“But how am I to get it? I want it very much.”
“I’ll jist fess ’t up to the Hoose, an’ say ’at I fan’ ’t whaur I will fin’ ’t. But I wuss ye wad len’ me yer pocket-nepkin to row ’t in, for I’m feared for blaudin’ ’t afore I get it back to ye.”
Florimel gave him her handkerchief, and Malcolm took his leave, saying.—
“I’ll be up i’ the coorse o’ a half-hoor at farthest.”
The humble devotion and absolute service of the youth, resembling that of a noble dog, however unlikely to move admiration in Lady Florimel’s heart, could not fail to give her a quiet and welcome pleasure. He was an inferior who could be depended upon, and his worship was acceptable. Not a fear of his attentions becoming troublesome ever crossed her mind. The wider and more impassable the distinctions of rank, the more possible they make it for artificial minds to enter into simply human relations; the easier for the oneness of the race to assert itself, in the offering and acceptance of a devoted service. There is more of the genuine human in the relationship between some men and their servants, than between those men and their own sons.
With eyes intent, and keen as those of a gaze-hound, Malcolm retraced every step, up to the grated door. But no volume was to be seen. Turning from the door of the tunnel, for which he had no Sesame, he climbed to the foot of the wall that crossed it above, and with a bound, a clutch at the top, a pull and a scramble, was in the high road in a moment. From the road to the links was an easy drop, where, starting from the grated door, he retraced their path from the dune. Lady Florimel had dropped the book when she rose, and Malcolm found it lying on the sand, little the worse. He wrapped it in its owner’s handkerchief, and set out for the gate at the mouth of the river.
As he came up to it, the keeper, an ill-conditioned snarling fellow, who, in the phrase of the Seaton-folk, “rade on the riggin (ridge) o’ ’s authority,” rushed out of the lodge, and just as Malcolm was entering, shoved the gate in his face.
“Ye comena in wi’oot the leave o’ me,” he cried, with a vengeful expression.
“What’s that for?” said Malcolm, who had already interposed his great boot, so that the spring-bolt could not reach its catch.
“There s’ nae lan’-loupin’ rascals come in here,” said Bykes, setting his shoulder to the gate.