Part 23 (1/2)

”You'll no dare to speak o' dying, wife, until the Lord gies you occasion; and Davie maun drink as he's brewed.”

”Nay, gudeman, but you brewed for him; the lad is drinking the cup you mixed wi' your ain hands.”

”I did my duty by him.”

”He had ower muckle o' your duty, and ower little o' your indulgence.

If Davie was wrang, ither folk werena right. Every fault has its forefault.”

Andrew looked in amazement at this woman, who for thirty and more years had never before dared to oppose his wishes, and to whom his word had been law.

”Davie's wrang-doing was weel kent, gude-wife; he hasted to sin like a moth to a candle.”

”It's weel that our faults arena written i' our faces.”

”I hae fallen on evil days, Mysie; saxty years syne wives and bairns werena sae contrarie.”

”There was gude and bad then, as now, gudeman.”

Mysie's face had a dour, determined look that no one had ever seen on it before. Andrew began to feel irritated at her. ”What do you want, woman?” he said sternly.

”I want my bairn, Andrew Cargill.”

”Your bairn is i' some far-awa country, squandering his share o'

Paradise wi' publicans and sinners.”

”I hope not, I hope not; if it werena for this hope my heart would break;” and then all the barriers that education and habit had built were suddenly overthrown as by an earthquake, and Mysie cried out pa.s.sionately, ”I want my bairn, Andrew Cargill! the bonnie bairn that lay on my bosom, and was dandled on my knees, and sobbed out his sorrows i' my arms. I want the bairn you were aye girding and grumbling at! that got the rod for this, and the hard word and the black look for that! My bonnie Davie, wha ne'er had a playtime nor a story-book! O gudeman, I want my bairn! I want my bairn!”

The repressed pa.s.sion and sorrow of ten long years had found an outlet and would not be controlled. Andrew laid down his pipe in amazement and terror, and for a moment he feared his wife had lost her senses.

He had a tender heart beneath his stern, grave manner, and his first impulse was just to take the sobbing mother to his breast and promise her all she asked. But he did not do it the first moment, and he could not the second. Yet he did rise and go to her, and in his awkward way try to comfort her. ”Dinna greet that way, Mysie, woman,” he said; ”if I hae done amiss, I'll mak amends.”

That was a great thing for Andrew Cargill to say; Mysie hardly knew how to believe it. Such a confession was a kind of miracle, for she judged things by results and was not given to any consideration of the events that led up to them. She could not know, and did not suspect, that all the bitter truths she had spoken had been gradually forcing themselves on her husband's mind. She did not know that wee Andrew's happy face over his story-books, and his eager claim for sympathy, had been an accusation and a reproach which the old man had already humbly and sorrowfully accepted. Therefore his confession and his promise were a wonder to the woman, who had never before dared to admit that it was possible Andrew Cargill should do wrong in his own household.

CHAPTER II.

The confidence that came after this plain speaking was very sweet and comforting to both, although in their isolation and ignorance they knew not what steps to take in order to find Davie. Ten years had elapsed since he had hung for one heart-breaking moment on his mother's neck, and bid, as he told her, a farewell for ever to the miserable scenes of his hard, bare childhood. Mysie had not been able to make herself believe that he was very wrong; dancing at pretty Mary Halliday's bridal and singing two or three love-songs did not seem to the fond mother such awful transgressions as the stern, strict Covenanter really believed them to be, though even Mysie was willing to allow that Davie, in being beguiled into such sinful folly, ”had made a sair tumble.”

However, Davie and his father had both said things that neither could win over, and the lad had gone proudly down the hill with but a few s.h.i.+llings in his pocket. Since then there had been ten years of anxious, longing grief that had remained unconfessed until this night.

Now the hearts of both yearned for their lost son. But how should they find him? Andrew read nothing but his Bible and almanac; he had no conception of the world beyond Kendal and Keswick. He could scarcely imagine David going beyond these places, or, at any rate, the coast of Scotland. Should he make a pilgrimage round about all those parts?

Mysie shook her head. She thought Andrew had better go to Keswick and see the Methodist preacher there. She had heard they travelled all over the world, and if so, it was more than likely they had seen Davie Cargill; ”at ony rate, he would gie advice worth speiring after.”

Andrew had but a light opinion of Methodists, and had never been inside the little chapel at Sinverness; but Mysie's advice, he allowed, ”had a savor o' sense in it,” and so the next day he rode over to Keswick and opened his heart to John Sugden, the superintendent of the Derwent Circuit. He had a.s.sured himself on the road that he would only tell John just as much as was necessary for his quest; but he was quite unable to resist the preacher's hearty sympathy. There never were two men more unlike than Andrew Cargill and John Sugden, and yet they loved each other at once.

”He is a son o' consolation, and dootless ane o' G.o.d's chosen,” said Andrew to Mysie on his return.

”He is a far n.o.bler old fellow than he thinks he is,” said John to his wife when he told her of Andrew's visit.

John had advised advertising for Davie in ”The Watchman;” for John really thought this organ of the Methodist creed was the greatest paper in existence, and honestly believed that if Davie was anywhere in the civilized world ”The Watchman” would find him out. He was so sure of it that both Mysie and Andrew caught his hopeful tone, and began to tell each other what should be done when Davie came home.