“I’ll no hear tell o’you going awa’! Sich daftness. And surely if you will gae, you’ll no leave an auld body like me wi’out some sma’ income. You that’s got siller.”
“I hae nae mair than I want. But I’ll ask Davie to do what he thinks he can do for you; seeing that you are my fayther’s sister. Puir fayther! I hope he doesna ken how hard you hae been on me.”
“You sall not go! I’ll no be left my lane—”
“I tell you, aunt, I am going in the morning. There is naebody in Pittenloch can stop me; no, nor Doctor Balmuto himsel’.”
Still Janet Caird scarcely believed Maggie. The girl had never been further from home than Kinkell. She thought she would go first to the minister, and she felt sure the minister would send her back home. So when Maggie passed out of the door soon after daybreak, and said “good-bye, Aunt Janet,” the old woman answered with an affected laugh—“gude-bye till the sun is doon. The night will bring you hame, Maggie.”
Maggie took the hills and was far up them before the village was astir. She had no intention of calling upon the minister; she still resented his last conversation with her, and after what he had said to Davie she had little hopes of obtaining a kind hearing from him just yet. She found Sandy Young’s wagon nearly ready to start for Stirling, and she easily got a seat in it. It was a slow, lumbering conveyance, but she was in no hurry; and she enjoyed very much the leisurely drive through lanes, and inland hamlets, and queer old towns. It was a strange and wonderful experience to a girl who had seen little of nature but the sea and the rocks, and little of men, save the men and women of her own distinctive class.
On the evening of the third day she reached Glasgow. It was a clear, blowing March day, very near the anniversary of her father’s and brothers’ death. Glasgow was in one of its brightest moods; the streets clean and crowded, and the lamplighters just beginning to light them. She easily found her way to the Candleriggs, and to the house in which David lodged. Here, for the first time, her heart failed her. She loitered about the window of the bakery until she had a sense of shame and hunger and weariness that overcame all her fears. “I’m wanting Mr. Promoter, ma’am,” she said at length to the woman behind the counter, and the woman looking sharply at her answered, “He’s in his room. Go through the close and up the stair; it’s at the right hand side.”
It seemed strange to knock at her brother’s door, and yet Maggie felt as if David would expect it of her. He answered the timid summons by a loud peremptory “Come in;” but when Maggie entered he leaped to his feet in amazement, and let the big book in his hand fall to the floor. There were the remains of tea on the table, and a young man who was sitting with David had pushed the cups aside, and filled their places with his papers and books.
“Maggie!”
“Ay, it’s me, Davie.”