CHAPTER VII. — THE BEGINNING OF THE END
On this same night the Mistress of Braelands sat musing by the glowing bit of fire in her bedroom, while her maid, Allister, was folding away her silk dinner-gown, and making the preparations for the night’s toilet. She was a stately, stern-looking woman, with that air of authority which comes from long and recognised position. Her dressing-gown of pale blue flannel fell amply around her tall form; her white hair was still coiled and puffed in an elaborate fashion, and there was at the wrist-bands of her sleeves a fall of lace which half covered her long, shapely white hands. She was pinching its plaits mechanically, and watching the effect as she idly turned them in the firelight to catch the gleam of opal and amethyst rings. But this accompaniment to her thoughts was hardly a conscious one; she had admired her hands for so many years that she was very apt to give to their beauty this homage of involuntary observation, even when her thoughts were fixed on subjects far-off and alien to them.
“Allister,” she said, suddenly, “I wonder where Mr. Archibald will be this night.”
“The Lord knows, Madame, and it is well he does; for it is little we know of ourselves and the ways we walk in.”
“The Lord looks after his own, Allister, and Mr. Archibald was given to him by kirk and parents before he was a month old. But if a man marries such a woman as you know nothing about, and then goes her ways, what will you say then?”
“It is not as bad as that, Madame. Mrs. Archibald is of well-known people, though poor.”
“Though low-born, Allister. Poverty can be tholed, and even respected; but for low birth there is no remedy but being born over again.”
“Well, Madame, she is Braelands now, and that is a cloak to cover all defects; and if I was you I would just see that it did so.”
“She is my son’s wife, and must be held as such, both by gentle and simple.”