"He has none that I know of. The real 'Seignior' and 'Seignioress'
live in Richelieu-en-Bas in the new manor house--I say 'new', but that must be seventy-five years old. This is only a part of the original seigniory."
"I don't understand these seigniories, and I tried to read up about them before I came here."
"It is very perplexing--these seigniorial rights and rents and transferences. I don't make any pretence of understanding them."
"Are the farm buildings occupied now?"
"No; Doctor Rugvie wants to attend to those himself. It is his recreation to make plans for this farm, and he will be here himself to see that they are begun and carried out right. He tells me he has always loved Canada."
"And what am I to do for you? I want to begin to feel of a little use," I said half impatiently.
"You are doing for me now, my dear." (How easily Delia Beaseley's name for me came from the "elderly Scotchwoman's" lips!) "Your presence cheers Jamie; the young need the young, and belong to the young--"
"But," I protested, "I am not young; I am twenty-six."
"And Jamie is twenty-three. But when you laughed together to-night, you both might have been sixteen. It did me good to hear you; this old house needs just that--and I can't laugh easily now," she added. I heard a note of hopelessness in her voice.
How lovely she was as she sat by the fire in the soft radiance of candle light! "Elderly"!--She could not be a day over fifty-seven or eight. The fine white cap rested on heavy, smoothly parted hair; the figure was round to plumpness; the dress, not modernized, became her; her voice was still young if a little weary, and her brown eyes bright, the lids unwrinkled.
"Do you know Delia Beaseley well? Doctor Rugvie says she is a fine woman."
"She is n.o.ble," I said emphatically; "I feel that I know her well, although I have seen her only a few times."
"Is she a widow?"
The door opened before I could gather my wits to answer. I felt intuitively that I could not say to this Scotchwoman, that Delia Beaseley was neither widow nor wife. I welcomed the sudden inrush of all four dogs and Jamie behind them, with the smell of a fresh pipe about him.
"I positively must have my second short pipe here with you. I kept away in deference to the new member of the family." He flourished his pipe towards me. "I always smoke here, don't I, mother?"
"In that case, I will stay in my room after supper unless you continue to smoke your first, second, and third--"
"Only two; Doctor Rugvie won't allow me a third--"
"Doctor Rugvie is a tyrant, and I 've said the same thing before," I declared firmly.
"Now, look here, Marcia," he said solemnly, "we will call a halt right now and here." He settled his long length in the deep easy chair on the other side of the hearth, refilled and relighted his pipe. "Doctor Rugvie is my friend, my very special friend; whoever enters this house, enters it on the footing of friendship with all those who are my friends--"
"Hear, hear! Another tyrant," I said, turning to his mother who was enjoying our chaff.
"--Whose name is legion," he went on, ignoring my interruption. "I'll begin to enumerate them for your benefit. There are the four dogs, Gordon setters of the best breed--and Gordon's setters in fact." He made some pun at which his mother smiled, but it was lost on me. "They 're not mine, they 're my friend's, and that amounts to the same thing when he 's away."
"And who is this friend of dogs and of man?"
"He? Guy Mannering, hear her! Why there's only one 'he' for this place and that's--"
"Doctor Rugvie?"
"Doctor Rugvie!" he repeated, looking at me in unfeigned amazement; then to his mother:
"Have n't you told her yet, mother?"
"I doubt if I mentioned his name--I had so many other things to say and think of." She spoke half apologetically.
"The man who owns this house, Miss Farrell,"--he was speaking so earnestly and emphatically that he forgot our agreement,--"the man who owns these dogs, the lord of this manor, such as it is, and everything belonging to it, lord of a forest it will do your eyes and lungs and soul good to journey through, the man who is master in the best sense of Pete and little Pete, of Angelique and Marie, of old Mere Guillardeau, of a dozen farmers here on the old Seigniory of Lamoral, my friend, Doctor Rugvie's friend and friend of all Richelieu-en-Bas, is Mr. Ewart, Gordon Ewart--and you missed my pun! the first I've made to-day!--and I hope he will be yours!"
"Well, I 'll compromise. If he will just tolerate me here for your sakes, I 'll be his friend whether he is mine or not--for I want to stay."
I meant what I said; and I think both mother and son realized, that under the jesting words there was a deep current of feeling. Mrs.
Macleod leaned over and laid her hand on mine.
"You shall stay, Marcia; it will not depend on Mr. Ewart, your remaining with us. When the farm is ready, Doctor Rugvie will place us there, and then I shall need your help all the time."
Again, as at the station with Delia Beaseley's blessing ringing in my ears, I felt the unaccustomed tears springing in my eyes. Jamie leaned forward and knocked the ashes from his pipe; he continued to stare into the fire.
"And who are the others?" I asked unsteadily; my lips trembled in spite of myself.
"The others? Oh--," he seemed to come back to us from afar, "there is Andre--"
"And who is Andre?"
"Just Andre--none such in the wide world; my guide's old father, old Mere Guillardeau's brother, old French voyageur and coureur de bois; it will take another evening to tell you of Andre.-- Mother," he spoke abruptly, "it's time for porridge and Cale."
"Yes, I will speak to Marie." She rose and left the room by a door at the farther end.
"Remark those fourteen candles, will you?" said Jamie, between puffs.
"I have noticed them; I call that a downright extravagance."
"I pay for it," he said sententiously; then, with a slight flash of resentment; "you need n't think I sponge on Ewart to the extent of fourteen candles a night."
I laughed a little under my breath. I knew a little friction would do him no harm.
"And when those fourteen candles burn to within two inches of the socket, as at present, it is my invariable custom, being a Scotsman, to call for the porridge--and for Cale, because he is of our tongue, and needs to discourse with his own, at least once, before going to bed. I say a Scotsman without his nine o'clock porridge is a cad."
"Any more remarks are in order," I said to tease him.
"You really must know Cale--"
"I thought I made his acquaintance this afternoon."
He laughed again his hearty laugh. "I forgot; he drove you out. We did n't send Pete because we thought you might not understand his lingo. But you must n't fancy you know Cale because you 've seen him once--oh, no! You 'll have to see him daily and sometimes hourly; in fact, you will see so much of him that, sometimes, you will wish it a little less; for you are to understand that Cale is omnipresent, very nearly omnipotent here with us, and indispensable to _me_. You will accept him on my recommendation and afterwards make a friend of him for your own sake."
"Who is he?"
"Cale?--He 's just Cale too. His name is Caleb Marstin; 'hails', as he says, from northern New England. I have noticed he does n't care to name the locality, and I respect his reticence; it's none of my business. He says he has n't lived there for more than a quarter of a century and has no relations. He can tell you more about forests, lumber and forestry, in one hour than a whole Agricultural College. He has been for years lumbering in northern Minnesota and across the Canadian border. He 's here to help reforest and conserve the old forest to the estate; he 's--in a word, he 's my right hand man."
"Is Mr. Ewart lord of Cale too?"