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A DUET, TRIO, AND QUARTET.
The next day things went much the same, only that Elsie was not in
the field. Cosmo, who had been thinking much over what Aggie had
said, and was not flattered that she should take him for the goose
he did not know himself to be, could hardly wait for the evening to
have another talk with her.
"Aggie," he said, as he overtook her in a hollow not many yards
from the verge of the farm, "I dinna like ye to think me sic a
gowk! What gars ye suppose a lass could hae her wull o' me in sic a
w'y 's you? No 'at I believe ony lass wad behave like that! It's no
like yersel' to fancy sae ill o' yer ain kin'! I'm sure ye didna
discover thae things i' yerain hert! There's nae sic a lass."
"What maitter whether there be sic a lass or no, sae lang as gien
there was ane, she wad be ower muckle for ye?"
"That's ower again what I'm compleenin' o'! an' gien it war onybody
but yersel' 'at has a richt, I wad be angry, Aggie."
"Cosmo," said Agnes solemnly, "ye're ower saft-hertit to the
women-fowk. I do believe--an' I tell ye't again in as mony
words--ye wad merry onylass raither nor see her in trible on your
accoont."
"Ance mair, Aggie, what gies ye a richt to think sae ill o' me?"
demanded Cosmo.
"Jist the w'y ye behaved to mysel'."
"YE never tellt me ye couldna du wantin' me!"
"I houp no, for it wadna hae been true. I can du wantin' ye weel
eneuch. But ye allooed ye wasna richt!"
"Ay--it was a presumption."
"Ay! but what made it a presumption?"
Cosmo could not bear to say plainly to the girl he loved so much,
that he had not loved her so as to have a right to ask her to marry
him. He hesitated.
"Ye didna loe me eneuch," said Aggie, looking up in his face.
"Aggie," returned Cosmo, "I'm ready to merry ye the morn gien ye'll
hae me!"
"There noo!" exclaimed Aggie, in a sort of provoked triumph, "didna
I tell ye! There ye are, duin' 't a' ower again! Wasna I richt?
Ye're fit to tak care o' onybody but yersel'--an' the lass 'at wad
fain hae ye! Eh, but sair ye need a sensible mitherly body like
mysel' to luik efter ye!"
"Tak me, than, an' luik efter me at yer wull, Aggie; I mean what I
say!" persisted Cosmo, bewildered with embarrassment and a
momentary stupidity.
"Ance mair, Cosmo, dinna be a gowk," said Agnes with severity. "Ye
loe ME ower little, an' I loe YOU ower muckle for that."
"Ye're no angry at me, Aggie?" said Cosmo, almost timidly.
"Angry at ye, my bonny lad!" cried Aggie, and looking up with a
world of tenderness in her eyes, and a divine glow of affection,
for hers was the love so sure of itself that it maketh not ashamed,
she threw her two strong, shapely honest arms round his neck; he
bent his head, she kissed him heartily on the mouth, and burst into
tears. Surely but for that other love that lay patient and hopeless
in the depth of Cosmo's heart, he would now have loved Aggie in a
way to satisfy her, and to justify him in saying he loved her! And
to that it might have come in time, but where is the use of saying
what might have been, when all things are ever moving towards the
highest and best for the individual as well as for the universe!
--not the less that hell may be the only path to it for some--the
hell of an absolute self-loathing.
Just at that moment, who should appear on the top of a broken mound
of the moorland, where she stood in the light of the setting sun,
but Elsie, neatly dressed, glowing and handsome! A moment she
stood, then descended, a dark scorn shadowing in her eyes, and a
smile on her mouth showing the whitest of teeth.
"Mr. Warlock," she said, and took no notice of his humble
companion, "my father sent me after you in a hurry as you may see,"
--and she heaved a deep breath--"to say he doesn't think the bear
o' the Gowan Brae,'ill be fit for cutting this two days, an'
they'll gang to the corn upo' the heuch instead. He was going to
tell you himself, but ye was in such a hurry!"
"I'm muckle obleeged to ye, Miss Elsie," replied Cosmo. "It'll save
me a half-mile i' the mornin'."
"An' my father says," resumed Elsie, addressing Agnes, "yer wark's
no worth yer wages."
Aggie turned upon her with flashing eyes and glowing face.
"I dinna believe ye, Miss Elsie," she said. "I dinna believe yer
father said ever sic a word. He kens my wark's worth my wages
whatever he likes to set me til. Mair by token he wad hae tellt me
himsel'! I s' jist gang straucht back an' speir."
She turned, evidently in thorough earnest, and set off at a rapid
pace back towards the house. Cosmo glanced at Elsie. She had turned
white--with the whiteness of fear, not of wrath. She had not
expected such action on the part of Aggie. She would be at once
found out! Her father was a man terrible in his anger, and her
conscience told her he would be angry indeed, angrier than she had
ever seen him! She stood like a statue, her eyes fixed on the
retreating form of the indignant Agnes, who reached the top of the
rising ground, and was beginning to disappear, before the spell of
her terror gave way. She turned with clasped hands to Cosmo, and
murmured, her white lips hardly able to fashion the words,
"Mr. Warlock, for God's sake, cry her back. Dinna lat her gang to
my father."
"Was the thing ye said no true?" asked Cosmo.
"Weel," faltered Elsie, searching inside for some escape from
admission, "maybe he didna jist say the verra words,--"
"Aggie maun gang," interrupted Cosmo. "She maunna lat it pass."
"It was a lee! It was a lee!" gasped Elsie.
Cosmo ran, and from the top of the rise called aloud,
"Aggie! Aggie! come back."
Beyond her he saw another country girl approaching, but took little
heed of her. Aggie turned at his call, and came to him quickly.
"She confesses it's a lee, Aggie," he said.
"She wadna, gien she hadna seen I was gaein' straucht til her
father!" returned Agnes.
"I daursay; but God only kens hoo to mak the true differ 'atween
what we du o' oorsel's, an' what we're gart. We maun hae mercy, an'
i' the meantime she's ashamed eneuch. At least she has the luik o'
't."
"It's ae thing to be ashamed 'cause ye hae dune wrang, an' anither
to be ashamed 'cause ye're f'un' oot!"
"Ay; but there compassion comes in to fill up; an' whan ye treat a
body wi' generosity, the hert wauks up to be worthy o' 't."
"Cosmo, ye ken maist aboot the guid in fowk, an' I ken maist aboot
the ill," said Aggie.
Here the young woman who had been nearing them scarce observed
while they talked, came up, and they turning to go back to Elsie,
where she still stood motionless, followed them at her own pace
behind.
"I beg yer pardon, Aggie," said Elsie, holding out her hand. "I was
ill-natert, an' said the thing wasna true. My father says there
isna a better gatherer i' the countryside nor yersel'." Aggie took
her offered hand and said,
"Lat by-ganes be by-ganes. Be true to me an' I'll be true to you.
An' I winna lee whether or no."
Here the stranger joined them. She was a young woman in the garb of
a peasant, but with something about her not belonging to the
peasant. To the first glance she was more like a superior servant
out for a holiday, but a second glance was bewildering. She stopped
with a half timid but quiet look, then dropped her eyes with a
flush.
"Will you please tell me if I am on the way to Castle Warlock?" she
said, with a quiver about her mouth which made her like a child
trying not to smile.
Cosmo had been gazing at her: she reminded him Very strangely of
Joan; but the moment he heard her voice, which was as different
from that of a Scotch peasant as Tennyson's verse is from that of
Burns, he gave a cry, and was on his knees before her.
"Joan!" he gasped, and seizing her hand, drew it to his lips, and
held it there.
She made no sound or movement. Her colour went and came. Her head
drooped. She would have fallen, but Cosmo received her, and rising
with her, as one might with a child in his arms, turned, and began
to walk swiftly homeward.
Aggie had a short fierce struggle with her rising heart, then
turned to Elsie, and said quietly,
"Ye see we're no wantit!"
"I see," returned Elsie. "But eh! she's a puir cratur."
"No sae puir!" answered Aggie. "Wad YE dress up like a gran' leddy
to gang efter yer yoong man?"
"Ay wad I--fest eneuch!" answered Elsie with scorn.
Aggie saw her mistake.
"Did ye tak notice o' her han's?" she said.
"No, I didna."
"Ye never saw sic han's! Did ye tak notice o' her feet?"
"No, I didna."
"Ye never saw sic feet! Yon's ane 'at canna gather, nor stock, nor
bin', but she's bonny a' throu', an' her v'ice is a sang, an'
she'll gang throu' fire an' waiter ohn blinkit for her love's sake.
Yon's the lass for oor laird! The like o' you an' me sud trible
heid nor hert aboot the likes o' HIM."
"Speyk for yersel', lass," said Elsie.
"I tellt ye," returned Aggie, quietly but with something like scorn,
"'at gien ye wad be true to me, I wad be true to you; but gie yersel'
airs, an' I say guid nicht, an' gang efter my fowk."
She turned and departed, leaving Elsie more annoyed than repentant:
it may take a whole life to render a person capable of shame, not
to say sorrow, for the meanest thing of many he has done.
And now, Aggie's heart lying stone-like within her as she followed
Cosmo with his treasure, her brain was alive and active for his
sake. Joan was herself again, Cosmo had set her down, and they were
walking side by side. "What are they going to do?" thought Aggie.
"Are they going straight home together? Why does she come now the
old laird is gone?" Such and many other questions she kept asking
herself in her carefulness over Cosmo.
They passed the turning Aggie would have taken to go home; she
passed it too, following them steadily.--That old Grizzie was no
good! She must go home with them herself! If the reason for which
she left the castle was a wise one, she must now, for the same
reason, go back to it! Those two must not be there with nobody to
make them feel comfortable and taken care of! They must not be left
to feel awkward together! She must be a human atmosphere about
them, to shield them, and make home for them! Love itself may be
too lonely. It needs some reflection of its too lavish radiation.
--This was practically though not altogether in form what Agnes
thought.
In the meantime, the first whelming joy-wave having retired, and
life and thought resumed their operations, they had begun to talk.
"Where have you come from?" asked Cosmo.
"From Cairntod, the place I came from that wild winter night,"
answered Joan.
"But you are. . . . when were you. . . . how long. . . . have
you been married?"
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