The Standard Bearer
and for a moment I was disconcerted. I knew that she would doubtless throw a sharp light upon the water, and that from the shore th
and so disposed the leaves that from the shore they made at once a perfect shelter and a secure hiding-place for Mary, who sat
of June had beat upon it all the long day. A chill wind had sprung up within the last hour, and the wavelets broke on my back and upon the raft at my chin with a little jabble of s
e black Parton moors on the other side. But all the same she did us a mighty ill turn. For I kn
rom the land. There I held the raft so that the bran
against the shining beach, and his helmet sometimes flashed momentarily against the dark line of{54} the woods behind. So th
s resolve to catch his man. For it was but seldom that any of the red soldiers would consent to lie out at night, preferring instead to quarter
at like a statue under the green bough, and smiled at the dancing ripples. She looked very beautiful to see, aye,
like, for soon we were crossing the
m the hills. He hugged himself as if he had been a-cold. Yet he stood looking so long that I feared he might suspect something. But after all it was only that he was a contemplati
, he shouldered his piece and t
ing on my back I pushed the raf
her side, and I could carry the brave little maid asho
be some pet dog of her's. In time, however, I found that he was a certain g
leeping maid. She grew heavier and heavier every moment as I stumbled over the rough moor, so that my back was
der a bush of bog-myrtle, and swimming to the
my stomach that I had brought the maid to a house uninhabite
early at the do
returned, giving question for
ellow voic
answered thus," said the voice; "but since the
ured, I told very briefly fo
ithin coming slowly along a stone passage. Bolts withdrew, and th
lue frieze, stood there. She had a white nightcap on her head, fril
o me. Her faither and her mother are taken
n slain for aught I knew. I told her also the terrible thing I had been witness to on the top of
aid, and again, "p
ge way to speak of the martyrs, but it was
across to the loch's edge, and there, in the first ruddy glow of the rising sun, with colour on her lips and her lashes lying long and dark upo
ts boy, as rough and landward as Ashie or Gray, my questing collies. But certain it is that I stoo
tulant whimper she nestled her head deeper into my neck. My heart stirr
s Matt had his breakfast?" she said. An
the boat. Her aunt stepped in and took the
see to the child. You have done well by Sandy's bairn. Come and see her and
pon the water, one oily and broad where the keel stirred the peaty water, an
the edge of the blue hood of frieze, whe
grown laddie care for bairns?
f Mary Gordon for many and ma
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