“MY FRIEND PATE,” said Sir John Low, “I cannot think that you have so little sense — a young man of havins, as I have ever kent you — as to oppose my Lord Oliphant in his lawfu’ rights. The estate has been gifted to him fully and fairly by him that had the power. And you have but the drap’s blood. We are not denying your blood-right. You are the next of kin; but if Sir Walter thought it the best thing to put back the auld lands under the hand of the undoubted head of the house — —”
“It is just that that will have to be tried,” said Pate.
“Man,” cried Sir John, “what are you but a distant kinsman after all? And my lord also is a kinsman — maybe farder off in degree, but assured in line as the fountainhead to the stream.”
“Mess John,” said Pate, “we will leave counting the degrees. There is one that needs no counting, being the child of the same father, and more near in kin than I am, as I frankly allow.” Here Pate lifted his bonnet from his head with a certain solemnity. “That she is a maid and not a man is naught; for the maid has succeeded to the father as long as there has been law in Scotland. And I have even heard say — —”
“Mistress Jean!” cried the curate, elevating his eyebrows; and he smote Pate on the back a jovial blow, all unlike his lean form and the gleam in his eyes. “Ha, my bonnie lad! you are none so simple for a country clown. You would strengthen one ill claim with another, and win the knight’s spurs by the help of the distaff! Whiles it is not a bad plan.”
That Pate’s cheek should have flamed at this filled him with a sense of humiliation; but it was anger and not shame that brought the red, which flushed fiercely over his brow and lent a red light to his hazel eyes.
“The lady’s claim is firm as Carnbee Law,” he said. “I yield to it, with no liking, nor even surety of well-doing. She may carry the auld castle that is the home of my fathers into a stranger name — the whilk would be the grief of my life. I yield to her, because I cannot in justice withstand. She claims me as her defender, which doubtless I am, being the first man — in Fife — of my name.”
Sir John, who had been staring at him open-mouthed, here burst into a laugh. “And you tell me that’s your reason!” he cried, in a derisive tone.
“You, or any man,” said Pate, calmly. “And I would do the same,” he added with a smile, turning upon the half-priest, who followed stealthily, as far as he dared, the habits of the old faith, sure of indulgence in the unsettled state of affairs— “I would do the same if I were one of your lambs, that tell you all in your ear ahint the kirk-door.”
“It would be well for you, my lad, if you did the same,” said the curate, reddening in his turn; “and ye should hear from me that when you lippen to a young lass you are a fool for your pains.”
“What!” said Pate, “is that the counsel you give, Sir John? To leave the orphan lass undefended, and bow the head to the silken lord? That is not the lear that has been learned to me.”
“Silence, yeoman!” cried the angry curate. “Are you one to teach your betters, let alone your priest?”
“Ay,” said Pate, “or any honest man; and I acknowledge no priest but only him that teaches the Word — which never yet bade to pass over the weak, even when it is to your own hurt, as this is to mine.”
“Here’s one coming that will give you grand reason for every fule-deed you like to do,” cried Sir John— “ay, and tie you up safe and fast to the lass that ye think has such a grand tocher. But bide awhile, bide awhile, Pate the pious. Succouring orphans is a fine thing when your own rights are not so clear as ye thought; but when you find a useless wife on your hands, and all the cows to milk, and the byres to clean — —”
“You have an ill tongue, if you were ten times a priest!” cried Pate, with a clouded brow.
But the controversy was stopped by Master Melville, who came up hastily, quickening his usually sober steps at the sound of Pate’s voice raised above its usual tone, and the laughing, scornful attitude of Sir John.
“Your look is not peaceful, Peter,” he said, “nor your eye content.”
“Did you expect to find me content, Maister Melville,” said Pate, “with my rights taken up by others, and myself scorned before my neighbours? I would then be a man not like other men.”
“The Lord of Over-Kellie,” said Sir John, “was, by my faith, near upon charging me with a cartel of war to that other nobleman the Lord Oliphant; but that I am a man of peace and carry no gage.”
“You might moderate your jesting, Brother Low,” said Melville, “and so show yourself a man of peace. This is not the time, Peter, to bandy words, with whosoever it may be. You have your duty to do for your kindred and your name.”
“It is what I am ready to do at all times,” cried Pate, hastily, eager to find in the minister’s face the counsel already established in his own.
“We will say good morrow, first,” said Melville, “to this reverend brother. It is an evil thing to be overly much concerned with the affairs of this world, Maister Low. Here are you and me, both led away by these heathenish disputes, that should have been in our quiet studies pondering our sermons, and the Lord’s Day coming on — —”
“I am no man for long sermons,” said Sir John, “nor am I liked the less on that account, so far as I can see.”
“Well, sermons are my trade,” said Melville, passing his brother-clergyman with a bow. He put his arm in Pate’s, and led the young man with him, gently forcing his steps. “All he means,” said the minister, holding Pate’s arm tight and leading him on, “is to make you talk and give forth your foam and nonsense, the whilk he will turn into solid mischief. I hope I am no uncharitable,” he added, devoutly; “but come you, Patie, my man, and talk out your soul: you are safer with me than with him.”
“No, minister,” said Pate, “I have no need for blethering, as you seem to think: my mind is steady and made up. The young lady is more wronged than I am. She is her father’s just heir. She claims me as her first servant, and I allow the claim. I am the man nearest to her. I am fechting, and I will fecht, to the death, for her right and not mine.”
“Pate! lad!” said the minister; his voice faltered, and even his step for the moment. Then he cried, “No wonder he did not understand!”
But Pate neither comprehended nor desired to comprehend the meaning of this reply. He was entirely preoccupied with his own thoughts. “That is my solemn determination,” he said. “I have had my fancies; but then I kent nothing of her, nor of her just rights. I will get them for her if I can, minister: it is my first duty, as the next of the name.”
“She is but a lassie,” said the minister, “and a wild one; no training, no mother, grown up just like a blade o’ grass on the lee. There is no telling what the like of her may do. She will take your very heart out of your life, and never ken what a gift it is. She may not even thank you. She may think it’s only her right and your duty.”
“And what is it else?” said Pate. “You are all the professor I ever had: if my lear is poor it is your blame. I think I have heard from your very mouth that if a man does not stand for his ain, specially for them of his own house — —”
“Oh, laddie, do not tackle me out of my own mouth!” cried the minister, peevishly; “many a foolish thing I’ve said. Meantime, you must mind that when the Apostle said yon, he was thinking nought of a man’s house, according to your meaning of the word. Little recked that holy man of the Oliphants or any Scots name, with their pride and their clanships. What he meant was the man’s wife and his bairns — and no a distant cousin twenty times removed.”
“No more than three times, minister,” said Pate; “make me not out more loon than laird. And as she’s her father’s daughter, and he so old a man, she is of the elder generation, my father’s second cousin, and no more than second cousin once removed to me. And what could be nearer my own house than that? Nay, the holy man, as you say — I wot not how to call him — would e’en have been of my mind.”
“Paul he was, and not always favourable to Peter,” said Melville, shaking his head, yet with a tremulous smile on his face. “Pate, I will ask you but one thing. Is it for the hope of this maiden’s love that you take up her forlorn cause?”
“Maister Melville,” said Pate, “I ken not if I love her; but reason none have I to think that she has ever wared a thought on me. There is clear in my mind the danger, and mostly the certainty, that she will mate with some stranger and carry the auld house into another name, — the whilk would be bitter to me — more bitter than words can say.”
“If it is so,” said the minister, “then the Lord bless you, my lad, Pate. Laird or no laird, you are a true man, and that’s better than rank or high degree.”
“You mind, minister,” said Pate, with a smile, “Aw toutt pourvoïre — you were the first to learn me what its meaning was.”
“I was ever a fool,” said Melville, “and ever will be! It is not that kind of lesson that makes a man win lairdship and land.”
“But it is maybe the best consolation when he has to bide without them,” Peter said.
They had come in their walk within sight of Kellie Castle, which stood square and strong, rising with its turrets to the sky from amid the peaceful fields, as it still stands undismayed by all the progress of the centuries. It is a little grim and grey in the darkness of its stone walls nowadays, all Scotland having been seized since then with that false reserve which discredits colour; but in these days, no doubt, much of the rough mass, especially in its out-buildings, must have shone in white or yellow, the old tints, weather-stained and glorious, which the country then loved. Pate looked towards that home of his fathers, lifting once more the bonnet from his brow. It had been a kind of idol to him throughout his youth, his every hope had centred in it; it had been his ambition, the desire of his heart — not an ignoble one. He looked upon it now with a smile full of sorrow and disappointment, and a thought, had he known it, higher than any other hope that had ever before centred upon Kellie. If it were won for her, then would it be well lost.
“Fare thee weel, auld Kellie,” he said with a half laugh to hide that tremor; “thou wilt never be to me or mine; and I have glowered at thee, and longed for thee all my life long: which maybe you will say, minister, is just a judgment on me for a covetous thought.”
“You will never hear such a word from me, Pate, my man,” said the minister. “I have more opinion, if I dare to say it, of your good Lord and mine.”
He, too, lifted his hat in reverence as he spoke, and after a moment both turned away.
“After all,” said Master Melville, “this is not the subject on which I sought you in haste, my lad, Pate. I hear that yonder wild lassie, hot with her race and her youth, is for defending the auld Castle by force of arms. She will call out every Oliphant in the Kingdom of Fife, you the captain: she will fill the stores with provender, and furbish up the auld armour, and hold the place against lord and loon. It’s over the whole countryside already, and the lads at St Monance all alow. There needs but a spark to fall, and there will be a blaze to light up Fife. Pate, do you think what that would be? Two whole parishes put to the horn. The men, that are the breadwinners, in prison or hounded out of the land. The women helpless with their bairns; the boats all useless on the shore, the plough in the furrow. Ever have I learned you, Pate Oliphant, that a man’s first thought should be for them about him that are in want of good guiding and help to do well. You cannot stand against the law. You cannot stand against the chief of your name, that has riches and troopers at his command (though well I wot he is a wastrel, and his son after him). Mistress Jean, she is but a bairn. The right and the wrong have gone to her head, and of the consequences she takes no thought. Vain to, speak till her of ruined houses and men slain or banished. She just thinks of victory and the three silver crescents waving over Kellie, and the tyrant driven away. As if she was a queen fighting for her crown — and, waes me! we have well known in this generation what comes of that.”
Pate had walked on by the minister’s side, silent, his head bowed, listening. He looked up hastily, interrupting —
“A princess; but with more right than the law, and more innocence than that gowan-flower. There is no similitude.”
“Nor am I making any comparisons, Pate Oliphant,” said the minister with a smile; “but what is all that,” he cried, as a sound as of shouting and tumult came to them over the cliffs on the breeze which is always fresh (or salt as the case may be) blowing off the Firth over the Fife braes.
They had walked far in their talk, and were now near the old village of St Monance, with its old kirk dating from the days of King David, that “sore sanct for the crown.” The sound evidently came from that quarter, and both the men quickened their steps accordingly. The village consisted then, as now, of a straggling line of red and moss-grown cottages, parallel — if any parallel could be to a coast cut up in zigzags by the line of rocks — with the margin of the sea. It was entirely a fisher village, the boats drawn up high in the rocky openings of the beach, almost on a level with the houses, and nets spread everywhere, drying, or mending, or being baited at every point. But in the centre of the “toun,” where the space between the houses and the sea was a little wider, was a little crowd of fishermen, their dark figures lighted up by a touch of brighter colour in a kirtle or petticoat, and the white specks of the mutches which every decent woman wore. They were all circling round a gayer figure in their midst, Mistress Jean to wit, uplifted on her pony, with her hair flowing under her riding-cap, the highest light in the picture, as her delicate face was, among all the ruddy, weather-beaten, glowing countenances round. Jean had, it was evident, been making something like an oration to her assembled vassals, and her eyes shining, her hair waving, her arm in the air, had kindled the fishers to enthusiasm. “We are Oliphants all,” she was saying as the minister and Pate came up, “every one kin, far off or near, and hey for the silver crescents and bonnie Kellie Castle, that never owned master since the days of Bruce but — —” she stopped with the pause of natural eloquence as her kinsman pushed into the crowd: then waving her whip, cried with all the force of her young voice, and a daring which brought the blood to her cheek, “Pate Oliphant’s line, and mine.”
Never was a touch more effective. As he pushed forward, scarcely hearing what she said, there rose a general shout, “Pate Oliphant and the bonny Leddy; Leddy Jean and the kind house o’ Kellie! We’re for them and nae land-loupers. The Bruce’s blood and the auld name!”
“Mistress Jean,” said Pate, “what do you here? This is no court of law, to judge between you and him that, right or wrong, is no land-louper, but the head of our name.”
“Land-louper yourself, Pate Oliphant!” cried Jean, in high indignation. “Let go my bridle! If you will not tell the lads, what is left to me but to do it? and you, if you will not speak, be silent, sir! for though I do you all honour, and name you with myself, you are but my vassal like the rest. And that you ken!”
Pate’s bonnet was in his hand, and he bowed low; but he held her bridle without flinching, though pony and rider both rebelled. “It is not safe for a spirity creature like this,” he said, “the roaring of those loons so near her lug. Silence, lads! The lady understands, without more of your rowting, that you’re all leal, and her friends.”
The men had slunk a step backward in dismay at what seemed to them a family quarrel. They brightened again, and answered, “Ay, that are we!” “To our last drap o’ blood!” “And yours too, Maister Pate!” — with a subdued clamour, daunted by his look, for he was not a man to trifle with, as they knew.
“My bonny bairn,” Mr Melville was saying at the other side, “if you will curb your pony to an auld man’s pace, I would fain go with you. There’s danger baith for man and beast here.”
“And what do I care for danger?” cried Jean; “it’s just half the pleasure. Bid Pate Oliphant let go my bridle. Do you think, me that am ‘most in arms for my rights, I will be guided by him?” She touched the excited pony with her whip, which made a bound, scattering the fisher-folk. But not Pate, who, setting his teeth, and digging his heels into the earth, held her with a grasp of iron. Jean had the whip raised again, with the intention, it seemed, this time, of striking him, when the minister called out to her —
“Slip down, lassie! the little beast is wild wud; she’ll dash you against the rocks; she’ll have your brains out: slip down, slip down, and you’ll take little harm.”
“Leddy, ye canna haud her a minute longer,” cried a fisher — one rushing on each side to pluck her from her saddle. But the girl blazed over them, her hair waving in their faces, her blue eyes darting fire.
“Away!” she cried. “Away! Hold off! She may master you and me, but she’ll not master Pate!”