Part 13 (1/2)
”That iss fery true. It wa.s.s a mess, what-e-ver!”
”You must show me this curious photograph, Archie, after lunch,” said Barret; ”it must be splendid.”
”But it is not so splendid as my dolly,” chimed in Flo. ”I'll show you zat after lunch too.”
Accordingly, after the meal was over, Archie carried Barret off to his workshop. Then Flo took him to the nursery, where she not only showed him the portrait of the n.i.g.g.e.r doll, which was a striking likeness--for dolls invariably sit well--but took special pains to indicate the various points which had ”come out” so ”bootifully”--such as the nails which Junkie had driven into its wooden head for the purpose of making it behave better; the chip that Junkie had taken off the end of its nose when he tried to convert that feature into a Roman; the deep line drawn round the head close to the hair by Junkie, when, as the chief of the Micmac Indians, he attempted to scalp it; and the hole through the right eye, by which Junkie proposed to let a little more light into its black brain.
Having seen and commented on all these things, Barret retired to the smoking-room, not to smoke, but to consult a bundle of newspapers which the post had brought to the house that day.
For it must not be imagined that the interests and amus.e.m.e.nts by which he was surrounded had laid the ghost of the thin, little old lady whom he had mur--at least run down--in London. No; wherever he went, and whatever he did, that old lady, like Nemesis, pursued him. When he looked down, she lay sprawling--a murdered, at least a manslaughtered, victim--at his feet. When he looked up, she hung, like the sword of Damocles, by a single fibre of maiden's hair over his head.
It was of no use that his friend Jackman rallied him on the point.
”My dear fellow,” he would say, ”don't you see that if you had really killed her, the thing would have been published far and wide all over the kingdom, with a minute description, and perhaps a portrait of yourself on the bicycle, in all the ill.u.s.trated papers? Even if you had only injured her severely, they would have made a sensation of it, with an offer, perhaps, of a hundred pounds for your capture, and a careful indication of the streets through which you pa.s.sed when you ran away--”
”Ay, that's what makes the matter so much worse,” Barret would reply; ”the unutterable meanness of running away!”
”But you repented of that immediately,” Jackman would return in soothing tones; ”and you did your utmost to undo it, though the effort was futile.”
Barret was usually comforted a good deal by the remarks of his friend, and indeed frequently forgot his trouble, especially when meditating on botanical subjects with Milly. Still, it remained a fact that he was haunted by the little old lady, more or less, and had occasional bad dreams, besides becoming somewhat anxious every time he opened a newspaper.
While Barret and the skipper were thus taking what the latter called an easy day of it, their friend Mabberly, with Eddie and Junkie and the seaman McGregor, had gone over the pa.s.s in the waggonette to the village of Cove for a day's sea-fis.h.i.+ng. They were driven by Ivor Donaldson.
”You'll not have been in these parts before, sir?” said Ivor, who was a quiet, polite, and sociable man when not under the influence of drink.
”No, never,” answered Mabberly, who sat on the seat beside him; ”and if it had not been for our misfortune, or the carelessness of that unknown steamer, I should probably never have known of the existence of your beautiful island. At least, I would have remained in ignorance of its grandeur and beauty.”
”That proves the truth of the south-country sayin', sir,--`It's an ill wind that blaws nae guid.'”
”It does, indeed; for although the loss of my father's yacht is a very considerable one, to have missed the hospitality of the laird of Kinlossie, and the rambling over your magnificent hills, would have been a greater misfortune.”
The keeper, who cherished a warm feeling for old Mr Gordon, and admired him greatly, expressed decided approval of the young man's sentiments, as was obvious from the pleased smile on his usually grave countenance, though his lips only gave utterance to the expression, ”Fery true, sir; you are not far wrong.”
At the Eagle Pa.s.s they halted a few minutes to breathe the horses.
Eddie and Junkie, of course, jumped down, followed by James McGregor, with whom they had already formed a friends.h.i.+p.
”Come away, an' we'll show you the place where Milly fell down. Come along, quicker, Shames,” cried Junkie, adopting the name that the skipper used; for the boy's love of pleasantry not infrequently betrayed him into impudence.
With a short laugh, Mabberly turned to Ivor, and asked if Shames was the Gaelic for James.
”No, sir” replied the keeper; ”but James is the English for Shames.”
”Ha! you are quoting now--or rather, misquoting--from the lips of some Irishman.”
”Weel, sir, I never heard it said that quota-ashun wa.s.s a sin,” retorted Ivor; then, turning to the stupendous cliff that frowned above them, ”Hev ye heard of the prophecy, sir, aboot this cliff?”
”No. What is it?”
”It's said that the cliff is to be the scene of a ghost story, a love story, and a murder all at the same time.”
”Is that all, Ivor? Did the prophet give no indication how the stories were to end, or who the murderer is to be, or the murdered one?”