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Merkland: or, Self Sacrifice
But James Aytoun had not only an excellent claim to respect and honor, but actually received it. It was not any empty pride either which led him to sign himself James Aytoun, of Aytoun. Had it not been for the reckless and extravagant father, whose debts had so hopelessly entangled his inheritance, the territorial designation would have represented many fair acres – a long-descended patrimony. As it was, with only a desolate mansion-house, in a southern county, and some bleak lands about it, James Aytoun, of Aytoun, was still received and honored as a gentleman of good family and blood – neither by descent, education, nor breeding beneath any family in Scotland.
It is but a narrow spirit which endeavors to sneer at a distinction like this, and call it the pride of poverty. James Aytoun belonged to that well-nurtured, manly class, whose hereditary honor and good fame belong to the nation, and whose frank dignity of mind and tone are as far removed as mental loftiness can be from that vulgar and arrogant thing, which mean men call pride.
Jacky was reconciling herself to the little Edinburgh kitchen, and had already entered into conversation with Tibbie, when little Bessie arrived from her mother’s humble house in an adjacent back street, to renew her acquaintance with her Strathoran friend. – Jacky had many messages to deliver from Johnnie Halflin, which Bessie received with a due amount of blushing laughter.
“And, Oh, Jacky! how will they ever do wanting you at the Tower?”
Jacky did not apprehend the covert wit – did not even perceive that the rosy little Edinburgh-bred girl, was about to condescend to, and patronise, the awkward rustic one.
“They’ll only miss me, for a while, at first – and then maybe, we’ll no be long.”
“Is’t Miss Ross that’s with you?” asked Bessie.
“I’m with Miss Ross,” said Jacky, quickly “Miss Anne chose me of her own will – after I askit her – and so did Miss Falconer.”
“Eh! isna she an awfu’ funny lady, yon Miss Falconer?”
“Funny!” Jacky was indignantly astonished. “I dinna ken what ye ca’ funny, Bessie. She’s like – ”
“She’s no like ither folk,” said Bessie.
“It’s you that doesna ken. She’s like – ”
“Wha is she like, Jacky?”
“She’s like Belphœbe,” muttered Jacky, hastily. “But ye dinna ken wha she was – and she’s a lady, for a’ that she does strange thing whiles.”
“Is that the lady that throosh the gentleman that was gaun to be uncivil to our Miss Alice?” interposed Tibbie.
“Yes,” said Bessie laughing. Little Bessie was not above the vanity of being thought to know these north country magnates. – ”And on New-year’s night, when all the ladies were at the Tower, (ye mind, Jacky?) Miss Falconer gied me a shilling a’ to mysel, for bringing her napkin to her, that she had left in Miss Alice’s dressing-room – and nippit my lug, and tell’t me to take care o’ Miss Alice – she ca’ed her my little mistress. Isna she an awful height herself?”
“She’s no so tall as Mrs. Catherine,” said Jacky.
“Eh, Jacky! Miss Alice didna come up to her shouther, and she’s a haill head higher than Miss Ross.”
Jacky did not choose to answer: though why there should seem any slight to Marjory, in an exaggeration of her stature, we cannot tell. Without doubt, Belphœbe was to the full as tall as she.
“Do you ken that Merkland’s been in Edinburgh?” asked Bessie. In Strathoran she had called Lewis, Mr. Ross; now she was bent on impressing Tibbie with a deep sense of her own familiarity with these great people. “Eh, Jacky, do you mind what Johnnie Halflin used to say about Merkland?”
Jacky had a high sense of honor. She made an elfin face at her talkative companion, and remained prudently silent.
“What did he say?” asked Tibbie.
“Ou naithing. Jacky and me kens.”
“An he said onything ill, I redd him to keep out o’ the power o’ my ten talents. He’s a young blackguard, like maist feck of his kind, I’ll warrant – idle serving callants, wi’ nought to do in this world, but claver about their betters, wi’ light-headed gilpies, like yoursel. I wad just like to ken what he said!”
“It was naething ill,” said Jacky.
“Oh, he’ll be a lad to some o’ ye, nae doubt – set ye up! But I can tell ye, he had better no come here to say an ill word o’ young Mr. Ross.”
“Miss Anne’s Mr. Lewis’s sister,” said Jacky, decisively. – ”Johnnie dauredna say a word ill o’ him – only that he was – ”
Bessie laughed —she had no honorable scruples, but maliciously refrained from helping Jacky out.
“Only about Miss Alice and him.”
“Weel ye’re a queer lassie,” said Mrs. Aytoun’s maid. “Could ye no have tell’t me that at first?”
Bessie laughed again.
“And, Jacky, is the wee fairy lady aye at the Mill yet?”
“Wha’s that?” cried the curious Tibbie.
“Oh, it’s a wee bairn that the fairies sent to Strathoran. She was a’ dressed in green silk, and had wings like Miss Alice’s white veil, and was riding on a pony as white as snaw; and the miller’s wife took her in, and her wings took lowe at the fire, and she would have been a’ burned, if Miss Ross hadna saved her – and Johnnie Halflin saw her wi’ his ain e’en – and they say she’s some kin to Jacky.”
Jacky repelled the insult with immense disdain.
“If I had Johnnie Halflin here, I would douk him in the Oran.”
“Ye might douk him in the water o’ Leith, Jacky,” said Bessie, laughing; “but the Oran’s no here, mind.”
Jacky was indignantly silent.
“And wha is she?” inquired Tibbie.
“She’s a little girl,” said Jacky, with some dignity, “a very bonnie wee foreign lady; and Mrs. Melder keeps her at the Mill, and she speaks in a strange tongue, and sings sangs – low, sweet, floating sangs – ye never heard the like of them, and her name is Lilie.”
“Lilie what?”
“I dinna ken. She says her name is Lilia Santa Clara, but neabody kens whether that’s her last name or no.”
“Losh!” exclaimed Tibbie, “will she be canny, after a’?”
“Canny! – you should look nearer yoursel,” said Bessie, with laughing malice.
“Never heed her,” said Tibbie. “Sit into the table, and take your tea. She’s a light-headed fuil – and ye can tell Johnnie Halflin that frae me.”
“Is Miss Anne gaun to bide in Edinburgh?” inquired Bessie, as they seated themselves at Tibbie’s clean, small table.
“No – she’s gaun to the sea-side.”
“Eh, Jacky, where? we’ll come out and see ye.”
“I dinna mind the name of the place,” said Jacky, “but it’s on the sea-side.”
“And what’s Miss Anne gaun to do?”
Jacky paused to deliberate. “She’s no gaun to do onything. – She’s just gaun to please hersel.”
“Ay,” said the inquisitive Bessie, “but what is’t for?”
“It’s maybe for something good,” said Jacky, quickly, “for that’s aye Miss Anne’s way; but she wasna gaun to tell me.”
“But what do you think it is, Jacky?” persisted Bessie, “ane can aye gie a guess – is she gaun to be married?”
“No!” exclaimed Jacky indignantly, “Married! It’s because ye dinna ken Miss Anne.”
“Miss Anne’s just like ither folk,” was the laughing response; “and there’s nae ill in being married.”
“Lassie, there’ll be news o’ you, if you’re no a’ the better hadden in,” cried Tibbie. “Set ye up wi’ your lads and your marryings! Maybe the young lady’s delicate, or she’ll hae friends at the sea-side.”
To which more delicate fishing interrogatories, Jacky, who knew that Anne was neither delicate nor had any friend at the sea-side, prudently refrained from making any answer.
The next day, Anne, accompanied by Mrs. Aytoun and Alice, set out for Aberford on a search for lodgings. Mrs. Aytoun had a friend, a regular frequenter of all places of general resort, whose list of sea-bathing quarters was almost a perfect one, and fortified by the results of her experience, they departed upon their quest, leaving Jacky in Bessie’s care behind them, to dream at her leisure over that wonderful Edinburgh, whose stately olden beauty the strange girl, after her own fashion, could appreciate so well.
Anne observed, with regret and sympathy, the gloom of silence that fell over the kind mother by her side, as they approached their destination. She observed the long, sad glances thrown through the windows of the coach at the country road, known long ago, when Mrs. Aytoun was not a widow. There were no other passengers to restrain their conversation, and when they were very near the village, Mrs. Aytoun pointed to a house, surrounded with wood, and standing at a considerable distance from the road. “Yonder, Alice, look – you were born there.”
Alice looked eagerly out. “You liked this place better than Aytoun, mother? Aytoun must have been very gloomy always.”
“Aytoun was a larger house than we needed, Alice – you have heard me say so – and I was in very delicate health then. I was never well while – ” your father lived, Mrs. Aytoun was about to say, but she checked herself hurriedly; not even in so slight a way would she reproach the dead.
The coach stopped – they were in the dull main street of the village. Mrs. Aytoun took out her list – at the head of the column stood “Mrs. Yammer” – the sea-bathing friend had particularly recommended the house, whose mistress bore so distressful a name. It was a short way out of the village, close upon the sea-side; they turned to seek it.
The magnificent Firth lay bright before them, its islands standing out darkly from its bosom, and its sunny glories bounded by the fertile shores and distant hills of the ancient kingdom of Fife. The exuberant wealth of these rich Lothian lands was bursting out around into Spring’s blythest green – a sunny April sky overhead, and April air waving in its golden breadths about them everywhere – it was impossible to think of sadness there. The shadow of her old woe floated away from Mrs. Aytoun’s unselfish spirit – Alice was so gay, Anne so pleasantly exhilarated, that she could not refuse to rejoice with them.
Mrs. Yammer’s house promised well. It was seated upon a gentle elevation – its front, at least, for the elevation made a very abrupt descent, and so procured that the rooms which were on the ground-floor before, should be the second story behind. In front ran the road leading to the country town, beyond there were some brief intervening fields, and then the sands. It was not above ten minutes walk from the immediate shore. At some little distance further on, there stood a house close to the water, standing up, gaunt and tall, from among a few trees. In the bright, living spring-day, it had a spectral, desolate look about it. Anne remarked it with some curiosity as she glanced round; but Mrs. Aytoun had already knocked, and she had not time to look again.
The door was opened by an energetic little servant, who ushered the ladies into an airy, lightsome parlor, with which Alice Aytoun was in ecstasies. One window looked out on the sea – the other, in a corner of the room, had a pleasant view of the fresh green country road, and glimpse of the village of Aberford itself in the distance; the furniture was very tolerable – the whole room particularly clean.
“O, Anne!” exclaimed Alice Aytoun, “I will come to see you every week!”
A little woman bustled into the room. She had on an old silk gown, curiously japanned by long service, and possessing in an uncommon degree the faculty of rustling – a comical, little, quick, merry, eccentric face – some curls which looked exceedingly like bits of twisted wire, covered by a clean cap of embroidered muslin, with a very plain border of well-darned lace. Mrs. Aytoun hesitated. To call this little person “Mrs.” anything, was palpably absurd; yet they had asked for Mrs. Yammer.
“It’s no me, it’s my sister,” said the brisk little person before them. “I’m Miss Crankie. Will ye sit down ladies? I am very glad to see you.”
Mrs. Aytoun sat down – little Alice concealed her laugh by looking steadfastly down the road, at the distant roofs of Aberford, and Anne took a chair beside her.
“Is’t no a grand prospect?” said Miss Crankie, “a’ the Firth before us, and the town at our right hand – a young lady that was here last simmer said to Tammie (that’s my sister, Mrs. Yammer, her name’s Thomasine – we call her Tammie for shortness,) ‘If it wasna for breaking the tenth command, I would covert ye your house, Mrs. Yammer,’ – and so dry, and free from drafts, and every way guid for an invalid. It’s uncommonly weel likit.”
“It seems a very nice house,” said Mrs. Aytoun. “Are your rooms disengaged, Miss Crankie?”
“For what time was ye wanting them, Mem?” said Miss Crankie. “There’s young Mrs. Mavis is to be here in July, and Miss Todd was speaking of bringing ower her brother’s bairns in August – but I’m aye fond to oblige a lady – for what time was ye wanting them?”
“This young lady, Miss Ross” – Miss Crankie honored Anne with a queer nod and a smile, which very nearly upset the gravity of Alice, and put Anne’s own in jeopardy, “desires to have lodgings in the neighborhood for this month, and, perhaps, May. – What do you think, my dear? will you need them longer?”
“I hope not,” said Anne, “but still, it is possible I may.”
“Miss Ross requires change of air,” said Mrs. Aytoun, faltering and endeavoring to excuse her equivocation, by noticing that Anne did look pale.
“Of scene, rather,” said Anne, slightly affected by the same hesitation. It was true, however, if not in the usual sense.
Miss Crankie fixed her odd little black eye upon Anne, nodded, and looked as if she comprehended perfectly.
“Will you be able to accommodate Miss Ross and her servant, Miss Crankie?”
“That will I; there’s no better accommodation in the haill Lothians; and, for change of scene, what could heart desire better than that – ay, or that either, young Miss, which is as bonnie a country view (no to be the sea) as can be seen. Will ye look at the bed-room?”
Miss Crankie darted out, leading the way. Mrs. Aytoun, Anne, and Alice followed. The bed-room was immediately behind the parlor, resplendent in all the glory of white covers, and chintz curtains, and with an embowered window looking out upon “the green,” which was separated from the kitchen-garden by a thick hedge of sweet-briar. Alice was delighted, and Anne so perfectly satisfied, that Mrs. Aytoun made the bargain. The rooms were taken, together with a little den up stairs for Jacky. Miss Crankie faithfully promised in her own name and Mrs. Yammer’s, that the apartments should be ready for Anne’s reception next day; and when they had partaken of a frugal refreshment – some very peculiar wine of Miss Crankie’s own manufacture, and cake to correspond – they left the house.
The day was so very beautiful, and Alice enjoyed the rare excursion so much, that they prolonged their walk. “Do you think I could walk out from Edinburgh, mother?” said Alice. “I should like so well to come and see Anne often; and, Anne, you will be dull alone.”
“But you will laugh at Miss Crankie, Alice,” said Anne, smiling, “and so get into her bad graces.”
Alice laughed. “Is she not a very strange person?”
“I have no doubt you will find her a kindly body,” said Mrs. Aytoun; “But I hope Jacky’s sense of the ludicrous is not so keen as her poetic feelings. You must take care of Jacky.”
“O, mamma,” said Alice, “you don’t know what a strange good girl Jacky is. People laugh at her, but she would not hurt any one’s feelings.”
“You do Jacky justice, Alice,” said Anne. “She is a strange good girl – she – ”
Anne paused suddenly, breathless and excited. Who was that tall, gaunt woman, walking thoughtfully with bent head and lingering foot step, over the sands? She seemed to have come from the spectral dark house, which Anne had noticed before, looming so drearily over the sunny waters. She raised her eyes as they met – the large, wistful, melancholy eyes fell upon Anne’s face. It was the unknown relative of little Lilie – the passenger who, six months ago, had lingered to cast that same searching, woeful look upon the house of Merkland.
Anne was startled and amazed. She thought the stranger seemed disturbed also. Her eyes appeared to dilate and grow keener as she looked earnestly at Anne, and then passed on.
“Do you know that person?” said Mrs. Aytoun, wonderingly.
Anne turned to look after her; instead of her former slow pace, her steps were now nervously quick and unsteady. Surely some unknown emotion strong and powerful, had risen in the stranger’s breast from this meeting. Anne answered Mrs. Aytoun with an effort. “I do not know her – but I have seen her before – I met her once in Strathoran.”
They went on. Anne’s mind was engrossed – she could not, as before, take part in the gay conversation of Alice. Mrs. Aytoun perceived her gravity. After some time, she asked again: “Do you know who she is? I see you are interested in her.”
“I do not know her at all,” said Anne. “You will think me very foolish, Mrs. Aytoun, it is her look – her eyes – she has a very remarkable face.”
“Probably she lives here,” said Mrs. Aytoun. “Let us look at this house.”
The house was no less spectral and gaunt, when they were near it, than at a distance. Many of the windows were closed – the large garden seemed perfectly neglected – only some pale spring flowers bloomed in front of a low projecting window, where there seemed to linger some remnants of cultivation. “It is a mysterious looking house,” said Mrs. Aytoun; “she may keep it perhaps – but there certainly can be no family living here.”
By-and-by they returned to Edinburgh – where Anne spent the remainder of the day in making some necessary calls. She spoke as little as possible of her intention of remaining in Aberford – those ordinary questions were so difficult to answer.
And who was this melancholy woman who had brought little Lilie to Strathoran? Could she have any connection with Norman’s history, or was it only the prevailing tone of Anne’s mind and thoughts that threw its fantastic coloring on every object she looked upon?
CHAPTER XXII
UPON the next day, Anne, accompanied by Jacky, left Edinburgh finally for her Aberford lodgings. She felt the isolation strangely at first: being alone in her own room, and being alone in the parlor of Mrs. Yammer’s house, were two very different things. She seated herself by the window as these long afternoon hours wore on. Jacky sat at the other end of the room, already engaged on some one of the numberless linen articles, which had been provided by her prudent mother, to keep her occupied. Jacky had already cast several longing glances at the little shelf between the windows, which contained the books of Mrs. Yammer’s household, but the awe of Anne’s presence was upon her; she sewed and dreamed in silence.
The dark spectral house by the waterside – the melancholy woman who had taken Lilie to Strathoran – Anne’s mind was full of these. Now and then a chance passenger upon the high road crossed before her; once or twice she had seen a solitary figure on the sands. None of these bore the same look. The steady pace of country business, and the meditative one of country leisure she could notice – nowhere the slow lingering heavy footsteps, the wistful melancholy face which distinguished the one individual, whom that fantastic spirit of imagination had already associated with Norman’s fate.
Anne had decided upon beginning her inquiries on the next day. She hastily bethought herself now, of a mode of making this evening of some service in her search; and turning to Jacky, bade her ask Miss Crankie and Mrs. Yammer to take tea with her. – Jacky with some hesitation obeyed – she thought it was letting down Miss Anne’s dignity. Miss Anne herself thought it was rather disagreeable and unpleasant: nevertheless, it might be of use, and she was content to endure it.
Miss Crankie had a turban, terrible to behold, made of black net, with what looked like spangles of yellow paint upon it, which she wore on solemn occasions. In honor of her new lodger, she donned it to-night. Jacky arranged the tea in almost sulky silence. At the appointed hour, Miss Crankie and her sister sailed solemnly in.
It was the merest fiction to call this pleasant house the property of Mrs. Yammer, as all who were favored with any glimpse into its domestic arrangements could easily perceive. Mrs. Yammer was a woeful, patient, resigned woman, very meekly submitting to the absolute dominion of “Johann,” saved for a feeble murmuring of her own complaints, the most voiceless and passive of weak-minded sisters. Miss Johann Crankie was very kind to the woeful widow, who hung upon her active hands so helplessly. She shut her ears to Mrs. Yammer’s countless aches and palpitations, as long as it was practicable – when she could no longer avoid hearing them, she administered bitter physic, and mustard plasters; a discipline which was generally successful in frightening away the distempers for some time.
Mrs. Yammer, in a much-suffering plaintive voice, immediately began to tell Anne of the palpitations of her heart. Miss Crankie fidgeted on her seat, shooting odd glances at Jacky, and intelligent ones of ludicrous pity at Anne, who endured Mrs. Yammer’s enumeration of troubles as patiently as was possible. The tea was a fortunate diversion.
“What is the name of that house on the waterside, Miss Crankie?” asked Anne.
“That’s Schole, Miss Ross,” said Miss Crankie, with the air of a person who introduces a notability. “You will have heard of it before, no doubt? It came into the possession of the present Laird, when he was in his cradle, puir bairn, and his light-headed gowk of a mother has him away, bringing him up in England. – She’s English hersel: maybe ye might ca’ that an excuse. I say its a downright imposition and shame to tak callants away to a strange country to get their breeding, when a’body kens there’s no the like o’ us for learning in a’ the world and Fife?”
“And does the proprietor of the house live in it now?” said Anne.
“Bless me, no – the Laird’s but a callant yet. Tammie, woman, what year was’t that auld Schole died?”
“It was afore I was married,” said Mrs. Yammer, dolefully. – ”I was a lang tangle of a lassie then, Miss Ross; and I mind o’ rinning out without my bonnet, and wi’ bare shoulders, and standing by the roadside, to see the funeral gang by. I have never been free o’ rheumatism since that day – whiles in my head – whiles in my arm – whiles – ”
“Miss Ross will hear a’ round o’ them afore she gangs away, Tammie,” said Miss Crankie, impatiently, “or else it’ll be a wonderful year. It’s maybe fifteen or sixteen years ago; and the widow and the bairn were off to England in the first month. Ye may tak my word for’t, there wasna muckle grief, though there was crape frae head to fit of her. I mind the funeral as weel as if it had passed this morning – folk pretending they were honoring the dead, that would scarce have spoken a word to him when he was a living man. He was an old, penurious nasty body, that bought a young wife wi’ his filthy siller. Ye mind him, Tammie?”
“Mind him!” said the martyr Tammie, pathetically, “ay, I have guid reason to mind him. Was I no confined to my bed, haill six weeks after that weary funeral wi’ the ticdouleureux? the tae cheek swelled, and the tither cheek blistered. I ken naebody, Johann, that has guid reason to mind him as me.”
“Weel, weel,” said Miss Crankie, “it was a strong plaister of guid mustard that cured ye. It’s a comfort that ane needs nae advice to prepare that – its baith easy made and effectual.”
Mrs. Yammer was cowed into silence. Miss Crankie, with a triumphant chuckle, went on: “And since then there’s been no word of them, Miss Ross, except an intimation in the newspapers, that the light-headed fuil of a woman had married again. Pity the poor bairn that has gotten a stepfather over him, for bye being keeped out of the knowledge o’ his ain land. I was ance in England mysel. There’s no an article in’t but flat fields, and dead water, and dreary lines o’ hedges. Ye may gang frae the tae end to the tither (a’ but the north part, and its maistly our ain,) and never ken ye have made a mile’s progress – its a’ the same thing ower again – and sleek cattle, beasts and men, that ken about naething in this world but eating and drinking. To think of a callant being keeped there, out of the knowledge of his ain country, and it a country like this!”
“It is a great pity, certainly,” said Anne, smiling.
“Pity! it’s a downright wrong and injury to the lad – there’s nae saying if his mind will ever get the better o’t.”