Macdonald Bhain's visit to his brother was fruitful in another way.
After taking counsel with Yankee and Kirsty, he resolved that he
would speak to his neighbors and make a "bee," to attack the brule.
He knew better than to consult either his brother or his nephew,
feeling sure that their Highland pride would forbid accepting any
such favor, and all the more because it seemed to be needed. But
without their leave the bee was arranged, and in the beginning of
the following week the house of Macdonald Dubh was thrown into a
state of unparalleled confusion, and Kirsty went about in a state
of dishevelment that gave token that the daily struggle with dirt
had reached the acute stage. From top to bottom, inside and
outside, everything that could be scrubbed was scrubbed, and then
she settled about her baking, but with all caution, lest she should
excite her brother's or her nephew's suspicion. It was a good
thing that little baking was required, for the teams that brought
the men with their axes and logging-chains for the day's work at
the brule brought also their sisters and mothers with baskets of
provisions. A logging bee without the sisters and mothers with
their baskets would hardly be an unmixed blessing.
The first man to arrive with his team was Peter McGregor's Angus,
and with him came his sister Bella. He was shortly afterward
followed by other teams in rapid succession--the Rosses, the
McKerachers, the Camerons, both Don and Murdie, the Rory McCuaigs,
the McRaes, two or three families of them, the Frasers, and others--
till some fifteen teams and forty men, and boys, who thought
themselves quite men, lined up in front of the brule.
The bee was a great affair, for Macdonald Bhain was held in high
regard by the people; and besides this, the misfortune that had
befallen his brother, and the circumstances under which it had
overtaken him, had aroused in the community a very deep sympathy
for him, and people were glad of the opportunity to manifest this
sympathy. And more than all, a logging bee was an event that
always promised more or less excitement and social festivity.
Yankee was "boss" for the day. This position would naturally have
fallen to Macdonald Bhain, but at his brother's bee, Macdonald
Bhain shrank from taking the leading place.
The men with the axes went first, chopping up the half-burned logs
into lengths suitable for the burning-piles, clearing away the
brushwood, and cutting through the big roots of the fire-eaten
stumps so that they might more easily be pulled. Then followed the
teams with their logging-chains, hauling the logs to the piles,
jerking out and drawing off the stumps whose huge roots stuck up
high into the air, and drawing great heaps of brush-wood to aid in
reducing the heavy logs to ashes. At each log-pile stood a man
with a hand-spike to help the driver to get the log into position,
a work requiring strength and skill, and above all, a knowledge of
the ways of logs which comes only by experience. It was at this
work that Macdonald Bhain shone. With his mighty strength he could
hold steady one end of a log until the team could haul the other
into its place.
The stump-pulling was always attended with more or less interest
and excitement. Stumps, as well as logs, have their ways, and it
takes a long experience to understand the ways of stumps.
In stump-hauling, young Aleck McGregor was an expert. He rarely
failed to detect the weak side of a stump. He knew his team, and
what was of far greater importance, his team knew him. They were
partly of French-Canadian stock, not as large as Farquhar
McNaughton's big, fat blacks, but "as full of spirit as a bottle of
whisky," as Aleck himself would say. Their first tentative pulls
at the stump were taken with caution, until their driver and
themselves had taken the full measure of the strength of the enemy.
But when once Aleck had made up his mind that victory was possible,
and had given them the call for the final effort, then his team put
their bodies and souls into the pull, and never drew back till
something came. Their driver was accustomed to boast that never
yet had they failed to honor his call.
Farquhar's handsome blacks, on the other hand, were never handled
after this fashion. They were slow and sure and steady, like their
driver. Their great weight gave them a mighty advantage in a pull,
but never, in all the solemn course of their existence, had they
thrown themselves into any doubtful trial of strength. In a slow,
steady haul they were to be relied upon; but they never could be
got to jerk, and a jerk is an important feature in stump-hauling
tactics. To-day, however, a new experience was awaiting them.
Farquhar was an old man and slow, and Yankee, while he was unwilling
to hurry him, was equally unwilling that his team should not do a
full day's work. He persuaded Farquhar that his presence was
necessary at one of the piles, not with the hand-spike, but simply
to superintend the arranging of the mass for burning. "For it ain't
every man, Yankee declared, "could build a pile to burn." As for his
team, Yankee persuaded the old man that Ranald was unequaled in
handling horses; that last winter no driver in the camp was up to
him. Reluctantly Farquhar handed his team over to Ranald, and stood
for some time watching the result of the new combination.
Ranald was a born horseman. He loved horses and understood them.
Slowly he moved the blacks at their work, knowing that horses are
sensitive to a new hand and voice, and that he must adapt himself
to their ways, if he would bring them at last to his. Before long
Farquhar was contented to go off to his pile, satisfied that his
team was in good hands, and not sorry to be relieved of the
necessity of hurrying his pace through the long, hot day, as would
have been necessary in order to keep up with the other drivers.
For each team a strip of the brule was marked out to clear after
the axes. The logs, brush, and stumps had to be removed and
dragged to the burning-piles. Aleck, with his active, invincible
French-Canadians, Ranald with Farquhar's big, sleek blacks, and
Don with his father's team, worked side by side. A contest was
inevitable, and before an hour had passed Don and Aleck, while
making a great show of deliberation, were striving for the first
place, with Aleck easily leading. Like a piece of machinery, Aleck
and his team worked together. Quickly and neatly both driver and
horses moved about their work with perfect understanding of each
other. With hardly a touch of the lines, but almost entirely by
word of command, Aleck guided his team. And when he took up the
whiffletrees to swing them around to a log or stump, his horses
wheeled at once into place. It was beautiful to see them,
wheeling, backing, hauling, pulling, without loss of time or
temper.
With Don and his team it was all hard work. His horses were
willing and quick enough, but they were ill-trained and needed
constant tugging at the lines. In vain Don shouted and cracked his
whip, hurrying his team to his pile and back again; the horses only
grew more and more awkward, while they foamed and fretted and tired
themselves out.
Behind came Ranald, still humoring his slow-going team with easy
hand and quiet voice. But while he refrained from hurrying his
horses, he himself worked hard, and by his good judgment and skill
with the chain, and in skidding the logs into his pile, in which
his training in the shanty had made him more than a match for any
one in the field, many minutes were saved.
When the cowbell sounded for dinner, Aleck's team stepped off for
the barn, wet, but fresh and frisky as ever, and in perfect heart.
Don's horses appeared fretted and jaded, while Ranald brought in
his blacks with their glossy skins white with foam where the
harness had chafed, but unfretted, and apparently as ready for work
as when they began.
"You have spoiled the shine of your team," said Aleck, looking over
Ranald's horses as he brought them up to the trough. "Better turn
them out for the afternoon. They can't stand much more of that
pace."
Aleck was evidently trying to be good-natured, but he could not
hide the sneer in his tone. They had neither of them forgotten the
incident at the church door, and both felt that it would not be
closed until more had been said about it. But to-day, Ranald was
in the place of host, and it behooved him to be courteous, and
Aleck was in good humor with himself, for his team had easily led
the field; and besides, he was engaged in a kind and neighborly
undertaking, and he was too much of a man to spoil it by any
private grudge. He would have to wait for his settlement with
Ranald.
During the hour and a half allowed for dinner, Ranald took his
horses to the well, washed off their legs, removed their harness,
and led them to a cool spot behind the barn, and there, while they
munched their oats, he gave them a good hard rub-down, so that when
he brought them into the field again, his team looked as glossy and
felt as fresh as before they began the day's work.
As Ranald appeared on the field with his glossy blacks, Aleck
glanced at the horses, and began to feel that, in the contest for
first place, it was Ranald he had to fear, with his cool, steady
team, rather than Don. Not that any suspicion crossed his mind
that Farquhar McNaughton's sleek, slow-going horses could ever hold
their own with his, but he made up his mind that Ranald, at least,
was worth watching.
"Bring up your gentry," he called to Ranald, "if you are not too
fine for common folks. Man, that team of yours," he continued,
"should never be put to work like this. Their feet should never be
off pavement."
"Never you mind," said Ranald, quietly. "I am coming after you,
and perhaps before night the blacks may show you their heels yet."
"There's lots of room," said Aleck, scornfully, and they both set
to work with all the skill and strength that lay in themselves and
in their teams.
For the first hour or two Ranald was contented to follow, letting
his team take their way, but saving every moment he could by his
own efforts. So that, without fretting his horses in the least, or
without moving them perceptibly out of their ordinary gait, he
found himself a little nearer to Aleck than he had been at noon;
but the heavy lifting and quick work began to tell upon him. His
horses, he knew, would not stand very much hurrying. They were too
fat for any extra exertion in such heat, and so Ranald was about to
resign himself to defeat, when he observed that in the western sky
clouds were coming up. At the same time a cool breeze began to
blow, and he took fresh heart. If he could hurry his team a little
more, he might catch Aleck yet; so he held his own a little longer,
preserving the same steady pace, until the clouds from the west had
covered all the sky. Then gradually he began to quicken his
horses' movements and to put them on heavier loads. Wherever
opportunity offered, instead of a single log, or at most two, he
would take three or four for his load; and in ways known only to
horsemen, he began to stir up the spirit of his team, and to make
them feel something of his own excitement.
To such good purpose did he plan, and so nobly did his team respond
to his quiet but persistent pressure, that, ere Aleck was aware,
Ranald was up on his flank; and then they each knew that until the
supper-bell rang he would have to use to the best advantage every
moment of time and every ounce of strength in himself and his team
if he was to win first place.
Somehow the report of the contest went over the field, till at
length it reached the ears of Farquhar. At once the old man,
seized with anxiety for his team, and moved by the fear of what
Kirsty might say if the news ever reached her ears, set off across
the brule to remonstrate with Ranald, and if necessary, rescue his
team from peril.
But Don saw him coming, and knowing that every moment was precious,
and dreading lest the old man would snatch from Ranald the victory
which seemed to be at least possible for him, he arrested Farquhar
with a call for assistance with a big log, and then engaged him in
conversation upon the merits of his splendid team.
"And look," cried he, admiringly, "how Ranald is handling them!
Did you ever see the likes of that?"
The old man stood watching for a few moments, doubtfully enough,
while Don continued pouring forth the praises of his horses, and
the latter, as he noticed Farquhar's eyes glisten with pride,
ventured to hint that before the day was done "he would make Aleck
McRae and his team look sick. And without a hurt to the blacks,
too," he put in, diplomatically, "for Ranald is not the man to hurt
a team." And as Farquhar stood and watched Ranald at his work, and
noted with surprise how briskly and cleverly the blacks swung into
their places, and detected also with his experienced eye that Aleck
was beginning to show signs of hurry, he entered into the spirit of
the contest, and determined to allow his team to win victory for
themselves and their driver if they could.
The ax men had finished their "stent." It wanted still an hour of
supper-time, and surely if slowly, Ranald was making toward first
place. The other teams were left far behind with their work, and
the whole field began to center attention upon the two that were
now confessedly engaged in desperate conflict at the front. One by
one the ax men drew toward the end of the field, where Ranald and
Aleck were fighting out their fight, all pretense of deliberation
on the part of the drivers having by this time been dropped. They
no longer walked as they hitched their chains about the logs or
stumps, but sprang with eager haste to their work. One by one the
other teamsters abandoned their teams and moved across the field to
join the crowd already gathered about the contestants. Among them
came Macdonald Bhain, who had been working at the farthest corner
of the brule. As soon as he arrived upon the scene, and understood
what was going on, he cried to Ranald: "That will do now, Ranald;
it will be time to quit."
Ranald was about to stop, and indeed had checked his horses, when
Aleck, whose blood was up, called out tauntingly, "Aye, it would be
better for him and his horses to stop. They need it bad enough."
This was too much for even Farquhar's sluggish blood. "Let them
go, Ranald!" he cried. "Let them go, man! Never you fear for the
horses, if you take down the spunk o' yon crowing cock."
It was just what Ranald needed to spur him on--a taunt from his foe
and leave from Farquhar to push his team.
Before each lay a fallen tree cut into lengths and two or three
half-burned stumps. Ranald's tree was much the bigger. A single
length would have been an ordinary load for the blacks, but their
driver felt that their strength and spirit were both equal to much
more than this. He determined to clear away the whole tree at a
single load. As soon as he heard Farquhar's voice, he seized hold
of the whiffletrees, struck his team a sharp blow with the lines--
their first blow that day--swung them round to the top of the tree,
ran the chain through its swivel, hooked an end round each of the
top lengths, swung them in toward the butt, unhooked his chain,
gathered all three lengths into a single load, faced his horses
toward the pile, and shouted at them. The blacks, unused to this
sort of treatment, were prancing with excitement, and when the word
came they threw themselves into their collars with a fierceness
that nothing could check, and amid the admiring shouts of the
crowd, tore the logs through the black soil and landed them safely
at the pile. It was the work of only a few minutes to unhitch the
chain, haul the logs, one by one, into place, and dash back with
his team at the gallop for the stumps, while Aleck had still
another load of logs to draw.
Ranald's first stump came out with little trouble, and was borne at
full speed to the pile. The second stump gave him more difficulty,
and before it would yield he had to sever two or three of its
thickest roots.
Together the teams swung round to their last stump. The excitement
in the crowd was intense. Aleck's team was moving swiftly and with
the steadiness of clockwork. The blacks were frantic with
excitement and hard to control. Ranald's last stump was a pine of
medium size, whose roots were partly burned away. It looked like
an easy victim. Aleck's was an ugly-looking little elm.
Ranald thought he would try his first pull without the use of the
ax. Quickly he backed up his team to the stump, passed the chain
round a root on the far side, drew the big hook far up the chain,
hitched it so as to give the shortest possible draught, threw the
chain over the top of the stump to give it purchase, picked up his
lines, and called to his team. With a rush the blacks went at it.
The chain slipped up on the root, tightened, bit into the wood, and
then the blacks flung back. Ranald swung them round the point and
tried them again, but still the stump refused to budge.
All this time he could hear Aleck chopping furiously at his elm-
roots, and he knew that unless he had his stump out before his
rival had his chain hitched for the pull the victory was lost.
For a moment or two he hesitated, looking round for the ax.
"Try them again, Ranald," cried Farquhar. "Haw them a bit."
Once more Ranald picked up the lines, swung his horses round to the
left, held them steady a moment or two, and then with a yell sent
them at their pull. Magnificently the blacks responded, furiously
tearing up the ground with their feet. A moment or two they hung
straining on their chain, refusing to come back, when slowly the
stump began to move.
"You have got it," cried Farquhar. "Gee them a point or two."
But already Ranald had seen that this was necessary, and once more
backed his team to readjust the chain which had slipped off the
top. As he fastened the hook he heard a sharp "Back!" behind him,
and he knew that the next moment Aleck's team would be away with
their load. With a yell he sprang at his lines, lashed the blacks
over the back, and called to them once more. Again his team
responded, and with a mighty heave, the stump came slowly out,
carrying with it what looked like half a ton of earth. But even as
it heaved, he heard Aleck's call and the answering crash, and
before he could get his team a-going, the French-Canadians were off
for their pile at a gallop, with the lines flying in the air behind
them. A moment later he followed, the blacks hauling their stump
at a run.
Together he and Aleck reached the pile. It only remained now to
unhook the chain. In vain he tugged and hauled. The chain was
buried deep beneath the stump and refused to move, and before he
could swing his team about and turn the stump over, he heard
Aleck's shout of victory.
But as he dropped his chain and was leisurely backing his horses,
he heard old Farquhar cry, "Hurry, man! Hurry, for the life of
you!"
Without waiting to inquire the reason, Ranald wheeled his team,
gave the stump a half turn, released his chain, and drove off from
the pile, to find Aleck still busy hooking his chain to his
whiffletree.
Aleck had had the same difficulty in freeing his chain as Ranald,
but instead of trying to detach it from the stump, he had unhooked
the other end, and then, with a mighty backward jerk, had snatched
it from the stump. But before he could attach it to his place on
the whiffletree again, Ranald stood ready for work.
"A win, lad! A win!" cried old Farquhar, more excited than he had
been for years.
"It is no win," said Aleck, hotly.
"No, no, lads," said Macdonald Bhain, before Farquhar could reply.
"It is as even a match as could well be. It is fine teams you both
have got, and you have handled them well."
But all the same, Ranald's friends were wildly enthusiastic over
what they called his victory, and Don could hardly keep his hands
off him, for very joy.
Aleck, on the other hand, while claiming the victory because his
team was at the pile first, was not so sure of it but that he was
ready to fight with any one venturing to dispute his claim. But
the men all laughed at him and his rage, until he found it wiser to
be good-humored about it.
"Yon lad will be making as good a man as yourself," said Farquhar,
enthusiastically, to Macdonald Bhain, as Ranald drove his team to
the stable.
"Aye, and a better, pray God," said Macdonald Bhain, fervently,
looking after Ranald with loving eyes. There was no child in his
home, and his brother's son was as his own.
Meanwhile Don had hurried on, leaving his team with Murdie that he
might sing Ranald's praises to "the girls," with whom Ranald was
highly popular, although he avoided them, or perhaps because he did
so, the ways of women being past understanding.
To Mrs. Murray and Maimie, who with the minister and Hughie, had
come over to the supper, he went first with his tale. Graphically
he depicted the struggle from its beginning to the last dramatic
rush to the pile, dilating upon Ranald's skill and pluck, and upon
the wonderful and hitherto unknown virtues of Farquhar's shiny
blacks.
"You ought to see them!" cried Don. "You bet they never moved in
their lives the way they did today. Tied him!" he continued.
"Tied him! Beat him, I say, but Macdonald Bhain says 'Tied him'--
Aleck McRae, who thinks himself so mighty smart with his team."
Don forgot in his excitement that the McRaes and their friends were
there in numbers.
"So he is," cried Annie Ross, one of Aleck's admirers. "There is
not a man in the Indian Lands that can beat Aleck and his team."
"Well," exulted Don, "a boy came pretty near it to-day."
But Annie only stuck out her lip at him in the inimitable female
manner, and ran off to add to the mischief that Don had already
made between Ranald and his rival.
But now the day's work was over, and the hour for the day's event
had come, for supper was the great event to which all things moved
at bees. The long tables stood under the maple trees, spread with
the richest, rarest, deadliest dainties known to the housewives and
maidens of the countryside. About the tables stood in groups the
white-aproned girls, tucked and frilled, curled and ribboned into
all degrees of bewitching loveliness. The men hurried away with
their teams, and then gave themselves to the serious duty of
getting ready for supper, using many pails of water in their
efforts to remove the black from the burnt wood of the brule.
At length the women lost all patience with them, and sent Annie
Ross, with two or three companions, to call them to supper. With
arms intertwined, and with much chattering and giggling, the girls
made their way to the group of men, some of whom were engaged in
putting the finishing touches to their toilet.
"Supper is ready," cried Annie, "and long past ready. You need not
be trying to fix yourselves up so fine. You are just as bad as any
girls. Oh!" Her speech ended in a shriek, which was echoed by the
others, for Aleck McRae rushed at them, stretching out his black
hands toward them. But they were too quick for him, and fled for
protection to the safe precincts of the tables.
At length, when the last of the men had made themselves, as they
thought, presentable, they began to make their approach to the
tables, slowly and shyly for the most part, each waiting for the
other. Aleck McRae, however, knew little of shyness, but walked
past the different groups of girls, throwing on either hand a
smile, a wink, or a word, as he might find suitable.
Suddenly he came upon the group where the minister's wife and her
niece were standing. Here, for the moment, his ease forsook him,
but Mrs. Murray came to meet him with outstretched hand.
"So you still retain your laurels?" she said, with a frank smile.
"I hear it was a great battle."
Aleck shook hands with her rather awkwardly. He was not on the
easiest terms with the minister and his wife. He belonged
distinctly to the careless set, and rather enjoyed the distinction.
"Oh, it was not much," he said; "the teams were well matched."
"Oh, I should like to have been there. You should have told us
beforehand."
"Oh, it was more than I expected myself," he said. "I didn't think
it was in Farquhar's team."
He could not bring himself to give any credit to Ranald, and though
Mrs. Murray saw this, she refused to notice it. She was none the
less anxious to win Aleck's confidence, because she was Ranald's
friend.
"Do you know my niece?" she said, turning to Maimie.
Aleck looked into Maimie's face with such open admiration that she
felt the blush come up in her cheeks.
"Indeed, she is worth knowing, but I don't think she will care to
take such a hand as that," he said, stretching out a hand still
grimy in spite of much washing. But Maimie had learned something
since coming to her aunt, and she no longer judged men by the fit
of their clothes, or the color of their skin, or the length of
their hair; and indeed, as she looked at Aleck, with his close-
buttoned smock, and overalls with the legs tucked neatly into the
tops of his boots, she thought he was the trimmest figure she had
seen since coming to the country. She took Aleck's hand and shook
it warmly, the full admiration in his handsome black eyes setting
her blood tingling with that love of conquest that lies in every
woman's heart. So she flung out her flag of war, and smiled back
at him her sweetest.
"You have a fine team, I hear," she said, as her aunt moved away to
greet some of the other men, who were evidently waiting to get a
word with her.
"That I have, you better believe," replied Aleck, proudly.
"It was very clever of Ranald to come so near beating you, wasn't
it?" she said, innocently. "He must be a splendid driver."
"He drives pretty well," admitted Aleck. "He did nothing else all
last winter in the shanties."
"He is so young, too," went on Maimie. "Just a boy, isn't he?"
Aleck was not sure how to take this. "He does not think so," he
answered, shortly. "He thinks he is no end of a man, but he will
have to learn something before he is much older."
"But he can drive, you say," continued Maimie, wickedly keeping her
finger on the sore spot.
"Oh, pshaw!" replied Aleck, boldly. "You think a lot of him, don't
you? And I guess you are a pair."
Maimie tossed her head at this. "We are very good friends, of
course," she said, lightly. "He is a very nice boy, and we are all
fond of him; but he is just a boy; he is Hughie's great friend."
"A boy, is he?" laughed Aleck. "That may be, but he is very fond
of you, whatever, and indeed, I don't wonder at that. Anybody
would be," he added, boldly.
"You don't know a bit about it," said Maimie, with cheeks glowing.
"About what?"
"About Ranald and--and--what you said."
"What I said? About being fond of you? Indeed, I know all about
that. The boys are all broke up, not to speak of myself."
This was going a little too fast for Maimie. She knew nothing, as
yet, of the freedom of country banter. She was new to the warfare,
but she was not going to lower her flag or retreat. She changed
the subject. "Your team must have been very tired."
"Tired!" exclaimed Aleck, "not a bit. They will go home like
birds. Come along with me, and you will see."
Maimie gasped. "I--" she hesitated, glanced past Aleck, blushed,
and stammered.
Aleck turned about quickly and saw Ranald staring at Maimie. "Oh,"
he said, banteringly, "I see. You would not be allowed."
"Allowed!" echoed Maimie. "And why not, pray? Who will hinder
me?"
But Aleck only shrugged his shoulders and looked at Ranald, who
passed on to his place at the table, black as a thunder-cloud.
Maimie was indignant at him. What right had he to stare and look
so savage? She would just show him. So she turned once more to
Aleck, and with a gay laugh, cried, "Some day I will accept your
invitation, so just make ready."
"Any day, or every day, and the more days the better," cried Aleck,
as he sat down at the table, where all had now taken their places.
The supper was a great success. With much laughter and chaffing,
the girls flitted from place to place, pouring cups of tea and
passing the various dishes, urging the men to eat, till, as Don
said, they were "full to the neck."
When all had finished, Mr. Murray, who sat at the head of the
table, rose in his place and said: "Gentlemen, before we rise from
this table, which has been spread so bountifully for us, I wish to
return thanks on behalf of Mr. Macdonald to the neighbors and
friends who have gathered to-day to assist in this work. Mr.
Macdonald asked me to say that he is all the more surprised at this
kindness, in that he feels himself to be so unworthy of it. I
promised to speak this word for him, but I do not agree with the
sentiment. Mr. Macdonald is a man whom we all love, and in whose
misfortune we deeply sympathize, and I only hope that this
Providence may be greatly blessed to him, and that we will all come
to know him better, and to see God's hand in his misfortune."
The minister then, after some further remarks expressive of the
good will of the neighbors for Mr. Macdonald, and in appreciation
of the kind spirit that prompted the bee, returned thanks, and the
supper was over.
As the men were leaving the table, Aleck watched his opportunity
and called to Maimie, when he was sure Ranald could hear, "Well,
when will you be ready for that drive?"
And Maimie, who was more indignant at Ranald than ever because he
had ignored all her advances at supper, and had received her
congratulations upon his victory with nothing more than a grunt,
answered Aleck brightly. "Oh, any day that you happen to
remember."
"Remember!" cried Aleck; "then that will be every day until our
ride comes off."
A few minutes later, as Ranald was hitching up Farquhar's team,
Aleck passed by, and in great good humor with himself, chaffingly
called out to Ranald in the presence of a number of the men,
"That's a fine girl you've got, Ranald. But you better keep your
eye on her."
Ranald made no reply. He was fast losing command of himself.
"Pretty skittish to handle, isn't she?" continued Aleck.
"What y're talkin' 'bout? That Lisette mare?" said Yankee, walking
round to Ranald's side. "Purty slick beast, that. Guess there
ain't anythin' in this country will make her take dust."
Then in a low voice he said to Ranald, hurriedly, "Don't you mind
him; don't you mind him. You can't touch him to-day, on your own
place. Let me handle him."
"No," said Aleck. "We were talking about another colt of Ranald's."
"What's that?" said Yankee, pretending not to hear. "Yes, you
bet," he continued. "Ranald can handle her all right. He knows
something about horses, as I guess you have found out, perhaps, by
this time. Never saw anything so purty. Didn't know your team had
got that move in them, Mr. McNaughton," Yankee went on to Farquhar,
who had just come up.
"Indeed, they are none the worse of it," said Farquhar, rubbing his
hands over the sleek sides of his horses.
"Worse!" cried Yankee. "They're worth a hundred dollars more from
this day on."
"I don't know that. The hundred dollars ought to go upon the
driver," said Farquhar, putting his hand kindly upon Ranald's
shoulder.
But this Ranald warmly repudiated. "They are a great team," he
said to Farquhar. "And they could do better than they did to-day
if they were better handled.'
"Indeed, it would be difficult to get that," said Farquhar, "for,
in my opinion, there is not a man in the country that could handle
them as well."
This was too much for Aleck, who, having by this time got his
horses hitched, mounted his wagon seat and came round to the door
at a gallop.
"Saved you that time, my boy," said Yankee to Ranald. "You would
have made a fool of yourself in about two minutes more, I guess."
But Ranald was still too wrathful to be grateful for Yankee's help.
"I will be even with him someday," he said, between his teeth.
"I guess you will have to learn two or three things first," said
Yankee, slowly.
"What things?"
"Well, how to use your head, first place, and then how to use your
hands. He is too heavy for you. He would crumple you up in a
couple of minutes."
"Let him, then," said Ranald, recklessly.
"Rather onpleasant. Better wait awhile till you learn what I told
you."
"Yankee," said Ranald, after a pause, "will you show me?"
"Why, sartin sure," said Yankee, cheerfully. "You have got to lick
him some day, or he won't be happy; and by jings! it will be worth
seein', too."
By this time Farquhar had come back from saying good by to
Macdonald Dubh and Mr. and Mrs. Murray, who were remaining till
the last.
"You will be a man yet," said Farquhar, shaking Ranald's hand.
"You have got the patience and the endurance." These were great
virtues in Farquhar's opinion.
"Not much patience, I am afraid," said Ranald. "But I am glad you
trusted me with your team."
"And any day you want them you can have them," said Farquhar, his
reckless mood leading him to forget Kirsty for the moment.
"Thank you, sir," said Ranald, wondering what Kirsty would look
like should he ever venture to claim Farquhar's offer.
One by one the teams drove away with their loads, till only the
minister and his party were left. Away under the trees Mr. Murray
was standing, earnestly talking to Macdonald Dubh. He had found
the opportunity he had long waited for and was making the most of
it. Mrs. Murray was busy with Kirsty, and Maimie and Hughie came
toward the stable where Yankee and Ranald were still standing. As
soon as Ranald saw them approaching he said to Yankee, abruptly,
"I am going to get the minister's horse," and disappeared into the
stable. Nor did he come forth again till he heard his father
calling to him: "What is keeping you, Ranald? The minister is
waiting for his horse."
"So you won a great victory, Ranald, I hear," said the minister, as
Ranald brought Black to the door.
"It was a tie," said Ranald.
"Oh, Ranald!" cried Hughie, "you beat him. Everybody says so. You
had your chain hitched up and everything before Aleck."
"I hear it was a great exhibition, not only of skill, but of
endurance and patience, Ranald," said the minister. "And these are
noble virtues. It is a great thing to be able to endure."
But Ranald made no reply, busying himself with Black's bridle.
Mrs. Murray noticed his gloom and guessed its cause.
"We will see you at the Bible class, Ranald," she said, kindly, but
still Ranald remained silent.
"Can you not speak, man?" said his father. "Do you not hear the
minister's wife talking to you?"
"Yes," said Ranald, "I will be there."
"We will be glad to see you," said Mrs. Murray, offering him her
hand. "And you might come in with Hughie for a few minutes
afterward," she continued, kindly, for she noted the misery in his
face.
"And we will be glad to see you, too, Mr. Macdonald, if it would
not be too much for you, and if you do not scorn a woman's
teaching."
"Indeed, I would be proud," said Macdonald Dubh, courteously, "as
far as that is concerned, for I hear there are better men than me
attending."
"I am sure Mrs. Murray will be glad to see you, Mr. Macdonald,"
said the minister.
"I will be thinking of it," said Macdonald Dubh, cautiously. "And
you are both very kind, whatever," he said, losing for a time his
habitual gloom.
"Well, then, I will look for you both," said Mrs. Murray, as they
were about to drive off, "so do not disappoint me."
"Good by, Ranald," said Maimie, offering Ranald her hand.
"Good by," said Ranald, holding her hand for a moment and looking
hard into her eyes, "and I hope you will enjoy your ride, whatever."
Then Maimie understood Ranald's savage manner, and as she thought
it over she smiled to herself. She was taking her first sips of
that cup, to woman's lips the sweetest, and she found it not
unpleasant. She had succeeded in making one man happy and another
miserable. But it was when she said to herself, "Poor Ranald!"
that she smiled most sweetly.