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Nan Sherwood's Summer Holidays Part 23

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"The same clear eyes, determined little chin, and proud carriage. Your mother has it too, when she is well. And her father before her, Randolph Hugh Blake--he was a wee lad when he first visited his uncle here--he had those eyes. You are all cut from the same pattern as Hugh Blake, the well-beloved steward of Emberon for nigh on to sixty years.

"We are glad to see you, little mistress," he said quaintly, as he rang a bell for a servant.

Nan looked up, startled, at the term "mistress." Was it right to address her so? A wave of shyness came over her. She looked about at the ancient hall with its obsolete firearms hanging on the walls, its big soft rug, tapestries, and the armor of a knight long dead standing in the corner. So this was Emberon! This was the estate her mother had inherited! This was the place her mother and father had visited a year, two years before, while she had been in Pine Camp and then at Lakeview Hall. Nan drew a deep breath, trying hard to realize it all.

For a few moments, they all stood around telling the venerable old gentleman, James Blake, who was a distant relative of Mrs. Sherwood's, of their journey. Then, as the servant he had summoned appeared, he spoke again to Nan with the utmost deference.

"Your apartments are ready upstairs," he said. "Go quickly, for it is late and some in the village have prepared an entertainment for the la.s.sies from America. It is quite necessary that you go down, for most of them down there are people who know the Blake story from beginning to end. Hugh Blake was an idol in these parts.

"He treated those who were under him with such kindness and thoughtfulness that they looked upon him almost as a father. He took care of them when they were sick, watched over them when they were in trouble, comforted them when their young folks went off to the cities or to America. He saw that none went hungry. He helped them whenever he could, and when he died, they mourned as though he was one of theirs. Now they are anxious to see his youngest descendant.

"Though I know you are tired," he chuckled as they all shook their heads, "you must make the most of your short stay here. Upstairs, my sister has everything in readiness. Now, begone with you." He dismissed them and turned toward the big fireplace to warm his hands.

"Why, Nan Sherwood!" Bess exclaimed as soon as they left the reception hall, "it's a castle! And you are the princess!" Although Bess was fooling, she was very much impressed at all she had seen.

"You are my subjects and you had better behave," Nan laughed as they were ushered into a group of big bedrooms with high canopied beds, huge chests, heavy rugs, thick damask drapes, everything dark and faded, the luxuries of ages gone by.

"Yes, princess of Emberon," Laura made a brief curtsey. "We are at your command. Your ladies in waiting await your orders." She took Nan's hand and led her to a high-backed oaken chair where Nan seated herself for a moment.

"Your subjects, madame," Laura waved her hand toward the others, and then added, "They don't amount to much, but they are the best we have to offer at present."

"That's treason!" Amelia exclaimed, "treason! We're loyal subjects and true. We are daughters of Scotland and defenders of the Blake clan."

The girls were acting. It was their own version of a scene from a cla.s.s play they had once acted in at Lakeview. The room's setting had brought it all back to mind. But in acting they were prophesying too, prophesying something even more romantic than the scene the present brought to mind.

"Defenders of the Blake clan! Ah, how it needs you! Come, rally round!"

Nan pretended to sound the call to battle as she left her regal seat and plunged into the job of unpacking.

The others followed suit. The stern faces of the ancient lairds of Emberon that looked down on them from heavy gilt frames on the wall never saw six more industrious girls than those in the Lakeview crowd as they unpacked and dressed.

Once Laura looked up at them. "I must say," she said then to Nan, "that this isn't a very cheerful looking bunch of ancestors that is watching us."

Nan paused in her work to look, too. "They aren't, are they?" she agreed, walking around the room and looking intently at each of their faces. "These are portraits, I think, of the first of the lairds of Emberon. A fighting lot they were and as straight-laced as the best of the Scotsmen."

"They look it," Laura answered. "I, personally, feel as though they disapprove of every single dress I'm taking out of this bag."

"Let's see, how should they be made to satisfy those crusty old gentlemen?" She held one up to herself. "It should be tighter in the bodice, have a ruff around the neck, and the skirt," she looked down at the trim pleats in her own, "oh, that's all wrong! It should be long and full, just touching the floor. No wonder they disapprove. I am disgusted myself," she added, looking up at one of the solemn faces and winking.

"Why, Laura Polk," Rhoda had been watching and listening to the little by-play, "You had better be more respectful to your hosts," she nodded toward the portraits, "or tonight, at the parade of the ghosts, you will be taught a well-deserved lesson."

"Parade of the ghosts!" The exclamation was Grace's.

"Why, of course, I had forgotten completely about that," Laura looked very serious. "At the stroke of midnight in these ancient castles, all of the skeletons come out of the closets and the dungeons and the secret stairways and the cellars and the attics, walk through the halls, rattle around a bit, clank a few chains and then do some fancy haunting. If they are healthy ghosts, they groan. If they are weaklings, they just whistle round a bit. Oh, there is no end to the excitement in these h.o.a.ry places.

"Besides the ghosts and skeletons, there are always a few dissatisfied retainers who welcome the first opportunity to polish off the living owners. They hang around," Laura was entirely oblivious to the fact that she had, for once in her life, startled Nan, "in caves, abandoned buildings, and sometimes behind sliding doors, and appear on the slightest pretext.

"But never fear, my la.s.sies," her voice came from the depths of her case, as she searched around the bottom for a small gold bracelet, "the line of the lairds of Emberon has died out, the Princess tells me, and so there's no one here to be polished off. We have nothing to worry about," she ended as she found the bracelet and clasped it around her wrist, "except ghosts and skeletons."

"And old Mr. Blake who is waiting downstairs for us, I am sure," Nan added as she moved toward the doorway.

"He wouldn't harm a hair of anyone's head," Rhoda joined Nan. "Are all the Blakes so nice?"

Nan didn't answer. Both Laura and Rhoda had brought to mind one of the Blakes whom she was trying hard to forget--Robert Hugh Blake, the hunchback. She remembered suddenly that she had forgotten completely to reread the letter that had come to mind again those last days on the boat. Now, there was no time as together they went out, joined Dr.

Prescott, and descended to the Great Hall where old James Blake was awaiting them.

"Are you all quite comfortable?" He smiled at the excited faces. It was good to have voices and laughter ringing through the rooms again. It reminded him of the old days when people were always about. In his mind's eye he saw men returning from the hunt, couples dancing, great tables groaning with food, excited groups discussing politics, Christmas parties for the young folk, feasts for everyone, servants and all, on the master's birthday.

Then, in a flash, for he was a religious soul, the vision changed, and it was Sunday morning. The Laird himself was at the head of the room, there near one of the two great fireplaces. The Bible was open before him, and he was reading to the household of Emberon, kneeling in the Great Hall before him.

Those had been the good days. James Blake wiped an involuntary tear out of his eye. He was an old man and tears came easily.

"Come, come," he said gruffly as he nodded to the girls, "the carriage is waiting and already we are late." He led the way out of the room to a side entrance. Soon the dull sound of the horses' hoofs beating against the road was echoing back through the night to the castle, as the carriage wound its way down the road to the lighted village.

CHAPTER XXIII

SCOTTISH GAMES AND SCOTTISH TUNES

It was a gala scene that met their eyes as they drove into the village.

There, around a game field lighted by myriads of small electric bulbs, the whole population of the town was collected. Everyone was in holiday mood. All eyes were riveted on a bra.s.s band of kilted Highlanders marching up and down the field when Nan and her friends made their appearance. At a signal, the band struck up a happy welcoming tune as the girls were ushered directly to a group of seats opposite the very center of the field. Everyone stood up and clapped.

"Seems almost like the good old high school days at Tillbury," Bess whispered to Nan, "I half expect a cheerleader to appear."

"s.h.!.+" The warning was Nan's, for after the girls acknowledged the greeting by bowing and smiling and had seated themselves, the contests began.

First, there was the bagpipe compet.i.tion. At opposite ends of the field on wooden platforms, raised so that everyone could see, the Angus MacPhersons, Donald MacDonalds, and James Mackenzies of the village marched very slowly around and around playing jigs and reels and all sorts of Scottish Highland tunes.

How weird the music seemed to the ears of the American girl! It wasn't gay enough for Bess who liked only the jazz music that she could hear at home. She grew restless. But Nan and Laura, always interested in strange new things, sat on the very edge of their seats, anxious not to miss any detail of what was happening.

"How I'd like to awaken Mrs. Cupp some drizzly dark morning with bagpipe music!" Laura's eyes danced merrily at the thought.

"You'd be expelled as sure as anything," Nan whispered back. "Will you look at that?" She almost fell off the edge of the seat in her excitement.

The Highlanders had retired for a while and, racing across the field now, were teams of two men each, one pus.h.i.+ng a wheelbarrow and the other in it. When they missed the goal, as they generally did, a bucket, suspended from a beam above the goal line, tipped and drenched the two with water, to the great amus.e.m.e.nt of the crowd.

"Oh, what fun!" Laura exclaimed. "Look! There goes another bucket over.

He got it right in the face!"

"And look at the next one," Bess was interested too, now. "Is he going to get by safely? No, look, Nan!" She grabbed her friend's arm. "The wheelbarrow and everything is going to go over now! Are they hurt?" She closed her eyes and looked the other way.

"Oh, Bess, they're not hurt, they're just half drowned," Nan was laughing heartily. This was fun to watch, better than any circus. The crowd cheered and laughed and clapped and laughed again. "Tilting the Bucket" was one of the favorite Scottish games.

Next came the highpoint of the evening--the dancing of the Highland Fling and the Sword Dance. Such dancing! The tall, straight, skirted Highlanders with their white jackets and green kilts went from movement to movement, swinging rhythmically and gracefully, leaving the girls breathless at the end. The crowd applauded, long and loudly.

The dancers came back and did the Highland Fling over again. The crowd wouldn't let them leave. They cheered and whistled. The dancers repeated again and again, each time doing it better than the last.

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