“They ca' me Christie Johnstone.”
“Well, Christie Johnstone, I am under the doctor's hands.”
“Puir lad. What's the trouble?” (solemnly and tenderly.)
“Ennui!” (rather piteously.)
“Yawn-we? I never heerd tell o't.”
“Oh, you lucky girl,” burst out he; “but the doctor has undertaken to cure me; in one thing you could assist me, if I am not presuming too far on our short acquaintance. I am to relieve one poor distressed person every day, but I mustn't do two. Is not that a bore?”
“Gie's your hand, gie's your hand. I'm vexed for ca'ing you daft. Hech! what a saft hand ye hae. Jean, I'm saying, come here, feel this.”
Jean, who had run in, took the viscount's hand from Christie.
“It never wroucht any,” explained Jean. “And he has bonny hair,” said Christie, just touching his locks on the other side.
“He's a bonny lad,” said Jean, inspecting him scientifically, and pointblank.