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<h2> CHAPTER XXXIII — BACK IN DOOM </h2>
<p>The night brooded on the Highlands when Count Victor reached the shore.
Snow and darkness clotted in the clefts of the valleys opening innumerably
on the sea, but the hills held up their heads and thought among the stars—unbending
and august and pure, knowing nothing at all of the glens and shadows. It
was like a convocation of spirits. The peaks rose everywhere white to the
brows and vastly ruminating. An ebbing tide too, so that the strand was
bare. Upon the sands where there had been that folly of the morning the
waves rolled in an ascending lisp, spilled upon at times with gold when
the decaying moon—a halbert-head thrown angrily among Ossian's
flying ghosts, the warrior clouds—cut through them sometimes and was
so reflected in the sea. The sea was good; good to hear and smell; the
flying clouds were grateful to the eye; the stars—he praised God for
the delicious stars not in words but in an exultation of gratitude and
affection, yet the mountain-peaks were most of all his comforters.</p>
<p>He had run from the castle as if the devil had been at his red heels, with
that ridiculous coat flapping its heavily braided skirts about his calves;
passed through snow-smothered gardens, bordered boding dark plantations of
firs, leaped opposing fell-dykes whence sheltering animals ran terrified
at the apparition, and he came out upon the seaside at the bay as one who
has overcome a nightmare and wakens to see the familiar friendly glimmer
of the bedroom fire.</p>
<p>A miracle! and mainly worked by a glimpse of these blanched hills. For he
knew now they were an inseparable part of his memory of Olivia, <i>her</i>
hills, <i>her</i> sheltering sentinels, the mere sight of them Doom's
orison. Though he had thought of her so much when he shivered in the
fosse, it had too often been as something unattainable, never to be seen
again perhaps, a part of his life past and done with. An incubus rode his
chest, though he never knew till now, when it fled at the sight of
Olivia's constant friends the mountains. Why, the girl lived! her home was
round the corner there dark-jutting in the sea! He could, with some
activity, be rapping at her father's door in a couple of hours!</p>
<p>"<i>Grace de Dieu!</i>" said he, "let us leave trifles and go home."</p>
<p>It was a curious sign of his preoccupation, ever since he had escaped from
his imprisonment, that he should not once have thought on where he was to
fly to till this moment when the hills inspired. "Silence, thought, calm,
and purity, here they are!" they seemed to tell him, and by no means
unattainable. Where (now that he had time to think of it) could he
possibly go to-night but to the shelter of Doom? Let the morrow decide for
itself. <i>� demain les affaires s�rieuses!</i> Doom and—Olivia.
What eyes she had, that girl! They might look upon the assailant of her
wretched lover with anything but favour; yet even in anger they were more
to him than those of all the world else in love.</p>
<p>Be sure Count Victor was not standing all the time of these reflections
shivering in the snow. He had not indulged a moment's hesitation since
ever he had come out upon the bay, and he walked through the night as fast
as his miserable shoes would let him.</p>
<p>The miles passed, he crossed the rivers that mourned through hollow arches
and spread out in brackish pools along the shore. Curlews piped dolorously
the very psalm of solitude, and when he passed among the hazel-woods of
Strone and Achnatra, their dark recesses belled continually with owls. It
was the very pick of a lover's road: no outward vision but the sombre
masses of the night, the valleys of snow, and the serene majestic hills to
accompany that inner sight of the woman; no sounds but that of solemn
waters and the forest creatures to make the memory of her words the
sweeter. A road for lovers, and he was the second of the week, though he
did not know it. Only, Simon MacTaggart had come up hot-foot on his horse,
a trampling conqueror (as he fancied), the Count trudged shamefully
undignified through snow that came high upon the silken stockings, and
long ago had made his dancing-shoes shapeless and sodden. But he did not
mind that; he had a goal to make for, an ideal to cherish timidly; once or
twice he found himself with some surprise humming Gringoire's song, that
surely should never go but with a light heart.</p>
<p>And in the fulness of time he approached the point of land from which he
knew he could first see Doom's dark promontory if it were day. There his
steps slowed. Somehow it seemed as if all his future fortune depended upon
whether or not a light shone through the dark to greet him. Between him
and the sea rolling in upon a spit of the land there was—of all
things!—a herd of deer dimly to be witnessed running back and
forward on the sand as in some confusion at his approach; at another time
the thing should have struck him with amazement, but now he was too busy
with his speculation whether Doom should gleam on him or not to study this
phenomenon of the frosty winds. He made a bargain with himself: if the
isle was black, that must mean his future fortune; if a light was there,
however tiny, it was the star of happy omen, it was—it was—it
was several things he dared not let himself think upon for fear of
immediate disappointment.</p>
<p>For a minute he paused as if to gather his courage and then make a dash
round the point.</p>
<p><i>Ventre Dieu!</i> Blackness! His heart ached.</p>
<p>And then, as most men do in similar circumstances, he decided that the
test was a preposterous one. Why, faith! should he relinquish hope of
everything because—</p>
<p>What! the light was there. Like a fool he had misjudged the distance in
the darkness and had been searching for it in the wrong place. It was so
bright that it might be a star estrayed, a tiny star and venturesome, gone
from the keeping of the maternal moon and wandered into the wood behind
Doom to tangle in the hazel-boughs. A dear star! a very gem of stars! a
star more precious than all the others in that clustered sky, because it
was the light of Olivia's window. A plague on all the others with their
twinkling search among the clouds for the little one lost! he wished it
had been a darker night that he might have only this one visible.</p>
<p>By rights he should be weary and cold, and the day's events should trouble
him; but to tell the truth, he was in a happy exaltation all the rest of
the way. Sometimes the star of hope evaded him as he followed the bending
path, trees interposing; he only ran the faster to get it into his vision
again, and it was his beacon up to the very walls of Doom.</p>
<p>The castle took possession of the night.</p>
<p>How odd that he should have fancied that brave tower arrogant; it was
tranced in the very air of friendliness and love—the fairy
residence, the moated keep of all the sweet old tales his nurse was used
to tell him when he was a child in Cam-mercy.</p>
<p>And there he had a grateful memory of the ringleted middle-aged lady who
had alternately whipped and kissed him, and in his night's terrors soothed
him with tales. "My faith!" said he, "thou didst not think thy Perrault's
'Contes des F�es' might, twenty years after, have so close an application
to a woman and a tower in misty Albion."</p>
<p>He walked deliberately across to the rock, went round the tower, stood a
moment in the draggled arbour—the poor arbour of dead ideals. Doom,
that once was child of the noisy wars, was dead as the Ch�teau d'Arques
save for the light in its mistress's window. Poor old shell! and yet
somehow he would not have had it otherwise.</p>
<p>He advanced and rapped at the door. The sound rang in the interior, and
presently Mungo's shuffling steps were heard and his voice behind the door
inquiring who was there.</p>
<p>"A friend," answered Count Victor, humouring the little old man's fancy
for affairs of arms.</p>
<p>"A friend!" repeated Mungo with contempt. "A man on a horse has aye
hunders o' frien's in the gutter, as Annapla says, and it wad need to be
somethin' rarer to get into Doom i' the mirk o' nicht. I opened the door
to a frien' the ither nicht and he gripped me by the craig and fair choked
me afore I could cry a barley."</p>
<p>"<i>Peste!</i> Do not flatter my English so much as to tell me you do not
recognise Count Victor's accent through a door."</p>
<p>"Lord keep 's!" cried Mungo, hastily drawing his bolts. "Hae ye changed
ye'r mind already and left the inns? It's a guid thing for your wife ye're
no marrit, or she wad be the sorry woman wi' sic a shiftin' man."</p>
<p>His astonishment was even greater when Count Victor stood before him a
ludicrous figure with his too ample coat.</p>
<p>"Dinna tell me ye hae come through the snaw this nicht like that!" he
cried incredulous, holding up his candle the better to examine the figure.</p>
<p>Count Victor laughed, and for an answer simply thrust forth a sopping foot
to his examination.</p>
<p>"Man, ye must hae been hot on't!" said the servant, shaking his cowled
head till the tassel danced above his temple. "Ye'r shoon's fair steeped
wi' water. Water's an awfu' thing to rot ye'r boots; I aye said if it
rotted ane's boots that way, whit wad it no' dae to ane's stamach? Oh,
sirs! sirs! this is becomin' the throng hoose, wi' comin's and goin's and
raps and roars and collie-shangies o' a' kin's. If it wasna me was the
canny gaird o't it's Himsel' wad hae to flit for the sake o' his nicht's
sleep."</p>
<p>"You behold, Mungo, the daw in borrowed plumes," said Count Victor as the
door was being barred again. "I hope the daw felt more comfortable than I
do in mine," and he ruefully surveyed his apparel. "Does Master Mungo
recognise these peacock feathers?"</p>
<p>Mungo scanned the garment curiously.</p>
<p>"It's gey like ane I've seen on a bigger man," he answered.</p>
<p>"And a better, perhaps, thought my worthy Mungo. I remember me that our
peacock was a diplomatist and had huge interest in your delightful
stories."</p>
<p>A movement of Mungo's made him turn to see the Baron standing behind him a
little bewildered at this apparition.</p>
<p>"<i>Failte!</i>" said the Baron, "and I fancy you would be none the waur,
as we say, of the fireside."</p>
<p>He went before him into the <i>salle</i>, taking Mungo's candle. Mungo was
despatched for Annapla, and speedily the silent abigail of visions was
engaged upon that truly Gaelic courtesy, the bathing of the traveller's
feet. The Baron considerately made no inquiries; if it was a caprice of
Count Victor's to venture in dancing shoes and a borrowed jacket through
dark snow-swept roads, it was his own affair. And the Count was so much
interested in the new cheerfulness of his host (once so saturnine and
melancholy) that he left his own affairs unmentioned for a while as the
woman worked. It was quite a light-hearted recluse this, compared with
that he had left a week ago.</p>
<p>"I am not surprised you found yon place dull," at the last hazarded the
Baron.</p>
<p>"<i>Comment?</i>"</p>
<p>"Down-by, I mean. I'm glad myself always to get home out of it at this
season. When the fishers are there it's all my fancy, but when it does not
smell of herring, the stench of lawyers' sheepskins gets on the top and is
mighty offensive to any man that has had muckle to do with them."</p>
<p>"Dull!" repeated Count Victor, now comprehending; "I have crowded more
experience into the past four-and-twenty hours than I might meet in a
month anywhere east of Calais. I have danced with a duchess, fought a
stupid duel, with a town looking on for all the world as if it were a
performance in a circus with lathen weapons, moped in a dungeon, broken
through the same, stolen a coat, tramped through miles of snow in a pair
of pantoufles, forgotten to pay the bill at the inn, and lost my baggage
and my reputation—which latter I swear no one in these parts will be
glad to pick up for his own use. Baron, I'll be shot if your country is
not bewitched. My faith! what happenings since I came here expecting to be
killed with <i>ennui!</i> I protest I shall buy a Scots estate and ask all
my friends over here to see real life. Only they must have good
constitutions; I shall insist on them having good constitutions. And
there's another thing—it necessitates that they must have so kind a
friend as Monsieur le Baron and so hospitable a house as Doom to fall back
on when their sport comes to a laughable termination, as mine has done
to-night."</p>
<p>"Ah! then you have found your needle in the haystack after all?" cried
Doom, vastly interested.</p>
<p>"Found the devil!" cried Montaiglon, a shade of vexation in his
countenance, for he had not once that day had a thought of all that had
brought, him into Scotland. "The haystack must be stuck full of needles
like the bran of a pin-cushion."</p>
<p>"And this one, who is not the particular needle named Drimdarroch?"</p>
<p>"I shall give you three guesses, M. le Baron."</p>
<p>Doom reflected, pulled out his nether lip with his fingers, looking hard
at his guest.</p>
<p>"It is not the Chamberlain?"</p>
<p>"<i>Peste!</i>" thought the Count, "can the stern unbending parent have
relented? You are quite right," he said; "no other. But it is not a matter
of the most serious importance. I lost my coat and the gentleman lost a
little blood. I have the best assurances that he will be on foot again in
a week or two, by which time I hope—at all events I expect—to
be out of all danger of being invited to resume the entertainment."</p>
<p>"In the meantime here's Doom, yours—so long as it is mine—while
it's your pleasure to bide in it if you fancy yourself safe from
molestation," said the Baron.</p>
<p>"As to that I think I may be tranquil. I have, there too, the best
assurances that the business will be hushed up."</p>
<p>"So much the better, though in any case this seems to have marred your
real engagements here in the matter of Drimdarroch."</p>
<p>Count Victor's turn it was to feel vexation now. He pulled his moustache
and reddened. "As to that, Baron," said he, "I pray you not to despise me,
for I have to confess that my warmth in the mission that brought me here
has abated sadly. You need not ask me why. I cannot tell you. As for me
and my affair, I have not forgotten, nor am I likely wholly to forget; but
your haystack is as <i>difficile</i> as you promised it should be, and—there
are divers other considerations. It necessitates that I go home. There
shall be some raillery at my expense doubtless—<i>Ciel!</i> how
Louis my cousin will laugh!—but no matter."</p>
<p>He spoke a little abstractedly, for he saw a delicate situation
approaching. He was sure to be asked—once Annapla's service was over—what
led to the encounter, and to give the whole story frankly involved
Olivia's name unpleasantly in a vulgar squabble. He saw for the first time
that he had been wholly unwarranted in taking the defence of the Baron's
interests into his own hands. Could he boldly intimate that in his opinion
jealousy of himself had been the spring of the Chamberlain's midnight
attacks on the castle of Doom? That were preposterous! And yet that seemed
the only grounds that would justify his challenging the Chamberlain.</p>
<p>When Annapla was gone then Doom got the baldest of histories. He was
encouraged to believe that all this busy day of adventure had been due to
a simple quarrel after a game of cards, and where he should have preferred
a little more detail he had to content himself with a humorous narrative
of the escape, the borrowing of the coat, and the interview with the
Duchess.</p>
<p>"And now with your permission, Baron, I shall go to bed," at last said
Count Victor. "I shall sleep to-night, like a <i>sabot</i>. I am, I know,
the boldest of beggars for your grace and kindness. It seems I am fated in
this country to make free, not only with my enemy's coat, but with my dear
friend's domicile as if it were an inn. To-morrow, Baron, I shall make my
dispositions. The coat can be returned to its owner none the worse for my
use of it, but I shall not so easily be able to square accounts with you."</p>
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