it was easy to see that he
was gratified by the remembrance.

Margot essayed one Scotch air after another, and was instructed in the
proper pronunciation of the words; feigning, it is to be feared, an
extra amount of incapacity to pronounce the soft "ch," for the sake of
giving her patient a better opportunity of displaying his superior
adroitness.

Comparatively speaking, Mr Macalister became quite genial and agreeable
in the course of that musical hour, and when Margot finished her
performance by singing "The Oak and the Ash," he waxed, for him,
positively enthusiastic.

"It's a small organ," he pronounced judicially, "a ve-ry small organ.
Ye would make a poor show on a concert platform, but for all that, I'm
not saying that it might not have been worse.  Ye can keep in tune, and
that's a mearcy!"

"Indeed, Alexander, I call it a bonnie voice!  There's no call for
squallings and squakings in a bit of a room like this.  I love to hear a
lassie's voice sound sweet and clear, and happy like herself, and that's
just the truth about Miss Vane's singing.  Thank ye, my dear.  It's been
a treat to hear you."

The broad, beaming smile, the sly little nod behind Mr Macalister's
back, proclaiming triumph and delighted gratitude--these sent Margot up
to her room heartened and revived in spirits, for there is nothing on
earth so invigorating as to feel that we have helped a fellow-creature.
The sunshine came back to her own heart, even as it was slowly breaking
its way through the clouds overhead.  She thrust her head out of the
window, and opening her mouth, drank in great gulps of the fresh damp
air, so sweet and reviving after the mouldy atmosphere of "the parlour."
Over the mountain tops in the direction from which the wind was blowing
the clouds were slowly drifting aside, leaving broader and broader
patches of blue.  Blue!  After the long grey hours of rain and mist.
The rapture of it was almost beyond belief!  A few minutes more, and the
glen would be alight with sunshine.  She would put on boots, cap, and
cape, and hurry out to enjoy every moment that remained.

The strong-soled little boots were lifted from their corner behind the
door, and down sat Margot on the floor, school-girl fashion, and began
to thread the laces in and out, and tie them securely into place.  Then
the deerstalker cap was pinned on top of the chestnut locks, and the
straps of the grey cape crossed over the white flannel blouse.  Now she
was ready, and the sunshine was already calling to her from without,
dancing across the floor, and bringing a delicious warmth into the
atmosphere.

Margot threw open the door and was about to descend the narrow
staircase, when she stopped short, arrested by an unexpected sound.
Some one was singing softly in a room near at hand, repeating the
refrain of the ballad which she had taken last on her list.  The deep
bass tones lingered softly on the words--

  "And the lad who marries me,
  Must carry me hame to my North Coun-tree!"

George Elgood was echoing her song in the seclusion of his own room!  He
had been indoors all the time, then, listening to her while she sang!
Margot's cheeks grew hot with embarrassment, yet in the repeated strain
there was a suggestion of appreciation, of lingering enjoyment which did
away with the idea of adverse criticism.

"Oh, the Oak and the Ash,"--the strain seemed to swell in volume,
growing ever nearer and nearer.  "And the lad who marries me--"

The door flew open, and they stood facing one another, each framed as in
a picture in the lintel of the doorways, divided only by a few yards of
boarded passage.  The strain came to an abrupt conclusion, frozen upon
his lips by the shock of surprise and embarrassment.  For the third time
in their short acquaintance Margot looked straight into his eyes; for
the third time recognised in their depths something that in mysterious
fashion seemed to respond to a want in her own nature; for the third
time saw the lids drop, heard an unintelligible murmur of apology, and
watched a hasty retreat.

For a moment Margot stood motionless, an expression of wounded pride
clouding the young rounded face, then very slowly descended the
staircase, traversed the length of the "lobby," and stood outside the
door, looking anxiously to right and left.

There he was, a strong, well-built figure in knickerbockers and Norfolk
coat striding rapidly up the hill path to the right,--trying, no doubt,
to put as much distance as possible between himself and the
objectionable girl who seemed ever to be appearing when she was not
wanted.  For a long minute Margot stood gazing miserably ahead, then
turning resolutely to the left, came face to face with the Chieftain
returning from the village with his pockets bulging with papers.

His sudden appearance at this moment of depression had a peculiar
significance to the girl's mind.  Doubt crystallised into resolution;
with a rapid beating of the heart she determined to grasp her courage in
both hands, and boldly make the plunge which she had been meditating for
some days past.



CHAPTER FIFTEEN.

REVELATIONS.

At sight of Margot the Chieftain first beamed delight, and then screwed
his chubby face into an expression of concern.

"Halloa!  What's up?  You look pretty middling doleful!" cried he,
casting an eloquent glance towards the inn windows, then lowering his
voice to a stage whisper, "Macalisteritis, eh?  Too much stuffy parlour
and domestic reminiscences?  Never mind!  Pack clouds away, and welcome
day!  The sun is shining, and I have a packet of bull's eyes for you in
one pocket and a budget of letters in another.  No, you don't!  Not one
single one of them to read in the house--come and sit on a stone by the
tarn, and we'll suck peppermints and read 'em together.  Wonderful how
much better you'll feel when you've had a good blow of fresh air.  I was
prancing mad when I went out this afternoon, but now--a child might play
with me!"

He threw out his short arms with his favourite sweeping gesture, his
coat flapped to and fro in the breeze, he stepped out with such a jaunty
tread on his short broad feet, that at sight of him Margot's depression
vanished like smoke, and she trotted along by his side with willing
footsteps.

"That's better!  That's better!  Never saw you look melancholy before,
and never want to again...  `Shocking disappearance of dimples!  A young
lady robbed of her treasures!  Thief still at large!  Consternation in
the neighbourhood!'  Eh!  How's that?  Young women who have been endowed
with dimples should never indulge in low spirits.  It's a criminal
offence against their neighbours.  Where's your brother?"

Margot laughed at the suddenness of the question.  It was one of the
Chieftain's peculiarities to leap upon one like this, taking one
unawares, and surprising thereby involuntary revelations.

"I don't know," she answered truthfully.  "Over the hills and far away,
I suppose--studying them in a new aspect.  He loved them yesterday in
the rain; to-day he felt sure that it would clear, and he wanted to see
the mists rise.  He does so intensely love studying Nature."

"Humph?"

Margot looked at him sharply, her head involuntarily assuming a
defensive tilt.

"What does `Humph' mean, pray?"

"Just exactly and precisely what it says!"

"It doesn't sound at all flattering or nice."

"Probably not.  It wasn't intended to be."

"Mr Elgood, how can you!  What can you have to say about Ron that isn't
to his credit?  I thought you liked him!  I thought you admired him!
You must see--you _must_--that he is different from other boys of his
age.  So much more clever, and thoughtful, and appreciative!"

"That's where the pity comes in!  It's pitiful to see a lad like that
mooning away his time, when he ought to be busy at football or cricket,
or playing tricks on his betters.  What business has he to appreciate
Nature?  Tell me that!  At twenty--is it, or only nineteen?--he ought to
be too much engrossed in exercising his muscles, and letting off steam
generally, to bother his head about effects of sun and mist.  Sun and
mist, indeed!  A good wholesome ordinary English lad doesn't care a toss
about sun or mist, except as they help or hinder his enjoyment of
sport!"

"Ronald is not an `ordinary English boy'!"

"Hoity-toity!  Now she's offended!"  The Chieftain looked at his
companion's flushed cheeks with twinkling eyes, not one whit daunted by
her airs of dignified displeasure.  "Don't want me to say what isn't
true, do you?  He's a nice lad--a very nice lad, and a clever one into
the bargain, though by no means the paragon you think him.  That's why
I'm sorry to see him frittering away his youth, instead of making hay
while the sun shines.  He'll be old soon enough.  Wake up some fine
morning to find himself with a bald head and stiff joints.  Then he'll
be sorry!  Wouldn't bother my head about him if I didn't like the lad.
Have a peppermint?  It will soothe your feelings."

The parcel of round black bull's eyes was held towards Margot in
ingratiating fashion.  It was impossible to refuse, impossible to
cherish angry feelings, impossible to do anything but laugh and be happy
in the presence of this kindest and most cheery of men.  Margot took the
peppermint, and sucked it with frank enjoyment the while she sat by the
tarn reading her letters.  Having received nothing from home for several
days, the same post had now brought letters from her father, Edith, and
Agnes, to say nothing of illustrated missives from the two small
nephews.  Mr Vane's note was short, and more an echo of her own last
letter than a record of his own doings.

"Glad to know that you like your surroundings--pleased to hear that the
weather keeps fine--hope you will enjoy your excursion," etcetera,
etcetera.

Just at the end came a few sentences which to the reader's quick wits
were full of hidden meaning.

"Agnes is taking the opportunity of your absence to organise a second
spring cleaning.  It seems only the other day since we were upset
before.  I dined at the club last night.  It is difficult to know what
to do with oneself on these long light evenings.--I would run away over
Sunday, if I could think of any place I cared to go to...  Town seems
very empty."

"Poor dear darling!" murmured Margot sympathetically, at which the
Chieftain lifted his eyes to flash upon her a glance of twinkling
amusement.  He made no spoken comment, however, but returned to the
perusal of his own correspondence, while Margot broke open the envelope
of Agnes's letter.

Two sheets of handwriting, with immense spaces between both words and
lines--"My dear Margot," as a beginning--"Your affectionate sister,
Agnes Mary Vane," as a conclusion.  Thrilling information to the effect
that the charwoman was coming on Friday.  Complaints of the late arrival
of the sweep.  Information requested concerning a missing mat which was
required to complete a set.  Mild disapproval of the Nag's Head Inn.  "I
cannot understand what you find to rave about in such quarters."  A sigh
of impatience and resignation was the tribute paid to this letter, and
then Margot settled herself more comfortably on the stone, and prepared
to enjoy a treat--a real heart-to-heart talk with her beloved eldest
sister.

Edith had the gift of sympathy.  Just as Agnes never understood, Edith
always seemed able to put herself in another's place, and enter into
that person's joys and griefs.  She herself might be sad and downcast,
but in her darkest hour she could always rejoice in another's good
fortune, and forget her own woes in eager interest and sympathy.  Now,
sitting alone in the dreary lodging-house sitting-room in Oxford
Terrace, she was able mentally to project herself into the far-off
Highland glen, and to feel an ungrudging joy in the pleasure of others.
Never a hint of "How I envy you!  How I wish I were there!"  Not a
mention of "I" in obtruding, shadow-like fashion from first to last, but
instead, tender little anecdotes about the boys; motherly solicitude for
their benefit, and humble asking of advice from one younger and less
experienced than herself; an outpouring of tenderness for her husband,
and of a beautiful and unbroken trust and belief, which failure was
powerless to shake.

"Jack is working like a slave trying to build up the ruins of the old
business.  It is difficult, discouraging work, and so far the results
are practically nil, but they will come.  Something will come!  More and
more I feel the conviction in my heart that all this trouble and
upheaval have been because God has some better thing in store for us
both.  We have only to wait and be patient, and the way will open.--I
don't want to be rich, only just to have enough money to live simply and
quietly.  We are so rich in each other's companionship that we can
afford to do without luxuries.  Last night we had a dinner of herbs--
literally herbs--a vegetarian feast costing about sixpence halfpenny,
but with such lots of love to sweeten it, and afterwards we went out for
a stroll into the Park, and I wore the hat you trimmed, and Jack made
love to me.  We _were_ happy!  I saw people looking at us with envious
eyes.  They thought we were a pair of lovers building castles in the
air, instead of an old married couple with two bouncing boys, having the
workhouse in much nearer proximity than any castle--but they were right
to envy us all the same.  We have the best thing!"

The letter dropped on to Margot's knee, and she sat silent, gazing
before her with shining eyes, her face softened into a beautiful
tenderness of expression.  For some time she was unconscious that her
companion had returned his own letters to his coat pocket, and was lying
along the ground, his head resting upon his hand, watching her with a
very intent scrutiny; but when at last her eyes were unconsciously drawn
towards him, she spoke at once, as if answering an unspoken question.

"What a wonderful thing love is!"

The Chieftain's light eyebrows were elevated in interrogation.

"In connection with the `dear darling' previously mentioned, if one may
ask?"

"That was my father.  I love him dearly, but just now I was thinking of
the other sort of love.  This letter is from my eldest sister.  She was
a beautiful girl, and could have married half a dozen rich men if she
had wished, but she chose the poorest of them all, a dear, good,
splendid man, who has been persistently unsuccessful all the way
through.  Everything--financially speaking, I mean,--has been against
him.  They have had continual anxiety and curtailment, until at last
they have had to let their pretty house and go into dingy lodgings.  My
father is very down on Jack.  He is a successful man himself, and don't
you think it needs a very fine nature to keep up faith in a person who
seems persistently to fail?  But my sister never doubts.  She loves her
husband more, and idealises him more, than on the day they were
married."

"And you call that man unsuccessful?"

Margot hardly recognised the low, earnest tones: her quick glance
downward surprised a spasm of pain on the chubby face, which she had
always associated with unruffled complacency.  It appeared that here
also lay a hidden trouble, a secret grief carefully concealed from the
world.

"Isn't that rather a misuse of the word?  A man who has gained and kept
such a love can never be called a failure by any one who understands the
true proportions of life.  With all his monetary losses he is rich...
And she is rich also...  Richer than she knows."

Margot's hand closed impulsively on Edith's letter and held it towards
him.

"Yes, you are right.  Read that, and you will see how right you are.
There are no secrets in it--its just a word-photograph of Edith herself,
and I'd like you to see her, as you understand so well.  She's my
dearest sister, whom I admire more than anybody in the world."

Mr Elgood took the letter without a word, and read over its contents
slowly once, and then, even more slowly, a second time.  When at last he
had finished he still held the sheet in his hands, smoothing it out with
gentle, reverent fingers.

"Yes!" he said slowly.  "I can see her.  She is a beautiful creature.  I
should like to know her in the flesh.  You must introduce us to one
another some day.  I haven't come across too many women like that in my
life.  It would be an honour to know her, to help her, if that were
possible."  He sighed, and stretching out his hand laid the letter on
Margot's knee.  "You are right, Miss Bright Eyes, love is a wonderful
thing!"

Margot glanced at him with involuntary, girlish curiosity, the
inevitable question springing to her lips before Prudence had time to
order silence.

"Do you--have you--did you ever--"

The Chieftain laughed softly.

"Have I ever been in love, you would ask!  What do you take me for,
pray?  Am I such a blind, cold-hearted clod that I could go through the
world for forty-five years and keep my heart untouched?  Of course I
have loved.  I do love!  It was once and for ever with me--"

"But you are not--"

"Married?  No!  She died long ago; but even if she had lived she was not
for me.  She would have been the wife of another man; a good fellow; I
think she would have been happy.  As it is, we remember her together.
She was a bright, sunshiny creature who carried happiness with her
wherever she went...  To have known her is the comfort of our lives--not
the grief.  We have lived through the deep waters, and can now rejoice
in her gain...  Do you know there is something about yourself which has
reminded me of her several times!  That is one reason why I like being
with you, and am interested in your life.  I should like you to think of
me as a friend, and come to me for help if you were ever in need of
anything that I could give."

The colour rushed into Margot's cheeks, and her heart beat with
suffocating quickness.  Here was the opportunity for which she had
longed, offered to her without any preliminary effort or contriving on
her own part!  The place, the time, the person were all in readiness,
waiting for her convenience.  If through cowardice or wavering she
allowed the moment to pass, she could never again hope for another such
opening.  Already the Chieftain was watching her with surprise and
curiosity, the softness of the last few minutes giving place to the
usual alert good-humour.

"Hey?  Well!  What is it?  What's the trouble?  Out with it!  Anything I
can do?"

"Mr Elgood," said Margot faintly, "you are very good, very kind; I am
most grateful to you.  I hope you _will_ help me, but first there is
something I must say...  I--I have been deceiving you from the
beginning!"

"What's that?"  The Chieftain sat up suddenly and stared at her beneath
frowning brows.  "Deceiving me?  _You_?  I don't believe a word of it!
What is there to deceive me about, pray?  You are not masquerading under
a false name, I suppose?  Not married, for instance, and passing
yourself off as single for some silly school-girl freak?"

"Oh no!  Oh no!  Everything that I have told you about myself is true,
absolutely true."

"I knew it.  You are not the sort that could act a lie.  What's all the
fuss about, then?"

"What I have told you is true, but--but--I have not told you _all_!"

"I should think not, indeed!  Who expected that you should?  I am not at
all sure that I care to hear it."

"Oh, but--I want to tell you!"

The Chieftain chuckled with amusement.  He was evidently comfortably
convinced of the non-importance of the forthcoming revelations, and
Margot's courage suffered another ebb as she returned his unsuspicious
glance.

"I--we--we knew that you were staying at the Nag's Head!"

The Chieftain cocked a surprised eyebrow, startled but unresentful.

"You knew that we were here, before you arrived, and met us in the
flesh?  Is that so?  I wonder how you heard!  I make it a rule to keep
my holiday plans as secret as possible, for the very good reason that a
holiday _is_ a holiday, and one wants a change of companionship as well
as scene.  How in the world did you hear that we were bound for
Glenaire?  I'm curious!"

Margot's eyelids fell guiltily, but Nature had generously endowed these
same lids with long black lashes, the points of which curled up in a
manner distractingly apparent when shown in contrast with a flushed pink
cheek; so it happened that instead of being hardened by the sight, the
Chieftain drew a few inches nearer, and smiled with genial approval.

"Well, out with it!  _How_ did you hear?"

"I--asked!"

"Asked?"  The brow became a network of astonished wrinkling.  "You
asked?  Whom did you ask?  And why?  What did you know about us, to give
you interest in our comings or goings?  This grows curiouser and
curiouser!  I imagined that we were as absolute strangers to you as you
were to us."

"It--it--there was the magazine--it was because of the magazine."

"Oh, indeed!  You knew the name through the magazine!  I understand!"
The Chieftain straightened himself, and the laugh died out of his eyes.
For the first time in the history of their short acquaintance Margot saw
his face set in firm, hard lines, the business face which had been left
at home, together with the black coats and silk hats of City wear, and
seeing it, trembled with fear.  But it was too late to retreat; for
better or worse she was bound to go forward and complete her half-
finished revelations.

"I wanted to get to know your brother, because he is the editor of the
_Loadstar_, and I had heard people say that he was the most powerful
literary man in London; that if he chose to take up any one who was
beginning to write he could do more to help than any one else.  We know
no literary people at home, and I wanted to.  Badly!"

"I see!  Just so.  Written a novel, and want help to get it into print,"
returned the Chieftain slowly.  He had drawn down his lips into an
expression of preternatural gravity, but the hard look had disappeared.
The murder was out, and he was not angry; he might pretend to be, but
Margot was too sharp-witted to be frightened by a pretence.

She drew a sigh of relief as she replied--

"No, indeed.  Couldn't to save my life.  It's--Ron!  I was thinking of
him, not of myself.  He is a poet!"

The Chieftain groaned aloud, as if in pain.

"Oh, I know you won't believe it, but he is!  He writes wonderful poems.
Not rhymes, but poems; beautiful poems that live in your mind.  He will
be another Tennyson or Browning when he is a little older."

The Chieftain groaned again, a trifle more loudly than before.

"It's true!  It really is true.  You must have seen yourself that he is
different from other boys of his age.  You heard him reeling off those
impromptu lines the other day, and said how clever they were!  I have
seen you looking at his face when he has been thinking out some idea.  I
knew what he was doing, and you didn't; but you guessed that he was
different from ordinary people."

"I saw that he was mooning about something, and wondered if he was right
in the head!  If he'd been my boy, I should have taken care to keep his
nose so close to the grindstone that he would have no time to moon!
Poet, indeed!  Didn't you tell me that your father was a successful
business man?  What is he about, to countenance such nonsense?"

"He doesn't!" replied Margot sadly.  "No one does but me, and that's why
I had to act.  Father agrees with you.  He doesn't care for books, and
looks down upon literary men as poor, effeminate sort of creatures, who
know nothing of the world.  He is ashamed that his only son writes
verses.  Ron detests the idea of business, but he has had to promise
father that he would go into his office if at the end of a year he had
had no encouragement to persevere in literature.  But how is a young
unknown poet to make himself known?  The magazines announce that they
can accept no unsolicited poetical contributions; the publishers laugh
at the idea of bringing out a book by a man of whom no one has heard.  A
boy might be a second Shakespeare, but no one would believe in him until
they had first broken his heart by their ridicule and unbelief.  The
year is out in September, so matters were getting desperate, when at
last I--thought of this plan!  I felt sure that if a man who was a real
judge of literary power met Ron face to face, and got to know him, he
would realise his gifts, and be willing to give him a chance.  It was no
use trying in London in the midst of the full pressure of work, but in
the country everything is different.  I knew a man who knew a man in the
office of the _Loadstar_, and asked him to find out your brother's
plans--"

As she was speaking Margot was conscious of a succession of stifled
chuckles which her companion vainly tried to suppress.  The Chieftain's
amusement had evidently overmastered his threatened displeasure, and
when at length she paused, he burst into an irresistible guffaw of
laughter, rubbed his hands together, and cried gleefully--

"Stalked him!  Stalked him!  Poor old George!  Big game, and no mistake.
Ran him to earth...  Eh, what?  Bravo, bravo, Miss Bright Eyes!  You
are a first-class conspirator."

He laughed again and again, with ever-increasing merriment, laughed till
his eyes disappeared in wrinkles of fat, till the tears streamed
helplessly down his cheeks.  His portly form shook with the violence of
his merriment; he kicked the air with his short, fat feet.

Margot stared at this strange exhibition in an amazement, which
gradually changed into annoyance and outraged dignity; so that when at
last the Chieftain sat up to mop his eyes with a large silk pocket-
handkerchief, he beheld a very dignified young lady sitting by his side
in a position of poker-like rigidity, with her head tilted to an
expressive angle.

"Sorry!" he panted hastily.  "Sorry I smiled.  A compliment, you know,
if you look at it in the right light.  It's such an uncommonly good
idea, and so original.  `The Stalking of the Editor'--eh?  Well, now
that you have made such a rattling good beginning, why don't you go on
and prosper?  Here you are; there he is; the field is your own.  Why
don't you go in and win?"

Margot's face fell, and her haughty airs vanished, as she turned towards
him a pair of widely-opened eyes, eloquent with plaintive surprise.

"But I can't!  How can I, when he runs away the moment I appear?  I made
Ron go fishing with him one day, but he went off and left him alone, and
now it's no use persuading any more.  Ron says it is only waste of time!
As for me, I have hardly spoken a word to him all this time, though I
feel that if I did really know him, I--" she hesitated, knitting her
brows, and pursing her soft red lips--"I could make him understand!  I
decided at last to confide in you, because you have been so kind and
friendly to us from the first that I felt sure you would be willing to
help.  You will, won't you?  Even if personally you don't approve of a
literary career, will you give Ron a chance of living his life in his
own way?  If your brother approved of his writings, and helped him to a
beginning, even the very smallest beginning, father would be satisfied
that he was not wasting his time."

The Chieftain clasped his hands around his knees, and sat staring at her
with thoughtful gaze.  His eyes rested upon the clear childlike eyes,
the sweet lips, the broad, honest brow, as though studying them in a new
light, and with regard to some problem suddenly presented to the mind.
Whatever was the question waiting to be decided, the answer was self-
evidently favourable, for his eyes lightened, he stretched out an
impetuous hand, and laid it upon her arm.

"Right!" he cried heartily.  "Right!  I'll help you!  The lad's a good
lad, and a clever lad; but what I do will be for your sake, not his!
You are a dear girl!  The dearest girl I have ever met--save one!  For
the sake of the bit of her that lives again in you, I am at your
service.  You shall have your chance.  From to-day forward I will see to
it that George makes a member of our party wherever we go.  He has done
enough writing; it is time that he began to play.  Make him play, Miss
Vane!  He has been old all his life; teach him to be young!  He is the
best fellow in the world, but he is fast asleep.  Wake him up!  There is
just one condition, and that is, that you leave your brother and his
scribblings alone for the time being!  Don't mention them, or any
question of the sort, but be content just to show yourself to George,
your own bright, natural girl-self, as you have shown it to me.  Learn
to know one another, and forget all about the boy.  His turn will come
later on!  You promise?"

"Ye-es!" faltered Margot shyly.  "Yes, I do; but you must promise too--
that you will, that you won't, won't let your brother think--"

The Chieftain touched her arm once more, with a gesture of kindly
reassurement.

"Don't you worry, little girl!  He shall have no thoughts about you that
are not altogether chivalrous and true.  It's not you who are going to
move in this matter, remember!  You've given it over into my hands; it
is I who am to pull the strings.  No, you needn't thank me.  It strikes
me that we are going to work out pretty even over this business.  If you
want help for your brother, I need it just as badly for mine.  I have
realised for a long time that he needed a medicine which no doctor could
supply."  He looked into her face with a sudden radiant smile.  "It
strikes me I might have searched a very long time before finding any one
so eminently fitted to undertake his cure!"



CHAPTER SIXTEEN.

RASPBERRY-PICKING.

Margot awoke the next morning with the pleasant feeling that something
was going to happen, and as she dressed, curiosity added an additional
savour to the anticipation.  What would happen?  How would the Chieftain
set to work?  Would the Editor consider himself a victim, or yield
readily to the temptation?  Certainly he had so far manifested no
anxiety to enjoy her society, had, indeed, seemed to avoid her at all
points; and yet, and yet-- Margot possessed her full share of a woman's
divination, and, despite appearances, the inward conviction lingered
that if the first natural shyness could be overcome, he would soon
become reconciled to her companionship, and might even--she blushed at
her own audacity!--_enjoy_ the change from his usual solitude.

Like a true daughter of Eve, Margot did her best to help on this happy
_denouement_ by taking special pains with her toilette, putting on one
of her prettiest washing frocks, and coiling her chestnut locks in the
most becoming fashion, and the consciousness of looking her best sent
her down to breakfast in the happiest of spirits.

Other countries may carry off the palm for the cooking of the more
elaborate meals of the day, but surely no breakfast can touch that
served in a well-ordered Scottish household.  The smoothly boiled
porridge, with its accompaniment of thick yellow cream; the new-laid
eggs; the grilled trout, fresh from the stream; the freshly baked "baps"
and "scones," the crisp rolls of oatcake; and last, but not least, the
delectable, home-made marmalade, which is as much a part of the meal as
the coffee itself.  He must be difficult to please who does not
appreciate such a meal as Mrs McNab served each morning to her guests
in the dining-room of the Nag's Head!

It was when Margot had reached the marmalade stage, and George Elgood, a
persistent late-comer, was setting to work on his ham and eggs, that the
Chieftain fired the first gun of the assault.

"When are you going to invite us all to come up and have tea with you in
your fairy dell, George?" he demanded suddenly.  "What do you think of
this fellow, Mrs Macalister, finding a veritable little heaven below,
and keeping it to himself all this time?  There's an easy ascent by the
head of the glen for those who object to the steeper climb; there's
shade, and water and everything that the most exacting person could want
for an ideal picnic.  To be in the country on a day like this, and not
to go for a picnic seems to me a deliberate waste of opportunity, What
about this afternoon, eh?  That will suit you as well as any other time,
I presume?"

To say that the Editor appeared surprised by this sudden threatening of
his solitude, would be to state the case too mildly.  He looked
absolutely stunned with astonishment, and his predicament was all the
more enhanced by the fact that already murmurs of assent and
anticipation welcomed the idea from his neighbours to right and to left.
He stared incredulously into his brother's face, wrinkled his brow, and
stammered out a laboured excuse.

"I'm afraid I-- The dell is in no sense my property--No doubt it would
make a capital site for a picnic, but I--I have no right to pose as
host!"

"Rubbish, my boy!  You are not going to get out of it so easily as that.
We expect you to act as master of the ceremonies, and show us the
beauties you have kept to yourself so long.  Yes, and to catch some
trout for us, too!  What do you say to that, Mrs Macalister?  How does
freshly grilled trout strike you as an accessory to a picnic?  We'll
have two fires, with the kettle on one, and the gridiron on the other,
and Mrs McNab will send up a hamper of good things to complete the
feast.  We'll leave George to manage that, as he knows how to get round
her; only do the thing well when you are about it; that's all I have to
say!  We shall bring rattling big appetites, shan't we, Miss Vane?"

Margot's glance passed by his to dwell with remorseful commiseration on
the Editor's perturbed face.  This was her own doing; a direct
consequence of her appeal of the day before!  The expression of the
brown eyes was wonderfully eloquent, and meeting them the Editor
bestirred himself to smile back a grateful recognition.  By this time,
however, the murmur had grown into definite speech; Mrs Macalister was
stating at length her life's experience as to picnics, and laying down
the law as to what was necessary for their success; the clergyman and
his son were debating how to reach the dell from the farthest point of
the day's expedition; Mr Macalister was slowly repeating--

"Trout!  Grilled trout!  It's a strange-like idea to have fish at a
picnic!"

It was plainly too late in the day for the Editor to refuse an
invitation which had already been practically accepted!  With a better
grace than might have been expected he resigned himself to his fate, and
the smile which he sent round the table was very charming in its shy
cordiality.

"I shall be delighted if you will honour me by coming so far; and no
doubt with Mrs McNab's help I shall be able to provide refreshments.
Shall we say half-past four?"

"Four o'clock would be better.  We want plenty of time to linger over
tea, and ramble about afterwards," said the Chieftain firmly; and there
being no dissent from this amendment, the Editor nodded assent, and,
gathering his papers in his hand, hurried out of the room.

Margot followed on the first opportunity.  She felt the eyes of the
Chieftain fixed on her face from across the room, and could imagine the
twinkle of humorous meaning with which they would be alight but she felt
too self-conscious and ill at ease to respond.  Like a frightened little
rabbit she scuttled upstairs to her own room and remained there, busying
herself with odd pieces of work until the inmates of the inn had taken
themselves off for their morning's excursions, and quiet reigned
throughout the house.  Then, and not till then, she opened her door and
peered cautiously at that other door across the landing.  It was closely
shut, and taking for granted that within its portals the bewildered
scholar was making the most of his free hours, Margot crept quietly down
the staircase, and turned to the right towards the kitchen.  It occurred
to her that she might be able to help Mrs McNab in her preparations for
the afternoon, and by doing so relieve the pangs of her own conscience.
All this work, and worry, and bewilderment, on her account--as a
response to her appeal!  She blushed guiltily, hardly knowing whether to
feel more gratified or annoyed with the Chieftain for so speedy a
demonstration of his power; dreading the moment when they should meet
again, and she must perforce brave the mischievous messages of his eyes.

The kitchen door was closely shut.  Mrs McNab was too capable a
housewife to allow the noise and odour of culinary preparations to
invade the rest of the house; but by this time Margot was sure of her
welcome, for scarcely a day had passed by that she had not offered her
services, and been condescendingly permitted to shell peas, stone fruit,
or whip up snowy masses of cream.  Mrs McNab always accorded permission
with the air of an empress conferring an order upon some humble
suppliant, but none the less Margot felt assured that she appreciated
the help, and would have missed it, had it not been forthcoming.

This morning she tapped on the door, opened it, and thrust her head
round the corner, to behold a tableau which remained fixed irrevocably
in heart and memory.  In the middle of the floor stood the mistress of
the inn, arms akimbo, engaged in laying down the law in characteristic,
downright fashion to some one who sat perched upon the dresser with
hands thrust deep into knickerbocker pockets, and feet in rough climbing
boots swinging nonchalantly to and fro; some one with a bright, almost
boyish face alight with fun, laughter, and defiance.

For the second time Margot beheld the real George Elgood denuded of his
mask of shyness and reserve, and thrilled at the recognition.  This
sunny, stone-flagged kitchen seemed fated to be the scene of unexpected
meetings!  She would have retreated in haste, but at the sound of her
entrance Mr Elgood jumped hastily to the floor, and Mrs McNab
authoritatively waved her forward.

"Here she is to speak for herself!  Come yer ways, Miss Vane.  I was
saying to Mr Elgood that maybe he'd listen to your advice, as he willna
tak' mine.  You're a leddy, and ken how such things should be done, and
if there's any call to waste the morning, and run into daft-like
expense, when everything a reasonable body need want is lying ready to
hand--"

Margot looked from one to the other in bewilderment, her spirits rising
with the discovery that for the first time in their short acquaintance
the Editor met her glance with an expression of relief rather than of
dread.  He was smiling still, and the boyish look lingered on his face,
making him appear an absolutely different creature from the grave,
formidable hermit to whom she was accustomed.

Margot's eyes danced, and she answered as naturally as if she had been
speaking to Ron himself.

"I don't know in the least what I am giving an opinion about--but I am
not a `reasonable body,' and as a rule the result of `daft-like expense'
is very nice!  I'm afraid that isn't what you wanted me to say, Mrs
McNab, but I must be honest.  Perhaps I may feel differently when I know
what I am talking about."

"Your picnic!" cried Mrs McNab.

"My picnic!" corrected the Editor.  "I never gave a picnic before, and
I'm weighed down by responsibility.  My brother refuses to help me, and
Mrs McNab is a Spartan, and nips my suggestions in the bud.  She thinks
we ought to be satisfied with bread and butter; I want cakes and fruit;
I want her to bake, and she says she has no time to bake; I want to send
over to Rew on the chance of getting strawberries; she says she has no
one to send.  If you agree with me, Miss Vane, perhaps she will make
time; I know by experience that she is always better than her word!"

Mrs McNab sniffed ironically.

"There's scones for ye, and good fresh butter--what do ye want forbye?
Ye'd get nae mair if ye were at hame, and it's not going to kill ye,
walking a couple of miles.  I've something else to do on a Thursday
morning than waste my time messing over things that aren't needed."

Mr Elgood leant against the dresser, and surveyed her more in sorrow
than in anger.

"Now what have you to do?" he demanded.  "It's absurd to pretend that
there is anything to clean, because you never give a thing a chance to
become dirty.  There is cold meat for lunch, as you yourself informed
me, so there's no cooking on hand.  This house goes by machinery, with
Elspeth to stoke up the motive power.  What can be left for you?  I
can't think of a single thing."

"Maybe not.  A man-body never kens what goes on under his nose, though
he'd be keen enough to find out if anything went wrong.  It's the day I
clean my candlesticks and brasses.  They don't go on shining by
themselves, whatever ye may think."

"Candlesticks and brasses!"  George Elgood repeated the words with
gloomy emphasis, fixing the speaker with reproachful eyes.
"Candlesticks and brasses!  And you put such things as those before
_me_, and the first--one of the first, favours I have ever asked! ...  A
big plum cake, with almonds at the top, and a round of shortbread; it
seems to me a most moderate request.  There's not a soul in the inn who
will notice a shade of extra polish on the candlesticks to-night, but
they will all bear me a lifelong grudge if I don't give them enough to
eat.  Have you ever been to a picnic where you were expected to be
satisfied with bread and butter, Miss Vane?"

Margot's shake of the head was tragic in its solemnity.

"Never! and I don't intend to begin.  I know where we can get some
fruit, at any rate, for I heard the woman at the grocer's shop saying
that she had raspberries to sell.  That is far easier than sending over
to Rew, and I'd be delighted to take a basket and bring back all I can
get.  While Mrs McNab makes the cakes!"

Mrs McNab sniffed again, but vouchsafed no further answer.  Mr
Elgood's face brightened, and he cried eagerly--

"That is kind of you!  Raspberries are very nearly as good as
strawberries, and it would be splendid to get them so near at hand.  I--
er--" he frowned, with a momentary return to his old embarrassment--"I
will come too, and carry the basket, for we must hope to have a fairly
heavy load."

Margot could hardly believe in the reality of this sudden change of
position, as she set out for the village ten minutes later, with George
Elgood by her side.  He carried the basket lent by Mrs McNab, and swung
along with big easy strides, while she trotted by his side, a pretty
girlish figure in her cool white frock.  It was left to her to do the
greatest share of the talking; but one reassuring fact was quickly
discovered, namely, that her companion's shyness seemed to consist
mainly in the dread of breaking strange ground, for once the first
plunge over he showed none of the expected embarrassment or distress.
If he could not be called talkative, he was at least an appreciative
listener; not a single point of her conversation missed its due share of
interest; while his deep, quiet laugh proved an incentive to fresh
flights of fancy.  For a whole ten days had Margot been waiting for her
opportunity, and now that it had come she was keen to turn it to the
best possible advantage.  Had the Chieftain been at hand to watch her
with his quizzical glance, she might have been tongue-tied and ill at
ease; even Ronald's presence would have brought with it a feeling of
self-consciousness; but in the kindly solitude of the mountain road she
could be herself, without thought of any one but her companion.
Remembering the warning which she had received, she kept the
conversation on strictly impersonal topics, avoiding even the mention of
Ron's name, but never had ordinary topics seemed so interesting, or the
way to the village so extraordinarily quickly traversed!

Inside the fusty grocer's shop the good Mrs Forsyth manifested none of
a Southerner's delight at the advent of a customer for her superfluous
fruit; she appeared, indeed, to receive Margot's first inquiry in a
somewhat flisty and off-hand manner, as though advantage were being
taken of a careless word, which she had not expected to have taken in
serious earnest.  George Elgood, distinctly rebuffed, muttered
unintelligible words of apology, but already Margot was beginning to
understand the dour Northern manner, and pressed the attack with
undiminished eagerness.  Thus coerced, Mrs Forsyth was forced to
acknowledge that she wouldna deny that she had raspberries in the
garden; and that it seemed a pity they should waste, as she hadna the
time to "presarve."  There was no telling--maybe when the children came
hame from school in the afternoon they wouldna be above picking a
basketful, and taking it down to the inn.

"But we want them now!  We want as many as you can possibly spare, but
we must have them to take back with us now!"

"And who's to pick them for ye, I would ask?" demanded Mrs Forsyth with
scathing directness.  "I've the shop to mind, and the dinner to cook;
it's not likely I can be out picking fruit at the same time, and there's
not anither soul in the house forbye mysel!  I'm thinking you'll have to
wait, or do without!"

"We could pick them ourselves!" pleaded the Editor eagerly.  "You would
have no trouble except to measure the fruit after it is gathered, and
tell us what we owe!  I don't care how much I pay.  I want some fruit
this morning, and if I can't get it from you I shall have to drive over
to Rew.  That would cost five or six shillings for the trap alone, so
you see I shall get off well, even if you charge me twice the usual
price."

But here again the benighted Southerner found himself brought up sharply
against an unexpected phase of Scottish character, for Mrs Forsyth was
distinctly on her high horse at the thought of being offered more than
her due.  She had her price; a fair-like price, she informed him
loftily, and she stuck to it.  She wasna the woman to make differences
between one person and anither.  Justice was justice, and she would like
to meet the man who could say she had ever stooped to accept a bribe.

So on and so on, while once again George Elgood hung his head abashed,
and glanced in distress at his companion.  In the delight afforded by
that appeal Margot felt equal to dealing with ten Mrs Forsyths, each
equally unreasonable and "kamstary."

"We will leave the price to you; we will leave everything to you!" she
cried gaily.  "I know it's asking a great deal to be allowed to come
into your garden and pick for ourselves, but we are rather in a
difficulty, for this gentleman is giving a picnic this afternoon, and
Mrs McNab has no fruit to give us.  It would be a favour not only to
us, but to the whole party if you would say Yes.  _Please_!"

The way in which Margot said "Please!" with head on one side, and
upraised, beseeching _eyes_, was one of the most fatal of her
blandishments.  Even the redoubtable Mrs McNab had succumbed at the
sight, and in her turn Mrs Forsyth also was overcome.  She made no
further objections, but led the way through the house into a long
stretch of vegetable garden, the end portion of which was thickly
planted with raspberry bushes.

"Help yourself!" she said briefly.  "You're welcome to all that's fit to
eat."

So the two who had been strangers, and had suddenly developed into a
kind of partnership of aim, set to work to fill the basket, which for
better convenience was slung over a branch of one of the bushes.

The sun shone down on them; the life-giving breeze blew round them; they
were alone together among the flowers and the scented herbs.  They
worked side by side, laughing over their efforts, comparing their
takings, gloating over the quickly-filling basket like a couple of
children recognising each other as playmates, and disdaining the
ordinary preliminaries of acquaintanceship.

"It's so kind of you to help me!" said the man.

"It's so kind of you to let me!" returned the maid.

"I--I have noticed that you seem always to be helping people."

"I didn't think you noticed anything at all!"

He had not intended to say so much.  She did not stop to consider what
she was implying.  Both blushed, relapsed into silence, and picked fruit
assiduously for several moments, before beginning again--

"I am afraid this picnic will be a great bore to you."

"Indeed, I think it is going to be a pleasure.  I should have thought of
it before, but that sort of thing does not come easily to me.  I have
lived too much alone!"

"You have your work--you have been absorbed in your work."

"Have I?  I'm afraid that is not altogether true!"

Margot glanced up surprised, met the dark eyes fixed full upon her, and
looked hurriedly away.

"I have been finding it increasingly difficult to be absorbed," he
continued dreamily.  "I have heard you all laughing and talking together
downstairs, and my thoughts have wandered.  Once you sang...  Do you
remember that wet afternoon when you sang?  I did not seem able to write
at all that afternoon."

The basket was full of fruit by now; Margot lifted it by one handle;
George Elgood lifted it by the other.  They walked down the sunlit
garden into the house.



CHAPTER EIGHTEEN.

TROUT FISHING.

There was a short, somewhat embarrassed silence while Margot kept her
eyes fixed on the scene of the late meal, the two smouldering fires, the
piled-up hampers and baskets, and the Editor drummed with his fingers,
and chewed his moustache.

"Er--" he began haltingly at last.  "How do you think it has gone?"

"You mean the--"

"Picnic!  Yes.  My first entertainment.  I feel responsible.  Think they
enjoyed it at all?"

"I'm sure of it.  Immensely!  They thawed wonderfully.  Think of the
duet!  To hear Mr Macalister singing was a revelation.  It has been a
delightful change from the ordinary routine.  And the trout!  The trout
was a huge success.  How amiable of it to let itself be caught so
conveniently!"

The Editor smiled, with the conscious pride of the experienced
fisherman.

"There was not much `let' about it.  He led me a pretty dance before he
gave up the struggle, but I was on my mettle, and bound to win.  Do you
know anything about fishing, Miss Vane?"

"I?"  Margot laughed happily.  "Just as much as I have gleaned from
watching little boys fish for minnows in Regent's Park!  I don't think I
have ever particularly wanted to know more.  It seems so dull to stand
waiting for hours for what may never come, not daring to speak, in case
you may scare it away!  What do you think about all the time?"

He turned and looked at her at that, his lips twitching with amusement.
Seated on the ground as they were, the two faces were very near
together, and each regarded the other with the feeling of advancing a
step further in the history of their acquaintance.

"He really _is_ young!" decided Margot, with a sigh of relief.  "It's
only the frown and the stoop and the eyeglasses which make him look as
if he were old."

George Elgood looked into the pink and white face, and his thoughts
turned instinctively to a bush of briar roses which he had seen and
admired earlier in the day.  So fresh, and fair, and innocent!  Were all
young girls so fragrant and flower-like as this?  Then he thought of the
little prickles which had stung his hand as he had picked a bud from the
same bush for his buttonhole, and smiled with latent mischief.  After
all, the remembrance did not lessen the likeness.  Miss Margot looked as
if she might--under provocation--display a prickle or two of her own!

"What do I think about?" he repeated slowly.  "That is rather a
difficult question to answer; but this good little river, I am thankful
to say, does not leave one much time for thought.  There's a little
channel just beyond the bridge that is a favourite place for sea trout.
Would you like to see it?"

"Might I?  Really?  Oh, please!" cried Margot, all in a breath.  Her
very prettiest "please," accompanied by a quick rise to her feet which
emphasised the eagerness of her words.

George Elgood lost no time in following her example, and together they
walked briskly away towards the head of the dell; that is to say, in the
opposite direction to that taken by the other members of the party.
George Elgood had picked up his fishing-tackle as he went--by an almost
unconscious impulse, as it seemed--and unconsciously his conversation
drifted to the all-absorbing topic.

"If we take a sharp cut across this hill--I'll give you a hand down the
steep bits!--we hit the river at the best spot.  You have been grumbling
at the wet weather, but you will see the good effects of rain, from a
fisherman's point of view.  The river is full from bank to bank, rushing
down to the sea.  It is a fine sight, a river in flood!  I don't know
anything in Nature which gives the same impression of power and joy.
That's where Norway has the pull.  Her mountains can't compare with the
Swiss giants, but everywhere there is a glorious wealth of water.  No
calm sleeping lakes, but leaping cataracts of rivers filling whole
valleys, as my little stream here fills its small banks; roaring and
dashing, and sparkling in the sun.  Norway is perfection, from a
fisherman's point of view; but there is plenty of sport to be found
nearer home.  I have had no cause to complain for the last fortnight.
This way--to the right!  It's just a little rough going at first, but it
cuts off a good mile.  You are sure you don't mind?"

Margot's laugh rang out jubilantly.  She scrambled up the steep mountain
path with nimble feet, easily out-distancing her guide, until the
hilltop was reached, and she stood silhouetted against the sky, while
the wind blew out her white skirts, and loosened curling tendrils of
hair.

Below could be traced the course of the river, winding in and out in
deep curves, and growing ever broader and fuller with every mile it
traversed.  The sunlight which played on it, making it look like a
silver ribbon, played also on the yellow gorse and purple heather; on
the long grey stretch of country in the distance; on that softer blue
plain joining the skyline, which was the sea itself.  A breath of salt
seemed to mingle with the aromatic odour of the heather, adding tenfold
to its exhilaration.

As Margot stood holding on to her hat, and waiting for her companion's
approach, she felt such a glorious sense of youth and well-being, such
an assurance of happiness to come, as is seldom given to mortals to
enjoy.  It was written in her face, her radiant, lovely young face, and
the light in the eyes which she turned upon him made the shy scholar
catch his breath.

"You did that well!  Magnificently well!" he cried approvingly.  "But
you must take the descent carefully, please.  There are one or two
sudden dips which might be awkward if you were not prepared.  I know
them all.  Shall I,--would you,--will you take my hand?"

"Thank you!" said Margot, and laid her hand in his with an acceptance as
simple as if he had been her own brother.  It was a very pretty little
hand, in which its owner felt a justifiable pride, and it lay like a
white snowflake in the strong brown palm stretched out to meet it.

For just a moment George Elgood kept his fingers straight and unclasped,
while he gazed downward at it with kindling eyes, then they closed in a
tight, protecting clasp, and together they began the descent.

For the most part it was easy enough, but the awkward places came so
often and unexpectedly that it did not seem worth while to unloose that
grasp until the bottom was safely reached.  Margot had a dream-like
sensation of having wandered along for hours, but in reality it was a
bare ten minutes before she and her guide were standing on level ground
by the side of the rushing river.

"Thank you!  That was a great help," she said quietly.  George Elgood,
with a sudden access of shyness, made no reply, but busied himself with
preparation.

"I'll just make another cast, to show you how one sets to work.  I take
a pretty big fly--the trout like that.  These are the flies--all sizes,
as you see.  I am rather proud of them, for I make them myself in the
winter months, when one can enjoy only the pleasures of anticipation.
It's a good occupation for a leisure hour."

"You make them yourself!"  Margot repeated incredulously, stretching out
her hand to receive one of the hairy morsels on her palm, and bending
over it in unaffected admiration.  "But how clever of you!  How can you
have the patience?  It must be dreadfully finicky work!"

"It is a trifle `finicky,' no doubt!"  He laughed over the repetition of
the word.  "But it's a refreshing change to work with one's hands
sometimes, instead of one's brain.  Now shall I give you your first
lesson in the art?  Don't imagine for a moment that fishing means
standing still for the hour together, with nothing more exciting than
the pulling-in of your fish the moment he bites.  That's the idea of the
outsider who does not know what adventure he is losing, what hope and
suspense, what glorious triumph!  Like most things, it's the struggle
that's the glory of the thing, not the prize.  Shall I soak this cast
for you, and give you your first lesson?"

"Oh, please!  I'd love it!  It would be too kind of you!" cried Margot
eagerly.  She had not the faintest idea what "soaking a cast" might
mean, and listened in bewilderment to a score of unfamiliar expressions;
but it is safe to affirm that she would have assented with equal fervour
to almost any proposition which her companion made.

There and then followed the first lesson on the seemingly easy, but in
reality difficult, task of "casting," the Editor illustrating his lesson
by easy, graceful throws, which Margot tried in vain to imitate.  She
grew impatient, stamping her feet, and frowning fiercely with her dark
eyebrows, while he looked on with the amused indulgence which one
accords to a child.

"Are you always in such a hurry to accomplish a thing at once?"

"Yes, always!  It's only when you don't care that you can afford to
wait."

"It sometimes saves time in the end to make haste slowly!"

"Oh, don't confound me with proverbs!" cried Margot, turning a flushed,
petulant face at him over her shoulder.  "I know I am impetuous and
imprudent, but--the horrid thing _will_ twist up!  Don't you think I
might have a demonstration this time?  Let me watch, and pick up hints.
I'm sure I should learn more quickly that way, and it would be less
boring for you.  Please!"

At that he took the rod, nothing loth, and Margot seated herself on the
ground, a trifle short of breath after her exertions, and not at all
sorry to have the chance of looking on while some one else did the work.
She was intently conscious of her companion's presence, but he seemed
to forget all about her, as wading slightly forward into the stream he
cast his fly in slow, unerring circuit.  How big he looked, how strong
and masterful; how graceful were the lines of his tall lean figure!
From where she sat Margot could see the dark profile beneath the
deerstalker cap, the long straight nose, the firmly-closed lips, the
steady eyes.  It was the face of a man whom above all things one could
trust.  "A poor dumb body," Mrs Macalister had dubbed him, scornfully;
but Margot had discovered that he was by no means dumb, and that once
the first barriers were broken, he could talk with the best, and bring
into his conversation the added eloquence of expression.  She recalled
the lighting of his absorbed eyes as he had looked down at her own white
hand, and flushed at the remembrance.

Margot had often pitied the wives and sisters of enthusiastic fishermen
who had perforce to sit mum-chance in the background, but to-day she was
conscious of no dissatisfaction with her own position.  She possessed
her full share of the girl's gift of building castles, and it would not
be safe to say how high the airy structure had risen before suddenly the
rod bent, and the Editor's intent face lit up with elation.  The fish
was hooked; it now remained to "play" with him, in professional
parlance, till he could be landed with credit to himself and his captor.

For the next half-hour Margot was keenly, vividly interested in studying
the tactics of the game.  The reel screamed out, as the captive made a
gallant dash for liberty; the Editor splashed after him, running hastily
by the side of the river, now reeling in his line, now allowing it full
play; and at the distance of a few yards she ran with him, now holding
her breath with suspense, now clasping her hands in triumph, until at
last, his struggles over, the captive floated heavily upon the stream.

It was the end for which she had longed throughout thirty of the most
exciting moments that she had ever known; but now that victory was
secured, woman--like she began to feel remorse.

"Oh, is it dead?  Have you killed it?  But it's horrid, you know--quite
horrible!  A big strong man like you, and that poor little fish--"

"Not little at all!  It's a good six-pounder," protested the fisherman,
quick to defend his sport against depreciation.  "No--he's not dead yet,
but he soon will be.  I will just--"

"Wait!  Wait!  Let me get out of the way."  Margot flew with her fingers
in her ears, then pulled them out to cry--"Is it done?  Is it over?  Can
I come back?"

"Yes; it is all right.  I've put him in my bag.  You will appreciate him
better in his table guise.  I'll take him back as a peace-offering to
Mrs McNab, for her own evening meal.  We have already had our share at
the pic--"

Suddenly his hands fell to his sides, he straightened himself, and
turned his eyes upon her, filled with puzzle and dismay.

"The pic--"

"--Nic!" concluded Margot faintly.  Rosy red were her cheeks; a weight
as of lead pressed on her eyelids, dragging them down, down, beneath his
gaze.  "I--I--_forgot_!  We were to have gone to find them!  Do you
suppose they are--hiding still?"

He laughed at that, though in somewhat discomfited fashion.

"Rather not!  Given us up long ago.  It must be getting on for an hour.
I can't think how I came to forget--"

Margot glanced at him shyly beneath her curling lashes.

"It was the fish!  A fisherman can't be expected to remember anything
when he is landing a trout!" she suggested soothingly.  Nevertheless she
remembered with a thrill of joy that his forgetfulness had dated back to
a time when there had been no fish in prospect.  "Do you suppose they
have gone home?"

"We will go and see.  From that mound over there we can overlook the
path to the inn.  Perhaps we had better keep a little in the background!
It would be as well that they should not see us, if they happened to
look up--"

If it were possible to feel a degree hotter, Margot felt it at that
moment, as she followed George Elgood up the little hillock to the
right, and, pausing just short of the top, peered stealthily around.  A
simultaneous exclamation broke from both lips; simultaneously they drew
back, and crouched on their knees to peer over the heather.

There they went!--straggling in a row in the direction of the inn, the
party of revellers who had been so basely deserted.

First, the clergyman, with his hands clasped behind his back, his head
bent in thought; a pensive reveller, this, already beginning to repent a
heavy, indigestible meal; next, Mrs Macalister, holding her skirts in
characteristic fashion well up in front and sweeping the ground behind;
a pace or two in the rear, her spouse, showing depression and weariness
in every line of his body.  Yet farther along the two young men carrying
the empty hampers; last of all, at quite a little distance from the
rest, the figure of the Chieftain stepping out with a tread even more
conspicuously jaunty than usual, his hands thrust deep into his pockets,
his head turned from side to side, as if curiously scanning the
hillsides.

At one and the same moment Margot and the Editor ducked their heads, and
scrambled backwards for a distance of two or three yards.  There was a
moment's silence, then instinctively their eyes met.  Margot pressed her
lips tightly together, George Elgood frowned, but it was all in vain; no
power on earth could prevent the mischievous dimples from dipping in her
cheeks; no effort could hide the twinkle in his eyes--they buried their
heads in their hands, and shook with laughter!

When at last composure was regained, George Elgood pulled his watch from
his pocket, glanced at the time, and cried eagerly--

"There is still an hour before we need be back for dinner.  As well be
hanged for a sheep as a lamb.  Let us go back to the river, and try our
luck once more!"



CHAPTER NINETEEN.

A TELEGRAM.

It was a very shamefaced Margot who made her appearance at the dinner-
table that evening; but, to her unspeakable relief, she found that there
was no cause for embarrassment.  Instead of the meaning glances and
joking remarks which she had dreaded, she was greeted with the ordinary
kindly prosaic welcome, and not even Mrs Macalister herself ventured an
innuendo.  The Chieftain was the only one who alluded to the non-
appearance of the searchers, and the manner in which he did so was a
triumph of the commonplace.

"Muddled up that hide-and-seek finely, didn't we?" he cried cheerily.
"Afraid you had all your trouble for nothing.  I happened to catch a
glimpse of you heading off in the wrong direction, so turned into `It'
myself, and rooted them all out of their lairs.  Then we played some
sensible, middle-aged, sitting-down games, and strolled home in time for
a siesta before dinner.  Very good picnic, I call it.  Great success!
We'll have another, one of these fine days."

"'Deed yes, and we will!" assented Mrs Macalister genially.  "It stirs
a body up to have an outing now and then.  I was thinking, why shouldn't
we drive over to B-- and see the old castle and all the sights?  I've
been hankering to go ever since we arrived; but it mounts up when you
drive about by yourselves.  If we shared two carriages between us, it
would make all the difference, and it seems foolish-like to be in a
neighbourhood and not see what there is to be seen.  You can get
carriages from Rew, they tell me, if you order them a day or two
before."

To the amazement of the company, it was George Elgood of all others who
hastened to second the proposal.

"A capital idea!" he cried.  "B-- is one of the finest old ruins in
Scotland.  Of course we must go; it would be worse than foolish to go
home without seeing it.  I have been before, so I could act as guide,
and those who possess cameras had better take them also, as the place is
rich in subjects."

The clergyman and his son pricked up their ears at this, photography
being with them only a degree less absorbing a pastime than that of
walking; Ron awoke suddenly to the remembrance that his half-plate
camera had never been unpacked since his arrival; and the three vied
with each other in asking questions about the proposed excursion, and in
urging that a date should be fixed.  Before the meal had come to a
conclusion, plans were mapped out, and a division of labour made, by
which one person was held responsible for the hiring of carriages,
another for the promised food, while George Elgood was left to arrange
the plan of campaign.

"We are a happy family, we are, we are, we are!" hummed the Chieftain,
under his breath, as he cast a twinkling glance across the table to
where Margot sat, as demure to outward seeming as she was excited at
heart.

"Why do you avoid me?" he demanded of her plumply, the next morning,
when, after several unsuccessful attempts, he ran her to earth by the
side of the tarn.  "Scurry out of my way like a frightened bunny
whenever I come along.  Won't do, you know!  Not going to trouble myself
to do you good turns, if you round on me afterwards, and avoid me as if
I were the plague.  What's it all about?"

"Nothing," stammered Margot confusedly.  "I only felt rather-- You _do_
tease, you know, and your eyes twinkle so mischievously that I felt that
discretion was the better part of valour."

"Well, don't do it again then, that's all, or I may turn rusty and upset
the apple-cart.  No reason that I know of why I should be ostracised,
because I try to help my fellow-creatures.  What are you doing over
here?  Reading?  What a waste of time!  Much better come and chuck
stones into the lake with me."

Margot's brown eyes widened in reproof.

"Don't you like books?"

"Hate the sight of 'em!  Especially on a holiday.  Never want to see as
much as a line of print from the time I leave home to the time I return.
Especially,"--his eyes twinkled in the mischievous manner to which
exception had just been taken--"especially poetry!  Don't mind my saying
so, do you?"

"Not a bit," returned Margot promptly, tossing her first stone into the
lake with a vehemence which held more than a suspicion of temper.  "Of
course I never--one would never--_expect_ you to like it.  It would be
the last thing one would expect--"

"Too fat?"

She blushed at that, and had the grace to look a trifle distressed.

"Oh, not that altogether.  It's a `_Je ne sais quoi_,' don't you know.
One could tell at a glance that you were not a literary man."

The Chieftain chuckled, bent down to gather a handful of stones, and
raised a red smiling face to hers.

"Well, well, we can't all be geniuses, you know!  One in a glen is about
as much as you can expect to meet in these hard times.  But I can chuck
stones with the best of 'em.  That one was a good dozen yards beyond
your last throw.  Put your back into it, and see what you can do.  It's
a capital way of letting off steam."

Margot was tempted to protest against the accusation, but reflection
prompted silence, since after all she _was_ cross, and there was no
denying it.

She took the little man's advice, and "let off steam" by the vigour and
determination with which she hurled pebbles into the lake, making them
skim along the surface in professional manner for an ever longer and
longer space before finally disappearing from sight.

The Chieftain cheered her on with example and precept, and, as usual,
irritation died a speedy death in the presence of his bright, cheery
personality.  While they were still laughing and cheering each other on
to fresh exploits, a lad from the post office passed along the road, and
the Chieftain wheeled round to call out the usual question--

"Anything for me?  Is the post in already?"

The lad shook his head.  He was a red-headed sociable-looking creature
who seemed only too glad to enliven his walk by a chat _en route_.  His
teeth showed in a cheerful smile as he replied--

"The post willna be here for an hour or mair.  It's just a telegram!"

A telegram!  It said much for the peaceful seclusion of the Glen that
the very sound of the word brought a chill of apprehension to the
listening ears.  No one received telegrams at the Nag's Head.  One and
all the visitors had sojourned thither with the aim of getting away as
far as possible from the world of telegrams, and electric trams, and
tube railways, and all the nerve-shattering inventions of modern life.
Their ambition was to outlive the sense of hurry; to forget that such a
thing as hurry existed, and browse along in peaceful uninterrupted ease.

To-day, however, in that far-away world beyond the heather-clad
mountains something must have happened of such importance to some member
of the little party that it could not wait for the leisurely medium of
the post, but for good or ill had demanded instant attention.

Margot and the Chieftain stood in silence for a moment before he asked
the second question.

"Who is it for?--What's the name?"

"Macalister!"

The name was pronounced with the lengthy drawl to which the hearers were
growing familiar.  They looked at each other with sighs of relief,
followed swiftly by contrition.

"I hope nothing is wrong!  I hope it's not bad news.  Poor Mr
Macalister's `nearves'!"

"No, no!  Nothing of the sort.  Why imagine evil?  Always look at the
bright side as long as you can.  Take for granted that it is good news,
splendid news--the news he would like most to hear.  Cut along, laddie!
People pay for telegrams with the intention of getting them to their
destination as quickly as possible.  We'll defer the pleasure of a
conversation to our next merry meeting."

The red-headed one grinned complacently and continued on his way,
whistling as he went.  There was about him no suggestion of a harbinger
of bad tidings; the sun shone from a cloudless sky, and awoke sparkling
reflections in the water; the scene was one of unbroken peace and
happiness, and yet, and yet,--some shadow seemed to have fallen on
Margot's soul, so that she could no longer take any interest in the mere
throwing of stones.  Her heart followed the footsteps of the messenger
down the winding path, and stood still as he entered the inn.

"What is it, little girl?  You look as if you had seen a ghost!"

The Chieftain stood observing her with an expression of kindly concern,
for the pretty face had turned white beneath its tan, and the brown eyes
were wide and tense, as if beholding something hidden from ordinary
gaze.  She gazed fixedly, not back in his face, but past him down the
lane towards the inn.

"I'm--afraid!  I _feel_ it is not good news.  It means trouble--big
trouble!  It is hanging over me like a cloud!"

He looked at her swiftly, and his face changed.

"Come then," he said quietly, "we will go back.  If it is trouble, we
may be able to help.  I never ignore presentiments; they are sent to us
all from time to time, and if we are faithful we obey them, like a
summons.  One came to me years ago.  It was late at night, and I was
just off to bed, when suddenly it came--the remembrance of a friend far
off; the insistent remembrance; the certainty that he needed me, and
that I must hasten to help.  By all the laws of common sense I should
have shrugged my shoulders and gone to sleep; but what are we, to judge
by our own poor knowledge the great unknown forces of God?  I went out
there and then, caught a midnight train, and was at his house by seven
in the morning.  His wife met me on the stair and said, `How did you
know?' ...  He lay dying in his bed, and all that night he had been
calling for me.  There was something I could do for him, better than any
one else.  He wished to place it in my hands before he went, and God had
mercifully provided the opportunity.  Never say that anything is
impossible in this world, little girl!  According to your faith so shall
it be unto you."

Margot did not answer except by a faint, strained smile.  Her eyes were
fixed upon the doorway of the inn, waiting for the reappearance of the
messenger, but he did not come, and the delay lent weight to her
apprehension.

They spoke no more, but walked silently side by side, until they drew
near to the inn, when suddenly the silence of the Glen was broken by a
strange, unaccustomed sound.  What was it?  Whence did it come?  From
some animal surely; some animal in pain or fear, piteously making known
its needs!  It could not be the moan of human woe!  Yet even as she
passionately denied the thought, Margot recognised in her heart that it
was true, and darting quickly forward made her way into the inn parlour.
The messenger still stood outside the door, waiting in stolid patience
for instructions, and by his side was Mrs McNab, wiping floury hands in
her apron, in evident perturbation of spirit.

On the plush-bedecked sofa in the corner of the parlour the half-
inanimate form of Mrs Macalister swayed helplessly to and fro, while on
either side stood two men--her husband and George Elgood--looking on in
helpless, masculine fashion.  Her cap had fallen back from her head, her
ruddy face was bleached to a livid grey, from her lips came from time to
time that pitiful, hopeless wail.  At first it seemed to have no
definite sound, but as one listened it took to itself words,--always the
same words, repeated again and again--

"My lassie!  My Lizzie!  Oh, my lassie!"

"Nay, dearie, nay!  You mustna give way.  She's better off.  You must be
strong.  We'll bear it together."

It was Mr Macalister who spoke; but Margot hardly recognised the voice,
hardly recognised the face, which, for all its pallor and quiver of
pain, was yet strong and calm.  All trace of the peevish discontent that
had hung like a cloud over the man had vanished like a mist; his bowed
back seemed to have straightened itself and grown erect; the whining
voice was composed and full of courage.  He had forgotten his nerves in
the presence of a great calamity; nay, more than that--he had forgotten
himself; his one care and anxiety was for his wife!

The tears smarted in Margot's eyes; she ran forward, dropped on her
knees before the chair, and clasped her strong young arms round the
swaying figure, steadying it with loving, gentle pressure.  The wan eyes
stared at her unrecognisingly for a moment, then, at the sight of her
girlish beauty, old memories returned, and the tears began to rain.

"Lizzie's gone!  Lizzie's gone!  I'll never see her again.  All in a
moment, and me so far away.  My little Lizzie!...  I canna bear it!..."

"She never suffered, mother.  She knew nothing about it.  It's better
for her than a long, painful illness.  You must be thankful for her
sake."  Mr Macalister looked down at Margot, and bravely essayed an
explanation.  "It was an accident.  We've just heard.  Instantaneous,
they say.  The mother's sore upset, but she's a brave woman.  She'll
bear it bravely for all our sakes.  We'll need to get back to Glasgow."

"Yes.  I'll help!  I'll pack for her.  Don't trouble about anything.
I'll see that it is all right.  You'll let me help you, dear, won't
you?"  Margot put up a tender hand, to straighten the cap on the poor,
dishevelled head; and something in the simple, daughterly action seemed
to reach the poor woman's heart, and bring with it the first touch of
calmness.  She sat up and looked blankly from side to side.

"I--I'm sorry!  I shouldna give way.  I never lost a child before, you
see, and Lizzie was such a one for her mother.  I wrote to her only last
night.  She leaves two bairnies of her own, but they are so young.
They'll never remember her!"  The pitiful trembling began again,
whereupon George Elgood's hand held out a glass of water, and Margot
took it from him to lift it to the quivering lips.

"They will need you all the more, and you must be strong for their
sakes.  That's what she would wish, isn't it?"

"Yes, yes.  I must take care of the children.  And Fred--poor Fred! but
he hasn't loved her as I have done for nearly thirty years.  Father,
when can we get back?"

"I'll see, my dearie.  I'll see!  Leave all to me.  I'll settle it all,
and this good lassie will pack your things.  Ye need trouble for
nothing, my lass,--ye need trouble for nothing."

He laid his broad hand on his wife's shoulder with a gesture infinitely
tender, then turned and went stumbling out of the room, while Margot's
eyes met the tear-drenched ones above her with a flash of enthusiasm.

"He is--_splendid_!"

Even at that moment Mrs Macalister showed a faint kindling of response.

"Didn't I tell ye?  When a man's out of health ye canna judge.  When
he's in his usual, there's no one to touch Mr Macalister."

With an instinctive movement Margot turned her head upward till her eyes
met those of George Elgood, and exchanged a flash of mutual
understanding.  It heartened her like a drink of water in a thirsty
land, for underlying the pity and the kindliness she recognised
something else; something that existed for herself alone, and which
seemed to bring with it an electric thrill of happiness.

Outside in the "lobby" the Chieftain was looking up trains in his own
_Bradshaw_, and arranging with Mrs McNab for the long drive to the
station, while Mr Macalister was writing out a return message with
trembling fingers.

"Come upstairs with me, dear!" said Margot gently.  "You shall lie on
the bed while I do the packing.  It's a long journey, and you must be as
fresh as possible when you arrive.  They will be waiting for you, you
know, and expecting you to comfort them.  You have told me how they all
rely upon you.  You wouldn't like to fail just when they need you most!"

Mrs Macalister raised herself feebly from her chair, but her poor face
quivered helplessly.

"I'm a broken reed for any one to lean on.  I can only remember that
Lizzie's gone.  There's no strength left in me.  She was the flower of
the flock.  And me so far away!"

For the next hour the poor woman lay on the bed in her room, now sobbing
in helpless paroxysms of grief, now relating pitiful, commonplace
anecdotes of the dead daughter so dearly beloved, a dazed helpless
creature, unable to do a hand's turn for herself, while her husband
crept in and out, quiet, resourceful, comforting, full of unselfish
compassion.  Margot had hard work to keep back her own tears, as he
clumsily pressed his own services upon her, picking up odd garments,
folding them carefully in the wrong way, and rummaging awkwardly through
the drawers.

The trap was to be ready to start by twelve o'clock, and ten minutes
before the time Margot carried a sponge and basin of water to the
bedside, bathed the poor, tear-stained face, brushed the straggling
locks of grey hair, and helped to fasten bonnet and cloak.  It was
pathetic to see the helplessness into which grief had stricken this
capable, bustling woman.  She lifted her chin, to allow the strings of
her bonnet to be tied by Margot's hands, and sat meekly while the
"dolman" was hooked.  It was like dressing a big docile baby; like a
child, too, the manner in which she clung to her husband's arm down the
narrow stair.

Mrs McNab was standing below in the lobby, her hard face flushed to an
unnatural red.  She held a basket in her hand filled with dainty paper
packages containing fruit, sandwiches, and cakes.  Unable to voice her
sympathy, she had put it into deeds, striving to ensure some comfort for
the long journey ahead.

Mrs Macalister smiled a pitiful travesty of a smile in acknowledgment,
and her friends pressed her hand, mercifully refraining from speech.
When it came to parting from Margot, however, that was a different
matter.  Mrs Macalister stooped from the seat of the trap to kiss the
girl's cheek once and again.

"You're a guid lassie," she said, trembling.  "I would have been lost
without you!  The Lord bless you, my dear!"

"Ay! and she _shall_ be blessed!" added Mr Macalister's voice, deeply.

Margot thrilled at the sound of those words, and stood back on the path
watching the departing wheels through a mist of tears.  They had gone,
those two good, loving, simple creatures, and in all likelihood she
would never see them again; for a moment their lives had touched, but
the currents had swept them apart; they were as ships that had passed in
the night.  To the end of time, however, she must be the better for the
meeting, for in their need they had leant upon her, and she had been
able to help.  They had blessed her in patriarchal fashion, and the
sound of their words still rang in her ears--

"The Lord bless you!"

"Ay! and she _shall_ be blessed?"



CHAPTER TWENTY.

CRITICISM.

Out of sympathy and respect for Mr and Mrs Macalister, nothing more
was said about the next picnic party for several days after their tragic
departure from the Glen, but the intervening time was, to Margot at
least, full of interest and excitement.  One morning, for instance, as
she strolled from the breakfast-room to the road, as was the easy custom
of the hour, a hurried step followed in the same direction, and George
Elgood, staring hard in an opposite direction, advanced an opinion that
one lesson in fishing was mere waste of time, whereas two, or perhaps
three, might possibly convey some real knowledge of the art.  Er--did
Miss Vane feel inclined to pay another visit to the river?

Miss Vane, poking the gravel with the points of her shoes, was--er--yes!
quite inclined, if Mr Elgood was sure she would not interrupt his sport
Mr Elgood, with equal eagerness and incoherence, assured Miss Vane that
she would do nothing of the kind, and hurried back to the inn, murmuring
vaguely concerning eleven o'clock.

In the quiet of the riverside, however, he regained his self-possession,
and once more proved himself to be the most interesting of companions,
the most patient of instructors.  Margot thought fishing a delightful
and absorbing pursuit, which was the more remarkable as she was rather
stupid than otherwise in mastering the initial movements.  Mr Elgood
encouraged her, however, by saying that some of the cleverest "rods" of
his acquaintance had been the slowest in picking up the knack.  The
great thing was to have plenty of practice!  She ought to come up every
morning for as much time as she could spare; meantime, as she had been
standing so long, would she not like to sit down, and rest awhile before
walking home?

Then they sat down side by side on the grassy bank, and talked together
as a man and a maid love to talk in the summer of their youth,
exchanging innocent confidences, comparing thoughts and opinions,
marvelling that they are so much alike.

Margot faithfully observed her promise to make no references to her
ambitions on her brother's behalf, and, truth to tell, her silence
involved little effort, for she was guiltily conscious of being so much
engrossed in her own affairs that even Ron's ambitions had faded into
the background.  As for the lad himself, he was happy enough, wandering
about by himself studying "effects" to transcribe to paper, or scouring
the countryside with the Chieftain, whom he frankly adored, despite the
many exceedingly plain-spoken criticisms and exhortations received from
his lips.

"Your sister has been telling me about that rhyming craze of yours," the
little man said suddenly one day.  "Likewise about her own very pretty
little scheme for the subjugation of my brother.  Told you that she'd
told me, eh?  Expect she did!  She is pleased to believe she is a
designing little adventuress, whereas as a matter of fact she's as clear
as crystal, and any one with half an eye could see through her schemes.
Well!  I laid down the law that neither she nor you are to worry my
brother about business matters during his holiday, for, to tell you the
truth, he has had his full share of worry of late.  But what about me?
I'm a plain, common-sense, steady-going old fellow, who might perhaps be
able to give you a word or two of advice!  What's all this nonsense
about throwing aside a post that's waiting for you, and which means an
income for life, in order to live in an attic, and scribble verses for
magazines?  If you knew the world, young man, you would understand that
you are blessedly well off, to have your way made smooth, and would not
be in such a hurry to meet disappointments half way.  They will come
soon enough!  At the best of it, you will have a hard row to hoe.  Why
make it worse?"

Ronald flushed in sensitive fashion, but there was no hint of offence in
his manner, as he replied--

"It is hardly a question of an attic, sir.  My father would not
disinherit me because I preferred literature to business.  I might have
a pittance instead of a fortune, but I should not have to fear want.
And why should I not live my own life?  If I am bound to meet troubles,
surely it is only right to provide what compensations I can, and my best
compensation would be congenial work!  I don't want to be rich.  Let
some other fellow take the post, and get his happiness out of it; it
would be slavery to me."

"Humph!  No boy likes the idea of putting his nose to the grindstone.
They all kick a bit at the thought of an office desk, but nine out of
ten enjoy the life when they get into the swing.  It's a great secret of
happiness in this world, to be kept so busy that we have not time to
think of ourselves.  We need work for its own sake, even more than for
what it brings; but our work must be worthy.  There's no real success
away from that...  About those verses now!  It's a pleasant occupation
for you to sling them together--I haven't a word to say against it as a
recreation--but that's a different thing from serious work.  There's
only one thing which justifies a man in cutting himself adrift from the
world, in opposition to the wishes of those who have his interests most
at heart, and that is, a strong and solemn conviction of a special
mission in life.  Very well then!  If you agree so far, let us proceed
to consider the mission of a poet.  There's only one justification for
his existence--only one thing that distinguishes him from the
professional rhymester whom nobody wants, and who is the bane and terror
of society, and that is--_that he has something to say_!  Now take your
own case--a lad without as much as a moustache on his face; the son of a
rich father, who has lain soft all his life, and had the bumps rolled
flat before him.  What do you imagine that you are going to teach the
world?  Do you fondly believe that you have anything to say that has not
been said before, and a thousand times better into the bargain?"

Ronald looked up and gazed dreamily ahead.  He had taken off his cap, as
his custom was in these moorland tramps, which were becoming of daily
occurrence, and his hair was ruffled on his forehead, giving an air of
even more than ordinary youth to his face.  The hazel eyes were dark,
and the curved lips trembled with emotion; he was searching his soul for
the reply to a question on which more than life seemed to depend, and
while he gazed at the purple mountains with unseeing eyes the Chieftain
gazed at his illumined face, and felt that he had received his answer.

The words of Wordsworth's immortal ode rushed into his brain, and he
recognised that this ignorant lad possessed a knowledge which was hidden
from the world.  Heaven, with its clouds of glory, lay close around him,
ignorant of worldly wisdom though he might be.  God forbid that the one
should ever be exchanged for the other!

The Chieftain was answered, but like Ron he remained silent.  They
walked on over the short, springy grass, breathed the clear, fresh
breeze, and thought their own thoughts.  It was not until nearly a mile
had been traversed that Ron turned his head and said simply, as if
answering a question put but a moment before--

"I sing, because I must!  It is my life.  I have not thought of other
people, except in so far as their approval would justify me in my
father's eyes.  You could no doubt judge better than I if what I have to
say has value or not.  Will you read some of my lines?"

A curious sound broke from the Chieftain's lips, a sound something
between a groan and a laugh.  He frowned, pursed his lips, swung his
short arms vigorously to and fro, shook his head with an air of
determined opposition, then suddenly softened into a smile.

"It's a strange world, my masters!  A strange world!  You never know
your luck!  In the middle of my holiday, and a Scotch moor into the
bargain!  I'll try Timbuctoo another year!  Nothing else for it.  Where
does my brain-rest come in, I want to know!  You and your verses--be
plagued to the pair of you!  Got some about you now, I suppose?  Hand
them over, then,--the first that come to the surface--and let me get
through with it as soon as possible!"

He plumped down on the grass as he spoke, took out a large bandana
handkerchief and mopped his brow with an air of resignation, while
Ronald fumbled awkwardly in his pocket.

"I have several pencil copies.  I think you can make them out.  This is
the latest.  A Madrigal--`To my Lady.'"

"Love-song?"

"Yes."

"Ever been in love?"

"No."

"What a pity when charming--poets--sing of things they don't understand!
Well, well, hand it over!  I'll bear it as bravely as I may--"

Ron winced, and bit his lower lip.  It was agony to sit by and watch the
cool, supercilious expression on the critic's face, the indifferent
flick of the fingers with which the sheet was closed and returned.

"Anything more?"

"You don't care for that one?"

"Pretty platitudes!  Read them before a score of times--and somewhat
more happily expressed.  If I were a poet--which I'm not, thank
goodness!--I could turn 'em out by the score.  Ten shillings each,
reduction upon taking a dozen.  Suitable for amateur tenors, or the
fashion-magazines.  Alterations made if required...  Anything else in
the lucky bag?"

"There's my note-book.  They are all in there--the new ones, I mean,
written since I came up here.  You can read which you please."

Ron took the precious leather book from his pocket, and handed it over
with an effort as painful as that of submitting a live nerve to the
dentist's tool.  As he sat on the ground beside his critic he dug his
heels into the grass, and the knuckles of his clenched hands showed
white through the tan.  The beginning had not been propitious, and he
knew well that no consideration for his feelings would seal the lips of
this most honest of critics.  For a few moments he had not courage to
look at his companion's face, but even without that eloquent guide it
was easy to follow his impressions.

A grunt, a groan, a long incredulous whistle, a sharp intake of breath--
these were but too readily translated as adverse criticisms, but between
these explosions came intervals of silence less easy to explain.  Ron
deliberately rolled over on his side, turning his back on his companion,
thereby making it impossible to see his face.  Those who have never
trusted their inmost thoughts to paper can hardly imagine the acute
suffering of the moment when they are submitted to the cold criticism of
an outsider.  Life and death themselves seemed to hang in the balance
for the young poet during the half-hour when he lay on the heather
listening to each sound and movement of his critic.  At the end of half
an hour the interruption came.  A yawn, a groan, the pressure of a heavy
hand on his shoulder.

"Now then, wake up, over there!  Time to move on!"

Awake!  As if it were possible that he could be asleep!  Never in his
life had he been more acutely, painfully conscious of his surroundings.
Ron rose to his feet, casting the while a tense glance at his
companion's face.  What verdict would he see written on eye and mouth as
the result of that half-hour's study?  He met a smile of bland good-
humour; the cheery, carelessly complacent smile of the breakfast-table,
the smoke-room, the after-dinner game; with not one trace of emotion, of
kindled feeling, or even ordinary appreciation!  The black note-book was
tossed into his hands, as carelessly as if it had been a ball; even a
commonplace word of comment was denied.

It was a bitter moment, but, to the lad's credit be it said, he met it
bravely.  A gulp to a tiresome lump in the throat, a slight quivering of
the sensitive lips, and he was master of himself again, hastily stuffing
the precious note-book out of sight, and striving to display the right
amount of interest in his companion's conversation.  It was not until
the inn was within sight that Mr Elgood made the slightest allusion to
the verses which he had read.

"Ah--about those rhymes!" he began casually.  "Don't take yourself too
seriously, you know.  It's a strange thing that young people constitute
themselves the pessimists of the world, while the old ones, who know
what real trouble is, are left to do the optimism by themselves.  If you
are bound to sing, sing cheerfully!  Try to forget that `sad' rhymes
with `glad,' and don't feel it necessary to end in the minor key.  That
rhyming business has a lot to answer for.  I like you best when you are
content to be your natural, cheerful self!"

"You think, then--you do think--some of them a little good?"

Ron's wistful voice would have melted a heart of stone.  The Chieftain
laid a hand on his arm with a very kindly pressure.

"There are some of 'em," he said cheerfully, "which are a lot better
than others.  I'm not partial to amateur verses myself, but I don't mind
telling you for your comfort that I've seen worse, before now--
considerably worse!"

Poor Ron!  It was bitter comfort.  In the blessed privacy of his own
room he sat himself down to read over the pages of the little black book
with painful criticism, asking himself miserably if it were really true
that they were feeble amateur efforts, tinged with pretence and
unreality.  Here and there a flush and a wince proved that the
accusation had gone home, when a vigorous pencil mark on the side of the
page marked the necessity for correction, but on the whole he could
honestly refute the charge; could declare, with the bold yet humble
conviction of the true craftsman, that it was good work; work well done;
work worth doing!

The dreamy brown eyes sent out a flash of determination.

"I _can_!" said Ron to himself.  "And I _will_!"



CHAPTER TWENTY ONE.

A MOUNTAIN MIST.

Three days later a wagonette was chartered from Rew, to drive the
diminished party to the scene of the haunted castle.  Margot felt rather
shy in the position of the only lady, but a mild proposition that she
should stay at home had been so vigorously vetoed that she had nothing
more to say.

"If one clergyman, plus one brother, plus one bald-headed veteran,
aren't sufficient chaperons for one small girl, things are coming to a
pretty pass indeed!" protested the Chieftain vigorously.  "If you stay
at home, we _all_ stay, so that's settled, and the disappointment and
upset will be on your head.  Why all this fuss, I should like to know?
One might think you were shy."

Margot pouted, and wriggled her shoulders inside her white blouse.

"I _am_ shy!"

"You are, are you?  Hadn't noticed it before.  Of whom, if one may ask?"

She turned at that, and walked back to the inn, nose in air, but
thereafter there were no more demurs.

It was indeed a very decorous little party which sat in two rows of
three, facing each other in the wagonette during the eight-mile drive.
The clergyman and the Chieftain, with Margot between them; and opposite,
the three dreamers: the Editor, Ron, and young Mr Menzies,--each
apparently too much immersed in his own thoughts to care for
conversation.  Margot was quite thankful when the drive came to an end,
outside castle walls, grim and grey, but imposing as ever, though they
were in reality but a shell, surrounding a plot of innocent green grass.
There were isolated towers still standing, however, approached by
winding stone stairways, and short lengths of walks along the ramparts,
and quaint little barred windows through which one could view the
surrounding country.  When Margot thrust her pretty laughing face
through one of these latter to greet her friends below, every
photographer among them insisted upon snap-shotting her then and there,
and for a good half-hour she was kept busy, posing in various attitudes,
to give the desired touch of life to the pictures.

Photography over, the next duties were to partake of lunch and to wander
round the small, and it must be confessed somewhat uninteresting little
village; then,--since the return home counted as one of the chief
attractions in the programme--the little party broke up into two, the
clergyman and his son preferring the longer route, round by the roads,
the other four to take the short--cut across the moors.

A five-mile walk across the moors!  Given health, settled skies, and
congenial society, it would be difficult to name a more exhilarating
occupation for a summer afternoon; but, truth to tell, the weather had
taken a decided turn for the worse since midday, and it needed some
optimism to set forth on a long exposed walk.

The subject had been discussed at lunch with special reference to
Margot, as the only lady of the party; but, as she aptly observed, she
was bound to get back somehow, and, as a choice of evils, preferred to
walk through rain, rather than sit still to be soaked through and
through on the seat of the wagonette.  It was therefore decided to make
an early start, and allow no loitering by the way; but when the village
had been left about a mile behind an unexpected delay occurred.  The
Chieftain thrust his hands into his pockets, and stopped short in the
middle of the road, with an expression of dismay.

"Eh, what!  Here's a fine kettle of fish!  Where's my bunch of keys?
They were here as safe as houses, a few minutes back.  I was jingling
tunes on them as we passed the school.  You heard me jingling 'em!
Dropped them on the road, I suppose, and walked on like a blind bat.
Serves me right to have to turn back to find 'em.  Can't lose my keys,
you know.  Got to find them somehow, or there'll be the mischief to pay.
You'll have to go on, George, and take Miss Vane with you.  There's no
time for conundrums, if you want to get home dry."  He looked towards
Ron with questioning eyebrows.  "Feel inclined to keep me company?  I
don't fancy that walk by my lonesome."

"Of course I do.  I should not think of leaving you behind by yourself,
sir," returned Ron eagerly.  "We can't have far to go, and we can soon
catch up the others, if we make a sprint for it.  Go on, Margot.  We'll
be after you in no time."

In the circumstances there was nothing else to be done, nor indeed,
after a long morning spent in wandering about as a party, was Margot
inclined to quarrel with the fate which provided an interesting _tete-a-
tete_ for the walk home.  She contented herself with expressing profuse
sympathy for the Chieftain's loss, and with prophesying cheerfully that
the keys were certain to be found, then promptly dismissed the subject
from her mind, and gave herself up to the enjoyment of the moment.

"I really think we are wise not to wait about," George Elgood said, in
accents of self-vindication, as they moved on together.  "The glass is
high, but I don't like the look of things, all the same, and for your
sake shall be glad when we are nearer home.  Are you pretty warmly
dressed, if the rain should come on?"

"Don't I look it?  I couldn't possibly have anything more suitable than
this tweed coat and skirt.  It doesn't matter how wet it gets.  It won't
spoil."

"I was thinking about your own comfort, not of the clothes.  You never
carry an umbrella with you, I notice!"

"I can't be bothered!  Showers are such an everyday occurrence up here,
that one would be doing nothing else.  I rather like the feel of the
rain on my face, and besides,"--she laughed mischievously, "it's good
for the complexion!"

"Is that so?" he asked gravely, his dark eyes dwelling on the soft,
rounded cheeks, which grew a shade more pink beneath his gaze.  Suddenly
his lips twitched, with the one-sided, humorous smile which brought the
youth into his face.  "I don't think the need in that direction is so
pressing that it could not be postponed with advantage, for to-day at
least.  Do you mind walking fairly quickly?  I shall feel more
comfortable when we are nearer home."

Margot was serenely indifferent whether it rained or not, but none the
less she appreciated the Editor's care for her welfare, which showed
itself in a dozen little graceful acts during the first part of their
walk.  For one unaccustomed to women's society he was marvellously
observant, and Margot felt a sweeter satisfaction in being so protected
than in all her former independence.  They climbed the hillside which
led to the moor and set out radiantly to traverse the grey expanse; grey
and cheerless to-day in very deed, with a thick, blanket-like dampness
in the atmosphere of which dwellers in southern climes are happily
ignorant.

George Elgood turned up the collar of his coat, and Margot thrust her
hands into her pockets, shivering slightly the while, but neither made
any complaint in words.  As usual, it was left to Margot to do most of
the talking; but though her companion's responses were short, they were
yet so sympathetic and appreciative, that there was never any difficulty
in finding a fresh subject.  Like most couples with whom friendship is
fast making way for a warmer emotion, personal topics were the most
appreciated, and what was happening in the world--the discoveries of
science, the works of the great writers--palled in interest before
sentences beginning with, "I think," and, "Do you think?"

"I wish--"

"Have you ever wished--?"

They looked at each other as they spoke, with bright, questioning
glances, which seemed ever to hail some precious new discovery of mind,
drawing them closer and closer together.  The hour of enchantment had
come, when they moved in a world of their own, unconscious of external
accidents.  The moisture hung in dewdrops on the Editor's cap, Margot's
hair curled damply on her forehead; but they felt neither cold nor
discomfort.  It was unusually dark for the time of day, and had grown
mysteriously darker during the last half-hour; but visitors to the
Highlands become philosophically resigned to sudden and unpleasant
atmospheric changes, and fall into the way of ignoring them as far as
possible.

It was only when they reached a point in the moor from whence the ground
sloped sharply downward towards the Glen that they awoke to the
consciousness of danger, for instead of a rolling stretch of green
surrounded by purple hills, they seemed to be looking down into a
cauldron of floating mist and steam, blocking out the view, confusing
the eyes, and slowly but surely concealing the familiar landmarks.

Margot and the Editor stopped short with simultaneous exclamations of
dismay, then wheeled quickly round, to see what lay behind.  Here indeed
the fog was much less dense, but the distance was already obliterated,
while long, smoke-like tendrils of mist were closing in on every hand.
The signs which they had noted had portended something worse than rain;
something which the dwellers in moorland regions learn to fear and dread
above all other phenomena,--a mountain mist!

George Elgood's face was eloquent with self-reproach.

"This is my fault!  Where were my eyes, that I did not see what was
happening?  The darkness should have warned me long ago.  I am horribly
ashamed of myself, Miss Vane!"

"You needn't be.  It's as much my fault as yours.  I did notice the damp
on my face, but I thought it was rain.  What are we to do?"

It was a simple question, but terribly difficult to answer.  With every
moment those rolling masses of mist settled down more densely over the
hillsides.  To walk forward was to walk blindfold over a treacherous
country; to return seemed hardly more propitious, though as a choice of
evils it was the one to be preferred.

"We must go back.  We can't have come more than two or three miles.  We
must get back, and drive round by the road.  Probably we shall meet
Geoffrey and your brother _en route_!"

Even as he spoke the Editor turned and led the way towards the little
village which had been left behind less than an hour before.  There was
no time to waste, for the darkness was increasing, and the clammy
dankness of the air struck to the very marrow.

"I shall never forgive myself if you suffer through this.  It was my
business to look after you.  There's only this slight excuse--that we
were mounting towards the highest part of the moor, which was naturally
the clearest.  The mist seems to have gathered from all around."

Margaret looked and shivered, but hastened to appease his anxiety.

"I think we _did_ notice, but as we were expecting rain, a little
mistiness was natural.  We could not tell that it was going to spread
like this.  Never mind!  It will be quite an adventure to brag about
when we are back in town.  `Lost on the Scotch moors!  Tourists
disappear in a mist!'  It would make a thrilling headline, wouldn't it?"

She laughed as she spoke, but the laugh had rather a forced tone.
Suddenly she became conscious that she was tired and chilled, that her
coat was soaked, and her boots heavy with damp.  Though only a few paces
away, the figure of her companion was wreathed with tendrils of mist;
they were floating round her also; blinding her eyes, catching her
breath, sending fresh shivers down her back.  A pang of fear shot
through her at the thought of what might lie ahead.

Like two grey ghosts they struggled onward through the gloom.



CHAPTER TWENTY TWO.

LOST ON THE MOOR.

George Elgood's haste to reach the end of the moor gave wings to his
feet, so that Margot had much ado to keep pace.  Contrary to
expectation, the fog did not lessen as they advanced, but closed in upon
them thicker and thicker, so that the ground beneath their feet became
invisible, and progress was broken by sundry trips and stumbles over
projecting mounds of heather.  The air seemed to reek with moisture, and
a deadly feeling of oppression, almost of suffocation, affected the
lungs, as the curling wreath of mist closed overhead.

Half an hour earlier Margot had felt that any sort of adventure (if
experienced in George Elgood's company) must of necessity be enjoyable,
but during that swift silent retreat she was conscious of a dawning of
something perilously like fear.  Her breath came in quickened pants, she
kept her eyes fixed in a straining eagerness on the tall figure looming
darkly ahead.  If she once lost sight of him, what would become of her?
It made her shudder to think of being left alone upon that shrouded
moor!

Every now and then as he walked, the Editor gave voice to a loud "coo-
ee," in hope that the echoes might reach the ears of his brother and
Ronald, who should by now be approaching in the same direction; but no
reply floated back to his anxious ears.

"Perhaps they have gone round by the road," he suggested tentatively.
"If they were some time in following, they may have seen the fog, and
come to the conclusion that discretion was the better part of valour."

"Ron wouldn't go another way if he thought I was in danger!  He promised
father to take care of me.  I know he will come."

"Then we are bound to meet; unless--" George Elgood stopped short
hurriedly.  It was not for him to open his companion's eyes to the fact
that the direction which they were taking had become a matter of
speculation, as one after another the familiar landmarks faded from
view.

The two brothers might pass by within a few yards, or their paths might
diverge by miles, but in either case they would be equally invisible.
The only hope was to go on sending out the familiar cry, which would at
once prove their identity.  "Not that we should be any better off with
them than without!" he told himself dolefully.

Margot did not ask for a completion of the unfinished sentence, perhaps
because she guessed only too truly its import.  A few steps farther on
her foot came in contact with a stone hidden beneath a clump of furze;
she stumbled, tried in vain to recover herself, and fell forward on her
knees.  The shock and the severe pricking which ensued forced a cry of
dismay, and the Editor turned back hurriedly, and uttered a startled
inquiry.

"Miss Vane, where are you?"

"I'm here!" replied a doleful voice, and a dark form stirred at his
feet.  "I--_fell_!  On a horrid bush!  My hands are full of prickles."

"I'll light a match while you get them out.  It's my fault.  I might
have guessed what would happen.  I'd like to kick myself for being so
thoughtless."

"Please don't!  We don't want any more tribulations.  I--I'm quite all
right!" cried Margot, with tremulous bravery.  The flicker of a match
showed a pale face, and two little hands grimed with dust and earth.
She brushed them hastily together, and peered up into his face.  "It's
pretty thick, isn't it?"

"Abominably thick!  I have heard of the sudden way in which these
mountain mists come on, but I've never been in one before.  I could kick
myself once more for not having noticed it sooner.  I suppose I was too
much absorbed in our conversation."

The match died out, and there was a moment's silence, in which Margot
seemed to hear the beating of her own heart.  Then in the darkness a
hand lifted hers, and placed it against an arm which felt reassuringly
solid.

"You must let me help you along.  A moor is not the easiest place in the
world to cross in the dark.  You won't mind my shouts?  I want to let
the other fellows know where we are, if they are within hearing."

"Oh, I don't mind.  I'll shout, too!  They must be near.  It seems
ridiculous that we can't see each other."

But still no answering cry came back, and Margot's sense of comfort in
the supporting arm gradually gave place to a revival of her first dread.
She shivered, and swallowed a lump in her throat before daring a
fateful question.

"Mr Elgood, do you know--have you the faintest idea where we are
going?"

His arm tightened over her hand, but he made no attempt at
prevarication.

"No, I haven't!  For the last five or ten minutes it has been purely
guess-work."

"We may be going in the wrong direction, or round and round in a
circle!"

"We may--I am afraid it is more than probable.  I have been thinking
that it might be better to stay where we are.  We can't have strayed
very far out of the course as yet, but--" Again he stopped, and this
time Margot completed the sentence.

"I know!  It's not safe to wander about when we can't see what is ahead.
I've been thinking the same thing.  We had better sit down and wait.
They will come to look for us.  I'm sure they will come, and there's a
cottage somewhere near, where we have been for milk.  That's another
chance.  If we keep calling the people, they may hear us."

"Oh yes, yes!  Some one will hear, or the mist will rise as suddenly as
it fell.  It will be only for a short time," returned the Editor
sturdily.  "Now look here--the ground is soaking--you can't possibly sit
on it without something underneath.  If you could spare your cape it
would serve us both as a rug, and I'm going to wrap you up in my coat."

He loosened his arm, as if to take off the said coat forthwith, but
Margot's fingers tightened their grasp in very determined fashion.

"You are not!  I won't wear it.  I absolutely refuse to do any such
thing.  How can you suggest such a horridly selfish arrangement--I to
wear your coat, while you sit shivering in shirt-sleeves?  Never!  I'd
rather freeze!"

"Put it the other way.  Am I, a man, to hug my coat, and let a girl sit
on the soaking grass?  How do you suppose I should feel?  I'd rather
freeze, too!"

Margot gave a quavering little laugh.

"It seems to me we have a pretty good chance of doing it--coat or no
coat.  If I am a girl, I'm a healthy one, and I must take my chance.
Did you happen to put your newspaper in your pocket this morning?  That
would be better than nothing."

"Of course I did!  That will do capitally.  What a blessing you thought
of it!  There!  Sit down quickly, and I'll pull a bit down under your
feet.  Can't I wrap that cape more tightly round you?  And the hood?
Hadn't you better have the hood up?"

"Yes, please!  I had forgotten the hood.  That will be cosy!"

Margot's cold cheeks flamed with sudden colour as she felt the touch of
careful fingers settling the hood round head and face, and fumbling for
the hook under the chin.  At that moment at least cold was not the
predominant sensation!  There was a short silence while the Editor
seated himself by her side, and felt in his pockets.

"You won't mind if I smoke?"

"I shall like it, especially if you have fusees.  I love the smell of
fusees!  You don't ask me to have a cigarette, I notice, and yet it is
fashionable for girls to smoke nowadays.  How did you know that I
didn't?"

"I _did_ know!  I can hardly tell why, but I am thankful for it, all the
same.  I am too old-fashioned to care for smoking women.  A girl loses
her charm when she apes a man's habits."

"Yes.  I agree.  I am sorry I am not a man, but as I'm a girl I prefer
to be a real one, and have my clothes smelling sweet and violety,
instead of like a fusty railway carriage.  But men seem to find smoke
soothing at times.  I wish I had a feminine equivalent of it just now.
It's a little bit frightening to sit still and stare into this blank
white wall.  Couldn't you tell me something interesting to pass the
time?"

"It's a little difficult to be `interesting' to order.  What particular
kind of narrative would distract you best?"

"Oh--something about yourself.  Something you have done, or felt, or
planned for another day.  I'm so interested in people!" returned Margot,
wrapping the folds of her cloak more closely round her, and slipping her
hands deep down into the inside pockets.  "Have you had any thrilling
experiences or adventures that you don't mind speaking about?  The more
thrilling the better, please, for my feet _are_ so cold!"

She shivered, in involuntary childish fashion, and George Elgood sighed
profoundly.

"This is about the biggest adventure I've had.  I was once snowed up for
a night in a rest-house on one of the Swiss mountains, but we had every
ordinary comfort, and knew exactly where we were, so that it didn't
amount to much, after all.  I was going up with my guide, and met
another party of two brothers and a sister coming down, and we all took
shelter together, while one of the guides returned to the village, to
let the people in the hotel know of our safety.  When the door was open
the prospect was sufficiently eerie, but we made a fire and brewed tea,
and passed the time pleasantly enough.  The worst part of it was that I
had to give up the ascent next day, as there was too much snow to make
it prudent to go on."

"Oh!  Yes!  Was she pretty?"

She felt, rather than saw, his start of surprise.

"Who?"

"The sister.  You said there was a girl in the other party."

"I'm _sure_ I don't know!  I didn't notice."

"Don't you care how people look?"

"It doesn't interest me, unless I am already attracted in other ways.
At least--" he hesitated conscientiously.  "I _used_ not to be.  I think
I am growing more noticing.  Geoff always said I needed to be awakened
to the claims of beauty.  I understand now that it may be a great
additional charm."

How did he understand?  Who or what had increased his power of
observation?  Margot hoped that she knew; longed to be certain, yet
dreaded the definite information.  In a little flurry of nervousness she
began to talk volubly on her own account, hoping thereby to ward off
embarrassing explanations.

"I seem fated to come in for adventures.  I went over to Norway one
summer, and the engines broke down half-way across the North Sea, and at
the same time all the electric lights went out.  It was terribly rough,
and we rolled for a couple of hours--the longest hours I have ever
known!  The partitions of the cabins did not quite reach to the roof,
and you could hear the different conversations going on all round.  In a
dreary kind of way I realised that they were very funny, and that I
should laugh over them another day.  Quite near us were two jolly
English schoolboys, who kept ordering meals all the next day, and
shouting out details to a poor sister who was lying terribly ill in the
next cabin `Monica, we are having bacon!  Have a bit of bread soaked in
fat?'  Then Monica would groan--a heartrending groan, and they would
start afresh.  `Buck up, Monica--try a muffin!'  At lunch-time they
pressed roast beef and Yorkshire pudding upon her, and she groaned
louder than ever.  She _was_ ill, poor girl.  In Norway there was an
alarm of fire in one of those terrible wooden hotels, and we all jumped
on each other's balconies to get to the outside staircases.  It was soon
extinguished, but it was a very bad scare.  And now this is the third.
Mr Elgood, do coo-ee again!  Ron must be looking for me, unless he is
lost himself."

The Editor put his hands to his mouth and sent forth a succession of
long-drawn-out calls, which seemed as though they must surely be heard
for miles around, but in the silence which followed no note of reply
could be heard.  In the face of such continued disappointment, Margot
had not the courage to go on making conversation, but relapsed into a
dreary silence, which was broken only by the gentle puff-puff of the
Editor's pipe.  In the darkness and silence neither took note of time,
or realised how it sped along.  Only by physical sensations could it be
checked, but gradually these became disagreeably pressing.

Margot's feet were like ice, her fingers so cold as to be almost
powerless; but as the minutes passed slowly by the active discomfort was
replaced by a feeling of drowsy indifference.  She seemed to have been
sitting for years staring into a blank white wall, and had no longer any
desire to move from her position.  It was easier to sit still, and wait
upon Fate.

Beneath the veil of darkness her head drooped forward, and she swayed
gently from side to side.  For some time these movements were so slight
as to pass unnoticed by her companion, but as the drowsiness increased
the muscles seemed to lose control, the swayings became momentarily more
pronounced, until she tilted violently over, to recover herself with a
jerk and a groan.  Then indeed George Elgood was startled into anxious
attention.

"What is it?  What is the matter?  Are you in pain?"

The inarticulate murmur which did duty for reply seemed only to whet
anxiety still further.

"Miss Vane, are you ill?  For pity's sake tell me what is wrong!"

Another murmur sounded faintly in his ear, followed by an
incoherent--"I'm only--asleep!  So--very--tired!"

With a sharp exclamation the Editor leapt upwards, and the drowsy Margot
felt herself suddenly hoisted to her feet by a pair of strong arms.  The
arms retained their hold of her even after she was erect, shaking her to
and fro with almost painful energy.

"But you _must_ not sleep!  Margot, Margot, awake!  I can't let you
sleep.  It is the worst thing you could do.  Speak to me, Margot.  Tell
me you understand.  Margot!  Darling!  Oh, do rouse yourself, and try to
understand!"

Margot never forgot that moment, or the wonder of it.  She seemed to
herself to be wandering in a strange country, far, far away from the
solid tangible earth--a land of darkness and dreams, of strange, numbing
unreality.  Her eyes were open, yet saw nothing: impalpable chains
fettered her limbs, so that they grew stiff and refused to move; an icy
coldness crept around her heart.  Hearing, like the other senses, was
dulled, yet through the throbbing silence a sound had penetrated,
bringing with it a thrill of returning life.  Some one had called
"_Margot_" in a tone she had never heard before.  Some one had said,
"_Darling_!"

Back through the fast-closing mists of unconsciousness Margot's soul
struggled to meet her mate.  Her fingers tightened feebly on his, and
her cold lips breathed a reply.

"Yes--I am here!  Do you want me?"

Something like a sob sounded in the Editor's throat.

"Do I want you?  My little Margot!  Did I ever want anything before?
Come, I will warm your little cold hands.  I will lead you every step of
the way.  You can't sit here any longer to perish of cold.  We will walk
on, and ask God to guide our feet.  Lean on me.  Don't be afraid!"

Then the dream became a moving one, in which she was borne forward
encircled by protecting arms; on and on; unceasingly onward, with ever-
increasing difficulty and pain.

George Elgood never knew whether he hit, as he supposed, a straight road
forward, or wandered aimlessly over the same ground.  His one care was
to support his companion, and to test each footstep before he took it;
for the rest, he had put himself in God's hands, with a simple faith
which expected a reply; and when at last the light of the cottage
windows shone feebly through the mist his thankfulness was as great as
his relief.

As for Margot, she was too completely exhausted to realise relief; she
knew only a shrinking from the light, from the strange watching face; a
deathly sensation as of falling from a towering height, before darkness
and oblivion overpowered her, and she lay stretched unconscious upon the
bed.



CHAPTER TWENTY THREE.

PARTINGS.

It was six days later when Margot opened her eyes, and found herself
lying on the little white bed in the bedroom of the Nag's Head, with
some one by the window whose profile as outlined against the light
seemed strangely and sweetly familiar.  She stared dumbly, with a
confused wonder in her brain.  _Edith_?  It could not possibly be Edith!
What should bring Edith up to Glenaire in this sudden and unexpected
fashion?  And why was she herself so weak and languid that to speak and
ask the question seemed an almost impossible exertion?

What had happened?  Was she only dreaming that her head ached, and her
hands seemed too heavy to move, and that Edith sat by the window near a
table covered with medicine bottles and glasses?  Margot blinked her
eyes, and stared curiously around.  No! it was no dream; she was
certainly awake, and through the dull torpor of her brain a remembrance
began slowly to work.  Something had happened!  She had been tired and
cold; oh, cold, cold, cold; so cold that it had seemed impossible to
live.  She had wandered on and on, through an eternity of darkness,
which had ended in the blackness of night.  Her head throbbed with the
effort of thinking; she shut her eyes and lay quietly, waiting upon
remembrance.

Suddenly it came.  A faint flush of colour showed itself in the white
cheek, and a tingle of warmth ran through the veins.  She remembered now
upon whose arm she had hung, whose voice it was which had cheered her
onward; in trembling, incredulous fashion she remembered what that voice
had said!

A faint exclamation sounded through the stillness, whereupon Edith
looked round quickly, and hurried to the bedside.

"Margot!  My darling!  Do you know me at last?"

Margot smiled wanly.  The smooth rounded face had fallen away sadly in
that week of fever and unconsciousness, and a little hand was pushed
feebly forward.

"Of course.  I'm so glad!  Edie, have I been ill?"

"Yes, darling; but you are better now.  After a few days' rest you will
be well again.  You must not be nervous about your dear self."

"And you came?"

"Yes, darling; Ron telegraphed, and father and I came up at once.  Agnes
is taking care of the boys."

"So kind!  I remember--it was the mist.  Was--Ron--safe?"

"Yes, darling, quite safe.  He and Mr Elgood arrived at the cottage
very soon after you, and were so thankful to find you there."

"Is--is _everybody_ well?"

Again that faint flush showed on the cheeks; but Edie was mercifully
blind, and answered with direct simplicity--

"Every one, dear, and you are going to be quite well, too.  You must not
talk any more just now, for you are rather a weak little girl still.
Drink this cup of milk, and roll over, and have another nap.  It is good
to see you sleeping quietly and peacefully again.  There!  Shut your
eyes, like a good girl!"

Then once more Margot floated off into unconsciousness; but this time it
was the blessed, health-restoring unconsciousness of sleep, such sleep
as she had not known for days past, and from which she awoke with rested
body and clearer brain.

When the dear father came in to kiss and greet her, a thin white hand
crept up to stroke his hair, and pull his ear in the way he loved,
whereupon he blinked away tears of thankfulness, and essayed to be
fierce and reproachful.

"So you couldn't be satisfied until you had dragged the whole family
after you, to the ends of the earth!  There's no pleasing some people.
This is my reward for being such a fool as to think you could take care
of yourself!"

"Ducky Doodles!" murmured Margot fondly.  As of yore, she manifested not
the faintest alarm at his pretence of severity, but twitched his ear
with complacent composure, and once more Mr Vane blinked and swallowed
a lump in his throat.  There had been hours during those last days when
he had feared that he might never again hear himself called "Ducky
Doodles," and what a sad grey world that would have meant!

Then came Ron, a little embarrassed, as was natural in a lad of his
years, but truly loving and tender all the same, and Margot's brown
_eyes_ searched his face with wistful questioning.

There was so much that she wanted to ask and to hear, and concerning
which no one had as yet vouchsafed information.  Ron could tell her all
that was to be told, which it was impossible to pass another night
without knowing, yet there he sat, sublimely unconscious that she wanted
to be assured of anything but his own safety.  With the energy of
despair, Margot forced herself to put a question.

"How are all--the others?"

"The Elgoods?  They are all right.  Awfully worried about you, you know,
and that sort of thing.  Afraid the governor might think they were to
blame.  The idea of your going down with pneumonia, and frightening us
all into fits!  I thought you were too healthy to be bowled over so
soon, but a London life doesn't fit one for exposure.  The governor was
furious with me for bringing you to the North."

But for once Margot was not interested in her father's feelings.  She
turned her head on the pillow and put yet another question.

"They did not catch colds, too?"

"Oh, colds!"  Ron laughed lightly.  "Of course, we all had colds; what
else could you expect?  We were lucky to get off so easily.  The Elgoods
put off leaving until you were safely round the corner, but they are off
first thing to-morrow."

At this there was a quick rustle of the bedclothes.

"Going?  _Where_?" asked a startled voice, in which sounded an
uncontrollable quiver of apprehension.  "Not away for altogether?"

"Yes!  Their time was up three days ago.  It is awfully decent of them
to have stayed on for so long.  We shall meet in town, I suppose; but
your Editor man is no use to me, Margot.  That little scheme has fallen
flat.  From first to last he has never troubled to show the faintest
interest in my existence, and has avoided the governor all he knew.  The
Chieftain is worth a dozen of him.  He has kept the whole thing going
this last week, amused the governor, looked after Edith, been a perfect
brick to me.  I'm glad we came, if it were only for the sake of making
his acquaintance, for he is the grandest man I've ever known; but your
scheme has failed, old girl."

From Margot's expression it would appear that everything on earth had
failed.  Her face looked as white as the pillow against which she
rested, and her eyes were tragic in her despairing sadness.  Ron
bestirred himself to comfort her, full of gratitude for so heartfelt an
interest.

"Never mind!  You did your best, and it's nobody's fault that he turned
out such a Diogenes.  The governor has been awfully decent since he came
up, and I don't despair of getting the time extended.  He is much more
amenable, apart from Agnes, and I fancy the Chieftain puts in a good
word for me now and then--not on the score of literature, of course--but
after they have been talking together, the governor always seems to look
upon me with more--more _respect_, don't you know, and less as if I were
a hopeless failure, of whom he was more or less ashamed.  That's a gain
in itself, isn't it?"

"'Um!" assented Margot vaguely.  "I suppose they drive over to catch the
evening express?  Did he--they--say anything about me?"

Ron started in surprise.

"My dear girl, we have talked of nothing else _but_ you, for the last
week!  Pulse, temperature, sleep; sleep, temperature, pulse; every hour
the same old tale.  You have given us all a rare old fright; but thank
goodness you are on the mend at last.  The doctor says it is only a
matter of time."

"Did--they--send any message?"

"No!  Edie said you were not to be excited.  Awfully sorry to miss
saying good-bye, and that sort of thing, but hope to meet you another
day in town."

Margot shut her eyes, and the line of curling lashes looked
astonishingly black against her cheek.

"I see.  Very kind!  I'm--tired, Ron.  I can't talk any more."

Ron rose from his seat with, it must be confessed, a sigh of relief.  He
was ill at ease in the atmosphere of the sick-room, and hardly
recognised his jaunty, self-confident companion in this wan and languid
invalid.  He dropped a light kiss on Margot's forehead, and hurried
downstairs, to be encountered on the threshold of the inn by George
Elgood, who for once seemed anxious to enter into conversation.

"You have been to see your sister.  Did she--er--was she well enough to
send any message before we go?"

"Oh, she's all right--quite quiet and sensible again, but doesn't bother
herself much about what is going on.  I told her you were off, but she
didn't seem to take much notice.  Expect she's so jolly thankful to feel
comfortable again that she doesn't care for anything else."

"Er--quite so, quite so!" repeated the Editor hastily; and Ron passed on
his way, satisfied that he had been all that was tactful and
considerate, and serenely unconscious that he had eclipsed the sun of
that summer's day for two anxious hearts!

There was little sleep for poor Margot that night, and in the morning
Edith noticed with alarm the flushed cheeks and shining eyes which
seemed to predict a return of the feverish symptoms.  She drew down the
blind and seated herself by the bedside, determined to guard the door
and allow no visitors.  The child had evidently had too much excitement
the day before, and must now be kept absolutely quiet.  But Margot
tossed and fidgeted, and threw the clothes restlessly about, refusing to
shut her eyes, and allow herself to be tucked up, as the elder sister
lovingly advised.  Her eyes were strained, and every now and then she
lifted her head from the pillow with an anxious, listening movement.  At
last it came, the sound for which she had been waiting--the rumble of
wheels, the clatter of horses' hoofs, the grunts and groans of the
ostler as he lifted the heavy bags to their place.  Margot's brown eyes
looked up with a piteous entreaty.

"They are going!  You must be quick, Edie.  Run down quickly and say
good-bye!"

"It isn't necessary, dear.  I saw them before coming upstairs.  Ron is
there, and father."

"But you must!  I want you to go.  Quickly, before it is too late.
Edie, you _must_!"

There was no denying so vehement a command.  Edith turned silently away,
confirmed in a growing suspicion, and yearning tenderly over the little
sister's suffering.  It was the younger brother, of course!--the tall,
silent man, whose lips had been so dumb, whose eyes so eloquent, during
the critical days of Margot's illness, and who had been the girl's
companion on the misty moor.  What had happened during those hours of
suspense and danger?  What barriers had been swept aside; what new
vistas opened?  Edith's own love was too sweet and sacred a thing to
allow her to pry and question into the heart-secrets of another, as is
the objectionable fashion of many so-called friends, but with her keen
woman-senses she took in George Elgood's every word, look, and movement
during the brief parting scene.

He stood aside, leaving his brother to utter the conventional farewells;
his lips were set, and his brows drawn together; but ever and anon, as
if against his will, his eyes shot anxious glances towards the window of
the room where Margot lay.  Edith moved a few steps nearer, to give the
chance of a few quiet words, if it was in his heart to speak, but none
came.  A moment later he had swung himself up beside his brother on the
high seat of the cart, and the wheels were beginning to move.

Edith went slowly back to her post, dreading to meet the gaze of those
dear brown eyes, which had lost their sparkle, and become so pathetic in
their dumb questioning.  She had no reassuring message to give, and
could only affect a confidence which she was far from feeling.

"Well, dear, they are off, but it is not good-bye--only _au revoir_, as
you are sure to meet again in town before long.  Mr Elgood asked
permission to call upon me in town.  Nice little man!  He has been so
wonderfully kind and considerate.  I can't think why he should trouble
himself so much for a complete stranger.  The tall one looked sorry to
go!  He kept looking up at your window.  He has a fine face--strong and
clever.  He must be an interesting companion."

Margot did not answer; but five minutes later she asked to have the
curtain drawn, as the light hurt her eyes.  They had a somewhat red and
inflamed appearance for the rest of the day; but when Mr Vane commented
on the fact, the dear, wise Edie assured him that it was a common
phenomenon after illness, and laid a supply of fresh handkerchiefs on
the bed--table in such a quiet and unobtrusive fashion, that they might
have grown there of their own accord.

"Some day," thought Margot dismally to herself, "some day I shall laugh
over this!"  For the present, however, her sense of humour was strangely
blunted, and the handkerchiefs were needed for a very different purpose.



CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR.

A PROUD MOMENT.

Margot's recovery was somewhat tedious, so that it was quite three weeks
after the departure of the brothers Elgood before she was strong enough
to face the journey home.  In the meantime Edith remained in charge as
nurse, while Mr Vane and Ron varied the monotony of life in the Glen by
making short excursions of two or three days' duration to places of
interest in the neighbourhood.

Notwithstanding the unchanged position of affairs, they appeared to be
on unusually good terms, a fact which would have delighted Margot if she
had been in her usual health and spirits; but she had become of late so
languid and preoccupied as to appear almost unconscious of her
surroundings.  Once a day she did, indeed, rouse herself sufficiently to
show some interest in passing events, that is to say, when the post
arrived in the morning; but the revival was but momentary, and on each
occasion was followed by a still deeper depression.

The elder sister was very tender during those days of waiting; very
tactful and patient with little outbursts of temper and unreasonable
changes of mind.  She knew that it was not so much physical as mental
suffering which was retarding the girl's progress, and yearned over her
with a sympathy that was almost maternal in its depth.

The little sister had proved herself such a true friend during the
trials of the last few years, that she would have gone through fire and
water to save her from pain; but there are some things which even the
most devoted relative cannot do.

Edith could not, for instance, write to George Elgood and question him
concerning his silence: could not ask how it came to pass that while his
brother had written to Margot, to Ronald, even to herself, he remained
silent, content to send commonplace messages through a third person.  As
for Margot herself, she never mentioned the younger of the two brothers,
but was always ready to talk about the elder, and seemed unaffectedly
pleased at her sister's appreciation of the kindly, genial little man.

"But why was he so sweet to me?"  Edith would ask, with puzzled
wonderment.  "From the moment I arrived he seemed to be on the outlook
to see how he could help.  And he took an interest in Jack, and asked
all about him and his affairs.  The astonishing thing is that I told
him, too!  Though he was a stranger, his interest was so _real_ and deep
that I could confide in him more easily than in many old friends.  Had
you been talking about us to him, by any chance?"

Margot turned her head on the pillow, and stared out of the window to
the ridge of hills against the skyline.  Her cheeks had sunk, making the
brown eyes appear pathetically large and worn.  There was a listlessness
in her expression which was strangely different from the vivacious,
self-confident Margot of a few weeks ago.

"Yes, I spoke about you one day.  He liked you, because you were so fond
of Jack.  He was in love himself, and the girl died, but he loves her
still, just the same.  He tries to help other girls for her sake.  He
said he wanted to know you.  If it were ever in his power to help you
and Jack, he would do it; but sometimes no one can help.  It makes
things worse when they try.  You might just as well give up at once."

"Margot!  What heresy, dear!  From you, too, who are always preaching
courage and perseverance!  That's pneumonia croaking, not the gallant
little champion of the family!  What would Ron and I have done without
you this last year, I should like to know?  Isn't it nice to see father
and the boy on such good terms?  I believe that also is in a great
degree due to Mr Elgood's influence.  The pater told me that he
congratulated him on having such a son, and seemed to think Ron quite
unusually gifted.  It is wonderful how much one man thinks of another
man's judgment!  We have said the same thing for years past, and it has
had no effect; but when a calm, level-headed man of business drops a
word, it is accepted as gospel.  You will be happy, won't you, darling,
if Ron's future is harmoniously arranged?"

"Ron will be happy!" said Margot shortly.  At the moment it seemed to
her as if such good fortune could never again be her own.  She must
always be miserable, since George Elgood cared so little for her that he
could disappear into space and leave her without a word.  Formal
messages sent through another person did not count, when one recalled
the tone of the voice which had said, "_Margot_!" and blushed at the
remembrance of that other word which had followed.

Sometimes, during those long days of convalescence, Margot almost came
to the conclusion that what she had heard had been the effect of
imagination only; as unreal and dream-like as the other events of that
fateful afternoon.  At other times, as if in contradiction of these
theories, every intonation of the Editor's voice would ring in her ears,
and once again she would flush and tremble with happiness.

At last the day arrived when the return to town need no longer be
delayed.  Mr Vane was anxious to return to his work, Edith to her
husband and children; and the doctor pronounced Margot strong enough to
bear the journey in the comfortable invalid carriage which had been
provided.

Preparations were therefore made for an early start, and poor Elspeth
made happy by such a wholesale legacy of garments as composed a very
trousseau in the estimation of the Glen.

No one was bold enough to offer a gift to Mrs McNab, but when the last
moment arrived Margot lifted her white face with lips slightly pursed,
like a child asking for a kiss.  As on the occasion of her first
appearance, a contortion of suppressed emotion passed over the dour
Scotch face, and something suspiciously like moisture trembled in the
cold eyes.

"When ye come back again, come back twa!" was the enigmatical sentence
with which the landlady made her adieu, and a faint colour flickered in
Margot's cheek as she pondered over its significance.

The journey home was broken by a night spent in Perth, and London was
reached on the afternoon of a warm July day.  The trees in the Park
looked grey with dust, the air felt close and heavy after the
exhilaration of the mountain breezes to which the travellers had become
accustomed; even the house itself had a heavy, stuffy smell, despite the
immaculate cleanliness of its _regime_.

Jack Martin was waiting to take his wife back to Oxford Terrace, the
children having already preceded her, and Margot felt a sinking of
loneliness at being left to Agnes's tender mercies.

"Dear me, child, what a wreck you look!  Your Highland holiday has been
a fine upset for us all.  What did I tell you before you started?
Perhaps another time you may condescend to listen to what I say!"  Such
was the ingratiating welcome bestowed upon the weary girl on her
arrival; yet when Margot turned aside in silence, and made no response
to the accompanying kiss of welcome, Agnes felt hurt and aggrieved.
From morning to night she had bustled about the house, assuring herself
that everything was in apple-pie order; arranging flowers, putting out
treasures of fancy-work, providing comforts for the invalid.  "And she
never notices, nor says one word of thanks.  I can't understand Margot!"
said poor Agnes to herself for the hundredth time, as she seated herself
at the head of the table for dinner.

"Are there any letters for me, Agnes?" queried Margot anxiously.

"One or two, I believe, and a paper or something of the sort.  You can
see them after dinner."

"I want them now!" said Margot obstinately.  She pushed back her chair
from the table, and walked across the room to the desk where newly-
arrived letters were laid out to await the coming of their owners.
Three white envelopes lay there, and a rolled-up magazine, all addressed
to herself.  She flushed expectantly as she bent to examine the
different handwritings.  Two were uninterestingly familiar, belonging to
faithful girl friends who had hastened to welcome her home; the third
was unmistakably a man's hand,--small and compact, the letters fine, and
accurately formed.

A blessed intuition told Margot that her waiting was at an end, and that
this was the message for which she had longed ever since her return to
consciousness.  With a swift movement she slipped the envelope into her
pocket, to be opened later on in the privacy of her room, and returned
to the table, bearing the other communications in her hand.

"I should have thought that after six weeks' absence from home you might
have been willing to talk to _me_, instead of wanting to read letters at
your very first meal!" said Agnes severely; and Margot laughed in good-
natured assent.

"I won't open them!  It was only curiosity to see what they were.  I'll
talk as much as you like, Aggie dear."

It was, all of a sudden, so easy to be amiable and unselfish!  The
nervous irritation which had made it difficult to be patient, even with
dear, tactful Edie during the last weeks, had taken wing and departed
with the first sight of that square white envelope.  The light came back
to Margot's eyes; she held her head erect, the very hollows in her
cheeks seemed miraculously to disappear, and to be replaced by the old
dimpling smile.  Mr Vane and Ron exchanged glances of delight at the
marvellous manner in which their invalid had stood the journey home.

The letters and parcel lay unnoticed on the table until the conclusion
of the meal, but as Margot picked them up preparatory to carrying them
upstairs to her own room, she gave a sudden start of astonishment.

"Ron, it's the _Loadstar_!  Some one has sent me a copy of the
_Loadstar_.  From the office, I think, for the name is printed on the
cover.  Who could it be?"

"The Editor, of course--as a mark of attention on your return home.
Lazy beggar!  It was easier than writing a letter," laughed Ron easily,
stretching out his hand as he spoke to take forcible possession, for the
magazine was of more interest to himself than to Margot, and he felt
that a new copy was just what was needed to occupy the hours before
bedtime.

Margot made no demur, but stood watching quietly while Ron tore off the
wrapper, and flattened the curled paper.  She was not in a reading mood,
but the suggestion that George Elgood might have sent the magazine made
it precious in her sight, and she waited anxiously for its return.

"It's mine, Ron.  It was sent to me!  I want to take it upstairs."

"Let me look at the index first, to see who is writing this month!  You
don't generally care for such stiff reading; I say, there's a fine
collection of names!  It's stronger than ever this month.  I don't
believe there is another paper in the world which has such splendid
fellows for contribu--"

Ron stopped short, his voice failing suddenly in the middle of the word.
His jaw dropped, and a wave of colour surged in his cheeks.

"It--it can't be!" he gasped incredulously.  "It _can't_!  There must be
another man of the same name.  It can't possibly be meant for _me_!..."

"What?  What?  Let me see?  What are you talking about?" cried Margot,
peering eagerly over his shoulder, while Ron pointed with a trembling
finger to the end of the table of contents.  Somehow the words seemed to
be printed in a larger type than the rest.  They grew larger and larger
until they seemed to fill the whole page--"_Solitude.  A Fragment.  By
Ronald Vane_!"

"Oh, Ron, it is!" shrieked Margot, in happy excitement.  "It _is_ you,
and no one else!  I _told_ you it was beautiful when you read it to me
that day in the Glen!  Oh, when did you send it to him?"

"Never!  I never so much as mentioned my verses in his hearing.  That
was part of the bargain--that we should not worry him on his holiday.
Margot, it was you!  You are only pretending that you know nothing about
it.  It must be your doing."

"Indeed it isn't!  I never even spoke of you to him."  Margot had the
grace to blush at the confession; but by this time Ron had turned over
the pages until he had come to the one on which his own words faced him
in the beautiful distinct typing of the magazine, and the rapture of the
moment precluded every other sentiment.  He did not hear what Margot
said, so absorbed was he in re-reading the lines in their delightful new
setting.

"It _is_ good; but it is only a fragment.  It isn't finished.  Why was
this chosen, instead of one of the others?"

"I told you you would ruin it if you made it longer.  It is perfect as
it is, and anything more would be padding.  It is a little gem, worthy
even of a place in the _Loadstar_.  Father, do you hear?  Do you
understand?  Look at your son's name among all those great men!  Aren't
you glad?  Aren't you _proud_!  Aren't you going to congratulate us
_both_?"

Mr Vane growled a little, for the sake of appearances; but though his
eyebrows frowned, the corners of his lips relaxed in a manner distinctly
complacent.  Even recognising as he did the herald of defeat, it was
impossible to resist a thrill of pride as his eye glanced down the
imposing list of names held open for his inspection.  A great scientist;
a great statesman; a leading author; an astronomer known throughout the
world; a soldier veteran, and near the end that other name, so dearly
familiar--the name of his own son!  The voice in which he spoke was
gruff with emotion.  "Humph!  You are in good company, at least.  Let me
see the verses themselves.  There must be something in them, I suppose,
but I am no judge of these things."



CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE.

"IN CORN."

Meantime Margot had returned to the far end of the room, and adroitly
slipped the third letter out of her pocket, feeling that it would be
selfish to delay reading the contents, as they must certainly cast some
light upon the present situation.  Her heart sank a little as she
recognised that the attention was less personal than she had imagined,
but even so, it was to herself that the magazine had been directed, and
that was an evidence of the fact that in publishing the poem her
pleasure had been considered even more than Ronald's advancement.

She tore open the stiff white envelope and read as follows:--

"Dear Miss Vane,--

"I hear that you are to arrive home this afternoon, and intend to take
the liberty of calling upon you after dinner, in the hope that you may
be able to give me a few minutes of uninterrupted conversation on a
subject of great importance.  If you are too much fatigued after your
journey, pray have no scruples in refusing me admission, in which case I
shall take an early opportunity of calling again; but after the strain
of the past few weeks I do not find myself able to wait longer than is
absolutely necessary for an interview.

"Yours faithfully,--

"George Elgood."

"Is that from Elgood?  What does he say?  What does he say?  Let us see
what he says!" petitioned Ron eagerly; but Margot returned the letter to
her pocket, resolutely ignoring his outstretched hand.

"He gives no explanation, but he is coming to-night.  Coming to call
after dinner, and he asks me to see him alone, so I'll find out all
about it, and tell you afterwards."

"Alone!"  Ron's face was eloquent with surprise, disappointment, and a
dawning suspicion.  "Why alone?  It's more my affair than yours.  I
_must_ thank him before he goes."

"I'll send for you, then.  I suppose he wants to explain to me first.
I'll be sure to send for you!" reiterated Margot hurriedly, as she
disappeared through the doorway.  Her first impulse was, girl-like, to
make for her own room, to give those final touches to hair and dress,
which are so all-important in effect, and that done, to sit alone,
listening for the expected knock at the door, the sound of footsteps
ascending to the drawing-room.  To meet George Elgood here!  To see his
tall dark figure outlined against the familiar background of home,--
Margot gasped at the thought, and felt her heart leap painfully at every
fresh sound.

The postman, the parcels delivery, a van from the Stores, had all
claimed the tribute of a blush, a gasp, and a fresh rush to the glass,
before at last slow footsteps were heard mounting the stairs, and Mary's
voice at the door announced, "A gentleman to see you, Miss Margot!" and
in another minute, as it seemed, she was facing George Elgood across the
length of the drawing-room.

The roles of invalid and anxious inquirer seemed for the moment to be
reversed, for while she was pink and smiling, he was grave and of a
ghastly pallor.  Nervous also; for the first words of greeting were an
unintelligible murmur, and they seated themselves in an embarrassed
silence.

"You--er--you received my letter?"

"Yes!"  Margot gazed at the tips of her dainty slippers, and smiled
softly to herself.  In the interval which had passed since they last
met, the Editor had evidently suffered a relapse into his old shyness
and reserve.  She had guessed as much from the somewhat stilted
phraseology of his letter, and was prepared to reassure him by her own
outspoken gratitude.

"Yes; I was so pleased!"

He gave a little start of astonishment, and stared at her with bright,
incredulous eyes.

"Pleased?  You mean it?  You did not think it a liberty--"

"Indeed I did not.  I guessed what you had to tell me, and it made me so
happy."

He leaned forward impetuously, the blood flushing his cheeks.

"You had guessed before?  You knew it was coming?"

"Not exactly, but I hoped--"

"_Hoped_!--Margot, is it possible that you have cared, too?  It seems
too wonderful to be true.--I never dreamt of such amazing happiness.  At
the best it seemed possible that you would be willing to give me a
hearing.  I did not dare to write, but this time of waiting has seemed
as if it would never end..."

As he began to speak Margot faced him with candid eyes, but at the sound
of his voice, and at sight of the answering flash of his eyes, her lids
quivered and fell, and she shrank back against the cushions of her
chair.  Astonishment overwhelmed her; but the relief, the thankfulness,
the rapture of the moment obliterated everything else.  She gave a
strangled sob of emotion and said faintly--

"It--it has seemed long to me, too!"

At that he was on his knees before her, clasping her hands and gazing at
her with an expression of rapturous relief.  "Oh, Margot, my darling,
was it because I was not there?  Have you missed me?  Not as I have
missed you--that is not possible, but enough to remember me sometimes,
and to be glad to meet again.  Have you thought of me at all, Margot?"

"I--I have thought of nothing else!" sighed Margot.  She was generous
with her assurance, knowing the nature of the man with whom she had to
deal, and her reward was the sight of the illumined face turned upon
her.

There, in a corner of a modern drawing-room, with a glimpse of a London
street between the curtain folds, Margot and George Elgood found the
Eden which is discovered afresh by all true lovers.  Such moments are
too sacred for intrusion; they live enshrined in memory until the end of
life.

It was not until a considerable time had flown by that Margot recalled
the events of the earlier evening, and with them still another claim
held by her lover upon her gratitude and devotion.  Drawing back, so as
to lift her charming face to his--a rosy, sparkling face, unrecognisable
as the same white and weary visage of a few hours back, she laid her
hand on his, and said sweetly--

"We went off at a tangent, didn't we?  I don't know how we went off, and
forgot the real business of the evening; but I never finished thanking
you!  You must think me terribly ungrateful!"

George Elgood regarded her with puzzled, adoring eyes.

"I haven't the least idea what you are talking about, but what does it
matter?  What does anything matter, except that we love each other, and
are the happiest creatures on earth?  Business, indeed!  Why need we
trouble ourselves to talk about business?  Margot, do you know that you
have a dimple in the middle of your cheek?  The most beautiful dimple in
the world!"

Margot shook her head at him with a pretence of disapproval, smiling the
while, so as to show off the dimple to the best advantage.

"You mustn't make me conceited.  I am vain enough already to know that
you love me, and have taken so much trouble to please me.  It _was_ kind
of you!"

"What was kind, sweetheart?  There is no kindness in loving you.  I had
no choice in the matter, for I simply could not help myself!"

"Ah, but you know what I mean!  You have given me my two greatest
desires!  I can't tell you how happy I was when I saw it."

He stared at her for a moment, then smiled complacently.

"You mean--my note?"

"No, I didn't mean your note.  Not this time.  I meant the magazine!"

"Magazine!"

The accent of bewilderment was unmistakably genuine, and Margot hastened
to explain still further.

"The new number of the _Loadstar_ with Ron's poem in it!"

"Ron's poem!"  The note of bewilderment was accentuated to one of
positive incredulity.  "A poem by your brother in the _Loadstar_!  I did
not know that he wrote at all."

Now it was Margot's turn to stare and frown.

"You didn't know!  But you _must_ have known.  How else could it get in?
You must have given permission."

"My sweetheart, what have I to do with the _Loadstar_, or any other
magazine?  What has my permission to do with it?"

"Everything in the world!  Oh, I know exactly what has happened.  Your
brother has told you about Ron, and showed you his verses, and you put
them in for his sake--_and mine_!  Because you knew I should be pleased,
and because they are good too, and you were glad to help him.  He is
longing to come in to thank you himself.  We shall both thank you all
our lives!"

George Elgood's face of stupefaction was a sight to behold.  His
forehead was corrugated with lines of bewilderment; he stared at her in
blankest dismay.

"What _are_ you talking about, sweetheart?  What does it all mean?  Your
brother has no need to thank me for any success which he has gained.  I
should have been only too delighted to help him in any way that was in
my power, but I have no influence with the _Loadstar Magazine_."

"No influence!  How can that be when you are the Editor?"

"I am the _What_?"

"Editor!  You have every influence.  You _are_ the magazine!"

George Elgood rose to his feet with a gesture of strongest astonishment.

"I the Editor of a magazine!  My dearest little girl, what are you
dreaming about?  There never was a man less suited to the position.  I
know nothing whatever of magazines--of any sort of literature.  I am in
corn!"

A corn merchant!  Margot's brain reeled.  She lay back in her chair,
staring at him with wide, stunned eyes, too utterly prostrated by
surprise to be capable of speech!



CHAPTER TWENTY SIX.

AN INTERVIEW WITH THE EDITOR.

Could it be believed that it was the _Chieftain_ who was the Editor,
after all!  That short, fat, undignified, commonplace little man!  "Not
in the least the type,"--so Ron had pronounced, in his youthful
arrogance, "No one would ever suspect _you_ of being literary!" so saucy
Margot had declared to his face.  She blushed at the remembrance of the
words, blushed afresh, as, one after another, a dozen memories rushed
through her brain.  That afternoon by the tarn, for example, when she
had summoned courage to confess her scheme, and he had lain prone on the
grass, helpless and shaken with laughter!

No wonder that he had laughed! but oh, the wickedness, the duplicity of
the wretch, to breathe no word of her mistake, but promptly set to work
to weave a fresh plot on his own account!  This was the reason why he
had extracted a promise that George was not to be told of Ron's ambition
during his holiday, feigning an anxiety for his brother's peace of mind,
which he was in reality doing his best to destroy!  This was the
explanation of everything that had seemed mysterious and contradictory.
He had been laughing in his sleeve all the time he had pretended to
help!

George Elgood listened with a mingling of amaze, amusement, and
tenderness to the hidden history of the weeks at Glenaire.  Being in the
frame of mind when everything that Margot did seemed perfect in his
eyes, he felt nothing but admiration for her efforts on her brother's
behalf.

It was an ingenious, unselfish little scheme, and the manner in which
she had laid it bare to the person most concerned was delightfully
unsophisticated.  He laughed at her tenderly, stroking her soft, pretty
hair with his big man's hand, the while he explained that he was a
business man pure and simple, and had made no excursions whatever into
literature; that the "writing" with which he had been occupied was
connected with proposed changes in his firm, and a report of a technical
character.

Margot flamed with indignation, but before the angry words had time to
form themselves on her lips, the thought occurred that after all the
help vouchsafed to her had been no pretence, but a very substantial
reality.  Ron's foot _had_ been placed on the first rung of the ladder,
while as for herself, what greater good could she have found to desire
than that which, through the Chieftain's machinations, had already come
to pass?  She lifted her face to meet the anxious, adoring gaze bent
upon her, and cried hurriedly--

"He--he meant it all the time!  He _meant_ it to happen!"

"Meant what, darling?"

"_This_!"

Margot waved her hand with a gesture sufficiently expressive, whereat
her lover laughed happily.

"Bless him! of course he did.  He has been badgering me for years past
to look out for a wife; and when we met you he was clever enough to
realise that you were the one woman to fill the post.  If he had said as
much to me at that stage of affairs, I should have packed up and made
off within the hour; if he had said it to you, you would have felt it
incumbent upon you to do the same.  Instead, he let you go on in your
illusion, while he designed the means of throwing us into each other's
society.  Good old Geoff!  I'm not at all angry with him.  Are you?"

Margot considered the point, her head tilted to a thoughtful angle.

"I'm--not--sure!  I think I am, just a little bit, for I hate to be
taken in.  He was laughing at me all the time."

"But after all, he has done what you wished!  I envy him for being able
to give you such pleasure; but perhaps I may be able to do as much in
another way.  Geoff tells me that Mr Martin has had financial troubles,
and there is nothing I would not do to help any one who belongs to you.
I'm out of my depths in poetry, but in business matters I can count, and
in this case I shall not be satisfied until I _do_."

Margot drew a long breath of contentment.  "Oh, if Jack is happy, and
Ron is successful, and I have--_You_!--there will be nothing left to
wish for in all the world.  Poor Ron! he is waiting eagerly to come in
to thank you for publishing his verse, and wondering why in the world
you wanted to see me alone.  Don't you think you ought just to read it,
to be able to say it is nice?"

"No, I don't!  You are all the poetry I can attend to to-night, and for
goodness' sake keep him away; I shall have to interview your father
later on, but after waiting all these weeks I must have you to myself a
little longer."

"Oh, I won't send for him.  I don't want him a bit," cried Margot
naively, "but he will come!"

And he did!

Waiting downstairs in the study, an hour seemed an absurd length of
time, and when no summons came Ron determined to take the law in his own
hands and join the conference.  The tableau which was revealed to him on
opening the drawing-room door struck him dumb with amazement, and the
explanations which ensued appeared still more extraordinary.

George Elgood speedily beat a retreat to the study, where Mr Vane
listened to his request with quiet resignation.  Elderly, grey-haired
fathers have a way of seeing more than their children suspect, and
Margot's father had recognised certain well-known signs in the manner in
which he had been questioned concerning his daughter's progress during
those anxious days at Glenaire.  His heart sank as he listened to the
lover's protestations, but he told himself that he ought to be thankful
to know that his little Margot had chosen a man of unblemished
character, who was of an age to appreciate his responsibility, possessed
an income sufficient to keep her in comfort, and, last but not least, a
home within easy distance of his own.

Late that evening, when her lover had taken his departure, Margot stole
down to the study and sat silently for a time on her old perch on the
arm of her father's chair, with her head resting lovingly against his
own.  He was thankful to feel her dear presence, and to know that she
wished to be near him on this night of all others, but his heart was too
full to speak, and it was she who at last spoke the first words.

"I never knew," she said softly, "I never knew that it was possible to
be as happy as this.  It's so wonderful!  One can't realise it all.
Father dear, I've been thinking of you! ...  I never realised before
what it meant to you when mother died--all that you lost!  You have been
good, and brave, and unselfish, dear, and we must have tried you sorely
many times.  We didn't understand, but I understand a little bit now,
daddy, and it makes me love you more.  You'll remember, won't you, that
this is going to draw us closer together, not separate us one little
bit?  You'll be _sure_ to remember?"

"Bless you, dear!" he said, and stroked her hand with tender fingers.
"It is sweet to hear you say so, at least.  I'm glad you are going to be
happy, and if I am to give you away at all, I am glad it is to a strong,
sensible man whom I can trust and respect; but it will be a sad day for
me when you leave the old home, Margot."

Margot purred over him with tenderest affection.

"How I wish Agnes would marry!"

"What has that to do with it, pray?"

"Then you could live with me, of course!  I should love it," said Margot
warmly; and though her father had no intention of accepting such an
invitation, it remained through life a solace to him to remember that it
had been in the girl's heart to wish it.

Next morning at twelve o'clock a daintily attired damsel ascended a
dusty staircase in Fleet Street and desired to see the Editor in his
den.  The dragon who guarded the fastness inquired of her if she had an
appointment, and, unsoftened by the charm of her appearance, volunteered
the information that Mr Elgood would see no stray callers.

"He will see _me_!" returned Margot arrogantly; and she was right, for,
to the surprise of the messenger, the sight of the little printed card
was followed by an order to "Show the lady in at once."

A moment later Margot made her first entrance into an Editor's den, and
round the corner of a big desk caught a glimpse of a decorous, black-
coated figure whom at first sight it was difficult to associate with the
light-hearted Chieftain of Glenaire.  As they confronted each other,
however, the round face twinkled into a smile, which served as fuel to
the girl's indignation.  She stopped short, ostentatiously disregarding
the outstretched hand, drew her brows together, and proclaimed
haughtily--

"I have come to let you know that you are found out.  I know all about
it now.  You have been laughing at me all the time?"

"Well,--very nearly!" he assented smilingly.  "You are such a nice
little girl to laugh at, you see, and it was an uncommonly good joke!
Do you remember the day when you confided to me solemnly that you had
journeyed to Scotland on purpose to stalk me, and run me to earth?
You'd have been a bit embarrassed if I'd told you the truth then and
there, wouldn't you now?  And besides--I see quite enough of literary
aspirants all the year round.  It was a bit hard to be hunted down on
one's holidays.  I felt bound to prevaricate, for the sake of my own
peace.  Then again there was George!  Where would George have come in?
If I had confessed my identity, should I have been kept awake, as I was
last night, listening to his rhapsodies by the hour together?  By the
way, we are going to be near relatives.  Don't you want to shake hands?"

"I'm very angry indeed!" maintained Margot stubbornly--nevertheless her
hand was in his, and her fingers involuntarily returned his pressure.
"Are you--_glad_!  Do you think I shall--do?  Does he seem _really_
happy?"

"Ah, my dear!" he sighed, and over the plump features there passed once
more the expression of infinite longing which Margot had seen once
before, when, in a moment of confidence, he had spoken of his dead love.
"Ah, my dear, how happy he is!  There is no word to express such
happiness!  George has not frittered away his affections on a number of
silly flirtations--his heart is whole, and it is wholly yours.  Do you
owe me no thanks for bringing you together?  You wanted to help your
brother; I wanted to help mine; so we are equally guilty or
praiseworthy, as the case may be.  For myself I am very well satisfied
with the result?"

Margot blushed, and cast down her eyes.

"I'm satisfied, too!" she said shyly.  "Much more than satisfied--and
Ron is enraptured.  Have you seen him?  He said he was coming to see you
first thing this morning!"

"Have I seen him, indeed?  I should think I had!  I thought I should
never get rid of the boy.  I told him straight that the magazine comes
first to me, and that not even a prospective sister-in-law--with
dimples!--could induce me to accept a line for publication otherwise
than on its own merits.  But the boy has power.  I can't tell yet how
far it may go, but it's worth encouraging.  When he gave me his
manuscript book to read I was struck by one fragment, and wrote it out
in shorthand, to publish as a surprise to you both.  I like the lad, and
will be glad to help him so far as it is in my power.  I can give him a
small post in this office, where at least he will be in the atmosphere;
but after that his future rests with himself.  What he writes that is
worth publishing, I will publish, but it will be judged on its merits
alone, and without any remembrance of his private associations.  He will
have his chance!"

He put out his hands and held her gently by the elbows, smiling at her
the while with the kindliest of smiles.

"Now are you satisfied, little girl?  From the moment that you looked at
me with _her_ eyes, and asked my help, I have had no better wish than to
give it.  I did not set about it quite in your own way, perhaps, but the
end is the same.  Don't trouble any more about the lad, but let me
smooth the way with your father, while you devote yourself to George.
His happiness is in your hands.  Be good to him!  He looks upon you as
an angel from heaven!  Be an angel for his sake!  He sees in you
everything that is good, and pure, and womanly.  Be what he believes!
Humanly speaking, his life is yours, and these little hands will draw
him more strongly than any power in the world.  It's a big
responsibility, little girl, but I am not afraid!  I know a good woman
when I see one, and can trust George to your care.  You will be very
happy.  I wonder if in the midst of your happiness you will sometimes
remember--a lonely man?"

Margot twisted herself quickly from his grasp, and her arms stretched
out and encircled his neck.  She did not speak, but her lips, pressed
against his cheek, gave an assurance more eloquent than words.

THE END.






End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Big Game, by Mrs. George de Horne Vaizey

*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIG GAME ***

***** This file should be named 21109.txt or 21109.zip *****
This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
        http://www.gutenberg.org/2/1/1/0/21109/

Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England

Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
will be renamed.

Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
permission and without paying copyright royalties.  Special rules,
set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark.  Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission.  If you
do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy.  You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
research.  They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks.  Redistribution is
subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.



*** START: FULL LICENSE ***

THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK

To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
http://gutenberg.org/license).


Section 1.  General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic works

1.A.  By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement.  If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.

1.B.  "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark.  It may only be
used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement.  There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement.  See
paragraph 1.C below.  There are a lot of things you can do with Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.  See paragraph 1.E below.

1.C.  The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works.  Nearly all the individual works in the
collection are in the public domain in the United States.  If an
individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
are removed.  Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
the work.  You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.

1.D.  The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work.  Copyright laws in most countries are in
a constant state of change.  If you are outside the United States, check
the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
Gutenberg-tm work.  The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
States.

1.E.  Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:

1.E.1.  The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
copied or distributed:

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

1.E.2.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
or charges.  If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
1.E.9.

1.E.3.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
terms imposed by the copyright holder.  Additional terms will be linked
to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.

1.E.4.  Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.

1.E.5.  Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
Gutenberg-tm License.

1.E.6.  You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
word processing or hypertext form.  However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
form.  Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.

1.E.7.  Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.

1.E.8.  You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
that

- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
     the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
     you already use to calculate your applicable taxes.  The fee is
     owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
     has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
     Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.  Royalty payments
     must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
     prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
     returns.  Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
     sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
     address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
     the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."

- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
     you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
     does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
     License.  You must require such a user to return or
     destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
     and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
     Project Gutenberg-tm works.

- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
     money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
     electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
     of receipt of the work.

- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
     distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.

1.E.9.  If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark.  Contact the
Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.

1.F.

1.F.1.  Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
collection.  Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
your equipment.

1.F.2.  LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
fees.  YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3.  YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.

1.F.3.  LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
written explanation to the person you received the work from.  If you
received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
your written explanation.  The person or entity that provided you with
the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
refund.  If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund.  If the second copy
is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
opportunities to fix the problem.

1.F.4.  Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.

1.F.5.  Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
the applicable state law.  The invalidity or unenforceability of any
provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.

1.F.6.  INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.


Section  2.  Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm

Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers.  It exists
because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
people in all walks of life.

Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
remain freely available for generations to come.  In 2001, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.


Section 3.  Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
Foundation

The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
Revenue Service.  The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
number is 64-6221541.  Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
http://pglaf.org/fundraising.  Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.

The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
throughout numerous locations.  Its business office is located at
809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
[email protected].  Email contact links and up to date contact
information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
page at http://pglaf.org

For additional contact information:
     Dr. Gregory B. Newby
     Chief Executive and Director
     [email protected]


Section 4.  Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation

Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment.  Many small donations
($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
status with the IRS.

The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
States.  Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
with these requirements.  We do not solicit donations in locations
where we have not received written confirmation of compliance.  To
SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
particular state visit http://pglaf.org

While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
approach us with offers to donate.

International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
outside the United States.  U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.

Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
methods and addresses.  Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate


Section 5.  General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.

Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
with anyone.  For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.


Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
unless a copyright notice is included.  Thus, we do not necessarily
keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.


Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:

     http://www.gutenberg.org

This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.