Amelia Barr - An Orkney Maid стр 9.

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Not so! said Ian sharply, the earth is the Lords, and the fulness thereof. I promised to be at Mistress Brodies for dinner at one oclock. What is the time?

McLeod took out his watch:You have twenty minutes, he said. I was just going to tell you that the girl we saw in the cathedral is her niece.

Ian had taken a step or two in the direction of the Brodie house, but he turned his head, and with a bright smile said, Thank you, Ken! and McLeod watched him a moment and then with a sigh softly ejaculated: What a courteous chap he iswhen he is in the mood to be courteousand what a when he is not in the mood.

Ian was at the Brodie house five minutes before one, and he found Mistress Brodie waiting for him. I am glad that you have kept your tryst, she said. We will just have a modest bite now, and we can make up all that is wanting here, at my brother Colls, a little later. I have a pleasant invite for yourself. My good sister-in-law has read some of your fathers sermons in the Sunday papers and magazines, and for their sake she will be glad to see you. I just promised for you.

Thank you, I shall be glad to go with you, and it was difficult for him to disguise how more than glad he was to have this opportunity.

So then, you will put on the best you have with youthe best is none too good to meet Thora in.

Thora?

Thora Ragnor, my own niece. She is the bonniest and the best girl in Scotland, if you will take me as a judge of girls. Good beyond the lave of girls, and so Bishop Hadley asked her special to dress the altar for Easter. He knew there would be no laughing and daffing about the work, if Thora Ragnor had the doing of it.

Is there any reason to refrain from laughing and daffing while at that work?

At Gods altar there should be nothing but prayer and praise. You know what girls talk and laugh about. If they have not some poor lad to bring to worship, or to scorn, they have no heart to help their hands; and the work is done silent and snappy. They are wishing they were at home, and could get their straight, yellow hair on to crimping pins, because Laurie or Johnny would be coming to see them, it being Saturday night.

Then the Bishop thought your niece would be more reverent?

He knew she would. He knew also, that she would not be afraid to be in the cathedral by herself, she would do the work with her own hands, and that there would be no giggling and gossiping and no young lads needed to hold vases and scissors and little balls of twine.

Their moderate bite was a pleasant lingering one. They talked of people in Edinburgh with whom they had some kind of a mutual acquaintance, and Mistress Brodie did the most of the talking. She was a charming story-teller, and she knew all the good stories about the University and its great professors. This day she spent the time illustrating John Stuart Blackie taking his ease in a dressing gown and an old straw hat. She made you see the man, and Ian felt refreshed and cheered by the mental vision. As for Lord Roseberry, he really sat at their modest bite with them. You know, laddie, she said, Scotsmen take their politics as if they were the Highland fling; and Roseberry was Scotlands idol. He was an orator who carried every soul with him, whether they wanted to go or not; and I was told by J. M. Barrie, that once when he had fired an audience to the delirium point, an old man in the hall shouted out:I dinna hear a word; but its grand; its grand!

They barely touched on Scottish religion. Mistress Brodie easily saw it was a subject her guest did not wish to discuss, and she shut it off from conversation, with the finality of her remark that some people never understood Scotch religion, except as outsiders misunderstood it. Well, Ian, I will be ready for our visit in about two hours; one hour to rest after eating and a whole hour to dress myself and lecture the lasses anent behaving themselves when they are left to their own idle wishes and wasteful work.

Then in two hours I will be ready to accompany you; and in the meantime I will walk over the moor and smoke a cigar.

No, no, better go down to the beach and watch the puffins flying over the sea, and the terns fishing about the low lying land. Or you might get a sight of an Arctic skua going north, or a black guillemot with a fish in its mouth flying fast to feed its young. The seaside is the place, laddie! There is something going on there constantly.

So Ian went to the seaside and found plenty of amusement there in watching a family quarrel among the eider ducks, who were feeding on the young mussels attached to the rocks which a low tide had uncovered.

It was a pleasant walk to the Ragnor home, and Rahal and Thora were expecting them. The sitting room was cheery with sunshine and fire glow, Rahal was in afternoon dress and Thora was sitting near the window spinning on the little wheel the marvellously fine threads of wool made from the dwarfish breed of Shetland sheep, and used generally for the knitting of those delicate shawls which rivalled the finest linen laces. On the entrance of her aunt and Ian Macrae she rose and stood by her wheel, until the effusive greetings of the two elder ladies were complete; and Ian was utterly charmed with the picture she madeit was completely different from anything he had ever seen or dreamed about.

The wheel was a pretty one, and was inlaid with some bright metal, and when Thora rose from her chair she was still holding a handful of fine snowy wool. Her blue-robed and blue-eyed loveliness appeared to fill the room as she stood erect and smiling, watching her mother and aunt. But when her aunt stepped forward to introduce Ian to her, she turned the full light of her lovely countenance upon him. Then both wondered where they had met before. Was it in dreams only?

Mother and aunt were soon deep in the fascinating gossip of an Edinburgh winter season, and Thora and Ian went into the greenhouse and the garden and found plenty to talk about until Conall Ragnor came home from business and supper was served. And the wonder was, that Conall bent to the young mans charm as readily as Thora had done. He was amazed at his shrewd knowledge of business methods and opportunities; and listened to him with grave attention, though laughing heartily at some of his plans and propositions.

Mr. Macrae, he said, thou art too far north for me. I do know a few Shetlanders that could pare the skin off thy teeth, but we Orcadeans are simple honest folk that just live, and let live. At which remark Ian laughed, and reminded Conall Ragnor of certain transactions in railway stock which had nonplussed the Perth directors at the time. Then Ragnor asked how he happened to know what was generally considered private information, and Ian answered, Private information is the most valuable, sir. It is what I look for. Then Ragnor rose from the table and said, Let us have a smoke and a little music.

Take thy smoke, Coll, said Mrs. Ragnor, and Mr. Macrae will give us the music. Barbara says he sings better than Harrison. Come, Mr. Macrae, we are waiting to hear thee.

Ian made no excuses. He sat down and sang with delightful charm and spirit A Life on the Ocean Wave and The Bay of Biscay. Then these were followed by the fresh and then popular songs, We May Be Happy Yet, Then Youll Remember Me and The Land of Our Birth. No one spoke or interrupted him, even to praise; but he was well repaid by the look on every face and the kindness that flowed out to him. He could see it in the eyes, and hear it in the voices, and feel it in the manner of all present.

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