<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br/> <span class="f8">A RUN ON THE BEACH</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">The</span> girl’s kiss was so spontaneous and so natural
that it could not convey any false impression to
me. It was a manifest expression of gratitude,
and that only. Nevertheless it set my heart beating and
my veins tingling with delight. From that instant I did
not feel quite a stranger to the giver; nor could I ever
feel as quite a stranger again. Something of the same
idea may have passed through the girl’s mind, for she
blushed and looked around her shyly; but, with a proud
lifting of her head and a slight stamp of her foot on
the rock, she put the matter behind her, for the present.
The old lady, in the midst of her concern for her companion
and herself, was able to throw a glance of disapproval
on me, as though I had done something wrong;
from which I gathered that the younger lady was not
only very dear to her, but held in some sort of unusual
respect as well. It was peculiar that she should in the
midst of her present condition be able to give a thought
to so trivial a thing. For though death did not now stare
her in the face, she was cold and wet; the rock she
stood on was hard and slippery, and the foam of the
breaking waves was even now curling around her feet.</p>
<p>She looked about her apprehensively; she did not know
whether or no we were on another isolated rock. I reassured
her on this subject, and we scrambled as quickly
as we could over the rocks on our way shoreward. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
elder lady took up most of my time. Here and there in
a difficult place, for the wind by now blew so strongly
that one found it hard to balance oneself as is necessary
when walking on rocks, I offered the younger my hand.
At first she firmly declined; but then, manifestly thinking
it churlish, she relented and let me help her. That kiss
was evidently rankling in her mind.</p>
<p>Both the women breathed more freely when we had
reached the shore and stood secure from the sea. And
indeed by this time the view, as we looked back, was
enough to frighten one. Great waves topped with white
were rolling in from as far as we could see; dashing
over the rocks, sending up here and there white towers
of spray, or rolling in on the flat shore in front of us with
an ominous roar. Woe betide any one who might be
isolated now on any rock beyond; he would be swept
off, and beaten on the rocks. The old lady groaned as
she saw it, and then said audibly a prayer of thankfulness.
Even the girl grew white for a moment; then,
to my secret joy, unconsciously she drew closer to me. I
took control of the party.</p>
<p>“Come,” I said, “you mustn’t stand here in your wet
clothes. Hurry to the hotel and get dried. You will
get your death of cold. We must all run! Or hasten,
at all events!” I added, as I took in the dimensions of
the elder lady.</p>
<p>“We have left our trap at the hotel” said the younger
lady as we began to walk quickly in the direction of Port
Erroll.</p>
<p>As we were moving off it suddenly struck me that Gormala
might have seen the episode of the rescue. The
very thought of such a thing filled me with such dismay
that I groaned aloud. Not for all the world would I have
had her have a hand in this; it was too sacred—too delightful—too
much apart from ordinary things! Whilst<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
I was lost in a reverie of inexpressible sweetness for
perhaps two or three seconds altogether, I was recalled
to myself by the voice of the girl who came close to
me:</p>
<p>“Are you hurt? Please tell me if you are. I am a
First Aid.”</p>
<p>“Hurt?” I asked, surprised “not at all. What on
earth makes you think so?”</p>
<p>“I heard you groan!”</p>
<p>“Oh that——” I began with a smile. Then I stopped,
for again the haunting fear of Gormala’s interference
closed over my heart like a wet mist. With the fear,
however, came a resolution; I would not have any doubt
to torment me. In my glance about the shore, as we
came off the rocks on to the beach, I had not seen a
sign of anyone. At this part of the shore the sandhills
have faded away into a narrow flat covered with bent-grass,
beyond which the land slopes up directly to the
higher plain. There was not room or place for any one
to hide; even one lying amongst the long bents could
be seen at a glance from above. Without a word I turned
to the left and ran as quickly as I could across the beach
and up the steep bank of the sandy plateau. With a
certain degree of apprehension, and my heart beating like
a trip-hammer—I had certainly taken this matter with
much concern—I looked around. Then I breathed freely;
there was not a sign of anyone as far as I could see. The
wind, now coming fiercely in from the sea, swept the
tall bent-grass till it lay over, showing the paler green
of its under side; the blue-green, metallic shimmer which
marks it, and which painters find it so hard to reproduce,
had all vanished under the stress.</p>
<p>I ran back to join the ladies. The elder one had
continued walking stolidly along the shore, leaving a
track of wet on the half dry sand as she went; but the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
younger one had lingered and came towards me as I
approached.</p>
<p>“I hope there was nothing wrong?” she asked in a
most natural way.</p>
<p>“No,” I said it without thinking, for there was something
about the girl which made me feel as if we were
old friends, and I spoke to her unconsciously in this strain.
“It’s all right. She’s not there!”</p>
<p>“Who?” she asked with unconsciousness of any <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">arrière
pensée</i>, an unconsciousness similar to my own.</p>
<p>“Gormala!” I answered.</p>
<p>“And who is Gormala?” For quite a minute or two
I walked on without speaking, for I wanted to think
before I answered. I felt that it would be hard to explain
the odd way in which the Seer-woman seemed
to have become tangled up in my life; and yet I wanted
to tell this girl. I feared that she might laugh at me;
that she might think me ridiculous; that she might despise
me; or even that she might think me a lunatic!
Then again Gormala might come and tell things to her.
There was no accounting for what the woman might do.
She might come upon us at any moment; she might
be here even now! The effect of her following or watching
me had begun to tell on my mind; her existence
haunted me. I looked around anxiously, and breathed
freely. There was no sign of her. My eyes finally
fetched up on the face of the girl.... Her beautiful,
dark eyes were fixed on me with interest and wonder.</p>
<p>“Well!” she said, after a pause, “I don’t suppose I’m
more inquisitive than my neighbours, but I should just
like to know, right here, what’s wrong with you. You
looked round that time just as if you were haunted!
Why did you run away that time and search round as
if some one had taken a pot-shot at you and you wanted
to locate him? Why did you groan before you went,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
and come back humming? Who is Gormala, anyhow;
and why were you glad that you didn’t see her? Why
didn’t you answer me when I asked you who she was?
Why did you walk along with your head up and your
eyes staring, as though you were seeing visions? And
why——”</p>
<p>All at once she stopped, and a swift blush swept over
her face and even her neck. “Oh,” she said in a low
tone with a note of pathos in her voice, “I beg your pardon!
my unruly tongue ran away with me. I have no
right to ask so many questions—and from a stranger
too!” She stopped as suddenly as she had begun.</p>
<p>“You might have spared me that!” I said “I know I
have been rude in delaying to answer your question about
Gormala; but the fact is that there are so many odd
things in connection with her that I was really considering
whether you would think me a fool or a lunatic if I
told them to you. And you certainly would not understand
why I didn’t want to see her, if I didn’t. And
perhaps not even if I did,” I added as an afterthought.
The girl’s awkwardness slipped from her like a robe; the
blush merged into a smile as she turned to me and said:</p>
<p>“This is most interesting. O! do tell me—if you
don’t mind.”</p>
<p>“I shall be delighted” I said, and I only expressed
my thought. “Gormala” I began; but just then the
stout lady in front of us, who was now a considerable
way ahead, turned round and called to us. I could only
hear “Miss Anita;” but the girl evidently understood,
for she called out:</p>
<p>“All right! We are coming at once!” and she hurried
on. It gave me a thrill of pleasure that she said “we”
not “I;” it was sweet to have a part in such a comprehension.
As we went she turned to me and said:</p>
<p>“You must tell me all about it; I shan’t be happy till<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
I hear the whole story, whatever it is. This is all too
lovely and exciting. I hadn’t an idea when we went
out sleepily this morning that there would be so much
in the day to think of afterwards.” I felt that I had
taken my courage in both hands as I said:</p>
<p>“You’ll both dine with me at the hotel, won’t you.
You have missed lunch and must be hungry, so we can
dine early. It will be such a true pleasure to me; and I can
tell you all about everything afterwards, if we can manage
to get a moment alone.”</p>
<p>She paused, and I waited anxiously. Then she spoke
with a delightful smile:</p>
<p>“That must be as Mrs. Jack says. But we shall see!”
With this I had to be content for the present.</p>
<p>When we came up to her, Mrs. Jack said in a woeful
way:</p>
<p>“Oh, Miss Anita, I don’t know what to do. The sand
is so heavy, and my clothes are so weighty with the wet,
and my boots squish so with the water in them that I’m
beginning to think I’ll never be able to get warm or
dry again; though I’m both warm enough and dry enough
in other ways.” As she spoke she moved her feet somewhat
after the manner of a bear dancing, so as to make
her wet boots squeak. I would have liked to have
laughed, though I really pitied the poor thing; but a
glance at the concern on Miss Anita’s face checked me.
Very tenderly she began to help and comfort the old
lady, and looked at me pleadingly to help her. “Why
dear” she said “no wonder it is hard walking for you
with your clothes so wringing wet,” and she knelt down
on the wet sand and began to wring them out. I looked
around to see what I could do to help. Just opposite,
where we were the outcrop of rock on which the Hawklaw
is based sent up a jagged spur of granite through the
sand, close under the bent-covered hillocks. I pointed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
to this and we led the old lady over to it and made her sit
down on a flat rock. Then we proceeded to wring her out,
she all the while protesting against so much trouble being
taken about her. We pulled off her spring-side boots,
emptied them out and, with considerable difficulty, forced
them on again. Then we all stood up, and the girl and I
took her arms and hurried her along the beach; we all
knew that nothing could be done for real comfort till
we should have reached the hotel. As we went she said
with gratitude in every note of her voice, the words
joggling out of her as she bumped along:</p>
<p>“Oh, my dears, you are very good to me.”</p>
<p>Once again the use of the plural gave me pleasure.
This time, however, it was my head, rather than my
heart, which was affected; to be so bracketted with Miss
Anita was to have hope as well as pleasure.</p>
<p>Things were beginning to move fast with me.</p>
<p>When we got to Cruden there was great local
excitement, and much running to and fro on the
part of the good people of the hotel to get dry
clothes for the strange ladies. None of us gave any
detail as to how the wetting took place; by some kind
of common consent it was simply made known for
the time that they had been overtaken by the tide. When
once the incomplete idea had been started I took care
not to elaborate it. I could see plainly enough that
though the elder lady had every wish to be profuse in
the expression of her gratitude to me, the younger one
not only remained silent but now and again restrained
her companion by a warning look. Needless to say, I
let things go in their own way; it was too sweet a pleasure
to me to share anything in the way of a secret with
my new friend, to imperil such a bliss by any breach
of reticence. The ladies were taken away to bedrooms
to change, and I asked that dinner for the three of us<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
might be served in my room. When I had changed my
own clothes, over which operation I did not lose any
time, I waited in the room for the arrival of my guests.
Whilst the table was being laid I learned that the two
ladies had come to the hotel early in the day in a dogcart
driven by the younger one. They had given no
orders except that the horse should be put up and well
cared for.</p>
<p>It was not long before the ladies appeared. Mrs.
Jack began to express her gratitude to me. I tried to
turn it aside, for though it moved me a little by its
genuineness, I felt somewhat awkward, as though I were
accepting praise under false pretences. Such service as
I had been able to render, though of the utmost importance
to them, had been so easy of execution to me that
more than a passing expression of thanks seemed out
of place. After all I had only accepted a wetting on
behalf of two ladies placed in an awkward position. I
was a good swimmer; and my part of the whole proceeding
was unaccompanied by any danger whatever, I
thought, of course, had it been later in the coming of
the storm, things might have been very different. Here
I shuddered as my imagination gave me an instantaneous
picture of the two helpless women in the toils of the
raging sea amongst those grim rocks and borne by that
racing tide which had done poor Lauchlane Macleod to
death. As if to emphasise my fears there now came a
terrific burst of wind which seemed to sweep over the
house with appalling violence. It howled and roared
above us, so that every window, chimney and door, seemed
to bear the sound right in upon us. Overhead was heard,
between the burst which shook the windows and doors,
that vague, booming sound, which conveys perhaps a
better sense of nature’s forces when let loose, than even
the concrete expression of their violence. In this new<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>
feeling of the possibilities of the storm, I realised the base
and the truth of the gratitude which the ladies felt; and
I also realised what an awful tragedy might have come
to pass had I or some one else not come down the path
from Whinnyfold just when I did.</p>
<p>I was recalled to myself by an expression of concern
by Mrs. Jack:</p>
<p>“Look how pale he has got. I do hope he has not been
hurt.” Mechanically I answered:</p>
<p>“Hurt! I was never better in my life,” then I felt
that my pallor must have left me and that I grew red
with pleasure as I heard Miss Anita say:</p>
<p>“Ah! I understand. He did not have any fear for
himself; but he is beginning to feel how terrible it
was for us.” The fulness of understanding on the
part of the beautiful girl, her perfect and ready sympathy,
the exactness of her interpretation of my mind,
made for me an inexpressible pleasure.</p>
<p>When I told Mrs. Jack that I had ventured to claim
them both as my guests, and hoped that they would
honour me by dining with me, she looked at her companion
in the same inquiring way which I had already
noticed. I could not see the face of the younger lady
at the moment as it was turned away from me, but
her approval was manifest; the answer was made gladly
in the affirmative. Then I put forth a hope that they
would allow me to have a carriage ready to take them
home, whenever they might desire, so that they might
feel at ease in remaining till they had been thoroughly
restored after their fatigue. I added that perhaps it
would be good for Miss Anita. Mrs. Jack raised her
eyebrows slightly, and I thought there was a note of
distance in her voice, as though she resented in a quiet
way my mentioning the name:</p>
<p>“Miss Anita!” she said; and there was that unconscious<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
stiffening of the back which evidences that one
is on guard. I felt somewhat awkward, as though I
had taken a liberty. The younger lady saw my difficulty,
and with a quick smile jumped to the rescue.</p>
<p>“Oh Mrs. Jack” she said “I quite forgot that we
were never introduced; but of course he heard you mention
my name. It was rather hurried our meeting;
wasn’t it? We must set it right now.” Then she added
very demurely:</p>
<p>“Dear Mrs. Jack, will you present to Miss Anita, Mr.——”
she looked at me interrogatively.</p>
<p>“Archibald Hunter” I said, and the presentation was
formally made. Then Miss Anita answered my question
about the carriage:</p>
<p>“Thank you for your kind offer, Mr. Archibald Hunter”
I thought she dwelt on the name, “but we shall
drive back as we came. The storm will not be quite so
bad inland, and as it does not rain the cart will be
all right; we have plenty of wraps. The lamps are
good, and I know the road; I noted it well as we came.
Is not that right?” she added, turning to her companion.</p>
<p>“Quite right, my dear! Do just as you like,” and so
the manner of their going was arranged.</p>
<p>Then we had dinner; a delightful, cosy meal. The fire
leaped whenever the wind roared; and as the darkness
of the storm made a sort of premature nightfall, it gave
a pleasant, homely look to everything. After dinner we
sat round the fire, and I think for a time we were all
content. To me it was so like a dream. To sit there
close to the beautiful stranger, and to think of the romantic
beginning of our acquaintance, was enjoyment
beyond words. As yet I did not dare to cast a glance
forwards; but I was content to wait for that. I had a
conviction that my own mind was made up.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>After a little while we all became silent. Mrs. Jack
was beginning to doze in her chair, and we two young
folk instinctively banded ourselves together with our
youthful superiority over sleep and fatigue. I sat quite
still; there was something so sweet in this organised
companionship of silence that it enraptured me. I did
not need Miss Anita’s look of caution to remain quiet;
there was something in her face, some power or quality
which was as eloquent as speech. I began to think of it;
and the habit of introspection, which had now become a
part of my nature, asserted itself. How much of this
quality I thought, was in her face, how much in my
own eyes and the brain that lay behind them. I was
recalled to myself by a whisper:</p>
<p>“I thought for a moment you were going to sleep
too. Hsh!” she placed a finger on her lip a moment
and then tiptoed over to the sofa; taking a soft cushion
she placed it under Mrs. Jack’s head, which had now
fallen over sideways upon the arm of the chair. Then
she sat beside me again, and bending over said softly:</p>
<p>“While she is asleep would you mind walking down
to the beach, I want to see the waves. They must be
big by now; I can hear their roaring from here.”</p>
<p>“I will go with delight;” I said “but you must wrap
up properly. It will not do to run any chance of a
chill.”</p>
<p>“All right, oh wise man! I obey, King Solomon! I
shall wait to put on my own clothes till I get back;
and you can lend me a mackie-coat if you will.” I got one
of mine for her, the newest; and we walked over the
sandhills to the beach.</p>
<p>The wind was blowing furiously. It never left off for a
moment; but occasionally there were bursts of such added
violence that we found it difficult to keep our feet. We
clung to each other at such moments, and the very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>
sense of the strength which enabled me to shield her
somewhat from the violence of the storm, made a new
feeling of love—I could not now disguise it from myself.
Something went out from me to her; some subtle feeling
which must, I suppose, have manifested itself in some way,
how I know not, for I kept guard upon myself. For
one blissful moment, possibly of forgetfulness, she clung
to me as the weak cling to the strong, the clinging of
self-surrender which is equally dear to the weak and the
strong, to the woman and the man. And then she drew
herself sharply away from me.</p>
<p>There was no misunderstanding the movement; it was
an intentional and conscious one, and the motive which
lay behind both was her woman’s mystery. I did not
know much about women, but I could make no mistake as
to this. Inasmuch as Providence has thought fit in its
wisdom to make men and women different, it is just
as well that each sex should at critical times use its
own potentialities for its protection and advancement.
Herein comes, in the midst of an unnatural civilisation,
the true utility of instinct. Since we have lost the need
of early information of the presence of game or of predatory
animals or hostile men, even our instincts adapt
themselves to our surroundings. Many an act which
may afterwards seem the result of long and careful premeditation
is, on reflection, found to be simply the result
of that form of momentary impulse which is in reality a
blind obedience to some knowledge of our ancestors
gained through painful experience. Some protective or
militant instinct whose present exercise is but a variant
of its primal use. For an instant the man and the
woman were antagonistic. The woman shrank, therefore
it was the man’s interest to advance; all at once
the man in me spoke through the bashfulness and reticence
of years:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Why do you shrink from me? Have I done anything?”</p>
<p>“Oh no!”</p>
<p>“Then why?” A hot blush mantled her face and neck.
Had she been an English girl I should not probably have
had a direct answer; she would have switched conversation
on some safer track, or have, after some skirmishing,
forbidden the topic altogether. This girl’s training, however,
had been different. Her equal companionship in
study with boys in school and college had taught her the
futility of trying to burke a question when her antagonist
was masculine; and the natural pluck and dominance—the
assertion of individuality which is a part of an American
woman’s birthright—brought up her pride. Still
blushing, but bearing herself with additional dignity, she
spoke. Had she been more self-conscious, and could she
have seen herself at the moment, she would have recognised
to the full that with so much pride and so much dignity
she could well afford to discuss any topic that she
chose.</p>
<p>“The fault is not yours. It is, or it was, my own.”</p>
<p>“You mean when I gave you back your brooch?” The
blood deepened and deepened to a painful intensity. In a
low voice, in the tone of speech, but with only the power
of a whisper she answered me:</p>
<p>“Yes!” This was my chance and I said with all the
earnestness I had, and which I felt to the full:</p>
<p>“Let me say something. I shall not ever allude to it
again unless you wish. I took that sweet acknowledgment
of your gratitude exactly as it was meant. Do
believe that I am a gentleman. I have not got a sister,
I am sorry to say, but if I had, I should not mind her
giving a kiss to a stranger under such circumstances. It
was a sweet and womanly act and I respect—and—like
you more for it. I wouldn’t, of course, for all the world<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span>
you hadn’t done it; and I shall never forget it. But
believe me I shall never forget myself on account of it.
If I did I should be a howling cad;—and—that’s all.”</p>
<p>As I spoke her face brightened and she sighed with an
expression of relief. The blush almost faded away, and
a bright smile broke over her face. With a serious deep
look in the eyes which glistened through her smile she
held out her hand and said:</p>
<p>“You are a good fellow, and I thank you with all my
heart.”</p>
<p>I felt as if I walked on air as we forced our way through
the storm which roared around us, over the sandhills
towards the sea. It was with an exultation that made my
head swim that I noticed that she kept step with me.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />