[Robert Falconer by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link book
Robert Falconer

CHAPTER X
10/29

What a terrible curse hung over her family! Surely they were all reprobate from the womb, not one elected for salvation from the guilt of Adam's fall, and therefore abandoned to Satan as his natural prey, to be led captive of him at his will.

She threw herself on her knees at the side of the bed, and prayed heart-brokenly.

Betty heard her as she limped past the door on her way back to her kitchen.
Meantime Shargar had rushed across the next street on his bare feet into the Crookit Wynd, terrifying poor old Kirstan Peerie, the divisions betwixt the compartments of whose memory had broken down, into the exclamation to her next neighbour, Tam Rhin, with whom she was trying to gossip: 'Eh, Tammas! that'll be ane o' the slauchtert at Culloden.' He never stopped till he reached his mother's deserted abode--strange instinct! There he ran to earth like a hunted fox.

Rushing at the door, forgetful of everything but refuge, he found it unlocked, and closing it behind him, stood panting like the hart that has found the water-brooks.
The owner had looked in one day to see whether the place was worth repairing, for it was a mere outhouse, and had forgotten to turn the key when he left it.

Poor Shargar! Was it more or less of a refuge that the mother that bore him was not there either to curse or welcome his return?
Less--if we may judge from a remark he once made in my hearing many long years after: 'For, ye see,' he said, 'a mither's a mither, be she the verra de'il.' Searching about in the dark, he found the one article unsold by the landlord, a stool, with but two of its natural three legs.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books