"I married your father and mother, David," he said. "I baptized you into the fold of Lerwick kirk, and I buried your sweet mother in its quiet croft. Your father was near to me and dear to me. A good man was Liot Borson--a good man! When that is said, what more is left to say? While my life-days last I shall not forget Liot Borson." And then they talked of David"s life in Uig, and when he left the manse he knew that he had found a friend.
It was then Thursday night, and he did not care to go to the fishing until the following Monday. Before he began to serve himself he wished to serve G.o.d, and so handsel his six days" work by the blessing of the seventh. This was the minister"s advice to him, and he found that every one thought it right and good; so, though he made his boat ready for sea, she was not to try her speed and luck on her new fishing-ground until David had offered up thanksgiving for his safe journey, and supplications for grace and wisdom to guide his new life aright.
"There is no more that I can do now until the early tide on Monday morning," he said to Barbara Traill, "and I will see if I can find any more of my kin-folk. Are any of my mother"s family yet living?"
"The Sabistons have all gone south to the Orkneys. They are handy at money-getting, and the rumor goes abroad that they are rich and masterful, and ill to deal with; but they were ever all that, or the old tellings-up do them much wrong."
"Few people are better spoken of than they deserve."
"That is so. Yet no one in Lerwick is so well hated as your great-aunt Matilda Sabiston. She is the last of the family left in Shetland. Go and see her if you wish to; I have nothing to say against it; but I can give you a piece of advice: lean not for anything on Matilda Sabiston."
"All I want of her is a little love for my mother"s sake; so I will go and see her. For the sake of the dead she will at least be civil."
"Nothing will come of the visit. It is not to be expected that Matilda will behave well to you, when she behaves ill to every one else."
"For all that, I would like to look upon her. We are blood-kin. I have a right to see her face; I have a right to offer her my service and my duty; whether she will take it or throw it from her is to be seen."
"She will _not_ take it. However, here is your dinner ready, and after you have eaten it go and see your kinswoman. You will easily find her; she lives in the largest house in Lerwick."
The little opposition to his desires confirmed David in his resolve.
When he had eaten, and dressed himself in his best clothing, he went to Matilda Sabiston"s house. It was a large stone dwelling, and had been famous for the unusual splendor of its furnishing.
David was astonished and interested, but not in the least abashed; for the absorbing idea in his mind was that of kindred, and the soft carpets, the velvet-covered chairs and sofas, the pictures and ornaments, were only the accessories of the condition. An old woman, grim and of few words, opened the heavy door, and then tottered slowly along a narrow flagged pa.s.sage before him until they came to a somberly furnished parlor, where Mistress Sabiston was sitting, apparently asleep.
"Wake up, mistress," said the woman. "Here be some one that wants to see you."
"A beggar, then, either for kirk or town. I have nothing to give."
"Not so; he is a fair, strong lad, who says you are his aunt."
"He lies, whoever he is. Let me see the fool, Anita."
"Here he is, mistress. Let him speak for himself." And Anita stood aside and permitted David to enter the room.
Matilda sat in a large, uncushioned chair of black wood--the chair of her fore-elder Olaf, who had made it in Iceland from some rare drift, and brought it with his other household goods to Shetland ten generations past. It was a great deal too large for her shrunken form, and her old, old face against its blackness looked as if it had been carved out of the yellow ivory of Sudan. Never had David seen a countenance so void of expression; it was like a scroll made unreadable by the wear and dust of years. Life appeared to have retreated entirely to her eyes, which were fierce and darkly glowing. And the weight and coldness of her great age communicated itself; he was chilled by her simple presence.
"What is your business?" she asked.
"I am the son of your niece Karen."
"I have no niece."
"Yea, but you have. Death breaks no kinship. It is souls that are related, not bodies; and souls live forever."
"Babble! In a word, what brought you here?"
"I came only to see you."
"Well, then, I sent not for you."
"Yet I thought you would wish to see me."
"I do not."
"Liot Borson is dead."
"I am glad of it. He was a murderer while he lived, and now I hope that he is a soul in pain forevermore."
"I am his son, and you must not--"
"Then what brought you here? I have hoped you were dead for many a year. If all the Borsons, root and branch, were gone to their father the devil, it would be a pleasure to me. I have ever hated them; to all who knew them they were bringers of bad luck," she muttered angrily, looking into David"s face with eyes full of baleful fire.
"Yet is love stronger than hate, and because my mother was of your blood and kin I will not hate you."
"Hear a wonder!" she screamed. "The man will not hate me. Son of a murderer, I want not one kind thought from you."
"There is no cause to call my father what neither G.o.d nor man has called him."
"Cause enough! I know that right well."
"Then it is only right you give proof of such a.s.sertions. Say what you mean and be done with it."
"Ah! you are getting angry at last. Your father would have been spitting fire before this. But it was not with fire he slew Bele Trenby--no, indeed; it was with water. Did he not tell you so when he stood on the brink of Tophet?"
"G.o.d did not suffer his soul to be led near the awful place. When he gave up his ghost he gave it up to the merciful Father of spirits.
It is wicked to speak lies of the living; it is abominable and dangerous to speak ill of the dead."
"I fear neither the living nor the dead. I will say to my last breath that Liot Borson murdered Bele Trenby. He was long minded to do the deed; at last he did it."
"How can you alone, of all the men and women in Lerwick, know this?"
"That night I dreamed a dream. I saw the moss and the black water, and Bele"s white, handsome face go down into it. And I saw your father there. What for? That he might do the murder in his heart."
"The dream came from your own thoughts."
"It came from Bele"s angel. The next day--yes, and many times afterward--I took to the spot the dog that loved Bele, and the creature whined and crouched to his specter. Men are poor, sightless creatures; animals see spirits where we are blind as bats."
"Are these your proofs? Why do people suffer you to say such things?"
"Because in their hearts they believe me. Murders tell tales; secretly, in the night, crossing the moss, when men are not thinking, they breathe suspicion; they speak after being long dumb. Fifty years is not the date of their bond. They haunt the place of their tragedy, and men dream of the deed. So it is. The report sticks to Liot, and more will come of it yet. Oh, that he were in your shoes to-day! I would find the strength to slay him, if I died and went to h.e.l.l for it."
"Woman, why dost thou d.a.m.n thyself while yet there is a hope of mercy?"
"Mercy! What have you to do with mercy? One thing rejoices me: it will not be long ere I meet that blessed thrall that cursed all the generations of the Borsons. He and I will strike hands in that quarrel; and it shall go ill with you and your children till the last Borson be cursed off the face of the earth."
"I will flee unto the Omnipotent. He will keep even my shadow from the evil ones that follow after. Now I will go, for I see there is no hope of good-will between us two."
"And it is my advice that you go away from Shetland."
"That I will _not_ do. There are my cousins Nanna and Vala here; and it is freely said that you have done them much ill. I will stay here and do them all the good I can."