<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
<h5>THE ENEMY IN THE HOUSE</h5>
<p class="noind"><span class="sc">It</span> is a strange thing that I should be at a stick for a date—the
date, besides, of an incident that changed the very
nature of my life, and sent us all into foreign lands. But
the truth is, I was stricken out of all my habitudes, and find
my journals very ill redd-up,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_7" href="#Footnote_7"><span class="sp">7</span></SPAN> the day not indicated sometimes
for a week or two together, and the whole fashion of
the thing like that of a man near desperate. It was late
in March at least, or early in April 1764. I had slept
heavily, and wakened with a premonition of some evil to
befall. So strong was this upon my spirit that I hurried
downstairs in my shirt and breeches, and my hand (I
remember) shook upon the rail. It was a cold, sunny
morning, with a thick white frost; the blackbirds sang
exceeding sweet and loud about the house of Durrisdeer,
and there was a noise of the sea in all the chambers. As I
came by the doors of the hall, another sound arrested me—of
voices talking. I drew nearer, and stood like a man
dreaming. Here was certainly a human voice, and that
in my own master’s house, and yet I knew it not; certainly
human speech, and that in my native land; and yet, listen
as I pleased, I could not catch one syllable. An old tale
started up in my mind of a fairy wife (or perhaps only a
wandering stranger), that came to the place of my fathers
some generations back, and stayed the matter of a week,
talking often in a tongue that signified nothing to the
hearers; and went again, as she had come, under cloud of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page153"></SPAN>153</span>
night, leaving not so much as a name behind her. A
little fear I had, but more curiosity; and I opened the
hall-door, and entered.</p>
<p>The supper-things still lay upon the table; the shutters
were still closed, although day peeped in the divisions;
and the great room was lighted only with a single taper
and the shining of the fire. Close in the chimney sat two
men. The one that was wrapped in a cloak and wore
boots, I knew at once: it was the bird of ill omen back
again. Of the other, who was set close to the red embers,
and made up into a bundle like a mummy, I could but
see that he was an alien, of a darker hue than any man
of Europe, very frailly built, with a singular tall forehead,
and a secret eye. Several packets and a small valise were
on the floor; and to judge by the smallness of this luggage,
and by the condition of the Master’s boots, grossly patched
by some unscrupulous country cobbler, evil had not
prospered.</p>
<p>He rose upon my entrance; our eyes crossed; and I
know not why it should have been, but my courage rose
like a lark on a May morning.</p>
<p>“Ha!” said I, “is this you?”—and I was pleased
with the unconcern of my own voice.</p>
<p>“It is even myself, worthy Mackellar,” says the Master.</p>
<p>“This time you have brought the black dog visibly
upon your back,” I continued.</p>
<p>“Referring to Secundra Dass?” asked the Master.
“Let me present you. He is a native gentleman of India.”</p>
<p>“Hum!” said I. “I am no great lover either of you
or your friends, Mr. Bally. But I will let a little daylight
in, and have a look at you.” And so saying, I undid the
shutters of the eastern window.</p>
<p>By the light of the morning I could perceive the man
was changed. Later, when we were all together, I was
more struck to see how lightly time had dealt with him;
but the first glance was otherwise.</p>
<p>“You are getting an old man,” said I.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page154"></SPAN>154</span></p>
<p>A shade came upon his face. “If you could see yourself,”
said he, “you would perhaps not dwell upon the
topic.”</p>
<p>“Hut!” I returned, “old age is nothing to me. I
think I have been always old; and I am now, I thank God,
better known and more respected. It is not every one
that can say that, Mr. Bally! The lines in <i>your</i> brow are
calamities; your life begins to close in upon you like a
prison; death will soon be rapping at the door; and I
see not from what source you are to draw your consolations.”</p>
<p>Here the Master addressed himself to Secundra Dass
in Hindustanee, from which I gathered (I freely confess,
with a high degree of pleasure) that my remarks annoyed
him. All this while, you may be sure, my mind had been
busy upon other matters, even while I rallied my enemy;
and chiefly as to how I should communicate secretly and
quickly with my lord. To this, in the breathing-space
now given me, I turned all the forces of my mind; when,
suddenly shifting my eyes, I was aware of the man himself
standing in the doorway, and, to all appearance, quite
composed. He had no sooner met my looks than he
stepped across the threshold. The Master heard him
coming, and advanced upon the other side; about four
feet apart, these brothers came to a full pause, and stood
exchanging steady looks, and then my lord smiled, bowed
a little forward, and turned briskly away.</p>
<p>“Mackellar,” says he, “we must see to breakfast for
these travellers.”</p>
<p>It was plain the Master was a trifle disconcerted; but
he assumed the more impudence of speech and manner.
“I am as hungry as a hawk,” says he. “Let it be something
good, Henry.”</p>
<p>My lord turned to him with the same hard smile.
“Lord Durrisdeer,” says he.</p>
<p>“O! never in the family,” returned the Master.</p>
<p>“Every one in this house renders me my proper title,”
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page155"></SPAN>155</span>
says my lord. “If it please you to make an exception, I
will leave you to consider what appearance it will bear to
strangers, and whether it may not be translated as an
effect of impotent jealousy.”</p>
<p>I could have clapped my hands together with delight:
the more so as my lord left no time for any answer, but,
bidding me with a sign to follow him, went straight out of
the hall.</p>
<p>“Come quick,” says he; “we have to sweep vermin
from the house.” And he sped through the passages, with
so swift a step that I could scarce keep up with him, straight
to the door of John Paul, the which he opened without
summons and walked in. John was, to all appearance,
sound asleep, but my lord made no pretence of waking him.</p>
<p>“John Paul,” said he, speaking as quietly as ever I
heard him, “you served my father long, or I would pack
you from the house like a dog. If in half an hour’s time
I find you gone, you shall continue to receive your wages
in Edinburgh. If you linger here or in St. Bride’s—old
man, old servant, and altogether—I shall find some very
astonishing way to make you smart for your disloyalty.
Up and begone. The door you let them in by will serve
for your departure. I do not choose my son shall see your
face again.”</p>
<p>“I am rejoiced to find you bear the thing so quietly,”
said I, when we were forth again by ourselves.</p>
<p>“Quietly!” cries he, and put my hand suddenly
against his heart, which struck upon his bosom like a
sledge.</p>
<p>At this revelation I was filled with wonder and fear.
There was no constitution could bear so violent a strain—his
least of all, that was unhinged already; and I decided
in my mind that we must bring this monstrous situation
to an end.</p>
<p>“It would be well, I think, if I took word to my lady,”
said I. Indeed, he should have gone himself, but I counted—not
in vain—on his indifference.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page156"></SPAN>156</span></p>
<p>“Ay,” says he, “do. I will hurry breakfast: we must
all appear at the table, even Alexander; it must appear
we are untroubled.”</p>
<p>I ran to my lady’s room, and with no preparatory
cruelty disclosed my news.</p>
<p>“My mind was long ago made up,” said she. “We
must make our packets secretly to-day, and leave secretly
to-night. Thank Heaven, we have another house! The
first ship that sails shall bear us to New York.”</p>
<p>“And what of him?” I asked.</p>
<p>“We leave him Durrisdeer,” she cried. “Let him
work his pleasure upon that.”</p>
<p>“Not so, by your leave,” said I. “There shall be a
dog at his heels that can hold fast. Bed he shall have, and
board, and a horse to ride upon, if he behave himself; but
the keys—if you think well of it, my lady—shall be left in
the hands of one Mackellar. There will be good care taken;
trust him for that.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Mackellar,” she cried, “I thank you for that
thought. All shall be left in your hands. If we must go
into a savage country, I bequeath it to you to take our
vengeance. Send Macconochie to St. Bride’s to arrange
privately for horses and to call the lawyer. My lord must
leave procuration.”</p>
<p>At that moment my lord came to the door, and we
opened our plan to him.</p>
<p>“I will never hear of it,” he cried; “he would think I
feared him. I will stay in my own house, please God, until
I die. There lives not the man can beard me out of it.
Once and for all, here I am, and here I stay, in spite of all
the devils in hell.” I can give no idea of the vehemency
of his words and utterance; but we both stood aghast, and
I in particular, who had been a witness of his former self-restraint.</p>
<p>My lady looked at me with an appeal that went to my
heart and recalled me to my wits. I made her a private
sign to go, and when my lord and I were alone, went up
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page157"></SPAN>157</span>
to him where he was racing to and fro in one end of the
room like a half-lunatic, and set my hand firmly on his
shoulder.</p>
<p>“My lord,” says I, “I am going to be the plain-dealer
once more; if for the last time, so much the better, for
I am grown weary of the part.”</p>
<p>“Nothing will change me,” he answered. “God forbid
I should refuse to hear you; but nothing will change me.”
This he said firmly, with no signal of the former violence,
which already raised my hopes.</p>
<p>“Very well,” said I. “I can afford to waste my
breath.” I pointed to a chair, and he sat down and looked
at me. “I can remember a time when my lady very much
neglected you,” said I.</p>
<p>“I never spoke of it while it lasted,” returned my lord,
with a high flush of colour; “and it is all changed now.”</p>
<p>“Do you know how much?” I said. “Do you know
how much it is all changed? The tables are turned, my
lord! It is my lady that now courts you for a word, a
look—ay, and courts you in vain. Do you know with
whom she passes her days while you are out gallivanting
in the policies? My lord, she is glad to pass them with a
certain dry old grieve<SPAN name="FnAnchor_8" href="#Footnote_8"><span class="sp">8</span></SPAN> of the name of Ephraim Mackellar;
and I think you may be able to remember what that means,
for I am the more in a mistake or you were once driven to
the same company yourself.”</p>
<p>“Mackellar!” cries my lord, getting to his feet. “O
my God, Mackellar!”</p>
<p>“It is neither the name of Mackellar nor the name of
God that can change the truth,” said I; “and I am telling
you the fact. Now for you, that suffered so much, to deal
out the same suffering to another, is that the part of any
Christian? But you are so swallowed up in your new
friend that the old are all forgotten. They are all clean
vanished from your memory. And yet they stood by you
at the darkest; my lady not the least. And does my lady
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page158"></SPAN>158</span>
ever cross your mind? Does it ever cross your mind what
she went through that night?—or what manner of a wife
she has been to you thenceforward?—or in what kind of
a position she finds herself to-day? Never. It is your
pride to stay and face him out, and she must stay along
with you. O! my lord’s pride—that’s the great affair!
And yet she is the woman, and you are a great hulking
man! She is the woman that you swore to protect; and,
more betoken, the own mother of that son of yours!”</p>
<p>“You are speaking very bitterly, Mackellar,” said he;
“but, the Lord knows, I fear you are speaking very true.
I have not proved worthy of my happiness. Bring my
lady back.”</p>
<p>My lady was waiting near at hand to learn the issue.
When I brought her in, my lord took a hand of each of us,
and laid them both upon his bosom. “I have had two
friends in my life,” said he. “All the comfort ever I had,
it came from one or other. When you two are in a mind,
I think I would be an ungrateful dog——” He shut his
mouth very hard, and looked on us with swimming eyes.
“Do what ye like with me,” says he, “only don’t think——”
He stopped again. “Do what you please with me: God
knows I love and honour you.” And dropping our two
hands, he turned his back and went and gazed out of the
window. But my lady ran after, calling his name, and
threw herself upon his neck in a passion of weeping.</p>
<p>I went out and shut the door behind me, and stood and
thanked God from the bottom of my heart.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>At the breakfast-board, according to my lord’s design,
we were all met. The Master had by that time plucked
off his patched boots and made a toilet suitable to the hour;
Secundra Dass was no longer bundled up in wrappers, but
wore a decent plain black suit, which misbecame him
strangely; and the pair were at the great window, looking
forth, when the family entered. They turned; and the
black man (as they had already named him in the house)
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page159"></SPAN>159</span>
bowed almost to his knees, but the Master was for running
forward like one of the family. My lady stopped him,
curtsying low from the far end of the hall, and keeping her
children at her back. My lord was a little in front: so
there were the three cousins of Durrisdeer face to face.
The hand of time was very legible on all; I seemed to
read in their changed faces a <i>memento mori</i>; and what
affected me still more, it was the wicked man that bore
his years the handsomest. My lady was quite transfigured
into the matron, a becoming woman for the head of a great
tableful of children and dependants. My lord was grown
slack in his limbs; he stooped; he walked with a running
motion, as though he had learned again from Mr. Alexander;
his face was drawn; it seemed a trifle longer than of old;
and it wore at times a smile very singularly mingled, and
which (in my eyes) appeared both bitter and pathetic.
But the Master still bore himself erect, although perhaps
with effort; his brow barred about the centre with imperious
lines, his mouth set as for command. He had all
the gravity and something of the splendour of Satan in
the “Paradise Lost.” I could not help but see the man with
admiration, and was only surprised that I saw him with so
little fear.</p>
<p>But indeed (as long as we were at the table) it seemed
as if his authority were quite vanished and his teeth all
drawn. We had known him a magician that controlled
the elements; and here he was, transformed into an
ordinary gentleman, chatting like his neighbours at the
breakfast-board. For now the father was dead, and my
lord and lady reconciled, in what ear was he to pour his
calumnies? It came upon me in a kind of vision how
hugely I had overrated the man’s subtlety. He had his
malice still; he was false as ever; and, the occasion being
gone that made his strength, he sat there impotent; he
was still the viper, but now spent his venom on a file.
Two more thoughts occurred to me while yet we sat at
breakfast: the first, that he was abashed—I had almost
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page160"></SPAN>160</span>
said, distressed—to find his wickedness quite unavailing;
the second, that perhaps my lord was in the right, and
we did amiss to fly from our dismasted enemy. But my
poor master’s leaping heart came in my mind, and I remembered
it was for his life we played the coward.</p>
<p>When the meal was over, the Master followed me to
my room, and, taking a chair (which I had never offered
him), asked me what was to be done with him.</p>
<p>“Why, Mr. Bally,” said I, “the house will still be open
to you for a time.”</p>
<p>“For a time?” says he. “I do not know if I quite
take your meaning.”</p>
<p>“It is plain enough,” said I. “We keep you for our
reputation; as soon as you shall have publicly disgraced
yourself by some of your misconduct, we shall pack you
forth again.”</p>
<p>“You are become an impudent rogue,” said the Master,
bending his brows at me dangerously.</p>
<p>“I learned in a good school,” I returned. “And you
must have perceived yourself that with my old lord’s death
your power is quite departed. I do not fear you now,
Mr. Bally; I think even—God forgive me—that I take a
certain pleasure in your company.”</p>
<p>He broke out in a burst of laughter, which I clearly
saw to be assumed.</p>
<p>“I have come with empty pockets,” says he, after a
pause.</p>
<p>“I do not think there will be any money going,”
I replied. “I would advise you not to build on
that.”</p>
<p>“I shall have something to say on the point,” he
returned.</p>
<p>“Indeed?” said I. “I have not a guess what it will
be, then.”</p>
<p>“O! you affect confidence,” said the Master. “I have
still one strong position—that you people fear a scandal,
and I enjoy it.”
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page161"></SPAN>161</span></p>
<p>“Pardon me, Mr. Bally,” says I. “We do not in the
least fear a scandal against you.”</p>
<p>He laughed again. “You have been studying repartee,”
he said. “But speech is very easy, and sometimes
very deceptive. I warn you fairly: you will find
me vitriol in the house. You would do wiser to pay
money down and see my back.” And with that he waved
his hand to me and left the room.</p>
<p>A little after, my lord came with the lawyer, Mr.
Carlyle; a bottle of old wine was brought, and we all had
a glass before we fell to business. The necessary deeds
were then prepared and executed, and the Scots estates
made over in trust to Mr. Carlyle and myself.</p>
<p>“There is one point, Mr. Carlyle,” said my lord, when
these affairs had been adjusted, “on which I wish that you
would do us justice. This sudden departure coinciding
with my brother’s return will be certainly commented on.
I wish you would discourage any conjunction of the two.”</p>
<p>“I will make a point of it, my lord,” said Mr. Carlyle.
“The Mas—Mr. Bally does not, then, accompany you?”</p>
<p>“It is a point I must approach,” said my lord. “Mr.
Bally remains at Durrisdeer, under the care of Mr. Mackellar;
and I do not mean that he shall even know our
destination.”</p>
<p>“Common report, however——” began the lawyer.</p>
<p>“Ah! but, Mr. Carlyle, this is to be a secret quite
among ourselves,” interrupted my lord. “None but you
and Mackellar are to be made acquainted with my movements.”</p>
<p>“And Mr. Bally stays here? Quite so,” said Mr.
Carlyle. “The powers you leave——” Then he broke
off again. “Mr. Mackellar, we have a rather heavy weight
upon us.”</p>
<p>“No doubt, sir,” said I.</p>
<p>“No doubt,” said he. “Mr. Bally will have no voice?”</p>
<p>“He will have no voice,” said my lord; “and, I hope,
no influence. Mr. Bally is not a good adviser.”
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page162"></SPAN>162</span></p>
<p>“I see,” said the lawyer.—“By the way, has Mr. Bally
means?”</p>
<p>“I understand him to have nothing,” replied my lord.
“I give him table, fire, and candle in this house.”</p>
<p>“And in the matter of an allowance? If I am to
share the responsibility, you will see how highly desirable
it is that I should understand your views,” said the lawyer.
“On the question of an allowance?”</p>
<p>“There will be no allowance,” said my lord. “I wish
Mr. Bally to live very private. We have not always been
gratified with his behaviour.”</p>
<p>“And in the matter of money,” I added, “he has
shown himself an infamous bad husband. Glance your
eye upon that docket, Mr. Carlyle, where I have brought
together the different sums the man has drawn from the
estate in the last fifteen or twenty years. The total is
pretty.”</p>
<p>Mr. Carlyle made the motion of whistling. “I had
no guess of this,” said he. “Excuse me once more, my
lord, if I appear to push you; but it is really desirable I
should penetrate your intentions. Mr. Mackellar might
die, when I should find myself alone upon this trust.
Would it not be rather your lordship’s preference that Mr.
Bally should—ahem—should leave the country?”</p>
<p>My lord looked at Mr. Carlyle. “Why do you ask
that?” said he.</p>
<p>“I gather, my lord, that Mr. Bally is not a comfort to
his family,” says the lawyer, with a smile.</p>
<p>My lord’s face became suddenly knotted. “I wish he
was in hell!” cried he, and filled himself a glass of wine,
but with a hand so tottering that he spilled the half into
his bosom. This was the second time that, in the midst
of the most regular and wise behaviour, his animosity had
spurted out. It startled Mr. Carlyle, who observed my
lord thenceforth with covert curiosity; and to me it restored
the certainty that we were acting for the best in
view of my lord’s health and reason.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page163"></SPAN>163</span></p>
<p>Except for this explosion the interview was very
successfully conducted. No doubt Mr. Carlyle would talk,
as lawyers do, little by little. We could thus feel we had
laid the foundations of a better feeling in the country, and
the man’s own misconduct would certainly complete what
we had begun. Indeed, before his departure, the lawyer
showed us there had already gone abroad some glimmerings
of the truth.</p>
<p>“I should perhaps explain to you, my lord,” said he,
pausing, with his hat in his hand, “that I have not been
altogether surprised with your lordship’s dispositions in
the case of Mr. Bally. Something of this nature oozed
out when he was last in Durrisdeer. There was some talk
of a woman at St. Bride’s, to whom you had behaved extremely
handsome, and Mr. Bally with no small degree of
cruelty. There was the entail, again, which was much
controverted. In short, there was no want of talk, back
and forward; and some of our wiseacres took up a strong
opinion. I remained in suspense, as became one of my
cloth; but Mr. Mackellar’s docket here has finally opened
my eyes—I do not think, Mr. Mackellar, that you and I
will give him that much rope.”</p>
<p> </p>
<p>The rest of that important day passed prosperously
through. It was our policy to keep the enemy in view,
and I took my turn to be his watchman with the rest.
I think his spirits rose as he perceived us to be so attentive,
and I know that mine insensibly declined. What chiefly
daunted me was the man’s singular dexterity to worm
himself into our troubles. You may have felt (after a
horse accident) the hand of a bone-setter artfully divide
and interrogate the muscles, and settle strongly on the
injured place? It was so with the Master’s tongue, that
was so cunning to question; and his eyes, that were so
quick to observe. I seemed to have said nothing, and yet
to have let all out. Before I knew where I was the man
was condoling with me on my lord’s neglect of my lady
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page164"></SPAN>164</span>
and myself, and his hurtful indulgence to his son. On this
last point I perceived him (with panic fear) to return
repeatedly. The boy had displayed a certain shrinking
from his uncle; it was strong in my mind his father had
been fool enough to indoctrinate the same, which was no
wise beginning: and when I looked upon the man before
me, still so handsome, so apt a speaker, with so great a
variety of fortunes to relate, I saw he was the very personage
to captivate a boyish fancy. John Paul had left only that
morning; it was not to be supposed he had been altogether
dumb upon his favourite subject: so that here would be
Mr. Alexander in the part of Dido, with a curiosity inflamed
to hear; and there would be the Master, like a diabolical
Æneas, full of matter the most pleasing in the world to any
youthful ear, such as battles, sea-disasters, flights, the
forests of the West, and (since his later voyage) the ancient
cities of the Indies. How cunningly these baits might be
employed, and what an empire might be so founded, little
by little, in the mind of any boy, stood obviously clear to
me. There was no inhibition, so long as the man was in
the house, that would be strong enough to hold these two
apart; for if it be hard to charm serpents, it is no very
difficult thing to cast a glamour on a little chip of manhood
not very long in breeches. I recalled an ancient sailor-man
who dwelt in a lone house beyond the Figgate Whins
(I believe, he called it after Portobello), and how the boys
would troop out of Leith on a Saturday, and sit and listen
to his swearing tales, as thick as crows about a carrion: a
thing I often remarked as I went by, a young student, on
my own more meditative holiday diversion. Many of these
boys went, no doubt, in the face of an express command;
many feared, and even hated, the old brute of whom they
made their hero; and I have seen them flee from him when
he was tipsy, and stone him when he was drunk. And yet
there they came each Saturday! How much more easily
would a boy like Mr. Alexander fall under the influence of
a high-looking, high-spoken gentleman-adventurer, who
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page165"></SPAN>165</span>
should conceive the fancy to entrap him; and the influence
gained, how easy to employ it for the child’s
perversion!</p>
<p>I doubt if our enemy had named Mr. Alexander three
times before I perceived which way his mind was aiming—all
this train of thought and memory passed in one pulsation
through my own—and you may say I started back as
though an open hole had gaped across a pathway. Mr.
Alexander: there was the weak point, there was the Eve
in our perishable paradise; and the serpent was already
hissing on the trail.</p>
<p>I promise you, I went the more heartily about the
preparations; my last scruple gone, the danger of delay
written before me in huge characters. From that moment
forth I seem not to have sat down or breathed. Now I
would be at my post with the Master and his Indian; now
in the garret buckling a valise; now sending forth Macconochie
by the side postern and the wood-path to bear
it to the trysting-place; and, again, snatching some words
of counsel with my lady. This was the <i>verso</i> of our life
in Durrisdeer that day; but on the <i>recto</i> all appeared quite
settled, as of a family at home in its paternal seat; and
what perturbation may have been observable, the Master
would set down to the blow of his unlooked-for coming,
and the fear he was accustomed to inspire.</p>
<p>Supper went creditably off, cold salutations passed,
and the company trooped to their respective chambers.
I attended the Master to the last. We had put him next
door to his Indian, in the north wing; because that was
the most distant and could be severed from the body of
the house with doors. I saw he was a kind friend or a
good master (whichever it was) to his Secundra Dass—seeing
to his comfort; mending the fire with his own hand,
for the Indian complained of cold; inquiring as to the rice
on which the stranger made his diet; talking with him
pleasantly in the Hindustanee, while I stood by, my candle
in my hand, and affected to be overcome with slumber.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page166"></SPAN>166</span>
At length the Master observed my signals of distress. “I
perceive,” says he, “that you have all your ancient habits:
early to bed and early to rise. Yawn yourself away!”</p>
<p>Once in my own room, I made the customary motions
of undressing, so that I might time myself; and when the
cycle was complete, set my tinder-box ready, and blew out
my taper. The matter of an hour afterward I made a
light again, put on my shoes of list that I had worn by
my lord’s sick-bed, and set forth into the house to call the
voyagers. All were dressed and waiting—my lord, my
lady, Miss Katharine, Mr. Alexander, my lady’s woman
Christie; and I observed the effect of secrecy even upon
quite innocent persons, that one after another showed in
the chink of the door a face as white as paper. We slipped
out of the side postern into a night of darkness, scarce broken
by a star or two; so that at first we groped and stumbled
and fell among the bushes. A few hundred yards up the
wood-path Macconochie was waiting us with a great lantern;
so the rest of the way we went easy enough, but still in
a kind of guilty silence. A little beyond the abbey the
path debouched on the main road; and some quarter of
a mile farther, at the place called Eagles, where the moors
begin, we saw the lights of the two carriages stand shining
by the wayside. Scarce a word or two was uttered at our
parting, and these regarded business: a silent grasping
of hands, a turning of faces aside, and the thing was over;
the horses broke into a trot, the lamplight sped like Will-o’-the-Wisp
upon the broken moorland, it dipped beyond
Stony Brae; and there were Macconochie and I alone with
our lantern on the road. There was one thing more to
wait for, and that was the reappearance of the coach upon
Cartmore. It seems they must have pulled up upon the
summit, looked back for a last time, and seen our lantern
not yet moved away from the place of separation. For a
lamp was taken from a carriage, and waved three times up
and down by way of a farewell. And then they were gone
indeed, having looked their last on the kind roof of Durrisdeer,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page167"></SPAN>167</span>
their faces toward a barbarous country. I never
knew before the greatness of that vault of night in which
we two poor serving-men—the one old, and the one elderly—stood
for the first time deserted; I had never felt before
my own dependency upon the countenance of others. The
sense of isolation burned in my bowels like a fire. It
seemed that we who remained at home were the true exiles,
and that Durrisdeer and Solwayside, and all that made
my country native, its air good to me, and its language
welcome, had gone forth and was far over the sea with my
old masters.</p>
<p>The remainder of that night I paced to and fro on the
smooth highway, reflecting on the future and the past.
My thoughts, which at first dwelled tenderly on those who
were just gone, took a more manly temper as I considered
what remained for me to do. Day came upon the inland
mountain-tops, and the fowls began to cry, and the smoke
of homesteads to arise in the brown bosom of the moors,
before I turned my face homeward, and went down the
path to where the roof of Durrisdeer shone in the morning
by the sea.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>At the customary hour I had the Master called, and
awaited his coming in the hall with a quiet mind. He
looked about him at the empty room and the three covers
set.</p>
<p>“We are a small party,” said he. “How comes that?”</p>
<p>“This is the party to which we must grow accustomed,”
I replied.</p>
<p>He looked at me with a sudden sharpness. “What
is all this?” said he.</p>
<p>“You and I and your friend Mr. Dass are now all the
company,” I replied. “My lord, my lady, and the children
are gone upon a voyage.”</p>
<p>“Upon my word!” said he. “Can this be possible?
I have indeed fluttered your Volscians in Corioli! But
this is no reason why our breakfast should go cold. Sit
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page168"></SPAN>168</span>
down, Mr. Mackellar, if you please”—taking, as he spoke,
the head of the table, which I had designed to occupy
myself—“and as we eat, you can give me the details of
this evasion.”</p>
<p>I could see he was more affected than his language
carried, and I determined to equal him in coolness. “I
was about to ask you to take the head of the table,” said
I; “for though I am now thrust into the position of your
host, I could never forget that you were, after all, a member
of the family.”</p>
<p>For a while he played the part of entertainer, giving
directions to Macconochie, who received them with an
evil grace, and attending specially upon Secundra. “And
where has my good family withdrawn to?” he asked
carelessly.</p>
<p>“Ah! Mr. Bally, that is another point,” said I. “I
have no orders to communicate their destination.”</p>
<p>“To me,” he corrected.</p>
<p>“To any one,” said I.</p>
<p>“It is the less pointed,” said the Master; “<i>c’est de bon
ton</i>: my brother improves as he continues. And I, dear
Mr. Mackellar?”</p>
<p>“You will have bed and board, Mr. Bally,” said I.
“I am permitted to give you the run of the cellar, which
is pretty reasonably stocked. You have only to keep well
with me, which is no very difficult matter, and you shall
want neither for wine nor a saddle-horse.”</p>
<p>He made an excuse to send Macconochie from the
room.</p>
<p>“And for money?” he inquired. “Have I to keep
well with my good friend Mackellar for my pocket-money
also? This is a pleasing return to the principles of boyhood.”</p>
<p>“There was no allowance made,” said I; “but I will
take it on myself to see you are supplied in moderation.”</p>
<p>“In moderation?” he repeated. “And you will take
it on yourself?” He drew himself up, and looked about
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page169"></SPAN>169</span>
the hall at the dark rows of portraits. “In the name of
my ancestors, I thank you,” says he; and then, with a
return to irony, “But there must certainly be an allowance
for Secundra Dass?” he said. “It is not possible they
have omitted that?”</p>
<p>“I will make a note of it, and ask instructions when I
write,” said I.</p>
<p>And he, with a sudden change of manner, and leaning
forward with an elbow on the table—“Do you think this
entirely wise?”</p>
<p>“I execute my orders, Mr. Bally,” said I.</p>
<p>“Profoundly modest,” said the Master; “perhaps not
equally ingenuous. You told me yesterday my power was
fallen with my father’s death. How comes it, then, that
a peer of the realm flees under cloud of night out of a house
in which his fathers have stood several sieges? that he
conceals his address, which must be a matter of concern
to his Gracious Majesty and to the whole republic? and
that he should leave me in possession, and under the paternal
charge of his invaluable Mackellar? This smacks to me
of a very considerable and genuine apprehension.”</p>
<p>I sought to interrupt him with some not very truthful
denegation; but he waved me down, and pursued his
speech.</p>
<p>“I say, it smacks of it,” he said; “but I will go beyond
that, for I think the apprehension grounded. I came to
this house with some reluctancy. In view of the manner
of my last departure, nothing but necessity could have
induced me to return. Money, however, is that which I
must have. You will not give with a good grace; well,
I have the power to force it from you. Inside of a week,
without leaving Durrisdeer, I will find out where these
fools are fled to. I will follow; and when I have run my
quarry down, I will drive a wedge into that family that
shall once more burst it into shivers. I shall see then
whether my Lord Durrisdeer” (said with indescribable
scorn and rage) “will choose to buy my absence; and you
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page170"></SPAN>170</span>
will all see whether, by that time, I decide for profit or
revenge.”</p>
<p>I was amazed to hear the man so open. The truth
is, he was consumed with anger at my lord’s successful
flight, felt himself to figure as a dupe, and was in no
humour to weigh language.</p>
<p>“Do you consider <i>this</i> entirely wise?” said I, copying
his words.</p>
<p>“These twenty years I have lived by my poor wisdom,”
he answered with a smile that seemed almost foolish in its
vanity.</p>
<p>“And come out a beggar in the end,” said I, “if beggar
be a strong enough word for it.”</p>
<p>“I would have you to observe, Mr. Mackellar,” cried
he, with a sudden imperious heat, in which I could not but
admire him, “that I am scrupulously civil; copy me in
that, and we shall be the better friends.”</p>
<p>Throughout this dialogue I had been incommoded by
the observation of Secundra Dass. Not one of us, since
the first word, had made a feint of eating: our eyes were
in each other’s faces—you might say, in each other’s
bosoms; and those of the Indian troubled me with a
certain changing brightness, as of comprehension. But I
brushed the fancy aside, telling myself once more he understood
no English; only, from the gravity of both voices,
and the occasional scorn and anger in the Master’s, smelled
out there was something of import in the wind.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>For the matter of three weeks we continued to live
together in the house of Durrisdeer: the beginning of that
most singular chapter of my life—what I must call my
intimacy with the Master. At first he was somewhat
changeable in his behaviour: now civil, now returning
to his old manner of flouting me to my face; and in both
I met him half-way. Thanks be to Providence, I had now
no measure to keep with the man; and I was never afraid
of black brows, only of naked swords. So that I found a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page171"></SPAN>171</span>
certain entertainment in these bouts of incivility, and was
not always ill inspired in my rejoinders. At last (it was
at supper) I had a droll expression that entirely vanquished
him. He laughed again and again; and “Who would
have guessed,” he cried, “that this old wife had any wit
under his petticoats?”</p>
<p>“It is no wit, Mr. Bally,” said I: “a dry Scots humour,
and something of the driest.” And, indeed, I never had
the least pretension to be thought a wit.</p>
<p>From that hour he was never rude with me, but all
passed between us in a manner of pleasantry. One of our
chief times of daffing<SPAN name="FnAnchor_9" href="#Footnote_9"><span class="sp">9</span></SPAN> was when he required a horse,
another bottle, or some money. He would approach me
then after the manner of a schoolboy, and I would carry
it on by way of being his father: on both sides, with an
infinity of mirth. I could not but perceive that he thought
more of me, which tickled that poor part of mankind, the
vanity. He dropped, besides (I must suppose unconsciously),
into a manner that was not only familiar, but
even friendly; and this, on the part of one who had so
long detested me, I found the more insidious. He went
little abroad; sometimes even refusing invitations. “No,”
he would say, “what do I care for these thick-headed
bonnet-lairds? I will stay at home, Mackellar; and we
shall share a bottle quietly, and have one of our good
talks.” And, indeed, meal-time at Durrisdeer must have
been a delight to any one, by reason of the brilliancy of
the discourse. He would often express wonder at his
former indifference to my society. “But, you see,” he
would add, “we were upon opposite sides. And so we
are to-day; but let us never speak of that. I would think
much less of you if you were not staunch to your employer.”
You are to consider he seemed to me quite impotent for
any evil; and how it is a most engaging form of flattery
when (after many years) tardy justice is done to a man’s
character and parts. But I have no thought to excuse
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page172"></SPAN>172</span>
myself. I was to blame; I let him cajole me, and, in
short, I think the watch-dog was gone sound asleep, when
he was suddenly aroused.</p>
<p>I should say the Indian was continually travelling to
and fro in the house. He never spoke, save in his own
dialect and with the Master; walked without sound; and
was always turning up where you would least expect him,
fallen into a deep abstraction, from which he would start
(upon your coming) to mock you with one of his grovelling
obeisances. He seemed so quiet, so frail, and so wrapped
in his own fancies, that I came to pass him over without
much regard, or even to pity him for a harmless exile from
his country. And yet without doubt the creature was still
eavesdropping; and without doubt it was through his
stealth and my security that our secret reached the Master.</p>
<p>It was one very wild night, after supper, and when we
had been making more than usually merry, that the blow
fell on me.</p>
<p>“This is all very fine,” says the Master, “but we should
do better to be buckling our valise.”</p>
<p>“Why so?” I cried. “Are you leaving?”</p>
<p>“We are all leaving to-morrow in the morning,” said
he. “For the port of Glascow first, thence for the province
of New York.”</p>
<p>I suppose I must have groaned aloud.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he continued, “I boasted; I said a week, and
it has taken me near twenty days. But never mind; I
shall make it up; I will go the faster.”</p>
<p>“Have you the money for this voyage?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Dear and ingenuous personage, I have,” said he.
“Blame me, if you choose, for my duplicity; but while
I have been wringing shillings from my daddy, I had a
stock of my own put by against a rainy day. You will
pay for your own passage, if you choose to accompany us
on our flank march; I have enough for Secundra and
myself, but not more—enough to be dangerous, not enough
to be generous. There is, however, an outside seat upon
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page173"></SPAN>173</span>
the chaise which I will let you have upon a moderate commutation;
so that the whole menagerie can go together—the
house-dog, the monkey, and the tiger.”</p>
<p>“I go with you,” said I.</p>
<p>“I count upon it,” said the Master. “You have
seen me foiled; I mean you shall see me victorious.
To gain that I will risk wetting you like a sop in this wild
weather.”</p>
<p>“And at least,” I added, “you know very well you
could not throw me off.”</p>
<p>“Not easily,” said he. “You put your finger on the
point with your usual excellent good sense. I never fight
with the inevitable.”</p>
<p>“I suppose it is useless to appeal to you?” said I.</p>
<p>“Believe me, perfectly,” said he.</p>
<p>“And yet, if you would give me time, I could write—”
I began.</p>
<p>“And what would be my Lord Durrisdeer’s answer?”
asks he.</p>
<p>“Ay,” said I, “that is the rub.”</p>
<p>“And, at any rate, how much more expeditious that
I should go myself!” says he. “But all this is quite a
waste of breath. At seven to-morrow the chaise will be
at the door. For I start from the door, Mackellar; I
do not skulk through woods and take my chaise upon the
wayside—shall we say, at Eagles?”</p>
<p>My mind was now thoroughly made up. “Can you
spare me quarter of an hour at St. Bride’s?” said I.
“I have a little necessary business with Carlyle.”</p>
<p>“An hour, if you prefer,” said he. “I do not seek to
deny that the money for your seat is an object to me;
and you could always get the first to Glascow with saddle-horses.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said I, “I never thought to leave old Scotland.”</p>
<p>“It will brisken you up,” says he.</p>
<p>“This will be an ill journey for someone,” I said. “I
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page174"></SPAN>174</span>
think, sir, for you. Something speaks in my bosom; and
so much it says plain—that this is an ill-omened journey.”</p>
<p>“If you take to prophecy,” says he, “listen to that.”</p>
<p>There came up a violent squall off the open Solway,
and the rain was dashed on the great windows.</p>
<p>“Do ye ken what that bodes, warlock?” said he, in
a broad accent: “that there’ll be a man Mackellar unco
sick at sea.”</p>
<p>When I got to my chamber, I sat there under a painful
excitation, hearkening to the turmoil of the gale, which
struck full upon that gable of the house. What with the
pressure on my spirits, the eldritch cries of the wind among
the turret-tops, and the perpetual trepidation of the
masoned house, sleep fled my eyelids utterly. I sat by
my taper, looking on the black panes of the window, where
the storm appeared continually on the point of bursting
in its entrance; and upon that empty field I beheld a
perspective of consequences that made the hair to rise
upon my scalp. The child corrupted, the home broken
up, my master dead, or worse than dead, my mistress
plunged in desolation—all these I saw before me painted
brightly on the darkness; and the outcry of the wind
appeared to mock at my inaction.</p>
<hr class="foot" />
<div class="note">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_7" href="#FnAnchor_7"><span class="fn">7</span></SPAN> Ordered.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_8" href="#FnAnchor_8"><span class="fn">8</span></SPAN> Land steward.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_9" href="#FnAnchor_9"><span class="fn">9</span></SPAN> Fooling.</p>
</div>
<hr class="art" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page175"></SPAN>175</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />