A Daughter of Fife - Page 111/138

She remembered also that she could write to Allan. There was a bare chance

that he might get the letter, especially if he should linger a few days in

Fife. But although she was ignorant of the action which David had taken

with regard to Janet Caird, she never thought of addressing the letter to

her care. For a moment she hesitated between Willie Johnson and Elder

Mackelvine, but finally chose the former, for Willie and Allan had been

great friends, and she was certain if Allan went to Pittenloch he would

not leave the village without seeing his old boat mate. It was a loving,

modest little letter, explaining the case in which she found herself, and

begging him to come to Drumloch and say a word of kindness to her. When

she folded and sealed it, she thought with pleasure of Allan's

astonishment and delight at her improvement; and many an hour she passed,

calculating, as well as she could, the distance, the time, and the chances

of Allan receiving her message.

As it happened, he just missed it; but it was Maggie's own fault. If she

had trusted it to the Drumloch mail-bag and servant it would have reached

Dalry on the twenty-ninth; and on that day Willie Johnson was in the

post-village, and received several letters lying there for himself and

others in Pittenloch. But when, in our anxiety, we trust to our own

judgment, instead of to that something which, for lack of a better name,

we call good fortune, we are usually, and perhaps justly, deserted by good

fortune. Maggie feared the footman would shirk her solitary letter, and

perhaps keep it until his regular visit to the post the following day; so

she gave it to the doctor, earnestly asking him to post it as he passed

through the town. And the doctor fully intended to do so, but he was met

by an urgent call for help; he forgot it then; he did not pass near the

post-office for two days, and the two days might as well have been two

months, for it was fully that time before Willie Johnson received his next

letters.

Mary was exceedingly ill on the twenty-ninth. Her soul had reached the

very border-land of being. In the dim, still room she lay, painfully

breathing, faintly murmuring words unintelligible and very far away. But

as Maggie sat motionless beside her, sometimes hopelessly watching,

sometimes softly praying, she could not help thinking of the beach at

Pittenloch, of the fresh salt air, and the sea coming in with the wind,

and the motion and sparkle and sunshine, and the tall, handsome man she

loved looking with sorrowful longing for her. And though she never grudged

Mary one moment of the joy she was sacrificing, yet her tears dropped upon

the clay-like hands she clasped in her own; for human love and human hopes

are very sweet, never perhaps more sweet than in the very hour in which we

yield them up to some noble duty, or some cruel fatality.