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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65615 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65615)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Master of Aberfeldie, Volume I (of 3),
-by James Grant
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Master of Aberfeldie, Volume I (of 3)
-
-Author: James Grant
-
-Release Date: June 14, 2021 [eBook #65615]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MASTER OF ABERFELDIE, VOLUME I
-(OF 3) ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE MASTER OF ABERFELDIE
-
-
-
- BY
-
- JAMES GRANT
-
- AUTHOR OF
- "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "THE CAMERONIANS,"
- "THE SCOTTISH CAVALIER,"
- ETC. ETC.
-
-
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
- VOL. I.
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- HURST AND BLACKETT, PUBLISHERS,
- 13, GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET.
- 1884.
-
- _All rights reserved._
-
-
-
-
- Contents
-
- Chapter
-
- I. Stalking the Deer
- II. Hawke Holcroft
- III. Uncle Raymond's Will
- IV. The Grahams of Dundargue
- V. Olive and Allan
- VI. The Chagrin of Love
- VII. Le Chagrin d'Amour
- VIII. The Riding-Party
- IX. The Picnic at Dunsinane
- X. The Golden Bangle
- XI. Eveline's Suitor
- XII. A Revelation to Holcroft
- XIII. Allan Proves Mysterious
- XIV. Olive Changes Her Mind
- XV. The Carpet-Dance, and What Came of It
-
-
-
-
-THE MASTER OF ABERFELDIE.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-STALKING THE DEER.
-
-'I don't know what Olive will think, or how she may view my loitering
-here, after all these years of absence, instead of hastening home to
-meet her; but, truth to tell, the temptation to have a shot on the
-purple heather after sweltering so long in India was so great----'
-
-'What does it matter what she thinks?' interrupted the elder man,
-laughing. 'When two persons are to spend the whole term of their
-natural lives together, they can surely spare a few days for pleasure
-apart!'
-
-'But consider, I have not seen my little _fiancée_ for seven years.'
-
-'You will find her a pretty tall _fiancée_ now,' replied the other,
-'and as handsome as any girl in Scotland, Allan.'
-
-The speakers were Lord Aberfeldie (he was viscount in the Peerage)
-and his son Allan, the Master, then at home on leave from the Black
-Watch, in which he was a captain; and now, side by side, they were
-creeping up a steep and stony corrie in search of the red deer, but
-paused for a few minutes to breathe and converse.
-
-The Master--so entitled as the son of a Scottish baron (we may add
-for the information of most English readers even in these days)--was,
-like his father, a tall and soldier-like fellow, with closely-shorn
-dark brown hair, straight features, and an almost black moustache,
-which partly concealed lips that were handsomely curved, and
-expressive of no small degree of firmness and decision. He carried
-his head erect, and spoke rather with the air of one used to command
-when addressing men, but with great and subtle softness when
-conversing with women of every station and degree; and already, under
-home influences, his dark hazel eyes were losing the keen and
-somewhat hawk-like expression they had worn when daily facing death
-and suffering on active service.
-
-Both father and son were handsome, though there were nearly thirty
-years between them in age, and both were, from head to foot,
-unmistakably thorough-bred men--the latter tanned deeply by a
-tropical sun, and his forehead scarred by a wound from a tulwar blade.
-
-Lord Aberfeldie, now above fifty, had taken a turn of service for a
-few years in the Black Watch till his succession to the title
-required his presence at home, though an enthusiastic soldier; and
-soon after his place in the regiment which he loved so well was taken
-by his only son and heir, the Master, then fresh from college.
-
-Father and son both wore plain shooting-kilts and jackets of coarse
-heather-coloured stuff, with handsomely-mounted sporans and skeins;
-other ornaments they had none, unless we except the crest of
-Graham--their surname--an eagle taloning a stork, in their
-glengarries; and the peer, who was a keen fisherman, had his
-head-dress further garnished by various flies and old fish-hooks.
-
-When _en route_ home to the family seat at Dundargue, in the Carse of
-Gowrie, the Master had been tempted by his father to join him at
-their shooting-box among the lovely Perthshire hills, where, at
-present, the party consisted of only four--Mr. Hawke Holcroft, an
-English guest, and Evan Cameron, a sub. of the Black Watch, also on
-leave; and these two, attended by a keeper and gillies, were creeping
-up another corrie, rifle in hand, about half a mile distant.
-
-'You have had this--a--Mr. Holcroft with you for some time at
-Dundargue!' said Allan Graham, questioningly.
-
-'Yes--for some weeks--before we came up to the hills here.'
-
-'He cannot know anything about the implied engagement--that of Olive
-Raymond with me?'
-
-'Implied?'
-
-'Well--the peculiar arrangements that exist under her father's
-eccentric will.'
-
-'Probably not--nay, undoubtedly not,' replied his father, eyeing him
-keenly; 'it is no business of his--so, whence the question, Allan?'
-
-'Because he showed me, rather vauntingly, a very fine photo he keeps
-in his pocket-book.'
-
-'A photo of Olive?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'The deuce he does. I have thought her sometimes too _épris_ with
-our horsey friend Hawke Holcroft, and thus longed for your return.
-They renewed at Dundargue, an acquaintance formed last season in
-London, when Olive made some sensation, I assure you; and, now that
-you have seen her photo, what do you think of her--pretty?'
-
-'Pretty! She is downright beautiful!'
-
-'Ah--wait till you have seen her. She does credit to your mother's
-rearing and her governess's tutelage; but you have not exhibited much
-impatience hitherto. Gad, when I was your age----'
-
-'You forget that she was such a child when we parted,' interrupted
-Allan, stroking out his long dark moustache. 'But was it not rather
-cool of him to show me her likeness?'
-
-'Perhaps; but then it was done in ignorance of the situation, and it
-is probably the result of some conservatory flirtation.'
-
-'But just as he showed it to me, was it not strange that I heard the
-cry of a plover overhead, and----'
-
-Lord Aberfeldie interrupted his son by a hearty laugh, and tossed
-away the end of his cigar.
-
-'After eight years' soldiering with the Black Watch, do you actually
-retain the superstition that the plover is a type of inconstancy, and
-the bird of ill-omen Burns, Scott, and Leyden describe it as being?'
-
-Allan laughed, too; but now, when among his native mountains and the
-scenes of his childhood, he could not help old Scottish impressions
-returning to him, though certainly the ranks of his regiment were the
-last place in which he was likely to forget them.
-
-The silver-haired and silver-bearded old game-keeper, Dugald Glas
-(whose real name was Mackinnon), a hawk-eyed Celt, with a
-weather-beaten visage, and bare knees that were brown as mahogany,
-now urged silence and no more smoking. He had discovered by the aid
-of his binoculars a couple of deer grazing, but pretty far apart,
-upon the hill-side; and once again by private signal the two parties
-began mutually their stealthy approach upward in the two corries that
-concealed them in the _forest_, for so it was called, though
-destitute now of trees.
-
-'A forest, as the word was strictly taken in ancient times,' says Sir
-Thomas Dick Lauder, 'could not be in the hands of anyone but the
-king, yet in later periods forests have become the property of
-subjects, or have been erected by them, though without being
-protected by forest laws. The royal forest in the Isle of Wight, in
-which there is not a single tree, is not the only English example
-remaining of the view taken of this old meaning of the word.' Hence,
-he adds, 'Let not the Cockney suppose that the word forest
-necessarily implies a district covered with oaks, chestnuts, or trees
-of any other description.'
-
-A powerful and gigantic staghound, wiry, sinewy, and iron-grey--the
-noble dog that Landseer loved to depict--saw the deer already without
-the aid of glasses and strained hard upon his leash, an iron chain,
-which was twisted round the muscular wrist of the old keeper, who
-soothed and patted him, while muttering in Gaelic, '_Mar e Bran, is e
-braithair!_' (If it is not Bran, it is his brother), alluding to
-Fingal's favourite staghound, which he was thought to resemble, as
-his hair was iron-grey, his feet were yellow, with erect ears of a
-ruddy tinge.
-
-The forenoon was brilliantly clear, so the deer-stalkers had not the
-weather to contend with, as that, if untoward, may render all
-strategy vain.
-
-Lord Aberfeldie and his son were as well aware as their skilled old
-keeper that in stalking the chief things to regard are the eyes and
-nose of the deer. His vision, quick as that of an eagle, can detect
-a human head above a ridge of rock or belt of bracken, and he can
-scent an intruder on his 'native heath,' if the breeze blows _from_
-the former, at a wonderful distance; and old Dugald Glas, who had
-brought the father and son to the forest at dawn with us much care
-and secresy as if an assassination was in hand, had long scanned the
-vicinity with his glasses before he discovered the stags in question,
-and gave the concealed stalkers the signal to approach them.
-
-The two animals were rather far apart; both were quietly feeding,
-and--as the season was considerably advanced--both in colour were
-marvellously like the grey stone and brown heather around them, and
-both were, as yet, all unalarmed as Lord Aberfeldie, the Master, and
-Dugald Glas, while pausing and holding ever and anon a council of war
-in low whispers, crept up the stony corrie, keeping carefully to
-leeward of the quarry they had selected, leaving Cameron of
-Stratherroch and Hawke Holcroft to approach the other as best they
-might; but it was in the present instance absolutely necessary that
-both parties should fire at the same instant, or one of the stags
-would vanish at a gallop, perhaps to the most distant limit of the
-forest.
-
-In crawling after such game the head must be foremost when going up a
-hill, and the feet foremost when going down, and the stalker must
-creep on his stomach and knees; and all this, when done in the kilt,
-over rough rocks, sharply-pointed heather, and mossy bog, is not to
-be effected without considerable toil and even discomfort.
-
-Nearly an hour of this kind of work had gone on, the father and son
-creeping side by side, softly and in silence, dragging their rifles
-after them, old Dugald following in the same fashion, with Bran
-straining on his iron chain; and once or twice they had actually to
-traverse the bed of a mountain burn that brawled hoarsely downward
-over its brown-worn pebbles and boulders.
-
-The stag was still feeding quietly, and all unconscious of the
-approach of death; and the stalkers were, they thought, within a safe
-distance now, and that it could not escape them; so Dugald Glas
-dropped behind, after whispering to the Master in Gaelic,
-
-'Blood upon the skein, Allan!'
-
-Then the heart of the latter began to beat highly as the moment for
-shooting drew near, for after all their care and toil it was quite
-possible that a grouse might whirr up from the heather, and with a
-warning cry scare the stag to full speed.
-
-'You take aim, Allan,' whispered Lord Aberfeldie, 'and I shall
-reserve my fire. It is years since you had a shot at a dun cow, my
-boy.'
-
-Inch by inch the Master cautiously inserted his double-barrelled
-rifle between the stiff tufts of purple heather that fringed the bank
-of the hollow up which they had been creeping, and brought the sights
-to bear upon the beautiful and graceful animal that cropped the
-herbage, with his branching antlers lowered; and Allan, in the
-excitement of the moment, felt his pulses beating wildly.
-
-'If I miss--if I fail!' he muttered.
-
-'Tut---there is no such word as fail!' replied his father,
-unconsciously quoting 'Richelieu.'
-
-Allan drew a long breath, while his dark eye seemed to flash along
-the barrel, and fired. Bang went a couple of rifles in the distant
-corrie, but Aberfeldie and his son took no heed of them. The
-latter's single shot had sped true, piercing the stag above the left
-eye, and now it lay prone on the heather, tearing up tufts and sandy
-earth with its hoofs in the agonies of death.
-
-Allan's skein-dhu was promptly in his hand; the stag was
-_gralloched_, and Dugald Glas, waving his bonnet, shouted loudly for
-Alister Bane and Hector Crubach (or lame Hector), two gillies, to
-bring up the pony, on which the dead animal was slung, and then the
-party set out for the place appointed for luncheon, as raid-day was
-now long since past.
-
-'What the deuce are Stratherroch and Holcroft about?' exclaimed Lord
-Aberfeldie, while shading his eyes with his hand; and to their
-success in sport we shall refer in the next chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-HAWKE HOLCROFT.
-
-The process of creeping in serpent fashion over sharp-pointed
-heather, rough stones, and occasionally in the bed of a mountain
-stream, as we have already described, proved intensely tiresome and
-distasteful to a 'man about town' like Mr. Hawke Holcroft, who could
-not entirely conceal his genuine disgust thereat, and at the slowness
-of the whole affair, though reminded by Dugald's son Angus, a smart
-young under-keeper, of the big hart of Benmore, which was stalked for
-seven long summer days before it was killed.
-
-'But, for the Lord's sake, sir, keep quiet,' whispered Angus. 'We
-are now close on one of the finest of Macgilony's dun cows.'
-
-'I see no dun cow!' grumbled Holcroft.
-
-'He means yonder deer,' whispered Cameron, a fair-haired and
-pleasant-looking fellow. 'Macgilony was a famous hunter in the olden
-time, and his dun cows, as he called them, were the red deer of the
-Grampians.'
-
-But to Holcroft, whose idea of hunting the stag was to have a scared
-and bewildered creature--a fallow deer, fed on oats and hay,
-perhaps--cast loose from a game-cart in a smooth, grassy park, the
-perseverance, courage, and labour required for stalking in the
-Highlands seemed a simple waste of time and an inconceivable bore.
-
-'Stop for a minute,' whispered Angus, as they crept _up the wind_;
-'the stag can smell with more than its nostrils.'
-
-As the stoppage took place directly in the bed of a brawling burn,
-where they all lay on their stomachs, Holcroft not unnaturally asked,
-with no small irritation, what he meant; and the wiry young
-Highlander, who was whiskered and moustached to such an extent that,
-with his shaggy eyebrows, he somewhat resembled a Skye terrier in
-visage, explained his theory--no uncommon one, though, of course, not
-admitted by naturalists--that the red deer can both smell and breathe
-through the curious aperture beneath each eye, even if their heads
-are immersed in water when in the act of drinking.
-
-'Dioul!' muttered Angus, as they crept forward again, but on dry
-heather this time, 'we can't be too cautious, whateffer! A deer's
-eye is as keen as an eagle's, and his nose acute as that of a
-foumart.'
-
-'The first shot shall be yours, Holcroft,' said Cameron. 'I shall
-reserve my fire. He seems a powerful animal, and, if you only wound
-him, we may have the devil to pay!'
-
-'Thanks--but how?' whispered Holcroft.
-
-'If the dogs bring him to bay, he may turn upon us ere another
-cartridge can be dropped in the barrel, and gore deep with his horns.'
-
-English sportsmen generally prefer having the deer driven to stalking
-them, for the bodily exertion requisite in the latter case tries so
-severely every muscle and sinew; but, to the true Highland hunter,
-one deer shot after a long and adventurous stalk, is worth a hundred
-knocked over after a successful drive by gillies, when the herd is
-urged in wild confusion through some narrow pass well garrisoned by
-breech-loaders in secure ambush.
-
-While Holcroft and Cameron crept softly forward nearer the browsing
-deer, the young keeper threw his plaid over the eyes of the staghound
-Shiuloch, and held it in by main strength, though his wrist was
-nearly dislocated by the strain of the leash, and the ill-suppressed
-whimpers of the animal were lost amid its muffling.
-
-'Now,' whispered Angus, hoarsely, full of excitement--'now is your
-time, sir!'
-
-Holcroft took a long aim; in his intense anxiety, and perhaps
-inspired by vanity, he overdid his aim; he fired at the precise
-moment Allan's shot was heard in the distant corrie, but only wounded
-the stag in the shoulder, and, just as he let fly the contents of the
-other barrel (and missed), it fled away with the speed of the wind,
-followed by the swift and powerful hound, which, quick as thought,
-Angus let slip, and both vanished down a deep glen, overhung by
-silver birches, close by.
-
-'_Ohone a Dhia!_ but he has missed it, after all--it is no use
-guiding a Sassenach whateffer!' muttered Angus, under his thick,
-ruddy moustache; yet, as Cameron could read by the expression that
-twinkled in his hazel eyes, secretly not ill-pleased at the result,
-however.
-
-'I almost did it--hit him, at all events!' said Holcroft, with
-intense mortification, as he was too much of an Englishman not to
-wish to excel in everything that appertained to sport.
-
-'Almost!' repeated Angus, who added to Cameron, in a low voice, "_Cha
-d'rinse theob riomh sealg!_" (_i.e._, Almost, never killed the game).
-
-'Better luck next time,' said the young Laird of Stratherroch,
-consolingly. 'Allan has knocked over his deer, I see.'
-
-'Attempt and Did-not were the two worst hounds of Fingal,' muttered
-Angus, in his Perthshire Gaelic, with a furtive glance, fall of
-meaning, at Stratherroch.
-
-'To the genuine Highlander,' says a recent English writer, 'it is a
-fixed article of belief that there never yet was a Sassenach who knew
-more about the wind and weather, or about the innumerable other
-mysteries which furnish the stalker with the tact and skill required
-to perfect him in his difficult craft, than a cow understands of
-conic sections. With true Celtic caution and prudence, the gillies
-tolerate the opulent tenant from the south out of respect for his
-cheque-book and his frequent drafts upon it; but in their hearts they
-look upon him as an _intruder_, and are not sorry when they
-contemplate his receding form, as he turns his face homewards, and
-leaves moor, loch, and mountain, glen and forest to 'their natural
-denizens.'
-
-And in this spirit Angus was secretly regarding the unconscious Mr.
-Holcroft, who had the genuine Southern idea that no man of woman born
-could undervalue him.
-
-So the little shooting-party united now, and, not unwillingly, all
-sat down to have luncheon, as they were sharply appetised by long
-exercise in the keen mountain air, and on no other tablecloth than
-the purple heather; the ample contents of a hamper--game pies, cold
-beef, bread, champagne (cooled in an adjacent runnel), whisky, and so
-forth--were laid out by the active hands of the gillies, expectant of
-their own repast when the time came.
-
-They lunched near the mossy ruins of a clachan--some of those
-melancholy ruins so common over all the Highlands, the traces of a
-departed people who have passed away to other lands, evicted by
-grasping selfishness to make way for grouse and deer.
-
-There, the low, shattered gables, an old well, some gooseberry bushes
-that marked 'where a garden had been,' were all that remained of a
-once populous village, whose men had often gone forth to fight for
-Scotland in the wars of old, and whose descendants in latter years
-had manned more than one company of the Black Watch in Egypt and the
-Peninsula.
-
-On the sunny hill-slope close by, a ruined wall, low and
-circular--above which appeared the grey arms of a solitary Celtic
-cross, an aged yew-tree, and where long grass waved in the
-wind--marked where lay the last of the clan, whom no human power
-could evict or send towards the setting sun; and these imparted a
-melancholy to the solemn scenery, for solemn it was with all its
-beauty.
-
-It was of that kind peculiar to some parts of Perthshire, where the
-subordinate hills, rising a thousand feet and more above the valley,
-are entirely covered with dusky pines, taking away all that
-appearance of blackness and desolation presented by naked mountain
-masses, and adding softness and beauty to the landscape, which would
-otherwise be stern and grim. Nor were the glassy loch and the
-murmuring torrent wanting there, nor those passes where the mountains
-approach each other, and make them, like that of Killiecrankie, excel
-even the famous Vale of Tempe.
-
-Though not very impressionable by Nature, Holcroft, influenced by the
-good things he was imbibing, said something about the beauty of the
-scenery, to which Lord Aberfeldie responded, adding, with a laugh,
-
-'I do enjoy life in a shooting-box, and of all the entrancing sports
-to me there is none like stalking the deer.'
-
-With his sodden knickerbocker suit drying slowly upon him in the
-mountain wind, Holcroft could only assent to this faintly, and
-wished, perhaps, that, like Stratherroch, he wore a kilt, and could
-wring the water out of the plaits thereof.
-
-'Of old in Scotland,' resumed Lord Aberfeldie, as he lit his
-briar-root pipe, 'no man was deemed perfect in the craft of hunting
-till he had landed a salmon from the pool, shot an eagle on the wing,
-and killed a stag. But, when here in a shooting-box, I always thank
-heaven that I am at least fifteen miles from a telegraph wire, that
-letters can only come once a day, and just before dinner, and bills
-and lawyers' letters seldom or never at all. Have a glass of
-something before you lunch, Dugald,' he said, addressing his
-venerable keeper; 'I know you will prefer Glenlivet to all the
-Clicquot and Moet in the world.'
-
-'A cless, thank you kindly, my lord,' replied Dugald, touching his
-bonnet, 'though my mouth can hold more of whateffer it be.'
-
-And, bowing to the company, Dugald drained it in quick time.
-
-'I daresay, Holcroft,' said Allan, 'you would prefer the deer driven
-to being stalked?'
-
-'Infinitely!' replied the other, as he quaffed a bumper of sparkling
-Moselle.
-
-'Well, I for one do not,' said the Master, emphatically.
-
-'The Highlander of old would follow a stag for days, or even for
-weeks, if necessary,' observed Lord Aberfeldie, with kindling eyes,
-'sleeping in his plaid among the heather, he would lie where night
-found him. With his long gaff he would catch a salmon between the
-water and the sky; but when stalking he had no conception of the
-brutal German battues now so common in the Highlands, and so
-degrading to sport,' he added; in his energy, forgetting that there
-was something of rebuke in his remarks, which certainly made
-Holcroft's cheek redden with annoyance, and his rather shifty eyes to
-lower.
-
-The Master, aware that this subject was rather a hobby with his
-father, hastened to change the conversation by observing,
-
-'How strange it seems, Stratherroch, that you and I should be so
-suddenly here after all these past years with the regiment--here
-among the purple heather and green bracken again.'
-
-'And a few weeks hence will see us with it again, and back to the old
-pipe-clay routine,' said Cameron.
-
-'Regiments are now no longer what they were in my time,' said Lord
-Aberfeldie, a little irrelevantly, perhaps, but pursuing his own
-ideas. 'Examinations, cramming and useless pedantry, promotion by
-selection and compulsory retirement for the officers, with short
-service among the men, render corps no longer what they were in the
-old days, each a happy, movable home. The time when a young officer
-often said, with just pride and noble ambition, "My father and my
-grandfather have both commanded _this_ regiment, and, please God, I
-hope at some period to do the same," can never come again! And what
-Highland officer now, in the Black Watch or any other of our national
-regiments, is followed to the colours by a band of his own name and
-kindred, or can speak of his comrades as "my father's people," or
-"the men from our glen;" and yet such was the case when yonder ruined
-clachan was instinct with village life, and the voices of children
-were heard around its humble hearths.'
-
-'The hero of Ghuznee had a theory that no Scotsman was fitted to
-command a regiment,' said Stratherroch, laughing.
-
-'I know that he detested Scotsmen, and brought six officers, all
-Scotsmen, to a court-martial; and it was then he is said to have made
-the statement which cost him so dear in India.'
-
-'How?' asked Holcroft.
-
-'Because, within an hour after, old Colonel Wemyss, of the 52nd,
-paraded him in rear of the cantonment, and planted a bullet in his
-body by way of curing him of prejudice for the future. Rather a
-convincing argument, old Wemyss thought it,' added Aberfeldie,
-laughing, as he knocked the ashes from his cherished briar-root, put
-it in its case, and dropped it into his silver-mounted sporran.
-
-'Talking of regiments, I saw yours at Portsmouth, Graham,' said
-Holcroft; 'and I thought the men looked graceful indeed, with their
-kilts over their left shoulders and their black sporrans waving above
-their bronzed faces.'
-
-Whether this was meant as a joke or a sneer, it is impossible to say;
-but his hearers took it as the former, and laughed accordingly, on
-which Holcroft added,
-
-'I mean their plaid-shawls over their shoulders. I remember that
-Miss Raymond laughed heartily when I made the same remark.'
-
-'I don't wonder at that,' said Lord Aberfeldie. 'Olive is a girl who
-laughs on very slight occasions.'
-
-'You have not seen her since your return,' said Holcroft to Allan
-Graham.
-
-'No; but I shall very soon now.'
-
-'She is a very handsome girl; what the deuce have the men been about
-to leave her all this time Miss Raymond?'
-
-'All this time? Why, she has not yet seen her twentieth year,'
-exclaimed Allan, with some annoyance, as he thought of the photo.
-
-'Her costumes are _chic_,' continued Holcroft, '_chic_ to a degree!
-How I admired her portrait in the Grosvenor Gallery; and wise was the
-artist to label it "Fair to See."'
-
-Allan glanced at his father, and his face clouded to hear all
-this--praise though it was--in the mouth of Hawke Holcroft.
-
-'You have an appreciation of beauty, apparently,' said young Cameron.
-
-'Who has not? Thus, as Disraeli says, "the action of lovely woman on
-our destiny is increasing," and, as Miss Raymond----'
-
-'I am Miss Raymond's uncle and guardian,' said Lord Aberfeldie,
-rather stiffly, and to Mr. Holcroft, as it seemed, a little
-irrelevantly, though cutting short whatever he meant to say; for the
-peer winced at the way in which his guest referred to his niece in
-the hearing of gillies and gamekeepers, and, more than all, in the
-presence of Allan, whose dark eyes wore rather a lowering expression;
-but, as all had hearty appetites after their recent exercise and long
-exposure in the keen, bracing mountain air of an autumn day, they
-were inclined to use their knives and forks rather than their
-tongues, and the subject, however pleasing to Mr. Holcroft, was
-dropped.
-
-The latter was not a pleasing type of Englishman, though his air and
-bearing were thoroughly those of a gentleman. He had a good square
-figure, but his legs were somewhat of the spindle order, as his
-knickerbocker suit revealed. He was flaxen-haired, fair-skinned, and
-somewhat freckled, with a tawny moustache and pale grey eyes; and
-strange it was that these, though weak-looking, cunning, and shifty,
-would assume at times, but covertly, a defiant, even ferocious
-expression, if evil passions excited him.
-
-He was almost destitute of eyebrows, but had a massive chin; and as
-Allan Graham regarded him, as he lay stretched upon the grass
-leisurely smoking, he by no means showed his father's sentiment of
-friendship for this son of an old friend; and there grew in his
-breast a mysterious instinct--almost a presentiment--that Holcroft
-would in some way or other bring trouble upon them conjunctly or
-severally.
-
-After the keepers and gillies had their repast, the luncheon
-apparatus was packed up, and, shouldering their rifles, the party set
-out for the shooting-box, which was situated in a pretty glen a few
-miles distant.
-
-Angus, who was--as his father boasted--strong as Cuchullin, again
-lifted the deer to the pony's back, and preceded by the family piper,
-Ronald Gair, with his pipes in full blast to the air of 'The Birks of
-Aberfeldie,' they departed down the winding path towards the dark
-blue loch that lay at the foot of the solemn, pine-clad hills.
-
-Like the gillies and keepers, Ronald was never seen without a sprig
-of the _Buaidh craob na Laibhreis_ (the laurel-tree of victory), the
-badge of the Grahams, in his bonnet.
-
-Ronald Gair's locks were silver now, but they had been dark enough
-when he played the Black Watch up the green slopes of the Alma,
-through all Central India, to the gates of Lucknow, and in later
-times to the corpse-encumbered swamps of Coomassie.
-
-Holcroft winced at what he deemed the dissonance of the pipes, and
-cursed their sound in his heart; but he was too well-bred or too
-prudent to say anything on the subject as he strode by Cameron's side
-down the strath, with a huge regalia between his teeth. Indeed, he
-might have been pretty well used to their sound by this time, as
-Ronald Gair roused the household with them in the morning, preceded
-many a meal--dinner always--and seemed to spend most of his time in
-incessant 'tuning up' between.
-
-'I have a suspicion that he is bad form, this Holcroft,' said Allan
-to his father, as they could converse, unheard by the other two, amid
-the din of the pipes, which Ronald blew as if to wake the Seven
-Sleepers of Ephesus, or Holgar Danske in his cavern at Elsinore. 'I
-have heard that he half lives on play and his betting-book, and that
-his little place in Essex, or rather what remains of it, is dipped
-over head and ears. Indeed, he admitted jocularly to Cameron that it
-was mortgaged for thrice its value, three times over, a fact which
-would teach the holders prudence for the future. Why did you have
-him here or at Dundargue?'
-
-'Well--his father and I were old friends, as you know; his father, in
-fact, by an act of great bravery, saved my life at the Alma, when
-three Russians were at the point of bayoneting me, as I lay helpless
-on the field; so you see, Allan, I cannot help being at least
-hospitable to the poor fellow, and certainly his friend.'
-
-Indeed, Lord Aberfeldie had always been the latter to Holcroft, and
-not seldom his 'banker,' but of this Allan knew nothing, nor was ever
-likely to know, so far as his father was concerned.
-
-'He seems to consider Olive an heiress,' said Allan, after a pause.
-
-'As--of course--she is.'
-
-'And he dared to speak of her under the slangy name of "cash" to
-Stratherroch, as I, by chance, overheard.'
-
-Lord Aberfeldie knitted his dark brows, and said,
-
-'I detest slang--it is deuced bad form; but Holcroft belongs, I know,
-to a horsey set.'
-
-The sun was setting now, and gradually his crimson glory was paling
-in fire on the hill tops, till it faded out and died away, and the
-shadows of the September night crept upward step by step from the
-deep glens below, and one by one the stars came out above the
-trees--a sea of dark and solemn pines that covered all the mountain
-slopes--and ere long the red lights from the curtained windows of the
-luxurious shooting-lodge were seen to cast long lines of wavering
-radiance across the bosom of the loch, by the margin of which it
-stood.
-
-Ere this, the great greyhound Shiuloch (whose name means speed) had
-returned, drenched with water (showing that he had pursued the stag
-into some distant loch) and bloody with more than one wound inflicted
-by antlers.
-
-The sharp-set hunters had dined luxuriously, and cigars with brandy
-and soda had become the order of the night, when the Master said to
-his father,
-
-'I think I have had enough of deer-stalking--three weeks nearly--and
-to-morrow I shall start for Dundargue.'
-
-'I think you are wise to do so,' replied Lord Aberfeldie, with a
-pointed glance.
-
-'Sorry to lose you, Graham,' said Holcroft, concealing under a bright
-smile his secret annoyance, envy, and alarm, of all which more anon.
-
-In this sudden resolution Allan Graham was influenced, perhaps, by
-some remarks of his father, the viscount, and pique at those of Hawke
-Holcroft, together with a natural longing to see his mother and
-sister, and a growing consciousness that he had been somewhat remiss
-and, to say the least of it, ungallant to his cousin. Thus, next
-day, he took his departure for Dundargue; but he could little foresee
-all the bitter complications that were to arise, and to culminate in
-the future, through his merely lingering to stalk deer in his
-father's forest.
-
-When he went off, none shook his hand more warmly than Hawke
-Holcroft, though the latter muttered under his breath,
-
-'Fool that I was, not to make my innings before this fellow came; but
-if some people could be put out of the way, that others might take
-their place, how much pleasanter this world would be--to other
-people, at least.'
-
-Little did the family of Aberfeldie know that in Hawke Holcroft they
-had among them an unscrupulous adventurer and most dangerous guest!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-UNCLE RAYMOND'S WILL.
-
-'Marriage, indeed!' exclaimed Olive Raymond, 'it will be time enough
-to speak of that when this "laggard in love," your brother, turns up
-here at Dundargue. Besides, all women don't marry, so why should I?'
-
-'Most pretty ones do, and marry you must!' replied, with a merry
-little laugh, Eveline Graham, the sole daughter of the house of
-Aberfeldie, to her English cousin, as she usually called her.
-
-'Such stuff all this is! Does not the author of "The Red Rag" say
-that "if there is a circumstance calculated to breed mutual
-detestation in the minds of two young people, it is the knowledge
-that their respective parents have destined them for each other!"'
-
-'How readily you quote,' said Eveline.
-
-'Because I have the subject at heart.'
-
-They were posed like a couple of Du Maurier's fashionable girls, and
-were leisurely sipping afternoon tea at a pretty Chippendale table
-from an exquisite Wedgwood service, and, for freedom to gossip, had
-dispensed with all attendance.
-
-Both the cousins were handsome girls, whose bearded, belted, and
-corsletted ancestors--portraits of whom hung on the walls, and who
-had often
-
- 'Carved at the meal with gloves of steel,'
-
-in that same Castle of Dundargue--would have regarded such a repast
-and such a beverage as 'afternoon tea' with no small wonder, and,
-perhaps, disgust.
-
-Eveline Graham was very softly featured and slender in figure; but
-Olive Raymond, who was the taller of the two, was more fully
-developed, yet looked slim as a Greek goddess in a dress of deep blue
-that became her pure complexion and rich brown hair, with only a tiny
-bouquet of white flowers in the brooch at her bosom, and a multitude
-of silver bangles--emblems of conquest, perhaps--like silver fetters,
-on her slender and snowy wrists. She was fair and colourless, with
-dark grey violet eyes that looked black under their jetty fringes at
-night.
-
-Eveline was more dazzlingly fair, but more _petite_, with soft, hazel
-eyes, and bright, brown hair that was shot with gold. She had
-exquisite hands and feet, and though _petite_, as we say, and
-slender, she had a peculiar grace and dignity of manner that only
-required a brocade-dress, ruff, and long stomacher to make her like
-one of her stately 'forbears,' whose portraits by Jameson were in the
-room in which she sat--a modern portion of the grim old Castle of
-Dundargue, the aspect and construction of which edifice were very
-different from those of the additions that had been made to it in
-later times.
-
-And as the girls sit there, in the tempered light of the afternoon
-sun streaming through the French windows that open to a stately
-balustraded terrace, and sip their tea leisurely, their conversation
-will throw some light upon the past, and perhaps the future, of
-certain of our _dramatis personæ_.
-
-'When Allan returns--'began Eveline.
-
-'Oh, don't talk to me again of Allan!' interrupted Olive Raymond,
-with a petulant toss of her pretty head, 'or I will begin to tease
-you about Stratherroch.'
-
-'How?' asked Eveline, colouring perceptibly.
-
-'He loves you--and you know he does.'
-
-'Yes,' said Eveline, as a soft smile stole over her mignonne face; 'I
-cannot doubt it, though no word from which I could infer it has ever
-escaped his lips; but poor Cameron has little more than his pay. His
-paternal acres are mortgaged to the full--even the shootings and
-fishings, believe, don't come to him. I heard papa express to mamma
-his surprise that Cameron could "pull through," as he phrased it;
-that he would have no ineligibles in future dangling about me, and
-that--as I have nothing--I must marry _money_! That was the
-word--oh, how selfish it sounds, and how hateful!' added the girl,
-while her rosy little nether lip quivered. 'Poor Evan!' she
-murmured, dreamily; and as she uttered his name her voice, which was
-soft even as Cordelia's, became like that of Annie Laurie, 'low and
-sweet.'
-
-'Ineligibles!' said her cousin; 'and yet he invited here Mr.
-Holcroft, who is well-nigh penniless, and against whose attentions
-Aunt Aberfeldie specially warned me.'
-
-'In the interests of Allan, of course.'
-
-'Allan--absurd!' exclaimed Olive, shrugging her handsome shoulders.
-'You all seem to forget that he can only remember me as a little
-girl.'
-
-'Still you are his _fiancée_.'
-
-'In a manner of way.'
-
-'Distinctly so, if the tenor of your papa's will is to be observed.'
-
-'Then I think he might have had some curiosity about me, instead of
-spending days at that stupid deer-forest. For all he knows, I might
-have been a veritable fright!' added Olive, with growing pique, as
-she glanced at the reflection of her own beautiful self in an
-adjacent console-mirror. 'If he thinks that, as Master of
-Aberfeldie, he has only to come and see, and conquer, I shall teach
-him that he is very much mistaken.'
-
-'Olive--how can you talk thus?' expostulated soft little Eveline;
-'his delay is probably all papa's fault.'
-
-'I am sure that I shall hate him then!'
-
-'Query?' said Eveline, with a saucy smile on her lovely lips.
-
-'There is no query in this case,' persisted Olive, as she set down
-her cup with a jerk; for in her spirit of freedom there was at times
-a curious but unexpressed antagonism in her heart to the family of
-Aberfeldie, as if she felt herself somewhat in their power, and even
-to her own disadvantage, and this spirit, which Holcroft was not slow
-to discover, had rather encouraged his hopes.
-
-'He will be sure to love you, at all events, Olive dear, if he has
-any sense or power of observation at all--you are so pretty--nay, so
-charming.'
-
-'Any fool may love a pretty face, and generally does so.'
-
-'But you possess much more than a pretty face, Olive.'
-
-'Yes--the fortune which I am to share with him ere my twenty-fifth
-year.'
-
-'Or, if you refuse----'
-
-'One half of it goes to him, and the other, or nearly so, to
-charitable institutions,' exclaimed Olive, her sweet face paling with
-absolute anger.
-
-'He will love you for yourself alone, I am assured,' persisted
-Eveline, in defence of her brother. 'You are beautiful, Cousin
-Olive; you ride, row, dance, play lawn-tennis, and flirt to
-perfection. Are not all these qualities calculated to excite
-admiration in a young officer; and then, more than all, you have such
-dear, funny ways with you.' And the warm-hearted girl concluded by
-laughing and kissing her cousin on both cheeks effusively.
-
-The tenor of this remarkable will, which has been referred to more
-than once, was, to say the least of it, peculiar.
-
-Some years before this period, Olive Raymond arrived at Dundargue an
-orphan, left in charge of Lord Aberfeldie--the child of his only
-sister, Muriel Graham, who had married a Mr. Raymond, a poor man,
-whom means furnished by the Aberfeldie family enabled to become one
-of the wealthiest planters in Jamaica. Both her parents had died
-early, and after her location at Dundargue she became a species of
-sister to Eveline and Allan Graham.
-
-Happy, indeed, was Olive alike in her Scottish home in the lovely
-Carse of Gowrie, and when the family took up their abode, according
-to the season or the sitting of Parliament, at their West-end
-residence in London.
-
-By will, Mr. Oliver Raymond left his entire fortune, which was very
-considerable, to his daughter; but, in gratitude to the family of his
-wife, on the strange condition that she was to marry his nephew,
-Allan Graham, whose death alone was to free her from that
-contingency. If she unreasonably refused, then, in that case, after
-her twenty-fifth year, she was to forfeit all that would accrue to
-her, save a very slender allowance--the share so forfeited to become
-the inheritance of her cousin Allan; and if _he_ declined to wed his
-cousin Olive, then, in _that_ case, the money so forfeited was to go
-to such Scottish charitable institutions as Lord Aberfeldie and the
-other trustees might select.
-
-This will was, undoubtedly, a strange one; but then Mr. Raymond had
-been a strange and eccentric man, animated by an intense regard and
-esteem for the family of his deceased wife, the Grahams of
-Aberfeldie, to whom he felt all his good fortune had been due.
-
-As children, the tenor of this tyrannical will in no way affected the
-relations of Olive and Allan with each other; and the latter--a manly
-and sturdy lad, when at home from the College of Glenalmond, where he
-pursued his studies and cultivated cricket, boxing, and
-football--petted and made much of the violet-eyed and brown-haired
-little cousin, who had dropped among them as if from the clouds; but
-after he had joined the Black Watch as a subaltern, and years passed
-on, and they began to be talked of and deemed in the family circle as
-an engaged couple, betrothed, affianced, and all the rest of it, the
-young beauty and heiress began to resent the terms of the will
-bitterly, perhaps not unreasonably; she became, as we have said,
-antagonistic, and was perplexed to think that her father could not
-have foreseen some difficulties on the part of his two legatees.
-
-Thus, as they both grew older, she seldom replied to the letters
-which Allan wrote to her, by his parents' desire, perhaps, rather
-than his own, till he ceased to write to her at all, on which she
-became severely piqued; and once when she was a little way on in her
-'teens,' and when Allan was at home for a very brief period before
-departing to India, she treated him with an indifference--almost
-animosity--that made him deem the girl wayward, cold-hearted, even
-purse-proud, and everything unpleasant; and with this fatal
-impression he rejoined the Black Watch, and amid many a flirtation
-might soon have forgotten the heiress that was growing up for him at
-Dundargue, but for the letters he received from thence, and in which
-ample references to her and her beauty and accomplishments were never
-omitted; while she, on the other hand, when she became of a
-marriageable age, seldom ceased to stigmatise the will as outrageous,
-indelicate, grotesque, and unjust. And now that her cousin Allan was
-coming home--nay, _had_ come home--for a protracted period on leave
-of absence, she felt that a crisis was at hand in her fate--a crisis
-in which she, like a hunted creature, knew not how to escape.
-
-'Yes, Allan will soon learn to love you for your own sake,' returned
-the gentle Eveline, after a pause.
-
-'How can I ever be certain of that? Oh, I owe little indeed to papa,
-who by such a will as his seeks to degrade both your brother and
-myself,' replied Olive.
-
-'Degrade!' exclaimed Eveline, her hazel eyes distending.
-
-'Yes--by forcing us into a marriage on one hand, or to accepting
-starvation on the other.'
-
-'Starvation!--such strong language, Olive,' said Eveline, in a tone
-of rebuke.
-
-Of the alleged tie that bound her to Allan Graham, and of the latter
-himself, personally, she had never thought so seriously as she had
-done of _late_; and, truth to tell, in the opportunities afforded by
-mutual residence in a country house--that great rambling castle
-especially--Mr. Hawke Holcroft, by his subtle attentions when no one
-else was near, had begun to interest her more than Lord or Lady
-Aberfeldie could have relished or conceived; and to her it seemed
-that for some time back at Dundargue (continuing a sentiment he had
-striven to rouse during a past season in London) his eyes bad been
-telling in imploring and passionate glances what his lips had not yet
-the audacity to utter; but then the girl was young, enthusiastic,
-impressionable, and far from insensible to admiration and flattery.
-
-Though she did not and could not regard Allan Graham as a lover, and
-disliked thus to view him in the light of her intended husband,
-circumstances now compelled her to _think_ of him; and though she
-remembered him chiefly as the playmate of her childhood, she was
-piqued that he seemed in no haste to meet and see her, but instead
-had openly manifested, as she thought, indifference and lack of
-interest or curiosity, by shooting at Aberfeldie Lodge for days.
-
-Thus pique made her not indisposed to encourage the attention of
-others, especially of Hawke Holcroft, as we shall show, when he
-returned to Dundargue before his departure for London.
-
-Olive Raymond in her pride of heart bitterly resented the tenor of
-her father's will. She knew that by the chances of war, climate, and
-foreign service generally, she might never have seen her cousin
-again; but now the inevitable seemed at hand, and she felt herself in
-a measure set apart for him as fairly as if she had personally
-betrothed herself; but was she to be bound, while he was absolutely
-free? And stories she had heard--some of them artfully and casually
-dropped by Holcroft--of more than one flirtation at Chatham and
-elsewhere, added to the pique in which she was indulging.
-
-Lady Aberfeldie now came in through one of the open French windows
-for her cup of afternoon tea, with a bright scarlet shawl loosely
-floating over her handsome head and shapely shoulders, quitting the
-terrace, where she had been amusing herself by feeding the peacocks.
-
-She was looking unusually radiant as she announced that Angus, the
-young keeper, had just come from the shooting lodge to inform her
-that the Master would be home that afternoon, and that his rooms must
-be put in order for him without delay.
-
-So, on hearing this, the wilful Olive resolved to pay a protracted
-visit elsewhere, and to be absent when he did arrive.
-
-No woman understood the art of dressing better than Lady Aberfeldie,
-and well was she aware how truly a dainty maize or a coral colour
-with rich black lace trimmings became her brunette tints, her dark
-hair and eyes, her pure, yet slightly olive complexion. Her whole
-air was graceful and queenly, as befitted one who was always to 'walk
-in silk attire.'
-
-Lady Aberfeldie never forgot that she had been the belle of three
-seasons in Belgravia, and an heiress to the boot, though the memories
-of others might be less retentive; and now, in her fortieth year, she
-was a very handsome blooming woman still.
-
-'We must have some dinners and no end of dances and lawn-tennis
-parties, mamma, in honour of Allan's return,' said Eveline, as she
-assisted her mother to tea.
-
-'Thank God, my dear boy is home--home again--and safe at last--after
-all he has faced and undergone,' said Lady Aberfeldie, with a bright
-and fond expression in her fine face. 'Why, it seems but yesterday,
-Olive, that you and he were little chits playing together on the lawn
-or at Nannie's knee--when you had rag dolls, and used to sing
-together of the old woman that lived in a shoe, or "High upon
-Highlands and low upon Tay," or of
-
- "Alexander, King of Macedon,
- Who conquered the world but Scotland alone;
- When he came to Scotland his courage grew cold,
- To find a little nation courageous and bold,
- So stout and so bold--"
-
-You remember the nursery song, Olive?'
-
-'I have forgotten it, aunt.'
-
-'Then I hope you will remember in its place the adage----'
-
-'What adage?' interrupted Olive sharply.
-
-'That a good son makes a good husband,' said Lady Aberfeldie, archly,
-and laughing as she tapped her niece's soft cheek with her teaspoon.
-
-'Adages are not to my taste, aunt.'
-
-'Child, what makes you seem so cross to-day?'
-
-'The weather, perhaps,' suggested Eveline.
-
-But Olive, who had rather a mutinous expression in her soft face,
-remained silent.
-
-'This is bad form in our day of joy,' said Lady Aberfeldie, who had
-been eyeing her closely. 'In society well-bred people always control
-their emotions--their feelings.'
-
-'Easy enough for them, aunt.'
-
-'How?'
-
-'Because they have seldom any feelings to control.'
-
-And to prevent more being said with reference to Allan--a subject she
-dreaded--Olive Raymond withdrew.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE GRAHAMS OF DUNDARGUE.
-
-Who would have imagined that within a few yards of the elegant and
-stately modern drawing-room in which these three handsome women of
-the best style were chatting and sipping their tea, there still
-existed within the old walls of Dundargue a hideous oubliette or
-bottle dungeon, like those that were in the Castle of St. Andrews and
-ancient peel of Linlithgow--so named from the French word to 'forget.'
-
-Shaped like a bottle, it was--and is--totally dark and of great
-depth, with no outlet but its narrow mouth, through which prisoners
-were precipitated and left to die. 'Dante,' says Victor Hugo, when
-describing that in the Bastille, 'could find nothing better for the
-construction of his hell. These dungeon-funnels usually terminated
-in a deep hole like a tub, in which Dante has placed his Satan, and
-in which society placed the criminal condemned to death. When once a
-miserable human being was interred there--farewell light, air, life,
-and hope! It never went out but to the gibbet or the stake.
-Sometimes it was left to rot there, and human justice called that
-forgetting. Between mankind and himself the condemned felt an
-accumulation of stones and jailers, and the whole prison was but one
-enormous and complicated lock that barred him out of the living
-world.'
-
-From such places the shrieks and wails of despair and death--death
-from thirst and hunger--never reach the upper air.
-
-When the oubliette of Dundargue was examined a few years ago there
-was found in it a mass of unctuous-looking mould that made those
-shudder who looked upon it. It was full of skulls and human bones.
-Of whom those beings had been even tradition was silent; but, as some
-coins of Edward I. of England were found among the ghastly remains,
-they were supposed to have been certain English prisoners or
-fugitives, who, when flying from the siege of Perth, had fallen into
-the hands of Sir Malise Graham of Dundargue, in the Carse of Gowrie,
-a relentless enemy of the invaders of his country, who said, grimly,
-'A few Englishmen less in the world would make the world all the
-better,' and, dropping them successively into the oubliette, placed a
-huge stone over the mouth of it, and 'forgot' all about them.
-
-From a short distance beyond Dundee, called 'The Beautiful' in the
-days of old, the lovely and fertile Carse of Gowrie, so famed in
-Scottish song, stretches far westward, bounded by the Firth of Tay on
-the south, and a line of undulating hills on the north, till it
-narrows to a vale among the rocky eminences that overlook the fair
-city of Perth.
-
-The Carse is not quite a dead level, for here and there slope up
-wooded or cultivated elevations, named Inches, serving to show that
-in the ages they won their name the Carse had been a wide, open lake;
-but above one of these inches towers the abrupt, though not very
-lofty, rock crowned by the Castle of Dundargue, an edifice on which
-the surrounding hills have looked down for centuries.
-
-Bronze or iron rings, to which the Romans are said to have moored
-their galleys, were lately to be seen in the rock of Dundargue, and
-cables have been found at the foot of the Sidlaw Hills, relics of the
-time when an inland sea rolled its waves against their now grassy
-slopes.
-
-The original castle, or strong square tower, starts flush from the
-edge of the rock, out of which its oubliette and lower vaults are
-hollowed, standing clear and minute against the sky, and its
-machicolated battlements rise high above the more florid modern
-additions of the days of James VI. and Queen Anne.
-
-From its stone bartizan can be seen the sweep of the broad, blue
-Firth of Tay, with its vessels, the varied surface of the beautiful
-Carse of Gowrie clothed with leafy timber, narrow stripes of
-sand-edged land, and long stretches of cultivated ground, studded
-with curious old orchards and ancient and hoary forests of dwarf oak;
-and on the north and west the glorious blue mountains, piled over
-each other in ranges, and capped, afar off, by the historic Grampians.
-
-The earliest portion of the edifice is said to have been built by Sir
-Malise Graham, and possesses the battlemented bartizan, which was a
-decided feature in the architecture of Scotland long before her
-intimate connection with the Continent; and the tenures of many
-houses in the vicinity are still held by owners who, if they had to
-fulfil the original obligations, would be compelled to bring to the
-castle coal for its fires, beer and beef for its tables, and oats for
-the chargers of the men-at-arms, with cords to bind and hang
-prisoners condemned to the dule-tree.
-
-The Grahams, Viscounts of Aberfeldie and Barons of Dundargue in the
-peerage of Scotland, had the barony bestowed on them in 1600, in
-consequence of the bravery of the then laird at the battle of
-Benrinnes, six years before, and the viscounty in 1648, for doughty
-deeds done in the wars of the Covenant; but they had been lairds of
-Dundargue in days that were remote indeed--the days of that Graham
-who, when expiring of a mortal wound on the field of Dunbar, gave his
-sword--the same weapon now preserved in the house of Montrose--to his
-son, 'the Graham' of future battles, 'the Richt Hand of Wallace,' in
-whose arms he expired of a wound, after the battle of Falkirk,
-leaving the patronymic of 'gallant' to all his descendants.
-
-In one apartment hung with Gobelin tapestry stood a bed wherein
-Charles II. had reposed before his coronation at Scone; and another
-had been occupied by his nephew, James VIII., of the Scottish
-Jacobites, before he went to visit Castle Lyon, the guest of John,
-Lord Aberfeldie, who declined to sit in the Union Parliament, and
-who, to the end of his days, even when George III. was king, was wont
-to assert 'that green peas and the other edibles were always a month
-later, after that vile and degrading incorporation,' and that many a
-sweet flower never blossomed again after the White Rose was destroyed
-at Culloden.
-
-In right of gift to an ancestor, the present peer was Hereditary
-Keeper of the Royal Palace of Falkland, and as such wore a key and
-chain of silver at his neck on collar days at Windsor and elsewhere.
-
-It was a September afternoon--almost evening--when the pastures had
-become parched, the foliage shrivelled and of various tints, and
-high-piled wains came rocking over the furrowed fields and through
-green lanes as the harvest was led home, that a horseman 'might have
-been seen' (to use the phraseology of Mr. G. P. R. James)--nay, was
-seen--to ride leisurely down the Carse and take a flying leap over a
-hedge into the great lawn of Dundargue, and then, after trotting his
-horse between belts of trees, he drew his bridle for a few minutes,
-while he lingered and regarded fondly and admiringly the old
-structure, which he had not seen for well-nigh seven years; and
-Allan, the Master of Aberfeldie--for he the rider was--thought there
-was not in all the Carse of Gowrie another residence to compare with
-Dundargue for the many stories and characteristics that circle about
-a house which has been for ages the home of one family, with all its
-historic memories, its traditions and patriotism.
-
-The shadows of the great old trees under which more than one Scottish
-king had blown his hunting-horn fell far along the turf, that was
-green as an emerald and soft as velvet. A semi-transparent haze,
-mingling with the sunshine, pervaded the Carse land; the smoke of an
-adjacent village ascended from the hoary orchards around it, and far
-eastward fell the shadow of the tall and weather-worn keep of
-Dundargue, with all its tourelles, or Scottish turrets, tinted redly
-by the rays of the setting sun; and Allan's heart swelled as he
-looked around, for the love of his native land was strong within him,
-and he recalled the words of an English writer, who describes it as
-the place chosen by Nature as the mirror of her beauty:
-
-'She has planted it in the northern seas, with its mountains fronting
-the western sun, and watered its plains and valleys with a thousand
-streams, over which the lights of heaven are poured with an
-illumination and a glory, with an entanglement and a mingling of all
-the colours that can make earth beautiful. There is no land in all
-the world which, for the softer splendours of mountain and fell, wood
-and stream, surpasses Scotland!'
-
-And Allan now remembered that the green ridge on which he had reined
-up his horse for a moment or two had been to him a place of fear,
-when a child, as the abode of the _Daoine Shi_--the goblins or
-fairies--who could be heard at work in the heart of the knoll, busily
-opening and shutting great chests, the contents of which were alleged
-to be the pillage of pantries, larders, and meal-girnels; and once an
-old housekeeper at Dundargue, who contrived to circumvent them by
-securing the door of her premises, was struck with blindness, from
-which she did not recover till the barrier was removed.
-
-Allan saw a lady suddenly appear upon a path close by that which led
-to the avenue; and she proved to be no other than Olive Raymond, who,
-intent on being absent when he arrived, came thus upon him face to
-face, yet neither knew the other.
-
-On her arm she bore a little basket, with some presents for her poor
-pensioners. The cordiality and kindness of Olive to the poor and
-labouring people made the periodical return of the household from
-London and elsewhere more than a matter for local rejoicing. There
-were none about Dundargue but loved her, as they also did Eveline
-Graham, though the latter did less among them; and the Scottish
-peasantry, it must be borne in mind, unlike others elsewhere, are
-usually too self-reliant and full of proper pride to accept aid from
-Dorcas, blanket, food, or coal societies.
-
-Well mounted, Allan had substituted a light-grey tweed suit, which
-well became his dark complexion, for his shooting-kilt and jacket,
-and as a sudden light or conviction came upon him, aided by a memory
-of the photo he had seen in Holcroft's possession, he sprang from his
-horse when the young lady drew near.
-
-'I beg your pardon,' said he, as he threw the bridle over his arm and
-lifted his hat; 'I cannot be mistaken, changed though you are--you
-are my cousin, Olive Raymond?'
-
-She blushed deeply, and said,
-
-'And you--are Allan Graham!'
-
-'Yes, Olive. Oh! how good, how kind of you to come and meet me,' he
-replied, his heart beating lightly as he looked into her beautiful
-face and deftly possessed himself of her hands.
-
-'Far from it,' she replied, seeking to release herself, and now
-growing pale with positive annoyance at his supposition. 'I have
-some duties to do at the village. I hope you enjoyed your shooting
-excursion?' she observed, after a pause.
-
-'I did--and yet----'
-
-'So much so, indeed, that you were in no haste to come home,' said
-she, laughing to conceal her secret vexation at the rencontre.
-
-Allan found his intended wife all that he could have wished, and more
-than he could have imagined. The little girl he had left, had now
-expanded into a tall, proud, and lovely one--lovelier than he had
-ever dreamed of her being; and under her pretty black velvet hat her
-grey-violet eyes regarded him with a curious mixture of shyness and
-confusion in their expression, and--though he did not then detect
-it--resentment.
-
-When he had last seen his 'little wife,' as he was wont to call her
-_then_, she was a madcap girl, with all her golden hair flying far
-and wide from a pearly neck and brow, rippling and unconfined. Now
-her braided hair was of the richest brown, and she was the belle of a
-London season, and he could not help acknowledging in his heart the
-many charms she possessed, and suddenly becoming very appreciative
-thereof.
-
-'I hope Mr. Holcroft is enjoying his sport among the hills?' said
-she, after another pause.
-
-'Never mind Holcroft,' replied Allan, a little piqued by her manner;
-'have you no welcome for me, Olive?'
-
-'Of course you are glad to be home again,' said she, evasively.
-
-'I have always loved dear old Dundargue, even when I came home as a
-boy from school, and now I shall love it more than ever.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Can you ask me--when you are its permanent inmate?'
-
-'I may not be so always,' said she, pointedly. 'Nothing lasts for
-ever; but as we are cousins--' she was about to add something, yet
-paused.
-
-'And more than mere cousins can ever be to each other. You might at
-least give me your hand, Olive,' said he, drawing nearer to her as
-she looked up at him, earnestly, shyly, and then, he began to think,
-rather defiantly, with those wonderful violet-grey eyes of hers. She
-gave him her right hand, and, though cased in a tight glove, a soft
-and warm little hand it felt; but he drew her towards him, and, ere
-she could avert the act, was softly and swiftly kissed by him.
-
-'_Don't_,' she exclaimed, as she snatched her fingers from his clasp.
-'How dare you?' she added, repelling him with both hands outspread,
-and a laughing indignation that was _not_ all laughter; but he looked
-at the sweet red lips as though he longed to offend again.
-
-'Olive, how can you treat me thus, after all these years?' he asked,
-with an emotion of annoyance. 'Have you forgotten what jolly
-playmates we used to be; how we went nutting and seeking birds' nests
-together, made rag dolls, and chorused "Alexander, King of Macedon,"
-and so forth, with our old nurse, Nannie Mackinnon, the wife of
-Dugald Glas?'
-
-'I have not forgotten; but I had thought, or hoped, that you had done
-so.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'I cannot say,' replied the wilful beauty, pouting and yet confessing
-in her secret heart how handsome he looked, and how winning he was in
-eye and manner.
-
-'I remember, too,' said he, laughingly, 'the scores of times we used
-to wander in the garden, or on the heather braes, seeking bees to
-_blob_ and get the honey out of them; and when on May mornings you
-used to catch a snail by the horns, and toss it over your left
-shoulder as an omen of luck in marriage.'
-
-'Allan, such odious and absurd things should be forgotten.'
-
-'We were children, then; and what fun we had when fishing with
-tinnies in the burn for minnows and pow-wowits under the old
-brig-stone. Do you remember how I used to climb to get birds' nests
-for you, and how we wove fairy caps of rushes and bluebells in many a
-green howe of the Sidlaw Hills?'
-
-'How can you treasure such childish memories, Allan?' she asked, but
-with momentary softness in her manner.
-
-'Because such were very dear to me when far away in other lands and
-other scenes, when the Indian sky was like a sheet of heated iron
-overhead, and the breeze that came from the sandy desert was like the
-breath of the death-blast; when cattle perished by the empty tanks,
-the birds sat on the dusty trees with eyes closed and beaks agape,
-and when strong soldiers died on the line of march, stricken down by
-sunstroke or sheer exhaustion.'
-
-'Poor Allan!'
-
-'And you are going to the village?' said he, inquiringly, seeing that
-she manifested no desire to return with him.
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'But won't you accompany me home, now that I have returned?'
-
-'You must excuse me--I do so enjoy a walk in the evening before
-dinner.'
-
-'I have not seen my mother for seven years,' he said, reproachfully;
-'yet, if you will permit me to accompany you to the village, I shall
-do so, and then escort you home.'
-
-'I cannot trespass on your time so much,' she replied, with a slight
-_soupçon_ of sarcasm in her tone; 'besides, what would Aunt
-Aberfeldie think of your being in no haste to see her, after
-lingering so long at the deer-forest?'
-
-Allan thought rightly that he now detected the true source of her
-pique and peculiar greeting; but he knew nothing yet of her bitter
-opposition to the terms of her father's will.
-
-'Aunt and Eveline are anxiously waiting you, so do not let me detain
-you longer. If an escort back is requisite, I shall doubtless find
-one with ease,' and, nodding her head smilingly, she tripped down the
-tree-shaded avenue and left him; thus he had no choice, though
-looking after her with a sigh, but to remount and ride towards the
-house, or rather the castle, of Dundargue.
-
-So--so she had so little interest in him, in his return and his
-society--that she would neither turn back with him nor permit him to
-escort her, but had left him to pay some trumpery visits which she
-could do at any other time, day, or hour.
-
-'How was this?' he asked of himself. 'Holcroft has certainly
-something to do with it. Why the deuce did my father bring the
-fellow here?'
-
-Allan's hitherto languid interest in her had become quickened by the
-sight of her undoubted beauty and grace, and he was, perhaps, a
-little unreasonably piqued by her open indifference as to his return
-from remote foreign service, and to his views and whole affairs.
-Thus the breach between these two--if such we may call it--seemed
-likely to widen.
-
-In a few minutes more the affectionate effusiveness of the welcome
-home accorded him by his mother and his tender sister consoled him,
-but it contrasted in his mind powerfully and painfully with that of
-his cousin; yet he could scarcely expect that she would have flung
-her soft arms round his neck and kissed him again and again with
-hungry affection on both cheeks as they did.
-
-'The pater, dear old fellow, will be home in the course of a day or
-two,' said he. 'Mr. Holcroft is coming with him, and Stratherroch,
-of Ours, too,' he added.
-
-He noticed that Eveline's pale cheek coloured for a moment at the
-name of the latter.
-
-'Ah, you know him, it seems?' said he.
-
-'Yes, very well,' replied Eveline, frankly.
-
-'He has been at home with the dépôt lately. A right good sort is
-Evan Cameron, but desperately hard up, poor lad. I often think he
-will have to exchange for India or something of that kind, though it
-would break his heart to leave the Black Watch.'
-
-Eveline's long lashes drooped as her brother said this, all
-unconscious that his casual remarks were secretly wounding her.
-
-The expression he could plainly detect in the sweet and expressive
-face of his sister at the mention of Evan Cameron gave Allan some
-occasion for thought.
-
-He loved and esteemed his friend and brother-officer, but felt it
-would be a serious misfortune indeed if any affection took root
-between him and Eveline; for Evan was poor, as we have hinted, his
-estate valueless to him, and 'at nurse;' and there was, moreover, a
-necessity for Eveline making a wealthy marriage--indeed, her father,
-Lord Aberfeldie, had already a suitor in view for her.
-
-'I am so sorry that our dear Olive is out,' said Allan's mother,
-breaking a little pause; 'but we knew not at what hour to expect you.'
-
-'I met her in the avenue----'
-
-'And you knew each other--how strange!' exclaimed Lady Aberfeldie,
-with a brightening face.
-
-'Yes, after a minute or two. She seems as charming a girl as one--to
-use a soldier's phrase--might see in the longest day's march.'
-
-'And such she is. She did not turn back with you?'
-
-'No, mother,' he replied, with hesitation.
-
-'But she was, of course, glad to see you?'
-
-'I can't say that she was particularly, mater dear; and she got into
-a regular pet because I dared to kiss her, even in a cousinly way.'
-
-'Dared, my darling boy!' exclaimed his mother, indignantly.
-
-'Fact, mater,' said the Master, smiling and twirling up the ends of
-his long dark moustaches.
-
-Lady Aberfeldie and her daughter exchanged a swift and mutual glance;
-but the latter knew more of the views of the young lady in question
-than the former did.
-
-'I am glad you are pleased with Olive,' said she; 'and when your
-acquaintance is fully resumed you will find the dear girl all you
-could wish.'
-
-'She has wonderful blue-grey eyes; they seem violet-blue when she
-smiles, and black when she is angry.'
-
-'Angry?' said Lady Aberfeldie, inquiringly.
-
-'Well, she rather looked so when I ventured to kiss her in the
-avenue,' said Allan, laughing, and referring to a kiss that, though
-snatched, he was never to forget, perhaps, in the long years that
-were to come.
-
-'She has grown the very image of her mother, your poor Aunt Muriel,
-who was one of my bridesmaids.'
-
-
-By visits to the minister's manse and elsewhere Olive had wilfully
-and petulantly contrived to protract her absence from home to the
-last moment; the dressing-bell had rung, and before dinner she was
-hastily giving a few touches to her costume--not that she cared to
-attract her cousin (quite the reverse)--but she dismissed her foreign
-maid, Clairette Patchouli, on a sign that Eveline wished to talk with
-her alone.
-
-'Now, Olive,' began the latter, 'that you have seen Allan----'
-
-'I saw him years ago,' interrupted Olive, pettishly.
-
-'He was a boy then; but now that he is a man, and not the boy you
-remember, what do you think of him?'
-
-Olive made no reply, but continued to slip her bangles on the
-whitest, roundest, and most taper pair of arms that ever bewildered
-the senses of man.
-
-'Isn't he very handsome?' persisted Eveline.
-
-'To partial eyes, perhaps, but there are plenty of men in the world
-quite as handsome--even more so, I doubt not. I like him already,
-but don't let him think so; besides, I also like our English visitor,
-Mr. Holcroft.'
-
-'I do _not_!' said Eveline, decisively.
-
-'Why?'
-
-'He is horsey in bearing, and his face, though handsome, I grant you,
-often wears a sinister, sharp, and supercilious expression.'
-
-'How tanned Allan is by the Indian sun!'
-
-'I think his face and head both grand and handsome!' exclaimed his
-sister, with affectionate enthusiasm; 'he quite reminds me of the old
-Greeks.'
-
-'I was not aware you knew any of them,' laughed Olive.
-
-'Their sculptures, I mean,' replied Eveline, as they swept down the
-great staircase to the dining-room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-OLIVE AND ALLAN.
-
-A few days had now passed since Allan Graham's return to Dundargue,
-but he seemed--though greatly attracted by his cousin Olive, and in a
-manner compelled to think of her as something more than a mere
-cousin--to make no progress in her favour at all. Sometimes he
-smoked beside her in utter silence, while she swung in a hammock
-between two trees on the lawn, deep--or affecting to be so--in the
-last three-volume novel that had come in the box from Edinburgh; and,
-when they stole furtive glances at each other, his were curious and
-hers, under the shadow of her gorgeous Japanese umbrella, were
-hostile, defiant at least, and thus not without a certain drollery;
-but few remarks were interchanged of a more exciting nature than that
-'the weather was lovely,' or 'the leaves were falling.'
-
-In these days, and for long after, Olive was terribly uncertain in
-her moods, and to Allan Graham it seemed at times as if she almost
-disliked him.
-
-When they were alone together, which was seldom, she scarcely spoke
-to him, and thus his enforced silence disposed her to be more silent
-still. To Olive the whole situation was one of miserable unrest; she
-felt that there was something grotesque in it, and she longed
-intensely to be anywhere else than at Dundargue.
-
-While Allan, admiring her rare beauty and pretty, petulant ways, was
-already learning to love her, he found his tongue loaded, as it were,
-tied up, and his tenderness cramped by the strange tenor of her
-father's will, which made him feel that, love her as he might, that
-love would never seem pure, or without the taint of selfishness.
-
-He had procured for her at Malta a complete suite of gold and
-pearl-mounted Maltese jewellery, the best that could be found in the
-Strada San Paoli, costing him more than even he could well afford;
-but now so cold and repellant was her demeanour that he had not the
-courage as yet to present the elaborate trinkets--so rich in fretwork
-and fine as a gossamer web--so they were left to repose in their
-purple velvet cases.
-
-Yet his thoughts about her were becoming persistent now. Times there
-were when he conceived that he would treat her judiciously, but
-tenderly, and in such a fashion that her feelings must slide into a
-species of sisterly, or at least cousinly, interest in him; but
-then--at these times--a flash of her dark grey-blue eyes cast these
-intentions to the winds, though Allan began to feel nothing but
-passionate love for her.
-
-To him, as to her, the situation imparted an awkwardness now, that of
-course he had never been conscious of when a boy. He did not want
-the money of his cousin or of anyone else, as he muttered to himself
-while tugging and twisting his thick, dark moustache; and thus, with
-all the tenderness that was growing in his heart for Olive, he often
-unconsciously adopted towards her a studied courtesy and almost
-indifferent bearing that somewhat galled her ready pride, and made
-her think 'this indifference to me, and the beauty all men aver I
-possess, can only spring from a love he bears some one else; and,
-with that love in his heart, he seems actually ready to conform to
-the outrageous wishes of papa!'
-
-And more convinced of this suspicion did she become when she found
-that he evinced no more desire to seek her society than that of his
-mother or sister; but this was the result of her own bearing.
-
-Allan was ere long in sore perplexity. The slightest attempt at
-tenderness she repelled or seemed to shrink from, as a sensitive
-plant shrinks from the touch; and, on the other hand, the lack of it
-seemed to increase her coldness and rouse her sense of pride.
-
-'What the deuce is the meaning of this?' muttered Allan, as he
-chanced upon a volume one day. It was a very handsome and expensive
-edition of some of Byron's poems, which had been given by Hawke
-Holcroft to Olive as a birthday gift, and on turning over the leaves
-of which he found innumerable paragraphs and lines pencilled on pages
-that seemed to fall naturally open, where these marks, all of which
-referred to love and passion, were most plentiful.
-
-All of these seemed to have been selected with an ulterior view for
-her perusal and study. Allan knit his brows and tossed the volume to
-the other side of the table.
-
-'So, so,' thought he, 'Cousin Olive has had a guide for her reading,
-and the guide is that fellow Holcroft. He has made good use of his
-time, hang him!'
-
-Olive, who had been watching him under the deep fringes of her eyes,
-smiled when she saw the action, and, instantly divining the reason of
-it, resolved not to leave her Byron lying about in future; and now a
-new mood seized her.
-
-'Tell me, Allan,' she said, suddenly looking up from a piece of music
-she was studying, 'did you ever think of me at all when you were all
-these years far away in India?'
-
-'Have you forgotten what I told you on the evening we met on the
-lawn?' said he, reproachfully, yet surprised by her taking the
-initiative in a conversation, especially of this kind. 'Often,
-indeed, did I think of you!'
-
-'How--in what fashion?'
-
-'As my merry little playmate when I was a mere youth--the droll girl
-to whom I was somehow tied up under Uncle Raymond's will.'
-
-'You phrase it rightly,' said she, biting her coral nether lip.
-'Tied up; yes, but I won't be so. Yet you did think of me as a droll
-little playmate?'
-
-'Yes; how else could I think of you? Not as the lovely girl I find
-you now, Olive.'
-
-'You may know by this time that I hate all flattery,' said she,
-blushing hotly at what she had brought upon herself by a blunt
-reference to a hitherto ignored subject--their mutual relation to
-each other.
-
-'I have here a gift I brought you from India,' observed Allan,
-timidly, as he unlocked his desk and thought of the Maltese
-ornaments, but did not dare refer to them as yet.
-
-'A gift?' said she, coldly, with face half averted.
-
-'A little silver idol of Siva, beautifully carved and chased--will
-you accept of it?'
-
-'Thanks--with pleasure,' said she, trembling lest it had been a ring.
-'How curious, and yet how grotesquely hideous it is!' she added,
-turning it round, and then balancing it in the white palm of a slim
-and delicate hand.
-
-'And rather a curious story attends it--if you care to hear.'
-
-'Please to tell me,' said she, her curiosity roused. 'Why, the funny
-thing has ever so many heads, and a dozen of arms at least!'
-
-'We were in cantonments at Hurdwur, in Delhi,' said Allan, glad to
-secure her attention even for a few minutes, 'when a subadar-major of
-the 10th Native Infantry, a disciple of Siva, wishing to sacrifice to
-his little idol, placed it by the bank of the river there, which is
-one of the greatest places for Hindoo purification, and the resort of
-thousands of pilgrims from every part of Hindostan. While he turned
-aside to get the ghee with which to anoint it, some person adroitly
-carried it off. After searching for it in vain, with consternation
-in his soul, the unfortunate subadar-major went to the priest of the
-nearest temple, and, with tears in his eyes, related his loss.
-
-'"Dog!" exclaimed the priest, "you have lost your god, and must
-prepare to die, for death alone can soothe the wrath of Siva."
-
-'"If die I must," replied the wretched subadar-major, with clasped
-hands and trembling knees, though a brave man, as the medals on his
-breast proved, "it shall be by drowning in the holy river; so come
-with me to the edge thereof, and give me your blessing."
-
-'The priest consented, and followed him to the Ganges, into which he
-went deliberately.
-
-'"Be courageous, my son--die with joy, and perfect happiness awaits
-you," exclaimed the priest.
-
-'"My dear master," said the subadar, "before I perish, lend me _your_
-god that I may adore it--the water is already up to my neck."
-
-'The priest consented, and handed his idol to the subadar-major, who,
-as if by accident, let it drop in the deep water.
-
-'"Ah! master," he exclaimed, as if in horror and dismay, "what a new
-misfortune! Your god is also lost, and so we must die together--for
-you must drown, too, and go with me to the throne of Siva!"
-
-'And, approaching the priest, he strove to grasp the hand of the
-latter, who stood pale and trembling on the lowest step of the ghaut
-or landing-place.
-
-'"What trash do you speak?" the priest suddenly exclaimed, in great
-wrath; "can there be any harm in losing a little image of baked clay,
-not worth an anna! I have dozens of such in my temple close by; let
-us each choose one, and keep silence on the subject!"
-
-'The subadar did so then, but chose this fine silver one, which he
-bestowed on me for kindness shown to him when dying of a wound
-received in a skirmish, and I brought it home as a bauble for you,
-Cousin Olive.'
-
-She placed the idol on the table, and remained silent, while Allan
-eyed her wistfully.
-
-'Why is my presence so distasteful to you?' he asked, after a
-minute's pause.
-
-'Distasteful! Oh! Allan, don't say so,' said she, impressed by the
-pathos of his tone, but for a moment only; 'it is you who think, or
-seem to think so.'
-
-'Olive!' he exclaimed, a little impatiently and reproachfully as he
-drew near her.
-
-'There--there--that will do,' said she, starting up, 'don't bring
-down the ceiling on me--auntie more than all!'
-
-And she swept from the room, leaving the idol behind her.
-
-Allan sighed with annoyance, and addressed her no more during the
-whole of that day. She was conscious of this, for she remarked to
-Lady Aberfeldie in the evening,
-
-'How odd--how strange Cousin Allan is to me!'
-
-'Strange?'
-
-'Yes, aunt.'
-
-'I know not what you mean, Olive,' she replied, a little gravely and
-severely; 'but to me it seems that you are always strange, and not my
-son, the Master.'
-
-Lady Aberfeldie had a soft, but set face of the classic type, with a
-mouth that, though beautiful and aristocratic, could become very
-fixed in expression at times, and it seemed so now to Olive, thus
-that young lady withdrew.
-
-'Our Allan is young and handsome, noble and most unselfishly in love
-with her, as I am beginning to hope, Eveline, so what more would
-Olive Raymond wish for?' said Lady Aberfeldie to her daughter.
-
-'She would have that, which she has not, mamma, perfect freedom to
-accept or refuse whom she chose. Unselfish in love I know Allan must
-be; but that is precisely the point which Olive is left to doubt.'
-
-'Wherefore?'
-
-'Through that unlucky will, which makes a kind of bondswoman of her.'
-
-'I would to heaven the silly document had never been framed! I have
-often feared that it might lead to all our attention, care, and
-affection being misconstrued by her; but Allan might have been
-sickly, weakly, even deformed, and, with the terms of this will
-hanging over her, what would she have thought then?'
-
-'Then, as I have heard her say, the will might be reduced by a court
-of law.'
-
-At this reply a clouded expression came into the fair, colourless
-face of Lady Aberfeldie, but just then a servant in the Graham
-livery, yellow and black, approached with a note on a salver.
-
-'From papa!' she said, while cutting it open with a mother-of-pearl
-knife. 'Just a line or two to say he will be home in a couple of
-days, and is certainly bringing with him Mr. Hawke Holcroft, "the son
-of his old friend," and that other young detrimental, Stratherroch.
-He is well-nigh penniless, but, with your papa, to be in the Black
-Watch is quite equal to a patent of nobility.'
-
-Eveline felt her colour fade, while a sad expression stole over her
-soft face, and her mother, after glancing at her narrowly, added,
-
-'He also brings our wealthy friend, Sir Paget Puddicombe, the M.P.
-for Slough-cum-Sloggit, in Yorkshire. You remember him in London
-last season, and how much he admired you, dear?'
-
-Eveline _did_ remember him, and how the rich but elderly baronet's
-attentions, encouraged by her parents, were the ridicule of her girl
-friends and the bane of her existence; yet she only sighed and
-remained silent, and, passing through a French window, quitted the
-drawing-room to join her brother, who was smoking a cigar on the
-terrace, and teasing the peacocks as they sat on the stately
-balustrade.
-
-He was in rather a similar mood. He felt the demeanour of Olive
-after the little episode of the idol keenly, and, remembering the
-pencilled Byron, was, of course, inclined to connect Hawke Holcroft
-with that demeanour; so he had certainly become, for a time, cold and
-constrained in manner to his cousin.
-
-'When was that photo of Olive done?' he asked, rather abruptly.
-
-'The one in the ball dress?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'When we were last in Edinburgh; but I do not remember where the
-studio was.'
-
-'She gave one to that Mr. Holcroft.'
-
-'I was quite unaware that she did so,' said Eveline, with some
-annoyance of manner.
-
-'Look here, Eve, if, when in London,' grumbled Allan, 'she shies her
-photos about in this fashion they will soon be in every fellow's
-possession, and we may, ere long, expect to find them, like those of
-professional beauties, on glove and match-boxes.'
-
-'What a funny and horrid idea!' said his sister, passing her arm
-through his and nestling her head on his shoulder, while he,
-stooping, kissed her _mignonne_ face with a smiling caress.
-
-'There is nothing funny about it,' he replied, though, like her, he
-could little foresee the trouble that unlucky photograph was to cost
-in the future. 'And, to say the least of it, Olive treats me with
-almost hostility at times.'
-
-'She does not conceal from me a resentment at her lack of free will.'
-
-'As for Uncle Raymond's arrangements, I would to goodness that he had
-left all he had to his old housekeeper and her infernal screeching
-cockatoo with the yellow tuft.'
-
-'Certainly Olive does not seem to be the kind of girl to be disposed
-of against her wish, Allan; you may read that in the firm tread of
-her little feet, in the carriage of her head, and the perfect
-possession of her manner.'
-
-'But surely she may be won--though she will not understand me.'
-
-'I hope she will ere long; but is there not a writer who says, Allan,
-that while the world lasts the difficulty of women understanding and
-making allowance for the feelings of men in what pertains to love,
-"will be probably one of the great sources of darkness and confusion
-in the social arrangement of things."'
-
-'What a dear little casuist it is,' said he, as she raised her
-_petite_ figure on tip-toe to kiss his well-tanned cheek; 'but,' he
-added, 'I am in a state of great uncertainty.'
-
-'Uncertainty can always be ended; but then perhaps how bitterly--how
-very bitterly,' replied Eveline, who was not without some harrowing
-thoughts of her own; and something in her tone caused Allan to regard
-her soft hazel eyes, and sweet, shy face, with tenderness and inquiry.
-
-'Of what are you thinking, or of--_whom_?' he whispered, as his arm
-went caressing round her, and he stroked her bright, sheeny hair.
-
-'I may trust you, Allan?' she said, in a broken voice.
-
-'To death, _petite_. You are thinking of--of Evan Cameron?'
-
-Eveline sobbed now.
-
-'Has he spoken of love to you?' asked Allan, in a low voice, and with
-a troubled expression in his face.
-
-'Never; he knows it would be hopeless,' she replied, huskily.
-
-'Poor Evan! and the governor is bringing him again--a grand mistake!
-How the deuce is all this to end with us? But don't sob so, my
-little darling,' he added, as he drew her closer to him.
-
-Yet, despite her brother's sympathy and tenderness, Eveline Graham
-let her tears flow freely, and he promised to keep her secret that
-she and Evan Cameron cherished an unspoken and hopeless love for each
-other; and in a brief space they were to meet again!
-
-Meanwhile, though somewhat relieved by having her brother for a
-confidant, she was both restless and unhappy. She strolled upon the
-terrace to feed the peacocks, or wandered listlessly in the garden,
-going from occupation to occupation, taking up a book--one of Mudie's
-last--only to toss it aside; seated herself before the piano, rose
-then and left it. Anon she resorted to her sketching-block, sorted
-her colours, selected a brush, only to quit any attempt to work with
-a hopeless sigh.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE CHAGRIN OF LOVE.
-
-Lord Aberfeldie duly arrived at Dundargue with his three gentlemen
-visitors, their approach being heralded by the pipes of Ronald Gair,
-who was perched on a seat of the game-laden wagonette as it bowled up
-the avenue.
-
-On the first day of his return the peer was anxious to learn upon
-what footing the cousins were--if Allan had made a proposal, or 'even
-opened the trenches,' and if so, with what success. On these points
-he was enlightened by Lady Aberfeldie, and, though not very much
-surprised to find matters as they were, he trusted to propinquity and
-cousinly feeling of intercourse, as trump cards in the game, and was
-sure that all would come right in the end, and before Allan's leave
-of absence was out.
-
-There was no selfishness in this desire of Lord Aberfeldie. He had
-no power to alter the matter as it stood, for if she did not marry
-Allan if he was willing to marry her, 'then and in that case,' as the
-will had it, her patrimony would be lost even to herself. Allan's
-death alone would save it for her.
-
-Great indeed, thought the girl with bitterness, must have been her
-father's regard for the house of Aberfeldie!
-
-'What friends--such lovers we might be but for the confounded plans
-of that eccentric old fellow!' was the ever-recurring thought of
-Allan.
-
-'You are at least fond of her?' said the peer, as he and his son
-smoked their cigars together on the terrace that overlooked the
-far-stretching vista of the Carse of Gowrie, then bathed in the ruddy
-splendour of the setting sun.
-
-'Fond of Olive! Yes, as much as she will permit me to be. She is my
-cousin, of course,' replied Allan.
-
-'There is something evasive--doubtful--in your answer; but you must
-at some time or other propose to her. You know precisely the terms
-of her father's remarkable will.'
-
-'Yes, and that it hangs like a millstone round the necks of us both,
-rendering what may be the dearest wish of our hearts liable, perhaps,
-to the grossest misconstruction. She has more than once told Eveline
-that to gain freedom of action she would face poverty--anything.'
-
-'Tuts! Romantic rant! Much she knows of what poverty is. But why
-should she even think of facing it?'
-
-'To be free and unfettered, as I have said.'
-
-'Relinquishing to you all that portion of her fortune which does not
-go to charitable institutions?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'Poor girl! A silly and impetuous threat. But she will think better
-of it, Allan, by-and-by, and we have fully five years to count upon
-yet.'
-
-But it did not seem as if the fair Olive was likely to change her
-mind soon, to judge by her bearing that evening, when, after dinner,
-the guests and family at Dundargue assembled in the drawing-room.
-
-The repast was over, and thereafter, ere the ladies withdrew, Ronald
-Gair, with all his drones in order, his Crimean, Indian, and Ashanti
-medals glittering on his breast, had marched thrice round the table,
-according to his daily wont, in 'full fig,' looking as only a
-Highland piper or a peacock can look; and, to the amazement of Sir
-Paget Puddicombe and the disgust of Hawke Holcroft, winding up 'The
-Birks of Aberfeldie' by several warlike skirls at the back of his
-master's chair--the dinner, we say, was over, and the gentlemen had
-joined the ladies in the stately drawing-room, which was lighted by
-more than one glittering chandelier.
-
-Lord Aberfeldie, his son, and Stratherroch, as they wore the kilt,
-had, of course, substituted for their rough shooting-jackets others
-of black cloth, with the irreproachable white vests and ties as
-evening costume, and had also assumed their silver-mounted dirks;
-while Holcroft and one or two more were _de rigueur_ in the funereal
-attire, which a writer calls 'the butler-suit, the most hideous
-clothing yet hit upon by our species.'
-
-In that brilliant drawing-room, grouped with well-bred people, were
-some curious elements of secret doubt and future discord that did not
-quite meet the eye.
-
-Holcroft hung over the chair of Olive so closely that, at times, the
-tip of his long and waxed tawny moustache nearly touched her head,
-while she played with her fan, opening and shutting it listlessly as
-they conversed in low tones, he adopting a sentimental one, though it
-was ever his boast that he 'was not one of those fools who hoard by
-them dried flowers, locks of hair, and all that sort of thing.'
-
-Quietly watched by Lady Aberfeldie, whose lips wore their set
-expression, Evan Cameron was entirely occupied with her daughter,
-while Allan seemed quite as intent on a new guest, Miss Logan of
-Loganlee, a girl possessed of considerable personal attractions; and
-his father talked politics with Loganlee himself, the parish
-minister, and Sir Paget Puddicombe, a short, pompous, and squat, but
-rather pleasant little man, with a prematurely bald head, which he
-had a way of jerking forward from his neck like a turtle, a rubicund
-face, two merry eyes, and whose age was rather doubtful, but too old
-any way for a girl of Eveline Graham's years, though he affected
-considerable juvenility of manner.
-
-Lord Aberfeldie, who generally about that time, when at Dundargue,
-was wont to enjoy a quiet little game of chess or bezique with Olive
-or Eveline, was rather bored by the _empressement_ with which the
-clergyman, Sir Paget, and Loganlee discussed politics and the
-prospects of the ministry.
-
-The latter, a sombre man, whose air of respectability was almost
-oppressive, was one of a style of men common enough in Scotland. A
-small landed proprietor, he had contrived to become M.P. in the
-Liberal interest for a cluster of Scottish burghs (each of which, if
-in England, would have had two members), and he was chiefly
-noted--being 'Parliament House bred'--for neglecting Scottish
-interests and toadying to the Lord-Advocate, and consequently
-obtained the usual legal reward, a sheriffship, or something of that
-kind, with a thousand a year or so.
-
-He seldom opened his mouth, save to talk on politics; he was tall and
-thin, with very square shoulders, grizzled, sandy, mutton-chop
-whiskers, apple-green eyes, and nothing more about him remarkable,
-save a curious air of perpetual self-assertion, combined, as we have
-said, with an oppressive one of respectability.
-
-His host began to change the tenor of the conversation by hoping that
-Sir Paget found his quarters comfortable last night, adding that he
-occupied 'the Johnson Room.'
-
-'Why is it so called?' asked Sir Paget, jerking forward his bald head.
-
-'Dr. Johnson slept a night in Dundargue when on his famous tour.'
-
-'Of which Boswell makes no mention?' said Mr. Logan, inquiringly.
-
-'Because my ancestor did not pay him sufficient deference; and,
-indeed, I fear we should scarcely ever have heard of the literary
-bear of Bolt Court and Fleet Street but for that Scotch toady of his.
-Though he alleged that the most valuable piece of timber in Scotland
-was his walking-stick, he might have seen some fine trees at the
-Birks of Aberfeldy. We must ride over there, Sir Paget, and I will
-show you the cradle of the Black Watch, my old regiment of immortal
-memory.'
-
-'How?'
-
-'It was first mustered there on the 25th of October, 1739.'
-
-'Ah!' said Sir Paget, who was not so much interested in the matter as
-the speaker.
-
-Sir Paget was a childless widower, and had been left a noble fortune
-in many ways, including nearly the whole of Slough-cum-Sloggit, of
-which his father rose by his own merits to be mayor. He had entered
-the town a tattered lad, with only a sixpence in his pocket, and, in
-due time, the sixpence became the basis of colossal wealth. He had
-been made a baronet by the ministry of the day--no one knew precisely
-for what; but the wealth he left behind him gave his son an interest
-in the eyes of Lady Aberfeldie he was unlikely to attain in the soft
-hazel orbs of her daughter.
-
-Sir Paget generally stood with his chest puffed out, reminding one of
-a pouter-pigeon, his little, fat hands interlaced behind his back,
-and often as not under the tails of his coat, his round,
-good-humoured face and twinkling eyes turned up to the faces of those
-with whom he conversed, as most men, and women, too, had the
-advantage of him in stature.
-
-With a gold _pince-nez_ balanced on his very pug nose, he was what
-young ladies described as 'an absurd little man' whose tender
-speeches they laughed at--none more than Eveline--till matters took a
-serious turn, though he failed to feel the truth of the aphorism,
-'Let no lover cherish sanguine hopes when the object of his choice
-has grown to look upon him in the light of the ridiculous.'
-
-Evan Cameron, we have said, sighed for Eveline; hopeless as his
-undeclared love had been, the presence of the wealthy English
-baronet, in conjunction with certain rumours he had heard, made it
-more hopeless than ever; and, unattractive though Sir Paget's years
-and figure, he felt intuitively that in him he had a dangerous rival.
-
-When he found that this most eligible _parti_ was again on the
-_tapis_--one whose name had been associated with that of Eveline in
-at least one 'society' paper during the last London season, poor
-Stratherroch's heart sank down to zero. He felt and knew that, with
-Lady Aberfeldie especially, he was literally 'nowhere' by his want of
-wealth, though, like a true Highlander, he could trace his lineage
-back into the misty times of Celtic antiquity; but, aristocratic
-though she was, the peeress set little store on that.
-
-Eveline Graham seemed as much beyond his reach as the moon. He felt
-that, for his own peace of mind, he ought to quit Dundargue as soon
-as possible, yet he clung desperately to the perilous delight of the
-girl's society.
-
-To all appearance, the pair were simply looking over, almost in
-silence, a large book of clear-skied and strongly-shadowed photos of
-Indian scenery brought home by Allan, yet both their hearts had but a
-single thought, and, when the downward glance of his soft grey eyes
-met hers, she felt that, in spite of herself, there was something in
-it like a magnetic spell.
-
-Passionate and pleading eyes they were, generous and loving in
-expression, telling the tale his lips had not yet uttered, and might
-never do so; and the girl lowered her white lids as if a weight
-oppressed them, and the diamond locket on her white bosom sparkled as
-a sigh escaped her.
-
-A little way off, in something of the same pose, Hawke Holcroft, with
-a glass in his pale, sinister eye, was hanging, as we have said, over
-Olive Raymond, doing his utmost in _sotto voce_ to fascinate that
-young lady, while pretending to translate, as suited the occasion and
-himself, for the edification of his fair listener, the lettering of
-one of the Chinese or Japanese fans that were strewed about the
-tables.
-
-Now, Mr. Hawke Holcroft knew nothing about the terms of Mr. Raymond's
-will, or of the existence of any such document, and might never know.
-He was only certain that Olive was undoubtedly an heiress; that he
-himself was very impecunious, and ere long might be well-nigh
-desperate; and so he did not see why he should not, to use his own
-horsey phraseology, 'enter stakes as well as another.'
-
-Rumour, certainly, had linked the names of the cousins together; 'but
-if she is engaged to Graham,' thought the observant Holcroft, 'it is
-strange that she wears no engagement ring.'
-
-He knew not that, separated as the pair had been almost from
-childhood, no such little formality as the presentation of a ring
-could have been gone through; and now, as the Master did not see his
-way to it as yet, Holcroft was 'scoring,'or thought so.
-
-He was leaving nothing unsaid to enchain her attention. He seemed
-very clever: at least he could converse fluently on many subjects;
-seemed to have been everywhere and to have seen everything worth
-seeing, or pretended to have done so, which was most likely.
-
-'However they stand, her heart is not in it,' was his ever-recurring
-thought; 'and if so, why the deuce shouldn't I try my hand? She has
-a pot of money--indeed, no end of money, I hear; but, then, if her
-noble aunt and uncle have made up their noble minds to pounce upon
-her as a daughter-in-law, how is she to resist, unless she elopes, if
-"Barkis" (meaning Allan) "is willin'"? They can make her life a
-burden to her until she gives in, or--or I run away with her, and why
-the devil should I not?'
-
-Holcroft was an artful man, and well acquainted with every phase of
-dissipated life; he had suave manners when he chose and an
-unexceptionable appearance. With many debts and secret passions, he
-was cold and selfish; a man who never made a move in any way without
-forecast and calculation; and who might commit a crime if driven to
-it, but never precisely a folly.
-
-He was closely watching Olive while he conversed with her; he admired
-her beautiful person, but still more her ample purse. She dared to
-trifle with him at times, he thought; and then, even when looking
-down upon her satin-like hair, her dazzling white shoulders and
-innocent violet eyes, with a vengeful feeling he mentally vowed that
-he would _compel_ her to love him, or accept him, he cared not which,
-if human will and cunning failed him not!
-
-He had a love--a passion for her--in a strange fashion of his own,
-yet times there were when he almost hated her for fencing with him:
-and little could the soft, bright beauty, who raised her fine eyes
-from time to time to his and conversed so laughingly with him, have
-conceived the conflicting emotions that were concealed in his breast
-under a smiling exterior, or the shame and agony he was yet to cost
-her.
-
-Even when he attempted to look loving, there were a cold expression
-and lack of colour in his eyes, and there was something very
-significant of an iron will about his lips and powerful chin.
-
-Olive had no warm feeling for Holcroft, and save for the obnoxious
-will would infinitely have preferred her cousin Allan in the end; but
-she affected just then to believe in Platonic friendship (blended
-with a little judicious flirtation) so firmly that, to pique Allan,
-she showed a great apparent preference for his would-be rival.
-
-Olive and Holcroft knew that this seeming flirtation was perilous
-work, and might compromise them both with Lord and Lady Aberfeldie,
-and with Allan, too, if it attracted attention; but Holcroft had a
-game to play. Olive's proud little heart was full of resentment and
-pique, and then anything with a spice of danger in it is always
-curiously fascinating.
-
-More than all, Olive was beginning to feel conscious that, under the
-circumstances, it was strangely awkward to be in the same house with
-Allan Graham--the intended husband to whom her father had bequeathed
-her. But whither could she go?
-
-In more than one instance, in the drawing-room at Dundargue, that
-night was illustrated the aphorism that language is given us to
-conceal our thoughts, and much was exhibited of what the French not
-inaptly term the chagrin or peevishness of love.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-LE CHAGRIN D'AMOUR.
-
-Allan Graham, with all his quiet and growing love for Olive, seeing
-how she received him, neither petted her as he was wont to do in his
-boyhood, nor after a time had attempted any tenderness with her; but
-trusted to the progress of events and the necessity for fulfilling
-her father's wish rather than to his own influence or power of
-persuasion, aware that she could only become the bride of another,
-penniless, or nearly so, a circumstance which militated sadly against
-himself.
-
-But this assumed coldness and calmness withal, Olive could feel, with
-a woman's acuteness in such matters, how much the expression of his
-dark eyes and the tone of his voice changed and softened,
-unconsciously, when he looked at and addressed her. She was of his
-own blood, like a sister, whom he might treat with formality or
-affection, coldly or playfully, according to the occasion or the
-mood, and whom he might love as much as he liked, or she would
-permit. Ah! this tender and mysterious tie of cousinship must give
-him, as he thought, 'a great pull' over Hawke Holcroft, and every
-other man.
-
-On this evening, how handsome she looked, in all her wilfullness!
-How Allan longed that he might take her in his embrace, to kiss her
-starry eyes, her peach-like cheek, and sheeny hair with an ardour he
-had never felt in his boyhood, when he had done so many times; but
-now, somehow, he dared scarcely think of such a thing, and there was
-that fellow Holcroft, with all his easy insouciance, and with the
-smile of one who never laughed really in his life, hanging just
-rather too much over her, with a considerable amount of empressement
-in his eyes and manner, pouring his flowery nothings into her
-apparently willing ear, and Lady Aberfeldie, who could stand this no
-longer, became secretly provoked, and opened and shut her fan of
-heavy mother-of-pearl with such vehemence that the sticks rattled.
-
-And, with the emotions we have described in his heart, Allan, as if
-the further to play out the game of cross-purposes, in a spirit of
-pique, doubtless, remained in close attendance on Miss Ruby Logan.
-
-Now the latter was not the heiress of Loganlee, as she had several
-brothers; but, even had she been so, it would not have enhanced her
-value in the ambitious estimation of Lady Aberfeldie.
-
-But Ruby was a very handsome girl, with a skin pure, transparent, and
-delicate as the lining of a shell, while her fine hair was ample in
-quantity, and of the darkest amber; her eyes large, deep-blue, and
-fringed by dark lashes. She was large, full in form, and altogether
-a bright and attractive-looking girl, and Olive felt conscious that
-she might prove rather a formidable rival if she ever had to view her
-as such.
-
-Replacing the three daughters of the minister of Dundargue, who had
-been afflicting the company with much boarding-school Mozart and
-Chopin, who would have deemed anything national vulgar, to say the
-least of it, compared with some lachrymose drawing-room ballad, and
-who in a ditty of great length and mystery, which we quote at second
-hand, had informed their hearers--
-
- 'Mermaids we be,
- Under the blue sea'--
-
-replacing them, we say, Ruby Logan sang to Allan in a rich
-mezzo-soprano voice, and with a suppressed emotion, born perhaps of a
-coquettish desire to dazzle and please him, as a handsome young
-fellow of good position, all of which proved a fresh annoyance to my
-Lady Aberfeldie, who deemed music at times 'a convenient noise for
-drowning conversation, and under whose shelter the old people talk
-scandal and the young people make love,' and who knew that Miss
-Logan, like Olive, had that wonderful charm, which is, perhaps, one
-of the greatest any girl can possess, a lovely and ever-changing
-expression; and even Allan, as he gazed down into the depths of her
-dark-blue eyes (while she sang _at_ him), and anon glanced furtively
-at Olive, thought to himself,
-
-'How the dickens _will_ our little game of cross-purposes end?'
-
-Lady Aberfeldie was just then indulging in the same surmise, as, full
-of watchfulness, she occupied an ottoman in the centre of the inner
-drawing-room, cresting up her white throat and well-shaped head;
-looking in her stately beauty like the heroine of some grand old
-Scottish romance of the days of Montrose or Prince Charles, for there
-was something of a past age in her style and bearing, though attired
-in the latest fashion by a modiste of Princes Street.
-
-In her matronhood, Lady Aberfeldie had still that subdued charm which
-was not now the beauty of youth, yet stood very much in place of it;
-but, with all her softness of manner, she was a proud and determined
-woman, capable of doing much to accomplish a purpose of her own, and
-the marriage of Eveline to Sir Paget Puddicombe was certainly her
-purpose at present.
-
-Thinking that it was high time to make some change in the general
-grouping, the moment Miss Logan's musical performance was done she
-summoned Allan to her side by a wave of her fan.
-
-'So glad I am that your father, who so often mistakes, invited dear
-Sir Paget here,' she said, in low voice.
-
-'He is rather a good sort,' replied Allan, in his off-hand way;
-'capital cellar and preserves, I have heard.'
-
-'So rich, and not _very_ old; he always admired Eveline, and she
-certainly cares for no one else--thus I have great hopes for her,
-Allan,' she added, confidently; but Allan sighed; he knew better, and
-recalled the tears of his gentle sister on the terrace, and her half
-murmured admissions of deep interest in that winsome young
-brother-officer, whom he loved so well; and, as he remained silent,
-his mother spoke again.
-
-'Mr. Holcroft seems to be fairly absorbing Olive; he has been talking
-to her quite long enough, and this will not do; ask her to play
-something at my request, and do you lead her to the piano.'
-
-'We are anticipated,' said Allan, as he saw his sister seat herself
-at the instrument with young Cameron by her side, busy among the
-leaves of her music; and a shade of annoyance deepened in the face of
-Lady Aberfeldie as she glanced at her husband, whose eyes were turned
-also towards the pair, and she knew from personal experience how much
-may be inferred or deduced from the words of a song, and also how
-many a tender speech, an accompaniment, however ill or well executed,
-may conceal.
-
-Lord Aberfeldie, of course, would never consent to Eveline having a
-suitor with means so limited as those of her young admirer; but,
-though the idea of such a contingency had not occurred to him. Lady
-Aberfeldie was much sharper and more suspicious; she saw 'how the
-tide set,' and was much opposed to Cameron being even a visitor at
-Dundargue in any way, as an utter 'detrimental,' and declined to see
-how his being one of 'Ours'--the Black Watch--altered _that_ matter.
-
-And now, after a considerable amount of preluding, much unnecessary
-whispering, as 'my lady' thought, much glancing and many reciprocal
-smiles, Evan Cameron began to sing, accompanied by her daughter; and
-more annoyed became the matron on finding the theme chosen one of
-love and tenderness that could be, and was, sung with considerable
-_point_--a now forgotten little Scotch song, which the author adapted
-to the air of 'Rousseau's Dream,' and with the desire to excel before
-the girl he loved better than life, young Cameron, gave his whole
-soul to the lyric.
-
- 'See the moon o'er cloudless Jura
- Shining in the loch below;
- See the distant mountain towering
- Like a pyramid of snow.
- Scenes of grandeur--scenes of childhood--
- Scenes so dear to love and me!
- Let us roam by bower and wild wood,
- All is lovelier when with _thee_.
-
- 'On Jura's hills the winds are sighing,
- But all is silent in the grove;
- And the leaves with dewdrops glistening
- Sparkle like the eye of love.
- Night so calm, so clear, so cloudless,
- Blessed night to love and me;
- Let us roam by bower and fountain,
- All is lovelier when with _thee_.'
-
-And it was not unnoticed by Lady Aberfeldie that at the closing word
-of each verse the eyes of the pair unconsciously met. Ere Eveline
-could be prevented, she had acceded to Cameron's softly uttered
-desire that she would sing anything for _him_; and she frankly did
-so, throwing into her voice the thrill and tenderness that are sure
-to come into a girl's utterances when singing to the man she loves.
-The heart of Cameron responded to this mysterious influence, and, as
-the girl regarded him furtively from time to time, she thought, with
-his crisp wavy hair, his clear grey eyes, general expression and
-bearing, he looked every inch what he was, the descendant of that Sir
-Evan Cameron of Lochiel who met Cromwell's men in combat under the
-shadow of Ben Nevis; yet to other eyes he seemed just a good sample
-of an infantryman who had across his forehead the genuine sunmark of
-his craft, made under the line of his forage-cap by a scorching
-tropical sun.
-
-And now when Lady Aberfeldie, to stop any more musical performances
-between these two, prevailed upon Olive to replace her cousin, she
-was quick enough to detect that the former, displeased or piqued by
-Allan's apparent attention to Ruby Logan, swept past him with the
-most subtle little touch of disdain in the carriage of her handsome
-head.
-
-Now Cameron had once more to give place to pudgy little Sir Paget,
-who--puffing out his chest and jerking forward his bald shining
-head--began to do his best to make himself pleasing to Eveline, while
-the latter, under her mother's watchful eye, was compelled to listen
-and appear to act with compliance and complacency; and poor Eveline,
-like Olive, often felt with some compunction that her mother's
-general bearing--which a certain quiet yet lofty dignity seemed never
-to forsake--was more calculated to inspire respect than love.
-
-And Cameron, while he found himself talking rather absently on
-regimental matters with Lord Aberfeldie, as he looked at Eveline from
-time to time, was thinking sadly in his honest heart,
-
-'Oh, what madness it is in me to love her as I do, and how wicked if
-I lure her into loving me! Can I expect her ambitious mother or her
-calculating father ever to view with favour one so penniless as I am?
-Would it be honourable in me to profit by her girlish prepossession
-in my favour, and so preclude her from reaping those advantages of
-wealth, position, and rank which she is entitled to expect, and to
-which her parents looked forward? and alas! as the wife of Sir
-Paget--if such be her fate--poor Eveline will be lost for ever to me.'
-
-His breast felt torn by such thoughts as these; and, sooth to say, it
-is as often amid the splendour and luxury of life, as amid its
-squalor and poverty, that some of its bitterest tragedies are acted
-out.
-
-But now the party began to break up--the ladies to seek their
-respective apartments, and the gentlemen to adjourn for a time to the
-smoking-room.
-
-As the two cousins, each so different in her style of loveliness,
-crossed the great apartment, the soft _frou-frou_ of their long
-silken dresses seemed to mingle with their soft laughter and silvery
-voices. Sir Paget jerked forward his head and remarked to his
-hostess that 'they made a charming picture.'
-
-Each had a sore place in her heart, but there was no appearance of it
-then.
-
-Though resenting the position in which she was placed, and much
-inclined to resist it, Olive Raymond--such is female caprice--also
-resented Allan's having hovered so much about the amber-haired
-beauty, and, when she bade him adieu for the night, she could not
-help singing softly, with some point and waggery, as she glanced back
-at him, the lines of Tennyson's song:
-
- 'I know a maiden fair to see,
- Take care!
- She can both false and friendly be,
- Beware, beware!
- Trust her not, she is fooling thee.'
-
-But whether she applied the words to herself or Ruby Logan it puzzled
-him to divine.
-
-Olive and Eveline were of an age, and able to sympathise with each
-other in every thought or fancy. They had grown up together like
-sisters, Olive, as an orphan, doubtless being the most petted of the
-two by the household ever since she came a little child to Dundargue,
-and both were frank, both were open-hearted, and proud of each
-other's personal attractions; and now, dismissing their maids, they
-brushed out each other's shining hair that they might have a quiet
-gossip together.
-
-'So ends a tiresome night,' said Eveline, shrugging her white
-shoulders, which shone like ivory in the light of the toilette
-candles: 'a night when the conversation of everyone seemed of a
-nature so antagonistic, or as if it was all broken up into wrong
-duets.'
-
-Like her father, Eveline was anxious to discover how the cousins were
-affected towards each other now; yet the course of this evening, in
-which Allan had plainly flirted with Ruby Logan, while Olive seemed
-to have been engrossed by Mr. Holcroft, did not seem to promise much,
-and she hinted this pretty plainly.
-
-'I do think Holcroft loves me, or leads me to infer that he does,'
-said Olive, with a soft smile on her downcast face, as she took off
-her rings, bangles, and bracelets, and tossed them on the marble
-toilette-table.'
-
-'And you--what is your feeling for him?' asked Eveline, with some
-anxiety in her face and tone; 'not love, I hope.'
-
-'I don't know what I feel--perhaps it is only a girl's emotion of
-gratitude and vanity.'
-
-'I hope it will never be anything more. You scarcely spoke to poor
-Allan to-night?' said Eveline, interrogatively.
-
-'Rather say he scarcely spoke to me! But we are fated to see quite
-enough of each other, I suppose,' replied Olive, as with slender
-fingers she coiled and knotted up the silky masses of her rich brown
-hair. 'How absurd it is,' she added, petulantly, 'to think, as I
-have said a hundred times, that I have a lover cut and dry for me--a
-_fiancé_--ever since he was in jackets and knickerbockers!'
-
-After a pause, during which she was critically and approvingly
-regarding herself sideways in the swinging cheval-glass, she said,
-
-'When I heard that he was returning to Dundargue, I was quite
-prepared to dislike him intensely.'
-
-'Olive!'
-
-'Fact, dear; and since then he must have been sorely puzzled by my
-various moods towards him.'
-
-'You speak but with truth in this; and yet he seems to have been
-somewhat the same with you.'
-
-'Poor fellow--but ever so good and kind.'
-
-'And--and you think, Olive dear, that you are beginning to love him
-as mamma wishes?'
-
-'Nay--nay, I cannot admit that.'
-
-'Even to me?' said Eveline, caressing her.
-
-'Even to you. Did you not see his manner to-night with Ruby Logan?'
-
-'To pique you, if possible, Olive; but when Allan proposes to you, as
-I am sure he will, and must do----'
-
-'_Must_ do!' interrupted Olive. 'Yes--there it is.'
-
-'Well?'
-
-'Then, and in that case, as the will has it, I shall tell him that,
-however I may esteem and regard him as my cousin, he can never be
-more, or nearer, or dearer than as such.'
-
-Eveline sighed and smiled; but she told this reply next day to Allan,
-and hence he became less in a hurry to bring matters to an issue,
-though love was growing in his heart, nevertheless.
-
-'Oh, why is it that women cannot speak their minds as men do? I wish
-I dared run away!' exclaimed the petulant beauty, beating the carpet
-with a little impatient foot. 'To-day I saw two great brown eagles
-winging their way skyward from the rock of Dundargue; and oh!
-Eveline, you can't think how long and wistfully I watched them till
-they dwindled into tiny specks.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'They seemed such free agents, and, as such, to be envied. They had
-no wills or last testaments made by others to control their
-actions--no parents to rule them in the matters of love and marriage.'
-
-'How droll you are, Olive! To whom but you would such speculations
-occur? I hope you did not express them to--to----'
-
-'Allan?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'Not to Allan.'
-
-'To whom then?'
-
-'Mr. Holcroft.'
-
-'Then, you were very wrong to do so,' said Eveline, almost severely;
-'he will be certain to draw his own deductions therefrom.'
-
-'In something else I was, I fear, wrong too.'
-
-'How?'
-
-'I permitted him to try one of my gold bangles--one sent me by Allan
-from Delhi--on his arm, and it would not come off again.'
-
-'And the bangle?'
-
-'Is still there,' said Olive, laughing, but not without a little
-emotion of alarm.
-
-'Oh, Olive!' exclaimed Eveline, with something of dismay, 'how could
-you? This is worse than the photo.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE RIDING-PARTY.
-
-For some time the days passed on as they generally do in a
-country-house like Dundargue, and there was all the usual flow of
-life and--with three exceptions, Sir Paget, Holcroft, and
-Cameron--change of guests and visitors, with the amusements wealth
-can give.
-
-First came the partridge-shooting, and then the pheasants were to be
-knocked over, while the ladies drove almost daily to the preserves
-with the luncheon in the drag or large pony-carriage; there were
-hunting days, dinners, luncheons, musical evenings, carpet dances,
-and so forth, and the inevitable lawn-tennis, with the ladies in
-bewitching costumes; but still Allan, damped perhaps by his sister's
-communications, 'made no way' with his tantalising cousin, and Hawke
-Holcroft, on Lord Aberfeldie's invitation, was still lingering at
-Dundargue.
-
-To Allan, Olive had become a part of his life, and each day seemed
-only to begin when he met her at breakfast in her charming morning
-toilette, fresh from her bath and the hands of Mademoiselle
-Clairette, her hair dressed to perfection, and her face radiant with
-health and beauty.
-
-'How often do I wish she had not a _sous_!' sighed Allan. 'Then she
-might learn that I love her for herself alone.'
-
-The curious position in which they were placed relatively made the
-cousins most strange to each other, involving much constraint.
-
-'They are fencing with their feelings,' was Lord Aberfeldie's
-conviction.
-
-To Evan Cameron, however, it was evident that Holcroft was 'making
-all the running he could' during Allan's absences after the game, or
-apparent occupation with laughing Ruby Logan, while it became evident
-to Sir Paget and more than one other guest that he got up many a
-quiet game at _ecarté_--that most rooking of all games--and many a
-match at billiards after the ladies had retired; and it was soon
-remarked by the same close observers that he was a singularly
-successful player, often pocketing large sums, seldom losing, and
-then very slenderly, as if to keep up appearances.
-
-At Dundargue he felt himself in clover! He knew, or was aware
-instinctively, that neither Lady Aberfeldie nor the Master cared much
-about him; but he also knew that his host was inspired by the
-kindliest feelings towards him as the only son of an early friend and
-gallant old Crimean comrade who had gone to his long home.
-
-If any rule governed the erratic life of the horsey and gambling
-Holcroft, it was that of resolutely shutting his eyes against
-to-morrow, and letting it take care of itself; and, now that there
-was a prospect of winning a wife with money--and such a chance seldom
-came his way--could he but play his cards well and surely, his
-fortune would be made!
-
-He was a mass of absolute selfishness--the result either of his
-innate nature or of his nomadic habits. A life-long bankrupt, he had
-been ever readier to borrow than to lend, to smoke any other fellow's
-cigars than his own, and to take every advantage of the honourable
-and unsuspecting.
-
-Such was the perilous inmate which a mistaken sense of kindness,
-gratitude, and hospitality had induced Lord Aberfeldie to make one of
-the family circle at Dundargue during the shooting season; and to
-whom the advent of the bangle--which, though it slipped easily upon
-his wrist, most mysteriously would not come off it--and other
-adventitious circumstances, the real cause of which he did not know,
-gave a considerable amount of what he termed to himself 'modest
-assurance' and confidence of ultimate success.
-
-'I should like to come into a nice little pot of money--a fortune, if
-you will--but not with a girl tacked to it,' he said, on one
-occasion, to throw Allan 'off the scent,' as he thought. 'I am
-neither domestic nor ambitious. A few thousands would do.'
-
-'And make you content?'
-
-'Content! I should feel as happy as more than once I have been at
-Monaco, when I have seen the croupier's rake pushing a jolly pile of
-gold across the _trente-et-quarante_ table towards me, by Jove.'
-
-It did not occur to him that by little speeches like this and
-anecdotes about his own acumen in the betting ring, he let a little
-light in upon the general tenor of his past and present life, and,
-all unconscious that Sir Paget and others listened with slightly
-elevated eyebrows, he would produce a sealskin cigar-case of
-portentous dimensions, draw therefrom a great Rio Hondo cigar, and
-after carefully manipulating it, begin to smoke it with intense
-satisfaction.
-
-Hawke Holcroft, like Mr. Micawber, was always waiting for something
-to 'turn up' in the way of good for himself, and now thought he had
-found that something in Olive Raymond--an heiress free, he deemed, to
-choose for herself--free to be wooed and won; and on a day when she
-proposed a riding-party to visit Macbeth's Castle of Dunsinane he
-very nearly had the hardihood to learn his fate--in the words of
-Montrose's song, to put it 'to the touch, to win or lose it all.'
-
-Drives, riding-parties, and rambles to visit artistic bits of scenery
-and the rural [** Transcriber's note: line missing from source book?]
-lions the neighbourhood afforded every opportunity to those who
-wished to cultivate each other's society at Dundargue, and the
-expedition proposed by Olive to visit the ruins of the usurper's
-castle, proved the occasion of Mr. Hawke Holcroft's attempt to
-advance his own interests.
-
-Whatever Lady Aberfeldie's views were, her husband had never been
-called upon to fulfil the duties of a vigilant guardian or parent,
-and to study the difference between 'detrimentals' and married
-parties, so he left the guidance of the whole affair in the hands of
-Allan, and remained closeted with his solicitor.
-
-By judicious manoeuvring, Holcroft contrived to pair-off with Olive,
-while Allan thus became the escort of Ruby Logan, and Eveline, of
-course, fell to Sir Paget, who soon found the truth of the vulgar
-adage about two being company, &c., on their being joined by
-Stratherroch.
-
-It was a clear and brilliant day early in October, when the blue sky
-was flecked by fleecy clouds, and the far-stretching scenery of the
-fertile Carse, overlooked by the long chain of heights, named the
-Sidlaw Hills, lay steeped in sunshine.
-
-The parks of Dundargue, with their broad acres of velvet-like turf,
-their stately oaks and towering beeches, among the gnarled branches
-of which legions of gleds were cawing to each other, and brown
-squirrels were gliding to and fro; their hedges of ancient thorn, and
-others where the hawthorn berries showed red and the wild roses were
-blooming--the parks, we say, were left behind, with all their groups
-of deer, and the party, certainly a merry and a well-mounted one,
-accompanied by the stag-hounds Shiuloch and Bran, careering joyously
-on either hand, followed by a couple of splendidly-horsed grooms,
-cantered along the highway, and ere long broke, or fell, into that
-slow and ambling pace which is suited for conversing with ease. And
-Holcroft, who was well versed in all horsey details, and had a very
-appreciative eye, could see that his fair companion's _tout
-ensemble_, her riding costume, her hat, veil, and gauntlets were all
-perfect, from the coils of brown glossy hair to the little foot that
-rested firmly in its tiny stirrup of burnished steel; and that foot
-was indeed a model--arched, small, and always full of character in
-its elasticity of tread; and, more than all, intoxicated by the
-ambient air, the sunshine, her own high spirits, and the pleasure of
-being mounted on her own favourite pad, Olive Raymond was looking her
-brightest and her best.
-
-He had, while engaging all her attention in conversation, contrived,
-unknown to her, by the pacing of his horse, to leave the trio
-referred to at some distance behind; while, luckily for him, Allan
-Graham, lured on by Ruby Logan--who was something between a flirt and
-a hoyden--had gone ahead with her suddenly at a hand-gallop, and now
-the pair were out of sight.
-
-There could be no engagement, despite all rumour thereof--not even a
-passing fancy--between the cousins, was now Holcroft's conviction,
-and of his own ultimate success with Olive he began to have little
-doubt, could he but warily mould her to his purpose; and already in
-fancy he saw her thousands--how many there were he knew not--firmly
-in his grasp.
-
-Though swallowed up by mortgages, his place in Essex--or the few
-acres that nominally still remained to him there--caused the
-retention of his name among the 'landed gentry of England,' and he
-based much upon that circumstance as aiding his designs on Lord
-Aberfeldie's ward, to whom he had sometimes dropped glowing hints of
-possession that were not nor ever had been his.
-
-Something undefined in Olive's manner rather encouraged him on this
-day. She, to show that she resented the apparent indifference of
-Allan as being a 'laggard in love,' even while resenting the tenor of
-that family compact which was meant to bind them together, was
-disposed to flirt with Holcroft, out of pique rather than precise
-preference, and to annoy Allan.
-
-With the latter present now, Holcroft became at times a species of
-difficulty to Olive. During a past season in London there had been
-sundry, not exactly love-passages, but little coquettings and
-lingerings in conservatories that nearly amounted to such; and he, in
-ignorance of the footing in which she was regarded by the family, was
-quite inclined, penniless as he was, or nearly so, to revive, if not
-improve, past relations; and this had been his object from the first
-day he came to Dundargue.
-
-And now 'that muscular idiot the Master,' as he was in the habit of
-mentally calling Allan, having cantered out of sight, he addressed
-himself more fully to his companion and the matter in hand.
-
-'I enjoy town to the full--none can do so more--when I am there, but
-I love--oh, I do love--the country!' replied Olive, in reply to a
-remark of Holcroft's about their last London season.
-
-'It is always very romantic, of course, and all that sort of thing.'
-
-'And with pleasant people about one, the country becomes so
-delightful for a time; and then we girls have such perfect freedom
-here.'
-
-'Even an escort is not necessary at times.'
-
-'Unless in the park--beyond that I always like to have one,' said
-Olive.
-
-'Are you pleased to have _me_ for one?' he asked, in a low voice, and
-pretty pointedly.
-
-'Of course,' she answered, frankly.
-
-'How charming to be at hand in case of danger!'
-
-'What possible danger?' asked Olive, with surprise.
-
-'Oh, the untimely appearance of an infuriated stag or the proverbial
-mad bull of the three-volume novel.'
-
-'Why not a brigand or a Bengal tiger?' said Olive, laughing; then,
-suddenly becoming grave, she added--'But, by the way, talking of
-Bengal, please to give me back my bangle.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Simply because I cannot permit you to retain it,' she replied,
-little foreseeing to what the natural request might lead.
-
-'Do not deprive me of it!' he urged, softly and entreatingly.
-
-'Why?' asked she, in return; 'for what reason. It is
-impossible--what may people say?'
-
-'What they please, if seen, which it never shall be.'
-
-'What might they not think?'
-
-'Oh, what does it matter?' he urged again, with much would-be sadness
-and tenderness.
-
-'Little to you, perhaps, but much to me,' retorted Olive; 'but I do
-not choose that aught should be either thought or said about it. We
-shall certainly be accused of flirting.'
-
-'No, no, Miss Raymond--oh, no, Olive----'
-
-'Olive!' she repeated, in a startled manner.
-
-'Pardon me--none could ever accuse me of flirting with you--that were
-an impossibility--for deeper thoughts----'
-
-'My bangle, please, Mr. Holcroft, and at once!' she said,
-imperatively, in dread of what more he might say.
-
-She held forth her hand, but the trinket either would not come off
-his wrist, or he pretended that such was the case. Olive tried to
-remove it, but in vain, and glanced round her, red with vexation.
-Her hand was gloved, otherwise she would have felt how unpleasantly
-cold and clammy were the fingers of her would-be lover.
-
-'Allow me to retain it, even for a time--though would that I might
-wear it in my grave--for a time, in memory of the darling hopes I
-have dared to cherish,' he whispered, in a manner there could be no
-mistaking now.
-
-'Spare me this melodramatic sort of thing, Mr. Holcroft,' said Olive,
-growing rather pale; 'I cannot--must not listen to you.'
-
-'Why--what do you mean?'
-
-'That there are obstacles between us, even were there not the want of
-liking,' she replied, decidedly, but with an agitated voice.
-
-'Obstacles?' he repeated, inquiringly, sadly, and certainly with an
-air of _disappointment_; 'am I now to understand that you are engaged
-to the Master of Aberfeldie, as these absurd Scots people call him?'
-
-Olive bit her ruddy nether lip at this home question; but made no
-reply.
-
-'What enigma is this? You either are or you are not. If not, why
-may not I----'
-
-'I dare not listen to this style of conversation,' interrupted Olive,
-with positive annoyance; 'and you have no right to force it upon me.'
-
-'After all that has passed?' said he, reproachfully, and rather
-feeling as if his hopes were melting into air.
-
-'I do not understand you,' replied Olive, whose conscience certainly
-did reproach her.
-
-'If I force this conversation--' he began in a bitter and rather
-upbraiding tone, then pausing; 'pardon me if I offend,' he resumed,
-with what seemed growing sadness, while attempting to touch her hand,
-yet withdrawing his own in apparent timidity. 'But am I wrong in
-deeming your engagement--or alleged engagement, as rumour says, made
-when you were a child--one in which your woman's heart and wishes
-have not been consulted? Tell me--for I may have to leave Dundargue
-soon now.'
-
-She was in some respects but a weak girl; he a crafty and wily man of
-the world; and, though he knew it not in the least, he was touching
-her on a very tender point--yet she replied, firmly enough,
-
-'You have no right to question me; but say, what has Allan done to
-you that your face should darken at the mention of his name? Is he
-not your friend?'
-
-'He was.'
-
-'And now----'
-
-'He is no longer so.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'He is my rival.'
-
-She coloured to her temples at this blunt reply, and all it inferred.
-
-'I loved you long before you ever cared for me,' he resumed, coolly.
-
-'Sir--how dare you say I ever cared for you?' exclaimed Olive, her
-cheeks aflame now; 'let this subject cease, and be resumed no more!'
-
-'It breaks my heart to hear you speak thus.'
-
-'Hearts don't break now-a-days, even in such romantic places as
-Dundargue,' said she, with a sharp little laugh; 'and here this
-matter ends.'
-
-He bowed in silence; but, fatally perhaps for Allan's interests and
-her own, she thought, and her vanity was flattered by the idea:
-
-'Holcroft loves me, despite the tenor of papa's will--loves me, for
-myself, of course; while Allan _knows_ its value to himself! Surely
-there is a difference in this!'
-
-But it was precisely because Holcroft knew neither of the will nor
-its spirit that he took the courage to address her as he did. Had he
-done so, that enterprising gentleman would speedily have 'dropped out
-of the hunt,' and, so far as he is concerned, we should then have no
-story to tell.
-
-Meanwhile he did not lose heart, and thought he had only to wait the
-fulness of time for the certainty of winning her, and with her,
-wealth--of joy or happiness he took no heed at all.
-
-By this time, greatly to Olive's relief, Eveline and her two swains
-had overtaken them, and so the matter dropped, though the minds of
-both, from two points of view, were full of it. She would now have
-to endure the double annoyance of being daily in the society of a
-lover who had addressed her as such, and of an _intended_ lover who
-had scarcely yet approached the subject!
-
-And, for some reason only known to herself, she did not tell Eveline,
-though her bosom-friend, of what had passed between herself and
-Holcroft. The latter, however, still retained the golden bangle on
-which her name was engraved; but for a time now there was something
-in her manner little to the liking of Hawke Holcroft--full as he was
-of dreams of her, or of her fortune rather--of the risks he ran, and
-the shifts to which he might be put ere he handled it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE PICNIC AT DUNSINANE.
-
-Ambling on together and urging their horses, but at an easy pace,
-they soon drew near the object of their destination--Macbeth's famous
-castle of Dunsinane--whither the portly old butler, Mr. Tappleton,
-had preceded them in a wagonette, freighted with a luxurious
-luncheon; and, leaving their cattle in charge of the grooms, they
-began the ascent of that peak of the Sidlaw Hills which has been
-immortalised by Shakespeare.
-
-With her riding-skirt thrown over her left arm, Eveline acted as
-their guide, and it may easily be supposed that she solicited the
-assistance of Cameron's arm, rather than that of Sir Paget
-Puddicombe, who had quite enough to do in assisting himself up a path
-which proved to him, as he said, 'rather a breather.'
-
-It was a winding road cut in the rock, all the other sides being
-steep and difficult of access, and ere long, on reaching the flat and
-fertile summit, which commands a magnificent view of Strathmore and
-Blairgowrie, they found themselves within the strong rampart and deep
-fosse of what has once been a great military station of oval form,
-two hundred and ten feet long, by one hundred and thirty broad; and
-there they found Allan and Ruby Logan, who had preceded them, in full
-possession of the highest point, whence he was directing her
-attention to the chief features in the scenery, including, of course,
-Birnam Wood, fifteen miles distant, 'The Lang Man's Grave,' a great
-stone, under which Macbeth is said to lie--Ruby the while clinging to
-his arm in the exuberance of her delight, and carrying her riding-hat
-in her hand, as she was quite aware that her hair alone, in its
-wonderful luxuriance, made her very attractive, it being an unruly
-mass of rich, rippling golden amber in hue, shot with a redder and
-brighter tint at times when the sunlight struck it.
-
-Under the splendour of a glorious noon, while a soft breeze rippled
-the verdant grass, the luncheon was proceeded with; fowls were
-dissected, pies investigated, champagne and hock, cool from the
-ice-pails, uncorked; all the requisites for a merry party were there,
-and yet in the party itself the chief element of high spirits was
-wanting, unless in the instance of Ruby Logan, who began to flatter
-herself that she had made--or nearly so--a conquest of the Master of
-Aberfeldie.
-
-Oppressed with the tenor of the conversation that had so recently
-passed between herself and Mr. Holcroft, Olive Raymond was unusually
-silent, and, for her, _distraite_; and he, remembering the somewhat
-decided 'snub' she had so unexpectedly given him, was somewhat silent
-too, but sought consolation in champagne, while listening rather
-abstractedly to Sir Paget Puddicombe descanting on the traditions of
-the neighbourhood, as, in guide-book fashion, he knew all about the
-predictions of the weird sisters, the defeat and death of the
-usurper, and was full of the probability that the great dramatist had
-visited Dunsinane in person.
-
-But Holcroft only quaffed his liquor, tugged his tawny moustache from
-time to time, and listened with an air of boredom, mingled with a
-quizzical expression of mistrust in his pale grey shifty eyes.
-
-He had seen Macbeth on the stage, of course, and endured him more
-than once; but of the Thane of Cawdor he knew no more than what he
-had seen of him behind the footlights, and had cared to learn no
-more; and now it was with some genuine Cockney bewilderment, as he
-looked at the massive trenches around him, he began to think that
-'some such fellow had existed then.'
-
-Eveline and young Cameron, under Sir Paget's eye, were both reserved
-and _triste_, and no wine seemed capable of rousing animation in the
-lover. He had but one thought--the end of his leave was approaching,
-and when he left Dundargue he might never again see Eveline Graham.
-His heart was heavy.
-
-When the trio were riding together, it was not that the eyes of
-Eveline disappointed him, or that she did not converse with him fully
-and earnestly; but he had detected in the manner of Sir Paget a
-provoking air of proprietary and confidence with regard to her that
-keenly piqued him, and could only have been born, he rightly
-conjectured, of some recent confidential arrangement with Lord
-Aberfeldie; but the young girl herself was sweetly unconscious of it
-all.
-
-His responses had been brief, and he had ventured on few remarks,
-aware that little would escape unnoticed; thus he had been somewhat
-silent, while Sir Paget's easy-going old roadster ambled between the
-horses of himself and Eveline, going pace for pace, Sir Paget's head
-at each jerking forward in turtle fashion.
-
-The trio still remained together when seated on the grass at
-luncheon, for neither of the gentlemen were disposed to quit the side
-of Eveline, whose colour might have been noticed to heighten at a
-question Sir Paget asked Cameron, of whom he certainly had a certain
-jealousy.
-
-'Where does your property of Stratherroch lie, Mr. Cameron?'
-
-'In Inverness-shire.'
-
-'Ah!--mountainous, of course--good shooting for those who care for
-such things--not that I do. Is the land very remunerative now?'
-
-'To others--not to me,' said Cameron, a little bitterly. 'A fair
-inheritance would be mine, Sir Paget, were Stratherroch unencumbered.
-My father was a wild fellow in his day--as what Highland laird is
-not? How some acres were mortgaged in succession, how others went
-_in toto_, heaven only knows--I don't. The estate is at nurse now;
-one day it will be mine again--but not for years; and I was too long
-foolishly sentimental about it.'
-
-'How?' asked Sir Paget.
-
-'I thought I would rather that the manor-house fell to ruins than
-pass, even temporarily, into the possession of strangers--of others
-than a Cameron; and now, by Jove! it has been for years occupied by
-one Jones Smithson, of Manchester.'
-
-'Whose rental is clearing it?'
-
-'Yes; and meantime I have little more in this world than my claymore
-and commission in the Black Watch,' said Cameron, with a somewhat
-hollow laugh and a swift, sad glance at Eveline; while Sir Paget
-smiled complacently as he thought of the balance at _his_ bankers,
-and the fat, unfettered acres that lay round Slough-cum-Sloggit.
-
-'I hope you do not find Dundargue dull, Sir Paget?' said Eveline, to
-change a conversation that rather oppressed her, as she was sharp
-enough to divine the thoughts of both men.
-
-'Assuredly not, Miss Graham; how could it be so when I am enabled to
-renew my intimacy with one who can cast, as it were, bright sunshine
-in the most shady place?' he replied, with an unusual jerk of his
-head, a glance of eye, and accentuation of voice that annoyed her
-greatly, while Cameron's lip quivered under his moustache with
-mingled irritation and amusement.
-
-And now at luncheon, inspired by a few bumpers of Clicquot, Sir
-Paget's glances at Eveline took occasionally the fashion of grotesque
-and languishing leers.
-
-The wealthy baronet was older than she by a great many years, but
-they by no means warranted him being safe from a love, or passion
-rather, that might prove cruel as the grave--the passion of a
-middle-aged man for a very handsome young girl, whose parents were
-fully disposed to further his views and their own. It has been said
-that 'people for the life of them cannot be said to believe in the
-love pangs of a man over forty, or of a woman over twenty-nine,' but
-people may at times be wrong.
-
-The present epoch was rather a trying one to Cameron and Eveline. As
-she had admitted to Allan, she knew that he loved her with a love
-unselfish and unspoken; and he felt intuitively that he was far from
-indifferent to her--knew it by the indescribable, untaught, and
-nameless signs by which a man learns instinctively that a woman loves
-him--in a first passion, a most intoxicating conviction; yet
-circumstances blended the happiness of Cameron with much that was
-alloy.
-
-To avoid attentions or would-be tender speeches that might annoy poor
-Cameron, Eveline found herself compelled to talk intently to Sir
-Paget about local traditions and superstitions, and, thanks to her
-old nurse Nannie, she had--for a fashionable young lady of the
-present day--a curious _répertoire_ of stories about wraiths and
-warnings, _Daione Shi_ and other fairies, who were wont in
-pre-railway times to haunt the corries, cairns, and rocks.
-
-'Have you no ghosts in or about Dundargue?' asked Sir Paget. 'A
-grand old mansion is scarcely complete without some such spectral
-visitor.'
-
-'Surely that oubliette, whatever it is, of which I have heard more
-than once, must contain something of the kind?' said Holcroft, in a
-covert, but detestable kind of sneering tone, which he could adopt
-when his own interests were not concerned.
-
-'In the gallery that leads to it I have heard of something strange,'
-said Allan.
-
-'Oh, do tell us--what is seen there?' exclaimed Ruby Logan.
-
-'Nothing--but old servants have a story to the effect that if anyone
-remains long there,' replied Allan, laughing, 'they are certain to
-have a strong sense of shadowy forms--intangible presences--hovering
-near them, and dare not turn their heads to see what they are.'
-
-'We have no decided ghosts, thank Heaven!' said Eveline, laughing,
-and all unconscious of Holcroft's manner. 'There are none even in
-the palaces of Holyrood or Falkland, where terrible things have been
-done, so why should there be in poor old Dundargue? But a spot close
-by where we are now lunching is the alleged scene of a curious
-event--a very dark tradition in our family history.'
-
-'Why recur to a story so absurd?' said Allan.
-
-But she was pressed to explain herself, and with a shy, sweet smile
-in her eyes as she glanced from time to time at Evan Cameron, and a
-wonderfully musical modulation of voice, she told her tale, but not
-quite as old nurse Nannie had told it to her.
-
-'The deep, rocky dell that lies between this and Dundargue, a few
-miles distant, was ever in past times what we find it now, covered
-with dense forest-trees, mingled with alders and silver birches so
-thickly as to exclude the rays of the sun, and it was said to be the
-haunt of a Urisk or mountain-goblin--a species of fiend which, Sir
-Walter Scott says, tradition avers to have had a figure half-man and
-half-goat.'
-
-'In short, the Grecian satyr of classical antiquity,' said Allan,
-laughing.
-
-'Be that as it may, the existence of this particular Urisk was never
-fairly proved until the days of one of our ancestors, Malise Graham
-of Dundargue, who fought at the battle of Ben Rinnes against the
-Reformers, and had in hiding in the "Priest's Hole," as it is still
-called, in the keep, a wandering Scottish Benedictine, known only as
-James of Jerusalem.
-
-'Now, Malise Graham had an only daughter, Muriel, a girl possessed of
-that rare and soft beauty----'
-
-'Which is still the inheritance of her family,' said Sir Paget, with
-a most portentous jerk of his head.
-
-'Please not to interrupt me, or I shall stop,' exclaimed Eveline,
-with unconcealed annoyance. 'Muriel, in her walks near Dundargue,
-had made--unknown to her family--the acquaintance of a handsome young
-stranger of winning manners and prepossessing appearance.
-
-'In the secluded life led in those days by a maiden of rank, such an
-event was of deep and peculiar interest; love speedily became the
-sequel, and in truth the object of it seemed to have been a very
-loveable fellow. Thus it was, with many bitter tears, that one
-evening she told him that her frequent absence from home had been
-remarked, and that she must meet him no more in that wooded hollow,
-especially as it was the haunt of goblins and other evil spirits.
-
-'On hearing this, the handsome stranger laughed till all the dell
-seemed to re-echo, caressed her tenderly, and, after urging her on
-peril of her truth and soul to come to the trysting-place at least
-once again, left her in haste, as some one was seen to approach them.
-
-'This proved to be James of Jerusalem, who is still remembered as the
-Black Priest of Dundargue. He wore nothing that was canonical; to
-have done so would have been as much as his life was worth in those
-days; thus he was clad in a sable Geneva cloak and doublet, with
-falling bands, and a calotte cap of black velvet with long lappets.
-
-'He looked deadly pale, and was trembling in every limb, while he
-crossed himself again and again, and said, in a low and agitated
-voice,
-
-'"Child Muriel, who is he that left you in such hot haste just now?"
-
-'But Muriel,
-
- "Crimson with shame, with terror mute,"
-
-terror of her father, who was a stern and rigid man, remained silent.
-
-'"Speak, unhappy girl!" urged the priest.
-
-'"I know not his name," she replied, faintly.
-
-'"Why?"
-
-'"He conceals it from me."
-
-'"And why?"
-
-'"I know not; but oh, father, guide and counsel me, for I love him
-dearly, as he loves me."
-
-'"You must meet him----"
-
-'"Once again," she urged, piteously.
-
-'"Never more, I meant to say--never more. But why say you once
-again?"
-
-'"I have promised, on my soul's peril."
-
-'"On your soul's peril indeed!" groaned the priest, in great
-tribulation; but, in defiance of all he could urge, Muriel, though
-she lived in an age of dark superstition, of omens and dread,
-inspired by her love, stole forth at the usual hour and entered the
-dell to meet her lover, for the last time, as it proved.
-
-'Perhaps it was a prevision of this that made the wood seem so dark
-and gloomy, and even the knots and gnarled branches of the trees to
-look like those in the forest to Undine, fiendish faces and freakish
-limbs.
-
-'Muriel knew in her heart that such meetings were wrong, unbecoming
-to her position, and sinful because she concealed them; but a spell
-seemed upon her, and she could not resist it. She took no heed of
-the future; she had but one thought, to be again with him.
-
-'"And oh! why should this meeting be our last one?" she wailed in her
-heart, as he drew her to him, looking so handsome the while in his
-black doublet slashed with red, his ruff and scarlet plume.
-
-'"My own!" said he, caressingly; "my own, I am aware that yonder
-dotard, fool and knave, the mass-monger, has been seeking to
-influence your mind against me, and to part us."
-
-'"And here he stands prepared to do so!" exclaimed the black priest,
-as he suddenly appeared beside them, his eyes sparkling, but
-strangely with fear, rage, and triumph mingling in their expression.
-Muriel's lover clasped her to his breast, and wrapped his scarlet
-mantle round her. Then, while his eyes glared with a fire which
-fortunately she did not see, he exclaimed,
-
-'"Stand back, canting liar--stand back, and begone!"
-
-'"Child Muriel, come to me, in the name of God!" cried the priest, in
-sore agony; but she still clung to her lover, who, at the name
-uttered, cowered and shrank, as in the opera we see Mephistopheles
-cower and shrink before the cross-hilted swords of the soldiers.
-
-'"Muriel, Muriel, you are mine!" exclaimed her lover, attempting to
-lift her from the ground.
-
-'"Take heed, child, ere it is too late," urged the priest.
-
-'"Dare you advise?" asked the stranger, mockingly; "does not one day
-judge another?"
-
-'"Yes, and the last day judges all--even such as you!" cried the
-benedictine; then, making a sign of the cross in the air, he
-exclaimed, 'In nomine Patris et Filii; et Spiritus Sancti!'
-
-'Scarcely had he done so when, under the power of his exorcism, the
-mantle, ruff, and plume of the pretended knight turned to bracken
-leaves, his goblin chain to wild holly, and he stood forth in all his
-deformity, a horror to the eye, half man and half goat, with the face
-of a baffled and exasperated fiend--the Urisk, or wood goblin; and,
-with a malignant yell, he vanished down the fast-darkening dingle!'
-
-'And Muriel?' asked Holcroft, who had listened to all with such a
-smile as his face might be expected to wear.
-
-'Was saved, of course,' said Eveline.
-
-'And lived happy ever after?'
-
-'Well--content at least, let us hope. She died a nun in the house of
-the English Benedictines at Paris--now the convent of the Val de
-Grace.'
-
-'And has this legend a moral?' asked Holcroft, mockingly.
-
-'Of course it has,' answered Allan, rather bluntly, yet with a quiet
-smile; 'it gave a good hint to the girls at Dundargue to beware of
-the attentions of unaccredited strangers.'
-
-Holcroft's colour changed for a moment, and not unnoticed by Allan;
-for perhaps, reading between the lines, all this seemed somewhat a
-parable to the former, who tugged at his yellow moustaches in a way
-he did when irritated, heedless that pomade hongroise was disastrous
-to straw-coloured gloves.
-
-The angry gleam that crossed the eyes of Holcroft was also noticed by
-Evan Cameron, who, for some reason as yet only known to himself,
-could not abide him; though certainly the latter did not cross _him_
-by any attentions to the penniless Eveline Graham.
-
-Her little tradition came as a pleasant interlude to nearly all, for
-save Sir Paget--always confident and genial--no one seemed quite at
-ease, as a sense of cross-purposes brooded over them.
-
-'Tappleton,' cried Allan to the butler, 'another glass of champagne
-all round; and then to be off,' he added, swinging Olive adroitly
-into her saddle, and thus, as he thought, anticipating Holcroft,
-though the latter, remembering keenly his recent 'snub,' had no
-intention of offering his services just then.
-
-Allan, fearing that he had gone rather too far with Ruby Logan in
-attempting to pique his cousin, now resolved to leave that young lady
-to the care of anyone else in their homeward ride, much to her
-surprise and disappointment, and took his place by the side of Olive,
-in obedience to a half-inviting glance she gave him.
-
-He and his sister were, of course, familiar since childhood with the
-ruins of Dunsinane and all their surroundings; but to two or three of
-the party, as they turned to depart, and saw the vast ramparts
-reddened by the setting sun, there came to memory the scene they had
-so often witnessed on the stage--Malcolm's army with the boughs of
-Birnam in their helmets, the 'alarms and excursions,' the fierce and
-protracted melo-dramatic combat, the downfall of Macbeth beneath the
-sword of Macduff, and the cries of 'Hail, King of Scotland--King of
-Scotland, hail!'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE GOLDEN BANGLE.
-
-A writer says 'there is the beauty of youth, and surely there is the
-beauty of love, too,' and the latter certainly shone in the soft eyes
-of Eveline Graham as she caracoled her horse in the homeward ride by
-the side of young Cameron, and her eyes, which were ever the mystery
-of that face, had now their sweetest smiles for him. She saw how his
-face was lighted up, and was aware how his voice softened when he
-addressed her as it softened to no other woman; and yet, withal,
-though no word of love had passed between these two, right well did
-they know the secret of each other's hearts; but poverty fettered his
-tongue, and her parents' ambition and known wishes nearly repressed
-all hope in the heart of Eveline.
-
-With all her regard for her father she had a fear of him, and still
-more so of her mother. All their prejudices were in favour of
-wealth; but Evan Cameron appeared to her altogether so dear and
-irresistible that she, poor girl, could not imagine anyone being
-proof against him, and with this conviction, and the knowledge that
-Allan loved him, she permitted herself occasionally to live in a kind
-of fool's paradise, wherein Sir Paget Puddicombe had no part.
-
-When her mother was not present, she played to Evan Cameron, and sang
-his favourite songs; she showed him her drawings for hints and
-suggestions, discussed her favourite books, and let him hang over her
-chair; and at such times, though nothing of love was said, there was
-a subtle tenderness in Cameron's eye and voice that made her
-impulsive heart quicken, as no man's eye or voice had ever done
-before, and young though she was, Eveline had heard more than one
-declaration of love.
-
-And now for a time he had the joy of having her all to himself, as
-they contrived to distance the rest of their party.
-
-But what availed it? Evan knew that, if once he passed beyond what
-appeared to be the merest friendship, his visit to Dundargue might
-come to a speedy end, and its hospitality could never be extended to
-him again.
-
-To Evan, Eveline Graham proved, if we may say so, a kind of
-revelation after the rough life he had led of late years in
-India--something from another world, as it were--and thus much of
-adoration mingled with his love for her. If dying could have served
-Eveline, there and then would Evan Cameron have died for her!
-
-Whether such enthusiastic passion might last it was impossible to
-say, but time may show.
-
-We have referred to the quiet confidence of Sir Paget Puddicombe--a
-confidence borne of his consciousness of wealth and assured position.
-However, he was sharp enough to see to some extent how Cameron was
-attracted by Eveline, and to feel how the latter preferred the young
-subaltern's society to his own; but in a very short time he knew that
-the 'detrimental,' as Lady Aberfeldie called him, would be again with
-his regiment, the Black Watch, perhaps under orders for foreign
-service; then he would have the course all to himself, and doubted
-not, as Holcroft would have said, 'to win in a canter.'
-
-Cameron thought the proverb right about there being no fool like an
-old one; but then, every old fool had not Sir Paget's bank-book, and
-the preference and influence of parents to back up his folly. But
-with a handsome figure, and his V.C., how much more was Cameron like
-the object of a young girl's eye than Sir Paget could ever be!
-
-'It was in the Kurram Pass, in Afghanistan, that you gained the
-Victoria Cross, Mr. Cameron?' said Eveline, breaking a pause in the
-conversation, and shortening her reins, while he checked the pace of
-his horse, and replied, with a pleased smile,
-
-'Yes; but how do you know that, Miss Graham--from your brother, the
-Master?'
-
-'No.'
-
-'I have never spoken of it.'
-
-'I read it in the Army List,' replied Eveline, candidly, and to hear
-her say so made the bronze cross of more value to him than the Garter
-would have been.
-
-She had read it, and committed the episode to heart too--how 'the
-Queen had been graciously pleased to signify her intention of
-conferring the decoration of the Victoria Cross' on Lieutenant Evan
-Cameron, of the --th Foot, and now of the Black Watch, for a daring
-act of bravery on a date given, when the retreating forces were
-attacked by Afghans in great strength, the latter having pushed
-forward upon the position at daybreak, and Lieutenant Cameron,
-accompanied by only five soldiers, captured a nine-pounder gun,
-shooting down or bayonetting all the gunners, and thus preventing the
-destructive use of the piece, which he brought off with the loss of
-one man, but in the conflict received three severe tulwar wounds.
-
-Cameron was an enthusiast in his profession, and with outwardly the
-air of a well-bred man of the world, and thoroughly so that of a
-young Line officer, he had in his nature a deep sentiment of
-nationality, of clanship, and Highland romance, with an intense pride
-in his regiment. He had entertained Eveline often with sketches,
-anecdotes, and traditions of the Black Watch, but of himself and his
-V.C., of course, he never spoke.
-
-'What a proud moment it must have been for you, when you knew that
-you had won the cross!' said the girl, with a flush on her soft cheek.
-
-Stirred in his soul by the interest she took in him, the great secret
-of his heart was trembling on his lips, but he repressed it, and a
-shadow came into his face and a wistfulness into his eyes.
-
-'Prouder would I have been, Miss Graham,' said he, 'if--if--I----
-
-'What?'
-
-'I had then been known even by name to _you_?' he replied, in a low
-voice, and with a manner there was no mistaking.
-
-Nothing more was said then; yet they both felt, while eye met eye,
-that their first words of love had been spoken.
-
-More might, perhaps, have passed, as the subject could easily have
-been enlarged on; but just then they were abruptly joined by Allan,
-who came up at a trot and reined in his horse sharply by their side,
-with a dark expression on his face, which Eveline thought augured ill
-for his success with Olive, whom he had suddenly left in the care of
-Mr. Hawke Holcroft.
-
-After quitting the ruins, as Allan rode on by his cousin's side, his
-memory had gone back to the days when she was a girl of some twelve
-years or so--a bright-eyed hoyden, who could fish, even take a shot
-from his gun, climb trees, eat apples right off the branch, play
-marbles with him, grasp a trout darting in the burn under the long
-yellow broom or purple brambles, and was his companion in many a
-ramble and out-door frolic; and now inspired by that memory, the
-scenery and beauty of the evening, he felt himself disposed to treat
-with considerable tenderness the lovely girl he hoped to make yet his
-own.
-
-On the other hand, Olive cared little to please him, and for a time
-she almost repelled, and yet by doing so she greatly lured and
-attracted him.
-
-The friendship of Allan and Olive was a source of some perplexity, if
-not amusement, to Eveline Graham, but of irritation to her mother, to
-whom they never seemed to act as lovers at all, unless in 'the Scots
-fashion' of pouting and quarrelling.
-
-To the eyes of all interested in the matter, it did not seem that she
-cared for him in the least. She never altered a plan or hastened her
-pace to meet him, or go where he might chance to be--in the library,
-on the terrace smoking, or in any of the quaint corridors that
-traversed the old house. She never adopted a dress, a ribbon, or
-ornament to please his eye, though she sometimes did, coquettishly,
-he thought, to flatter Hawke Holcroft; and even now, as they were
-slowly traversing the dark, woody dell of the legend--the
-_Coire-nan-Uriskin_--she was humming, half in warning, half in
-waggery, Tennyson's song:
-
- 'She can both false and friendly be,
- Beware! beware!
- Trust her not, she is fooling thee!'
-
-And yet, as she glanced at her soldierly cousin from time to time
-under her long, dark lashes, she thought that, though he looked
-stately in the kilt, he seldom looked better than now when in riding
-costume, with the smartest of light grey cover coats.
-
-The girl's mind vibrated curiously between her over-sensitive pride,
-her wishes, her doubts, and half convictions.
-
-If pique at her position in the family with Allan had made her
-accept, with a certain degree of equanimity, the attentions of
-Holcroft, she now began to feel a pleasure that she had not more
-fully encouraged them.
-
-At such moments as the present Allan felt that this fair girl, who
-had ever been his friend--cherished as a sister--this sweet cousin
-with the violet eyes and rich brown hair--was dear to him with a
-tenderness to which he could scarcely give a name, unless it were
-purest love; and she might have read it in his eyes, intense and
-strong, but for that spirit of wilfulness which led her to
-temporise--was it to tyrannise?--or play with it and him.
-
-But may a girl really love a man till she is certain of being loved
-in return? For Allan, baffled by her manner, had said nothing very
-pointed as yet, as if he based all their future on her father's will;
-and times there were when in pique he dropped his way of treating her
-half playfully, half deferentially, and became absolutely cold.
-
-In fact, the thoughts of Olive, apart from her jealous pride, were
-somewhat difficult to analyse; but, as yet, she deemed that she could
-only regard him with a kind of sisterly attention; while he, when not
-irritated by the presence of Holcroft, would say to Eveline,
-
-'When we are alone, and can slip back into our old memories, I shall
-soon teach her to love me.'
-
-'But meantime,' replied his sister, 'you are the most tiresome couple
-in the world.'
-
-'I wish Mr. Holcroft or some one else would join us,' said Olive,
-looking round in her saddle.
-
-'Why, it is always Mr. Holcroft!' exclaimed Allan.
-
-'You are so provokingly silent. For more than a mile you have not
-once spoken to me. It is stupid to be so _triste_! Surely there is
-some one else whose society you prefer, or with whom you would be
-more lively?'
-
-'Olive!' said he, on hearing this blunt and pointed remark--both
-curiously so for her. 'You are surely not jealous of anyone?' he
-added.
-
-'Jealous!' echoed the girl, with a strange but affected kind of lazy
-scorn; 'why should I be so, and of _whom_?'
-
-'Well may you ask, of whom could you be so?' replied Allan,
-pointedly--so much so that she coloured; 'though I, of course, matter
-little to you.'
-
-'Allan, you are very wrong to say so,' said the girl, softly.
-
-'Then I am not quite indifferent to you?' urged Allan, impulsively
-now; 'you do care for me a little?'
-
-'Certainly--a good deal, if it is any satisfaction to you; but
-there--don't touch my bridle hand, or you will make my horse shy.
-How can you be so tiresome!'
-
-Allan sighed, and yet he regarded her, in her loveliness and
-insouciance, with an expression just then of mingled amusement,
-annoyance, and regard in his dark hazel eyes.
-
-With all the love that had been growing in his heart for Olive, he
-had been in no hurry to urge his suit, for, though impetuous by
-nature, he could be reserved and cautious enough at times; but now
-his heart flew to his head, and he said, bluntly,
-
-'Dearest Olive, will you promise to love me--to marry me?'
-
-'Why require any promise about the matter?' she replied, as all her
-wilfulness returned; 'has not my father promised for me--bequeathed
-me to you like a bale of goods, or condemned me to poverty!' she
-added, with a bitter laugh on her lips that curled with anger. 'I
-wonder that he did not order that I was to be locked up and fed on
-bread and water till I gave my consent to marry you, or that I was to
-be dropped into that oubliette which exists somewhere in Dundargue.'
-
-'Cousin Olive,' said he, reproachfully, 'why this pride and doubt of
-my purpose? You are as cruel as you are beautiful.'
-
-'This is worse than anything you have ever said to me,' she cried,
-with angry laughter still.
-
-'Worse?'
-
-'Yes, an attempt at gross straightforward compliment, as if I was a
-girl at a railway buffet.'
-
-'Don't you like to be complimented?'
-
-'By some people--yes,' was the petulant reply.
-
-'All the girls I have ever known have liked pretty, flattering
-speeches.'
-
-'But I am different, I hope, from most of the girls you have known.'
-
-'By Jove you are!' replied the Master, twisting his moustache till he
-made himself wince; 'but will I never be more to you than I am now?'
-
-'Never more than my cousin--what would you desire to be? But here
-comes Mr. Holcroft, to whom I certainly made no sign,' she added,
-with some annoyance, as she thought of what had so lately passed
-between them; and then, so variable was her emotion, that she laughed
-as she thought--'Two proposals in one day, and both made in the
-saddle too--how droll!'
-
-Allan misinterpreted her silent laugh as a welcome to Holcroft, and
-shrank from his own angry fears--they were not convictions yet--lest
-he should adopt that meanest passion of the whole category--jealousy
-without a just cause--jealousy of one inferior to him in social
-position, and certainly in personal attractions.
-
-When reduced to act cavalier to Miss Ruby Logan, who certainly did
-not want him, Hawke Holcroft had looked darkly after the cousins as
-they rode off together, and thought that nothing short of death would
-prevent him from accomplishing the object he had now in view ere he
-left Dundargue.
-
-From something in the manner of the cousins, he--a close
-observer--augured that Allan had not made his 'innings' with the
-heiress, yet he cantered up to Allan's side, and said, smilingly to
-Olive,
-
-'May I smoke, Miss Raymond? The road is quite lonely, and if not
-disagreeable to you----'
-
-'Certainly,' said she, curtly.
-
-'And I shall join you,' added Allan. 'Can you oblige me with a
-light, Holcroft?'
-
-Cigars were selected, and Holcroft handed his silver matchbox to
-Allan, who, with a leap of his heart, though without changing colour
-or a muscle of his dark and sunburned face, saw on his rival's wrist
-his own gift sent from Delhi, the gold bangle, which Olive had,
-perhaps, for the time forgotten, and on which was her own name in
-raised Roman letters.
-
-He had seen Holcroft in rather close proximity to her during the most
-of the day, and if piqued thereat, more than ever was he piqued and
-startled now, and abruptly wheeling round his horse, he muttered some
-excuse and joined his sister and his friend Cameron, while the words
-of the song came ominously back to memory--
-
- 'Trust her not, she is fooling thee.'
-
-
-The bangle! He blushed to think of it, and shrank as yet from
-speaking of it, even to Eveline, for he was altogether unaware of
-under what circumstances Holcroft came to possess it, or the effort
-Olive had made to procure its return without success, but imagination
-and jealousy now did much to fill his heart with secret fury.
-
-Would the future hold love or hatred for these two cousins? It
-seemed just then difficult to say.
-
-Like Eveline, he thought the gift of the photo a trifle when compared
-with this, yet the photo was eventually to prove the most serious and
-troublesome gift of the two.
-
-Wounded self-esteem, disquiet, and intense mortification reigned
-supreme in the mind of the somewhat proud young Master of Aberfeldie;
-but he felt himself necessitated to dissemble. Hawke Holcroft was
-his father's guest, the son of his father's oldest and most valued
-friend; and while at Dundargue it would be necessary to treat him
-with courtesy, though Allan never doubted that he was a 'leg,' and
-resolved that his courtesy would be blended with watchfulness,
-if--bitter thought--Olive was now worth watching over!
-
-Unprepared for such a crisis or catastrophe as the discovery of the
-bangle, and ignorant that Allan had made it, when a carpet-dance took
-place that evening at Dundargue, though Olive was arrayed in one of
-her most becoming toilettes for him, and him alone, he never even
-addressed her or looked near her; and, black though his brow, he
-entirely occupied himself with Ruby Logan; and, provoked by this,
-Olive again endured the attention of Holcroft, and thought to
-play--or affect to play--with them _both_.
-
-In this, however, the little scheme was doomed to be disappointed by
-the events of the following day.
-
-'I shall quit Dundargue for London, or give up my leave and go back
-to the regiment, and never look upon her fair, false face again till
-I have schooled myself into merely regarding her with a
-brotherly--well, say cousinly--eye!' thought Allan, with great
-bitterness of spirit.
-
-But how about that absurd will and the settlement of the money?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-EVELINE'S SUITOR.
-
-'Verily,' says a writer, 'we miss our opportunities, and live our
-lives as if they were all to come twice over; not as if each passing
-sunset brought us nearer that day when the pulse must cease to beat,
-and the heart with all its emotions must be stilled for ever.'
-
-Olive was now experiencing the truth of this to a certain extent.
-
-She had been--in spite of herself--touched by Allan's earnestness,
-and on retiring to her room her first act was to have his neglected
-gift--the little silver idol--the bequest of the grateful
-subadar--duly installed on a pretty Swiss bracket, and next morning
-she determined to discover why his manner, after their return from
-Dunsinane, had been so marked and disagreeable to her, even if she
-should take the initiative, and have to recur to the conversation
-which ended so abruptly on the preceding evening.
-
-She entered the breakfast-room full of the subject, and dressed--so
-far as lace and blue ribbons went--in a most attractive and
-coquettish morning costume; but Allan was not there--he was at the
-stables, no doubt, or at the kennel. How tiresome men were, she
-thought.
-
-'Good morning, Olive darling! how charming you look--I must
-positively give you a kiss!' exclaimed the not usually effusive Lady
-Aberfeldie, touching the girl's cheek with her lips.
-
-The last to appear at the breakfast-table was her husband, who
-entered with a note in his hand, and an expression of surprise on his
-face.
-
-'Here is a strange thing, Eveline,' said he to Lady Aberfeldie.
-'Tappleton has just brought me this note from Allan----'
-
-'From Allan!' exclaimed one or two voices.
-
-'Stating that he would leave by dawn this morning to take the train
-for the south, and might be absent some time, and this without
-further explanation.'
-
-'How odd--how unlike him!' exclaimed Lady Aberfeldie. 'Do you know
-of any business engagement or invitation he had?'
-
-'No--I know of nothing.'
-
-'Or you, Olive--or you, Mr. Cameron?'
-
-All professed ignorance, and the matter was canvassed by the family
-circle in vain.
-
-'It will be explained, of course. Allan never acts without reason,'
-said his father, addressing himself to the morning meal.
-
-'Allan gone--how odd--how unaccountable!' was the thought of Olive,
-whose heart rather reproached her; and now, for a little time, she
-missed the handsome cousin whom she had so teased, worried, and
-mortified; and she began to dread that he had resigned his leave of
-absence, and gone abruptly to rejoin his regiment.
-
-'Olive,' said Lady Aberfeldie, 'do go on with your breakfast.'
-
-'Oh, auntie, I have finished.'
-
-'Finished!--child, you have taken nothing: Tappleton will get you a
-little grouse-pie.'
-
-'Oh, no--thanks,' replied Olive, and, rising from the table, she
-quitted the room. The eyes of her aunt and Holcroft followed her, as
-each had thoughts of their own.
-
-The love the latter professed for her was destitute of jealousy, but
-was not without fear; and his face just then would have been a
-picture had anyone cared to study it.
-
-There might have been read satisfaction that by Allan's unexpected
-departure he had the field all to himself; annoyance, for the
-Dundargue despatch-box often brought him, and on this morning had
-done so, epistles in blue envelopes, which he cared not to receive;
-greed, as he thought of the prize that might yet be his; and hot
-impatience to find it in his grasp; and thus, while affecting to
-listen to Lord Aberfeldie, who was describing to him and Sir Paget a
-cover they were to shoot over that day, his mind was revolving how he
-might succeed in entrapping Olive Raymond into some kind of Scotch
-marriage (whatever that was) in fun, or jest, and then declare it was
-a true and solemn ceremony. He thought he had heard of such things
-being tried and done, but was not quite certain.
-
-However, he took fresh courage now that he would have her all to
-himself, and thought, with Bulwer, that 'thrones and bread man wins
-by the aid of others. Fame and woman's heart he can only gain
-through himself.'
-
-Not that he cared much for fame or woman's heart either; but he could
-mightily appreciate her fortune.
-
-Whatever was the secret thought of Olive about the sudden and
-unexpected departure of Allan, she felt some renewal of her pique,
-but of a different kind, when told by Eveline of the magnificent
-suite of Maltese ornaments he had brought home.
-
-'For whom?' she asked.
-
-'You, of course.'
-
-'Then he has never offered them for my acceptance.'
-
-'Think of your manner to him, Olive.'
-
-'They are for Ruby Logan more likely. He has met Ruby before, we all
-know.'
-
-'I should not be surprised if they become a gift to Ruby now,'
-replied Eveline, who was quietly provoked by Olive's treatment of her
-brother; 'though, when he got these jewels at Malta, I question if he
-knew of that yellow-haired damsel's existence.'
-
-And now, greatly to the vexation of Eveline, and the amusement
-perhaps of Olive, the latter's bangle remained on the wrist of the
-enterprising Mr. Holcroft, though none of them knew the mischief that
-the discovery of it had wrought in the mind of Allan Graham; but in
-the latter's absence poor little Eveline was doomed to
-have--unsupported by his presence and advice--some heavy trouble of
-her own.
-
-Lord and Lady Aberfeldie were in consultation in the latter's
-boudoir, a little, old-fashioned room of octagonal shape, the
-panelled walls of which were hung with rich silk--a sanctum long
-sacred to the Chatelaines of Dundargue, and the whole appurtenances
-of which had that combined air of ease, repose, and grandeur peculiar
-to the furniture of an ancient and long-descended race.
-
-Kelpie--a currish-looking terrier, but her ladyship's pet--had got
-his morning repast of cream and macaroons from her own white hands,
-and, this important duty over, she and her husband began to converse
-on family matters.
-
-Lady Aberfeldie amid these, indulged in some angry surmises as to how
-long they were 'to have the society of Mr. Holcroft.'
-
-'I cannot say that I care much personally for Hawke Holcroft,'
-replied her husband; 'but his father, as you know, saved my life at
-Alma, and won therefore the V.C. I have told you, Eveline, I think,
-that when Colin Campbell's Highland brigade advanced in _echelon_ of
-regiments along the Kourgané Hill, the Black Watch, of course, led
-the way, and, just about the time the Russian Kazan column broke, no
-particular sound had followed our firing but the yells of their
-wounded ringing through the smoke. With the next volley we heard a
-rattling sound, as our bullets fell like hail upon the tin-kettles
-they carried outside their knapsacks, as all the great grey-coated
-blocks of infantry were _right about face_ now, in full retreat. It
-was just then, as our calvary and guns swept after them in pursuit,
-that I fell wounded, and would have been bayoneted on the spot by
-four Russians, who lay among some caper bushes shamming death, had
-not old Major Holcroft cut them down like ninepins, and protected me
-till some of our fellows returned. I cannot forget all that, you
-know.'
-
-Lady Aberfeldie, who had heard all this fifty times at least before,
-sighed with impatience, and said,
-
-'His son certainly appears to have some attraction for Olive; and
-what would you think if Allan, repelled by her, was actually to fall
-in love with Ruby Logan and her amber locks? What a complication
-that might be.'
-
-'Don't suggest such a thing for a moment. I hope he will prove
-himself every way worthy of one who has so long occupied, like
-Eveline, the place of a daughter in our hearts.'
-
-'Talking of Eveline, it is high time she was informed of Sir Paget's
-views and wishes; and while on the subject may I ask,' she added,
-with some asperity of tone, 'how long Mr. Cameron is to be here?'
-
-'A week yet, and then he must report himself at head-quarters.'
-
-'A whole week?' muttered lady Aberfeldie, who was far from
-inhospitable when she approved of the objects to whom she thought
-hospitality should be extended.
-
-'I do like Stratherroch. He is like his father, old Angus of the
-Cameron Highlanders, yet not so lively; for Angus was the king of
-good fellows, and used to keep the mess-table in a roar.'
-
-'Yet I would his son were with the regiment again, or anywhere else
-but here.'
-
-'I think he admires Eveline.'
-
-'I am certain of it, and the sooner their intimacy terminates the
-better. Eveline and Strath--good heavens!' exclaimed Lady
-Aberfeldie, with her white jewelled hands uplifted, 'never again must
-their names be mingled, even in our family circle, especially under
-pending circumstances.'
-
-'They do seem intimate,' said the peer, moodily; 'but have not at
-least progressed so far as the use of Christian names.'
-
-'That would be intolerable:' and, ringing the bell, Lady Aberfeldie
-desired a servant to summon her daughter, who appeared in a very
-coquettish and becoming lawn-tennis costume, for a game on the lawn,
-where the courts were already set and some friends awaited.
-
-She entered with a bright smile, which soon died away, for she read
-an expression in the faces of her parents, especially that of her
-mother, which seemed to her sensitive heart prophetic of evil.
-
-If it be true, as Madame be Stael asserts, that 'love occupies the
-whole life of a woman,' it need not be a matter of surprise that the
-sex can discover each other's love secrets with ease; thus, though
-Lady Aberfeldie fully suspected what filled the heart of her
-daughter--so closely had she watched her--she was somewhat pitiless
-now.
-
-With all her queenly manner and soft grace, her unexceptional
-toilettes and suavity of manner, Lady Aberfeldie had a will of iron,
-yea, of adamant in some things, and her daughter's marriage with Sir
-Paget was one of them.
-
-She was told plainly and bluntly that he had proposed for her hand;
-had asked permission to address her on the subject; had offered
-magnificent--yea, princely settlements; and it was expected the
-marriage would take place, when the family returned to London, next
-season.
-
-The long dreaded cloud had burst upon her at last!
-
-She grew white as a lily on hearing this sentence, clung to a console
-table for support, and then burst into a torrent of tears, while her
-father drew her tenderly towards him.
-
-'Be calm, child,' said he, 'we shall give you plenty of time to think
-about it; marriage is a serious thing at all times.'
-
-Eveline thought it was doubly serious with such a bridegroom, but
-could only sob, while her mother eyed her gloomily, as she thought
-this excessive grief and repugnance augured worse for her scheme than
-indignation or defiance would have done; but poor Eveline was all
-softness and gentleness.
-
-'What folly is this?' she asked.
-
-'I am your only daughter, mamma,' urged Eveline.
-
-'Hence it is your first duty to your family, to yourself, and the
-world to make an early, eligible, and wealthy marriage. Every season
-brings many such to pass in our own circle.'
-
-'Are we so poor, mamma?'
-
-'We are not rich, and know not what may happen.'
-
-Did Lady Aberfeldie speak prophetically? If so, it was an utterance
-made unawares.
-
-'Eveline darling,' said her father, 'you were content enough with the
-attentions of Sir Paget, and to accept even his presents in London, a
-season or two ago.'
-
-'I was but a girl then fresh from school, and--and joined other girls
-in laughing at my having an old lover. I--I knew no better,' she
-continued, sobbing.
-
-'And had not met Cameron of Stratherroch!' said her mother through
-her set teeth, and quite forgetting the _rôle_ she had so recently
-suggested.
-
-'No,' thought Eveline, 'and had not learned to love him.' She
-shivered as if she had been struck when her mother spoke, and then
-said, with all the firmness she could assume.
-
-'You must mistake us in some way, mamma. Mr. Cameron has never
-addressed a word to me that he might not have addressed to yourself.'
-
-'I am glad of it--then I shall taunt you with his name no more,' said
-her mother, kissing her forehead. 'People generally, but young
-ladies especially, should never indulge in strong emotions.'
-
-'Perhaps, mamma; but why?'
-
-'They age the face so much by lining it.'
-
-Eveline covered with her handkerchief her whole sweet face, which was
-quivering with emotion now. She felt that the romance of her young
-girl's life was quite passing from her, and that, even if she escaped
-a marriage with Sir Paget, she must think of Evan Cameron and his
-silent love no more!
-
-'Think of Sir Paget's princely settlements,' said Lord Aberfeldie.
-'But how difficult it is,' he added, as if to himself, 'to imbue a
-woman--a pretty girl more than all--with any idea of the seriousness
-of pounds, shillings, and pence! To her they are as the sands upon
-the seashore, unless she has known want.'
-
-'Do reflect on all this, Eveline,' urged her mother.
-
-'I cannot; and why should I do so?'
-
-'Because most of the great evils of life might be avoided if we would
-only take time to reflect.'
-
-'In a matter like this, mamma,' said Eveline, taking courage from her
-desperation, and hoping by temporising to gain, at least, time,
-'reflection might lead to madness. Can wealth or princely
-settlements make up for that disparity of years which will excite
-ridicule in all the girls who know me, and cover me with contempt as
-a mean, sordid, and covetous creature in marrying a man I do not and
-can never love, and who cannot really care for me, whatever he may
-think or say? So, so, I am to be taken to market, as it were, and
-sold to the best advantage. That is the plain English of it!'
-
-'Eveline, how can you adopt a tone so little like you?' said her
-mother, reproachfully. 'Sir Paget will be sure to address you on
-this subject, as he has your papa's permission, and, when he does so,
-be sure that you comport yourself as becomes my daughter,' she added,
-rather haughtily, and rather ignoring her husband in the matter.
-'But go; I hear Olive and Miss Logan calling for you.'
-
-Eveline hurried away, bathed her eyes, and then, hat in hand,
-descended from the terrace to the sunny lawn, where Olive, Ruby, and
-other girls were flitting about, radiant with smiles and in
-gaily-coloured costumes, with saucy and bewitching hats, talking and
-laughing merrily; but the girl felt as one in a dream, a nightmare.
-A dark cloud seemed to envelop her, amid which she heard the voices
-of her friends, and it may be imagined with what emotions in her
-breast she saw in the tennis-court opposite her, Cameron, looking so
-handsome in a kind of athlete's flannel dress, and the rotund figure
-of Sir Paget in a tight morning coat, out of the neck of which his
-round, shining head was jerked ever and anon in the turtle fashion we
-have described.
-
-Never while she lived, Eveline thought, should she forget the horror
-she had of that game of lawn-tennis; the part she had to act in it
-under a glorious sunshine, and the desire she had for the seclusion
-of her own room, for by contrast with the chaos in her own heart the
-whole bright scene became a species of grim phantasmagoria.
-
-Her heart seemed full of tears; her naturally buoyant and happy
-spirit was crushed. She dared hardly trust herself to address even
-Cameron, who saw, with a lover's instinct, that something, he knew
-not what (unless with reference to Sir Paget), had gone decidedly
-wrong.
-
-We have already adverted to the strong passion an elderly swain like
-Sir Paget may conceive for a young girl; and, encouraged by her
-parents' permission, he was now giving full swing to it, as he
-watched her slender, lithe, and willowy figure in the various
-postures incident to the game, which tested his powers of action
-severely, and during a pause in it he approached her with a smile
-rippling on his rubicund old face, and displaying a set of teeth that
-were first-rate as to cost and quality.
-
-'My dear Miss Graham,' he said, with a most insinuating jerk of his
-head, 'why do you avoid me?'
-
-'I am not aware that I avoid you; I hope I don't do so,' replied
-Eveline, colouring with annoyance, and at the conviction that she
-certainly had done so. Then, as a kind of hunted feeling came over
-her, she added; 'but I do not think, Sir Paget, that I am bound to
-account to you for all I do.'
-
-'Of course not,' said he, with a bow, and Eveline coloured more
-deeply at the ungraciousness of her own speech; 'of course not, my
-dear young lady--_as yet_,' he added, under his breath.
-
-At last she pleaded illness, fatigue, and headache, threw down her
-hat, and fairly fled to her own room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-A REVELATION TO HOLCROFT.
-
-The sudden, unexpected, and unexplained departure of Allan Graham
-from Dundargue (a reason for which will be given in due time), if it
-puzzled his family, still more puzzled and piqued Olive, especially
-after what passed between them on their homeward ride. But then,
-says Lefanu,--'Women are so enigmatical; some in everything--all in
-matters of the heart.'
-
-The monetary matters of Mr. Hawke Holcroft were approaching a species
-of crisis now, and he was daily getting orange-coloured missives and
-messages 'wired' in mysterious terms from jockeys, bookmakers, and
-other horsey folks that added to his tribulation, for things seemed
-to be going wrong with him, and he felt that now or never must he
-attempt to secure the heiress, who, he thought, was only waiting to
-be carried off.
-
-Even loo and écarté in the evening with such pigeon-like players as
-Sir Paget were beginning to fail as resources.
-
-'Odd fellow in his way,' remarked the baronet to Cameron. 'A trifle
-too lucky at cards for my taste.'
-
-'Or mine,' said Cameron, grimly.
-
-'Turns up the king too often after the early hours of the morning.'
-
-Yet when night came again and the small hours of the morning, the
-somewhat simple M.P. for Slough-cum-Sloggit was again a heavy loser
-to Holcroft.
-
-'He has some secret about him,' said the former.
-
-'Most men have some secret which they generally keep to themselves,'
-replied Cameron.
-
-'Secrets certainly, which they seldom tell to their wives or
-sweethearts,' said the baronet, laughing.
-
-We have said that Olive had a secret thought that might prove
-somewhat fatal to Allan's success with her, a mistaken idea that
-Holcroft loved her--loved her for herself--and despite the tenor of
-her father's will; while Allan might love her because he knew the
-value of its tenor to himself.
-
-And, now that the latter was so unaccountably absent, Holcroft was
-full of confidence, and, the ice having once been broken, thought it
-would be easy to go back to where he had left off on the ride home
-from Dunsinane.
-
-In his own selfish way he loved her; but then she was beautiful.
-Loved her! 'Oh, poverty of language, that we must so often use the
-word love!' exclaims a writer.
-
-It was some days before his inevitable departure from Dundargue (and
-not an hour too soon for that), when he and Olive were somewhat
-earlier, and before anyone else, in the breakfast-room, and the notes
-of Ronald Gair's pipes, playing his morning reveille, 'The Black
-Watch,' a slow and wailing air, were dying away on the terrace
-outside.
-
-Holcroft's face looked worn and haggard--more freckled, and the eyes
-more than usually shifty in their expression. He had received some
-letters and telegrams the evening before that upset him so much that
-he failed even to win at loo or écarté, and the live-long night he
-had been heard by Cameron pacing to and fro, as if unable to rest.
-
-Olive was struck by his pallid appearance.
-
-They exchanged 'Good-mornings,' and then a few minutes' silence
-ensued.
-
-'We may have rain soon.' was the not very original remark of Holcroft.
-
-'The sky looks very like it. Rain always comes when the mist is
-where we see it now, on yonder low spur of the Sidlaw Hills,' replied
-Olive.
-
-She was kneeling on a bearskin, beside the great staghounds, Shiuloch
-and Bran, with her little white hands outspread before the fire for
-warmth; and a charming picture she made, in her morning costume,
-fresh and lovely as a fairy, with the dogs in the foreground, and the
-great carved stone arch of the baronial chimney-piece for a frame.
-
-Hawke Holcroft turned from the window and came to her side, though
-curiously enough the hazel eyes of the hounds glistened, and they
-showed their teeth at him, suggestive of kicks secretly administered.
-
-'We are down earlier than usual this morning,' said she.
-
-'All the better.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'I want so particularly to talk to you,' said he, with all the
-softness he could assume.
-
-'And I with you,' said Olive, with a frankness that was a curious
-mistake. 'You leave us soon, I believe?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'For London?'
-
-'For London,' he replied, mechanically, as it were.
-
-'I thought you came to stay out the grouse-shooting?'
-
-'Till the tenth of December! I have not been asked,' he replied,
-gnawing his yellow moustache; and then, after a pause, added, 'would
-_you_ wish that I stayed?'
-
-'Certainly, if you are enjoying yourself,' was the girl's frank
-but--after what he had urged some time ago--rather rash response.
-
-His eyes sparkled--he drew nearer.
-
-'Miss Raymond--Olive!' he exclaimed, but paused, as, at that moment,
-Lady Aberfeldie swept into the room; 'on the terrace--the terrace
-after breakfast,' he whispered, hurriedly, and then turned to receive
-his hostess's morning greeting, which was so frigid that he feared
-she had overheard him call her niece by her Christian name.
-
-Holcroft was rather abstracted at breakfast; thus Ruby Logan, who had
-been watching him, said,
-
-'I would not, if I were you, put more sugar on the devilled turkey;
-it won't improve it.'
-
-'Forgot it was not salt; thanks, Miss Logan,' stammered Holcroft.
-
-Now, whether the charming Olive was inspired by coquetry, curiosity,
-caprice, or a strange desire to play with fire, we know not; but when
-breakfast was over she laid down a novel she had been reading, or
-affecting to read, at intervals during the meal, and, assuming her
-garden hat, with all the laces and ribbons of her bright morning
-dress fluttering about her, while everyone else at table was deep in
-his or her letters and papers, went forth upon--the terrace!
-
-Now Mr. Hawke Holcroft never read novels or anything else unless for
-a purpose. He glanced at the page which Olive had left open (the
-work was 'Miss Forrester') and the passage struck him as most
-_apropos_ to himself:
-
-'I never pretended to goodness. I have certain views for myself. I
-never pretended to fooling. I am clever. What stands between me and
-my ambition I will remove; of whatever can administer to it I will
-avail myself. Beyond this, it seems to me, I am as good as other
-people.'
-
-'Hawke, my boy, yourself to a hair!' thought he, as he quietly sought
-the terrace, not by the French window, as Olive had done, but by
-going through a corridor and the entrance hall.
-
-As coolly as if she had no prevision of what he was sure to urge,
-Olive, who wore a waggish yet shy expression under her garden hat,
-and who kept her hands deep in the pockets of her morning dress, said,
-
-'What have you to say to me here that you could not have said in the
-vicinity of the tea-urn?'
-
-'All that I have to say may be said in three words.'
-
-'Three! say it then.'
-
-'I love you; a confession that has hovered on my timid lips many a
-time.'
-
-'I cannot listen to this, and I wish to have back my bangle. If
-Allan were to see it--good heavens!'
-
-'I have said that it shall be buried with me. Do give me some hope.'
-
-'Of what; permission to retain the bangle?'
-
-'No; that you may one day love me.'
-
-'I cannot.'
-
-'Say rather that you will not.'
-
-Barring, in an angle of the terrace, her attempts to leave him, he
-continued, in an earnestness that was born of monetary pressure and
-desperate hope, to plead his passion.
-
-'I am greatly honoured,' replied the girl, growing cold as he waxed
-warm, and glancing nervously at the windows of the mansion; 'but I am
-very sorry----'
-
-'That you don't love me.'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'But you may in time. Oh, how I could teach you to do so! Let me
-wait and strive, Olive. You deem me wild, perhaps--horsey, and all
-that sort of thing; but do you think a man never changes, never grows
-better, under a woman's softening influence? Are you entirely to let
-this family compact, whatever it may be, Olive--pardon me, Miss
-Raymond,' he added, as he saw how her face clouded by the reference
-to her position--'are you intending to let it stand between you and
-all other chances of marriage?'
-
-'You have no right to question me thus, or to assume this interest in
-my affairs, Mr. Holcroft.'
-
-'Pardon me, but I have a love for you that will last while life does.'
-
-He did not add that it was the love of--her money.
-
-'If there is only the Master, your cousin, between us, that is no
-barrier, as I know you don't love him.'
-
-'Then you know more of me than I do of myself,' said Olive, provoked
-by his blunt brusquerie of manner, and failing to be flattered by his
-pertinacity just then.
-
-'Perhaps you deem me an heiress?' said Olive, as a new light suddenly
-broke upon her.
-
-'My dear Miss Raymond,' stammered Holcroft, colouring with surprise
-at the abruptness of her question. 'I never thought upon the
-subject; I only knew that--that--I am not just now a man of fortune;
-my place in Essex----' he paused, thinking the less he said about it
-the better. 'But who thinks of pelf when the heart is full of
-passion!' he added, magnanimously. 'But tell me now,' said he, in
-his most suave tone, 'do you care for anyone else more than for me?'
-
-'I don't care for you at all--at least in the way you mean,' she
-replied, defiantly.
-
-He ground his teeth, even while he smiled, and thought,
-
-'I must have patience before I tempt my fate again!'
-
-Hawke Holcroft had made it so much a habit during his sojourn at
-Dundargue to be in close attendance upon Olive--especially when they
-were alone together--that his lovemaking took her less by surprise.
-In a spirit of pique she had permitted him to dangle, and to play--if
-we may use the term--at admiration for herself; but, now that he had
-become serious a second time, she became alarmed.
-
-The remark which had escaped her had excited some surprise in the
-mind of Holcroft, as it interested him deeply; thus he said, in a low
-soft voice,
-
-'You referred to your not being an heiress, Miss Raymond, as if
-_that_ could possibly make any difference with one who loves you
-as--as----'
-
-'There, there, that will do!' interrupted the impetuous Olive; 'I am
-_not_ an heiress, in one sense, but very much of a beggar, if you
-knew all,' she added, in a voice that faltered.
-
-He regarded her with some bewilderment, as well he might, and said,
-
-'My dear Miss Raymond, what am I to understand by this paradox?'
-
-'Understand that I must marry my cousin Allan, or forfeit papa's
-fortune--it goes to him if I refuse, or to charities.'
-
-Her distinctness and vehemence carried conviction with her words.
-Holcroft was confounded; but, being a practised dissembler, he only
-smiled, and said,
-
-'A most remarkable arrangement, and a tyrannical one for you. But
-suppose the Master had died in his boyhood--or were to die now?'
-
-'The will would be worthless in effect, of course, I suppose,'
-replied Olive, whose cheeks now burned scarlet, for--always a
-creature of hot impulse--she now thought, '_why_ should I have
-permitted my self to speak to _him_, one, almost a stranger, or to
-any man, of papa's will? What must he think of me! Oh, what will
-Aunt Aberfeldie say?'
-
-For half a minute Holcroft was silent. He was thinking, 'this must
-be all bosh!--a cock and a bull, or a madman's will; she doesn't know
-what she is talking about--no woman or girl ever knows business.
-Well--I've a pull on her anyway; a viscount's niece isn't in a
-fellow's power every day, as she will find herself in mine.'
-
-What he referred to we shall show ere long.
-
-While Olive was still crimson with reflections on her own imprudence,
-Holcroft took possession of her passive hands, and said, in a partly
-assumed voice of agitation,
-
-'You told me, Miss Raymond--let me say Olive--a minute or two ago
-that you did not care for me. I shall not take that as your final
-answer; and ere I leave Dundargue, when I again venture to speak to
-you on the subject nearest my heart, your reply----'
-
-'Will too probably be the same,' replied Olive, wrenching away her
-hands, as steps were heard near, and she hastily re-entered the house.
-
-The footsteps heard were those of Allan, who came leisurely up the
-flight, a broad and stately one, which led to the terrace. He had,
-while proceeding down the avenue, observed the pair together, and, as
-it seemed to him, in rather too close proximity. He also remarked
-Olive's abrupt departure, at _his_ approach as he supposed, and his
-soul become ireful within him; but he felt himself, as he gave a hand
-to Holcroft, compelled to dissemble.
-
-So did the latter who met him smilingly.
-
-'Welcome home to Dundargue,' he exclaimed; 'you have come back as
-unexpectedly as you went; but whither?'
-
-'Only as far as Edinburgh.'
-
-'Ah.' The reply seemed rather to relieve Holcroft. Nothing was
-known about him there, he thought.
-
-'A lady was on the terrace with you just now?'
-
-'Yes--Miss Raymond.'
-
-'So I thought--sorry she did not stay.'
-
-'Why--particularly?'
-
-'I have some news that may interest her.'
-
-'About whom?'
-
-'Herself.'
-
-'Hope they are pleasant?'
-
-'That will depend upon how she may view them,' said Allan, with a
-nod, as he entered the house.
-
-'Now, what the deuce has he been up to--this fellow, with his hair
-cut to the military pattern--Newgate crop, I should call it--he looks
-queer this morning,' muttered Holcroft, as he selected a cigar from
-his case, bit the end off with his sharp white teeth, and proceeded
-to smoke it with brief, angry, and unenjoyable puffs that indicated a
-mind full of bitterness and ill at ease. Olive's communication had
-been a sudden revelation to him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-ALLAN PROVES MYSTERIOUS.
-
-If Allan's sudden departure and unexplained absence excited some
-curiosity in the minds of his family, his return excited it afresh
-when he declined to make any explanation until he had held an
-interview with his cousin, Olive Raymond, who, for a time, secluded
-herself in her own room on the usual feminine plea of having a
-headache.
-
-Eveline, who had so longed for his return, now with tears told him of
-her father's frequently expressed wish--nay, command, and Sir Paget's
-forthcoming proposal; but, full of his own miseries, he could only
-caress her and say,
-
-'God bless you, little one. I wish you well over all this.'
-
-Sir Paget had left Dundargue pending the final arrangements, as he
-thought; thus the cloud and the dread were hanging over her still.
-
-'Has Olive received back her gold bangle--my gift--from Mr.
-Holcroft?' asked Allan, with knitted brows.
-
-'I--I think not. How did you learn he had it?'
-
-'Plainly enough--I saw it on his wrist!'
-
-'Where he put it, in play--not she.'
-
-'I should hope not, by Jove!'
-
-'I know she has asked him for it repeatedly.'
-
-'Can't make the beggar out.'
-
-'I can--he thinks Olive an heiress.
-
-Allan's dark brow became more deeply knitted.
-
-'She thinks that if she married you, Allan dear,' said his sister,
-after a pause, 'she would be sacrificing her own pride and liberty,
-and that you might marry her though not caring for her----'
-
-'But for that wretched money?' said Allan, with a kind of snort.
-'Poor Olive--she views the situation in this light! I certainly
-shall not ask her to make any sacrifices for me, and, so far as I am
-concerned, she shall be free as a bird in the air.'
-
-His sister regarded him now with some perplexity, not understanding
-what he meant, but said,
-
-'You have just come in time for a little carpet-dance we have
-arranged as a farewell treat to Ruby Logan, Mr. Holcroft, and--and
-Evan Cameron, who are about to leave Dundargue.'
-
-Allan noted the inflection of her voice as she uttered the name of
-his young brother officer, and then hurried away, as their mother
-entered the room, and with rather a cloudy expression in her face,
-though he hastened to kiss her.
-
-'You have been to Edinburgh, I have heard,' she said.
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'About what, Allan?'
-
-'That you will learn in time, mother. I must speak with Olive first.'
-
-Lady Aberfeldie was full of irrepressible curiosity, but Allan
-declined to gratify it just then.
-
-'Have your recent movements any reference to Olive?'
-
-'You will learn in time, mother.'
-
-Lady Aberfeldie's face shaded with annoyance, for, only the day
-before, she and the petulant young lady in question had indulged in a
-tift between them.
-
-Perceiving a wistful look and fitful manner about Olive, and that she
-was more than usually restless and irritable, Lady Aberfeldie had
-unwisely spoken to her on the subject of Allan's regard for her.
-
-Olive had sat for a moment or two, with her delicate hands tightly
-interlaced in her lap, and then, turning defiantly to her aunt, she
-said,
-
-'I will never marry Allan!'
-
-'You must marry Allan, my dear girl,' replied Lady Aberfeldie, calmly
-and firmly.
-
-'Why?'
-
-'You know your father's wish.'
-
-'Oh, the will, of course! So I am to be treated like a child? Well,
-if so, I may prove a wilful and dangerous one!'
-
-Her aunt's report of this conversation made Lord Aberfeldie more than
-ever anxious for the return of his son.
-
-'You are very mysterious, Allan. You and Olive seem a pair of
-enigmas,' said Lady Aberfeldie. 'But your father waits you in the
-library, and perhaps you will condescend to confide in him, if not in
-me. I must own it will be a fatal thing for your future happiness if
-Olive thinks you seek her for gain; but for what does Mr. Holcroft so
-evidently seek her?'
-
-Allan smiled disdainfully.
-
-'I have tried to think, mother dear, that she is not affected by this
-person Holcroft, but begin to own to myself that "the faith that
-worketh miracles" is not in me.'
-
-When questioned by his father, Allan made the same reticent reply,
-that he must see Olive before making any explanations.
-
-'The time has come now, Allan,' said Lord Aberfeldie, 'when you are
-bound in honour to make your cousin an offer, for in this peculiar
-entanglement--for such, I grant you, it is--you and she do not stand
-in the position of most engaged persons.'
-
-'But suppose I have no wish to marry----'
-
-'Absurd--outrageous!'
-
-'Or may not marry at all?'
-
-'By the refusal of Olive?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'Then her fortune, or most of it, becomes yours, in terms of the
-will--'
-
-'Which has been a curse to us both. In her mind, and in the eyes of
-all who may come to hear of it, we must lie under the degrading
-imputation of a mercenary motive.'
-
-'Not if you act with tact and delicacy, and surely your boy-and-girl
-attachment must remain unchanged,' said Lord Aberfeldie, in a voice
-that was soft, rather than indignant, as his memory went back to the
-day when Olive first came a little orphan child to Dundargue--a tiny
-and graceful creature, with tender, wondering, and beseeching eyes--a
-child that climbed upon his knee, clung to him with sympathetic love,
-and played with his watch-chain or the tassels of his sash, if he was
-in uniform. 'And so,' he added, after a pause, 'you must propose to
-the dear girl as a mere matter of form.'
-
-'I have already done so,' said Allan, recalling, what he was not
-likely to forget, all that had occurred during the homeward ride from
-Dunsinane.
-
-'Well, sir?' asked his father.
-
-'I was laughed at--mocked, I may say.'
-
-'Impossible! The girl must have been jesting with you.'
-
-'I do not think so,' said Allan, both sadly and bitterly as he
-thought of the bangle and many other circumstances, the inevitable
-'trifles light as air.'
-
-'Well, you are bound to renew your proposal.'
-
-'I do not think so, nor shall I again, unless some change comes over
-her.'
-
-'If I exert my authority as guardian and trustee----'
-
-'She may run away. Olive is a proud and restless girl with a defiant
-spirit, though she has a very affectionate heart.'
-
-'But you cannot expect that she is to propose to _you_.'
-
-'I do love her, father--love her dearly; but fear that she views me
-too much as a brother to love me otherwise.'
-
-'This is rank nonsense. Think of your separations, and of your
-last--one well nigh seven years--with the Black Watch.'
-
-'But might it not be the case that she may have a _penchant_ for some
-one else?'
-
-'For whom?' asked Lord Aberfeldie, angrily.
-
-'Well, say for your friend Mr. Holcroft.'
-
-'Penniless Hawke Holcroft! absurd--the man has seen but little of
-her.'
-
-'Quite enough in London and here to learn to admire, if not to love
-her. I would, however, rather see her laid in her grave than married
-to Holcroft,' said Allan, in a stern but broken voice, adding under
-his breath, as he left his father's presence and cut short an
-unpleasant interview, 'but, so far as I am concerned, she shall be
-free to choose for herself--free as the wind.'
-
-'What the deuce can all this mean?' exclaimed Lord Aberfeldie, in
-great perplexity; 'was ever an unfortunate man more troubled with two
-intractable girls, than I am with Eveline and Olive!'
-
-It has been said that, 'if exceedingly few men and women understand
-each other when they are in their sober senses, how must it fare when
-they are under the blinding influence of love?'
-
-But Allan's course of action was decided now.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-OLIVE CHANGES HER MIND.
-
-'You are pleased to see me again, Olive?'
-
-'Of course, Allan--why do you ask me?' she exclaimed, putting both
-her hands into his in welcome.
-
-He retained them with a tender pressure for half a minute, looking
-the while wistfully into her violet eyes, and then he let them drop
-from his clasp.
-
-'You wish particularly to speak with me, I understand?' said Olive,
-nervously thinking it must refer to the _tête-à-tête_ he had overseen
-on the terrace.
-
-'Yes--particularly, dear Olive.'
-
-When he saw her tender beauty, her grace, and her witchery, and felt
-all the subtle charm of her presence, his heart was wrung by the
-thought that, by the very act he had the power to do, and the
-suggestions he was about to make to her, he might place her at the
-entire disposal of Hawke Holcroft, of whose real character he now
-knew more than formerly.
-
-How variable had been the emotions she had, ever since his return
-from India, exhibited towards him! By turns she had been changeable
-and indifferent apparently; playful, petulant, and imperious; yet
-always bewitching and sweet.
-
-Seeing the cloudy and sad expression of his eye, Olive said,
-
-'You have not come to scold me for anything, Allan. We are at least
-friends.'
-
-'Would we were more,' said Allan, remembering what his father had
-urged but a few minutes before.
-
-'Surely to be cousins is a near enough relationship.'
-
-'Olive,' said he, reproachfully, 'unless you have formed a distinct
-attachment for some one else, I must say I do not understand you.'
-
-'I don't want you to understand me,' she replied, with half-averted
-face.
-
-'Why are you so hard with me?' he exclaimed, with a wistful, longing,
-and miserable expression in his eyes.
-
-She made no reply, so he spoke again.
-
-'I have had a long consultation with our family agent in Edinburgh.'
-
-'About what?'
-
-'Your affairs and mine, Olive.'
-
-'_My_ affairs?'
-
-'Yes, and I have obtained the opinion of ruby Logan's father, and of
-counsel of much higher--yes, of the highest--repute on the vexed
-subject of your father's will--vexed at least between you and I,
-Olive.'
-
-She gazed at him with something of vacant surprise blended with
-inquiry in her face.
-
-'What I am about to suggest may be dangerous, as I do not know the
-terms on which you permit yourself to be with this--Mr. Holcroft--but
-I have had excellent legal advice, and----'
-
-'Legal advice--oh, indeed!' she interrupted, with a toss of her
-pretty head; 'that is well, for the laws as made by you men rank us
-women with children and lunatics. And what says this advice?'
-
-'That you can be freed from the trammels of your father's will--free,
-and the inheritrix of your own great wealth.'
-
-She regarded him for a minute with blank astonishment; then as bright
-joy like sunshine spread over her sweet face and sparkled in the
-depth of her eyes, she exclaimed, in a low voice,
-
-'Free, do you say, free in my own actions, and free to bestow papa's
-money how and on whom I please?'
-
-'On _whom_ you please,' replied Allan, thinking with intense
-mortification on Holcroft, and Holcroft only; for personally he was
-far above thinking of the fortune that might otherwise be his own, as
-the stars are above the earth. 'Let me but see all this matter fully
-arranged and then I shall be content,' said he, after a pause, during
-which they had been regarding each other; he, her with sadness, and
-she him with bewilderment. 'There are rumours in the air of a
-turn-up with the Turks, and of a war in Egypt, and right glad I am of
-that!'
-
-'Why, Allan?'
-
-'Because I'll get attached to the first army corps that sails, even
-if the Black Watch is not going; but that it is sure to be, as, thank
-God! the dear old corps is always in everything.'
-
-'And why this joy?'
-
-'To get as far away from you as possible,' he replied, bluntly, in a
-hollow tone.
-
-'Must you do so, Allan?'
-
-'Yes, unless I mean to drive myself mad.'
-
-'Do you really love me so much--and--and,' she paused, for she seemed
-touched, her sweet lips were quivering now.
-
-'What more?'
-
-'For myself alone,' she asked, softly.
-
-'Love you--oh, Olive.'
-
-'There now, don't!' she exclaimed, turning away her face, and Allan
-shrank back.
-
-'Playing with me, after all--after all!' he muttered. 'Will you
-please to look at the opinion of counsel,' he added, drawing from his
-pocket a folio document, stitched with a red thread, and with a broad
-margin.
-
-'What a long story!' she exclaimed, as she glanced at and read,
-
-
-'Chambers, Edinburgh.
-
-'Copy of Counsel's opinion referred to in letter of 20th October,
-1882, on the will of the late Oliver Raymond, Esq, of Jamaica, with
-note of fees thereon.'
-
-
-'What a fearful long story!' exclaimed Olive again. 'Tell me all
-about it, Allan? but pray don't read it.'
-
-'The will of your father is herein denounced as eccentric--one that
-no court of law would enforce, nor could uphold, as in more than one
-instance it is not conceived in strictly legal terms, and, to all
-intents and purposes, can be put aside if you choose. Thus, Olive,
-you are free--free from all the bonds--if such ever existed--that
-seemed to bind you to me; and I thank God that it is so, and I shall
-go to Egypt, perhaps, with a lighter heart. All that now remains to
-be done is to take the means, if such are necessary, to have the
-document set aside as so much waste paper, and you duly made mistress
-of your inheritance, as you are now of age, in England, at least,
-where it is invested. Thus, you see, Olive, this opinion of counsel
-is most valuable to you.'
-
-Her soft eyes were brimming over with tears now, as she mechanically
-took the document in her tremulous fingers.
-
-'And thus you relinquish me?' she said.
-
-'I relinquish, gladly, your fortune, and all control over your
-actions, if--you choose.'
-
-'But I don't choose! Oh, Allan, how generous all this is of you.
-But I shall not be less so, nor will I act upon this opinion of
-counsel.'
-
-'How?'
-
-'See, thus!'
-
-And, tearing it into pieces, she cast them into the fire-grate.
-
-'Illegal as it may be, papa's will must be now a law to me more than
-ever.'
-
-'And you, Olive?'
-
-'Love you, dear Allan, and love you dearly,' cried the wilful and
-impulsive girl, as all her heart went forth to him, and he pressed
-her to his breast at last.
-
-Doubt, pride, defiance, and petulance had all passed away, and Olive
-was all softness, love, and joy now; and to the pair time seemed for
-a term to stand still, and save their caressing words softly
-murmured, and the twitter of birds among the ivy without, silence
-appeared to reign in this room; and nothing seemed to disturb them,
-till Olive suddenly started from Allan's arms.
-
-'What is it, love?' he asked.
-
-'A face at the window!'
-
-'Whose face?'
-
-'I know not,' she replied, with some agitation. 'It has just
-vanished.'
-
-She thought, nay, she was sure, it had the features of Hawke
-Holcroft, but she did not _say_ so. If it were he, how much had he
-overheard, how much overseen!
-
-But she soon forgot the episode, and that night at dinner she looked
-more radiant than ever, in her suite of Maltese jewellery--gold set
-with orient pearls.
-
-'It is usual for engaged ladies to have a ring,' Allan had whispered,
-as he slipped a magnificently jewelled hoop upon her mystic finger.
-
-'Fool that I have been!' thought the girl. 'How near was I
-estranging one of the best and dearest of men in the world, not for
-the sake of one immeasurably his inferior, even worthless perhaps,
-but in a spirit of vanity, pique, and suspicion!'
-
-'Allan,' she whispered to him softly, when an opportunity came, 'I
-see now how foolish I have been and wilful--oh, so wilful! But we
-all make mistakes in life, and require at times each other's pity and
-forgiveness.'
-
-How sweetly and shyly she looked and spoke.
-
-Hawke Holcroft felt intuitively, and indeed saw, that there was some
-sudden change in the bearing of the pair to each other, and that a
-sudden brightness had come into the faces of all--even that of
-Eveline, usually now so _triste_ and pale--and under his sandy
-moustache he 'wondered what the devil it all meant,' till his
-watchful eyes detected the new and brilliant ring on the engaged
-finger of Olive Raymond!
-
-
-If Mr. Hawke Holcroft imagined he had nothing to dread personally
-from the Master's sudden visit to Edinburgh he reckoned without his
-host, as he would have found had he overheard a brief conversation
-which took place between Allan and his comrade, young Cameron, as
-they loitered in the gun-room looking over old Joe-Mantons, new
-rifles, and central-fire breech-loaders, &c.
-
-He was not slow to perceive very soon that Allan, usually so suave
-and pleasant in manner, treated him now with a kind of stiffness that
-was almost hauteur; but he dissembled his rage and so did Allan, who
-had a keen sense of the laws of hospitality, with the genuine British
-dread of aught that might approach a 'scene,' more than all as the
-visit of Holcroft was nearly ended.
-
-Poor wretch! he strove well to keep a brave front in society, while
-letters that often lay beside his plate at breakfast were seen to
-cloud his brow with perplexity, for they alluded to wrong horses
-backed, I.O.U.'s, bills, and cheques 'referred to drawer,' and so
-forth, and he must have left Dundargue before this, but for a
-friendly slip of paper, which he had received from Lord Aberfeldie,
-that 'Fool of Quality,' as he thought him.
-
-'Look here, Cameron,' said Allan, as the twain smoked their cigars in
-a quiet place. 'It is little wonder to me that you, Sir Paget
-Puddicombe, and one or two others lost at cards with Holcroft as you
-did. I dined with our fellows at the mess in the Castle when I went
-to Edinburgh. There his name cropped up by the merest chance, and I
-was told by Carslogie of Ours that he was present at a shindy in
-London, where this fellow Holcroft, after having an unprecedented run
-at cards at a place in St. James Street, was accused of having the
-ace of trumps up his sleeve, from whence it fell when he was shying a
-bottle at the accuser's head. He talks to the pater largely of his
-"place in Essex," or what remains of it. Involved in debt to a
-ruinous extent, he gave bills right and left, which were dishonoured.
-£10,000 _had_ been raised upon his estate, in which he had only a
-reversionary interest, and, when the mortgagees called in their
-money, and the estate was sold, it did not suffice to pay a tithe of
-the sums he had raised in every conceivable way, and everyone lost
-their money all round. Sharp that! Yet he scraped through without
-punishment.'
-
-'By Jove!'
-
-'Worse still. Carslogie told me he was suspected of causing a horse
-to fail in a race through having the bit poisoned; and how he left a
-young fellow in the Hussars at Maidstone in the lurch, by refusing at
-the last moment to ride for him a peculiarly vicious horse, which he
-had solemnly undertaken to do, and so causing him to lose the race,
-on which he had most imprudently made a ruinously heavy book.'
-
-'And how did it end?'
-
-'The report of a pistol that night in the cavalry barrack announced
-that the Hussar had shot himself--that is all! And this is the
-"young man of the period" whom my father's confiding simplicity has
-made a welcome guest for some weeks back at Dundargue, and thrown
-into the society of my sister and Olive! But I shall fully open his
-eyes the moment our visitor is gone.'
-
-But it was rather a pity for his own sake that Allan did not 'open'
-Lord Aberfeldie's eyes a little before that event, and such being the
-character of Mr. Hawke Holcroft the reader may feel less surprised at
-some of the things we may have to record of him ere long.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE CARPET-DANCE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT.
-
-Though somewhat of the nature of an impromptu affair, the
-'carpet-dance' partook of something of a more important kind. Many
-guests were invited; the ladies were in semi-toilet and the gentlemen
-in evening dress: but the great dancing-room at Dundargue was
-decorated to perfection by the care of Mr. Tappleton, the butler, the
-housekeeper, and gardener, with the rarest plants, flowers, and ferns
-the conservatories could produce, disposed in China and Japanese jars
-on pedestals and marble console tables of the time of Louis XIV., at
-whose court a Lord Aberfeldie had once been ambassador.
-
-The fete had been brought about by the two fair cousins as a farewell
-treat to the last of their present guests, who were departing--Ruby
-Logan, Stratherroch, and--Mr. Holcroft!
-
-Greatly to Eveline's relief, Sir Paget was gone, but, as if to worry
-her further, Sir Paget left for her--with Lady Aberfeldie--a letter
-referring to his admiration and regard for her since the last season
-in London, and with it a handsome diamond necklet--the sight of which
-in its fragrant Russian-leather case she loathed--with the hope that
-she would accept and wear it, in token that she was holding out
-brilliant hopes to him when 'they met in town again.'
-
-Eveline flatly declined to accept and wear the jewellery, so, to her
-intense annoyance, it remained as yet in her mother's hands. She was
-'biding her time.'
-
-The wealthy suitor had attained a battered middle-age, while Eveline
-was still in the glory of her youth. True, but he had both wealth
-and rank to offer, for though she was an 'Honourable Miss,' he was a
-baronet, and so far as his love went, if it came late in life, it
-was, nevertheless, a kind of overmastering passion.
-
-The new emotions of her heart caused Eveline to reflect more than
-perhaps she had ever done before. It seemed but yesterday since she
-and Olive conned their tasks and practised their scales together
-under the eyes of a governess; since they had gathered bouquets of
-wild flowers from the clefts of the rocks of Dundargue, and made
-fairy caps of rushes and harebells by the burnside; happy children
-both; but how miserable she was now that she was on the verge of
-womanhood, and had learned to love and to hate; for she loved Evan
-Cameron, and hated--yes, and she blushed as she admitted it to
-herself--she did hate that smiling and rubicund old interloper, Sir
-Paget.
-
-'And you will not wear the necklet?' said Lady Aberfeldie, for the
-last time.
-
-'Do please to excuse me, dearest mamma--I cannot--yet a while.'
-
-Lady Aberfeldie was pleased by the half obedience these words implied.
-
-'What ornaments will you wear then?' she asked. 'You have so many to
-choose from.'
-
-'Let me wear the lovely diamond necklace that lies in the strong
-casket in your room, mamma.'
-
-Lady Aberfeldie's calm, patrician face darkened.
-
-'I would rather you wore no diamonds at all, child; and these I never
-wear myself.'
-
-'But why, mamma?'
-
-'Because that necklace always brings evil to whoever wears it.'
-
-'So I have heard. But it is a silly superstition, and they are such
-lovely stones! But what is the story of them?'
-
-'The wife of a cavalier who died with Montrose on the scaffold of
-Edinburgh gave them to an ancestor of ours to save his life. This
-was the first viscount, who was a zealous Covenanter, and the bosom
-friend of Lord Warriston. He certainly took the jewels from the poor
-sorrowing wife----'
-
-'And the cavalier?'
-
-'Was beheaded by the Maiden at the market-cross, and a kind of curse
-seems to have attended these diamonds ever since.'
-
-'A cruel story.'
-
-'But a true one.'
-
-Eveline laughed at the superstition, kissed her cold, proud mother,
-and carried her point; thus, at the time when carriage after carriage
-was depositing guests at the great arched entrance hall, Eveline was
-surveying her figure and face in the mirror with all a young girl's
-satisfaction and thinking that her slender white throat never looked
-as it did then, when encircled by the sparkling diamonds of the
-luckless widow, and Olive at the same time was looking radiant in the
-Maltese suite of Allan.
-
-How the two last named enjoy the carpet-dance! Perfect confidence
-was so sweetly established between them, they had so many little
-secrets to tell, so many revelations to make, so many comparisons, of
-mutual hopes and fears, and so forth, while each seemed to exult in
-the affection of the other, and felt in their hearts the words
-ascribed to old Catullus:--
-
- 'Let those love now who never loved before.
- Let those who always loved, now love the more!'
-
-
-'Those two young fools seem to understand each other and each other's
-interests at last!' whispered Lord to Lady Aberfeldie, with a smile
-of amusement.
-
-'But there are two _other_ young fools present who are doing their
-best to mar each other's interests,' was her cold and warning
-response.
-
-Hawke Holcroft's shifty eyes lowered as he watched the cousins and
-whirled in a waltz with Ruby Logan or any other girl who came to
-hand. He was in utter perplexity to find the new footing on which
-these hitherto strange lovers so suddenly were, and that he himself
-was, as he felt and thought, 'nowhere!'
-
-What could she mean? There was something of radiance in the faces of
-all the family--even of the sweetly pensive Eveline--all indicative
-of a new movement that _he_ was out of.
-
-'As for Olive,' he muttered, while a sentiment of rage, mingled with
-avarice and jealousy, grew strong in his heart, 'she is an infernal
-weather-cock, but a deuced handsome one!'
-
-Ruby Logan was equally puzzled, but found consolation with young
-Carslogie of the Black Watch, whom Allan had invited to the
-festivity, and who styled her, with reference to her hair, 'the amber
-witch.'
-
-'Happy Olive and Allan,' thought Eveline, as she rested for a minute
-on the arm of Cameron, 'they may have as many round dances as they
-choose without remark, while mine, with _him_, must be few and far
-between.'
-
-Her dress was white silk, trimmed with little laurel leaves and
-crowberry--the latter a delicate attention to Evan, as it is the
-badge of the Camerons.
-
-'Will you wear my colours to-night?' she asked, as they promenaded at
-that end of the room which was furthest away from 'papa and mamma.'
-She broke off a spray and made him a button-hole. 'Allow me to fix
-it for you,' said Eveline, and deftly she put it in his lapel, while
-Evan's heart thrilled to feel the touch of her beloved hand--even
-though gloved--so near his heart, as they swept into another waltz.
-
-'Aberfeldie,' said the hostess to her husband, 'I feel certain that
-Evan Cameron is in love with our Eveline.'
-
-Lord Aberfeldie had no doubt about it whatever now, but he only said,
-
-'He would be a fool to be otherwise.'
-
-'But that is not what we seek!'
-
-'Certainly not; but all young fellows have fancies; and he will be
-gone from this in a few hours now.'
-
-'Thank Heaven, yes!' responded Lady Aberfeldie, devoutly.
-
-'By the way, why did you permit her to wear those unlucky diamonds?'
-
-'She pled so hard, and then the idea of their bringing evil is so
-behind the age.'
-
-'Behind the age or not, something untoward or unlucky always
-accompanies their appearance in public. They should have been sent
-to Bond Street long ago.'
-
-And Lord Aberfeldie smiled on her affectionately, as at that moment
-he could not help thinking how handsome and young his wife looked in
-her costume of rich ruby velvet, trimmed at the square cut neck and
-arms with the finest white old lace, while jewels that an empress
-might have worn glittered in her ears and hair.
-
-Replacing sometimes the professional musicians, making themselves
-useful at the piano, and playing certainly good dance music were
-two--the 'mermaids,' as Holcroft called them--the minister's
-daughters, who were usually so fond of warbling that they 'were under
-the blue sea.'
-
-He knew nothing of what Allan had learned concerning him--of the
-light Carslogie had thrown on his private life; thus, whatever change
-had come over the spirit of Olive's dream, he deemed it necessary to
-ask her for, at least, one round dance as usual; and Allan watched
-them with a haughty grimace on his features as they danced it in a
-silent manner that was peculiar and rather oppressive to both. The
-moment it was over, and he handed her back to a seat, Holcroft took
-refuge in the refreshment-room, where Mr. Tappleton gave him a
-foaming glass of sparkling champagne.
-
-Young Cameron was rather grave, Allan thought, but the former was
-oppressed by one idea then, that on the morrow he would have to
-report himself at the headquarters of the Black Watch, and he gazed
-like one in a dream at the dancers whirling round him; so Allan took
-him to task and strove to rally him.
-
-'Why so sad, old fellow? You're down on your luck, somehow,' said he.
-
-'Because, Graham,' replied Cameron, with a forced smile, 'there are
-times when I am inclined to ask with Mr. Mallock, "Is life worth
-living?"'
-
-'Of course it is--but how with you?'
-
-'Well,' replied Cameron, with whom just then one bitter thought was
-more than usually keen, 'dipped nigh to sinking as my place of
-Stratherroch is, I don't see so much to live for, and certainly
-deuced little to live upon.'
-
-'Don't take this gloomy view, old fellow,' said Allan, cheerfully.
-
-'It is very well for you to take a jolly view of the world,
-Allan--you, the son of a peer, and engaged to----'
-
-'Take heart, man; we've lots of life before us--life in Egypt
-perhaps. There is Eveline sitting alone; take another turn with her,
-and then we'll have some of Mumms' extra dry together.'
-
-Eveline had opened an album as Cameron drew near her, but closed it
-instantly as the first photo that met her eyes was a fine cabinet one
-of Sir Paget. There was an expression of pensive sweetness in her
-otherwise radiant face, for she, poor girl, never for a moment forgot
-that a parting--too probably a final one it might prove--was close at
-hand now, and, after the two past delightful months, how dreary would
-the future seem!
-
-'Are you tired?' said a tender voice in her ear; 'it is our dance, I
-think--but would you rather sit it out?'
-
-'A little promenade rather.'
-
-He bowed, and, rising, she took his proffered arm. They made a
-circuit of the room once or twice, and then, lured no doubt by the
-coolness and seclusion of a long corridor, entered it, unnoticed as
-they thought; but the watchful gaze of Lady Aberfeldie had followed
-them.
-
-There was much to see in this long, stately, and vaulted corridor,
-and its deeply embayed windows overlooking the rock on which the
-oldest part of Dundargue is perched. Its floor was of _parqueterie_;
-its walls of wainscot, with massively framed old pictures; some
-trophies of arms and family armour hung there, and the windows were
-furnished with ancient stone seats and modern stained glass, through
-which the radiance of the setting sun was contending with the dim
-shaded lamps.
-
-Specimens of unique china and frail goblets of Venetian glass, with
-other objects of 'bigotry and virtue,' as Holcroft had called them,
-were there in oaken cabinets and on exquisite brackets. Among other
-things, on a pedestal, skilfully stuffed, the last golden eagle that
-had been shot at the Birks of Aberfeldie, by the gun of Dugald Glas,
-a glorious bird that measured five feet from tip to tip of his
-shining pinions; yet none of these things caught the attention of the
-two promenaders.
-
-Her hand was on his arm; involuntarily that arm pressed the soft and
-tremulous fingers which rested there, and in another moment his hand
-stole over them without their being withdrawn--nay, it seemed as if
-their load became more heavy.
-
-Eveline was not unaware that there was something morally wrong in the
-situation; but, then, 'the situation had its charm.'
-
-'Eveline!'
-
-Cameron had never before ventured to call her by her Christian name,
-nor, until it passed his lips half unconsciously now, had he an
-intention of so uttering it; but that utterance seemed scarcely a new
-revelation to the girl.
-
-Soft and lovely was the shy smile upon her upturned face as they
-stood within the deep bay of a window. Was it that smile, or what,
-that dazed Evan Cameron and swept his senses away; but he caught her
-suddenly in his arms and kissed her lips and eyes, whispering,
-
-'Oh! Eveline, my darling--my darling!'
-
-And then there was a pause, full of sighs of happiness. 'The stone
-was cast into the water, and the still lake broke up into a stormy
-sea, where there would be peace and quiet no more!' No more, at
-least, unless the future held some happiness for these two poor
-loving hearts.
-
-'Have I done wrong?' said Cameron, in a breathless voice, after a
-little time; 'God knows I never meant that you should see how dearly,
-how desperately, and how hopelessly I love you when I let the
-precious secret escape me as I did; but it is done now.'
-
-She was pale as death and trembling violently, as she thought of her
-mother; yet she nestled closely and clingingly to him.
-
-'You love me, Eveline?'
-
-'Can you ask?' she whispered. 'Yes--oh, yes--Evan.'
-
-He was intoxicated, and drew her close to him again. Such a moment
-comes but once in life--once only!
-
-'Let us go now--we shall be missed,' said Eveline.
-
-'Oh, stay one moment longer, darling.'
-
-'Mamma, if we could only get her to be our friend, all might be right
-and go well.'
-
-'Even with my poverty, Eveline?'
-
-'Don't call it so. Yes, papa always gives in to her in the long run.'
-
-Cameron sighed.
-
-'Are you two practising for amateur theatricals, or admiring the
-stars through the stained glass?' said the voice of Lord Aberfeldie,
-suddenly.
-
-We have said that the eyes of his wife had followed the pair, and
-hence no doubt his lordship's sudden appearance in the dimly-lighted
-corridor. Both were painfully confused.
-
-How much had Lord Aberfeldie overseen, how much had he overheard, or
-how little of both? It was impossible for them to guess, but he
-good-naturedly affected not to see all that his mind took in.
-
-Cameron felt that he had nothing to explain, to urge, or to utter,
-but bowed, smiled a very hollow smile indeed, and led his partner
-back to the dancing-room, where neither waltzed more that evening, as
-the impromptu affair was over, the guests were departing, and Lord
-Aberfeldie was beginning to think that the diamonds of the legend
-were already producing their evil results in this the first untoward
-event in the young life of his daughter.
-
-Allan and Cameron, avoiding Holcroft, sat long that night in the
-former's room smoking and imbibing brandy-and-soda, but no word
-escaped the lover of what had passed in the corridor; and, sooth to
-say, full of Olive and himself, Allan had never missed the pair from
-the dancing-room.
-
-Cameron was to leave Dundargue betimes next morning, so he bade
-farewell to his comrade, who charged him with remembrances to 'all
-our fellows of the Black Watch;' and anon Cameron found himself alone
-with his own loving, exulting, sad, and anxious thoughts, and with
-the little bouquet--a dwarf laurel leaf and sprig of
-crowberry--dearer to him then than even his Victoria Cross!
-
-Again and again did he rehearse that sweet episode in the dimly-lit
-corridor, and again and again in the time to come would it return
-with sorrowful reiteration to his heart and memory!
-
-Eveline loved him! Her own lips had acknowledged it, her kisses
-seemed still to linger on his lips; but to what end--my God! he
-exclaimed, in bitterness of heart, to what end? Again and again he
-thought over her plaintive and child-like wish, 'if we could only get
-mamma to be our friend,' and all that wish suggested. Her mother
-suspected much, he feared, and that her father knew all. Sir Paget,
-with his colossal wealth, was looming in the distance like a simoon
-to the newly dawned love; and poor Evan could but come to the
-terrible conclusion that, like too many others, his penniless love
-could only be a hopeless one.
-
-So wore the night away--the last, Cameron was assured, he would ever
-spend in Dundargue; and morning came.
-
-Unslept, Cameron made rapidly the prosaic preparations for his
-departure, and a valet had borne off his portmanteaus, rugs, and
-gun-case to the entrance hall, where the sleepy Mr. Tappleton and a
-wagonette awaited him.
-
-As he was about to descend the great, silent staircase, suddenly
-Eveline, fully dressed for the day and softly slippered, stood before
-him, her mignonne face very pale, and her soft hazel eyes inflamed by
-past weeping.
-
-'Evan!'
-
-'My darling!'
-
-No housemaids were about as yet, and no prying eyes were there, nor
-had Ronald Gair with his pipes blown _reveille_.
-
-'I could not let you go without--without one word of farewell,' she
-sobbed.
-
-Long and mute was their embrace, and the heart of Cameron swelled as
-if to bursting with mingled love and gratitude. He pressed her to
-it. It was their parting embrace, and both seemed to feel in it that
-which a writer has described as 'the vibration of an agony.'
-
-'I feel as if I were bereft of reason!' he whispered.
-
-'My poor Evan--my own dear love!' cooed the girl. One kiss more, and
-he was gone.
-
-When or where, if ever, would they meet again?
-
-Eveline had nervously and sedulously avoided Sir Paget till the time
-of his departure; and, when he did leave Dundargue in the dawn, he
-was only seen off by the old butler; but Evan Cameron had an
-unexpected farewell caress, the memory of a sad, soft, and clinging
-kiss that he was to take away with him to what he deemed the land of
-bondage, and tearful eyes watched his wagonette as it passed down the
-avenue and out upon the high-road that led to the railway.
-
-Evan looked backwards at the tall and stately pile of Dundargue, on
-which the rays of the rising sun shone redly, and deep in his heart
-he envied Carslogie, who was to remain behind for a couple of days'
-shooting. Yet wherefore should he envy any man while Eveline loved
-him? was his afterthought.
-
-And she, poor girl, seemed to feel herself left most terribly alone
-with all her sorrow--alone amid her loving family and splendid
-surroundings, and with Evan's words of love lingering in her ear she
-was soon bidden to school herself to think of Sir Paget, and Sir
-Paget Puddicombe only! 'The human creature,' it has been written,
-'who would have suited us to every fibre of our being we have not
-found, or, having found, have not possessed; but (perhaps)
-undervalued, and so allowed to pass out of our lives.'
-
-These two suited each other 'to a fibre,' as our author quaintly puts
-it, and in perfect unanimity of sentiment; and yet for all that they
-may be compelled to pass out of each other's lives, and live those
-lives far, far apart.
-
-Under her mother's scrutiny Eveline strove hard to dissemble, and on
-receiving her morning kiss said,
-
-'Well, mamma, no evil has come of the wearing the diamonds--Dundargue
-has not taken fire.'
-
-'No, child--indeed, good has come!'
-
-'How, mamma?'
-
-'This morning's mail has brought an enclosure for you--the formal
-proposal of Sir Paget.'
-
-Eveline was stricken dumb, but thought to herself,
-
-'Unhappy I--evil _has_ come!'
-
-And ere noon was passed she was taken to task by her father in the
-library, prompted by her mother, no doubt.
-
-He drew her to him caressingly, and, interlacing his fingers upon her
-head, drew her soft cheek upon his breast.
-
-'I think, Eveline,' said he, 'you may know by this time how well I
-love you.'
-
-'I do, indeed, papa,' replied Eveline, in a low voice, but feeling
-her heart sink under this unusual prelude nevertheless.
-
-'And yet you have been deluding me.'
-
-'Deluding you--I, papa?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'Oh, how?'
-
-'By encouraging--pardon me, not that--rather by permitting a visitor
-to encourage certain hopes. That, you know, it is impossible I
-should view with favour.'
-
-'You mean--you mean----' stammered Eveline, recalling the episode in
-the corridor.
-
-'Evan Cameron.'
-
-'He is gone,' said she, with difficulty restraining her tears.
-
-'To darken the door of Dundargue no more! Not that I have any fault
-to find with poor Cameron--a brave fellow who has won his V.C., and
-is a Black Watchman to boot; but he is Laird of Stratherroch only in
-name; his purse does not come up to the requisite standard, and may
-never do so till both your heads are grey; but he is gone, as you
-say, and we shall think of him no more. I have other brighter,
-better, and richer views for you, my dear child, and I hope you will
-not disappoint us all. Sir Paget loves you, and you will think
-seriously over all this?'
-
-'How can I do otherwise, papa?' was the dubious response, and the
-girl stole away to her own room. So wearing the diamonds seemed only
-to be bringing about a sudden crisis in the affairs of herself and
-the banished Evan Cameron, for such she deemed him.
-
-And, ere she went to bed that night, Eveline, poor girl, strove to
-pray that she might have some guide or assistance up the stony and
-thorny path which she feared was before her now in life; but she no
-longer now had the deep and unbroken sleep that had ever been her lot
-the moment her soft cheek touched the pillow. Too nervous to sleep
-alone, she crept in beside Olive, and, nestling her little face in
-the white bosom of her cousin, wept long and bitterly.
-
-But events were now to occur that caused even the brilliant proposal
-of Sir Paget to be forgotten.
-
-
-
-END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
-
-
-
-LONDON: PRINTED BY DUNCAN MACDONALD, BLENHEIM HOUSE.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MASTER OF ABERFELDIE, VOLUME I
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-by James Grant
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Master of Aberfeldie, Volume I (of 3), by James Grant</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Master of Aberfeldie, Volume I (of 3)</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Grant</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 14, 2021 [eBook #65615]</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Al Haines</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MASTER OF ABERFELDIE, VOLUME I (OF 3) ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE MASTER OF ABERFELDIE<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- JAMES GRANT<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- AUTHOR OF<br />
- "THE ROMANCE OF WAR," "THE CAMERONIANS,"<br />
- "THE SCOTTISH CAVALIER,"<br />
- ETC. ETC.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- IN THREE VOLUMES.<br />
- VOL. I.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON:<br />
- HURST AND BLACKETT, PUBLISHERS,<br />
- 13, GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET.<br />
- 1884.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- <i>All rights reserved.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- Contents<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- Chapter<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- I. <a href="#chap01">Stalking the Deer</a><br />
- II. <a href="#chap02">Hawke Holcroft</a><br />
- III. <a href="#chap03">Uncle Raymond's Will</a><br />
- IV. <a href="#chap04">The Grahams of Dundargue</a><br />
- V. <a href="#chap05">Olive and Allan</a><br />
- VI. <a href="#chap06">The Chagrin of Love</a><br />
- VII. <a href="#chap07">Le Chagrin d'Amour</a><br />
- VIII. <a href="#chap08">The Riding-Party</a><br />
- IX. <a href="#chap09">The Picnic at Dunsinane</a><br />
- X. <a href="#chap10">The Golden Bangle</a><br />
- XI. <a href="#chap11">Eveline's Suitor</a><br />
- XII. <a href="#chap12">A Revelation to Holcroft</a><br />
- XIII. <a href="#chap13">Allan Proves Mysterious</a><br />
- XIV. <a href="#chap14">Olive Changes Her Mind</a><br />
- XV. <a href="#chap15">The Carpet-Dance, and What Came of It</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-THE MASTER OF ABERFELDIE.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I.
-<br /><br />
-STALKING THE DEER.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'I don't know what Olive will think, or
-how she may view my loitering here, after
-all these years of absence, instead of
-hastening home to meet her; but, truth to
-tell, the temptation to have a shot on the
-purple heather after sweltering so long in
-India was so great&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What does it matter what she thinks?'
-interrupted the elder man, laughing.
-'When two persons are to spend the whole
-term of their natural lives together, they
-can surely spare a few days for pleasure
-apart!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But consider, I have not seen my little
-<i>fiancée</i> for seven years.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will find her a pretty tall <i>fiancée</i>
-now,' replied the other, 'and as handsome
-as any girl in Scotland, Allan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The speakers were Lord Aberfeldie (he
-was viscount in the Peerage) and his son
-Allan, the Master, then at home on leave
-from the Black Watch, in which he was a
-captain; and now, side by side, they were
-creeping up a steep and stony corrie in
-search of the red deer, but paused for a
-few minutes to breathe and converse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Master&mdash;so entitled as the son of a
-Scottish baron (we may add for the
-information of most English readers even in
-these days)&mdash;was, like his father, a tall
-and soldier-like fellow, with closely-shorn
-dark brown hair, straight features, and an
-almost black moustache, which partly
-concealed lips that were handsomely curved,
-and expressive of no small degree of
-firmness and decision. He carried his head
-erect, and spoke rather with the air of one
-used to command when addressing men,
-but with great and subtle softness when
-conversing with women of every station
-and degree; and already, under home
-influences, his dark hazel eyes were losing
-the keen and somewhat hawk-like expression
-they had worn when daily facing
-death and suffering on active service.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both father and son were handsome,
-though there were nearly thirty years
-between them in age, and both were, from
-head to foot, unmistakably thorough-bred
-men&mdash;the latter tanned deeply by a tropical
-sun, and his forehead scarred by a wound
-from a tulwar blade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie, now above fifty, had
-taken a turn of service for a few years in
-the Black Watch till his succession to the
-title required his presence at home, though
-an enthusiastic soldier; and soon after his
-place in the regiment which he loved so
-well was taken by his only son and heir,
-the Master, then fresh from college.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Father and son both wore plain shooting-kilts
-and jackets of coarse heather-coloured
-stuff, with handsomely-mounted
-sporans and skeins; other ornaments they
-had none, unless we except the crest of
-Graham&mdash;their surname&mdash;an eagle taloning
-a stork, in their glengarries; and the
-peer, who was a keen fisherman, had his
-head-dress further garnished by various
-flies and old fish-hooks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When <i>en route</i> home to the family seat
-at Dundargue, in the Carse of Gowrie, the
-Master had been tempted by his father to
-join him at their shooting-box among the
-lovely Perthshire hills, where, at present,
-the party consisted of only four&mdash;Mr. Hawke
-Holcroft, an English guest, and
-Evan Cameron, a sub. of the Black Watch,
-also on leave; and these two, attended by
-a keeper and gillies, were creeping up
-another corrie, rifle in hand, about half a
-mile distant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have had this&mdash;a&mdash;Mr. Holcroft
-with you for some time at Dundargue!'
-said Allan Graham, questioningly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;for some weeks&mdash;before we came
-up to the hills here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He cannot know anything about the
-implied engagement&mdash;that of Olive
-Raymond with me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Implied?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well&mdash;the peculiar arrangements that
-exist under her father's eccentric
-will.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Probably not&mdash;nay, undoubtedly not,'
-replied his father, eyeing him keenly; 'it
-is no business of his&mdash;so, whence the
-question, Allan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because he showed me, rather
-vauntingly, a very fine photo he keeps in his
-pocket-book.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A photo of Olive?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The deuce he does. I have thought
-her sometimes too <i>épris</i> with our horsey
-friend Hawke Holcroft, and thus longed
-for your return. They renewed at
-Dundargue, an acquaintance formed last
-season in London, when Olive made some
-sensation, I assure you; and, now that you
-have seen her photo, what do you think of
-her&mdash;pretty?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pretty! She is downright beautiful!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah&mdash;wait till you have seen her. She
-does credit to your mother's rearing and
-her governess's tutelage; but you have
-not exhibited much impatience hitherto.
-Gad, when I was your age&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You forget that she was such a child
-when we parted,' interrupted Allan,
-stroking out his long dark moustache. 'But
-was it not rather cool of him to show me
-her likeness?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps; but then it was done in
-ignorance of the situation, and it is
-probably the result of some conservatory
-flirtation.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But just as he showed it to me, was it
-not strange that I heard the cry of a
-plover overhead, and&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie interrupted his son by a
-hearty laugh, and tossed away the end of
-his cigar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'After eight years' soldiering with the
-Black Watch, do you actually retain the
-superstition that the plover is a type of
-inconstancy, and the bird of ill-omen
-Burns, Scott, and Leyden describe it as
-being?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan laughed, too; but now, when
-among his native mountains and the
-scenes of his childhood, he could not help
-old Scottish impressions returning to him,
-though certainly the ranks of his regiment
-were the last place in which he was
-likely to forget them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The silver-haired and silver-bearded old
-game-keeper, Dugald Glas (whose real
-name was Mackinnon), a hawk-eyed Celt,
-with a weather-beaten visage, and bare
-knees that were brown as mahogany, now
-urged silence and no more smoking. He
-had discovered by the aid of his binoculars
-a couple of deer grazing, but pretty
-far apart, upon the hill-side; and once
-again by private signal the two parties
-began mutually their stealthy approach
-upward in the two corries that concealed
-them in the <i>forest</i>, for so it was called,
-though destitute now of trees.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A forest, as the word was strictly
-taken in ancient times,' says Sir Thomas
-Dick Lauder, 'could not be in the hands
-of anyone but the king, yet in later periods
-forests have become the property of
-subjects, or have been erected by them,
-though without being protected by forest
-laws. The royal forest in the Isle of
-Wight, in which there is not a single
-tree, is not the only English example
-remaining of the view taken of this old
-meaning of the word.' Hence, he adds,
-'Let not the Cockney suppose that the
-word forest necessarily implies a district
-covered with oaks, chestnuts, or trees of
-any other description.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A powerful and gigantic staghound,
-wiry, sinewy, and iron-grey&mdash;the noble
-dog that Landseer loved to depict&mdash;saw
-the deer already without the aid of glasses
-and strained hard upon his leash, an iron
-chain, which was twisted round the muscular
-wrist of the old keeper, who soothed
-and patted him, while muttering in Gaelic,
-'<i>Mar e Bran, is e braithair!</i>' (If it is not
-Bran, it is his brother), alluding to Fingal's
-favourite staghound, which he was thought
-to resemble, as his hair was iron-grey, his
-feet were yellow, with erect ears of a
-ruddy tinge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The forenoon was brilliantly clear, so
-the deer-stalkers had not the weather to
-contend with, as that, if untoward, may
-render all strategy vain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie and his son were as
-well aware as their skilled old keeper that
-in stalking the chief things to regard are
-the eyes and nose of the deer. His vision,
-quick as that of an eagle, can detect a
-human head above a ridge of rock or belt
-of bracken, and he can scent an intruder
-on his 'native heath,' if the breeze blows
-<i>from</i> the former, at a wonderful distance;
-and old Dugald Glas, who had brought the
-father and son to the forest at dawn with
-us much care and secresy as if an assassination
-was in hand, had long scanned the
-vicinity with his glasses before he discovered
-the stags in question, and gave the
-concealed stalkers the signal to approach
-them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two animals were rather far apart;
-both were quietly feeding, and&mdash;as the
-season was considerably advanced&mdash;both
-in colour were marvellously like the grey
-stone and brown heather around them,
-and both were, as yet, all unalarmed as
-Lord Aberfeldie, the Master, and Dugald
-Glas, while pausing and holding ever and
-anon a council of war in low whispers,
-crept up the stony corrie, keeping carefully
-to leeward of the quarry they had selected,
-leaving Cameron of Stratherroch and
-Hawke Holcroft to approach the other as
-best they might; but it was in the present
-instance absolutely necessary that both
-parties should fire at the same instant, or
-one of the stags would vanish at a gallop,
-perhaps to the most distant limit of the
-forest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In crawling after such game the head
-must be foremost when going up a hill,
-and the feet foremost when going down,
-and the stalker must creep on his stomach
-and knees; and all this, when done in the
-kilt, over rough rocks, sharply-pointed
-heather, and mossy bog, is not to be
-effected without considerable toil and even
-discomfort.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nearly an hour of this kind of work had
-gone on, the father and son creeping side
-by side, softly and in silence, dragging
-their rifles after them, old Dugald following
-in the same fashion, with Bran straining
-on his iron chain; and once or twice
-they had actually to traverse the bed of a
-mountain burn that brawled hoarsely
-downward over its brown-worn pebbles
-and boulders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The stag was still feeding quietly, and
-all unconscious of the approach of death;
-and the stalkers were, they thought, within
-a safe distance now, and that it could not
-escape them; so Dugald Glas dropped
-behind, after whispering to the Master in
-Gaelic,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Blood upon the skein, Allan!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the heart of the latter began to
-beat highly as the moment for shooting
-drew near, for after all their care and toil
-it was quite possible that a grouse might
-whirr up from the heather, and with a
-warning cry scare the stag to full speed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You take aim, Allan,' whispered Lord
-Aberfeldie, 'and I shall reserve my fire.
-It is years since you had a shot at a dun
-cow, my boy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Inch by inch the Master cautiously
-inserted his double-barrelled rifle between
-the stiff tufts of purple heather that fringed
-the bank of the hollow up which they had
-been creeping, and brought the sights to
-bear upon the beautiful and graceful
-animal that cropped the herbage, with his
-branching antlers lowered; and Allan, in
-the excitement of the moment, felt his
-pulses beating wildly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If I miss&mdash;if I fail!' he muttered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tut&mdash;-there is no such word as fail!'
-replied his father, unconsciously quoting
-'Richelieu.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan drew a long breath, while his dark
-eye seemed to flash along the barrel, and
-fired. Bang went a couple of rifles in the
-distant corrie, but Aberfeldie and his son
-took no heed of them. The latter's single
-shot had sped true, piercing the stag above
-the left eye, and now it lay prone on the
-heather, tearing up tufts and sandy earth
-with its hoofs in the agonies of death.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan's skein-dhu was promptly in his
-hand; the stag was <i>gralloched</i>, and Dugald
-Glas, waving his bonnet, shouted loudly
-for Alister Bane and Hector Crubach (or
-lame Hector), two gillies, to bring up the
-pony, on which the dead animal was slung,
-and then the party set out for the place
-appointed for luncheon, as raid-day was
-now long since past.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What the deuce are Stratherroch and
-Holcroft about?' exclaimed Lord Aberfeldie,
-while shading his eyes with his hand;
-and to their success in sport we shall refer
-in the next chapter.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II.
-<br /><br />
-HAWKE HOLCROFT.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The process of creeping in serpent fashion
-over sharp-pointed heather, rough stones,
-and occasionally in the bed of a mountain
-stream, as we have already described,
-proved intensely tiresome and distasteful
-to a 'man about town' like Mr. Hawke
-Holcroft, who could not entirely conceal
-his genuine disgust thereat, and at the
-slowness of the whole affair, though
-reminded by Dugald's son Angus, a smart
-young under-keeper, of the big hart of
-Benmore, which was stalked for seven
-long summer days before it was killed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, for the Lord's sake, sir, keep quiet,'
-whispered Angus. 'We are now close on
-one of the finest of Macgilony's dun cows.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I see no dun cow!' grumbled Holcroft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He means yonder deer,' whispered
-Cameron, a fair-haired and pleasant-looking
-fellow. 'Macgilony was a famous
-hunter in the olden time, and his dun
-cows, as he called them, were the red
-deer of the Grampians.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But to Holcroft, whose idea of hunting
-the stag was to have a scared and
-bewildered creature&mdash;a fallow deer, fed on
-oats and hay, perhaps&mdash;cast loose from a
-game-cart in a smooth, grassy park, the
-perseverance, courage, and labour required
-for stalking in the Highlands seemed a
-simple waste of time and an inconceivable
-bore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stop for a minute,' whispered Angus,
-as they crept <i>up the wind</i>; 'the stag can
-smell with more than its nostrils.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the stoppage took place directly in
-the bed of a brawling burn, where they all
-lay on their stomachs, Holcroft not
-unnaturally asked, with no small irritation,
-what he meant; and the wiry young Highlander,
-who was whiskered and moustached
-to such an extent that, with his shaggy
-eyebrows, he somewhat resembled a Skye
-terrier in visage, explained his theory&mdash;no
-uncommon one, though, of course, not
-admitted by naturalists&mdash;that the red deer
-can both smell and breathe through the
-curious aperture beneath each eye, even
-if their heads are immersed in water
-when in the act of drinking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dioul!' muttered Angus, as they crept
-forward again, but on dry heather this
-time, 'we can't be too cautious, whateffer!
-A deer's eye is as keen as an eagle's, and
-his nose acute as that of a foumart.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The first shot shall be yours, Holcroft,'
-said Cameron. 'I shall reserve my fire.
-He seems a powerful animal, and, if you
-only wound him, we may have the devil
-to pay!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks&mdash;but how?' whispered Holcroft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If the dogs bring him to bay, he may
-turn upon us ere another cartridge can be
-dropped in the barrel, and gore deep with
-his horns.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-English sportsmen generally prefer having
-the deer driven to stalking them, for the
-bodily exertion requisite in the latter case
-tries so severely every muscle and sinew;
-but, to the true Highland hunter, one deer
-shot after a long and adventurous stalk, is
-worth a hundred knocked over after a
-successful drive by gillies, when the herd
-is urged in wild confusion through some
-narrow pass well garrisoned by breech-loaders
-in secure ambush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While Holcroft and Cameron crept softly
-forward nearer the browsing deer, the
-young keeper threw his plaid over the eyes
-of the staghound Shiuloch, and held it in
-by main strength, though his wrist was
-nearly dislocated by the strain of the leash,
-and the ill-suppressed whimpers of the
-animal were lost amid its muffling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now,' whispered Angus, hoarsely, full
-of excitement&mdash;'now is your time, sir!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holcroft took a long aim; in his intense
-anxiety, and perhaps inspired by vanity,
-he overdid his aim; he fired at the precise
-moment Allan's shot was heard in the
-distant corrie, but only wounded the stag
-in the shoulder, and, just as he let fly the
-contents of the other barrel (and missed),
-it fled away with the speed of the wind,
-followed by the swift and powerful hound,
-which, quick as thought, Angus let slip,
-and both vanished down a deep glen,
-overhung by silver birches, close by.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Ohone a Dhia!</i> but he has missed it,
-after all&mdash;it is no use guiding a Sassenach
-whateffer!' muttered Angus, under his
-thick, ruddy moustache; yet, as Cameron
-could read by the expression that
-twinkled in his hazel eyes, secretly not
-ill-pleased at the result, however.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I almost did it&mdash;hit him, at all events!'
-said Holcroft, with intense mortification,
-as he was too much of an Englishman not
-to wish to excel in everything that
-appertained to sport.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Almost!' repeated Angus, who added
-to Cameron, in a low voice, "<i>Cha d'rinse
-theob riomh sealg!</i>" (<i>i.e.</i>, Almost, never
-killed the game).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Better luck next time,' said the young
-Laird of Stratherroch, consolingly. 'Allan
-has knocked over his deer, I see.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Attempt and Did-not were the two
-worst hounds of Fingal,' muttered Angus,
-in his Perthshire Gaelic, with a furtive
-glance, fall of meaning, at Stratherroch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To the genuine Highlander,' says a
-recent English writer, 'it is a fixed article
-of belief that there never yet was a
-Sassenach who knew more about the wind and
-weather, or about the innumerable other
-mysteries which furnish the stalker with
-the tact and skill required to perfect him
-in his difficult craft, than a cow
-understands of conic sections. With true Celtic
-caution and prudence, the gillies tolerate
-the opulent tenant from the south out of
-respect for his cheque-book and his
-frequent drafts upon it; but in their hearts
-they look upon him as an <i>intruder</i>, and are
-not sorry when they contemplate his
-receding form, as he turns his face
-homewards, and leaves moor, loch, and mountain,
-glen and forest to 'their natural denizens.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And in this spirit Angus was secretly
-regarding the unconscious Mr. Holcroft,
-who had the genuine Southern idea that
-no man of woman born could undervalue
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So the little shooting-party united now,
-and, not unwillingly, all sat down to have
-luncheon, as they were sharply appetised
-by long exercise in the keen mountain air,
-and on no other tablecloth than the purple
-heather; the ample contents of a hamper&mdash;game
-pies, cold beef, bread, champagne
-(cooled in an adjacent runnel), whisky,
-and so forth&mdash;were laid out by the active
-hands of the gillies, expectant of their
-own repast when the time came.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They lunched near the mossy ruins of a
-clachan&mdash;some of those melancholy ruins
-so common over all the Highlands, the
-traces of a departed people who have
-passed away to other lands, evicted by
-grasping selfishness to make way for
-grouse and deer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There, the low, shattered gables, an old
-well, some gooseberry bushes that marked
-'where a garden had been,' were all that
-remained of a once populous village,
-whose men had often gone forth to fight
-for Scotland in the wars of old, and whose
-descendants in latter years had manned
-more than one company of the Black
-Watch in Egypt and the Peninsula.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the sunny hill-slope close by, a ruined
-wall, low and circular&mdash;above which appeared
-the grey arms of a solitary Celtic cross,
-an aged yew-tree, and where long grass
-waved in the wind&mdash;marked where lay the
-last of the clan, whom no human power
-could evict or send towards the setting
-sun; and these imparted a melancholy to
-the solemn scenery, for solemn it was with
-all its beauty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was of that kind peculiar to some
-parts of Perthshire, where the subordinate
-hills, rising a thousand feet and more
-above the valley, are entirely covered with
-dusky pines, taking away all that appearance
-of blackness and desolation presented
-by naked mountain masses, and adding
-softness and beauty to the landscape, which
-would otherwise be stern and grim. Nor
-were the glassy loch and the murmuring
-torrent wanting there, nor those passes
-where the mountains approach each other,
-and make them, like that of Killiecrankie,
-excel even the famous Vale of Tempe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though not very impressionable by
-Nature, Holcroft, influenced by the good
-things he was imbibing, said something
-about the beauty of the scenery, to which
-Lord Aberfeldie responded, adding, with a
-laugh,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do enjoy life in a shooting-box, and
-of all the entrancing sports to me there is
-none like stalking the deer.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With his sodden knickerbocker suit
-drying slowly upon him in the mountain
-wind, Holcroft could only assent to this
-faintly, and wished, perhaps, that, like
-Stratherroch, he wore a kilt, and could
-wring the water out of the plaits thereof.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of old in Scotland,' resumed Lord
-Aberfeldie, as he lit his briar-root pipe,
-'no man was deemed perfect in the craft
-of hunting till he had landed a salmon
-from the pool, shot an eagle on the wing,
-and killed a stag. But, when here in a
-shooting-box, I always thank heaven that
-I am at least fifteen miles from a telegraph
-wire, that letters can only come once a
-day, and just before dinner, and bills and
-lawyers' letters seldom or never at all.
-Have a glass of something before you
-lunch, Dugald,' he said, addressing his
-venerable keeper; 'I know you will prefer
-Glenlivet to all the Clicquot and Moet in
-the world.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A cless, thank you kindly, my lord,'
-replied Dugald, touching his bonnet,
-'though my mouth can hold more of
-whateffer it be.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, bowing to the company, Dugald
-drained it in quick time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I daresay, Holcroft,' said Allan, 'you
-would prefer the deer driven to being
-stalked?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Infinitely!' replied the other, as he
-quaffed a bumper of sparkling Moselle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I for one do not,' said the Master,
-emphatically.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The Highlander of old would follow a
-stag for days, or even for weeks, if
-necessary,' observed Lord Aberfeldie, with
-kindling eyes, 'sleeping in his plaid among
-the heather, he would lie where night
-found him. With his long gaff he would
-catch a salmon between the water and the
-sky; but when stalking he had no
-conception of the brutal German battues now so
-common in the Highlands, and so degrading
-to sport,' he added; in his energy,
-forgetting that there was something of
-rebuke in his remarks, which certainly made
-Holcroft's cheek redden with annoyance,
-and his rather shifty eyes to lower.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Master, aware that this subject was
-rather a hobby with his father, hastened
-to change the conversation by observing,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How strange it seems, Stratherroch,
-that you and I should be so suddenly here
-after all these past years with the
-regiment&mdash;here among the purple heather and
-green bracken again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And a few weeks hence will see us
-with it again, and back to the old
-pipe-clay routine,' said Cameron.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Regiments are now no longer what
-they were in my time,' said Lord Aberfeldie,
-a little irrelevantly, perhaps, but
-pursuing his own ideas. 'Examinations,
-cramming and useless pedantry, promotion
-by selection and compulsory retirement
-for the officers, with short service among
-the men, render corps no longer what they
-were in the old days, each a happy,
-movable home. The time when a young
-officer often said, with just pride and
-noble ambition, "My father and my
-grandfather have both commanded <i>this</i> regiment,
-and, please God, I hope at some period to
-do the same," can never come again! And
-what Highland officer now, in the Black
-Watch or any other of our national regiments,
-is followed to the colours by a band
-of his own name and kindred, or can
-speak of his comrades as "my father's
-people," or "the men from our glen;"
-and yet such was the case when yonder
-ruined clachan was instinct with village
-life, and the voices of children were heard
-around its humble hearths.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The hero of Ghuznee had a theory that
-no Scotsman was fitted to command a
-regiment,' said Stratherroch, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know that he detested Scotsmen, and
-brought six officers, all Scotsmen, to a
-court-martial; and it was then he is said
-to have made the statement which cost
-him so dear in India.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?' asked Holcroft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because, within an hour after, old
-Colonel Wemyss, of the 52nd, paraded
-him in rear of the cantonment, and planted
-a bullet in his body by way of curing him
-of prejudice for the future. Rather a
-convincing argument, old Wemyss thought
-it,' added Aberfeldie, laughing, as he
-knocked the ashes from his cherished briar-root,
-put it in its case, and dropped it into his
-silver-mounted sporran.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Talking of regiments, I saw yours at
-Portsmouth, Graham,' said Holcroft; 'and
-I thought the men looked graceful indeed,
-with their kilts over their left shoulders
-and their black sporrans waving above
-their bronzed faces.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether this was meant as a joke or a
-sneer, it is impossible to say; but his
-hearers took it as the former, and laughed
-accordingly, on which Holcroft added,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I mean their plaid-shawls over their
-shoulders. I remember that Miss
-Raymond laughed heartily when I made the
-same remark.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't wonder at that,' said Lord
-Aberfeldie. 'Olive is a girl who laughs on
-very slight occasions.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have not seen her since your
-return,' said Holcroft to Allan Graham.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; but I shall very soon now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She is a very handsome girl; what the
-deuce have the men been about to leave
-her all this time Miss Raymond?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All this time? Why, she has not yet
-seen her twentieth year,' exclaimed Allan,
-with some annoyance, as he thought of the
-photo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Her costumes are <i>chic</i>,' continued
-Holcroft, '<i>chic</i> to a degree! How I admired
-her portrait in the Grosvenor Gallery; and
-wise was the artist to label it "Fair to
-See."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan glanced at his father, and his face
-clouded to hear all this&mdash;praise though it
-was&mdash;in the mouth of Hawke Holcroft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have an appreciation of beauty,
-apparently,' said young Cameron.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who has not? Thus, as Disraeli says,
-"the action of lovely woman on our
-destiny is increasing," and, as Miss
-Raymond&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am Miss Raymond's uncle and guardian,'
-said Lord Aberfeldie, rather stiffly,
-and to Mr. Holcroft, as it seemed, a little
-irrelevantly, though cutting short
-whatever he meant to say; for the peer winced
-at the way in which his guest referred to
-his niece in the hearing of gillies and
-gamekeepers, and, more than all, in the
-presence of Allan, whose dark eyes wore
-rather a lowering expression; but, as all
-had hearty appetites after their recent
-exercise and long exposure in the keen,
-bracing mountain air of an autumn day,
-they were inclined to use their knives and
-forks rather than their tongues, and the
-subject, however pleasing to Mr. Holcroft,
-was dropped.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latter was not a pleasing type of
-Englishman, though his air and bearing
-were thoroughly those of a gentleman.
-He had a good square figure, but his legs
-were somewhat of the spindle order, as
-his knickerbocker suit revealed. He was
-flaxen-haired, fair-skinned, and somewhat
-freckled, with a tawny moustache and
-pale grey eyes; and strange it was that
-these, though weak-looking, cunning, and
-shifty, would assume at times, but covertly,
-a defiant, even ferocious expression, if
-evil passions excited him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was almost destitute of eyebrows,
-but had a massive chin; and as Allan
-Graham regarded him, as he lay stretched
-upon the grass leisurely smoking, he by no
-means showed his father's sentiment of
-friendship for this son of an old friend;
-and there grew in his breast a mysterious
-instinct&mdash;almost a presentiment&mdash;that
-Holcroft would in some way or other bring
-trouble upon them conjunctly or severally.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After the keepers and gillies had their
-repast, the luncheon apparatus was packed
-up, and, shouldering their rifles, the
-party set out for the shooting-box, which
-was situated in a pretty glen a few miles
-distant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Angus, who was&mdash;as his father boasted&mdash;strong
-as Cuchullin, again lifted the
-deer to the pony's back, and preceded by
-the family piper, Ronald Gair, with his
-pipes in full blast to the air of 'The
-Birks of Aberfeldie,' they departed down
-the winding path towards the dark blue
-loch that lay at the foot of the solemn,
-pine-clad hills.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like the gillies and keepers, Ronald
-was never seen without a sprig of the
-<i>Buaidh craob na Laibhreis</i> (the laurel-tree
-of victory), the badge of the Grahams, in
-his bonnet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ronald Gair's locks were silver now,
-but they had been dark enough when he
-played the Black Watch up the green slopes
-of the Alma, through all Central India, to
-the gates of Lucknow, and in later times
-to the corpse-encumbered swamps of
-Coomassie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holcroft winced at what he deemed the
-dissonance of the pipes, and cursed their
-sound in his heart; but he was too
-well-bred or too prudent to say anything on
-the subject as he strode by Cameron's
-side down the strath, with a huge regalia
-between his teeth. Indeed, he might have
-been pretty well used to their sound by
-this time, as Ronald Gair roused the
-household with them in the morning, preceded
-many a meal&mdash;dinner always&mdash;and seemed
-to spend most of his time in incessant
-'tuning up' between.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have a suspicion that he is bad form,
-this Holcroft,' said Allan to his father, as
-they could converse, unheard by the other
-two, amid the din of the pipes, which Ronald
-blew as if to wake the Seven Sleepers of
-Ephesus, or Holgar Danske in his cavern
-at Elsinore. 'I have heard that he half
-lives on play and his betting-book, and that
-his little place in Essex, or rather what
-remains of it, is dipped over head and ears.
-Indeed, he admitted jocularly to Cameron
-that it was mortgaged for thrice its value,
-three times over, a fact which would
-teach the holders prudence for the future.
-Why did you have him here or at Dundargue?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well&mdash;his father and I were old
-friends, as you know; his father, in fact,
-by an act of great bravery, saved my life
-at the Alma, when three Russians were at
-the point of bayoneting me, as I lay helpless
-on the field; so you see, Allan, I cannot
-help being at least hospitable to the
-poor fellow, and certainly his friend.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, Lord Aberfeldie had always been
-the latter to Holcroft, and not seldom his
-'banker,' but of this Allan knew nothing,
-nor was ever likely to know, so far as his
-father was concerned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He seems to consider Olive an heiress,'
-said Allan, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As&mdash;of course&mdash;she is.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And he dared to speak of her under
-the slangy name of "cash" to Stratherroch,
-as I, by chance, overheard.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie knitted his dark brows,
-and said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I detest slang&mdash;it is deuced bad form;
-but Holcroft belongs, I know, to a horsey
-set.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sun was setting now, and gradually
-his crimson glory was paling in fire on the
-hill tops, till it faded out and died away,
-and the shadows of the September night
-crept upward step by step from the
-deep glens below, and one by one the stars
-came out above the trees&mdash;a sea of dark
-and solemn pines that covered all the
-mountain slopes&mdash;and ere long the red
-lights from the curtained windows of the
-luxurious shooting-lodge were seen to cast
-long lines of wavering radiance across the
-bosom of the loch, by the margin of which
-it stood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere this, the great greyhound Shiuloch
-(whose name means speed) had returned,
-drenched with water (showing that he had
-pursued the stag into some distant loch)
-and bloody with more than one wound
-inflicted by antlers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sharp-set hunters had dined luxuriously,
-and cigars with brandy and soda
-had become the order of the night, when
-the Master said to his father,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think I have had enough of
-deer-stalking&mdash;three weeks nearly&mdash;and
-to-morrow I shall start for Dundargue.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think you are wise to do so,' replied
-Lord Aberfeldie, with a pointed glance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sorry to lose you, Graham,' said Holcroft,
-concealing under a bright smile his
-secret annoyance, envy, and alarm, of all
-which more anon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this sudden resolution Allan Graham
-was influenced, perhaps, by some remarks
-of his father, the viscount, and pique at
-those of Hawke Holcroft, together with a
-natural longing to see his mother and
-sister, and a growing consciousness that he
-had been somewhat remiss and, to say the
-least of it, ungallant to his cousin. Thus,
-next day, he took his departure for Dundargue;
-but he could little foresee all the
-bitter complications that were to arise, and
-to culminate in the future, through his
-merely lingering to stalk deer in his father's
-forest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When he went off, none shook his hand
-more warmly than Hawke Holcroft, though
-the latter muttered under his breath,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fool that I was, not to make my
-innings before this fellow came; but if
-some people could be put out of the way,
-that others might take their place, how
-much pleasanter this world would be&mdash;to
-other people, at least.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Little did the family of Aberfeldie know
-that in Hawke Holcroft they had among
-them an unscrupulous adventurer and most
-dangerous guest!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III.
-<br /><br />
-UNCLE RAYMOND'S WILL.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'Marriage, indeed!' exclaimed Olive Raymond,
-'it will be time enough to speak of
-that when this "laggard in love," your
-brother, turns up here at Dundargue.
-Besides, all women don't marry, so why
-should I?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Most pretty ones do, and marry you
-must!' replied, with a merry little laugh,
-Eveline Graham, the sole daughter of the
-house of Aberfeldie, to her English cousin,
-as she usually called her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Such stuff all this is! Does not the
-author of "The Red Rag" say that "if
-there is a circumstance calculated to breed
-mutual detestation in the minds of two
-young people, it is the knowledge that
-their respective parents have destined them
-for each other!"'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How readily you quote,' said Eveline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because I have the subject at heart.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were posed like a couple of Du
-Maurier's fashionable girls, and were
-leisurely sipping afternoon tea at a pretty
-Chippendale table from an exquisite
-Wedgwood service, and, for freedom to
-gossip, had dispensed with all attendance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both the cousins were handsome girls,
-whose bearded, belted, and corsletted
-ancestors&mdash;portraits of whom hung on the
-walls, and who had often
-</p>
-
-<p>
- 'Carved at the meal with gloves of steel,'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-in that same Castle of Dundargue&mdash;would
-have regarded such a repast and such a
-beverage as 'afternoon tea' with no small
-wonder, and, perhaps, disgust.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline Graham was very softly featured
-and slender in figure; but Olive Raymond,
-who was the taller of the two, was
-more fully developed, yet looked slim as a
-Greek goddess in a dress of deep blue that
-became her pure complexion and rich
-brown hair, with only a tiny bouquet of
-white flowers in the brooch at her bosom,
-and a multitude of silver bangles&mdash;emblems
-of conquest, perhaps&mdash;like silver fetters,
-on her slender and snowy wrists. She
-was fair and colourless, with dark grey
-violet eyes that looked black under their
-jetty fringes at night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline was more dazzlingly fair, but
-more <i>petite</i>, with soft, hazel eyes, and
-bright, brown hair that was shot with
-gold. She had exquisite hands and feet,
-and though <i>petite</i>, as we say, and slender,
-she had a peculiar grace and dignity of
-manner that only required a brocade-dress,
-ruff, and long stomacher to make her like
-one of her stately 'forbears,' whose
-portraits by Jameson were in the room in
-which she sat&mdash;a modern portion of the
-grim old Castle of Dundargue, the aspect
-and construction of which edifice were
-very different from those of the additions
-that had been made to it in later times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as the girls sit there, in the tempered
-light of the afternoon sun streaming
-through the French windows that open to
-a stately balustraded terrace, and sip their
-tea leisurely, their conversation will throw
-some light upon the past, and perhaps the
-future, of certain of our <i>dramatis personæ</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When Allan returns&mdash;'began Eveline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, don't talk to me again of Allan!'
-interrupted Olive Raymond, with a
-petulant toss of her pretty head, 'or I will
-begin to tease you about Stratherroch.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?' asked Eveline, colouring perceptibly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He loves you&mdash;and you know he does.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said Eveline, as a soft smile stole
-over her mignonne face; 'I cannot doubt
-it, though no word from which I could
-infer it has ever escaped his lips; but
-poor Cameron has little more than his pay.
-His paternal acres are mortgaged to the
-full&mdash;even the shootings and fishings,
-believe, don't come to him. I heard
-papa express to mamma his surprise that
-Cameron could "pull through," as he
-phrased it; that he would have no
-ineligibles in future dangling about me,
-and that&mdash;as I have nothing&mdash;I must
-marry <i>money</i>! That was the word&mdash;oh,
-how selfish it sounds, and how hateful!'
-added the girl, while her rosy little nether
-lip quivered. 'Poor Evan!' she
-murmured, dreamily; and as she uttered his
-name her voice, which was soft even as
-Cordelia's, became like that of Annie
-Laurie, 'low and sweet.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ineligibles!' said her cousin; 'and yet
-he invited here Mr. Holcroft, who is
-well-nigh penniless, and against whose
-attentions Aunt Aberfeldie specially warned
-me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the interests of Allan, of course.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Allan&mdash;absurd!' exclaimed Olive,
-shrugging her handsome shoulders. 'You all
-seem to forget that he can only remember
-me as a little girl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Still you are his <i>fiancée</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In a manner of way.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Distinctly so, if the tenor of your papa's
-will is to be observed.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then I think he might have had some
-curiosity about me, instead of spending
-days at that stupid deer-forest. For all
-he knows, I might have been a veritable
-fright!' added Olive, with growing pique,
-as she glanced at the reflection of her own
-beautiful self in an adjacent console-mirror.
-'If he thinks that, as Master of Aberfeldie,
-he has only to come and see, and
-conquer, I shall teach him that he is very
-much mistaken.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Olive&mdash;how can you talk thus?'
-expostulated soft little Eveline; 'his delay
-is probably all papa's fault.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am sure that I shall hate him then!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Query?' said Eveline, with a saucy
-smile on her lovely lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is no query in this case,' persisted
-Olive, as she set down her cup with
-a jerk; for in her spirit of freedom there
-was at times a curious but unexpressed
-antagonism in her heart to the family of
-Aberfeldie, as if she felt herself somewhat
-in their power, and even to her own
-disadvantage, and this spirit, which Holcroft
-was not slow to discover, had rather
-encouraged his hopes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He will be sure to love you, at all
-events, Olive dear, if he has any sense or
-power of observation at all&mdash;you are so
-pretty&mdash;nay, so charming.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Any fool may love a pretty face, and
-generally does so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But you possess much more than a
-pretty face, Olive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;the fortune which I am to
-share with him ere my twenty-fifth year.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Or, if you refuse&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'One half of it goes to him, and the
-other, or nearly so, to charitable
-institutions,' exclaimed Olive, her sweet face
-paling with absolute anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He will love you for yourself alone, I
-am assured,' persisted Eveline, in defence
-of her brother. 'You are beautiful, Cousin
-Olive; you ride, row, dance, play lawn-tennis,
-and flirt to perfection. Are not all
-these qualities calculated to excite
-admiration in a young officer; and then, more
-than all, you have such dear, funny ways
-with you.' And the warm-hearted girl
-concluded by laughing and kissing her cousin
-on both cheeks effusively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The tenor of this remarkable will,
-which has been referred to more than
-once, was, to say the least of it, peculiar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Some years before this period, Olive
-Raymond arrived at Dundargue an orphan,
-left in charge of Lord Aberfeldie&mdash;the
-child of his only sister, Muriel Graham,
-who had married a Mr. Raymond, a poor
-man, whom means furnished by the Aberfeldie
-family enabled to become one of the
-wealthiest planters in Jamaica. Both her
-parents had died early, and after her
-location at Dundargue she became a species of
-sister to Eveline and Allan Graham.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Happy, indeed, was Olive alike in her
-Scottish home in the lovely Carse of
-Gowrie, and when the family took up their
-abode, according to the season or the
-sitting of Parliament, at their West-end
-residence in London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By will, Mr. Oliver Raymond left his
-entire fortune, which was very
-considerable, to his daughter; but, in gratitude to
-the family of his wife, on the strange
-condition that she was to marry his nephew,
-Allan Graham, whose death alone was to
-free her from that contingency. If she
-unreasonably refused, then, in that case,
-after her twenty-fifth year, she was to
-forfeit all that would accrue to her, save a
-very slender allowance&mdash;the share so
-forfeited to become the inheritance of her
-cousin Allan; and if <i>he</i> declined to wed his
-cousin Olive, then, in <i>that</i> case, the money
-so forfeited was to go to such Scottish
-charitable institutions as Lord Aberfeldie
-and the other trustees might select.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This will was, undoubtedly, a strange
-one; but then Mr. Raymond had been a
-strange and eccentric man, animated by
-an intense regard and esteem for the
-family of his deceased wife, the Grahams
-of Aberfeldie, to whom he felt all his good
-fortune had been due.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As children, the tenor of this tyrannical
-will in no way affected the relations of
-Olive and Allan with each other; and the
-latter&mdash;a manly and sturdy lad, when at
-home from the College of Glenalmond,
-where he pursued his studies and cultivated
-cricket, boxing, and football&mdash;petted
-and made much of the violet-eyed and
-brown-haired little cousin, who had dropped
-among them as if from the clouds; but
-after he had joined the Black Watch as a
-subaltern, and years passed on, and they
-began to be talked of and deemed in the
-family circle as an engaged couple,
-betrothed, affianced, and all the rest of it,
-the young beauty and heiress began to
-resent the terms of the will bitterly,
-perhaps not unreasonably; she became, as we
-have said, antagonistic, and was perplexed
-to think that her father could not have
-foreseen some difficulties on the part of
-his two legatees.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus, as they both grew older, she
-seldom replied to the letters which Allan
-wrote to her, by his parents' desire,
-perhaps, rather than his own, till he ceased to
-write to her at all, on which she became
-severely piqued; and once when she was
-a little way on in her 'teens,' and when
-Allan was at home for a very brief period
-before departing to India, she treated
-him with an indifference&mdash;almost
-animosity&mdash;that made him deem the girl wayward,
-cold-hearted, even purse-proud, and
-everything unpleasant; and with this fatal
-impression he rejoined the Black Watch, and
-amid many a flirtation might soon have
-forgotten the heiress that was growing up
-for him at Dundargue, but for the letters
-he received from thence, and in which
-ample references to her and her beauty
-and accomplishments were never omitted;
-while she, on the other hand, when she
-became of a marriageable age, seldom
-ceased to stigmatise the will as outrageous,
-indelicate, grotesque, and unjust.
-And now that her cousin Allan was coming
-home&mdash;nay, <i>had</i> come home&mdash;for a protracted
-period on leave of absence, she felt
-that a crisis was at hand in her fate&mdash;a
-crisis in which she, like a hunted creature,
-knew not how to escape.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Allan will soon learn to love you
-for your own sake,' returned the gentle
-Eveline, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How can I ever be certain of that?
-Oh, I owe little indeed to papa, who by
-such a will as his seeks to degrade both
-your brother and myself,' replied Olive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Degrade!' exclaimed Eveline, her hazel
-eyes distending.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;by forcing us into a marriage on
-one hand, or to accepting starvation on the
-other.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Starvation!&mdash;such strong language,
-Olive,' said Eveline, in a tone of rebuke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of the alleged tie that bound her to
-Allan Graham, and of the latter himself,
-personally, she had never thought so
-seriously as she had done of <i>late</i>; and, truth
-to tell, in the opportunities afforded by
-mutual residence in a country house&mdash;that
-great rambling castle especially&mdash;Mr. Hawke
-Holcroft, by his subtle attentions
-when no one else was near, had begun to
-interest her more than Lord or Lady
-Aberfeldie could have relished or conceived;
-and to her it seemed that for some time
-back at Dundargue (continuing a
-sentiment he had striven to rouse during a
-past season in London) his eyes bad been
-telling in imploring and passionate glances
-what his lips had not yet the audacity to
-utter; but then the girl was young,
-enthusiastic, impressionable, and far from
-insensible to admiration and flattery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though she did not and could not regard
-Allan Graham as a lover, and disliked
-thus to view him in the light of her
-intended husband, circumstances now
-compelled her to <i>think</i> of him; and though she
-remembered him chiefly as the playmate
-of her childhood, she was piqued that he
-seemed in no haste to meet and see her,
-but instead had openly manifested, as she
-thought, indifference and lack of interest
-or curiosity, by shooting at Aberfeldie Lodge
-for days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thus pique made her not indisposed to
-encourage the attention of others,
-especially of Hawke Holcroft, as we shall show,
-when he returned to Dundargue before his
-departure for London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive Raymond in her pride of heart
-bitterly resented the tenor of her father's
-will. She knew that by the chances of
-war, climate, and foreign service generally,
-she might never have seen her cousin
-again; but now the inevitable seemed at
-hand, and she felt herself in a measure
-set apart for him as fairly as if she had
-personally betrothed herself; but was she
-to be bound, while he was absolutely free?
-And stories she had heard&mdash;some of them
-artfully and casually dropped by Holcroft&mdash;of
-more than one flirtation at Chatham
-and elsewhere, added to the pique in which
-she was indulging.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie now came in through
-one of the open French windows for her
-cup of afternoon tea, with a bright scarlet
-shawl loosely floating over her handsome
-head and shapely shoulders, quitting the
-terrace, where she had been amusing
-herself by feeding the peacocks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was looking unusually radiant as
-she announced that Angus, the young
-keeper, had just come from the shooting
-lodge to inform her that the Master would
-be home that afternoon, and that his
-rooms must be put in order for him
-without delay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So, on hearing this, the wilful Olive
-resolved to pay a protracted visit elsewhere,
-and to be absent when he did arrive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No woman understood the art of dressing
-better than Lady Aberfeldie, and well
-was she aware how truly a dainty maize or
-a coral colour with rich black lace
-trimmings became her brunette tints, her dark
-hair and eyes, her pure, yet slightly olive
-complexion. Her whole air was graceful
-and queenly, as befitted one who was
-always to 'walk in silk attire.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie never forgot that she
-had been the belle of three seasons in
-Belgravia, and an heiress to the boot, though
-the memories of others might be less
-retentive; and now, in her fortieth year,
-she was a very handsome blooming woman
-still.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We must have some dinners and no
-end of dances and lawn-tennis parties,
-mamma, in honour of Allan's return,' said
-Eveline, as she assisted her mother to
-tea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank God, my dear boy is home&mdash;home
-again&mdash;and safe at last&mdash;after all he
-has faced and undergone,' said Lady
-Aberfeldie, with a bright and fond expression
-in her fine face. 'Why, it seems but
-yesterday, Olive, that you and he were little
-chits playing together on the lawn or at
-Nannie's knee&mdash;when you had rag dolls,
-and used to sing together of the old
-woman that lived in a shoe, or "High upon
-Highlands and low upon Tay," or of
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "Alexander, King of Macedon,<br />
- Who conquered the world but Scotland alone;<br />
- When he came to Scotland his courage grew cold,<br />
- To find a little nation courageous and bold,<br />
- So stout and so bold&mdash;"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-You remember the nursery song, Olive?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have forgotten it, aunt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then I hope you will remember in its
-place the adage&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What adage?' interrupted Olive sharply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That a good son makes a good husband,'
-said Lady Aberfeldie, archly, and
-laughing as she tapped her niece's soft
-cheek with her teaspoon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Adages are not to my taste, aunt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Child, what makes you seem so cross
-to-day?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The weather, perhaps,' suggested Eveline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Olive, who had rather a mutinous
-expression in her soft face, remained
-silent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is bad form in our day of joy,'
-said Lady Aberfeldie, who had been eyeing
-her closely. 'In society well-bred people
-always control their emotions&mdash;their feelings.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Easy enough for them, aunt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because they have seldom any feelings
-to control.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And to prevent more being said with
-reference to Allan&mdash;a subject she
-dreaded&mdash;Olive Raymond withdrew.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><br />
-THE GRAHAMS OF DUNDARGUE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Who would have imagined that within a
-few yards of the elegant and stately
-modern drawing-room in which these three
-handsome women of the best style were
-chatting and sipping their tea, there still
-existed within the old walls of Dundargue
-a hideous oubliette or bottle dungeon, like
-those that were in the Castle of St. Andrews
-and ancient peel of Linlithgow&mdash;so
-named from the French word to 'forget.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shaped like a bottle, it was&mdash;and
-is&mdash;totally dark and of great depth, with no
-outlet but its narrow mouth, through
-which prisoners were precipitated and left
-to die. 'Dante,' says Victor Hugo, when
-describing that in the Bastille, 'could find
-nothing better for the construction of his
-hell. These dungeon-funnels usually
-terminated in a deep hole like a tub, in
-which Dante has placed his Satan, and in
-which society placed the criminal
-condemned to death. When once a miserable
-human being was interred there&mdash;farewell
-light, air, life, and hope! It never went
-out but to the gibbet or the stake.
-Sometimes it was left to rot there, and human
-justice called that forgetting. Between
-mankind and himself the condemned felt
-an accumulation of stones and jailers,
-and the whole prison was but one
-enormous and complicated lock that barred
-him out of the living world.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From such places the shrieks and wails
-of despair and death&mdash;death from thirst
-and hunger&mdash;never reach the upper air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the oubliette of Dundargue was
-examined a few years ago there was found
-in it a mass of unctuous-looking mould
-that made those shudder who looked upon
-it. It was full of skulls and human bones.
-Of whom those beings had been even
-tradition was silent; but, as some coins
-of Edward I. of England were found
-among the ghastly remains, they were
-supposed to have been certain English
-prisoners or fugitives, who, when flying
-from the siege of Perth, had fallen into
-the hands of Sir Malise Graham of
-Dundargue, in the Carse of Gowrie, a
-relentless enemy of the invaders of his country,
-who said, grimly, 'A few Englishmen less
-in the world would make the world all the
-better,' and, dropping them successively
-into the oubliette, placed a huge stone
-over the mouth of it, and 'forgot' all
-about them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From a short distance beyond Dundee,
-called 'The Beautiful' in the days of old,
-the lovely and fertile Carse of Gowrie, so
-famed in Scottish song, stretches far
-westward, bounded by the Firth of Tay on
-the south, and a line of undulating hills
-on the north, till it narrows to a vale
-among the rocky eminences that overlook
-the fair city of Perth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Carse is not quite a dead level,
-for here and there slope up wooded or
-cultivated elevations, named Inches,
-serving to show that in the ages they won
-their name the Carse had been a wide,
-open lake; but above one of these inches
-towers the abrupt, though not very lofty,
-rock crowned by the Castle of Dundargue,
-an edifice on which the surrounding hills
-have looked down for centuries.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Bronze or iron rings, to which the
-Romans are said to have moored their
-galleys, were lately to be seen in the
-rock of Dundargue, and cables have been
-found at the foot of the Sidlaw Hills,
-relics of the time when an inland sea
-rolled its waves against their now grassy
-slopes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The original castle, or strong square
-tower, starts flush from the edge of the
-rock, out of which its oubliette and lower
-vaults are hollowed, standing clear and
-minute against the sky, and its machicolated
-battlements rise high above the
-more florid modern additions of the days
-of James VI. and Queen Anne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From its stone bartizan can be seen the
-sweep of the broad, blue Firth of Tay,
-with its vessels, the varied surface of the
-beautiful Carse of Gowrie clothed with
-leafy timber, narrow stripes of sand-edged
-land, and long stretches of cultivated
-ground, studded with curious old orchards
-and ancient and hoary forests of dwarf
-oak; and on the north and west the glorious
-blue mountains, piled over each other
-in ranges, and capped, afar off, by the
-historic Grampians.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The earliest portion of the edifice is
-said to have been built by Sir Malise
-Graham, and possesses the battlemented
-bartizan, which was a decided feature in the
-architecture of Scotland long before her
-intimate connection with the Continent;
-and the tenures of many houses in the
-vicinity are still held by owners who, if
-they had to fulfil the original obligations,
-would be compelled to bring to the castle
-coal for its fires, beer and beef for its
-tables, and oats for the chargers of the
-men-at-arms, with cords to bind and hang
-prisoners condemned to the dule-tree.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Grahams, Viscounts of Aberfeldie
-and Barons of Dundargue in the peerage
-of Scotland, had the barony bestowed on
-them in 1600, in consequence of the
-bravery of the then laird at the battle
-of Benrinnes, six years before, and the
-viscounty in 1648, for doughty deeds done
-in the wars of the Covenant; but they
-had been lairds of Dundargue in days that
-were remote indeed&mdash;the days of that
-Graham who, when expiring of a mortal
-wound on the field of Dunbar, gave his
-sword&mdash;the same weapon now preserved
-in the house of Montrose&mdash;to his son,
-'the Graham' of future battles, 'the Richt
-Hand of Wallace,' in whose arms he
-expired of a wound, after the battle of
-Falkirk, leaving the patronymic of 'gallant'
-to all his descendants.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In one apartment hung with Gobelin
-tapestry stood a bed wherein Charles II. had
-reposed before his coronation at Scone;
-and another had been occupied by his
-nephew, James VIII., of the Scottish
-Jacobites, before he went to visit Castle Lyon,
-the guest of John, Lord Aberfeldie, who
-declined to sit in the Union Parliament,
-and who, to the end of his days, even when
-George III. was king, was wont to assert
-'that green peas and the other edibles
-were always a month later, after that vile
-and degrading incorporation,' and that
-many a sweet flower never blossomed
-again after the White Rose was destroyed
-at Culloden.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In right of gift to an ancestor, the
-present peer was Hereditary Keeper of
-the Royal Palace of Falkland, and as such
-wore a key and chain of silver at his neck
-on collar days at Windsor and elsewhere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a September afternoon&mdash;almost
-evening&mdash;when the pastures had become
-parched, the foliage shrivelled and of
-various tints, and high-piled wains came
-rocking over the furrowed fields and through
-green lanes as the harvest was led home,
-that a horseman 'might have been seen'
-(to use the phraseology of Mr. G. P. R. James)&mdash;nay,
-was seen&mdash;to ride leisurely
-down the Carse and take a flying leap over
-a hedge into the great lawn of Dundargue,
-and then, after trotting his horse between
-belts of trees, he drew his bridle for a few
-minutes, while he lingered and regarded
-fondly and admiringly the old structure,
-which he had not seen for well-nigh seven
-years; and Allan, the Master of Aberfeldie&mdash;for
-he the rider was&mdash;thought there was
-not in all the Carse of Gowrie another
-residence to compare with Dundargue for
-the many stories and characteristics that
-circle about a house which has been for
-ages the home of one family, with all its
-historic memories, its traditions and patriotism.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The shadows of the great old trees
-under which more than one Scottish king
-had blown his hunting-horn fell far along
-the turf, that was green as an emerald and
-soft as velvet. A semi-transparent haze,
-mingling with the sunshine, pervaded the
-Carse land; the smoke of an adjacent
-village ascended from the hoary orchards
-around it, and far eastward fell the shadow
-of the tall and weather-worn keep of
-Dundargue, with all its tourelles, or Scottish
-turrets, tinted redly by the rays of the
-setting sun; and Allan's heart swelled as
-he looked around, for the love of his native
-land was strong within him, and he
-recalled the words of an English writer, who
-describes it as the place chosen by Nature
-as the mirror of her beauty:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She has planted it in the northern seas,
-with its mountains fronting the western
-sun, and watered its plains and valleys
-with a thousand streams, over which the
-lights of heaven are poured with an
-illumination and a glory, with an entanglement
-and a mingling of all the colours that can
-make earth beautiful. There is no land
-in all the world which, for the softer
-splendours of mountain and fell, wood and
-stream, surpasses Scotland!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Allan now remembered that the
-green ridge on which he had reined up
-his horse for a moment or two had been
-to him a place of fear, when a child, as
-the abode of the <i>Daoine Shi</i>&mdash;the goblins
-or fairies&mdash;who could be heard at work in
-the heart of the knoll, busily opening and
-shutting great chests, the contents of
-which were alleged to be the pillage of
-pantries, larders, and meal-girnels; and
-once an old housekeeper at Dundargue,
-who contrived to circumvent them by
-securing the door of her premises, was
-struck with blindness, from which she did
-not recover till the barrier was removed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan saw a lady suddenly appear upon
-a path close by that which led to the
-avenue; and she proved to be no other
-than Olive Raymond, who, intent on being
-absent when he arrived, came thus upon
-him face to face, yet neither knew the
-other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On her arm she bore a little basket, with
-some presents for her poor pensioners.
-The cordiality and kindness of Olive to
-the poor and labouring people made the
-periodical return of the household from
-London and elsewhere more than a matter
-for local rejoicing. There were none about
-Dundargue but loved her, as they also did
-Eveline Graham, though the latter did
-less among them; and the Scottish peasantry,
-it must be borne in mind, unlike others
-elsewhere, are usually too self-reliant and
-full of proper pride to accept aid from
-Dorcas, blanket, food, or coal societies.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Well mounted, Allan had substituted a
-light-grey tweed suit, which well became
-his dark complexion, for his shooting-kilt
-and jacket, and as a sudden light or
-conviction came upon him, aided by a memory
-of the photo he had seen in Holcroft's
-possession, he sprang from his horse when
-the young lady drew near.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I beg your pardon,' said he, as he
-threw the bridle over his arm and lifted
-his hat; 'I cannot be mistaken, changed
-though you are&mdash;you are my cousin, Olive
-Raymond?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She blushed deeply, and said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you&mdash;are Allan Graham!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Olive. Oh! how good, how kind
-of you to come and meet me,' he replied,
-his heart beating lightly as he looked into
-her beautiful face and deftly possessed
-himself of her hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Far from it,' she replied, seeking to
-release herself, and now growing pale with
-positive annoyance at his supposition. 'I
-have some duties to do at the village. I
-hope you enjoyed your shooting excursion?'
-she observed, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I did&mdash;and yet&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So much so, indeed, that you were in
-no haste to come home,' said she, laughing
-to conceal her secret vexation at the
-rencontre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan found his intended wife all that he
-could have wished, and more than he could
-have imagined. The little girl he had left,
-had now expanded into a tall, proud, and
-lovely one&mdash;lovelier than he had ever
-dreamed of her being; and under her
-pretty black velvet hat her grey-violet
-eyes regarded him with a curious mixture
-of shyness and confusion in their expression,
-and&mdash;though he did not then detect it&mdash;resentment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When he had last seen his 'little wife,'
-as he was wont to call her <i>then</i>, she
-was a madcap girl, with all her golden
-hair flying far and wide from a pearly
-neck and brow, rippling and unconfined.
-Now her braided hair was of the richest
-brown, and she was the belle of a London
-season, and he could not help acknowledging
-in his heart the many charms she
-possessed, and suddenly becoming very
-appreciative thereof.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hope Mr. Holcroft is enjoying his
-sport among the hills?' said she, after
-another pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never mind Holcroft,' replied Allan, a
-little piqued by her manner; 'have you no
-welcome for me, Olive?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course you are glad to be home
-again,' said she, evasively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have always loved dear old Dundargue,
-even when I came home as a boy
-from school, and now I shall love it more
-than ever.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can you ask me&mdash;when you are its
-permanent inmate?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I may not be so always,' said she,
-pointedly. 'Nothing lasts for ever; but
-as we are cousins&mdash;' she was about to add
-something, yet paused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And more than mere cousins can ever
-be to each other. You might at least give
-me your hand, Olive,' said he, drawing
-nearer to her as she looked up at him,
-earnestly, shyly, and then, he began to think,
-rather defiantly, with those wonderful
-violet-grey eyes of hers. She gave him
-her right hand, and, though cased in a
-tight glove, a soft and warm little hand it
-felt; but he drew her towards him, and,
-ere she could avert the act, was softly and
-swiftly kissed by him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Don't</i>,' she exclaimed, as she snatched
-her fingers from his clasp. 'How dare
-you?' she added, repelling him with both
-hands outspread, and a laughing indignation
-that was <i>not</i> all laughter; but he
-looked at the sweet red lips as though he
-longed to offend again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Olive, how can you treat me thus, after
-all these years?' he asked, with an
-emotion of annoyance. 'Have you forgotten
-what jolly playmates we used to be; how
-we went nutting and seeking birds' nests
-together, made rag dolls, and chorused
-"Alexander, King of Macedon," and so
-forth, with our old nurse, Nannie
-Mackinnon, the wife of Dugald Glas?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have not forgotten; but I had
-thought, or hoped, that you had done
-so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot say,' replied the wilful beauty,
-pouting and yet confessing in her secret
-heart how handsome he looked, and how
-winning he was in eye and manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I remember, too,' said he, laughingly,
-'the scores of times we used to wander in
-the garden, or on the heather braes,
-seeking bees to <i>blob</i> and get the honey out of
-them; and when on May mornings you
-used to catch a snail by the horns, and
-toss it over your left shoulder as an omen
-of luck in marriage.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Allan, such odious and absurd things
-should be forgotten.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We were children, then; and what
-fun we had when fishing with tinnies in
-the burn for minnows and pow-wowits
-under the old brig-stone. Do you remember
-how I used to climb to get birds' nests
-for you, and how we wove fairy caps of
-rushes and bluebells in many a green howe
-of the Sidlaw Hills?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How can you treasure such childish
-memories, Allan?' she asked, but with
-momentary softness in her manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because such were very dear to me
-when far away in other lands and other
-scenes, when the Indian sky was like a
-sheet of heated iron overhead, and the
-breeze that came from the sandy desert
-was like the breath of the death-blast;
-when cattle perished by the empty tanks,
-the birds sat on the dusty trees with eyes
-closed and beaks agape, and when strong
-soldiers died on the line of march, stricken
-down by sunstroke or sheer exhaustion.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor Allan!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you are going to the village?'
-said he, inquiringly, seeing that she
-manifested no desire to return with
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But won't you accompany me home,
-now that I have returned?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You must excuse me&mdash;I do so
-enjoy a walk in the evening before
-dinner.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have not seen my mother for seven
-years,' he said, reproachfully; 'yet, if
-you will permit me to accompany you to
-the village, I shall do so, and then escort
-you home.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot trespass on your time so
-much,' she replied, with a slight <i>soupçon</i>
-of sarcasm in her tone; 'besides, what
-would Aunt Aberfeldie think of your
-being in no haste to see her, after
-lingering so long at the deer-forest?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan thought rightly that he now
-detected the true source of her pique and
-peculiar greeting; but he knew nothing
-yet of her bitter opposition to the terms
-of her father's will.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Aunt and Eveline are anxiously waiting
-you, so do not let me detain you longer.
-If an escort back is requisite, I shall
-doubtless find one with ease,' and, nodding her
-head smilingly, she tripped down the
-tree-shaded avenue and left him; thus he had
-no choice, though looking after her with a
-sigh, but to remount and ride towards the
-house, or rather the castle, of Dundargue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So&mdash;so she had so little interest in him,
-in his return and his society&mdash;that she
-would neither turn back with him nor
-permit him to escort her, but had left him to
-pay some trumpery visits which she could
-do at any other time, day, or hour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How was this?' he asked of himself.
-'Holcroft has certainly something to do
-with it. Why the deuce did my father
-bring the fellow here?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan's hitherto languid interest in her
-had become quickened by the sight of her
-undoubted beauty and grace, and he was,
-perhaps, a little unreasonably piqued by
-her open indifference as to his return from
-remote foreign service, and to his views
-and whole affairs. Thus the breach
-between these two&mdash;if such we may call
-it&mdash;seemed likely to widen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes more the affectionate
-effusiveness of the welcome home accorded
-him by his mother and his tender sister
-consoled him, but it contrasted in his mind
-powerfully and painfully with that of his
-cousin; yet he could scarcely expect that
-she would have flung her soft arms round
-his neck and kissed him again and again
-with hungry affection on both cheeks as
-they did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The pater, dear old fellow, will be
-home in the course of a day or two,' said
-he. 'Mr. Holcroft is coming with him,
-and Stratherroch, of Ours, too,' he added.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He noticed that Eveline's pale cheek
-coloured for a moment at the name of the
-latter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, you know him, it seems?' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, very well,' replied Eveline, frankly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He has been at home with the dépôt
-lately. A right good sort is Evan Cameron,
-but desperately hard up, poor lad. I often
-think he will have to exchange for India
-or something of that kind, though it would
-break his heart to leave the Black Watch.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline's long lashes drooped as her
-brother said this, all unconscious that his
-casual remarks were secretly wounding
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The expression he could plainly detect
-in the sweet and expressive face of his
-sister at the mention of Evan Cameron
-gave Allan some occasion for thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He loved and esteemed his friend and
-brother-officer, but felt it would be a
-serious misfortune indeed if any affection
-took root between him and Eveline; for
-Evan was poor, as we have hinted, his
-estate valueless to him, and 'at nurse;'
-and there was, moreover, a necessity for
-Eveline making a wealthy marriage&mdash;indeed,
-her father, Lord Aberfeldie, had
-already a suitor in view for her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am so sorry that our dear Olive is
-out,' said Allan's mother, breaking a little
-pause; 'but we knew not at what hour to
-expect you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I met her in the avenue&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you knew each other&mdash;how
-strange!' exclaimed Lady Aberfeldie, with
-a brightening face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, after a minute or two. She seems
-as charming a girl as one&mdash;to use a
-soldier's phrase&mdash;might see in the longest
-day's march.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And such she is. She did not turn
-back with you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, mother,' he replied, with hesitation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But she was, of course, glad to see
-you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can't say that she was particularly,
-mater dear; and she got into a regular
-pet because I dared to kiss her, even in a
-cousinly way.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dared, my darling boy!' exclaimed his
-mother, indignantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fact, mater,' said the Master, smiling
-and twirling up the ends of his long dark
-moustaches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie and her daughter
-exchanged a swift and mutual glance; but
-the latter knew more of the views of the
-young lady in question than the former did.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am glad you are pleased with Olive,'
-said she; 'and when your acquaintance is
-fully resumed you will find the dear girl all
-you could wish.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She has wonderful blue-grey eyes; they
-seem violet-blue when she smiles, and black
-when she is angry.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Angry?' said Lady Aberfeldie, inquiringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, she rather looked so when I
-ventured to kiss her in the avenue,' said
-Allan, laughing, and referring to a kiss
-that, though snatched, he was never to
-forget, perhaps, in the long years that
-were to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She has grown the very image of her
-mother, your poor Aunt Muriel, who was
-one of my bridesmaids.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-By visits to the minister's manse and
-elsewhere Olive had wilfully and petulantly
-contrived to protract her absence from
-home to the last moment; the dressing-bell
-had rung, and before dinner she was
-hastily giving a few touches to her costume&mdash;not
-that she cared to attract her cousin
-(quite the reverse)&mdash;but she dismissed her
-foreign maid, Clairette Patchouli, on a sign
-that Eveline wished to talk with her alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, Olive,' began the latter, 'that you
-have seen Allan&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I saw him years ago,' interrupted Olive,
-pettishly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He was a boy then; but now that he is
-a man, and not the boy you remember,
-what do you think of him?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive made no reply, but continued to
-slip her bangles on the whitest, roundest,
-and most taper pair of arms that ever
-bewildered the senses of man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Isn't he very handsome?' persisted
-Eveline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To partial eyes, perhaps, but there are
-plenty of men in the world quite as
-handsome&mdash;even more so, I doubt not. I like
-him already, but don't let him think so;
-besides, I also like our English visitor,
-Mr. Holcroft.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do <i>not</i>!' said Eveline, decisively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He is horsey in bearing, and his face,
-though handsome, I grant you, often wears
-a sinister, sharp, and supercilious expression.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How tanned Allan is by the Indian
-sun!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think his face and head both grand
-and handsome!' exclaimed his sister, with
-affectionate enthusiasm; 'he quite reminds
-me of the old Greeks.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was not aware you knew any of them,'
-laughed Olive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Their sculptures, I mean,' replied
-Eveline, as they swept down the great
-staircase to the dining-room.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V.
-<br /><br />
-OLIVE AND ALLAN.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A few days had now passed since Allan
-Graham's return to Dundargue, but he
-seemed&mdash;though greatly attracted by his
-cousin Olive, and in a manner compelled to
-think of her as something more than a
-mere cousin&mdash;to make no progress in her
-favour at all. Sometimes he smoked beside
-her in utter silence, while she swung in a
-hammock between two trees on the lawn,
-deep&mdash;or affecting to be so&mdash;in the last
-three-volume novel that had come in the
-box from Edinburgh; and, when they stole
-furtive glances at each other, his were
-curious and hers, under the shadow of
-her gorgeous Japanese umbrella, were
-hostile, defiant at least, and thus not
-without a certain drollery; but few remarks
-were interchanged of a more exciting
-nature than that 'the weather was lovely,'
-or 'the leaves were falling.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In these days, and for long after, Olive
-was terribly uncertain in her moods, and
-to Allan Graham it seemed at times as if
-she almost disliked him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When they were alone together, which
-was seldom, she scarcely spoke to him,
-and thus his enforced silence disposed her
-to be more silent still. To Olive the whole
-situation was one of miserable unrest; she
-felt that there was something grotesque
-in it, and she longed intensely to be
-anywhere else than at Dundargue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While Allan, admiring her rare beauty
-and pretty, petulant ways, was already
-learning to love her, he found his tongue
-loaded, as it were, tied up, and his
-tenderness cramped by the strange tenor of
-her father's will, which made him feel that,
-love her as he might, that love would never
-seem pure, or without the taint of selfishness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had procured for her at Malta a
-complete suite of gold and pearl-mounted
-Maltese jewellery, the best that could be
-found in the Strada San Paoli, costing
-him more than even he could well afford;
-but now so cold and repellant was her
-demeanour that he had not the courage as
-yet to present the elaborate trinkets&mdash;so
-rich in fretwork and fine as a gossamer
-web&mdash;so they were left to repose in their
-purple velvet cases.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet his thoughts about her were
-becoming persistent now. Times there were
-when he conceived that he would treat her
-judiciously, but tenderly, and in such a
-fashion that her feelings must slide into a
-species of sisterly, or at least cousinly,
-interest in him; but then&mdash;at these times&mdash;a
-flash of her dark grey-blue eyes cast
-these intentions to the winds, though
-Allan began to feel nothing but passionate
-love for her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To him, as to her, the situation imparted
-an awkwardness now, that of course he had
-never been conscious of when a boy. He
-did not want the money of his cousin or of
-anyone else, as he muttered to himself
-while tugging and twisting his thick, dark
-moustache; and thus, with all the
-tenderness that was growing in his heart for
-Olive, he often unconsciously adopted
-towards her a studied courtesy and almost
-indifferent bearing that somewhat galled
-her ready pride, and made her think 'this
-indifference to me, and the beauty all men
-aver I possess, can only spring from a love
-he bears some one else; and, with that
-love in his heart, he seems actually ready
-to conform to the outrageous wishes of
-papa!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And more convinced of this suspicion
-did she become when she found that he
-evinced no more desire to seek her society
-than that of his mother or sister; but this
-was the result of her own bearing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan was ere long in sore perplexity.
-The slightest attempt at tenderness she
-repelled or seemed to shrink from, as a
-sensitive plant shrinks from the touch;
-and, on the other hand, the lack of it
-seemed to increase her coldness and rouse
-her sense of pride.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What the deuce is the meaning of
-this?' muttered Allan, as he chanced upon
-a volume one day. It was a very
-handsome and expensive edition of some of
-Byron's poems, which had been given by
-Hawke Holcroft to Olive as a birthday
-gift, and on turning over the leaves of
-which he found innumerable paragraphs
-and lines pencilled on pages that seemed
-to fall naturally open, where these marks,
-all of which referred to love and passion,
-were most plentiful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All of these seemed to have been selected
-with an ulterior view for her perusal
-and study. Allan knit his brows and
-tossed the volume to the other side of
-the table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So, so,' thought he, 'Cousin Olive has
-had a guide for her reading, and the guide
-is that fellow Holcroft. He has made
-good use of his time, hang him!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive, who had been watching him under
-the deep fringes of her eyes, smiled when
-she saw the action, and, instantly divining
-the reason of it, resolved not to leave her
-Byron lying about in future; and now a
-new mood seized her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tell me, Allan,' she said, suddenly
-looking up from a piece of music she was
-studying, 'did you ever think of me at
-all when you were all these years far
-away in India?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have you forgotten what I told you on
-the evening we met on the lawn?' said he,
-reproachfully, yet surprised by her taking
-the initiative in a conversation, especially
-of this kind. 'Often, indeed, did I think
-of you!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How&mdash;in what fashion?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As my merry little playmate when I
-was a mere youth&mdash;the droll girl to whom
-I was somehow tied up under Uncle
-Raymond's will.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You phrase it rightly,' said she, biting
-her coral nether lip. 'Tied up; yes, but
-I won't be so. Yet you did think of me
-as a droll little playmate?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; how else could I think of you?
-Not as the lovely girl I find you now,
-Olive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You may know by this time that I hate
-all flattery,' said she, blushing hotly at
-what she had brought upon herself by a
-blunt reference to a hitherto ignored
-subject&mdash;their mutual relation to each other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have here a gift I brought you from
-India,' observed Allan, timidly, as he
-unlocked his desk and thought of the Maltese
-ornaments, but did not dare refer to them
-as yet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A gift?' said she, coldly, with face half
-averted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A little silver idol of Siva, beautifully
-carved and chased&mdash;will you accept of it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks&mdash;with pleasure,' said she,
-trembling lest it had been a ring. 'How
-curious, and yet how grotesquely hideous it
-is!' she added, turning it round, and then
-balancing it in the white palm of a slim
-and delicate hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And rather a curious story attends
-it&mdash;if you care to hear.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Please to tell me,' said she, her
-curiosity roused. 'Why, the funny thing has
-ever so many heads, and a dozen of arms
-at least!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We were in cantonments at Hurdwur,
-in Delhi,' said Allan, glad to secure her
-attention even for a few minutes, 'when
-a subadar-major of the 10th Native Infantry,
-a disciple of Siva, wishing to sacrifice
-to his little idol, placed it by the bank of
-the river there, which is one of the greatest
-places for Hindoo purification, and the
-resort of thousands of pilgrims from every
-part of Hindostan. While he turned aside
-to get the ghee with which to anoint it,
-some person adroitly carried it off. After
-searching for it in vain, with consternation
-in his soul, the unfortunate subadar-major
-went to the priest of the nearest temple,
-and, with tears in his eyes, related his loss.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Dog!" exclaimed the priest, "you
-have lost your god, and must prepare to
-die, for death alone can soothe the wrath
-of Siva."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"If die I must," replied the wretched
-subadar-major, with clasped hands and
-trembling knees, though a brave man, as
-the medals on his breast proved, "it shall
-be by drowning in the holy river; so come
-with me to the edge thereof, and give me
-your blessing."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The priest consented, and followed him
-to the Ganges, into which he went deliberately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Be courageous, my son&mdash;die with joy,
-and perfect happiness awaits you,"
-exclaimed the priest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"My dear master," said the subadar,
-"before I perish, lend me <i>your</i> god that I
-may adore it&mdash;the water is already up to
-my neck."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The priest consented, and handed his
-idol to the subadar-major, who, as if by
-accident, let it drop in the deep water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Ah! master," he exclaimed, as if in
-horror and dismay, "what a new
-misfortune! Your god is also lost, and so we
-must die together&mdash;for you must drown,
-too, and go with me to the throne of
-Siva!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And, approaching the priest, he strove
-to grasp the hand of the latter, who stood
-pale and trembling on the lowest step of
-the ghaut or landing-place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"What trash do you speak?" the priest
-suddenly exclaimed, in great wrath; "can
-there be any harm in losing a little image
-of baked clay, not worth an anna! I have
-dozens of such in my temple close by; let
-us each choose one, and keep silence on the
-subject!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The subadar did so then, but chose
-this fine silver one, which he bestowed on
-me for kindness shown to him when
-dying of a wound received in a skirmish,
-and I brought it home as a bauble for you,
-Cousin Olive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She placed the idol on the table, and
-remained silent, while Allan eyed her
-wistfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why is my presence so distasteful to
-you?' he asked, after a minute's pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Distasteful! Oh! Allan, don't say so,'
-said she, impressed by the pathos of his
-tone, but for a moment only; 'it is you
-who think, or seem to think so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Olive!' he exclaimed, a little impatiently
-and reproachfully as he drew near her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There&mdash;there&mdash;that will do,' said she,
-starting up, 'don't bring down the
-ceiling on me&mdash;auntie more than all!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And she swept from the room, leaving
-the idol behind her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan sighed with annoyance, and
-addressed her no more during the whole of
-that day. She was conscious of this, for
-she remarked to Lady Aberfeldie in the
-evening,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How odd&mdash;how strange Cousin Allan
-is to me!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Strange?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, aunt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know not what you mean, Olive,' she
-replied, a little gravely and severely; 'but
-to me it seems that you are always strange,
-and not my son, the Master.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie had a soft, but set face
-of the classic type, with a mouth that,
-though beautiful and aristocratic, could
-become very fixed in expression at times,
-and it seemed so now to Olive, thus that
-young lady withdrew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Our Allan is young and handsome,
-noble and most unselfishly in love with
-her, as I am beginning to hope, Eveline, so
-what more would Olive Raymond wish
-for?' said Lady Aberfeldie to her daughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She would have that, which she has
-not, mamma, perfect freedom to accept or
-refuse whom she chose. Unselfish in love
-I know Allan must be; but that is precisely
-the point which Olive is left to doubt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Wherefore?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Through that unlucky will, which
-makes a kind of bondswoman of her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I would to heaven the silly document
-had never been framed! I have often
-feared that it might lead to all our attention,
-care, and affection being misconstrued
-by her; but Allan might have been sickly,
-weakly, even deformed, and, with the terms
-of this will hanging over her, what would
-she have thought then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then, as I have heard her say, the will
-might be reduced by a court of law.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this reply a clouded expression came
-into the fair, colourless face of Lady
-Aberfeldie, but just then a servant in the
-Graham livery, yellow and black, approached
-with a note on a salver.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'From papa!' she said, while cutting it
-open with a mother-of-pearl knife. 'Just
-a line or two to say he will be home in a
-couple of days, and is certainly bringing
-with him Mr. Hawke Holcroft, "the son
-of his old friend," and that other young
-detrimental, Stratherroch. He is well-nigh
-penniless, but, with your papa, to be
-in the Black Watch is quite equal to a
-patent of nobility.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline felt her colour fade, while a sad
-expression stole over her soft face, and
-her mother, after glancing at her
-narrowly, added,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He also brings our wealthy friend, Sir
-Paget Puddicombe, the M.P. for
-Slough-cum-Sloggit, in Yorkshire. You remember
-him in London last season, and how much
-he admired you, dear?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline <i>did</i> remember him, and how the
-rich but elderly baronet's attentions,
-encouraged by her parents, were the ridicule
-of her girl friends and the bane of her
-existence; yet she only sighed and
-remained silent, and, passing through a French
-window, quitted the drawing-room to join
-her brother, who was smoking a cigar on
-the terrace, and teasing the peacocks as
-they sat on the stately balustrade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was in rather a similar mood. He
-felt the demeanour of Olive after the little
-episode of the idol keenly, and, remembering
-the pencilled Byron, was, of course,
-inclined to connect Hawke Holcroft with
-that demeanour; so he had certainly
-become, for a time, cold and constrained in
-manner to his cousin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When was that photo of Olive done?'
-he asked, rather abruptly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The one in the ball dress?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When we were last in Edinburgh; but
-I do not remember where the studio was.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She gave one to that Mr. Holcroft.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was quite unaware that she did so,'
-said Eveline, with some annoyance of
-manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look here, Eve, if, when in London,'
-grumbled Allan, 'she shies her photos
-about in this fashion they will soon be in
-every fellow's possession, and we may,
-ere long, expect to find them, like those
-of professional beauties, on glove and
-match-boxes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a funny and horrid idea!' said
-his sister, passing her arm through his and
-nestling her head on his shoulder, while
-he, stooping, kissed her <i>mignonne</i> face with
-a smiling caress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is nothing funny about it,' he
-replied, though, like her, he could little
-foresee the trouble that unlucky photograph
-was to cost in the future. 'And, to
-say the least of it, Olive treats me with
-almost hostility at times.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She does not conceal from me a
-resentment at her lack of free will.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As for Uncle Raymond's arrangements,
-I would to goodness that he had left all
-he had to his old housekeeper and her
-infernal screeching cockatoo with the
-yellow tuft.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Certainly Olive does not seem to be the
-kind of girl to be disposed of against her
-wish, Allan; you may read that in the firm
-tread of her little feet, in the carriage of
-her head, and the perfect possession of her
-manner.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But surely she may be won&mdash;though
-she will not understand me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hope she will ere long; but is there
-not a writer who says, Allan, that while
-the world lasts the difficulty of women
-understanding and making allowance for
-the feelings of men in what pertains to
-love, "will be probably one of the great
-sources of darkness and confusion in the
-social arrangement of things."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a dear little casuist it is,' said he,
-as she raised her <i>petite</i> figure on tip-toe to
-kiss his well-tanned cheek; 'but,' he added,
-'I am in a state of great uncertainty.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Uncertainty can always be ended; but
-then perhaps how bitterly&mdash;how very
-bitterly,' replied Eveline, who was not
-without some harrowing thoughts of her own;
-and something in her tone caused Allan
-to regard her soft hazel eyes, and sweet,
-shy face, with tenderness and inquiry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of what are you thinking, or of&mdash;<i>whom</i>?'
-he whispered, as his arm went
-caressing round her, and he stroked her
-bright, sheeny hair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I may trust you, Allan?' she said, in a
-broken voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To death, <i>petite</i>. You are thinking
-of&mdash;of Evan Cameron?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline sobbed now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Has he spoken of love to you?' asked
-Allan, in a low voice, and with a troubled
-expression in his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never; he knows it would be hopeless,'
-she replied, huskily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor Evan! and the governor is bringing
-him again&mdash;a grand mistake! How
-the deuce is all this to end with us? But
-don't sob so, my little darling,' he added,
-as he drew her closer to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet, despite her brother's sympathy and
-tenderness, Eveline Graham let her tears
-flow freely, and he promised to keep her
-secret that she and Evan Cameron cherished
-an unspoken and hopeless love for
-each other; and in a brief space they were
-to meet again!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile, though somewhat relieved
-by having her brother for a confidant, she
-was both restless and unhappy. She
-strolled upon the terrace to feed the
-peacocks, or wandered listlessly in the garden,
-going from occupation to occupation,
-taking up a book&mdash;one of Mudie's last&mdash;only
-to toss it aside; seated herself before the
-piano, rose then and left it. Anon she
-resorted to her sketching-block, sorted her
-colours, selected a brush, only to quit any
-attempt to work with a hopeless sigh.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><br />
-THE CHAGRIN OF LOVE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie duly arrived at Dundargue
-with his three gentlemen visitors, their
-approach being heralded by the pipes of
-Ronald Gair, who was perched on a seat
-of the game-laden wagonette as it bowled
-up the avenue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the first day of his return the peer
-was anxious to learn upon what footing
-the cousins were&mdash;if Allan had made a
-proposal, or 'even opened the trenches,'
-and if so, with what success. On these
-points he was enlightened by Lady Aberfeldie,
-and, though not very much surprised
-to find matters as they were, he trusted
-to propinquity and cousinly feeling of
-intercourse, as trump cards in the game, and
-was sure that all would come right in the
-end, and before Allan's leave of absence
-was out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was no selfishness in this desire
-of Lord Aberfeldie. He had no power to
-alter the matter as it stood, for if she did
-not marry Allan if he was willing to marry
-her, 'then and in that case,' as the will
-had it, her patrimony would be lost even
-to herself. Allan's death alone would save
-it for her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Great indeed, thought the girl with
-bitterness, must have been her father's regard
-for the house of Aberfeldie!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What friends&mdash;such lovers we might
-be but for the confounded plans of that
-eccentric old fellow!' was the ever-recurring
-thought of Allan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are at least fond of her?' said the
-peer, as he and his son smoked their
-cigars together on the terrace that
-overlooked the far-stretching vista of the Carse
-of Gowrie, then bathed in the ruddy splendour
-of the setting sun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fond of Olive! Yes, as much as she
-will permit me to be. She is my cousin,
-of course,' replied Allan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is something evasive&mdash;doubtful&mdash;in
-your answer; but you must at some
-time or other propose to her. You know
-precisely the terms of her father's
-remarkable will.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, and that it hangs like a millstone
-round the necks of us both, rendering
-what may be the dearest wish of our
-hearts liable, perhaps, to the grossest
-misconstruction. She has more than once
-told Eveline that to gain freedom of action
-she would face poverty&mdash;anything.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tuts! Romantic rant! Much she
-knows of what poverty is. But why
-should she even think of facing it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To be free and unfettered, as I have
-said.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Relinquishing to you all that portion
-of her fortune which does not go to
-charitable institutions?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor girl! A silly and impetuous
-threat. But she will think better of it,
-Allan, by-and-by, and we have fully five
-years to count upon yet.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it did not seem as if the fair Olive
-was likely to change her mind soon, to
-judge by her bearing that evening, when,
-after dinner, the guests and family at
-Dundargue assembled in the drawing-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The repast was over, and thereafter,
-ere the ladies withdrew, Ronald Gair, with
-all his drones in order, his Crimean,
-Indian, and Ashanti medals glittering on
-his breast, had marched thrice round the
-table, according to his daily wont, in 'full
-fig,' looking as only a Highland piper or a
-peacock can look; and, to the amazement
-of Sir Paget Puddicombe and the disgust
-of Hawke Holcroft, winding up 'The
-Birks of Aberfeldie' by several warlike
-skirls at the back of his master's chair&mdash;the
-dinner, we say, was over, and the
-gentlemen had joined the ladies in the
-stately drawing-room, which was lighted
-by more than one glittering chandelier.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie, his son, and Stratherroch,
-as they wore the kilt, had, of course,
-substituted for their rough shooting-jackets
-others of black cloth, with the
-irreproachable white vests and ties as
-evening costume, and had also assumed
-their silver-mounted dirks; while
-Holcroft and one or two more were <i>de rigueur</i>
-in the funereal attire, which a writer calls
-'the butler-suit, the most hideous clothing
-yet hit upon by our species.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In that brilliant drawing-room, grouped
-with well-bred people, were some curious
-elements of secret doubt and future
-discord that did not quite meet the eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holcroft hung over the chair of Olive
-so closely that, at times, the tip of his
-long and waxed tawny moustache nearly
-touched her head, while she played with
-her fan, opening and shutting it listlessly
-as they conversed in low tones, he adopting
-a sentimental one, though it was ever
-his boast that he 'was not one of those
-fools who hoard by them dried flowers,
-locks of hair, and all that sort of thing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quietly watched by Lady Aberfeldie,
-whose lips wore their set expression, Evan
-Cameron was entirely occupied with her
-daughter, while Allan seemed quite as
-intent on a new guest, Miss Logan of
-Loganlee, a girl possessed of considerable
-personal attractions; and his father talked
-politics with Loganlee himself, the parish
-minister, and Sir Paget Puddicombe, a
-short, pompous, and squat, but rather
-pleasant little man, with a prematurely
-bald head, which he had a way of jerking
-forward from his neck like a turtle, a
-rubicund face, two merry eyes, and whose
-age was rather doubtful, but too old any
-way for a girl of Eveline Graham's years,
-though he affected considerable juvenility
-of manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie, who generally about
-that time, when at Dundargue, was wont
-to enjoy a quiet little game of chess or
-bezique with Olive or Eveline, was rather
-bored by the <i>empressement</i> with which the
-clergyman, Sir Paget, and Loganlee
-discussed politics and the prospects of the
-ministry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latter, a sombre man, whose air of
-respectability was almost oppressive, was
-one of a style of men common enough in
-Scotland. A small landed proprietor, he
-had contrived to become M.P. in the
-Liberal interest for a cluster of Scottish
-burghs (each of which, if in England,
-would have had two members), and
-he was chiefly noted&mdash;being 'Parliament
-House bred'&mdash;for neglecting Scottish
-interests and toadying to the Lord-Advocate,
-and consequently obtained the usual legal
-reward, a sheriffship, or something of that
-kind, with a thousand a year or so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seldom opened his mouth, save to
-talk on politics; he was tall and thin, with
-very square shoulders, grizzled, sandy,
-mutton-chop whiskers, apple-green eyes,
-and nothing more about him remarkable,
-save a curious air of perpetual self-assertion,
-combined, as we have said, with an
-oppressive one of respectability.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His host began to change the tenor of the
-conversation by hoping that Sir Paget found
-his quarters comfortable last night, adding
-that he occupied 'the Johnson Room.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why is it so called?' asked Sir Paget,
-jerking forward his bald head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dr. Johnson slept a night in Dundargue
-when on his famous tour.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of which Boswell makes no mention?'
-said Mr. Logan, inquiringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because my ancestor did not pay him
-sufficient deference; and, indeed, I fear
-we should scarcely ever have heard of the
-literary bear of Bolt Court and Fleet Street
-but for that Scotch toady of his. Though
-he alleged that the most valuable piece
-of timber in Scotland was his walking-stick,
-he might have seen some fine trees
-at the Birks of Aberfeldy. We must ride
-over there, Sir Paget, and I will show you
-the cradle of the Black Watch, my old
-regiment of immortal memory.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was first mustered there on the 25th
-of October, 1739.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah!' said Sir Paget, who was not so
-much interested in the matter as the
-speaker.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Paget was a childless widower, and
-had been left a noble fortune in many
-ways, including nearly the whole of
-Slough-cum-Sloggit, of which his father
-rose by his own merits to be mayor. He
-had entered the town a tattered lad, with
-only a sixpence in his pocket, and, in
-due time, the sixpence became the basis
-of colossal wealth. He had been made
-a baronet by the ministry of the day&mdash;no
-one knew precisely for what; but the
-wealth he left behind him gave his son
-an interest in the eyes of Lady Aberfeldie
-he was unlikely to attain in the soft hazel
-orbs of her daughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Paget generally stood with his chest
-puffed out, reminding one of a pouter-pigeon,
-his little, fat hands interlaced
-behind his back, and often as not under
-the tails of his coat, his round,
-good-humoured face and twinkling eyes turned
-up to the faces of those with whom he
-conversed, as most men, and women, too,
-had the advantage of him in stature.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a gold <i>pince-nez</i> balanced on his
-very pug nose, he was what young ladies
-described as 'an absurd little man' whose
-tender speeches they laughed at&mdash;none
-more than Eveline&mdash;till matters took a
-serious turn, though he failed to feel the
-truth of the aphorism, 'Let no lover
-cherish sanguine hopes when the object
-of his choice has grown to look upon him
-in the light of the ridiculous.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Evan Cameron, we have said, sighed
-for Eveline; hopeless as his undeclared
-love had been, the presence of the wealthy
-English baronet, in conjunction with
-certain rumours he had heard, made it more
-hopeless than ever; and, unattractive
-though Sir Paget's years and figure, he
-felt intuitively that in him he had a
-dangerous rival.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When he found that this most eligible
-<i>parti</i> was again on the <i>tapis</i>&mdash;one whose
-name had been associated with that of
-Eveline in at least one 'society' paper
-during the last London season, poor
-Stratherroch's heart sank down to zero. He
-felt and knew that, with Lady Aberfeldie
-especially, he was literally 'nowhere' by
-his want of wealth, though, like a true
-Highlander, he could trace his lineage
-back into the misty times of Celtic
-antiquity; but, aristocratic though she was,
-the peeress set little store on that.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline Graham seemed as much beyond
-his reach as the moon. He felt that, for
-his own peace of mind, he ought to quit
-Dundargue as soon as possible, yet he
-clung desperately to the perilous delight
-of the girl's society.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To all appearance, the pair were simply
-looking over, almost in silence, a large
-book of clear-skied and strongly-shadowed
-photos of Indian scenery brought home
-by Allan, yet both their hearts had but a
-single thought, and, when the downward
-glance of his soft grey eyes met hers, she
-felt that, in spite of herself, there was
-something in it like a magnetic spell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Passionate and pleading eyes they were,
-generous and loving in expression, telling
-the tale his lips had not yet uttered, and
-might never do so; and the girl lowered
-her white lids as if a weight oppressed
-them, and the diamond locket on her white
-bosom sparkled as a sigh escaped her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A little way off, in something of the
-same pose, Hawke Holcroft, with a glass
-in his pale, sinister eye, was hanging, as
-we have said, over Olive Raymond, doing
-his utmost in <i>sotto voce</i> to fascinate that
-young lady, while pretending to translate,
-as suited the occasion and himself, for the
-edification of his fair listener, the
-lettering of one of the Chinese or Japanese
-fans that were strewed about the tables.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, Mr. Hawke Holcroft knew nothing
-about the terms of Mr. Raymond's will, or
-of the existence of any such document, and
-might never know. He was only certain
-that Olive was undoubtedly an heiress;
-that he himself was very impecunious, and
-ere long might be well-nigh desperate; and
-so he did not see why he should not, to
-use his own horsey phraseology, 'enter
-stakes as well as another.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rumour, certainly, had linked the names
-of the cousins together; 'but if she is
-engaged to Graham,' thought the observant
-Holcroft, 'it is strange that she wears no
-engagement ring.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knew not that, separated as the pair
-had been almost from childhood, no such
-little formality as the presentation of a
-ring could have been gone through; and
-now, as the Master did not see his way to it
-as yet, Holcroft was 'scoring,'or thought so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was leaving nothing unsaid to
-enchain her attention. He seemed very
-clever: at least he could converse fluently
-on many subjects; seemed to have been
-everywhere and to have seen everything
-worth seeing, or pretended to have done
-so, which was most likely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'However they stand, her heart is not
-in it,' was his ever-recurring thought; 'and
-if so, why the deuce shouldn't I try my
-hand? She has a pot of money&mdash;indeed,
-no end of money, I hear; but, then, if her
-noble aunt and uncle have made up their
-noble minds to pounce upon her as a
-daughter-in-law, how is she to resist, unless
-she elopes, if "Barkis" (meaning Allan)
-"is willin'"? They can make her life a
-burden to her until she gives in, or&mdash;or I
-run away with her, and why the devil
-should I not?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holcroft was an artful man, and well
-acquainted with every phase of dissipated
-life; he had suave manners when he chose
-and an unexceptionable appearance. With
-many debts and secret passions, he was
-cold and selfish; a man who never made a
-move in any way without forecast and
-calculation; and who might commit a crime
-if driven to it, but never precisely a folly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was closely watching Olive while he
-conversed with her; he admired her beautiful
-person, but still more her ample purse.
-She dared to trifle with him at times, he
-thought; and then, even when looking
-down upon her satin-like hair, her dazzling
-white shoulders and innocent violet eyes,
-with a vengeful feeling he mentally vowed
-that he would <i>compel</i> her to love him, or
-accept him, he cared not which, if human
-will and cunning failed him not!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had a love&mdash;a passion for her&mdash;in a
-strange fashion of his own, yet times there
-were when he almost hated her for fencing
-with him: and little could the soft, bright
-beauty, who raised her fine eyes from time
-to time to his and conversed so laughingly
-with him, have conceived the conflicting
-emotions that were concealed in his breast
-under a smiling exterior, or the shame and
-agony he was yet to cost her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even when he attempted to look loving,
-there were a cold expression and lack of
-colour in his eyes, and there was something
-very significant of an iron will about
-his lips and powerful chin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive had no warm feeling for Holcroft,
-and save for the obnoxious will would
-infinitely have preferred her cousin Allan
-in the end; but she affected just then to
-believe in Platonic friendship (blended
-with a little judicious flirtation) so firmly
-that, to pique Allan, she showed a great
-apparent preference for his would-be
-rival.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive and Holcroft knew that this seeming
-flirtation was perilous work, and might
-compromise them both with Lord and
-Lady Aberfeldie, and with Allan, too, if it
-attracted attention; but Holcroft had a
-game to play. Olive's proud little heart
-was full of resentment and pique, and then
-anything with a spice of danger in it is
-always curiously fascinating.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-More than all, Olive was beginning to
-feel conscious that, under the circumstances,
-it was strangely awkward to be in
-the same house with Allan Graham&mdash;the
-intended husband to whom her father had
-bequeathed her. But whither could she go?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In more than one instance, in the drawing-room
-at Dundargue, that night was
-illustrated the aphorism that language is
-given us to conceal our thoughts, and
-much was exhibited of what the French
-not inaptly term the chagrin or peevishness
-of love.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><br />
-LE CHAGRIN D'AMOUR.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Allan Graham, with all his quiet and
-growing love for Olive, seeing how she
-received him, neither petted her as he was
-wont to do in his boyhood, nor after a time
-had attempted any tenderness with her;
-but trusted to the progress of events and
-the necessity for fulfilling her father's wish
-rather than to his own influence or power
-of persuasion, aware that she could only
-become the bride of another, penniless, or
-nearly so, a circumstance which militated
-sadly against himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But this assumed coldness and calmness
-withal, Olive could feel, with a woman's
-acuteness in such matters, how much the
-expression of his dark eyes and the tone
-of his voice changed and softened,
-unconsciously, when he looked at and addressed
-her. She was of his own blood, like a
-sister, whom he might treat with formality
-or affection, coldly or playfully, according
-to the occasion or the mood, and whom he
-might love as much as he liked, or she
-would permit. Ah! this tender and
-mysterious tie of cousinship must give
-him, as he thought, 'a great pull' over
-Hawke Holcroft, and every other man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On this evening, how handsome she
-looked, in all her wilfullness! How Allan
-longed that he might take her in his
-embrace, to kiss her starry eyes, her
-peach-like cheek, and sheeny hair with an
-ardour he had never felt in his boyhood,
-when he had done so many times; but
-now, somehow, he dared scarcely think of
-such a thing, and there was that fellow
-Holcroft, with all his easy insouciance, and
-with the smile of one who never laughed
-really in his life, hanging just rather too
-much over her, with a considerable amount
-of empressement in his eyes and manner,
-pouring his flowery nothings into her
-apparently willing ear, and Lady
-Aberfeldie, who could stand this no longer,
-became secretly provoked, and opened and
-shut her fan of heavy mother-of-pearl with
-such vehemence that the sticks rattled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, with the emotions we have described
-in his heart, Allan, as if the further
-to play out the game of cross-purposes, in
-a spirit of pique, doubtless, remained in
-close attendance on Miss Ruby Logan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the latter was not the heiress of
-Loganlee, as she had several brothers; but,
-even had she been so, it would not have
-enhanced her value in the ambitious
-estimation of Lady Aberfeldie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Ruby was a very handsome girl,
-with a skin pure, transparent, and delicate
-as the lining of a shell, while her fine hair
-was ample in quantity, and of the darkest
-amber; her eyes large, deep-blue, and
-fringed by dark lashes. She was large,
-full in form, and altogether a bright and
-attractive-looking girl, and Olive felt
-conscious that she might prove rather a
-formidable rival if she ever had to view her as
-such.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Replacing the three daughters of the
-minister of Dundargue, who had been
-afflicting the company with much boarding-school
-Mozart and Chopin, who would have
-deemed anything national vulgar, to say the
-least of it, compared with some lachrymose
-drawing-room ballad, and who in a ditty of
-great length and mystery, which we quote at
-second hand, had informed their hearers&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Mermaids we be,<br />
- Under the blue sea'&mdash;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-replacing them, we say, Ruby Logan sang
-to Allan in a rich mezzo-soprano voice,
-and with a suppressed emotion, born
-perhaps of a coquettish desire to dazzle and
-please him, as a handsome young fellow of
-good position, all of which proved a fresh
-annoyance to my Lady Aberfeldie, who
-deemed music at times 'a convenient noise
-for drowning conversation, and under
-whose shelter the old people talk scandal
-and the young people make love,' and who
-knew that Miss Logan, like Olive, had
-that wonderful charm, which is, perhaps,
-one of the greatest any girl can possess, a
-lovely and ever-changing expression; and
-even Allan, as he gazed down into the
-depths of her dark-blue eyes (while she
-sang <i>at</i> him), and anon glanced furtively at
-Olive, thought to himself,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How the dickens <i>will</i> our little game of
-cross-purposes end?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie was just then indulging
-in the same surmise, as, full of
-watchfulness, she occupied an ottoman in the
-centre of the inner drawing-room, cresting
-up her white throat and well-shaped head;
-looking in her stately beauty like the
-heroine of some grand old Scottish
-romance of the days of Montrose or Prince
-Charles, for there was something of a past
-age in her style and bearing, though
-attired in the latest fashion by a modiste
-of Princes Street.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In her matronhood, Lady Aberfeldie
-had still that subdued charm which was
-not now the beauty of youth, yet stood
-very much in place of it; but, with all her
-softness of manner, she was a proud and
-determined woman, capable of doing much
-to accomplish a purpose of her own, and
-the marriage of Eveline to Sir Paget
-Puddicombe was certainly her purpose at
-present.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thinking that it was high time to make
-some change in the general grouping, the
-moment Miss Logan's musical performance
-was done she summoned Allan to her side
-by a wave of her fan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So glad I am that your father, who so
-often mistakes, invited dear Sir Paget
-here,' she said, in low voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He is rather a good sort,' replied Allan,
-in his off-hand way; 'capital cellar and
-preserves, I have heard.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So rich, and not <i>very</i> old; he always
-admired Eveline, and she certainly cares
-for no one else&mdash;thus I have great hopes
-for her, Allan,' she added, confidently; but
-Allan sighed; he knew better, and recalled
-the tears of his gentle sister on the
-terrace, and her half murmured admissions of
-deep interest in that winsome young
-brother-officer, whom he loved so well;
-and, as he remained silent, his mother
-spoke again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mr. Holcroft seems to be fairly absorbing
-Olive; he has been talking to her quite
-long enough, and this will not do; ask her
-to play something at my request, and do
-you lead her to the piano.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We are anticipated,' said Allan, as he
-saw his sister seat herself at the
-instrument with young Cameron by her side,
-busy among the leaves of her music; and
-a shade of annoyance deepened in the face
-of Lady Aberfeldie as she glanced at her
-husband, whose eyes were turned also
-towards the pair, and she knew from
-personal experience how much may be inferred
-or deduced from the words of a song, and
-also how many a tender speech, an
-accompaniment, however ill or well executed,
-may conceal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie, of course, would never
-consent to Eveline having a suitor with
-means so limited as those of her young
-admirer; but, though the idea of such a
-contingency had not occurred to him. Lady
-Aberfeldie was much sharper and more
-suspicious; she saw 'how the tide set,'
-and was much opposed to Cameron being
-even a visitor at Dundargue in any
-way, as an utter 'detrimental,' and
-declined to see how his being one of
-'Ours'&mdash;the Black Watch&mdash;altered <i>that</i>
-matter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, after a considerable amount
-of preluding, much unnecessary whispering,
-as 'my lady' thought, much glancing
-and many reciprocal smiles, Evan Cameron
-began to sing, accompanied by her
-daughter; and more annoyed became the matron
-on finding the theme chosen one of love
-and tenderness that could be, and was,
-sung with considerable <i>point</i>&mdash;a now
-forgotten little Scotch song, which the author
-adapted to the air of 'Rousseau's Dream,'
-and with the desire to excel before the girl
-he loved better than life, young Cameron,
-gave his whole soul to the lyric.
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'See the moon o'er cloudless Jura<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shining in the loch below;<br />
- See the distant mountain towering<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Like a pyramid of snow.<br />
- Scenes of grandeur&mdash;scenes of childhood&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Scenes so dear to love and me!<br />
- Let us roam by bower and wild wood,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All is lovelier when with <i>thee</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'On Jura's hills the winds are sighing,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But all is silent in the grove;<br />
- And the leaves with dewdrops glistening<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sparkle like the eye of love.<br />
- Night so calm, so clear, so cloudless,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Blessed night to love and me;<br />
- Let us roam by bower and fountain,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All is lovelier when with <i>thee</i>.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And it was not unnoticed by Lady
-Aberfeldie that at the closing word of each
-verse the eyes of the pair unconsciously
-met. Ere Eveline could be prevented,
-she had acceded to Cameron's softly uttered
-desire that she would sing anything for
-<i>him</i>; and she frankly did so, throwing into
-her voice the thrill and tenderness that
-are sure to come into a girl's utterances
-when singing to the man she loves. The
-heart of Cameron responded to this
-mysterious influence, and, as the girl regarded
-him furtively from time to time, she
-thought, with his crisp wavy hair, his clear
-grey eyes, general expression and bearing,
-he looked every inch what he was, the
-descendant of that Sir Evan Cameron of
-Lochiel who met Cromwell's men in
-combat under the shadow of Ben Nevis; yet
-to other eyes he seemed just a good sample
-of an infantryman who had across his
-forehead the genuine sunmark of his craft,
-made under the line of his forage-cap by a
-scorching tropical sun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now when Lady Aberfeldie, to stop
-any more musical performances between
-these two, prevailed upon Olive to replace
-her cousin, she was quick enough to
-detect that the former, displeased or piqued
-by Allan's apparent attention to Ruby
-Logan, swept past him with the most
-subtle little touch of disdain in the
-carriage of her handsome head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Cameron had once more to give
-place to pudgy little Sir Paget, who&mdash;puffing
-out his chest and jerking forward his
-bald shining head&mdash;began to do his best
-to make himself pleasing to Eveline, while
-the latter, under her mother's watchful
-eye, was compelled to listen and appear to
-act with compliance and complacency; and
-poor Eveline, like Olive, often felt with
-some compunction that her mother's
-general bearing&mdash;which a certain quiet yet
-lofty dignity seemed never to forsake&mdash;was
-more calculated to inspire respect than
-love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Cameron, while he found himself
-talking rather absently on regimental
-matters with Lord Aberfeldie, as he looked at
-Eveline from time to time, was thinking
-sadly in his honest heart,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, what madness it is in me to love
-her as I do, and how wicked if I lure her
-into loving me! Can I expect her ambitious
-mother or her calculating father ever
-to view with favour one so penniless as I
-am? Would it be honourable in me to
-profit by her girlish prepossession in my
-favour, and so preclude her from reaping
-those advantages of wealth, position, and
-rank which she is entitled to expect, and
-to which her parents looked forward? and
-alas! as the wife of Sir Paget&mdash;if such be
-her fate&mdash;poor Eveline will be lost for ever
-to me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His breast felt torn by such thoughts
-as these; and, sooth to say, it is as often
-amid the splendour and luxury of life, as
-amid its squalor and poverty, that some of
-its bitterest tragedies are acted out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But now the party began to break up&mdash;the
-ladies to seek their respective apartments,
-and the gentlemen to adjourn for
-a time to the smoking-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the two cousins, each so different in
-her style of loveliness, crossed the great
-apartment, the soft <i>frou-frou</i> of their long
-silken dresses seemed to mingle with their
-soft laughter and silvery voices. Sir Paget
-jerked forward his head and remarked to
-his hostess that 'they made a charming
-picture.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each had a sore place in her heart, but
-there was no appearance of it then.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though resenting the position in which
-she was placed, and much inclined to resist
-it, Olive Raymond&mdash;such is female caprice&mdash;also
-resented Allan's having hovered so
-much about the amber-haired beauty, and,
-when she bade him adieu for the night,
-she could not help singing softly, with
-some point and waggery, as she glanced
-back at him, the lines of Tennyson's song:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'I know a maiden fair to see,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Take care!<br />
- She can both false and friendly be,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beware, beware!<br />
- Trust her not, she is fooling thee.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-But whether she applied the words to
-herself or Ruby Logan it puzzled him to divine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive and Eveline were of an age, and
-able to sympathise with each other in
-every thought or fancy. They had grown
-up together like sisters, Olive, as an
-orphan, doubtless being the most petted
-of the two by the household ever since she
-came a little child to Dundargue, and both
-were frank, both were open-hearted, and
-proud of each other's personal attractions;
-and now, dismissing their maids, they
-brushed out each other's shining hair that
-they might have a quiet gossip together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So ends a tiresome night,' said Eveline,
-shrugging her white shoulders, which
-shone like ivory in the light of the toilette
-candles: 'a night when the conversation
-of everyone seemed of a nature so antagonistic,
-or as if it was all broken up into
-wrong duets.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like her father, Eveline was anxious to
-discover how the cousins were affected
-towards each other now; yet the course of
-this evening, in which Allan had plainly
-flirted with Ruby Logan, while Olive
-seemed to have been engrossed by
-Mr. Holcroft, did not seem to promise much,
-and she hinted this pretty plainly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do think Holcroft loves me, or leads
-me to infer that he does,' said Olive, with
-a soft smile on her downcast face, as she
-took off her rings, bangles, and bracelets,
-and tossed them on the marble toilette-table.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you&mdash;what is your feeling for
-him?' asked Eveline, with some anxiety
-in her face and tone; 'not love, I hope.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't know what I feel&mdash;perhaps it
-is only a girl's emotion of gratitude and
-vanity.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hope it will never be anything more.
-You scarcely spoke to poor Allan to-night?'
-said Eveline, interrogatively.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Rather say he scarcely spoke to me!
-But we are fated to see quite enough of
-each other, I suppose,' replied Olive, as
-with slender fingers she coiled and knotted
-up the silky masses of her rich brown hair.
-'How absurd it is,' she added, petulantly,
-'to think, as I have said a hundred times,
-that I have a lover cut and dry for me&mdash;a
-<i>fiancé</i>&mdash;ever since he was in jackets and
-knickerbockers!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a pause, during which she was
-critically and approvingly regarding
-herself sideways in the swinging cheval-glass,
-she said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When I heard that he was returning
-to Dundargue, I was quite prepared to
-dislike him intensely.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Olive!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fact, dear; and since then he must
-have been sorely puzzled by my various
-moods towards him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You speak but with truth in this; and
-yet he seems to have been somewhat the
-same with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor fellow&mdash;but ever so good and kind.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And&mdash;and you think, Olive dear, that
-you are beginning to love him as mamma
-wishes?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay&mdash;nay, I cannot admit that.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Even to me?' said Eveline, caressing her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Even to you. Did you not see his
-manner to-night with Ruby Logan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To pique you, if possible, Olive; but
-when Allan proposes to you, as I am sure
-he will, and must do&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Must</i> do!' interrupted Olive. 'Yes&mdash;there
-it is.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then, and in that case, as the will has
-it, I shall tell him that, however I may
-esteem and regard him as my cousin, he
-can never be more, or nearer, or dearer
-than as such.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline sighed and smiled; but she told
-this reply next day to Allan, and hence he
-became less in a hurry to bring matters to
-an issue, though love was growing in his
-heart, nevertheless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, why is it that women cannot speak
-their minds as men do? I wish I dared
-run away!' exclaimed the petulant beauty,
-beating the carpet with a little impatient
-foot. 'To-day I saw two great brown
-eagles winging their way skyward from
-the rock of Dundargue; and oh! Eveline,
-you can't think how long and wistfully I
-watched them till they dwindled into tiny
-specks.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They seemed such free agents, and, as
-such, to be envied. They had no wills or
-last testaments made by others to control
-their actions&mdash;no parents to rule them in
-the matters of love and marriage.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How droll you are, Olive! To whom
-but you would such speculations occur?
-I hope you did not express them to&mdash;to&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Allan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not to Allan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To whom then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mr. Holcroft.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then, you were very wrong to do so,'
-said Eveline, almost severely; 'he will be
-certain to draw his own deductions therefrom.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In something else I was, I fear, wrong too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I permitted him to try one of my gold
-bangles&mdash;one sent me by Allan from Delhi&mdash;on
-his arm, and it would not come off again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And the bangle?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is still there,' said Olive, laughing, but
-not without a little emotion of alarm.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Olive!' exclaimed Eveline, with
-something of dismay, 'how could you?
-This is worse than the photo.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><br />
-THE RIDING-PARTY.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-For some time the days passed on as they
-generally do in a country-house like
-Dundargue, and there was all the usual flow
-of life and&mdash;with three exceptions, Sir
-Paget, Holcroft, and Cameron&mdash;change of
-guests and visitors, with the amusements
-wealth can give.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-First came the partridge-shooting, and
-then the pheasants were to be knocked
-over, while the ladies drove almost daily
-to the preserves with the luncheon in the
-drag or large pony-carriage; there were
-hunting days, dinners, luncheons, musical
-evenings, carpet dances, and so forth, and
-the inevitable lawn-tennis, with the ladies
-in bewitching costumes; but still Allan,
-damped perhaps by his sister's communications,
-'made no way' with his tantalising
-cousin, and Hawke Holcroft, on Lord
-Aberfeldie's invitation, was still lingering
-at Dundargue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Allan, Olive had become a part of
-his life, and each day seemed only to begin
-when he met her at breakfast in her
-charming morning toilette, fresh from her
-bath and the hands of Mademoiselle Clairette,
-her hair dressed to perfection, and
-her face radiant with health and beauty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How often do I wish she had not a
-<i>sous</i>!' sighed Allan. 'Then she might
-learn that I love her for herself alone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The curious position in which they were
-placed relatively made the cousins most
-strange to each other, involving much
-constraint.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are fencing with their feelings,'
-was Lord Aberfeldie's conviction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Evan Cameron, however, it was
-evident that Holcroft was 'making all the
-running he could' during Allan's absences
-after the game, or apparent occupation
-with laughing Ruby Logan, while it became
-evident to Sir Paget and more than one
-other guest that he got up many a quiet
-game at <i>ecarté</i>&mdash;that most rooking of all
-games&mdash;and many a match at billiards
-after the ladies had retired; and it was
-soon remarked by the same close observers
-that he was a singularly successful player,
-often pocketing large sums, seldom losing,
-and then very slenderly, as if to keep up
-appearances.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At Dundargue he felt himself in clover!
-He knew, or was aware instinctively, that
-neither Lady Aberfeldie nor the Master
-cared much about him; but he also knew
-that his host was inspired by the kindliest
-feelings towards him as the only son of an
-early friend and gallant old Crimean
-comrade who had gone to his long home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If any rule governed the erratic life of
-the horsey and gambling Holcroft, it was
-that of resolutely shutting his eyes against
-to-morrow, and letting it take care of
-itself; and, now that there was a prospect
-of winning a wife with money&mdash;and such
-a chance seldom came his way&mdash;could he
-but play his cards well and surely, his
-fortune would be made!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was a mass of absolute selfishness&mdash;the
-result either of his innate nature or of
-his nomadic habits. A life-long bankrupt,
-he had been ever readier to borrow than
-to lend, to smoke any other fellow's cigars
-than his own, and to take every advantage
-of the honourable and unsuspecting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the perilous inmate which a
-mistaken sense of kindness, gratitude, and
-hospitality had induced Lord Aberfeldie to
-make one of the family circle at Dundargue
-during the shooting season; and to
-whom the advent of the bangle&mdash;which,
-though it slipped easily upon his wrist,
-most mysteriously would not come off it&mdash;and
-other adventitious circumstances, the
-real cause of which he did not know, gave
-a considerable amount of what he termed
-to himself 'modest assurance' and
-confidence of ultimate success.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I should like to come into a nice little
-pot of money&mdash;a fortune, if you will&mdash;but
-not with a girl tacked to it,' he said, on
-one occasion, to throw Allan 'off the
-scent,' as he thought. 'I am neither
-domestic nor ambitious. A few thousands
-would do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And make you content?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Content! I should feel as happy as
-more than once I have been at Monaco,
-when I have seen the croupier's rake
-pushing a jolly pile of gold across the
-<i>trente-et-quarante</i> table towards me, by
-Jove.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It did not occur to him that by little
-speeches like this and anecdotes about his
-own acumen in the betting ring, he let a
-little light in upon the general tenor of
-his past and present life, and, all
-unconscious that Sir Paget and others listened
-with slightly elevated eyebrows, he would
-produce a sealskin cigar-case of portentous
-dimensions, draw therefrom a great Rio
-Hondo cigar, and after carefully manipulating
-it, begin to smoke it with intense
-satisfaction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hawke Holcroft, like Mr. Micawber,
-was always waiting for something to 'turn
-up' in the way of good for himself, and
-now thought he had found that something
-in Olive Raymond&mdash;an heiress free, he
-deemed, to choose for herself&mdash;free to be
-wooed and won; and on a day when she
-proposed a riding-party to visit Macbeth's
-Castle of Dunsinane he very nearly had
-the hardihood to learn his fate&mdash;in the
-words of Montrose's song, to put it 'to the
-touch, to win or lose it all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Drives, riding-parties, and rambles to
-visit artistic bits of scenery and the rural
-[** Transcriber's note: line missing from source book?]
-lions the neighbourhood afforded every
-opportunity to those who wished to
-cultivate each other's society at Dundargue,
-and the expedition proposed by Olive to
-visit the ruins of the usurper's castle,
-proved the occasion of Mr. Hawke
-Holcroft's attempt to advance his own interests.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whatever Lady Aberfeldie's views were,
-her husband had never been called upon
-to fulfil the duties of a vigilant guardian
-or parent, and to study the difference
-between 'detrimentals' and married parties,
-so he left the guidance of the whole affair
-in the hands of Allan, and remained
-closeted with his solicitor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By judicious manoeuvring, Holcroft
-contrived to pair-off with Olive, while Allan
-thus became the escort of Ruby Logan,
-and Eveline, of course, fell to Sir Paget,
-who soon found the truth of the vulgar
-adage about two being company, &amp;c., on
-their being joined by Stratherroch.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a clear and brilliant day early in
-October, when the blue sky was flecked
-by fleecy clouds, and the far-stretching
-scenery of the fertile Carse, overlooked
-by the long chain of heights, named the
-Sidlaw Hills, lay steeped in sunshine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The parks of Dundargue, with their
-broad acres of velvet-like turf, their stately
-oaks and towering beeches, among the gnarled
-branches of which legions of gleds were
-cawing to each other, and brown squirrels
-were gliding to and fro; their hedges of
-ancient thorn, and others where the
-hawthorn berries showed red and the wild
-roses were blooming&mdash;the parks, we say,
-were left behind, with all their groups of
-deer, and the party, certainly a merry and
-a well-mounted one, accompanied by the
-stag-hounds Shiuloch and Bran, careering
-joyously on either hand, followed by a
-couple of splendidly-horsed grooms,
-cantered along the highway, and ere long
-broke, or fell, into that slow and ambling
-pace which is suited for conversing with
-ease. And Holcroft, who was well versed
-in all horsey details, and had a very
-appreciative eye, could see that his fair
-companion's <i>tout ensemble</i>, her riding
-costume, her hat, veil, and gauntlets were
-all perfect, from the coils of brown glossy
-hair to the little foot that rested firmly in
-its tiny stirrup of burnished steel; and
-that foot was indeed a model&mdash;arched,
-small, and always full of character in its
-elasticity of tread; and, more than all,
-intoxicated by the ambient air, the
-sunshine, her own high spirits, and the
-pleasure of being mounted on her own
-favourite pad, Olive Raymond was looking
-her brightest and her best.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had, while engaging all her attention
-in conversation, contrived, unknown to
-her, by the pacing of his horse, to leave
-the trio referred to at some distance
-behind; while, luckily for him, Allan
-Graham, lured on by Ruby Logan&mdash;who was
-something between a flirt and a hoyden&mdash;had
-gone ahead with her suddenly at a
-hand-gallop, and now the pair were out of
-sight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There could be no engagement, despite
-all rumour thereof&mdash;not even a passing
-fancy&mdash;between the cousins, was now
-Holcroft's conviction, and of his own
-ultimate success with Olive he began to have
-little doubt, could he but warily mould her
-to his purpose; and already in fancy he
-saw her thousands&mdash;how many there were
-he knew not&mdash;firmly in his grasp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though swallowed up by mortgages,
-his place in Essex&mdash;or the few acres that
-nominally still remained to him there&mdash;caused
-the retention of his name among
-the 'landed gentry of England,' and he
-based much upon that circumstance as
-aiding his designs on Lord Aberfeldie's
-ward, to whom he had sometimes dropped
-glowing hints of possession that were not
-nor ever had been his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Something undefined in Olive's manner
-rather encouraged him on this day. She,
-to show that she resented the apparent
-indifference of Allan as being a 'laggard
-in love,' even while resenting the tenor of
-that family compact which was meant to
-bind them together, was disposed to flirt
-with Holcroft, out of pique rather than
-precise preference, and to annoy Allan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With the latter present now, Holcroft
-became at times a species of difficulty to
-Olive. During a past season in London
-there had been sundry, not exactly love-passages,
-but little coquettings and lingerings
-in conservatories that nearly amounted
-to such; and he, in ignorance of the
-footing in which she was regarded by the
-family, was quite inclined, penniless as he
-was, or nearly so, to revive, if not
-improve, past relations; and this had been
-his object from the first day he came to
-Dundargue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now 'that muscular idiot the Master,'
-as he was in the habit of mentally
-calling Allan, having cantered out of sight,
-he addressed himself more fully to his
-companion and the matter in hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I enjoy town to the full&mdash;none can do
-so more&mdash;when I am there, but I love&mdash;oh,
-I do love&mdash;the country!' replied Olive,
-in reply to a remark of Holcroft's about
-their last London season.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is always very romantic, of course,
-and all that sort of thing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And with pleasant people about one,
-the country becomes so delightful for a
-time; and then we girls have such perfect
-freedom here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Even an escort is not necessary at times.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Unless in the park&mdash;beyond that I
-always like to have one,' said Olive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are you pleased to have <i>me</i> for one?'
-he asked, in a low voice, and pretty
-pointedly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course,' she answered, frankly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How charming to be at hand in case
-of danger!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What possible danger?' asked Olive,
-with surprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, the untimely appearance of an
-infuriated stag or the proverbial mad bull
-of the three-volume novel.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why not a brigand or a Bengal tiger?'
-said Olive, laughing; then, suddenly
-becoming grave, she added&mdash;'But, by the
-way, talking of Bengal, please to give me
-back my bangle.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Simply because I cannot permit you
-to retain it,' she replied, little foreseeing
-to what the natural request might lead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not deprive me of it!' he urged,
-softly and entreatingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?' asked she, in return; 'for what
-reason. It is impossible&mdash;what may
-people say?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What they please, if seen, which it
-never shall be.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What might they not think?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, what does it matter?' he urged
-again, with much would-be sadness and
-tenderness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Little to you, perhaps, but much to
-me,' retorted Olive; 'but I do not choose
-that aught should be either thought or said
-about it. We shall certainly be accused of
-flirting.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, no, Miss Raymond&mdash;oh, no,
-Olive&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Olive!' she repeated, in a startled
-manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me&mdash;none could ever accuse
-me of flirting with you&mdash;that were an
-impossibility&mdash;for deeper thoughts&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My bangle, please, Mr. Holcroft, and at
-once!' she said, imperatively, in dread of
-what more he might say.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She held forth her hand, but the trinket
-either would not come off his wrist, or he
-pretended that such was the case. Olive
-tried to remove it, but in vain, and
-glanced round her, red with vexation. Her
-hand was gloved, otherwise she would
-have felt how unpleasantly cold and
-clammy were the fingers of her would-be
-lover.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Allow me to retain it, even for a
-time&mdash;though would that I might wear it in
-my grave&mdash;for a time, in memory of the
-darling hopes I have dared to cherish,' he
-whispered, in a manner there could be no
-mistaking now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Spare me this melodramatic sort of
-thing, Mr. Holcroft,' said Olive, growing
-rather pale; 'I cannot&mdash;must not listen
-to you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why&mdash;what do you mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That there are obstacles between us,
-even were there not the want of liking,'
-she replied, decidedly, but with an agitated
-voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Obstacles?' he repeated, inquiringly,
-sadly, and certainly with an air of
-<i>disappointment</i>; 'am I now to understand that
-you are engaged to the Master of Aberfeldie,
-as these absurd Scots people call him?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive bit her ruddy nether lip at this
-home question; but made no reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What enigma is this? You either are
-or you are not. If not, why may not I&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I dare not listen to this style of
-conversation,' interrupted Olive, with positive
-annoyance; 'and you have no right to
-force it upon me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'After all that has passed?' said he,
-reproachfully, and rather feeling as if his
-hopes were melting into air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not understand you,' replied Olive,
-whose conscience certainly did reproach
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If I force this conversation&mdash;' he began
-in a bitter and rather upbraiding tone,
-then pausing; 'pardon me if I offend,' he
-resumed, with what seemed growing sadness,
-while attempting to touch her hand,
-yet withdrawing his own in apparent
-timidity. 'But am I wrong in deeming your
-engagement&mdash;or alleged engagement, as
-rumour says, made when you were a child&mdash;one
-in which your woman's heart and
-wishes have not been consulted? Tell
-me&mdash;for I may have to leave Dundargue soon
-now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was in some respects but a weak
-girl; he a crafty and wily man of the
-world; and, though he knew it not in the
-least, he was touching her on a very
-tender point&mdash;yet she replied, firmly enough,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have no right to question me; but
-say, what has Allan done to you that your
-face should darken at the mention of his
-name? Is he not your friend?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He was.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And now&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He is no longer so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He is my rival.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She coloured to her temples at this
-blunt reply, and all it inferred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I loved you long before you ever cared
-for me,' he resumed, coolly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sir&mdash;how dare you say I ever cared for
-you?' exclaimed Olive, her cheeks aflame
-now; 'let this subject cease, and be
-resumed no more!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It breaks my heart to hear you speak
-thus.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hearts don't break now-a-days, even in
-such romantic places as Dundargue,' said
-she, with a sharp little laugh; 'and here
-this matter ends.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He bowed in silence; but, fatally
-perhaps for Allan's interests and her own, she
-thought, and her vanity was flattered by
-the idea:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Holcroft loves me, despite the tenor of
-papa's will&mdash;loves me, for myself, of
-course; while Allan <i>knows</i> its value to
-himself! Surely there is a difference in
-this!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it was precisely because Holcroft
-knew neither of the will nor its spirit that
-he took the courage to address her as he
-did. Had he done so, that enterprising
-gentleman would speedily have 'dropped
-out of the hunt,' and, so far as he is
-concerned, we should then have no story to tell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile he did not lose heart, and
-thought he had only to wait the fulness of
-time for the certainty of winning her, and
-with her, wealth&mdash;of joy or happiness he
-took no heed at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time, greatly to Olive's relief,
-Eveline and her two swains had overtaken
-them, and so the matter dropped, though
-the minds of both, from two points of
-view, were full of it. She would now
-have to endure the double annoyance of
-being daily in the society of a lover who
-had addressed her as such, and of an
-<i>intended</i> lover who had scarcely yet
-approached the subject!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, for some reason only known to
-herself, she did not tell Eveline, though her
-bosom-friend, of what had passed between
-herself and Holcroft. The latter,
-however, still retained the golden bangle on
-which her name was engraved; but for a
-time now there was something in her
-manner little to the liking of Hawke
-Holcroft&mdash;full as he was of dreams of her, or
-of her fortune rather&mdash;of the risks he ran,
-and the shifts to which he might be put
-ere he handled it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><br />
-THE PICNIC AT DUNSINANE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Ambling on together and urging their
-horses, but at an easy pace, they soon
-drew near the object of their destination&mdash;Macbeth's
-famous castle of Dunsinane&mdash;whither
-the portly old butler, Mr. Tappleton,
-had preceded them in a wagonette,
-freighted with a luxurious luncheon; and,
-leaving their cattle in charge of the grooms,
-they began the ascent of that peak of the
-Sidlaw Hills which has been immortalised
-by Shakespeare.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With her riding-skirt thrown over her
-left arm, Eveline acted as their guide, and
-it may easily be supposed that she solicited
-the assistance of Cameron's arm, rather
-than that of Sir Paget Puddicombe, who
-had quite enough to do in assisting himself
-up a path which proved to him, as he said,
-'rather a breather.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was a winding road cut in the rock,
-all the other sides being steep and difficult
-of access, and ere long, on reaching the
-flat and fertile summit, which commands a
-magnificent view of Strathmore and
-Blairgowrie, they found themselves within the
-strong rampart and deep fosse of what has
-once been a great military station of oval
-form, two hundred and ten feet long, by
-one hundred and thirty broad; and there
-they found Allan and Ruby Logan, who
-had preceded them, in full possession of
-the highest point, whence he was directing
-her attention to the chief features in the
-scenery, including, of course, Birnam
-Wood, fifteen miles distant, 'The Lang
-Man's Grave,' a great stone, under which
-Macbeth is said to lie&mdash;Ruby the while
-clinging to his arm in the exuberance of
-her delight, and carrying her riding-hat
-in her hand, as she was quite aware that
-her hair alone, in its wonderful luxuriance,
-made her very attractive, it being an
-unruly mass of rich, rippling golden amber in
-hue, shot with a redder and brighter tint
-at times when the sunlight struck it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Under the splendour of a glorious noon,
-while a soft breeze rippled the verdant
-grass, the luncheon was proceeded with;
-fowls were dissected, pies investigated,
-champagne and hock, cool from the ice-pails,
-uncorked; all the requisites for a
-merry party were there, and yet in the
-party itself the chief element of high
-spirits was wanting, unless in the instance
-of Ruby Logan, who began to flatter
-herself that she had made&mdash;or nearly so&mdash;a
-conquest of the Master of Aberfeldie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Oppressed with the tenor of the
-conversation that had so recently passed
-between herself and Mr. Holcroft, Olive
-Raymond was unusually silent, and, for
-her, <i>distraite</i>; and he, remembering the
-somewhat decided 'snub' she had so
-unexpectedly given him, was somewhat silent
-too, but sought consolation in champagne,
-while listening rather abstractedly to Sir
-Paget Puddicombe descanting on the
-traditions of the neighbourhood, as, in
-guide-book fashion, he knew all about the
-predictions of the weird sisters, the defeat
-and death of the usurper, and was full of
-the probability that the great dramatist
-had visited Dunsinane in person.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Holcroft only quaffed his liquor,
-tugged his tawny moustache from time to
-time, and listened with an air of boredom,
-mingled with a quizzical expression of
-mistrust in his pale grey shifty eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had seen Macbeth on the stage, of
-course, and endured him more than once;
-but of the Thane of Cawdor he knew no
-more than what he had seen of him behind
-the footlights, and had cared to learn no
-more; and now it was with some genuine
-Cockney bewilderment, as he looked at
-the massive trenches around him, he began
-to think that 'some such fellow had existed
-then.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline and young Cameron, under Sir
-Paget's eye, were both reserved and <i>triste</i>,
-and no wine seemed capable of rousing
-animation in the lover. He had but one
-thought&mdash;the end of his leave was
-approaching, and when he left Dundargue
-he might never again see Eveline Graham.
-His heart was heavy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the trio were riding together, it
-was not that the eyes of Eveline
-disappointed him, or that she did not converse
-with him fully and earnestly; but he had
-detected in the manner of Sir Paget a
-provoking air of proprietary and confidence
-with regard to her that keenly piqued him,
-and could only have been born, he rightly
-conjectured, of some recent confidential
-arrangement with Lord Aberfeldie; but
-the young girl herself was sweetly
-unconscious of it all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His responses had been brief, and he
-had ventured on few remarks, aware that
-little would escape unnoticed; thus he had
-been somewhat silent, while Sir Paget's
-easy-going old roadster ambled between
-the horses of himself and Eveline, going
-pace for pace, Sir Paget's head at each
-jerking forward in turtle fashion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The trio still remained together when
-seated on the grass at luncheon, for
-neither of the gentlemen were disposed
-to quit the side of Eveline, whose colour
-might have been noticed to heighten at
-a question Sir Paget asked Cameron, of
-whom he certainly had a certain jealousy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where does your property of Stratherroch
-lie, Mr. Cameron?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In Inverness-shire.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah!&mdash;mountainous, of course&mdash;good
-shooting for those who care for such
-things&mdash;not that I do. Is the land very
-remunerative now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To others&mdash;not to me,' said Cameron,
-a little bitterly. 'A fair inheritance would
-be mine, Sir Paget, were Stratherroch
-unencumbered. My father was a wild
-fellow in his day&mdash;as what Highland laird
-is not? How some acres were mortgaged
-in succession, how others went <i>in toto</i>,
-heaven only knows&mdash;I don't. The estate
-is at nurse now; one day it will be mine
-again&mdash;but not for years; and I was too
-long foolishly sentimental about it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?' asked Sir Paget.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I thought I would rather that the
-manor-house fell to ruins than pass, even
-temporarily, into the possession of
-strangers&mdash;of others than a Cameron; and now, by
-Jove! it has been for years occupied by
-one Jones Smithson, of Manchester.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whose rental is clearing it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; and meantime I have little more
-in this world than my claymore and
-commission in the Black Watch,' said Cameron,
-with a somewhat hollow laugh and a swift,
-sad glance at Eveline; while Sir Paget
-smiled complacently as he thought of the
-balance at <i>his</i> bankers, and the fat,
-unfettered acres that lay round Slough-cum-Sloggit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hope you do not find Dundargue dull,
-Sir Paget?' said Eveline, to change a
-conversation that rather oppressed her, as she
-was sharp enough to divine the thoughts
-of both men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Assuredly not, Miss Graham; how
-could it be so when I am enabled to renew
-my intimacy with one who can cast, as it
-were, bright sunshine in the most shady
-place?' he replied, with an unusual jerk of
-his head, a glance of eye, and accentuation
-of voice that annoyed her greatly, while
-Cameron's lip quivered under his moustache
-with mingled irritation and amusement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now at luncheon, inspired by a few
-bumpers of Clicquot, Sir Paget's glances at
-Eveline took occasionally the fashion of
-grotesque and languishing leers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wealthy baronet was older than she
-by a great many years, but they by no
-means warranted him being safe from a
-love, or passion rather, that might prove
-cruel as the grave&mdash;the passion of a
-middle-aged man for a very handsome young girl,
-whose parents were fully disposed to
-further his views and their own. It has been
-said that 'people for the life of them
-cannot be said to believe in the love pangs
-of a man over forty, or of a woman over
-twenty-nine,' but people may at times be
-wrong.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The present epoch was rather a trying
-one to Cameron and Eveline. As she had
-admitted to Allan, she knew that he loved
-her with a love unselfish and unspoken;
-and he felt intuitively that he was far from
-indifferent to her&mdash;knew it by the
-indescribable, untaught, and nameless signs by
-which a man learns instinctively that a
-woman loves him&mdash;in a first passion, a
-most intoxicating conviction; yet
-circumstances blended the happiness of Cameron
-with much that was alloy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To avoid attentions or would-be tender
-speeches that might annoy poor Cameron,
-Eveline found herself compelled to talk
-intently to Sir Paget about local traditions
-and superstitions, and, thanks to her old
-nurse Nannie, she had&mdash;for a fashionable
-young lady of the present day&mdash;a curious
-<i>répertoire</i> of stories about wraiths and
-warnings, <i>Daione Shi</i> and other fairies,
-who were wont in pre-railway times to
-haunt the corries, cairns, and rocks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have you no ghosts in or about
-Dundargue?' asked Sir Paget. 'A grand old
-mansion is scarcely complete without some
-such spectral visitor.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely that oubliette, whatever it is, of
-which I have heard more than once, must
-contain something of the kind?' said Holcroft,
-in a covert, but detestable kind of
-sneering tone, which he could adopt when
-his own interests were not concerned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the gallery that leads to it I have
-heard of something strange,' said Allan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, do tell us&mdash;what is seen there?'
-exclaimed Ruby Logan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nothing&mdash;but old servants have a story
-to the effect that if anyone remains long
-there,' replied Allan, laughing, 'they are
-certain to have a strong sense of shadowy
-forms&mdash;intangible presences&mdash;hovering
-near them, and dare not turn their heads
-to see what they are.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We have no decided ghosts, thank
-Heaven!' said Eveline, laughing, and all
-unconscious of Holcroft's manner. 'There
-are none even in the palaces of Holyrood
-or Falkland, where terrible things have
-been done, so why should there be in poor
-old Dundargue? But a spot close by
-where we are now lunching is the alleged
-scene of a curious event&mdash;a very dark
-tradition in our family history.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why recur to a story so absurd?' said
-Allan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But she was pressed to explain herself,
-and with a shy, sweet smile in her eyes
-as she glanced from time to time at Evan
-Cameron, and a wonderfully musical modulation
-of voice, she told her tale, but not
-quite as old nurse Nannie had told it to
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The deep, rocky dell that lies between
-this and Dundargue, a few miles distant,
-was ever in past times what we find it
-now, covered with dense forest-trees,
-mingled with alders and silver birches so
-thickly as to exclude the rays of the sun, and
-it was said to be the haunt of a Urisk or
-mountain-goblin&mdash;a species of fiend which,
-Sir Walter Scott says, tradition avers to
-have had a figure half-man and half-goat.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In short, the Grecian satyr of classical
-antiquity,' said Allan, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Be that as it may, the existence of this
-particular Urisk was never fairly proved
-until the days of one of our ancestors,
-Malise Graham of Dundargue, who fought
-at the battle of Ben Rinnes against the
-Reformers, and had in hiding in the
-"Priest's Hole," as it is still called, in
-the keep, a wandering Scottish Benedictine,
-known only as James of Jerusalem.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, Malise Graham had an only
-daughter, Muriel, a girl possessed of that
-rare and soft beauty&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Which is still the inheritance of her
-family,' said Sir Paget, with a most
-portentous jerk of his head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Please not to interrupt me, or I shall
-stop,' exclaimed Eveline, with unconcealed
-annoyance. 'Muriel, in her walks near
-Dundargue, had made&mdash;unknown to her
-family&mdash;the acquaintance of a handsome
-young stranger of winning manners and
-prepossessing appearance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In the secluded life led in those days
-by a maiden of rank, such an event was
-of deep and peculiar interest; love
-speedily became the sequel, and in truth the
-object of it seemed to have been a very
-loveable fellow. Thus it was, with many
-bitter tears, that one evening she told him
-that her frequent absence from home had
-been remarked, and that she must meet
-him no more in that wooded hollow, especially
-as it was the haunt of goblins and
-other evil spirits.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'On hearing this, the handsome stranger
-laughed till all the dell seemed to re-echo,
-caressed her tenderly, and, after urging her
-on peril of her truth and soul to come
-to the trysting-place at least once again,
-left her in haste, as some one was seen to
-approach them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This proved to be James of Jerusalem,
-who is still remembered as the Black
-Priest of Dundargue. He wore nothing
-that was canonical; to have done so
-would have been as much as his life was
-worth in those days; thus he was clad in
-a sable Geneva cloak and doublet, with
-falling bands, and a calotte cap of black
-velvet with long lappets.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He looked deadly pale, and was trembling
-in every limb, while he crossed himself
-again and again, and said, in a low and
-agitated voice,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Child Muriel, who is he that left you
-in such hot haste just now?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But Muriel,
-</p>
-
-<p>
- "Crimson with shame, with terror mute,"<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-terror of her father, who was a stern and
-rigid man, remained silent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Speak, unhappy girl!" urged the priest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"I know not his name," she replied, faintly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"He conceals it from me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"And why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"I know not; but oh, father, guide and
-counsel me, for I love him dearly, as he
-loves me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"You must meet him&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Once again," she urged, piteously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Never more, I meant to say&mdash;never
-more. But why say you once again?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"I have promised, on my soul's peril."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"On your soul's peril indeed!" groaned
-the priest, in great tribulation; but, in
-defiance of all he could urge, Muriel,
-though she lived in an age of dark
-superstition, of omens and dread, inspired by
-her love, stole forth at the usual hour and
-entered the dell to meet her lover, for the
-last time, as it proved.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps it was a prevision of this that
-made the wood seem so dark and gloomy,
-and even the knots and gnarled branches
-of the trees to look like those in the forest
-to Undine, fiendish faces and freakish
-limbs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Muriel knew in her heart that such
-meetings were wrong, unbecoming to her
-position, and sinful because she concealed
-them; but a spell seemed upon her, and
-she could not resist it. She took no heed
-of the future; she had but one thought, to
-be again with him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"And oh! why should this meeting be
-our last one?" she wailed in her heart,
-as he drew her to him, looking so
-handsome the while in his black doublet
-slashed with red, his ruff and scarlet plume.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"My own!" said he, caressingly; "my
-own, I am aware that yonder dotard, fool
-and knave, the mass-monger, has been
-seeking to influence your mind against me,
-and to part us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"And here he stands prepared to do
-so!" exclaimed the black priest, as he
-suddenly appeared beside them, his eyes
-sparkling, but strangely with fear, rage, and
-triumph mingling in their expression.
-Muriel's lover clasped her to his breast,
-and wrapped his scarlet mantle round her.
-Then, while his eyes glared with a fire
-which fortunately she did not see, he
-exclaimed,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Stand back, canting liar&mdash;stand back,
-and begone!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Child Muriel, come to me, in the
-name of God!" cried the priest, in sore
-agony; but she still clung to her lover, who,
-at the name uttered, cowered and shrank,
-as in the opera we see Mephistopheles
-cower and shrink before the cross-hilted
-swords of the soldiers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Muriel, Muriel, you are mine!"
-exclaimed her lover, attempting to lift her
-from the ground.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Take heed, child, ere it is too late,"
-urged the priest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Dare you advise?" asked the stranger,
-mockingly; "does not one day judge
-another?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'"Yes, and the last day judges all&mdash;even
-such as you!" cried the benedictine; then,
-making a sign of the cross in the air, he
-exclaimed, 'In nomine Patris et Filii; et
-Spiritus Sancti!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Scarcely had he done so when, under
-the power of his exorcism, the mantle,
-ruff, and plume of the pretended knight
-turned to bracken leaves, his goblin chain
-to wild holly, and he stood forth in all his
-deformity, a horror to the eye, half man
-and half goat, with the face of a baffled
-and exasperated fiend&mdash;the Urisk, or wood
-goblin; and, with a malignant yell, he
-vanished down the fast-darkening dingle!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And Muriel?' asked Holcroft, who had
-listened to all with such a smile as his face
-might be expected to wear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Was saved, of course,' said Eveline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And lived happy ever after?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well&mdash;content at least, let us hope.
-She died a nun in the house of the English
-Benedictines at Paris&mdash;now the convent of
-the Val de Grace.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And has this legend a moral?' asked
-Holcroft, mockingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course it has,' answered Allan, rather
-bluntly, yet with a quiet smile; 'it gave a
-good hint to the girls at Dundargue to
-beware of the attentions of unaccredited
-strangers.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holcroft's colour changed for a moment,
-and not unnoticed by Allan; for perhaps,
-reading between the lines, all this seemed
-somewhat a parable to the former, who
-tugged at his yellow moustaches in a way
-he did when irritated, heedless that pomade
-hongroise was disastrous to straw-coloured
-gloves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The angry gleam that crossed the eyes
-of Holcroft was also noticed by Evan
-Cameron, who, for some reason as yet
-only known to himself, could not abide
-him; though certainly the latter did not
-cross <i>him</i> by any attentions to the
-penniless Eveline Graham.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her little tradition came as a pleasant
-interlude to nearly all, for save Sir
-Paget&mdash;always confident and genial&mdash;no one
-seemed quite at ease, as a sense of
-cross-purposes brooded over them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tappleton,' cried Allan to the butler,
-'another glass of champagne all round;
-and then to be off,' he added, swinging
-Olive adroitly into her saddle, and thus,
-as he thought, anticipating Holcroft,
-though the latter, remembering keenly
-his recent 'snub,' had no intention of
-offering his services just then.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan, fearing that he had gone rather
-too far with Ruby Logan in attempting to
-pique his cousin, now resolved to leave
-that young lady to the care of anyone else
-in their homeward ride, much to her
-surprise and disappointment, and took his
-place by the side of Olive, in obedience to
-a half-inviting glance she gave him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He and his sister were, of course, familiar
-since childhood with the ruins of Dunsinane
-and all their surroundings; but to two
-or three of the party, as they turned to
-depart, and saw the vast ramparts
-reddened by the setting sun, there came to
-memory the scene they had so often
-witnessed on the stage&mdash;Malcolm's army with
-the boughs of Birnam in their helmets,
-the 'alarms and excursions,' the fierce
-and protracted melo-dramatic combat, the
-downfall of Macbeth beneath the sword
-of Macduff, and the cries of 'Hail, King
-of Scotland&mdash;King of Scotland, hail!'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X.
-<br /><br />
-THE GOLDEN BANGLE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A writer says 'there is the beauty of
-youth, and surely there is the beauty of
-love, too,' and the latter certainly shone in
-the soft eyes of Eveline Graham as she
-caracoled her horse in the homeward ride
-by the side of young Cameron, and her
-eyes, which were ever the mystery of that
-face, had now their sweetest smiles for
-him. She saw how his face was lighted
-up, and was aware how his voice softened
-when he addressed her as it softened to
-no other woman; and yet, withal, though
-no word of love had passed between these
-two, right well did they know the secret
-of each other's hearts; but poverty
-fettered his tongue, and her parents'
-ambition and known wishes nearly repressed all
-hope in the heart of Eveline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With all her regard for her father she
-had a fear of him, and still more so of her
-mother. All their prejudices were in
-favour of wealth; but Evan Cameron
-appeared to her altogether so dear and
-irresistible that she, poor girl, could not
-imagine anyone being proof against him, and
-with this conviction, and the knowledge
-that Allan loved him, she permitted herself
-occasionally to live in a kind of fool's
-paradise, wherein Sir Paget Puddicombe
-had no part.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When her mother was not present, she
-played to Evan Cameron, and sang his
-favourite songs; she showed him her
-drawings for hints and suggestions,
-discussed her favourite books, and let him
-hang over her chair; and at such times,
-though nothing of love was said, there
-was a subtle tenderness in Cameron's eye
-and voice that made her impulsive heart
-quicken, as no man's eye or voice had ever
-done before, and young though she was,
-Eveline had heard more than one
-declaration of love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now for a time he had the joy of
-having her all to himself, as they
-contrived to distance the rest of their party.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But what availed it? Evan knew that,
-if once he passed beyond what appeared
-to be the merest friendship, his visit to
-Dundargue might come to a speedy end,
-and its hospitality could never be extended
-to him again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Evan, Eveline Graham proved, if
-we may say so, a kind of revelation after
-the rough life he had led of late years in
-India&mdash;something from another world, as
-it were&mdash;and thus much of adoration mingled
-with his love for her. If dying could
-have served Eveline, there and then would
-Evan Cameron have died for her!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whether such enthusiastic passion
-might last it was impossible to say, but
-time may show.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have referred to the quiet confidence
-of Sir Paget Puddicombe&mdash;a confidence
-borne of his consciousness of wealth and
-assured position. However, he was sharp
-enough to see to some extent how Cameron
-was attracted by Eveline, and to feel
-how the latter preferred the young subaltern's
-society to his own; but in a very
-short time he knew that the 'detrimental,'
-as Lady Aberfeldie called him, would be
-again with his regiment, the Black Watch,
-perhaps under orders for foreign service;
-then he would have the course all to
-himself, and doubted not, as Holcroft would
-have said, 'to win in a canter.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cameron thought the proverb right
-about there being no fool like an old one;
-but then, every old fool had not Sir Paget's
-bank-book, and the preference and influence
-of parents to back up his folly. But
-with a handsome figure, and his V.C., how
-much more was Cameron like the object of
-a young girl's eye than Sir Paget could
-ever be!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was in the Kurram Pass, in Afghanistan,
-that you gained the Victoria Cross,
-Mr. Cameron?' said Eveline, breaking a
-pause in the conversation, and shortening
-her reins, while he checked the pace of
-his horse, and replied, with a pleased
-smile,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; but how do you know that, Miss
-Graham&mdash;from your brother, the Master?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have never spoken of it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I read it in the Army List,' replied
-Eveline, candidly, and to hear her say so
-made the bronze cross of more value to
-him than the Garter would have been.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had read it, and committed the
-episode to heart too&mdash;how 'the Queen had
-been graciously pleased to signify her
-intention of conferring the decoration of the
-Victoria Cross' on Lieutenant Evan
-Cameron, of the &mdash;th Foot, and now of the
-Black Watch, for a daring act of bravery
-on a date given, when the retreating forces
-were attacked by Afghans in great
-strength, the latter having pushed forward
-upon the position at daybreak, and
-Lieutenant Cameron, accompanied by only five
-soldiers, captured a nine-pounder gun,
-shooting down or bayonetting all the
-gunners, and thus preventing the destructive
-use of the piece, which he brought off with
-the loss of one man, but in the conflict
-received three severe tulwar wounds.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cameron was an enthusiast in his profession,
-and with outwardly the air of a
-well-bred man of the world, and thoroughly
-so that of a young Line officer, he had in
-his nature a deep sentiment of nationality,
-of clanship, and Highland romance, with
-an intense pride in his regiment. He had
-entertained Eveline often with sketches,
-anecdotes, and traditions of the Black
-Watch, but of himself and his V.C., of
-course, he never spoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a proud moment it must have
-been for you, when you knew that you had
-won the cross!' said the girl, with a flush
-on her soft cheek.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Stirred in his soul by the interest she
-took in him, the great secret of his heart
-was trembling on his lips, but he repressed
-it, and a shadow came into his face and a
-wistfulness into his eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Prouder would I have been, Miss
-Graham,' said he, 'if&mdash;if&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I had then been known even by name
-to <i>you</i>?' he replied, in a low voice, and
-with a manner there was no mistaking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nothing more was said then; yet they
-both felt, while eye met eye, that their
-first words of love had been spoken.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-More might, perhaps, have passed, as
-the subject could easily have been enlarged
-on; but just then they were abruptly
-joined by Allan, who came up at a trot and
-reined in his horse sharply by their side,
-with a dark expression on his face, which
-Eveline thought augured ill for his success
-with Olive, whom he had suddenly left in
-the care of Mr. Hawke Holcroft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After quitting the ruins, as Allan rode
-on by his cousin's side, his memory had
-gone back to the days when she was a girl
-of some twelve years or so&mdash;a bright-eyed
-hoyden, who could fish, even take a shot
-from his gun, climb trees, eat apples right
-off the branch, play marbles with him,
-grasp a trout darting in the burn under
-the long yellow broom or purple brambles,
-and was his companion in many a ramble
-and out-door frolic; and now inspired by
-that memory, the scenery and beauty of
-the evening, he felt himself disposed to
-treat with considerable tenderness the
-lovely girl he hoped to make yet his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the other hand, Olive cared little to
-please him, and for a time she almost
-repelled, and yet by doing so she greatly
-lured and attracted him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The friendship of Allan and Olive was a
-source of some perplexity, if not amusement,
-to Eveline Graham, but of irritation
-to her mother, to whom they never seemed
-to act as lovers at all, unless in 'the Scots
-fashion' of pouting and quarrelling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the eyes of all interested in the matter,
-it did not seem that she cared for him
-in the least. She never altered a plan or
-hastened her pace to meet him, or go where
-he might chance to be&mdash;in the library, on
-the terrace smoking, or in any of the
-quaint corridors that traversed the old
-house. She never adopted a dress, a
-ribbon, or ornament to please his eye,
-though she sometimes did, coquettishly,
-he thought, to flatter Hawke Holcroft;
-and even now, as they were slowly
-traversing the dark, woody dell of the
-legend&mdash;the <i>Coire-nan-Uriskin</i>&mdash;she was humming,
-half in warning, half in waggery, Tennyson's song:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'She can both false and friendly be,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beware! beware!<br />
- Trust her not, she is fooling thee!'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-And yet, as she glanced at her soldierly
-cousin from time to time under her long,
-dark lashes, she thought that, though he
-looked stately in the kilt, he seldom looked
-better than now when in riding costume,
-with the smartest of light grey cover coats.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl's mind vibrated curiously between
-her over-sensitive pride, her wishes,
-her doubts, and half convictions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If pique at her position in the family
-with Allan had made her accept, with a
-certain degree of equanimity, the attentions
-of Holcroft, she now began to feel a
-pleasure that she had not more fully
-encouraged them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At such moments as the present Allan
-felt that this fair girl, who had ever been
-his friend&mdash;cherished as a sister&mdash;this
-sweet cousin with the violet eyes and rich
-brown hair&mdash;was dear to him with a
-tenderness to which he could scarcely give a
-name, unless it were purest love; and she
-might have read it in his eyes, intense and
-strong, but for that spirit of wilfulness
-which led her to temporise&mdash;was it to
-tyrannise?&mdash;or play with it and him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But may a girl really love a man till she
-is certain of being loved in return? For
-Allan, baffled by her manner, had said
-nothing very pointed as yet, as if he based
-all their future on her father's will; and
-times there were when in pique he dropped
-his way of treating her half playfully, half
-deferentially, and became absolutely cold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In fact, the thoughts of Olive, apart
-from her jealous pride, were somewhat
-difficult to analyse; but, as yet, she
-deemed that she could only regard him
-with a kind of sisterly attention; while he,
-when not irritated by the presence of
-Holcroft, would say to Eveline,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When we are alone, and can slip back
-into our old memories, I shall soon teach
-her to love me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But meantime,' replied his sister, 'you
-are the most tiresome couple in the
-world.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I wish Mr. Holcroft or some one else
-would join us,' said Olive, looking round
-in her saddle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, it is always Mr. Holcroft!' exclaimed Allan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are so provokingly silent. For
-more than a mile you have not once
-spoken to me. It is stupid to be so <i>triste</i>!
-Surely there is some one else whose society
-you prefer, or with whom you would be
-more lively?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Olive!' said he, on hearing this blunt
-and pointed remark&mdash;both curiously so for
-her. 'You are surely not jealous of
-anyone?' he added.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Jealous!' echoed the girl, with a strange
-but affected kind of lazy scorn; 'why
-should I be so, and of <i>whom</i>?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well may you ask, of whom could you
-be so?' replied Allan, pointedly&mdash;so much
-so that she coloured; 'though I, of course,
-matter little to you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Allan, you are very wrong to say so,'
-said the girl, softly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then I am not quite indifferent to
-you?' urged Allan, impulsively now; 'you
-do care for me a little?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Certainly&mdash;a good deal, if it is any
-satisfaction to you; but there&mdash;don't touch
-my bridle hand, or you will make my horse
-shy. How can you be so tiresome!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan sighed, and yet he regarded her,
-in her loveliness and insouciance, with an
-expression just then of mingled amusement,
-annoyance, and regard in his dark
-hazel eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With all the love that had been growing
-in his heart for Olive, he had been in no
-hurry to urge his suit, for, though
-impetuous by nature, he could be reserved and
-cautious enough at times; but now his
-heart flew to his head, and he said,
-bluntly,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dearest Olive, will you promise to love
-me&mdash;to marry me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why require any promise about the
-matter?' she replied, as all her wilfulness
-returned; 'has not my father promised for
-me&mdash;bequeathed me to you like a bale of
-goods, or condemned me to poverty!' she
-added, with a bitter laugh on her lips that
-curled with anger. 'I wonder that he did
-not order that I was to be locked up and
-fed on bread and water till I gave my
-consent to marry you, or that I was to be
-dropped into that oubliette which exists
-somewhere in Dundargue.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Cousin Olive,' said he, reproachfully,
-'why this pride and doubt of my purpose?
-You are as cruel as you are beautiful.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is worse than anything you have
-ever said to me,' she cried, with angry
-laughter still.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Worse?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, an attempt at gross straightforward
-compliment, as if I was a girl at a
-railway buffet.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't you like to be complimented?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By some people&mdash;yes,' was the petulant
-reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All the girls I have ever known have
-liked pretty, flattering speeches.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But I am different, I hope, from most
-of the girls you have known.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By Jove you are!' replied the Master,
-twisting his moustache till he made himself
-wince; 'but will I never be more to
-you than I am now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never more than my cousin&mdash;what
-would you desire to be? But here comes
-Mr. Holcroft, to whom I certainly made
-no sign,' she added, with some annoyance,
-as she thought of what had so lately passed
-between them; and then, so variable was
-her emotion, that she laughed as she
-thought&mdash;'Two proposals in one day, and
-both made in the saddle too&mdash;how droll!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan misinterpreted her silent laugh as
-a welcome to Holcroft, and shrank from
-his own angry fears&mdash;they were not
-convictions yet&mdash;lest he should adopt that
-meanest passion of the whole category&mdash;jealousy
-without a just cause&mdash;jealousy
-of one inferior to him in social position,
-and certainly in personal attractions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When reduced to act cavalier to Miss
-Ruby Logan, who certainly did not want
-him, Hawke Holcroft had looked darkly
-after the cousins as they rode off together,
-and thought that nothing short of death
-would prevent him from accomplishing
-the object he had now in view ere he left
-Dundargue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From something in the manner of the
-cousins, he&mdash;a close observer&mdash;augured
-that Allan had not made his 'innings'
-with the heiress, yet he cantered up to
-Allan's side, and said, smilingly to Olive,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'May I smoke, Miss Raymond? The
-road is quite lonely, and if not disagreeable
-to you&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Certainly,' said she, curtly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And I shall join you,' added Allan.
-'Can you oblige me with a light, Holcroft?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cigars were selected, and Holcroft
-handed his silver matchbox to Allan, who,
-with a leap of his heart, though without
-changing colour or a muscle of his dark and
-sunburned face, saw on his rival's wrist
-his own gift sent from Delhi, the gold
-bangle, which Olive had, perhaps, for the
-time forgotten, and on which was her own
-name in raised Roman letters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had seen Holcroft in rather close
-proximity to her during the most of the
-day, and if piqued thereat, more than ever
-was he piqued and startled now, and
-abruptly wheeling round his horse, he
-muttered some excuse and joined his sister
-and his friend Cameron, while the words
-of the song came ominously back to
-memory&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Trust her not, she is fooling thee.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The bangle! He blushed to think of it,
-and shrank as yet from speaking of it,
-even to Eveline, for he was altogether
-unaware of under what circumstances
-Holcroft came to possess it, or the effort
-Olive had made to procure its return
-without success, but imagination and
-jealousy now did much to fill his heart
-with secret fury.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Would the future hold love or hatred
-for these two cousins? It seemed just
-then difficult to say.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like Eveline, he thought the gift of the
-photo a trifle when compared with this, yet
-the photo was eventually to prove the
-most serious and troublesome gift of the
-two.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wounded self-esteem, disquiet, and
-intense mortification reigned supreme in the
-mind of the somewhat proud young Master
-of Aberfeldie; but he felt himself
-necessitated to dissemble. Hawke Holcroft was
-his father's guest, the son of his father's
-oldest and most valued friend; and while
-at Dundargue it would be necessary to
-treat him with courtesy, though Allan
-never doubted that he was a 'leg,' and
-resolved that his courtesy would be
-blended with watchfulness, if&mdash;bitter
-thought&mdash;Olive was now worth watching over!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unprepared for such a crisis or catastrophe
-as the discovery of the bangle, and
-ignorant that Allan had made it, when a
-carpet-dance took place that evening at
-Dundargue, though Olive was arrayed in
-one of her most becoming toilettes for
-him, and him alone, he never even
-addressed her or looked near her; and, black
-though his brow, he entirely occupied
-himself with Ruby Logan; and, provoked by
-this, Olive again endured the attention of
-Holcroft, and thought to play&mdash;or affect to
-play&mdash;with them <i>both</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this, however, the little scheme was
-doomed to be disappointed by the
-events of the following day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall quit Dundargue for London, or
-give up my leave and go back to the
-regiment, and never look upon her fair, false
-face again till I have schooled myself into
-merely regarding her with a brotherly&mdash;well,
-say cousinly&mdash;eye!' thought Allan,
-with great bitterness of spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But how about that absurd will and the
-settlement of the money?
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><br />
-EVELINE'S SUITOR.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'Verily,' says a writer, 'we miss our
-opportunities, and live our lives as if they
-were all to come twice over; not as if each
-passing sunset brought us nearer that
-day when the pulse must cease to beat,
-and the heart with all its emotions must be
-stilled for ever.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive was now experiencing the truth of
-this to a certain extent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had been&mdash;in spite of herself&mdash;touched
-by Allan's earnestness, and on
-retiring to her room her first act was to
-have his neglected gift&mdash;the little silver
-idol&mdash;the bequest of the grateful subadar&mdash;duly
-installed on a pretty Swiss bracket,
-and next morning she determined to
-discover why his manner, after their return
-from Dunsinane, had been so marked and
-disagreeable to her, even if she should
-take the initiative, and have to recur to
-the conversation which ended so abruptly
-on the preceding evening.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She entered the breakfast-room full of
-the subject, and dressed&mdash;so far as lace
-and blue ribbons went&mdash;in a most
-attractive and coquettish morning costume;
-but Allan was not there&mdash;he was at the
-stables, no doubt, or at the kennel. How
-tiresome men were, she thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good morning, Olive darling! how
-charming you look&mdash;I must positively give
-you a kiss!' exclaimed the not usually
-effusive Lady Aberfeldie, touching the
-girl's cheek with her lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The last to appear at the breakfast-table
-was her husband, who entered with a note
-in his hand, and an expression of surprise
-on his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Here is a strange thing, Eveline,' said
-he to Lady Aberfeldie. 'Tappleton has
-just brought me this note from
-Allan&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'From Allan!' exclaimed one or two
-voices.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stating that he would leave by dawn
-this morning to take the train for the
-south, and might be absent some time,
-and this without further explanation.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How odd&mdash;how unlike him!' exclaimed
-Lady Aberfeldie. 'Do you know of any
-business engagement or invitation he had?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No&mdash;I know of nothing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Or you, Olive&mdash;or you, Mr. Cameron?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All professed ignorance, and the matter
-was canvassed by the family circle in
-vain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It will be explained, of course. Allan
-never acts without reason,' said his father,
-addressing himself to the morning
-meal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Allan gone&mdash;how odd&mdash;how unaccountable!'
-was the thought of Olive, whose
-heart rather reproached her; and now, for
-a little time, she missed the handsome
-cousin whom she had so teased, worried,
-and mortified; and she began to dread
-that he had resigned his leave of
-absence, and gone abruptly to rejoin his
-regiment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Olive,' said Lady Aberfeldie, 'do go on
-with your breakfast.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, auntie, I have finished.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Finished!&mdash;child, you have taken
-nothing: Tappleton will get you a little
-grouse-pie.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, no&mdash;thanks,' replied Olive, and,
-rising from the table, she quitted the room.
-The eyes of her aunt and Holcroft followed
-her, as each had thoughts of their own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The love the latter professed for her was
-destitute of jealousy, but was not without
-fear; and his face just then would have
-been a picture had anyone cared to study
-it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There might have been read satisfaction
-that by Allan's unexpected departure he
-had the field all to himself; annoyance, for
-the Dundargue despatch-box often brought
-him, and on this morning had done so,
-epistles in blue envelopes, which he cared
-not to receive; greed, as he thought of the
-prize that might yet be his; and hot
-impatience to find it in his grasp; and thus,
-while affecting to listen to Lord Aberfeldie,
-who was describing to him and Sir Paget
-a cover they were to shoot over that day,
-his mind was revolving how he might
-succeed in entrapping Olive Raymond into
-some kind of Scotch marriage (whatever
-that was) in fun, or jest, and then declare
-it was a true and solemn ceremony. He
-thought he had heard of such things being
-tried and done, but was not quite certain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-However, he took fresh courage now
-that he would have her all to himself, and
-thought, with Bulwer, that 'thrones and
-bread man wins by the aid of others.
-Fame and woman's heart he can only gain
-through himself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not that he cared much for fame or
-woman's heart either; but he could
-mightily appreciate her fortune.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Whatever was the secret thought of
-Olive about the sudden and unexpected
-departure of Allan, she felt some renewal
-of her pique, but of a different kind, when
-told by Eveline of the magnificent suite of
-Maltese ornaments he had brought home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For whom?' she asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You, of course.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then he has never offered them for my
-acceptance.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Think of your manner to him, Olive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are for Ruby Logan more likely.
-He has met Ruby before, we all know.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I should not be surprised if they
-become a gift to Ruby now,' replied Eveline,
-who was quietly provoked by Olive's
-treatment of her brother; 'though, when
-he got these jewels at Malta, I question if
-he knew of that yellow-haired damsel's
-existence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, greatly to the vexation of
-Eveline, and the amusement perhaps of
-Olive, the latter's bangle remained on the
-wrist of the enterprising Mr. Holcroft,
-though none of them knew the mischief
-that the discovery of it had wrought in the
-mind of Allan Graham; but in the latter's
-absence poor little Eveline was doomed to
-have&mdash;unsupported by his presence and
-advice&mdash;some heavy trouble of her own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord and Lady Aberfeldie were in
-consultation in the latter's boudoir, a little,
-old-fashioned room of octagonal shape, the
-panelled walls of which were hung with
-rich silk&mdash;a sanctum long sacred to the
-Chatelaines of Dundargue, and the whole
-appurtenances of which had that combined
-air of ease, repose, and grandeur peculiar
-to the furniture of an ancient and
-long-descended race.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Kelpie&mdash;a currish-looking terrier, but
-her ladyship's pet&mdash;had got his morning
-repast of cream and macaroons from her
-own white hands, and, this important duty
-over, she and her husband began to
-converse on family matters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie amid these, indulged in
-some angry surmises as to how long they
-were 'to have the society of Mr. Holcroft.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot say that I care much personally
-for Hawke Holcroft,' replied her
-husband; 'but his father, as you know, saved
-my life at Alma, and won therefore the V.C.
-I have told you, Eveline, I think, that when
-Colin Campbell's Highland brigade
-advanced in <i>echelon</i> of regiments along the
-Kourgané Hill, the Black Watch, of course,
-led the way, and, just about the time the
-Russian Kazan column broke, no particular
-sound had followed our firing but the yells
-of their wounded ringing through the
-smoke. With the next volley we heard a
-rattling sound, as our bullets fell like hail
-upon the tin-kettles they carried outside
-their knapsacks, as all the great grey-coated
-blocks of infantry were <i>right about face</i> now,
-in full retreat. It was just then, as our
-calvary and guns swept after them in
-pursuit, that I fell wounded, and would have
-been bayoneted on the spot by four Russians,
-who lay among some caper bushes shamming
-death, had not old Major Holcroft cut them
-down like ninepins, and protected me till
-some of our fellows returned. I cannot
-forget all that, you know.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie, who had heard all this
-fifty times at least before, sighed with
-impatience, and said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'His son certainly appears to have some
-attraction for Olive; and what would you
-think if Allan, repelled by her, was actually
-to fall in love with Ruby Logan and her
-amber locks? What a complication that
-might be.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't suggest such a thing for a moment.
-I hope he will prove himself every
-way worthy of one who has so long occupied,
-like Eveline, the place of a daughter in our
-hearts.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Talking of Eveline, it is high time she
-was informed of Sir Paget's views and
-wishes; and while on the subject may I
-ask,' she added, with some asperity of
-tone, 'how long Mr. Cameron is to be
-here?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A week yet, and then he must report
-himself at head-quarters.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A whole week?' muttered lady Aberfeldie,
-who was far from inhospitable when
-she approved of the objects to whom she
-thought hospitality should be extended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do like Stratherroch. He is like his
-father, old Angus of the Cameron Highlanders,
-yet not so lively; for Angus was the
-king of good fellows, and used to keep the
-mess-table in a roar.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yet I would his son were with the regiment
-again, or anywhere else but here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think he admires Eveline.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am certain of it, and the sooner their
-intimacy terminates the better. Eveline
-and Strath&mdash;good heavens!' exclaimed
-Lady Aberfeldie, with her white jewelled
-hands uplifted, 'never again must their
-names be mingled, even in our family
-circle, especially under pending circumstances.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They do seem intimate,' said the peer,
-moodily; 'but have not at least progressed
-so far as the use of Christian names.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That would be intolerable:' and, ringing
-the bell, Lady Aberfeldie desired a servant
-to summon her daughter, who appeared in
-a very coquettish and becoming lawn-tennis
-costume, for a game on the lawn, where
-the courts were already set and some friends
-awaited.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She entered with a bright smile, which
-soon died away, for she read an expression
-in the faces of her parents, especially
-that of her mother, which seemed to her
-sensitive heart prophetic of evil.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If it be true, as Madame be Stael asserts,
-that 'love occupies the whole life of a
-woman,' it need not be a matter of surprise
-that the sex can discover each other's love
-secrets with ease; thus, though Lady
-Aberfeldie fully suspected what filled the
-heart of her daughter&mdash;so closely had she
-watched her&mdash;she was somewhat pitiless
-now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With all her queenly manner and soft
-grace, her unexceptional toilettes and
-suavity of manner, Lady Aberfeldie had a will
-of iron, yea, of adamant in some things,
-and her daughter's marriage with Sir Paget
-was one of them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was told plainly and bluntly that he
-had proposed for her hand; had asked
-permission to address her on the subject; had
-offered magnificent&mdash;yea, princely settlements;
-and it was expected the marriage
-would take place, when the family returned
-to London, next season.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The long dreaded cloud had burst upon
-her at last!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She grew white as a lily on hearing this
-sentence, clung to a console table for
-support, and then burst into a torrent of tears,
-while her father drew her tenderly towards him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Be calm, child,' said he, 'we shall give
-you plenty of time to think about it;
-marriage is a serious thing at all times.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline thought it was doubly serious
-with such a bridegroom, but could only sob,
-while her mother eyed her gloomily, as
-she thought this excessive grief and
-repugnance augured worse for her scheme than
-indignation or defiance would have done;
-but poor Eveline was all softness and
-gentleness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What folly is this?' she asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am your only daughter, mamma,'
-urged Eveline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hence it is your first duty to your
-family, to yourself, and the world to make
-an early, eligible, and wealthy marriage.
-Every season brings many such to pass in
-our own circle.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are we so poor, mamma?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We are not rich, and know not what
-may happen.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Did Lady Aberfeldie speak prophetically?
-If so, it was an utterance made
-unawares.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Eveline darling,' said her father, 'you
-were content enough with the attentions of
-Sir Paget, and to accept even his presents
-in London, a season or two ago.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was but a girl then fresh from school,
-and&mdash;and joined other girls in laughing at
-my having an old lover. I&mdash;I knew no
-better,' she continued, sobbing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And had not met Cameron of Stratherroch!'
-said her mother through her set
-teeth, and quite forgetting the <i>rôle</i> she had
-so recently suggested.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' thought Eveline, 'and had not
-learned to love him.' She shivered as if
-she had been struck when her mother spoke,
-and then said, with all the firmness she
-could assume.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You must mistake us in some way,
-mamma. Mr. Cameron has never addressed
-a word to me that he might not have
-addressed to yourself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am glad of it&mdash;then I shall taunt you
-with his name no more,' said her mother,
-kissing her forehead. 'People generally,
-but young ladies especially, should never
-indulge in strong emotions.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps, mamma; but why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They age the face so much by lining it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline covered with her handkerchief
-her whole sweet face, which was quivering
-with emotion now. She felt that the romance
-of her young girl's life was quite passing
-from her, and that, even if she escaped
-a marriage with Sir Paget, she must think
-of Evan Cameron and his silent love no
-more!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Think of Sir Paget's princely settlements,'
-said Lord Aberfeldie. 'But how
-difficult it is,' he added, as if to himself, 'to
-imbue a woman&mdash;a pretty girl more than
-all&mdash;with any idea of the seriousness of
-pounds, shillings, and pence! To her they
-are as the sands upon the seashore, unless
-she has known want.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do reflect on all this, Eveline,' urged
-her mother.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot; and why should I do so?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because most of the great evils of life
-might be avoided if we would only take
-time to reflect.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In a matter like this, mamma,' said
-Eveline, taking courage from her desperation,
-and hoping by temporising to gain,
-at least, time, 'reflection might lead to
-madness. Can wealth or princely settlements
-make up for that disparity of years
-which will excite ridicule in all the girls
-who know me, and cover me with contempt
-as a mean, sordid, and covetous creature
-in marrying a man I do not and can never
-love, and who cannot really care for me,
-whatever he may think or say? So, so, I
-am to be taken to market, as it were, and
-sold to the best advantage. That is the
-plain English of it!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Eveline, how can you adopt a tone so
-little like you?' said her mother, reproachfully.
-'Sir Paget will be sure to address
-you on this subject, as he has your papa's
-permission, and, when he does so, be sure
-that you comport yourself as becomes my
-daughter,' she added, rather haughtily, and
-rather ignoring her husband in the matter.
-'But go; I hear Olive and Miss Logan
-calling for you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline hurried away, bathed her eyes,
-and then, hat in hand, descended from the
-terrace to the sunny lawn, where Olive,
-Ruby, and other girls were flitting about,
-radiant with smiles and in gaily-coloured
-costumes, with saucy and bewitching hats,
-talking and laughing merrily; but the girl
-felt as one in a dream, a nightmare. A
-dark cloud seemed to envelop her, amid
-which she heard the voices of her friends,
-and it may be imagined with what
-emotions in her breast she saw in the
-tennis-court opposite her, Cameron, looking so
-handsome in a kind of athlete's flannel
-dress, and the rotund figure of Sir Paget
-in a tight morning coat, out of the neck of
-which his round, shining head was jerked
-ever and anon in the turtle fashion we
-have described.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Never while she lived, Eveline thought,
-should she forget the horror she had of
-that game of lawn-tennis; the part she had
-to act in it under a glorious sunshine, and
-the desire she had for the seclusion of her
-own room, for by contrast with the chaos
-in her own heart the whole bright scene
-became a species of grim phantasmagoria.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her heart seemed full of tears; her
-naturally buoyant and happy spirit was
-crushed. She dared hardly trust herself
-to address even Cameron, who saw, with a
-lover's instinct, that something, he knew
-not what (unless with reference to Sir
-Paget), had gone decidedly wrong.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have already adverted to the strong
-passion an elderly swain like Sir Paget
-may conceive for a young girl; and,
-encouraged by her parents' permission, he
-was now giving full swing to it, as he
-watched her slender, lithe, and willowy
-figure in the various postures incident to
-the game, which tested his powers of action
-severely, and during a pause in it he
-approached her with a smile rippling on his
-rubicund old face, and displaying a set of
-teeth that were first-rate as to cost and
-quality.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My dear Miss Graham,' he said, with a
-most insinuating jerk of his head, 'why do
-you avoid me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am not aware that I avoid you; I
-hope I don't do so,' replied Eveline,
-colouring with annoyance, and at the conviction
-that she certainly had done so. Then, as
-a kind of hunted feeling came over her,
-she added; 'but I do not think, Sir Paget,
-that I am bound to account to you for all
-I do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course not,' said he, with a bow, and
-Eveline coloured more deeply at the
-ungraciousness of her own speech; 'of course
-not, my dear young lady&mdash;<i>as yet</i>,' he added,
-under his breath.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last she pleaded illness, fatigue, and
-headache, threw down her hat, and fairly
-fled to her own room.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><br />
-A REVELATION TO HOLCROFT.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The sudden, unexpected, and unexplained
-departure of Allan Graham from Dundargue
-(a reason for which will be given in
-due time), if it puzzled his family, still
-more puzzled and piqued Olive, especially
-after what passed between them on their
-homeward ride. But then, says
-Lefanu,&mdash;'Women are so enigmatical; some in
-everything&mdash;all in matters of the heart.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The monetary matters of Mr. Hawke
-Holcroft were approaching a species of
-crisis now, and he was daily getting
-orange-coloured missives and messages
-'wired' in mysterious terms from jockeys,
-bookmakers, and other horsey folks that
-added to his tribulation, for things seemed
-to be going wrong with him, and he felt
-that now or never must he attempt to
-secure the heiress, who, he thought, was
-only waiting to be carried off.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even loo and écarté in the evening
-with such pigeon-like players as Sir Paget
-were beginning to fail as resources.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Odd fellow in his way,' remarked the
-baronet to Cameron. 'A trifle too lucky
-at cards for my taste.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Or mine,' said Cameron, grimly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Turns up the king too often after the
-early hours of the morning.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet when night came again and the
-small hours of the morning, the somewhat
-simple M.P. for Slough-cum-Sloggit was
-again a heavy loser to Holcroft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He has some secret about him,' said
-the former.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Most men have some secret which they
-generally keep to themselves,' replied
-Cameron.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Secrets certainly, which they seldom
-tell to their wives or sweethearts,' said the
-baronet, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have said that Olive had a secret
-thought that might prove somewhat fatal
-to Allan's success with her, a mistaken
-idea that Holcroft loved her&mdash;loved her
-for herself&mdash;and despite the tenor of her
-father's will; while Allan might love her
-because he knew the value of its tenor to
-himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, now that the latter was so unaccountably
-absent, Holcroft was full of confidence,
-and, the ice having once been
-broken, thought it would be easy to go
-back to where he had left off on the ride
-home from Dunsinane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In his own selfish way he loved her;
-but then she was beautiful. Loved her!
-'Oh, poverty of language, that we must so
-often use the word love!' exclaims a writer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was some days before his inevitable
-departure from Dundargue (and not an
-hour too soon for that), when he and
-Olive were somewhat earlier, and before
-anyone else, in the breakfast-room, and
-the notes of Ronald Gair's pipes, playing
-his morning reveille, 'The Black Watch,'
-a slow and wailing air, were dying away
-on the terrace outside.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holcroft's face looked worn and
-haggard&mdash;more freckled, and the eyes more
-than usually shifty in their expression.
-He had received some letters and
-telegrams the evening before that upset him
-so much that he failed even to win at loo
-or écarté, and the live-long night he had
-been heard by Cameron pacing to and fro,
-as if unable to rest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive was struck by his pallid appearance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They exchanged 'Good-mornings,' and
-then a few minutes' silence ensued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We may have rain soon.' was the not
-very original remark of Holcroft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The sky looks very like it. Rain
-always comes when the mist is where we
-see it now, on yonder low spur of the
-Sidlaw Hills,' replied Olive.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was kneeling on a bearskin, beside
-the great staghounds, Shiuloch and Bran,
-with her little white hands outspread
-before the fire for warmth; and a charming
-picture she made, in her morning costume,
-fresh and lovely as a fairy, with the
-dogs in the foreground, and the great
-carved stone arch of the baronial
-chimney-piece for a frame.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hawke Holcroft turned from the window
-and came to her side, though curiously
-enough the hazel eyes of the hounds
-glistened, and they showed their teeth at
-him, suggestive of kicks secretly administered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We are down earlier than usual this
-morning,' said she.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All the better.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I want so particularly to talk to you,'
-said he, with all the softness he could
-assume.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And I with you,' said Olive, with a
-frankness that was a curious mistake. 'You
-leave us soon, I believe?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For London?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For London,' he replied, mechanically,
-as it were.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I thought you came to stay out the
-grouse-shooting?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Till the tenth of December! I have
-not been asked,' he replied, gnawing his
-yellow moustache; and then, after a pause,
-added, 'would <i>you</i> wish that I stayed?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Certainly, if you are enjoying yourself,'
-was the girl's frank but&mdash;after what he
-had urged some time ago&mdash;rather rash
-response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His eyes sparkled&mdash;he drew nearer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Miss Raymond&mdash;Olive!' he exclaimed,
-but paused, as, at that moment, Lady Aberfeldie
-swept into the room; 'on the terrace&mdash;the
-terrace after breakfast,' he whispered,
-hurriedly, and then turned to receive his
-hostess's morning greeting, which was so
-frigid that he feared she had overheard
-him call her niece by her Christian name.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holcroft was rather abstracted at
-breakfast; thus Ruby Logan, who had been
-watching him, said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I would not, if I were you, put more
-sugar on the devilled turkey; it won't
-improve it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Forgot it was not salt; thanks, Miss
-Logan,' stammered Holcroft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, whether the charming Olive was
-inspired by coquetry, curiosity, caprice, or
-a strange desire to play with fire, we know
-not; but when breakfast was over she laid
-down a novel she had been reading, or
-affecting to read, at intervals during the
-meal, and, assuming her garden hat, with
-all the laces and ribbons of her bright
-morning dress fluttering about her, while
-everyone else at table was deep in his or
-her letters and papers, went forth
-upon&mdash;the terrace!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now Mr. Hawke Holcroft never read
-novels or anything else unless for a
-purpose. He glanced at the page which Olive
-had left open (the work was 'Miss
-Forrester') and the passage struck him as
-most <i>apropos</i> to himself:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I never pretended to goodness. I have
-certain views for myself. I never
-pretended to fooling. I am clever. What
-stands between me and my ambition I will
-remove; of whatever can administer to it
-I will avail myself. Beyond this, it seems
-to me, I am as good as other people.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hawke, my boy, yourself to a hair!'
-thought he, as he quietly sought the terrace,
-not by the French window, as Olive had
-done, but by going through a corridor and
-the entrance hall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As coolly as if she had no prevision of
-what he was sure to urge, Olive, who wore
-a waggish yet shy expression under her
-garden hat, and who kept her hands deep
-in the pockets of her morning dress, said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What have you to say to me here that
-you could not have said in the vicinity of
-the tea-urn?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'All that I have to say may be said in
-three words.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Three! say it then.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I love you; a confession that has
-hovered on my timid lips many a time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot listen to this, and I wish to
-have back my bangle. If Allan were to see
-it&mdash;good heavens!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have said that it shall be buried with
-me. Do give me some hope.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of what; permission to retain the
-bangle?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; that you may one day love me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Say rather that you will not.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barring, in an angle of the terrace, her
-attempts to leave him, he continued, in an
-earnestness that was born of monetary
-pressure and desperate hope, to plead his passion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am greatly honoured,' replied the girl,
-growing cold as he waxed warm, and
-glancing nervously at the windows of the
-mansion; 'but I am very sorry&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That you don't love me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But you may in time. Oh, how I could
-teach you to do so! Let me wait and
-strive, Olive. You deem me wild,
-perhaps&mdash;horsey, and all that sort of thing; but
-do you think a man never changes, never
-grows better, under a woman's softening
-influence? Are you entirely to let this
-family compact, whatever it may be,
-Olive&mdash;pardon me, Miss Raymond,' he added, as
-he saw how her face clouded by the
-reference to her position&mdash;'are you intending
-to let it stand between you and all other
-chances of marriage?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have no right to question me thus,
-or to assume this interest in my affairs,
-Mr. Holcroft.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Pardon me, but I have a love for you
-that will last while life does.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He did not add that it was the love
-of&mdash;her money.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If there is only the Master, your cousin,
-between us, that is no barrier, as I know
-you don't love him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then you know more of me than I do
-of myself,' said Olive, provoked by his blunt
-brusquerie of manner, and failing to be
-flattered by his pertinacity just then.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps you deem me an heiress?'
-said Olive, as a new light suddenly broke
-upon her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My dear Miss Raymond,' stammered
-Holcroft, colouring with surprise at the
-abruptness of her question. 'I never
-thought upon the subject; I only knew
-that&mdash;that&mdash;I am not just now a man of
-fortune; my place in Essex&mdash;&mdash;' he paused,
-thinking the less he said about it the better.
-'But who thinks of pelf when the heart is
-full of passion!' he added, magnanimously.
-'But tell me now,' said he, in his most suave
-tone, 'do you care for anyone else more
-than for me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't care for you at all&mdash;at least
-in the way you mean,' she replied, defiantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He ground his teeth, even while he
-smiled, and thought,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I must have patience before I tempt
-my fate again!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hawke Holcroft had made it so much a
-habit during his sojourn at Dundargue to be
-in close attendance upon Olive&mdash;especially
-when they were alone together&mdash;that his
-lovemaking took her less by surprise. In
-a spirit of pique she had permitted him to
-dangle, and to play&mdash;if we may use the
-term&mdash;at admiration for herself; but, now
-that he had become serious a second time,
-she became alarmed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The remark which had escaped her had
-excited some surprise in the mind of
-Holcroft, as it interested him deeply; thus he
-said, in a low soft voice,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You referred to your not being an
-heiress, Miss Raymond, as if <i>that</i> could
-possibly make any difference with one who
-loves you as&mdash;as&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There, there, that will do!' interrupted
-the impetuous Olive; 'I am <i>not</i> an heiress,
-in one sense, but very much of a beggar, if
-you knew all,' she added, in a voice that
-faltered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He regarded her with some bewilderment,
-as well he might, and said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My dear Miss Raymond, what am I to
-understand by this paradox?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Understand that I must marry my
-cousin Allan, or forfeit papa's fortune&mdash;it
-goes to him if I refuse, or to charities.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her distinctness and vehemence carried
-conviction with her words. Holcroft was
-confounded; but, being a practised
-dissembler, he only smiled, and said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A most remarkable arrangement, and a
-tyrannical one for you. But suppose the
-Master had died in his boyhood&mdash;or were
-to die now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The will would be worthless in effect,
-of course, I suppose,' replied Olive, whose
-cheeks now burned scarlet, for&mdash;always a
-creature of hot impulse&mdash;she now thought,
-'<i>why</i> should I have permitted my self to speak
-to <i>him</i>, one, almost a stranger, or to any
-man, of papa's will? What must he think
-of me! Oh, what will Aunt Aberfeldie say?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For half a minute Holcroft was silent.
-He was thinking, 'this must be all bosh!&mdash;a
-cock and a bull, or a madman's will; she
-doesn't know what she is talking
-about&mdash;no woman or girl ever knows business.
-Well&mdash;I've a pull on her anyway; a viscount's
-niece isn't in a fellow's power every
-day, as she will find herself in mine.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What he referred to we shall show ere
-long.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While Olive was still crimson with
-reflections on her own imprudence, Holcroft
-took possession of her passive hands, and
-said, in a partly assumed voice of agitation,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You told me, Miss Raymond&mdash;let me
-say Olive&mdash;a minute or two ago that you
-did not care for me. I shall not take that
-as your final answer; and ere I leave
-Dundargue, when I again venture to speak
-to you on the subject nearest my heart,
-your reply&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Will too probably be the same,' replied
-Olive, wrenching away her hands, as steps
-were heard near, and she hastily re-entered
-the house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The footsteps heard were those of Allan,
-who came leisurely up the flight, a broad
-and stately one, which led to the terrace.
-He had, while proceeding down the avenue,
-observed the pair together, and, as it
-seemed to him, in rather too close proximity.
-He also remarked Olive's abrupt departure,
-at <i>his</i> approach as he supposed, and his
-soul become ireful within him; but he felt
-himself, as he gave a hand to Holcroft,
-compelled to dissemble.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So did the latter who met him smilingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Welcome home to Dundargue,' he
-exclaimed; 'you have come back as
-unexpectedly as you went; but whither?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Only as far as Edinburgh.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah.' The reply seemed rather to relieve
-Holcroft. Nothing was known about
-him there, he thought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A lady was on the terrace with you
-just now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;Miss Raymond.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So I thought&mdash;sorry she did not stay.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why&mdash;particularly?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have some news that may interest her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'About whom?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Herself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hope they are pleasant?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That will depend upon how she may
-view them,' said Allan, with a nod, as he
-entered the house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, what the deuce has he been up
-to&mdash;this fellow, with his hair cut to the
-military pattern&mdash;Newgate crop, I should
-call it&mdash;he looks queer this morning,'
-muttered Holcroft, as he selected a cigar from
-his case, bit the end off with his sharp
-white teeth, and proceeded to smoke it with
-brief, angry, and unenjoyable puffs that
-indicated a mind full of bitterness and ill
-at ease. Olive's communication had been
-a sudden revelation to him.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><br />
-ALLAN PROVES MYSTERIOUS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-If Allan's sudden departure and unexplained
-absence excited some curiosity in the
-minds of his family, his return excited it
-afresh when he declined to make any
-explanation until he had held an interview
-with his cousin, Olive Raymond, who, for
-a time, secluded herself in her own room
-on the usual feminine plea of having a
-headache.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline, who had so longed for his
-return, now with tears told him of her
-father's frequently expressed wish&mdash;nay,
-command, and Sir Paget's forthcoming
-proposal; but, full of his own miseries, he
-could only caress her and say,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'God bless you, little one. I wish you
-well over all this.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sir Paget had left Dundargue pending
-the final arrangements, as he thought; thus
-the cloud and the dread were hanging over
-her still.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Has Olive received back her gold
-bangle&mdash;my gift&mdash;from Mr. Holcroft?' asked
-Allan, with knitted brows.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I&mdash;I think not. How did you learn he
-had it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Plainly enough&mdash;I saw it on his
-wrist!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where he put it, in play&mdash;not she.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I should hope not, by Jove!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know she has asked him for it repeatedly.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can't make the beggar out.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can&mdash;he thinks Olive an heiress.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan's dark brow became more deeply
-knitted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She thinks that if she married you,
-Allan dear,' said his sister, after a pause,
-'she would be sacrificing her own pride and
-liberty, and that you might marry her
-though not caring for her&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But for that wretched money?' said
-Allan, with a kind of snort. 'Poor Olive&mdash;she
-views the situation in this light! I
-certainly shall not ask her to make any
-sacrifices for me, and, so far as I am concerned,
-she shall be free as a bird in the air.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His sister regarded him now with some
-perplexity, not understanding what he
-meant, but said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have just come in time for a little
-carpet-dance we have arranged as a
-farewell treat to Ruby Logan, Mr. Holcroft,
-and&mdash;and Evan Cameron, who are about
-to leave Dundargue.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan noted the inflection of her voice
-as she uttered the name of his young brother
-officer, and then hurried away, as their
-mother entered the room, and with rather
-a cloudy expression in her face, though he
-hastened to kiss her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have been to Edinburgh, I have
-heard,' she said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'About what, Allan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That you will learn in time, mother. I
-must speak with Olive first.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie was full of irrepressible
-curiosity, but Allan declined to gratify it
-just then.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have your recent movements any
-reference to Olive?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will learn in time, mother.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie's face shaded with
-annoyance, for, only the day before, she and
-the petulant young lady in question had
-indulged in a tift between them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perceiving a wistful look and fitful
-manner about Olive, and that she was more
-than usually restless and irritable, Lady
-Aberfeldie had unwisely spoken to her on
-the subject of Allan's regard for her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Olive had sat for a moment or two, with
-her delicate hands tightly interlaced in her
-lap, and then, turning defiantly to her
-aunt, she said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I will never marry Allan!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You must marry Allan, my dear girl,'
-replied Lady Aberfeldie, calmly and firmly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You know your father's wish.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, the will, of course! So I am to be
-treated like a child? Well, if so, I may
-prove a wilful and dangerous one!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her aunt's report of this conversation
-made Lord Aberfeldie more than ever
-anxious for the return of his son.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are very mysterious, Allan. You
-and Olive seem a pair of enigmas,' said
-Lady Aberfeldie. 'But your father waits
-you in the library, and perhaps you will
-condescend to confide in him, if not in me.
-I must own it will be a fatal thing for your
-future happiness if Olive thinks you seek
-her for gain; but for what does Mr. Holcroft
-so evidently seek her?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan smiled disdainfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have tried to think, mother dear, that
-she is not affected by this person Holcroft,
-but begin to own to myself that "the faith
-that worketh miracles" is not in me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When questioned by his father, Allan
-made the same reticent reply, that he must
-see Olive before making any explanations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The time has come now, Allan,' said
-Lord Aberfeldie, 'when you are bound in
-honour to make your cousin an offer, for
-in this peculiar entanglement&mdash;for such,
-I grant you, it is&mdash;you and she do not stand
-in the position of most engaged persons.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But suppose I have no wish to marry&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Absurd&mdash;outrageous!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Or may not marry at all?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By the refusal of Olive?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then her fortune, or most of it, becomes
-yours, in terms of the will&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Which has been a curse to us both. In
-her mind, and in the eyes of all who may
-come to hear of it, we must lie under the
-degrading imputation of a mercenary
-motive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not if you act with tact and delicacy,
-and surely your boy-and-girl attachment
-must remain unchanged,' said Lord Aberfeldie,
-in a voice that was soft, rather than
-indignant, as his memory went back to the
-day when Olive first came a little orphan
-child to Dundargue&mdash;a tiny and graceful
-creature, with tender, wondering, and
-beseeching eyes&mdash;a child that climbed upon
-his knee, clung to him with sympathetic
-love, and played with his watch-chain or
-the tassels of his sash, if he was in uniform.
-'And so,' he added, after a pause, 'you must
-propose to the dear girl as a mere matter of
-form.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have already done so,' said Allan,
-recalling, what he was not likely to forget,
-all that had occurred during the homeward
-ride from Dunsinane.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, sir?' asked his father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was laughed at&mdash;mocked, I may say.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Impossible! The girl must have been
-jesting with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not think so,' said Allan, both sadly
-and bitterly as he thought of the bangle
-and many other circumstances, the inevitable
-'trifles light as air.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, you are bound to renew your
-proposal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not think so, nor shall I again,
-unless some change comes over her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If I exert my authority as guardian
-and trustee&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She may run away. Olive is a proud
-and restless girl with a defiant spirit, though
-she has a very affectionate heart.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But you cannot expect that she is to
-propose to <i>you</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do love her, father&mdash;love her dearly;
-but fear that she views me too much as a
-brother to love me otherwise.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is rank nonsense. Think of your
-separations, and of your last&mdash;one well
-nigh seven years&mdash;with the Black Watch.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But might it not be the case that she
-may have a <i>penchant</i> for some one else?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For whom?' asked Lord Aberfeldie,
-angrily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, say for your friend Mr. Holcroft.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Penniless Hawke Holcroft! absurd&mdash;the
-man has seen but little of her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Quite enough in London and here to
-learn to admire, if not to love her. I would,
-however, rather see her laid in her grave
-than married to Holcroft,' said Allan, in a
-stern but broken voice, adding under
-his breath, as he left his father's presence
-and cut short an unpleasant interview,
-'but, so far as I am concerned, she shall be
-free to choose for herself&mdash;free as the wind.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What the deuce can all this mean?'
-exclaimed Lord Aberfeldie, in great
-perplexity; 'was ever an unfortunate man
-more troubled with two intractable girls,
-than I am with Eveline and Olive!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been said that, 'if exceedingly few
-men and women understand each other
-when they are in their sober senses, how
-must it fare when they are under the
-blinding influence of love?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Allan's course of action was decided
-now.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><br />
-OLIVE CHANGES HER MIND.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'You are pleased to see me again, Olive?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course, Allan&mdash;why do you ask me?'
-she exclaimed, putting both her hands into
-his in welcome.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He retained them with a tender pressure
-for half a minute, looking the while wistfully
-into her violet eyes, and then he let
-them drop from his clasp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You wish particularly to speak with me,
-I understand?' said Olive, nervously thinking
-it must refer to the <i>tête-à-tête</i> he had
-overseen on the terrace.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;particularly, dear Olive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When he saw her tender beauty, her
-grace, and her witchery, and felt all the
-subtle charm of her presence, his heart
-was wrung by the thought that, by the
-very act he had the power to do, and the
-suggestions he was about to make to her,
-he might place her at the entire disposal of
-Hawke Holcroft, of whose real character he
-now knew more than formerly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How variable had been the emotions she
-had, ever since his return from India,
-exhibited towards him! By turns she had
-been changeable and indifferent apparently;
-playful, petulant, and imperious; yet
-always bewitching and sweet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seeing the cloudy and sad expression
-of his eye, Olive said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have not come to scold me for
-anything, Allan. We are at least
-friends.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would we were more,' said Allan,
-remembering what his father had urged but a
-few minutes before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Surely to be cousins is a near enough
-relationship.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Olive,' said he, reproachfully, 'unless
-you have formed a distinct attachment for
-some one else, I must say I do not
-understand you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't want you to understand me,'
-she replied, with half-averted face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why are you so hard with me?' he
-exclaimed, with a wistful, longing, and
-miserable expression in his eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She made no reply, so he spoke again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have had a long consultation with our
-family agent in Edinburgh.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'About what?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your affairs and mine, Olive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>My</i> affairs?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, and I have obtained the opinion of
-ruby Logan's father, and of counsel of
-much higher&mdash;yes, of the highest&mdash;repute
-on the vexed subject of your father's
-will&mdash;vexed at least between you and I,
-Olive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She gazed at him with something of
-vacant surprise blended with inquiry in her
-face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What I am about to suggest may be
-dangerous, as I do not know the terms on
-which you permit yourself to be with
-this&mdash;Mr. Holcroft&mdash;but I have had excellent
-legal advice, and&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Legal advice&mdash;oh, indeed!' she interrupted,
-with a toss of her pretty head; 'that is
-well, for the laws as made by you men rank
-us women with children and lunatics. And
-what says this advice?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That you can be freed from the trammels
-of your father's will&mdash;free, and the
-inheritrix of your own great wealth.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She regarded him for a minute with
-blank astonishment; then as bright joy
-like sunshine spread over her sweet face
-and sparkled in the depth of her eyes, she
-exclaimed, in a low voice,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Free, do you say, free in my own actions,
-and free to bestow papa's money how and
-on whom I please?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'On <i>whom</i> you please,' replied Allan,
-thinking with intense mortification on
-Holcroft, and Holcroft only; for personally he
-was far above thinking of the fortune that
-might otherwise be his own, as the stars
-are above the earth. 'Let me but see all
-this matter fully arranged and then I shall
-be content,' said he, after a pause, during
-which they had been regarding each other;
-he, her with sadness, and she him with
-bewilderment. 'There are rumours in the
-air of a turn-up with the Turks, and of a
-war in Egypt, and right glad I am of that!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, Allan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because I'll get attached to the first
-army corps that sails, even if the Black
-Watch is not going; but that it is sure to
-be, as, thank God! the dear old corps is
-always in everything.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And why this joy?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To get as far away from you as possible,'
-he replied, bluntly, in a hollow tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Must you do so, Allan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, unless I mean to drive myself
-mad.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you really love me so much&mdash;and&mdash;and,'
-she paused, for she seemed touched,
-her sweet lips were quivering now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What more?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For myself alone,' she asked, softly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Love you&mdash;oh, Olive.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There now, don't!' she exclaimed,
-turning away her face, and Allan shrank
-back.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Playing with me, after all&mdash;after all!'
-he muttered. 'Will you please to look at
-the opinion of counsel,' he added, drawing
-from his pocket a folio document, stitched
-with a red thread, and with a broad margin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a long story!' she exclaimed, as
-she glanced at and read,
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-'Chambers, Edinburgh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Copy of Counsel's opinion referred to in
-letter of 20th October, 1882, on the will of
-the late Oliver Raymond, Esq, of Jamaica,
-with note of fees thereon.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-'What a fearful long story!' exclaimed
-Olive again. 'Tell me all about it, Allan? but
-pray don't read it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The will of your father is herein denounced
-as eccentric&mdash;one that no court of
-law would enforce, nor could uphold, as in
-more than one instance it is not conceived in
-strictly legal terms, and, to all intents and
-purposes, can be put aside if you choose.
-Thus, Olive, you are free&mdash;free from all
-the bonds&mdash;if such ever existed&mdash;that
-seemed to bind you to me; and I thank God that
-it is so, and I shall go to Egypt, perhaps,
-with a lighter heart. All that now remains
-to be done is to take the means, if such
-are necessary, to have the document set
-aside as so much waste paper, and you duly
-made mistress of your inheritance, as you
-are now of age, in England, at least, where
-it is invested. Thus, you see, Olive, this
-opinion of counsel is most valuable to you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her soft eyes were brimming over with
-tears now, as she mechanically took the
-document in her tremulous fingers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And thus you relinquish me?' she said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I relinquish, gladly, your fortune, and
-all control over your actions, if&mdash;you
-choose.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But I don't choose! Oh, Allan, how
-generous all this is of you. But I shall not
-be less so, nor will I act upon this opinion
-of counsel.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'See, thus!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, tearing it into pieces, she cast them
-into the fire-grate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Illegal as it may be, papa's will must be
-now a law to me more than ever.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you, Olive?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Love you, dear Allan, and love you dearly,'
-cried the wilful and impulsive girl, as
-all her heart went forth to him, and he
-pressed her to his breast at last.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Doubt, pride, defiance, and petulance
-had all passed away, and Olive was all
-softness, love, and joy now; and to the pair
-time seemed for a term to stand still, and
-save their caressing words softly murmured,
-and the twitter of birds among the ivy
-without, silence appeared to reign in this
-room; and nothing seemed to disturb them,
-till Olive suddenly started from Allan's
-arms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is it, love?' he asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A face at the window!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whose face?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know not,' she replied, with some
-agitation. 'It has just vanished.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She thought, nay, she was sure, it had
-the features of Hawke Holcroft, but she
-did not <i>say</i> so. If it were he, how much
-had he overheard, how much overseen!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But she soon forgot the episode, and that
-night at dinner she looked more radiant
-than ever, in her suite of Maltese
-jewellery&mdash;gold set with orient pearls.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is usual for engaged ladies to have a
-ring,' Allan had whispered, as he slipped a
-magnificently jewelled hoop upon her
-mystic finger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fool that I have been!' thought the
-girl. 'How near was I estranging one of
-the best and dearest of men in the world,
-not for the sake of one immeasurably his
-inferior, even worthless perhaps, but in a
-spirit of vanity, pique, and suspicion!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Allan,' she whispered to him softly,
-when an opportunity came, 'I see now how
-foolish I have been and wilful&mdash;oh, so
-wilful! But we all make mistakes in life, and
-require at times each other's pity and
-forgiveness.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How sweetly and shyly she looked and
-spoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hawke Holcroft felt intuitively, and
-indeed saw, that there was some sudden
-change in the bearing of the pair to each
-other, and that a sudden brightness had
-come into the faces of all&mdash;even that of
-Eveline, usually now so <i>triste</i> and pale&mdash;and
-under his sandy moustache he 'wondered
-what the devil it all meant,' till his watchful
-eyes detected the new and brilliant ring
-on the engaged finger of Olive Raymond!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-If Mr. Hawke Holcroft imagined he had
-nothing to dread personally from the
-Master's sudden visit to Edinburgh he reckoned
-without his host, as he would have found
-had he overheard a brief conversation
-which took place between Allan and his
-comrade, young Cameron, as they loitered
-in the gun-room looking over old Joe-Mantons,
-new rifles, and central-fire breech-loaders, &amp;c.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was not slow to perceive very soon
-that Allan, usually so suave and pleasant
-in manner, treated him now with a kind of
-stiffness that was almost hauteur; but he
-dissembled his rage and so did Allan, who
-had a keen sense of the laws of hospitality,
-with the genuine British dread of aught
-that might approach a 'scene,' more than
-all as the visit of Holcroft was nearly
-ended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor wretch! he strove well to keep a
-brave front in society, while letters that
-often lay beside his plate at breakfast were
-seen to cloud his brow with perplexity, for
-they alluded to wrong horses backed,
-I.O.U.'s, bills, and cheques 'referred to
-drawer,' and so forth, and he must have
-left Dundargue before this, but for a friendly
-slip of paper, which he had received from
-Lord Aberfeldie, that 'Fool of Quality,' as
-he thought him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look here, Cameron,' said Allan, as the
-twain smoked their cigars in a quiet place.
-'It is little wonder to me that you, Sir
-Paget Puddicombe, and one or two others
-lost at cards with Holcroft as you did. I
-dined with our fellows at the mess in the
-Castle when I went to Edinburgh. There
-his name cropped up by the merest chance,
-and I was told by Carslogie of Ours that
-he was present at a shindy in London,
-where this fellow Holcroft, after having an
-unprecedented run at cards at a place in
-St. James Street, was accused of having the
-ace of trumps up his sleeve, from whence
-it fell when he was shying a bottle at the
-accuser's head. He talks to the pater
-largely of his "place in Essex," or what
-remains of it. Involved in debt to a ruinous
-extent, he gave bills right and left, which
-were dishonoured. £10,000 <i>had</i> been
-raised upon his estate, in which he had only a
-reversionary interest, and, when the mortgagees
-called in their money, and the estate
-was sold, it did not suffice to pay a tithe of
-the sums he had raised in every conceivable
-way, and everyone lost their money all
-round. Sharp that! Yet he scraped
-through without punishment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By Jove!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Worse still. Carslogie told me he was
-suspected of causing a horse to fail in a race
-through having the bit poisoned; and how
-he left a young fellow in the Hussars at
-Maidstone in the lurch, by refusing at the
-last moment to ride for him a peculiarly
-vicious horse, which he had solemnly undertaken
-to do, and so causing him to lose the
-race, on which he had most imprudently
-made a ruinously heavy book.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And how did it end?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The report of a pistol that night in the
-cavalry barrack announced that the Hussar
-had shot himself&mdash;that is all! And this
-is the "young man of the period" whom
-my father's confiding simplicity has made
-a welcome guest for some weeks back at
-Dundargue, and thrown into the society of
-my sister and Olive! But I shall fully open
-his eyes the moment our visitor is gone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it was rather a pity for his own sake
-that Allan did not 'open' Lord Aberfeldie's
-eyes a little before that event, and such
-being the character of Mr. Hawke Holcroft the
-reader may feel less surprised at some of
-the things we may have to record of him
-ere long.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><br />
-THE CARPET-DANCE, AND WHAT CAME OF IT.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Though somewhat of the nature of an
-impromptu affair, the 'carpet-dance' partook
-of something of a more important kind.
-Many guests were invited; the ladies were
-in semi-toilet and the gentlemen in evening
-dress: but the great dancing-room at
-Dundargue was decorated to perfection by the
-care of Mr. Tappleton, the butler, the
-housekeeper, and gardener, with the rarest
-plants, flowers, and ferns the conservatories
-could produce, disposed in China and Japanese
-jars on pedestals and marble console
-tables of the time of Louis XIV., at whose
-court a Lord Aberfeldie had once been
-ambassador.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fete had been brought about by the
-two fair cousins as a farewell treat to the
-last of their present guests, who were
-departing&mdash;Ruby Logan, Stratherroch,
-and&mdash;Mr. Holcroft!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Greatly to Eveline's relief, Sir Paget was
-gone, but, as if to worry her further, Sir
-Paget left for her&mdash;with Lady Aberfeldie&mdash;a
-letter referring to his admiration and
-regard for her since the last season in
-London, and with it a handsome diamond
-necklet&mdash;the sight of which in its fragrant
-Russian-leather case she loathed&mdash;with
-the hope that she would accept and wear
-it, in token that she was holding out
-brilliant hopes to him when 'they met in town
-again.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline flatly declined to accept and wear
-the jewellery, so, to her intense annoyance,
-it remained as yet in her mother's hands.
-She was 'biding her time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wealthy suitor had attained a
-battered middle-age, while Eveline was still in
-the glory of her youth. True, but he had
-both wealth and rank to offer, for though
-she was an 'Honourable Miss,' he was a
-baronet, and so far as his love went, if it
-came late in life, it was, nevertheless, a
-kind of overmastering passion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The new emotions of her heart caused
-Eveline to reflect more than perhaps she
-had ever done before. It seemed but
-yesterday since she and Olive conned their
-tasks and practised their scales together
-under the eyes of a governess; since they
-had gathered bouquets of wild flowers from
-the clefts of the rocks of Dundargue, and
-made fairy caps of rushes and harebells by
-the burnside; happy children both; but
-how miserable she was now that she was on
-the verge of womanhood, and had learned
-to love and to hate; for she loved Evan
-Cameron, and hated&mdash;yes, and she blushed
-as she admitted it to herself&mdash;she did hate
-that smiling and rubicund old interloper,
-Sir Paget.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you will not wear the necklet?'
-said Lady Aberfeldie, for the last time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do please to excuse me, dearest mamma&mdash;I
-cannot&mdash;yet a while.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie was pleased by the half
-obedience these words implied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What ornaments will you wear then?'
-she asked. 'You have so many to choose
-from.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let me wear the lovely diamond necklace
-that lies in the strong casket in your
-room, mamma.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Aberfeldie's calm, patrician face
-darkened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I would rather you wore no diamonds
-at all, child; and these I never wear myself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But why, mamma?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because that necklace always brings
-evil to whoever wears it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So I have heard. But it is a silly
-superstition, and they are such lovely
-stones! But what is the story of them?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The wife of a cavalier who died with
-Montrose on the scaffold of Edinburgh
-gave them to an ancestor of ours to save
-his life. This was the first viscount, who
-was a zealous Covenanter, and the bosom
-friend of Lord Warriston. He certainly
-took the jewels from the poor sorrowing
-wife&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And the cavalier?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Was beheaded by the Maiden at the
-market-cross, and a kind of curse seems to
-have attended these diamonds ever since.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A cruel story.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But a true one.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline laughed at the superstition, kissed
-her cold, proud mother, and carried her
-point; thus, at the time when carriage after
-carriage was depositing guests at the great
-arched entrance hall, Eveline was surveying
-her figure and face in the mirror with
-all a young girl's satisfaction and thinking
-that her slender white throat never looked
-as it did then, when encircled by the
-sparkling diamonds of the luckless widow,
-and Olive at the same time was looking
-radiant in the Maltese suite of Allan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How the two last named enjoy the
-carpet-dance! Perfect confidence was so
-sweetly established between them, they had
-so many little secrets to tell, so many
-revelations to make, so many comparisons,
-of mutual hopes and fears, and so forth,
-while each seemed to exult in the affection
-of the other, and felt in their hearts the
-words ascribed to old Catullus:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Let those love now who never loved before.<br />
- Let those who always loved, now love the more!'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-'Those two young fools seem to
-understand each other and each other's interests
-at last!' whispered Lord to Lady Aberfeldie,
-with a smile of amusement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But there are two <i>other</i> young fools
-present who are doing their best to mar
-each other's interests,' was her cold and
-warning response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hawke Holcroft's shifty eyes lowered as
-he watched the cousins and whirled in a
-waltz with Ruby Logan or any other girl
-who came to hand. He was in utter
-perplexity to find the new footing on which
-these hitherto strange lovers so suddenly
-were, and that he himself was, as he felt
-and thought, 'nowhere!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What could she mean? There was something
-of radiance in the faces of all the
-family&mdash;even of the sweetly pensive
-Eveline&mdash;all indicative of a new movement that
-<i>he</i> was out of.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As for Olive,' he muttered, while a
-sentiment of rage, mingled with avarice and
-jealousy, grew strong in his heart, 'she is
-an infernal weather-cock, but a deuced
-handsome one!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ruby Logan was equally puzzled, but
-found consolation with young Carslogie of
-the Black Watch, whom Allan had invited
-to the festivity, and who styled her, with
-reference to her hair, 'the amber witch.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Happy Olive and Allan,' thought Eveline,
-as she rested for a minute on the arm
-of Cameron, 'they may have as many round
-dances as they choose without remark,
-while mine, with <i>him</i>, must be few and far
-between.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her dress was white silk, trimmed with
-little laurel leaves and crowberry&mdash;the latter
-a delicate attention to Evan, as it is the
-badge of the Camerons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Will you wear my colours to-night?'
-she asked, as they promenaded at that end
-of the room which was furthest away from
-'papa and mamma.' She broke off a spray
-and made him a button-hole. 'Allow me
-to fix it for you,' said Eveline, and deftly
-she put it in his lapel, while Evan's heart
-thrilled to feel the touch of her beloved
-hand&mdash;even though gloved&mdash;so near his heart, as
-they swept into another waltz.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Aberfeldie,' said the hostess to her
-husband, 'I feel certain that Evan Cameron
-is in love with our Eveline.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Aberfeldie had no doubt about it
-whatever now, but he only said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He would be a fool to be otherwise.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But that is not what we seek!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Certainly not; but all young fellows
-have fancies; and he will be gone from
-this in a few hours now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank Heaven, yes!' responded Lady
-Aberfeldie, devoutly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By the way, why did you permit her to
-wear those unlucky diamonds?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She pled so hard, and then the idea of
-their bringing evil is so behind the age.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Behind the age or not, something
-untoward or unlucky always accompanies their
-appearance in public. They should have
-been sent to Bond Street long ago.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Lord Aberfeldie smiled on her
-affectionately, as at that moment he could not
-help thinking how handsome and young
-his wife looked in her costume of rich ruby
-velvet, trimmed at the square cut neck and
-arms with the finest white old lace, while
-jewels that an empress might have worn
-glittered in her ears and hair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Replacing sometimes the professional
-musicians, making themselves useful at the
-piano, and playing certainly good dance
-music were two&mdash;the 'mermaids,' as Holcroft
-called them&mdash;the minister's daughters,
-who were usually so fond of warbling that
-they 'were under the blue sea.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knew nothing of what Allan had
-learned concerning him&mdash;of the light
-Carslogie had thrown on his private life; thus,
-whatever change had come over the spirit
-of Olive's dream, he deemed it necessary to
-ask her for, at least, one round dance as
-usual; and Allan watched them with a
-haughty grimace on his features as they
-danced it in a silent manner that was peculiar
-and rather oppressive to both. The
-moment it was over, and he handed her back to
-a seat, Holcroft took refuge in the
-refreshment-room, where Mr. Tappleton gave
-him a foaming glass of sparkling champagne.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Young Cameron was rather grave, Allan
-thought, but the former was oppressed by
-one idea then, that on the morrow he would
-have to report himself at the headquarters
-of the Black Watch, and he gazed like one
-in a dream at the dancers whirling round
-him; so Allan took him to task and strove
-to rally him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why so sad, old fellow? You're down
-on your luck, somehow,' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because, Graham,' replied Cameron,
-with a forced smile, 'there are times when
-I am inclined to ask with Mr. Mallock, "Is
-life worth living?"'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course it is&mdash;but how with you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well,' replied Cameron, with whom just
-then one bitter thought was more than
-usually keen, 'dipped nigh to sinking as
-my place of Stratherroch is, I don't see so
-much to live for, and certainly deuced little
-to live upon.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't take this gloomy view, old fellow,'
-said Allan, cheerfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is very well for you to take a
-jolly view of the world, Allan&mdash;you, the son
-of a peer, and engaged to&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Take heart, man; we've lots of life
-before us&mdash;life in Egypt perhaps. There is
-Eveline sitting alone; take another turn
-with her, and then we'll have some of
-Mumms' extra dry together.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline had opened an album as Cameron
-drew near her, but closed it instantly as
-the first photo that met her eyes was a
-fine cabinet one of Sir Paget. There was
-an expression of pensive sweetness in her
-otherwise radiant face, for she, poor girl,
-never for a moment forgot that a parting&mdash;too
-probably a final one it might prove&mdash;was
-close at hand now, and, after the two
-past delightful months, how dreary would
-the future seem!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are you tired?' said a tender voice in
-her ear; 'it is our dance, I think&mdash;but
-would you rather sit it out?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A little promenade rather.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He bowed, and, rising, she took his
-proffered arm. They made a circuit of the
-room once or twice, and then, lured no
-doubt by the coolness and seclusion of a
-long corridor, entered it, unnoticed as they
-thought; but the watchful gaze of Lady
-Aberfeldie had followed them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was much to see in this long,
-stately, and vaulted corridor, and its deeply
-embayed windows overlooking the rock on
-which the oldest part of Dundargue is
-perched. Its floor was of <i>parqueterie</i>; its
-walls of wainscot, with massively framed
-old pictures; some trophies of arms and
-family armour hung there, and the
-windows were furnished with ancient stone
-seats and modern stained glass, through
-which the radiance of the setting sun
-was contending with the dim shaded
-lamps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Specimens of unique china and frail
-goblets of Venetian glass, with other objects
-of 'bigotry and virtue,' as Holcroft had
-called them, were there in oaken cabinets
-and on exquisite brackets. Among other
-things, on a pedestal, skilfully stuffed, the
-last golden eagle that had been shot at the
-Birks of Aberfeldie, by the gun of Dugald
-Glas, a glorious bird that measured five
-feet from tip to tip of his shining pinions;
-yet none of these things caught the
-attention of the two promenaders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her hand was on his arm; involuntarily
-that arm pressed the soft and tremulous
-fingers which rested there, and in another
-moment his hand stole over them without
-their being withdrawn&mdash;nay, it seemed as
-if their load became more heavy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline was not unaware that there
-was something morally wrong in the
-situation; but, then, 'the situation had its
-charm.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Eveline!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cameron had never before ventured to
-call her by her Christian name, nor, until
-it passed his lips half unconsciously now,
-had he an intention of so uttering it; but
-that utterance seemed scarcely a new
-revelation to the girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Soft and lovely was the shy smile upon
-her upturned face as they stood within the
-deep bay of a window. Was it that smile,
-or what, that dazed Evan Cameron and
-swept his senses away; but he caught her
-suddenly in his arms and kissed her lips
-and eyes, whispering,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh! Eveline, my darling&mdash;my darling!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And then there was a pause, full of
-sighs of happiness. 'The stone was cast
-into the water, and the still lake broke up
-into a stormy sea, where there would be
-peace and quiet no more!' No more, at
-least, unless the future held some
-happiness for these two poor loving hearts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have I done wrong?' said Cameron, in
-a breathless voice, after a little time; 'God
-knows I never meant that you should see
-how dearly, how desperately, and how
-hopelessly I love you when I let the precious
-secret escape me as I did; but it is done
-now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was pale as death and trembling
-violently, as she thought of her mother;
-yet she nestled closely and clingingly to
-him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You love me, Eveline?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can you ask?' she whispered. 'Yes&mdash;oh,
-yes&mdash;Evan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was intoxicated, and drew her close
-to him again. Such a moment comes but
-once in life&mdash;once only!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let us go now&mdash;we shall be missed,'
-said Eveline.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, stay one moment longer, darling.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mamma, if we could only get her to
-be our friend, all might be right and go
-well.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Even with my poverty, Eveline?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't call it so. Yes, papa always
-gives in to her in the long run.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cameron sighed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are you two practising for amateur
-theatricals, or admiring the stars through
-the stained glass?' said the voice of Lord
-Aberfeldie, suddenly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have said that the eyes of his wife
-had followed the pair, and hence no doubt
-his lordship's sudden appearance in the
-dimly-lighted corridor. Both were
-painfully confused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How much had Lord Aberfeldie overseen,
-how much had he overheard, or how
-little of both? It was impossible for
-them to guess, but he good-naturedly
-affected not to see all that his mind
-took in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cameron felt that he had nothing to
-explain, to urge, or to utter, but bowed,
-smiled a very hollow smile indeed, and led
-his partner back to the dancing-room,
-where neither waltzed more that evening,
-as the impromptu affair was over, the
-guests were departing, and Lord
-Aberfeldie was beginning to think that the
-diamonds of the legend were already
-producing their evil results in this the first
-untoward event in the young life of his
-daughter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Allan and Cameron, avoiding Holcroft,
-sat long that night in the former's room
-smoking and imbibing brandy-and-soda,
-but no word escaped the lover of what
-had passed in the corridor; and, sooth to
-say, full of Olive and himself, Allan had
-never missed the pair from the dancing-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cameron was to leave Dundargue
-betimes next morning, so he bade farewell
-to his comrade, who charged him with
-remembrances to 'all our fellows of the
-Black Watch;' and anon Cameron found
-himself alone with his own loving, exulting,
-sad, and anxious thoughts, and with
-the little bouquet&mdash;a dwarf laurel leaf and
-sprig of crowberry&mdash;dearer to him then
-than even his Victoria Cross!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again and again did he rehearse that
-sweet episode in the dimly-lit corridor, and
-again and again in the time to come would
-it return with sorrowful reiteration to his
-heart and memory!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline loved him! Her own lips had
-acknowledged it, her kisses seemed still to
-linger on his lips; but to what end&mdash;my
-God! he exclaimed, in bitterness of heart,
-to what end? Again and again he thought
-over her plaintive and child-like wish, 'if
-we could only get mamma to be our
-friend,' and all that wish suggested. Her
-mother suspected much, he feared, and
-that her father knew all. Sir Paget, with
-his colossal wealth, was looming in the
-distance like a simoon to the newly
-dawned love; and poor Evan could but
-come to the terrible conclusion that, like
-too many others, his penniless love could
-only be a hopeless one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So wore the night away&mdash;the last,
-Cameron was assured, he would ever
-spend in Dundargue; and morning came.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unslept, Cameron made rapidly the
-prosaic preparations for his departure, and
-a valet had borne off his portmanteaus, rugs,
-and gun-case to the entrance hall, where
-the sleepy Mr. Tappleton and a wagonette
-awaited him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he was about to descend the great,
-silent staircase, suddenly Eveline, fully
-dressed for the day and softly slippered,
-stood before him, her mignonne face very
-pale, and her soft hazel eyes inflamed by
-past weeping.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Evan!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My darling!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No housemaids were about as yet,
-and no prying eyes were there, nor had
-Ronald Gair with his pipes blown <i>reveille</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I could not let you go without&mdash;without
-one word of farewell,' she sobbed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Long and mute was their embrace, and
-the heart of Cameron swelled as if to
-bursting with mingled love and gratitude. He
-pressed her to it. It was their parting
-embrace, and both seemed to feel in it
-that which a writer has described as 'the
-vibration of an agony.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I feel as if I were bereft of reason!' he
-whispered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My poor Evan&mdash;my own dear love!'
-cooed the girl. One kiss more, and he was
-gone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When or where, if ever, would they meet
-again?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline had nervously and sedulously
-avoided Sir Paget till the time of his
-departure; and, when he did leave Dundargue
-in the dawn, he was only seen off by the
-old butler; but Evan Cameron had an
-unexpected farewell caress, the memory of a
-sad, soft, and clinging kiss that he was to
-take away with him to what he deemed the
-land of bondage, and tearful eyes watched
-his wagonette as it passed down the
-avenue and out upon the high-road that led
-to the railway.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Evan looked backwards at the tall and
-stately pile of Dundargue, on which the
-rays of the rising sun shone redly, and
-deep in his heart he envied Carslogie, who
-was to remain behind for a couple of days'
-shooting. Yet wherefore should he envy
-any man while Eveline loved him? was his
-afterthought.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And she, poor girl, seemed to feel herself
-left most terribly alone with all her
-sorrow&mdash;alone amid her loving family and
-splendid surroundings, and with Evan's
-words of love lingering in her ear she was
-soon bidden to school herself to think of
-Sir Paget, and Sir Paget Puddicombe only!
-'The human creature,' it has been written,
-'who would have suited us to every fibre of
-our being we have not found, or, having
-found, have not possessed; but (perhaps)
-undervalued, and so allowed to pass out
-of our lives.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These two suited each other 'to a fibre,'
-as our author quaintly puts it, and in
-perfect unanimity of sentiment; and yet for all
-that they may be compelled to pass out of
-each other's lives, and live those lives far,
-far apart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Under her mother's scrutiny Eveline
-strove hard to dissemble, and on receiving
-her morning kiss said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, mamma, no evil has come of the
-wearing the diamonds&mdash;Dundargue has
-not taken fire.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, child&mdash;indeed, good has come!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How, mamma?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This morning's mail has brought an
-enclosure for you&mdash;the formal proposal of
-Sir Paget.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Eveline was stricken dumb, but thought
-to herself,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Unhappy I&mdash;evil <i>has</i> come!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And ere noon was passed she was taken
-to task by her father in the library,
-prompted by her mother, no doubt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He drew her to him caressingly, and,
-interlacing his fingers upon her head, drew
-her soft cheek upon his breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I think, Eveline,' said he, 'you may
-know by this time how well I love
-you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do, indeed, papa,' replied Eveline,
-in a low voice, but feeling her heart
-sink under this unusual prelude
-nevertheless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And yet you have been deluding me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Deluding you&mdash;I, papa?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, how?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'By encouraging&mdash;pardon me, not that&mdash;rather
-by permitting a visitor to encourage
-certain hopes. That, you know, it is
-impossible I should view with favour.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You mean&mdash;you mean&mdash;&mdash;' stammered
-Eveline, recalling the episode in the
-corridor.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Evan Cameron.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He is gone,' said she, with difficulty
-restraining her tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To darken the door of Dundargue no
-more! Not that I have any fault to find
-with poor Cameron&mdash;a brave fellow who
-has won his V.C., and is a Black Watchman
-to boot; but he is Laird of Stratherroch
-only in name; his purse does not
-come up to the requisite standard, and
-may never do so till both your heads are
-grey; but he is gone, as you say, and we
-shall think of him no more. I have other
-brighter, better, and richer views for you,
-my dear child, and I hope you will not
-disappoint us all. Sir Paget loves you,
-and you will think seriously over all
-this?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How can I do otherwise, papa?' was
-the dubious response, and the girl stole
-away to her own room. So wearing the
-diamonds seemed only to be bringing
-about a sudden crisis in the affairs of
-herself and the banished Evan Cameron,
-for such she deemed him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And, ere she went to bed that night,
-Eveline, poor girl, strove to pray that she
-might have some guide or assistance up
-the stony and thorny path which she
-feared was before her now in life; but she
-no longer now had the deep and unbroken
-sleep that had ever been her lot the
-moment her soft cheek touched the pillow.
-Too nervous to sleep alone, she crept in
-beside Olive, and, nestling her little face
-in the white bosom of her cousin, wept
-long and bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But events were now to occur that
-caused even the brilliant proposal of Sir
-Paget to be forgotten.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-LONDON: PRINTED BY DUNCAN MACDONALD, BLENHEIM HOUSE.
-</p>
-
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